Pumped up kicks 1066 A.D Cover in Old English (Anglo Saxon tongue) Bardcore/Medieval style

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2020
  • "For even in the 11th century, the 60's were turbulent times"
    Original song by ‪@FosterThePeople‬ : • Foster The People - Pu...
    Consider supporting the channel, I know what I do ain't much but its honest work ❤ : www.patreon.com/the_miracle_a...
    Wanna follow and support me?
    open.spotify.com/artist/4y9XM...
    / the-miracle-aligner
    paypal.me/jakholethaisii?coun...
    / the_miracle_aligner
    Soooo a lot you asked for this, I am super stoked to have actually finished it too XD, Ok So I wanted to make this my 10k sub special but by the time I finished making this I'm getting close to 20k, really wanted to thank all of you for the love and support guys, this is me thanking ya'll in advance for the 20k, it has been so unreal.
    As always, Big thanks to @Cornelius Link for creating this masterpiece of an instrumental :
    • Foster The People - Pu...
    Also, a big shout out to AB (@ABAlphaBeta) who helped me with the translations and phonetic training with the making of this video, If ya'll like good and informative historical content please go and check out his channel, It's quite amazing :
    / @abalphabeta
    For anyone interested, here are the lyrics :)
    Hroþa hæfþ cwice hand
    Lóciende ymbe rúm, nile tellan þé his ræd
    Hé hæfþ smocapípan fulne, hómde út múþe, biþ án wilde cniht
    Hé fand Írisc-worht bogan
    On hises fæder ciste diernan on arce þinga,
    Ic ne gíet cnáwe hwæt
    hé is cumende for þé, hé is cumende for þé ġéa
    Eall þá óþer cild mid findġum soccum
    Sċulon betera rinnen fram minum earhum
    Eall þá óþer cild mid findġum soccum
    Sċulon betera rinnen, cwicra þon mín boga
    Eall þá óþer cild mid findġum soccum
    Sċulon betera rinnen fram minum earhum
    Eall þá óþer cild mid findġum soccum
    Sċulon betera rinnen, cwicra þonne mín boga
    Ætta wyrcþ lange dæġe
    Hé is cumende hám late, hé is cumende hám late
    And hé is bringende mé wundor-ġife
    For þenung is on cyċenan baþod on íse
    Ic béo wæht for lange hwíle
    Ġéa sliht mínes handa biþ nú án cwic-plyced streng
    Handliġe mid mínre pípan
    And secge þín hǽr is on fýre, þú móst hafian losod þín witt, ġéa
    #pumpedupkicks #medieval #bardcore #oldenglish #anglosaxons
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 8K

  • @duck-headedllama9991
    @duck-headedllama9991 Před 3 lety +16410

    In year 3066, people won't have to remake music to imagine how it would have sounded like. They'd have a millennium of songs stored on the Internet.
    And the worst part is that in year 5066 this comment will be seen as old as we see the old Egyptian culture.
    The concept of time is certainly shocking and it gives me goosebumps.

    • @timothycook4782
      @timothycook4782 Před 3 lety +1177

      I hope the youtube archive survives a long time. Eventually, in a few thousand years, people will maybe even find these comments again.

    • @John-tc9gp
      @John-tc9gp Před 3 lety +635

      No reason to assume 'the internet' will do a good job of preserving anything in the long run

    • @GentlemanBystander
      @GentlemanBystander Před 3 lety +260

      >thinking anything digital will survive the next bolide event or the Yellowstone Super-Caldera cooking-off.

    • @Noidonteatbabiesstopasking
      @Noidonteatbabiesstopasking Před 3 lety +388

      The internet will be both a blessing and a nightmare for historians. I can't think how they'll be able to sort through all that information

    • @John-tc9gp
      @John-tc9gp Před 3 lety +444

      @@Noidonteatbabiesstopasking To illustrate just how poor the internet is as a permanent archive, try to find more than a handful of websites you can still browse in their 1998 form. Good luck

  • @yeetusthemfetus1436
    @yeetusthemfetus1436 Před 3 lety +7378

    "what type of music do you like?"
    "60's music"
    "1960's?"
    "1060"

  • @apache1434
    @apache1434 Před 4 lety +13593

    When the Anglosaxon kid reaches for his scabbard during "Norman French" class.

    • @ElGaymer2001
      @ElGaymer2001 Před 4 lety +159

      This guy should keep making videos like this!

    • @markoVTX
      @markoVTX Před 3 lety +27

      Superb 👍

    • @NyalBurns
      @NyalBurns Před 3 lety +45

      You mean ‘the English kid’

    • @robertswitzer990
      @robertswitzer990 Před 3 lety +34

      Nyal No, he means the britons.

    • @NyalBurns
      @NyalBurns Před 3 lety +40

      Robert Switzer: Not everyone from Britain is Anglo-Saxon. That is why I said English.

  • @StuffyMc
    @StuffyMc Před 2 lety +6672

    Not only did you sing it in Old English but you altered the lyrics to be more period appropriate and still made it all fit. Outstanding.

    • @brantdanger
      @brantdanger Před 2 lety +62

      Yep, that was the cool part.

    • @gryffin638
      @gryffin638 Před 2 lety +179

      Also I think there just was not a word for “gun” yet so he had to.

    • @AutoReport1
      @AutoReport1 Před 2 lety +72

      Except for the smoking pipe. Tobacco and pipes came from the Americas in the 15 th and 16 th centuries.

    • @AutoReport1
      @AutoReport1 Před 2 lety

      @@commentor369chelsea4 not with a pipe. Cannabis seems to have been steamed, opium ingested. It was obvious to everyone that smoke is always bad for you.

    • @LittleV179
      @LittleV179 Před 2 lety +129

      @@AutoReport1 we had other plants such as mugwort aka sailors tobacco before then and other plants mostly smoked in ritual fashion. Clay pipes have been found from this period.

