The Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy

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  • čas přidán 12. 05. 2024
  • After settling in Great Britain, the Anglo-Saxons organized themselves in different kingdoms which would be later known as the Heptarchy, let's learn about it!
    Check out the first part at: • Who were the Anglo-Sax...
    And the second part at: • The Anglo-Saxon Settle...
    Check out atlasVPN, the sponsor of the video, and get 82% OFF your 3-year subscription using our link at: get.atlasvpn.com/KnowHistory
    Sound provided by Andreas Waldetoft: "Lionheart"
    Sources:
    www.gutenberg.org/files/657/6... Anglo Saxon chronical by Bede
    Asser's Life of King Alfred
    Bede and the Gewissae: The Political Evolution of the Heptarchy and Its Nomenclature, Walker, H.E, Cambridge Historical Journal 12 (1956)
    The Anglo Saxons, James Campbell, Oxford Phaidon (1982)
    The Kingdom of Kent, Witney, K.P, London Phillmore (1982)
    Pictures:
    Anglo-Saxon burial site: www.prittlewellprincelyburial...
    St. Martins Church, Ryarsh, Kent by Glen: commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Canterbury Cathedral from the cloisters by Kai Hendry: commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Twitter: / knowhistoryyt
    Patreon: / knowhistoryyt
    Discord: discordapp.com/invite/CmyatuF
    #Medieval_History #Britain #Anglo_Saxons
    Crusader Kings III Copyright: 2020 Paradox Interactive AB. www.paradoxplaza.com
    Total War: Atilla www.totalwar.com/
    Buy the game here: geni.us/kiR7Nho

Komentáře • 437

  • @KnowHistory
    @KnowHistory  Před rokem +20

    Don't forget to use my link get.atlasvpn.com/KnowHistory to get AtlasVPN exclusive 3-yeardeal with 82% OFF!

    • @overdose8329
      @overdose8329 Před rokem

      Another great video but I have some questions. Firstly, you didn’t give an approximate date for East Anglian settlement nor its formation as a kingdom so can you let us know when those happened? Also, why are your sources so old (1950s and 1980s)? Shouldn’t there be more updates sources, archeological findings, etc about this? You can also look into a collab or getting sources from the CZcams channels History with Hilbert (He’s in the ASNAC programme) and History Time.

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem +2

      @@overdose8329 @Overdose Sure. The sources used were primarily selected as they were both available (using university resources), and when compared with other sources offered much of the same and valid information. The age of the sources doesn't negate their accuracy or validity, and while of course we are open and searching for better sources with more information, the ones used provided the information required for the depth of investigation we needed to conduct for this video. While of course newer sources may offer further insight, the insights they do offer didn't seem to offer too much with regard to the narrative we told
      Of course though, realities do affect just which sources we have available. Sadly not every source is available for whatever reason, yet the ones we used I personally feel offered enough information and, given what was read and compared with the other background reading we conducted, seemed wholly acceptable.

    • @ModernDayRenaissanceMan
      @ModernDayRenaissanceMan Před rokem

      I would love to know where you found the landowner register. History and genetics are subjects that I research a lot & no matter how well you Google sometimes you are always at the mercy of an algorithm. Finding information in today's world is getting harder and harder because it should be posted online for everyone to see but it is constantly being blocked somehow or censored. Anytime I can find a reliable source for firsthand information I jump at that chance

    • @scottscottsdale7868
      @scottscottsdale7868 Před 5 dny

      @@calum5975good explanation. And love that name Wuffa.

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Před rokem +465

    Funny how people comment that Britain now has a German monarch, but don’t say much how they used to have a French one. They’ve just returned to their roots.

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem +45

      Mhm. Not only that but the current Monarch isn't even that German. Useful Charts broke down the ancestry of the British Monarchy. (Although given Prince Phillip belonged to a German noble house, I suppose Charles will be much more German than the Queen was)

    • @py8554
      @py8554 Před rokem +58

      Perhaps because the Normans didn’t even think of themselves as French?

    • @themaestro3034
      @themaestro3034 Před rokem +1

      Huh?

    • @jammehrmann1871
      @jammehrmann1871 Před rokem +13

      @@kevin6293Correct, but more germanic than every monarch before the Hanoverians and their descendents took over England/Britain in the 18th century from the norman-scottish Stuarts

    • @egontania-wp5dn
      @egontania-wp5dn Před rokem +2

      William III?

  • @julianv1617
    @julianv1617 Před rokem +78

    One of the most underrated history channels on the platform. Hoping that the algorithm takes more people here

    • @KnowHistory
      @KnowHistory  Před rokem +4

      Thank you so much for those words!! :') Fingers crossed!

    • @garypulliam3740
      @garypulliam3740 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Where is it rated? I'd like to see how it compares to others. Is it even in the top 10?

  • @StoicHistorian
    @StoicHistorian Před rokem +125

    Great video! Anglo-Saxon history is a very interesting time period

    • @KnowHistory
      @KnowHistory  Před rokem +9

      Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed it!!

    • @RatelHBadger
      @RatelHBadger Před 11 měsíci

      It's interesting, because watching History with Hilbert a few years ago. Apparently, British universities were doing away with any history courses studying Anglo-Saxon events, because it was a misleading and racist term.