  • @richytheking1315
    @richytheking1315 Před 2 lety +2210

    How does the recording still sound so good after 1000 years? Truly amazing.

    • @stephenroutley1376
      @stephenroutley1376 Před rokem +149

      This sounds like the remastered version from the 1116 50th anniversary release.

    • @togarnis8096
      @togarnis8096 Před rokem +108

      @@stephenroutley1376 You're both wrong.
      The reason it sounds so good is clearly because its been remastered by Renaissance Italians.
      This tune was probably utter trash before the 15th Century.

    • @flyingsalmons934
      @flyingsalmons934 Před rokem +46

      @@togarnis8096 this is actually from my inns local bard in lublin your all wrong. he said god told him it and that means its objectively correct

    • @johndoherty487
      @johndoherty487 Před rokem +8

      957 year's!

    • @Panhandlecheese
      @Panhandlecheese Před rokem +22

      @@togarnis8096 You're Both and both wrong, it's the French revolution Remaster by the Jacobins.

  • @bobodenkirk9086
    @bobodenkirk9086 Před 3 lety +13891

    “We live in a monarchy.”
    - The Jester

    • @spikethedragon341
      @spikethedragon341 Před 3 lety +648

      A *Norman* foreign monarchy! Saxons will rise in Rebellion once more!!!

    • @eriXD_1510
      @eriXD_1510 Před 3 lety +138

      I got that reference

    • @RNB_lovr
      @RNB_lovr Před 3 lety +72

      I'm dead😂

    • @bobodenkirk9086
      @bobodenkirk9086 Před 3 lety +487

      “Knock knock.”
      “Who’s there?”
      “It’s the town guard. Your heir, he contracted the Black Death. He’s dead.”

    • @cheatcharoninc172
      @cheatcharoninc172 Před 3 lety +24

      Bruh

  • @ira1420
    @ira1420 Před 4 lety +7445

    All the French kids gangsta until the silent English kid shows up with a long boga

    • @andersyu4464
      @andersyu4464 Před 3 lety +313

      *langa boga

    • @gremlinlad3671
      @gremlinlad3671 Před 3 lety +60

      can’t tell if you’re talking about european history or the classic french-english rivalry in french/english immersion schools

    • @94josema
      @94josema Před 3 lety +14

      What is a long boga?

    • @justinfleming675
      @justinfleming675 Před 3 lety +77

      @@94josema long bow. In the video it shows boga (bo-hah) means bow

    • @akhsinilhami2418
      @akhsinilhami2418 Před 3 lety +48

      Ooga boga

  • @shmood3000
    @shmood3000 Před rokem +197

    “Baldric, thou art a good man: come not hither to-morrow.”
    “Bringst you ill tidings?”
    (He does not speak.)

  • @BenjaminISmith
    @BenjaminISmith Před 9 měsíci +143

    English, German, French, Spanish, Dutch, and Norwegian speakers: "hey, I recognize that language!"

    • @yomiolokodana
      @yomiolokodana Před 4 měsíci +2

      Perhaps exclude English speakers...

    • @stevendorset6319
      @stevendorset6319 Před 2 měsíci +2

      hey ... it is just Anglo Saxon.

    • @MoolsDogTwoOfficial
      @MoolsDogTwoOfficial Před 2 měsíci +12

      @@yomiolokodanaActually, a quite a lot of words and sentences are recognisable to me.

    • @yomiolokodana
      @yomiolokodana Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@MoolsDogTwoOfficial I could understand quite a bit too, and it was like I got hit by some intelligiblity, but then it decided to switch back to fake sea German

    • @scottwallace5239
      @scottwallace5239 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Tbf i only think the English, german,dutch and norweigan kids would understand anything, this language was before the french got involved with

  • @232mumboy
    @232mumboy Před 4 lety +3653

    Ælfred: hand me the aux cord
    Me: you better not play trash
    Ælfred:

    • @newguy90
      @newguy90 Před 4 lety +238

      Ælfred: Gifu mec þine auxcordne.
      Mec: Ne þu whilst ne plegian scitte.
      Ælfred:

    • @theflerffyburr7919
      @theflerffyburr7919 Před 3 lety +17

      Æ is pronounced like "eye" so thats Eyelfred

    • @Kromiball
      @Kromiball Před 3 lety +54

      @@theflerffyburr7919 No, It isn't /ai/ It's pronounced like the a in “cat”; /kæt/

    • @TehAlmightyTaco
      @TehAlmightyTaco Před 3 lety +5

      @@newguy90 how do you access those extra characters? like the "th" one?

    • @user-hk8yp7cw1v
      @user-hk8yp7cw1v Před 3 lety +11

      @@TehAlmightyTaco Heisannan, lítinn nýjankømr;
      Hefir þú herjaðir með þeir stórir drengirnir fyrr?

  • @franciscodetonne4797
    @franciscodetonne4797 Před 4 lety +3311

    The dedication is as surreal as casually hearing 11th English in the 21st century.
    Amazing.

    • @gryphon0468
      @gryphon0468 Před 4 lety +111

      It's actually much older, more like 6th century.

    • @georgiod.3555
      @georgiod.3555 Před 4 lety +41

      @@gryphon0468 Yeah Obviously...the roman-latin vibes are distinguished in the language

    • @Fakshat1212
      @Fakshat1212 Před 4 lety +39

      @@gryphon0468 nah old English didn't change into middle English until the mid 12th century.

    • @Fakshat1212
      @Fakshat1212 Před 4 lety +3

      @@gryphon0468 so the guys correct

    • @flamingpi2245
      @flamingpi2245 Před 4 lety +35

      Georgio D.
      Actually the interaction with Latin derived Romance languages was what separated this language from middle and new English, this language definitely has a more Germanic sound

  • @ryhol5417
    @ryhol5417 Před 2 lety +674

    Watching this live was so sick! The bonfires were numerous. Mead was priced scandalously high

    • @TheSoup87
      @TheSoup87 Před rokem +40

      Fr that mead was good tho

    • @100megatonYT
      @100megatonYT Před rokem +43

      @@TheSoup87 fr totally worth the shillings

    • @stephenroutley1376
      @stephenroutley1376 Před rokem +37

      I contracted buboes in ye moshe pitt, but by gads it was weruth ite.