    • @michaelhalsall5684
      @michaelhalsall5684 Před 3 měsíci +1

      A very interesting time to me! At school we were told about the Romans invading southern Britain in the First Century AD and then the Norman invasion in the Eleventh Century AD. That millennium in between was written off as just the Dark Ages and was in fact two very interesting eras, Roman Britain and then Pre-Conquest Britain. This channel is educating us about Pre-Conquest Britain.

  • @theodore3290
    @theodore3290 Před rokem +29

    This is a great video on Anglo-Saxon history, which is an over-looked and underrated part of history.

    • @ilcondottierocartografo6770
      @ilcondottierocartografo6770 Před rokem +4

      Seriously the early middle ages are underrated and underappreciated

    • @mattender8323
      @mattender8323 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Know History liking your comment that is now 2 months old gives me hope

  • @78cunobelin
    @78cunobelin Před 11 měsíci +53

    Great video! I had heard or learned somewhere that the word "sheriff" is from the Arabic "sharif" and it was borrowed by English speakers during the Crusades. Interesting to hear about "shire reeve" (and the internet seems to support that as the basis for the word "sheriff"). Just goes to show that we cannot always rely on things we heard or learned in the past and must always be open to new information.

    • @joedee1863
      @joedee1863 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @78cunobelin -The word Sheriff is from the English word 'Shire Reive' which predates the crusades.
      The Arabs didn't invent the word 'Shire' but the Persian/Hindi word 'Shahir' is very close. Shahir = City.
      Hebrew and Syrian for City is Ir (Iraq) (Iran) sounds like 'eer'.
      Maybe Shahir comes from Shah ir.
      (Royal City)
      Still working on it
      The Arabic word Sharif is from the Hebrew word Seraph which means burning snake.
      Took me years to find this out.
      The similarity of the names is a bummer

    • @78cunobelin
      @78cunobelin Před 10 měsíci

      @@joedee1863 well, it is all proto-indo-european so perhaps it is all the same ;)

    • @joedee1863
      @joedee1863 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@78cunobelin - it's fascinating stuff. I like languages and keep stumbling over words thinking ''how did that get there ?"
      I knew the word for " keep quiet " in ancient Hebrew was HUSH !
      But just the other day I find out the word for 'dumb' is DUMA. [Isaiah 4:6] נִדְמ֥וּ n damu.

    • @joedee1863
      @joedee1863 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@78cunobelin - except for Semitic languages,

  • @ilcondottierocartografo6770

    I am so glad these amazing history channels are appearing in my recommended

  • @elel4092
    @elel4092 Před rokem +16

    Using these for a subject I have at university (anglo-saxon history and culture) as a way to better understand and remember! Loved all your videos so far! Hoping these will continue! Thank you for making these! :)

  • @RyanMatthewCampbell
    @RyanMatthewCampbell Před 11 měsíci +16

    I wish the Celtic names of Wessex' supposed founders was mentioned. A Celtic elite adopting Germanic customs is an interesting tale indeed.

    • @puskascat
      @puskascat Před 11 měsíci +3

      perhaps the Celtic names were adopted, just as Norman names were adopted after the Norman conquest.

    • @RyanMatthewCampbell
      @RyanMatthewCampbell Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@puskascat Wessex wasn't conquered by Celts though.

    • @seaghanobuadhaigh8240
      @seaghanobuadhaigh8240 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@RyanMatthewCampbell I don't agree, since there was clearly human settlement in that area before the Celts came to Britain. Even in Ireland there are pre-Celtic place names that have survived to the present.

    • @RyanMatthewCampbell
      @RyanMatthewCampbell Před 11 měsíci

      @@seaghanobuadhaigh8240 huh? What does that have to do with the Kingdom of Wessex' founders have Celtic personal names? Wessex was an Anglo-Saxon Kingdom, not Celtic or pre-Celtic.

  • @noahtylerpritchett2682
    @noahtylerpritchett2682 Před rokem +34

    I personally think the Bernicians were descendants of the Frisians, explaining a extremely early Roman Period settlement as Frisian mercenaries were known to live in the region by Rome. Romans left behind a Brythonic kingdom who mingled with the Frisic cultures.

    • @DJF040788
      @DJF040788 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Interesting. I think this theory is probably also supported linguistically

  • @brianhammer5107
    @brianhammer5107 Před 7 měsíci +3

    "... there was no Vortigern" is a huge, highly contested POV

  • @AdamS789
    @AdamS789 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Great find in my feed. Your channel has tons of potential and keep up the great content!

  • @inuuteqstotts9639
    @inuuteqstotts9639 Před rokem +40

    Well done Know History. It would be great if you did the other cultural perspectives in the same timeline in Britannia.

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem +7

      An excellent idea. Sadly our knowledge on such topics is considerably less, but I'm sure we can start research into it. Perhaps the Kingdoms of early Medieval Wales.

    • @johnpatrick5307
      @johnpatrick5307 Před rokem +1

      Many historians reckon this Anglo-Saxon thing was largely made up by monks, isolated in their abbeys.
      For instance, an Anglo-Saxon burial ground near Updown, in Kent, was found to contain the grave of a African descended child.
      See: Daily Mail Updown.

    • @ketlingpl
      @ketlingpl Před rokem +1

      ​@@johnpatrick5307 we wuz angelo saxenz

    • @bombastothunder3701
      @bombastothunder3701 Před rokem +3

      ​@johnpatrick5307 except the "Anglo-saxon" thing has been proven with genetics.

  • @Zederok
    @Zederok Před rokem +8

    Missed a golden opportunity to describe the East Anglian regions of Suffolk and Norfolk. AKA south folks and north folks.