    • @kaydwessie296
      @kaydwessie296 Před rokem +19

      I quite enjoyed watching the local harlots act debaucherous after eating those mushrooms

    • @prezentoappr1171
      @prezentoappr1171 Před 6 měsíci +1

      lmao@@100megatonYT

  • @dogwithheadphones
    @dogwithheadphones Před rokem +70

    Anglo-Saxon soldier here, I remember just before the Battle of Hastings, we started singing this to hype ourselves up for the impending battle tru story

    • @TheSoup87
      @TheSoup87 Před rokem +4

      I was there, my Anglo Saxon friend

    • @kindadumb916
      @kindadumb916 Před rokem +6

      I can confirm, i was the norman

    • @amerAsterix
      @amerAsterix Před 3 dny

      Yes...I imagine you singing and drinking and being happy

  • @ludwigvanbeethoven4971
    @ludwigvanbeethoven4971 Před 3 lety +8994

    Only the 1000’s kids will remember

    • @thejudomasta7300
      @thejudomasta7300 Před 3 lety +112

      Ludwig van Beethoven *duel of the fates starts to play*

    • @clearskysqd.2145
      @clearskysqd.2145 Před 3 lety +62

      1060's

    • @ye670
      @ye670 Před 3 lety +93

      Yooo i rlly fuck with ur music why no more concerts?

    • @flupsdarups3897
      @flupsdarups3897 Před 3 lety +30

      hi ludwig! im a big fan !

    • @arelcrest5048
      @arelcrest5048 Před 3 lety +5

      Omg!! Yes. Good, we‘re vampires and other demons now. Ah!

  • @pandito46
    @pandito46 Před 4 lety +2516

    Cornelius_link: *makes medieval Pumped Up kicks*
    the_miracle_aligner: I recon I can sing those historicaly accurate lyrics that are in the comments of that video
    Hildegard Von Bingen: Grabeth mine beer *sings with more accurate lyrics*
    the_miracle_aligner: *clears throat in Anglo Saxon* Heald mîn ealu

    • @martyjean
      @martyjean Před 4 lety +206

      Watching this meme evolve is amazing. Your comment is the cherry on top of this sundae.

    • @SimplyDuker
      @SimplyDuker Před 4 lety +42

      @@martyjean The meme evolved by using the TARDIS.

    • @kiryuchan137
      @kiryuchan137 Před 4 lety +39

      I unliked this comment just to like it again. Liking this comment once doesn't feel enough.

    • @kurtisburtis
      @kurtisburtis Před 4 lety +22

      And for the next pass, we need make the kennings needed to rewrite this in alliterative verse ...

    • @dustonpage1280
      @dustonpage1280 Před 4 lety +54

      Things are heating up in the Bardcore fandom

  • @loopyloo7371
    @loopyloo7371 Před rokem +459

    It's mad how 'all the other kids' and other words (he, is, and...) sound practically the same, it really caught me off guard and it's the fact that these words i've been speaking my entire life were also spoke by some random villager however many hundreds of years ago, possibly someone who lived or farmed on the very land my house is built on. How they have survived so many centuries is truly mind-boggling and it's got to be the deepest sense of heritage I've ever felt

    • @Kadukunahaluu
      @Kadukunahaluu Před rokem +86

      English: He, is, and
      German: Er, ist, und
      Dutch: Hij, is, en
      Afrikaans: Hy, is, en
      Conclusion: "is" is eternal

    • @urphakeandgey6308
      @urphakeandgey6308 Před 9 měsíci +26

      I sometimes think about this. I'm also mixed race, so to me it's even crazier to think that I'm somewhat detached from this heritage, yet I speak a language descended from it fluently.
      Some random villager in Old England who probably didn't even know of my other ethnicity's existence could potentially speak to me.

    • @AleisterCrowleyMagus
      @AleisterCrowleyMagus Před 9 měsíci +37

      I am a retired professor of medieval literature - Anglo-Saxon and Middle English. I loved reading Anglo-Saxon and seeing the students’ eyes light up at they hear for example “cwicra” and get that “quicker” and other words have come to them across 1500 years…this version of the song is awesome.

    • @sophjonge7410
      @sophjonge7410 Před 9 měsíci +14

      Also "hises fæder ciste" sounds practically the same to how we say his father's chest. That caught me off guard.

    • @HANKTHEDANKEST
      @HANKTHEDANKEST Před 8 měsíci +20

      If you and he both were VERY patient, you could very likely have a halting, slightly-confusing conversation with your Old English-speaking great(x) grandpa, as long as it was a simple one. Given a week together and you'd likely have the beginnings of a patois. So many similarities.

  • @garchamp9844
    @garchamp9844 Před 3 měsíci +16

    This song came up on my playlist while I was driving my elderly mother to an appointment. She thought that it was Jutlandic with a southern accent 😂

  • @olbradley
    @olbradley Před 4 lety +2543

    This should have been played at the Battle of Hastings.

  • @creepz6872
    @creepz6872 Před 3 lety +5684

    Some of you knights are alright. Don't come to Agincourt tomorrow

    • @HelixFlame33
      @HelixFlame33 Před 3 lety +198

      @Tony Shephard There was one school shooting in the USA (forgot which one), where the killer announced his deed a day before on 4chan, saying "Some of you guys are alright. Don't go to school tomorrow" or something along those lines.

    • @isaacbingham7241
      @isaacbingham7241 Před 3 lety +154

      @Tony Shephard The battle of Agincourt was an English victory over France during the Hundred Years War, it postdates the song's supposed settong by about 400 years.

    • @ziekziek5601
      @ziekziek5601 Před 3 lety +10

      @@HelixFlame33 wasn't that the virginia tech guy

    • @seanlux2214
      @seanlux2214 Před 3 lety +13

      @@HelixFlame33 It was the Umpqua Community College shooting, in Oregon.

    • @electrom.1703
      @electrom.1703 Před 3 lety +2

      Sean Lux wrong

  • @Cephalopod51
    @Cephalopod51 Před 8 měsíci +108

    As someone who studied some Old English, read notable Old English poems in translation, and am the son of a English major who studied Beowulf in the original Old English, it excites me to see someone translating modern days songs like "Pumped Up Kicks" into Old English and to make it so catchy. For a very old language, Old English is very beautiful to hear spoken and sung out loud. I can see Old English translations of a whole lot of modern songs being played in a Mead Hall in some alternate reality world where English speakers have devolved into living and speaking like the Danes and Saxons from the Anglo-Saxon Period, drinking mead, singing joyfully, and hoping that the grim and greedy Grendel doesn't devour them.

  • @aspenhancock1163
    @aspenhancock1163 Před 4 měsíci +19

    I appreciate that “all the other” has basically not changed in pronunciation at all 😂

  • @lial2143
    @lial2143 Před 4 lety +867

    When Grendel walks into the king's hall

  • @maxkaufmann833
    @maxkaufmann833 Před 4 lety +1822

    King Godwin upon defeating the Vikings and turning south to face the Normans, 1066.

    • @softenbysam
      @softenbysam Před 4 lety +56

      Tfw your lines break ranks to chase your routing enemy, sealing your fate

    • @johannesklohse8115
      @johannesklohse8115 Před 4 lety +15

      Didn't the word "Normans" came from the germanic word for "northmen", which is another name for Vikings?
      Aren't Normans just a mixture of Vikings and what later became French people? Would be kind of ironic consider their different reputations.

    • @billyswift1745
      @billyswift1745 Před 4 lety +1

      @@softenbysam Nice taste in profile picture

    • @thegrandcanyon9861
      @thegrandcanyon9861 Před 4 lety +25

      Johannes Klohse Yes and no. France gave the Vikings Normandy so they'd stop raiding them, but a lot of the culture remained french, most notably the language. (Modern English is a mix of Norman french and Anglo-saxon.) There were slight variations in a lot of things, but it's mostly french with Norse aspects, like a culture creole.

    • @johannesklohse8115
      @johannesklohse8115 Před 4 lety +2

      @@thegrandcanyon9861 Ah, good to know. Thanks for the update!

  • @rocky-xh8jw
    @rocky-xh8jw Před 6 měsíci +27

    legend has it the Saxons were singing this while the Normans were doing their feigned retreat

  • @robing1099
    @robing1099 Před rokem +166

    I'm half german half italian and have lived in the UK. Hearing this language sung so well just put me in a state of awe. Amazing stuff.

    • @memesnamaykonteksto4381
      @memesnamaykonteksto4381 Před 10 měsíci

      So you have British accent??

    • @robing1099
      @robing1099 Před 10 měsíci

      @@memesnamaykonteksto4381 I've picked it up fairly quickly to be honest, yeah

    • @MURDERPILLOW.
      @MURDERPILLOW. Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@robing1099yeah then t'welcum t'to count'try

    • @joeybanana3366
      @joeybanana3366 Před 8 měsíci +6

      ​@@robing1099 british accent, italian gesturing, and i assume german driving?
      what have we created

  • @Sa-fv5oo
    @Sa-fv5oo Před 4 lety +623

    i never thought id have to translate english into english.

    • @wet_camo_crocs_0041
      @wet_camo_crocs_0041 Před 3 lety +1

      😂

    • @patrickturner6878
      @patrickturner6878 Před 3 lety +3

      @Liam Nathan Abla That sure sounds like a "Germanism" to me. The "Vundergeeft" or "Wonder-Gift" lol

    • @poki580
      @poki580 Před 3 lety

      @@patrickturner6878 germanism in english?
      thats like caling something a slavism in polish

    • @ryan7864
      @ryan7864 Před 3 lety +1

      @@poki580 Modern English vocabulary is more Latin than German anymore. Nearly 60%

    • @mr.flibblessumeriantransla5417
      @mr.flibblessumeriantransla5417 Před 3 lety +7

      @Ryan In totality of words? Yes. But in reality the majority of words used by the average person on a daily basis, especially in casual conversation, are mostly Germanic roots. While Norman-French and Latin have greatly influenced English, most of the words which buff up those numbers are neologisms and technical terms.
      If you breakdown the etymology of casual speech you hear throughout the day, you’ll find that it’s mostly of Germanic English origin.

  • @k3ps00n7
    @k3ps00n7 Před 3 lety +4188

    Everyone is talking about the language but no one mentions that it's a pretty damn good song in this language

    • @BxLawy
      @BxLawy Před 3 lety +21

      Agreed

    • @brianspeck3568
      @brianspeck3568 Před 3 lety +131

      Way better than the original

    • @cas1652
      @cas1652 Před 3 lety +40

      @@brianspeck3568 ikr, can't get it out of my head

    • @stevefranks6541
      @stevefranks6541 Před 3 lety +40

      Greetings K3P00N, Since downloading I have become totally obsessed with this song. And the Old English is beautiful if not amazing. I found a review of the original song and its lyrics -- Foster the People's for the meaning. Can't stop playing Pumped Up Kicks - 1066AD. Help! :-)

    • @boyfriendwannabe1825
      @boyfriendwannabe1825 Před 3 lety +40

      @@brianspeck3568 What do you mean "than the original" ? Is this not the orignal?

  • @RTrades
    @RTrades Před rokem +104

    It's a damn shame that modern english doesn't have this rythm. When he signs
    "Cwicra than min boga"
    In my head it just comes out as
    "Quicker than my bow"
    If you listen to it for a while your ear will adjust to it and you'll get it.
    It sounds so harmonious I wish we maintained this.