  • @xess4168
    @xess4168 Před rokem +12

    Cerdic, is a Briton name, so while Cerdic may have been an invader, I think it is more likely that Cerdic hired Saxons to conquer a swathe of land in exchange for marrying into the Saxon tribal system as a chief, using the Old Saxon language instead of British Latin or Old Brytonnic. Cerdic could also be a mistranslations of the Briton name, "Caradog" as Cerdic could have been pronounced as Kerdig.

    • @thomasford8197
      @thomasford8197 Před 11 měsíci +2

      DNA evidence continues to demonstrate that, contrary to old concepts of ethnic cleansing, Celtic and Germanic peoples merged pretty early on to begin to create an English culture and ethnicity. Many other cultures have adopted the language of other cultures (the Irish, Welsh, and Scots as a pretty notable example!) and these kinds of transitions frequently take a good length of time. On top of this, it probably didn’t hurt when Augustine of Canterbury converted Aethelberht to Christianity, thereby allowing Christian concepts to be, more or less, disseminated by way of the English language and thoroughly endorsed by the Vatican. A little while later the Synod of Whitby more completely aligned the Church in eastern England with Rome. Consequently, the Celtic Church (and languages?) in the rest of England was on the ‘wrong’ side of favor and, ultimately, history. From that point onward, the hegemony of the English language became inevitable in the British Isles.

  • @ioannistsagas5290
    @ioannistsagas5290 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Waiting for the next video, as explained at the end of the video! Great work!

  • @swayp5715
    @swayp5715 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Brilliant analysis and thank you so much it's so useful❤

  • @Svensk7119
    @Svensk7119 Před rokem +9

    Grammar note: I have always heard Cerdic pronounced with a hard C, like Celtic. Kerdic, then.
    I am not arguing, nor saying Serdic is an incorrect pronunciation. I just wanted to point out the soft C tradition in English is very young for how dominant it is. There are lots of hard Cs in old words.
    Also, in a completely unrelated note, when reading Pr. Tolkien, Every C before an E (at the start of a name) is hard. Celeborn, Celebrant would be Keleborn and Kelebrant.

    • @Excommunicated-ei1ep
      @Excommunicated-ei1ep Před 11 měsíci +2

      He was pronouncing it Ch not Se tbh mate. The Ch sound was used because the Anglo-Saxons were an Ingaevonic People, just like the Frisians, who also used the Ch Sound instead of the Hard K Sound.
      A lot of the Hard K Pronunciation of Anglo-Saxon words, that are still in Today’s English, came into English from Norse and Danish Influence…

    • @bbraat
      @bbraat Před 11 měsíci +1

      He's got an accent of some sort which may be affecting it.
      He say "myff" in place of "myth" and "fought" in place of "thought" and "brovers" in place of "brothers".
      See 3:34.

    • @jimbokilo
      @jimbokilo Před 10 měsíci +1

      Tolkien was the foremost authority on Anglo Saxons and wrote the Oxford Dictionary, id trust his knowledge.

    • @michaelhalsall5684
      @michaelhalsall5684 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@Excommunicated-ei1ep I believe that the letter C was pronounced as "k" in Old English. In Welsh and Irish the letter C is always "hard" like K and those languages don't need the letter K in their spelling for that reason. In English the "soft c" convention where "c" becomes "s" if it directly followed by "e, i or y" seems to be a later medieval invention and why Middle and Modern English need to use the letter K . In Old English there was a letter called "yogh" which looked like a "Z" or a "3" and represented a guttural sound, perhaps the Gaelic "ch' sound as in "loch" OR perhaps the "Dutch G" sound, OR perhaps both.

    • @Excommunicated-ei1ep
      @Excommunicated-ei1ep Před 3 měsíci

      @@michaelhalsall5684
      Sometimes is was Pronounced as a Hard K Sound and sometimes it was Pronounced with a Ch Sound, depending on Dialect or Grammar. The Ch Sound, as in Cheese or Church, which is similar in sound to todays Frisian, which has the Ts Sound, similar to Ch.
      Ch: Cheese/Ts: Tsiis. Because
      of this Ch/Ts Sound and other reasons, Anglo-Saxon and
      Old Frisian, are often called
      “Anglo-Frisian”. Because we
      both make up “Ingaevonic”…which is 1 of the 3 Main Branches of West Germanic.

  • @egontania-wp5dn
    @egontania-wp5dn Před rokem +4

    Fascinating! Please carry on 🙏. I was struck by that list of landowners from Mercia... And your translation to 'border' . Does that make Marcomanni border people too?( Even though in another context)

    • @jammehrmann1871
      @jammehrmann1871 Před rokem

      Yes they are (same context) they were living in a march (borderland) situation with the celtic rhaetians and later romans just like the mercians with the welsh or the use if Mark in German when referring to Brandenburg and its people
      Aswell as Denmark

  • @bee-fs3vb
    @bee-fs3vb Před rokem +3

    This channel is so underrated.

  • @exploremusic2182
    @exploremusic2182 Před měsícem

    Is there a video about Vikings and the foundation of the Kingdom of England mentioned at the end? I'd love to see more on this topic.

  • @ivanstrydom8417
    @ivanstrydom8417 Před 7 měsíci

    Very good video series sir.