    • @kollinwoolley
      @kollinwoolley Před 8 měsíci +2

      I truly wished we re-establish this dialect it's perfect in its own way.

    • @screwstatists7324
      @screwstatists7324 Před 8 měsíci +4

      One more reason to hate the French.
      Just kidding. We love the romance vocabulary, even if we can't use it

    • @kollinwoolley
      @kollinwoolley Před 7 měsíci +1

      Yea harmonic

    • @krakentoast
      @krakentoast Před 6 měsíci +1

      It sounds just like german

    • @taggymcshaggy6383
      @taggymcshaggy6383 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Its a language not a dialect. Scots has a lot more similarities to anglo-saxon/anglish
      Look into scots if you want a modern language similar to anglish
      ​@@kollinwoolley

  • @tzardnickolasthelitromanov
    @tzardnickolasthelitromanov Před 2 lety +240

    " _The invasion of William De Normandie and that of his Normans were perhaps one of the worst things that humanity has ever experienced, And the consequences of their actions have been most severe and dire for the human race as a whole_ "
    -translated from the last missive written by
    Cyning Hereweald Gudánwinnansune before the battle of Hastings.

    • @MalleusIudaeorum
      @MalleusIudaeorum Před 2 lety +13

      I heard he had a stylish moustache

    • @tzardnickolasthelitromanov
      @tzardnickolasthelitromanov Před 2 lety +12

      ​​​​@@MalleusIudaeorum He did alongside beard (atleast depicted in the old Later paintings done during the 1500-1700's). I also remember reading something (A *very, very* long time ago. Mind you) that the beard/mustache styles of the very very late 1700's and throughout the 1800's were somewhat loosely based/inspired off of those many paintings of him. (If I recall correctly here or I could just be, blatantly be wrong about this)

    • @Chelsea-wd4ec
      @Chelsea-wd4ec Před rokem +1

      Where did you find this?

    • @zackamor8043
      @zackamor8043 Před rokem +3

      Genghis Khan, hold my beer

    • @kindadumb916
      @kindadumb916 Před rokem +17

      I will never forgive William for robbing old English from me.

  • @alarmmclock4460
    @alarmmclock4460 Před 3 lety +1461

    I’d imagine that if this song was somehow played to people from 1,000 years ago, they’d think it was about a peasant uprising and the slaughtering of the royal youth.

    • @madamewoselle
      @madamewoselle Před 3 lety +80

      Still can be!!

    • @djwizzle42
      @djwizzle42 Před 3 lety +28

      Maybe it is about that. Lol

    • @101jir
      @101jir Před 3 lety +43

      I imagine a bunch of commoners singing this around a tavern and their lord* steps in.
      *edited from (if anyone is curious): overseer (idk what they would have been called) stumbles in.

    • @CarlosRios1
      @CarlosRios1 Před 3 lety +3

      @@101jir their lord

    • @101jir
      @101jir Před 3 lety

      @@CarlosRios1 thx

  • @joefalko3756
    @joefalko3756 Před 4 lety +2423

    God it’s incredible when you can make out what they’re saying. “All the other child” seems to have stayed the same, this is crazy

    • @germanicgems
      @germanicgems Před 4 lety +204

      Most of it is understandable. For example “He hæfþ smocapipen fulne” = “He haveth smokepipe full” (þ is equal to th)

    • @hippyjoe
      @hippyjoe Před 4 lety +98

      @colten bennion Eyup. English used to have Ash, thorn, and eth, Ææ, Þþ, and Ðð.

    • @ShenDoodles
      @ShenDoodles Před 4 lety +67

      This language is part of English's evolution.

    • @Abdega
      @Abdega Před 4 lety +53

      @@ShenDoodles Yes, but remember there was a huge change after the Norman Conquests

    • @evanreign9344
      @evanreign9344 Před 4 lety +92

      The most common words tend to be the slowest to change. Also why they're always full of irregular forms, they'll frequently keep the old regular form when a new regular form develops, which turns the old regular form irregular.

  • @nickkuiper32
    @nickkuiper32 Před 9 měsíci +13

    The fact that the lyrics changed "bullets" to "arrows" make this song great.

  • @alphaundpinsel2431
    @alphaundpinsel2431 Před rokem +54

    What's suprising is that the lyrics are still readable in modern English if you look hard enough.

  • @jodofe4879
    @jodofe4879 Před 4 lety +2858

    Spoiler: King Harold could not outrun William's arrow

    • @robertmacdonald6527
      @robertmacdonald6527 Před 4 lety +128

      Too soon

    • @j.clementec.m.1558
      @j.clementec.m.1558 Před 4 lety +43

      @@robertmacdonald6527 try in another millennia?

    • @yaz9292
      @yaz9292 Před 4 lety +22

      Robert MacDonald its been 900 years

    • @robertmacdonald6527
      @robertmacdonald6527 Před 4 lety +72

      @@j.clementec.m.1558 Maybe when we Saxons get our reparations from our Norman oppressors

    • @robno101
      @robno101 Před 4 lety +34

      "I used to be a king like you. Then I took an arrow to the eye"

  • @urthtvbyjess
    @urthtvbyjess Před 4 lety +796

    So I'm hiding from some guy in a monastery and he has a bow... He keeps singing this... What do I do?

    • @imperialofficer6185
      @imperialofficer6185 Před 4 lety +25

      Withdraw, alert the watch!

    • @urthtvbyjess
      @urthtvbyjess Před 4 lety +27

      @@slavonic8970 the thing is, he's not a monk, he's a quiet boy

    • @alexie832
      @alexie832 Před 4 lety +18

      Hide and stay silent in the privy, young squire

    • @elbentos7803
      @elbentos7803 Před 4 lety +13

      Put on your hauberk and pierce the vilain with your lance.

    • @countbathory4020
      @countbathory4020 Před 4 lety +11

      The Dank Meme Mastah 911? Sirrah, ‘tis the United Kingdom, wherein we alert 999!

  • @iancraigbintliff9738
    @iancraigbintliff9738 Před 11 měsíci +32

    This is so beautiful!!!!!
    Old English is the most beautiful language ever!!!

  • @BrieBoar
    @BrieBoar Před rokem +12

    Imagine going to a tavern and hearing this song play in the background as you find out that Harold II was shot in the eye in battle and William the Bastard is now William the Conqueror of England

  • @Jireninyourrecommendations
    @Jireninyourrecommendations Před 4 lety +765

    When the song's so good that you make a second version
    of it

  • @cyooldog3920
    @cyooldog3920 Před 3 lety +5693

    Why is old english so satisfying to listen to? Every word flows smoothly

    • @JorgeSchz2004
      @JorgeSchz2004 Před 3 lety +369

      Especially the part when it says
      _Sćulo'n betera rinnen_ 😍😍 0:45

    • @kokofan50
      @kokofan50 Před 3 lety +594

      Synthetic languages, that means languages with case endings, tend to have good flow.

    • @cyooldog3920
      @cyooldog3920 Před 3 lety +92

      @@kokofan50 what are some modern languages that are like that?

    • @kokofan50
      @kokofan50 Před 3 lety +432

      @@cyooldog3920 German still is, but it’s been simplified. French, Russian, Greek, Persian, Gaelic still are.

    • @kokofan50
      @kokofan50 Před 3 lety +57

      @@cyooldog3920 German still is, but it’s been simplified. French, Russian, Greek, Persian, Gaelic still are.

  • @cb7235
    @cb7235 Před rokem +17

    This way this flows so perfectly illustrates that English has changed in many ways, yet still also stays the same in other ways

  • @akila_melindeth
    @akila_melindeth Před rokem +13

    The longer you listen to this the more sense it makes. It's surprisingly easy to switch our brains to Old English

  • @Zoe-sh2hm
    @Zoe-sh2hm Před 3 lety +1175

    It’s interesting that the change in time period changes the meaning of the song. Medieval peasants wouldn’t have really mingled with wealthier people nearly as much as we take for granted, so this reads a lot more like the beginning of a peasant rebellion than a school shooting now.

    • @sophiaschier-hanson4163
      @sophiaschier-hanson4163 Před 3 lety +173

      I thought the same exact thing! It works even better because the English class system as we know it today largely evolved from ethnic tension between the indigenous Anglo-Saxon peasantry and their wealthy Norman occupiers in this very period. This kid isn't just trying to take out any old rich people, he's a freedom fighter making a futile heroic stand against the people who invaded his homeland. Which takes on an extra layer of sad, poignant irony considering the later history of the British Isles.

    • @avgvstvs7
      @avgvstvs7 Před 3 lety +15

      @@sophiaschier-hanson4163 Britain belongs to Welsh bretons

    • @avgvstvs7
      @avgvstvs7 Před 3 lety +3

      @Custard Drop its true tho

    • @patrickturner6878
      @patrickturner6878 Před 3 lety +13

      @@sophiaschier-hanson4163 This makes me think of that horrid novel "The Wake" by that crazy progressive Irish author. All the critics called it a literary achievement how he managed to mix Auld Anglish vocabulary with modern grammar to make a readable pseudo-text. Sure it read like old english kinda. But the critics completely ignored the fact that the story was completely satirical of the English and made them all look like ignorant backwoods hill people who were brought enlightenment by William the Bastard's sword. lol

    • @Noidonteatbabiesstopasking
      @Noidonteatbabiesstopasking Před 3 lety +5

      I like that. You've enhanced my experience

  • @zivcarmi3845
    @zivcarmi3845 Před 4 lety +321

    There are Old English epics like Beowulf and then there are the REAL Old English epics. This lands firmly in the latter category.

  • @whitworth5s248
    @whitworth5s248 Před rokem +27

    I've seen so many of these medieval covers done poorly that I had low expectations for this, but it's actually quite good. This goes right into my cursed music folder.

  • @Avantasia77
    @Avantasia77 Před rokem +64

    As a Dane, Its so fascinating and awesome to see the Norse/Danish Iikeness in Anglo Saxon. "Sculon betera rinnen" is so close to modern Danish "skulle bedre rende" although you wouldn't formulate it quite like that. And the old form of "coming" "cumende" that's so close to the Danish direct translatation of "coming" which is "kommende".

    • @vorpalchoppers
      @vorpalchoppers Před rokem +2

      Amazing

    • @leesh.py3
      @leesh.py3 Před rokem +7

      England was colonized by Danes, after all. The north of England was settled by Danish people and was known as Danelaw. Their language left its traces in England (and English).

    • @fabianauer1986
      @fabianauer1986 Před rokem +6

      It is also very close to German. With words like Boga (in German Bogen) it's really interesting how our languages ​​come together

    • @IR-xy3ij
      @IR-xy3ij Před rokem +6

      In German there's also besser, kommen and Rennen, which are cognates with old English. It's really funny that nowadays any continental/Norse Germanic language speaker can understand old English better than an English speaker, all thanks to the French.

    • @acidpunker1
      @acidpunker1 Před rokem +5

      All Germanic languages have a common root. Also the Anglo-Saxon tribes came not just from Germany but from Jutland and Frisia. It's not surprising at all that many words are shared.

  • @NHDOreBros
    @NHDOreBros Před 3 lety +3727

    It's interesting to see words that almost sound the same but are spelt entirely different, like arrow=earhum.

    • @AntonNidhoggr
      @AntonNidhoggr Před 3 lety +123

      Kinda, but sometimes such similarity may be deceiving. In Norse for example 'örum' is a pl. dative case of 'ör' = arrow. I wonder if it's the same for Old English because these words look suspiciously similar :-D

    • @user-zj6su6ry2k
      @user-zj6su6ry2k Před 3 lety +12

      @@AntonNidhoggr u didnt surfing unintentionally into english historia or anyway its big ibfluence as langfocus paul said I surf wiktio found out without further ado- there the a in ado is old norse infinitives

    • @wenqiweiabcd
      @wenqiweiabcd Před 3 lety +32

      @@AntonNidhoggr
      The spelling with the front vowel is modern Icelandic, not Old Norse. It comes from the same Germanic root as arrow, but it's not a loanword from English.