  • @NSBarnett
    @NSBarnett Před 11 měsíci +1

    The star on your map at 3:46-3:51 and marked "Ebbsfleet", which you say is near where Ramsgate is now, is near enough to where Ramsgate is now . . . but Ebbsfleet is 50 miles west, quite a long way up the Thames. So where did they land?

  • @snufkinhollow318
    @snufkinhollow318 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I think the mark of really good short-form history content on CZcams is being able to be both concise and informative, as well as being clear about what is merely conjecture and what is backed up by compelling evidence. You seem to have mastered all those skills and this is a great video.
    Of course, there's always a point for debate when it comes to this period of history (or any period for that matter) and I would have to take issue with the suggestion here that Augustine "reintroduced" Christianity to Britain and that the Anglo-Saxons were "strictly pagan" before his mission. Whilst there may not have been any 'officially' Christian Anglo-Saxon territories or rulers, there were certainly Anglo-Saxon Christians prior to Augustine, having been converted by Irish missionaries. Indeed, it was partly the spread of 'Celtic' Christianity from Ireland that prompted Rome to dispatch Augustine in the first place.
    Otherwise, thank you for this great content. I've just subscribed and can't wait to get stuck in to more of your videos.

  • @aurasenpai8139
    @aurasenpai8139 Před rokem +8

    Nice Crusaders Kings 3 love the game.

  • @oldsilver6035
    @oldsilver6035 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Thank you, I wondered what that meant my 13th or 14th great grandfather had that sheriff designation and I didn't know what that meant. I saw an oil painting of him and his kilt was way too low. There's another painting of him in armor. I gathered we were from his spare.

  • @deusvult6920
    @deusvult6920 Před rokem

    Nice ive watched 3 of these anglo saxon vids and i think youve done a good job have a sub

  • @michaelhalsall5684
    @michaelhalsall5684 Před 3 měsíci

    A side note - The name "shire" (pronounced "shyer") has been revived in Australia to mean a Local Government Area particularly in rural areas area. An old Saxon name put back into modern usage.

  • @jerrybaird2059
    @jerrybaird2059 Před 11 měsíci

    Outstanding video, an oral history at its best.

  • @robertdavie1221
    @robertdavie1221 Před rokem +3

    Another fantastic video!

  • @outoftheblu__
    @outoftheblu__ Před rokem +5

    im a little late to watching the full thing, but great video. i still love the linguistics stuff, keep it up

  • @stephenwhite9087
    @stephenwhite9087 Před 10 měsíci

    To my knowledge , the term sheriff derives from Shire Reeve. Shire from old English , meaning bright and sparkling stream / beck , which were natural borders between administrative areas, and Reeve, the king' s man in the shire responsible for collecting the King' s taxes.

  • @est9949
    @est9949 Před rokem +13

    The two siblings, stallion and horse, settled in the city of canter 🤣 This is too good to be true

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem +4

      Interesting you mention this - the Canter is named after Canterbury!
      Canterbury was the holiest christian site in England, and one of the holiest in all of Europe. Saint Thomas Beckett was murdered there on the orders of King Henry, and a cult developed around him which consumed England. Going to Canterbury was something many people would try to do. Many people took horses of course, and would take a relaxed riding pace known as a Canterbury Gallop, a Gallop to the City of Canterbury.
      Fast forward a few hundred years, Canterbury Gallop is reduced to Canter.

    • @noahtylerpritchett2682
      @noahtylerpritchett2682 Před rokem

      it's real however! Only recent decades of Neo-Marxism and Neo-Liberalism under weird agendas are denying it and saying it's not true! Clearly political motivation.

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem

      @@noahtylerpritchett2682 What?

    • @seaghanobuadhaigh8240
      @seaghanobuadhaigh8240 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@calum5975 Did Henry order his murder, or just "hint" that he'd be happy if someone were to do it?

  • @hagalhagal9989
    @hagalhagal9989 Před 10 měsíci

    Such a breath of fresh air to see an unbiased historical channel such as this one.
    Was recommended this channel after watching Kings and Generals, which wreaks of subtle anti-Christian and pro-Muslim bias.

  • @manuelkong10
    @manuelkong10 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Who narrates these ?? Sounds much like the kid who played "Pitt the Younger" in the Black Adder series....
    Whoever it is, I like that voice

  • @scottstevens5481
    @scottstevens5481 Před 11 měsíci +1

    How are your graphics created? Do you know which software your Graphic Artist uses? I really enjoy the story telling these images support!

    • @DavidtheBard1
      @DavidtheBard1 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Looks like most of it is from Crusader Kings 3

    • @KnowHistory
      @KnowHistory  Před 11 měsíci +2

      Thank you!! :D They're from a game called Crusader Kings 3!

  • @MRRookie232
    @MRRookie232 Před rokem +10

    Please do one the Celts in the British Isles, including their arrival and the society they developed, up until the period of Roman Britannia.

    • @bbraat
      @bbraat Před 11 měsíci +3

      Yes, and one on the people before the Celts.

  • @Qurosia
    @Qurosia Před 10 měsíci

    Honestly, this was an amazing summary of these places - far more in depth (yet also shorter!) than any coverage I've come across before.

  • @mirrorblue100
    @mirrorblue100 Před 10 měsíci

    Wonderful series - thank you.

  • @darkdefender6384
    @darkdefender6384 Před rokem

    Well done on this video.

  • @jamesives4375
    @jamesives4375 Před rokem

    Just saw this video and the other Anglo Saxon one (just before this) earned a new sub!

  • @erikosberg1166
    @erikosberg1166 Před 10 měsíci

    Great content. But I wonder what Paradox thinks about you using their assets and art? 🤔 great content though!

  • @hazchemel
    @hazchemel Před 11 měsíci +1

    thank you, illuminating a mysterious and fascinating period of England's gestation.

    • @MrDeicide1
      @MrDeicide1 Před 11 měsíci +1

      England's slimy spawning, you mean

    • @cjclark1208
      @cjclark1208 Před 2 měsíci

      Englands raucous conception in thy privy chambers.

    • @hazchemel
      @hazchemel Před 2 měsíci

      @@cjclark1208 was it a cross species union, with both the Lord Privy and the Great seals doing their bit? :)

  • @ismailyussuf9740
    @ismailyussuf9740 Před rokem +6

    your content is going to blow up.

  • @henriklarsson5221
    @henriklarsson5221 Před rokem +5

    My name is Uhtred, son of Uhtred! Destiny is all!

  • @Grumpyoldman037
    @Grumpyoldman037 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I know quite a bit about UK history, but the Anglo-Saxon times were rather "dark ages" for me. Thank you for the information.

    • @parkerprice6787
      @parkerprice6787 Před 11 měsíci

      i'd recommend the British History Podcast if you want to bring more light to this period. it's a very detailed and fascinating account of all of recorded british history in chronological order, which has only recently reached Hastings.

    • @Grumpyoldman037
      @Grumpyoldman037 Před 11 měsíci

      @@parkerprice6787 Thank you! Great idea!

  • @Kristaliorn
    @Kristaliorn Před rokem +4

    This was great!

  • @wookeybradbury
    @wookeybradbury Před 11 měsíci +2

    Even today if youre from east Kent youre a man of Kent, if you come from the west its a Kentish man

  • @christopherevans2445
    @christopherevans2445 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Well done

  • @FlemingRound
    @FlemingRound Před 11 měsíci

    Fds o teu sotaque é incrível!
    E já agora, great content!

  • @qerqiztopulli1708
    @qerqiztopulli1708 Před rokem +7

    Love your video

  • @John_Jim
    @John_Jim Před rokem +5

    While your etymological explanation of the name Mercia might be correct, the comparisons you give are a bit confusing, since 'mark', at least in its modern meaning, is synonymous with 'land', and not 'border' in the Nordic languages. Meaning land of the Danes and land of the Finns, not borderlands (in Norwegian, Finn is also the name of the Saami who inhabit the region, so it's not a reference to the Finns of Finland).
    I'm being picky. It was a good video. Very well done!

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem +1

      I'm sorry but the research done and even a quick Wiktionary search shows this isn't the case. March / Mark did mean, and continues to mean "Borderlands" in both English and German. I'm unsure if the word has evolved somewhat in Nordic languages, but the meaning when Denmark was named it definitely meant "Borderlands (Mork in Old Norse) of the Danes.
      While Mark does in some form mean "land", it's just not any land. It's specifically land that borders a border. You can reduce that to simply refer to the borderlands as "the border"
      When we said 'border' we didn't solely mean the invisible line dividing two countries but the general region of that.
      You are correct about the Saami though. I'm surprised you still refer to Saami as Finn's. We use to call them Lapps in English, but this term is regarded as offensive now.

    • @John_Jim
      @John_Jim Před rokem +4

      @@calum5975 As I said, I'm not questioning the meaning of the word in English (or German), only the comparison to the names in Danish and Norwegian, where the word has indeed evolved to mean 'land' rather than 'borderland'. You can read about that on Wiktionary as well. It makes sense, since Denmark is THE LAND of the Danes, not the borderlands. Same goes for Finnmark.
      I am Swedish btw. We used to call the Saami Lappar (pl.) but not any longer. The area is still referred to as Lappland though, but also Sapmi if you want to be PC 🙂

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem +3

      @@John_Jim Yes, the point is though, the name of Denmark is older than the modern Danish language. It's from old Norse, and in old Norse the name means "March (borderland) of the Danes". The modern Danish words that evolved from those older Norse words don't specifically matter. The Old English words were much firmer cognates of old Norse "Mork" (from which Denmark evolved) than the modern Norse forms. The modern meaning of Mark doesn't matter - it's like using the modern definition of a word to define a word from the 500s. It's an anachronism.
      Therefore, Mercia and (Den)mark are cognates. They've both evolved considerably (Mercia being a Latinised form of Meirce and Denmark a slow evolution from the old Norse name)
      English has strangely and interestingly retained the old Germanic meaning much firmer than Danish or Swedish, it appears.

    • @John_Jim
      @John_Jim Před rokem +1

      @@calum5975 I get you. I did not know the 'mark' in Denmark originally referred to the southern borderlands, but thought it was simply the land. I found the Wikipedia article about it. The etymology of Finnmark seems to be not as easy to find.

    • @jammehrmann1871
      @jammehrmann1871 Před rokem

      For you and all others everywhere where mark marc or some other derivitive of it is present, it represents germanic speaking borderlands with non germanic cultures such as Sorbs, Celtic or Finnic or in Denmarks case the North/West Germanic devide, have a nice day y'all

  • @bambidawg5376
    @bambidawg5376 Před rokem

    Mount and blade footage at use? Or am I wrong

  • @mooniean
    @mooniean Před rokem +6

    Wooo sponsor!!!!!!

    • @KnowHistory
      @KnowHistory  Před rokem +3

      AH! A WILD OLD NARRATOR APPEARS!