    • @LugaresYJuegosTM
      @LugaresYJuegosTM Před 3 lety +2

      czcams.com/video/St32aLCNMmQ/video.html

    • @kaaz1010
      @kaaz1010 Před 3 lety +13

      @@AntonNidhoggr in modern Norwegian, the word for arrow is interestingly completely disconnected from this.

  • @garolonlied
    @garolonlied Před 4 lety +661

    2010: XXIst Century English
    2020a: Elizabethan English
    2020b: Old English
    2021: Proto-Germanic
    2022: Indo-European

  • @PsychoticBear
    @PsychoticBear Před rokem +8

    I like how "all the other kids" sounds the same in both.

  • @jsprung8548
    @jsprung8548 Před 4 měsíci +2

    The accuracy of the language and accents on certain words/vowels is really incredible! This should have a billion likes lol

  • @austinjackson7103
    @austinjackson7103 Před 4 lety +535

    Medieval remixes are by far the best thing to come out of 2020

    • @ValeMareArt
      @ValeMareArt Před 3 lety +7

      Not that 2020 gave us many good things among which to choose

    • @TheCrusaderBin
      @TheCrusaderBin Před 3 lety +3

      At least we have that heh. Ironically, mortality rate is down by 20%, at least in my country, people are afraid of their own shadow lolz

    • @Rygir
      @Rygir Před 3 lety

      @@TheCrusaderBin Really? First time I've heard that regular mortality rate was lowered like that

    • @regiodeurse6513
      @regiodeurse6513 Před 3 lety

      ​@@Rygir child mortality ("sudden infant death syndrome") evidently dropped aswell in the first month of c word. Because parents postponed their infant's scheduled vaccinations because they refused to come to the centers where they give those afraid of catching Da vairous. Authorities were like "but... here it's safe... come get.. ur... aaaaaaah... Okay we open up everything.. And also c word doesnt affect children".. So Children dont need the comming Cvaccine? "well..."

    • @horrorTTX
      @horrorTTX Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, 2020 is such a dumpster fire that we have to go back 1000 years for decent content

  • @venomgrievousviii2323
    @venomgrievousviii2323 Před 3 lety +3761

    Theatre kids: Shakespearean English is the best English.
    Me, an intellectual: No, you’ve got it wrong it’s Anglo-Saxon.

    • @amadeobordiga8464
      @amadeobordiga8464 Před 3 lety +37

      Middle English is nice i think

    • @harryflashman3451
      @harryflashman3451 Před 3 lety +113

      @@amadeobordiga8464 smells too much like garlic to me

    • @Thinktank-rn6dm
      @Thinktank-rn6dm Před 3 lety +79

      @@harryflashman3451 fuckin frogs saying what letters we are and aren't allowed to use. bring back þe þorn

    • @onehellofaninvader
      @onehellofaninvader Před 3 lety +60

      @@amadeobordiga8464 Shakespeare didn't speak Middle English, it was early Modern Eng :)

    • @onehellofaninvader
      @onehellofaninvader Před 3 lety +12

      But Middle English is awesome.

  • @DracoInduperator
    @DracoInduperator Před rokem +30

    It's so interesting to hear how some words haven't really changed. The start of the chorus especially sounds like Modern English

  • @AllAboutTradingCardGames
    @AllAboutTradingCardGames Před 2 lety +24

    As a history teacher I will definately use this in my lessons about the medieval era! Thank you

    • @Cyclonixs
      @Cyclonixs Před 11 měsíci +5

      You know that the original song is about a school sh*oting

    • @DavisonVoices
      @DavisonVoices Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@Cyclonixslol

    • @zwilder1
      @zwilder1 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Cyclonixs no no of course its not

    • @IAMswayingwillow
      @IAMswayingwillow Před 3 měsíci

      Bagpipes don’t have a full range and have other instruments from old Yore That led them to fewer notes in a song then our techno versions of today. Also this version has a march driven drum beat to it or I could see it as the end of the day after dinner dancing rhythm we’re dancing over the poles or the hot rocks or a jig dance. I recall elect maple songs with this type of trend.

    • @IAMswayingwillow
      @IAMswayingwillow Před 3 měsíci

      May pole dance

  • @krealyesitisbeta5642
    @krealyesitisbeta5642 Před 4 lety +457

    *When you do a crusade, only to realize that your brother took over your kingdom while you were gone:*

    • @tofferooni4972
      @tofferooni4972 Před 4 lety +19

      *TIME FOR A SECOND CRUSADE*

    • @sheevpalpatine1105
      @sheevpalpatine1105 Před 4 lety +11

      1066 was about 30 years before the crusades but i see where you are going

    • @johnohara4788
      @johnohara4788 Před 4 lety +15

      *Angry Richard the Lionheart noises*

    • @minerat27
      @minerat27 Před 4 lety +5

      The English kings during the crusades would have spoken French

    • @vit968
      @vit968 Před 4 lety +7

      *Of course your brother took over your kingdom because you left all your duties to go off Deus-Vulting 3,000 miles away while using your kingdom as a personal piggy bank to fund your Lawrence of Arabia Adventures, only to get jailed and forcing your mum to crowdfund your release.*
      *#KingJohnDidNothingWrong*

  • @privateryan5671
    @privateryan5671 Před 4 lety +307

    Love em or hate em, he's spitting facts.

  • @chukkinladd
    @chukkinladd Před rokem +12

    I do love hearing the voice of my ancestors so beautifully recreated.

  • @travisbaldridge23
    @travisbaldridge23 Před rokem +45

    Unironically learning these lyrics so every time this song plays somewhere I can sing in full Anglo Saxon to the confused dismay of all the other shoppers in Walmart.