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem

      @@KnowHistory Moonie smells.

    • @mooniean
      @mooniean Před rokem

      @@calum5975 moonie smells wonderfully

  • @spellandshield
    @spellandshield Před rokem +1

    Es mesmo de Portugal? o teu inglês é de loucos, sobretudo o sotaque!

    • @KnowHistory
      @KnowHistory  Před rokem

      Eu sou português sim ahah, mas o narrador é britânico mesmo ahah

    • @spellandshield
      @spellandshield Před rokem

      @@KnowHistory ah, entendo...

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory Před rokem

    interesting overview

  • @Svensk7119
    @Svensk7119 Před rokem

    Where, precisely is the Umber? Is that the right name? This video made it seem that it was the Northern border of Mercia. I thought it North of that.
    Am I wrong?

    • @lightfootpathfinder8218
      @lightfootpathfinder8218 Před 8 měsíci

      Do you mean the river "Humber" ? If so It's the large estuary that separates Mercia and Northumbria and even today is the border of both Lincolnshire and Yorkshire and hence northern England and The east Midlands. It's the estuary in the north eastern part of the map

  • @GaveMeGrace1
    @GaveMeGrace1 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @pimmpslap
    @pimmpslap Před rokem

    Have you done a welsh one?

  • @RatelHBadger
    @RatelHBadger Před 11 měsíci

    6:15 is this why there is a Princess Monaco of Kent?

  • @kaisersozay99
    @kaisersozay99 Před 4 měsíci

    Good one.

  • @thoubosen2779
    @thoubosen2779 Před rokem +2

    AD>CE

  • @bitTorrenter
    @bitTorrenter Před 10 měsíci

    You forgot about Middlesex, or do you count that area as part of the Essex Kingdom.

  • @mango4ttwo635
    @mango4ttwo635 Před rokem +6

    Fun Fact. The north Saxons died out as they followed the spirit of their land: Nossex

    • @andriusgimbutas3723
      @andriusgimbutas3723 Před rokem

      Southern Saxons on the other hand, were killed by imposotrs

    • @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044
      @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044 Před rokem

      ​@@jml732 there was enough sex counties in England perhaps

    • @sharonprice42
      @sharonprice42 Před rokem

      That's good 😊

    • @alanbeddow3775
      @alanbeddow3775 Před rokem +2

      The ancient prehistoric people of Nossex, Homo Nonerectus also died out centuries earlier for two very obvious reasons.

  • @sabrik3885
    @sabrik3885 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Cool video. My comment is unrelated to the content of the documentary but rather the title of the video. Hewt is the Kurdish word we use for the number seven. Hewt = Hept. I thought that was interesting. First time I'm hearing of a Heptarchy.

    • @KnowHistory
      @KnowHistory  Před 11 měsíci +2

      Kurdish and Latin (where Hept comes from) are related languages! It's very interesting to see such similar words in such distant languages! It's an amazing way of seeing a common ancient heritage between vastly different modern groups!

    • @sabrik3885
      @sabrik3885 Před 11 měsíci

      @@KnowHistory yes, indeed... The numbers in Iranic languages are most similar to those in Slavic, but they also have cognates in Germanic and Latin etc. Some similar numbers to English are Chor = four, hesht = eight etc, also the word for horse which is ostor is exactly the same as the equivalent word used in Icelandic.

  • @HardWater91
    @HardWater91 Před rokem +2

    Interestingly, Sussex was the last region to be Christianised even though it was next to Kent. Maybe the Sussaxons and Kentish people didn’t like each other much for a while.
    Sussex and Kent have county cricket teams to this day. Sussex is the oldest county club in the world and also the oldest professional sports team.

    • @HardWater91
      @HardWater91 Před rokem

      Sussex was based on the area the Regni tribe inhabited, so it’s an older region.

    • @harrynewiss4630
      @harrynewiss4630 Před rokem +3

      The weald had a lot to do with that. Sussex was a very remote place then in many ways

    • @harrynewiss4630
      @harrynewiss4630 Před rokem +2

      The weald was around 90 miles long and 30 miles deep in those days

  • @veridicusmaximus6010
    @veridicusmaximus6010 Před 5 měsíci

    I'm just waiting to find out the who, when, and how my I-Z2541 got to the Island. ;)

  • @riveravon5296
    @riveravon5296 Před 11 měsíci

    What about the movement was from England to Denmark and not the other way around. It gives more sense, at least for me.

  • @janejohnstone5795
    @janejohnstone5795 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Yes...I can believe this...as lot of English people look...Anglo-Saxon...red hair, blue eyes...brown and blonde hair..still have that look...noticed when on holiday there...recently...attractive looking...and tall...

    • @ndie8075
      @ndie8075 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I agree....as Saxon german from Westfalia....the old home of the westsaxons.....they are similar to us

  • @davidchurch3472
    @davidchurch3472 Před 10 měsíci

    If Cedric, first king of Wessex, was leader of the tribe 'Gewissae', then, was he actually a British King of south east Wales?

  • @noahtylerpritchett2682
    @noahtylerpritchett2682 Před rokem +1

    Mierce the c is pronounced with a ch sound.

  • @keithbillington8747
    @keithbillington8747 Před rokem +1

    Just a thought Kent was taken by the north Jutland people, like know Limfjorden major sea route (smaller boats) why England conquered?

    • @joedee1863
      @joedee1863 Před rokem

      Tall, Thick set ,wide shouldered Jutts, who are now known as Kents who love farming and animal breeding seems a plausible case to me. I'll put money on it.

    • @princejameswindsor2161
      @princejameswindsor2161 Před rokem

      Kent was first kingdom in world was held in high court Mt Olympus to be just that with an order of first five commandments by the emperor of Rome along with its statesman. Held in high court by the highest of Roman empire and God .

    • @princejameswindsor2161
      @princejameswindsor2161 Před rokem

      Jutz didn't come til counterfeit 2nd kingdom arose by not having authentic statesman or churches which was London England kents neighbor. When that happen the pix was invading so the king of England thought he could call for some help and sent an order to a legit statesman of Kent which made it to high court as statesman put order thru to Roman empire and was held in there high court Mt Olympus and when vortigan did so he exposed all his counterfeit doings with his requesting an order of mercenary s to help defend and exposing how he went about being a copy cat mocking God order of Kent and did not have blessing so doing so he exposed himself to be counterfeit to God in God's name In high court that day .
      Also Hengist and Horsa was summoned and God told his sons will give Vortigan what he requested and also I want him also served and order to vacate that stated this my Son's of Wihtgisl,
      Sons of Witta ,
      Sons of Wecta,
      Sons of Wodan arose of and are the only Royal tender and of south Abrams.
      God told his boys to serve that order and make London one with Kent as it's an order to get mercenary s aka jutz and along the way home to rally the ANGLO SAXONS COBURG GOTHA letting any willing man that wants to fight ride along with the order . Vortigan thought it was a big laugh til he was invited to a Feist and all but one other than vortigan survived. vortigan left London high and dry never to return to England murdered by his own corrupt Welsh son counterfeit King Author of Welsh .

  • @rms3
    @rms3 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Why do they have to degrade an otherwise good video by using "C.E." rather than the conventional, historical "A.D."? The story of the Anglo Saxons in England hinges on their conversion to Christianity so why discard the Christian dating system we've used for 1500 years?

  • @soyuz281
    @soyuz281 Před 11 měsíci

    Heptarchy -- Literally the 7 kingdoms. Where else I heard that.

  • @MCorpReview
    @MCorpReview Před rokem +1

    Favorite period of English history 😢what were+the scots 😢doing back then?😊all the best cities 🌆 r in the south😊I always thought Northumbria is territorial larger than Mercia .😊

  • @moneybubble333
    @moneybubble333 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Next episode when???

  • @huntergray3985
    @huntergray3985 Před 11 měsíci

    It's funny, the Saxon kingdoms were Sussex -land of the south Saxons; Wessex -land of the west Saxons; Essex -land of the east Saxons; and of course, later we had right in the centre of these Middlesex. But I always imagine the Saxons to the north settling into their new home and holding a big meeting to name their new home, someone steps forward and says: Our new land will be called Nossex, whack! A sudden battle-axe to the head and the whole Moot votes to keep the old Romano-Celtic name for the land: Mercia.

  • @copperhead3703
    @copperhead3703 Před rokem

    What american stste is shire?

    • @puskascat
      @puskascat Před 11 měsíci

      New Hampshire, I imagine.

  • @Hlord-be4xx
    @Hlord-be4xx Před rokem +5

    I wouldent say with full confidence that the Kentish weren’t at one point ruled by men named Hengist and Horsa.

  • @josemaurosantos1531
    @josemaurosantos1531 Před 11 měsíci

    Your haplogroup is:
    I
    Born between 35 and 28 thousand years ago, haplogroup I represents one of the first peoples of Europe, having several descendant lineages that spread throughout the European territory during the last Ice Age, having its maximum frequency in the Balkans. It is one of the most numerous haplogroups among European males, being the second largest paternal lineage found on the continent (second only to the R lineage). Its I1 branch is related to Nordic Europe, ancestor of Germanic tribes and Vikings, while I2 is strongly related to Neolithic cultures.
    Y-chromosomal Adam
    160 to 120 thousand years
    A: Africa
    140 to 90 thousand years
    BT: Africa
    85 to 60 thousand years
    CT: Africa
    80 to 60 thousand years
    CF: Leaving Africa
    75 to 60 thousand years
    F: Leaving Africa
    62 to 57 thousand years
    IJ: Haplogroup parent of I and J
    45 to 30 thousand years
    I: Eastern Eurasia
    35 to 28 thousand years.

  • @creationsxl2979
    @creationsxl2979 Před rokem +5

    Lessss goooo

  • @KloneheimBiggums
    @KloneheimBiggums Před 2 měsíci

    18:15 Saint Oswald! LFG!!!

  • @christophermilroy5198
    @christophermilroy5198 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Did the Romans before this not call the island Britannia?

  • @NolanHawkeyeAnthony
    @NolanHawkeyeAnthony Před rokem

    Where is the next video?

    • @KnowHistory
      @KnowHistory  Před rokem +1

      not released yet, life has been extremely busy, but i plan to release it till the end of the year if everything goes smoothly

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem

      ​@@KnowHistory end of the year xD 😅

  • @Valhalla88888
    @Valhalla88888 Před 9 měsíci +1

    when the Romans left in the 4th century, the border between Scotland and todays England was close to Hardrians Wall why you keep showing Northumbria as close to Edinburgh? also Northumbria was also controlled by the Scots in the 13th century right?

    • @ronhall9394
      @ronhall9394 Před 7 měsíci

      This is because the Northumbrians - who were Angles - either subjugated or politically dominated the land up the the Firth of Forth. Their claims on this territory were lost when Northumbria was overrun by the Danes.
      In a similar fashion the Scots dominated what is now known as Northumberland through political means - The Scottish King held the title Duke of Northumberland (although it was still considered as an English title, and in this particular case the Scottish King would have the English monarch as overlord) which had been granted through marriage, however due to the political vacuum in Northern England caused by the Anarchy, the ability of the English monarch to exercise their rights as overlord of the Duke of Northumberland faded and as Stephen and Matilda were knocking several bells out of each other and ruining England in the process, the political will and military might to enforce that was not present. So Northumberland slipped into the Scottish orbit by default.
      Once the line of succession was settled and the English King felt strong enough, he asked for it back and in 1237 The Treaty of York was an agreed between the kings Henry III of England and Alexander II of Scotland and the Anglo-Scottish border moved to where it is know (broadly speaking).

  • @WayneCalvert
    @WayneCalvert Před 11 měsíci +1

    if folk want to create their own calendars (this bce ce thing) please find your own point of reference, rather than appropriating the christian calendar

  • @RashidAli-fb3se
    @RashidAli-fb3se Před 11 měsíci

    French is a hybrid
    Between Latin and German and even Latin is made of galic italic and Germanic this is why the Roman's became adaptive and evolving constantly in nature roles early citizens where like that many people from different trubes Including Germania italic galic but the difference is they united and adopted greece systems many Greek systems and you could say they greenkafied in their own way thus creating Latin language

    • @RashidAli-fb3se
      @RashidAli-fb3se Před 11 měsíci

      And anglo saxon england was a highly influential kingdom nobles had little influence earldoms where ruled by eldormans which was nonheriditary and they where appointed by the king as officials and underthem white counties earldoms then where devided into counties or Shires

  • @survivalizer
    @survivalizer Před 5 měsíci

    Vikings when? Fully addicted now lol

  • @sidjoosin6549
    @sidjoosin6549 Před rokem

    Finn mark/land - means final mark/land, not "..of Finnish". Quite opposite - "Finnish" means "..of fin (last) land", thus Suomi people usually called.

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem

      Finn (Suomi) has absolutely nothing to do with "finish", as in the end of something.
      Finn comes from "Finnas" (Old English), which is in turn from "Finnr" (Hunter) in Old Norse. The Sami were the refered to as this originally, yet due to missidentification the term became applied to the Suomi, a different but related people. The name is very simply "Mark of the Finns". This can be seen in various sources.

  • @emiliangioanta8475
    @emiliangioanta8475 Před 11 měsíci

    Hello. I like very much your historycal movies. Can you translate into roumanian please? Have a nice day.

  • @Emanon...
    @Emanon... Před 11 měsíci

    Where's Norsex? West Anglia? Southumbria?

  • @Nastyswimmer
    @Nastyswimmer Před 10 měsíci

    2:20 - within a MATTER of decades. Ditto at 2:36

  • @asiblingproduction
    @asiblingproduction Před rokem +2

    England could’ve been named Sexland. SMH missed opportunities.

  • @Emanon...
    @Emanon... Před 11 měsíci +1

    Uhtred, sword of Uhtred

  • @bryanfloyd1152
    @bryanfloyd1152 Před rokem +1

    AD not ce

  • @digge2210
    @digge2210 Před rokem

    Mom can we buy Westeros®?
    We already got one
    Westeros at home:

  • @johnfisher247
    @johnfisher247 Před rokem +3

    Please use BC and AD....not the cancel culture method.

    • @funky__cracky8369
      @funky__cracky8369 Před rokem

      Cancel culture?

    • @ZestySea
      @ZestySea Před 11 měsíci +1

      Gawd - the time of Christ’s birth and death is not known - only estimated. Then there is debate as whether he existed at all. Given the number of similar stories well before that era, this is possible. Then, you are assuming that Christianity is relevant to everyone - which it isn’t.

  • @scottscottsdale7868
    @scottscottsdale7868 Před 5 dny

    The spread of Christianity is interesting on this island nation. Another large island nation is Madagascar. There was a queen around 1850 or so who was given the name of Bloody. She killed the missionaries from England because she was concerned they would try to take over the country. She was right. Of course it is important to note my wife is a descendent of the monarchy in Madagagascar.

  • @megapangolin1093
    @megapangolin1093 Před rokem

    Interestingly, Kent was the first Kingdom to submit to Christianity, and Sussex, next door, would be the last. Good holdout by Sussex. Interesting video.

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem

      That's a fascinating story in and of itself. The Sussex Rapes (subdivisions of Sussex were called that!) were rather isolated, the geography ensures that somewhat. Also, for some reason or another the Sussex kings were simply slow to adopt the faith, so building churches was delayed.
      But really, "Susssex Rapes". Damn. What a quirk of English😅

  • @landsea7332
    @landsea7332 Před rokem +4

    1:13 Its the late 5th century CE ??? If you are discussing Western Culture , that should be AD .
    Especially since the Anglo Saxons became Catholics by the time of Alfred the Great .
    .

    • @calum5975
      @calum5975 Před rokem

      but we as modern secular historians choose to use CE. It's purely up to you. If you use AD or CE, that's your choice.

    • @MattiavonSigmund
      @MattiavonSigmund Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@calum5975 Secularism is wrong.