    • @Nyctophora
      @Nyctophora Před rokem +7

      Sing it loud and proud brother!

    • @kollinwoolley
      @kollinwoolley Před 8 měsíci +4

      I think this language was one of the most fascinating, and if not a key part to today's society. And without it, I'm sure a lot of education/knowledge being discovered today wouldn't be here without Anglo saxons. Also I wished English was still called " Ænglisc "

    • @themedivaltrainerdawson4951
      @themedivaltrainerdawson4951 Před 6 měsíci +4

      I do the same and quietly sing this version to myself and get weird looks

  • @marcelogoncalvesdocouto5044
    @marcelogoncalvesdocouto5044 Před 3 lety +220

    The modern version talks about a school shooting, but the medieval version seems to be talking about a rebellion against the nobility.

    • @iordanneDiogeneslucas
      @iordanneDiogeneslucas Před 3 lety +34

      Well, school shootings tend to be carried out by social outcasts and the 'cool' kids they kill would be the social nobility

  • @oddtail_tiger
    @oddtail_tiger Před 4 lety +2918

    OK, so Medieval-style covers of popular songs are fun even when they are just instrumental. But my eye kinda starts twitching when people put lyrics to those, and those are just modern English with a few "thee" and "thou" here and there (and usually used incorrectly), add a few "-eth" are thrown in for good measure, and that's it. It's just a pet peeve of mine.
    Then there's the ones that actually try and make the stylization somewhat believable, with lyrics that are a passable approximation of Chaucer's English, or at least an early modern English vibe. Those are fun, because the lyricist puts in some damn effort.
    And then there's this. This is impressive. This is gold. It's in a league of its own =D

    • @LMvdB02
      @LMvdB02 Před 3 lety +25

      But smoking a pipe in medieval europe? That's not very accurate.

    • @sherisheepsworth8432
      @sherisheepsworth8432 Před 3 lety +51

      @@LMvdB02 True, but this is just a translation, I'm sure there are plenty of songs that are accurate from 450 to 1154 AD

    • @arnantphongsatha7906
      @arnantphongsatha7906 Před 3 lety +27

      @@LMvdB02 could have been hashish

    • @user-hk8yp7cw1v
      @user-hk8yp7cw1v Před 3 lety +7

      @@LMvdB02 mostly hashish

    • @DrDeathpwnsu
      @DrDeathpwnsu Před 3 lety +25

      Pipe or not you could send these guys back in a time machine and I'm pretty sure the people back then would jam out to this tune.

  • @roku3216
    @roku3216 Před rokem +15

    Anglo Saxon is surprisingly beautiful. It helps, that the singer is also very artful.

  • @naiastra
    @naiastra Před rokem +4

    what I love is that "all the other kids" basically sounds exactly the same now as it did a thousand years ago

  • @comradeviper4054
    @comradeviper4054 Před 3 lety +1368

    The French at Agincourt: "let's crush theese English peasants!"
    The English:

    • @Crusader1089
      @Crusader1089 Před 3 lety +16

      "Écrasons ces paysans anglais"

    • @jevongraham5223
      @jevongraham5223 Před 3 lety +25

      The English that was spoken by the English longbowmen and other soldiers at agincourt would have been a bit different to the English in the song, as the Norman invasion had happened before and English was simplified and given lots of French vocabulary

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday Před 3 lety +7

      i Preza Nah. At this point, there we’re definitely some speakers who spoke Old English dialects left, but most were probably really old (as old as you can get back then).

    • @jevongraham5223
      @jevongraham5223 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Odinsday the fact that people didn't get as old back means that older dialects would have died even earlier. It was close to old English sure, but it was still early middle English, which is not what this song is in

    • @Noidonteatbabiesstopasking
      @Noidonteatbabiesstopasking Před 3 lety

      Ooh nice

  • @benjamindover2601
    @benjamindover2601 Před 4 lety +9140

    Old English is basically spicy German.

    • @Eastcyning
      @Eastcyning Před 3 lety +1212

      Anglo-Saxons were basically sea Germans, so it checks out

    • @uitham
      @uitham Před 3 lety +787

      It actually sounds a lot more like dutch. I can actually understand it somewhat

    • @johannbrucker-sladkovic2444
      @johannbrucker-sladkovic2444 Před 3 lety +537

      @@uitham I don't want to trigger but dutch is part of the low german language family so he is right, it's actually northsea german. I will never understand why those language families are called (... ) - german, since german(the german language is only a central-german language

    • @willemvanstaden3292
      @willemvanstaden3292 Před 3 lety +88

      @@uitham jy bedoel sekerlik "Neder-Duits"? Want Afrikaans (wat ek hier tik) is baie soos Neder-Duits en is afkomstig daarvan. Dalk kom Hollands ook van Neder-Duits af?

    • @user-hk8yp7cw1v
      @user-hk8yp7cw1v Před 3 lety +186

      @@Stahlross I speak Norwegian and Old Norse and I also understand like 40% of the whole sentence.

  • @Memesauce67
    @Memesauce67 Před rokem +4

    Ive loved this song for over a year now and find it genuinely beautiful

  • @irenedeneb6188
    @irenedeneb6188 Před 2 lety +3

    These wonderful pieces really beautifully convey the continuity between old and new music.

  • @timefortjer6705
    @timefortjer6705 Před 4 lety +1167

    I was thinking with the first video "this isn't *really* how they spoke in the Middle Ages"
    I figured that sense no one would understand it, there would never be a version made in actual Old English, and I would have to live with the Shakespearean. I have never been happier to be proven wrong! The sheer linguistic craftsmanship that went into this video is astonishing. As someone with a deep appreciation for linguistics, I find this video absolutely inspiring. Thank you so much for making it!

    • @TheRtRevKaiser
      @TheRtRevKaiser Před 4 lety +44

      I'd like to hear some of these songs in Middle English as well. The 1300s (around the time of Chaucer) still puts you in the (Late) Medieval period, but it's more intelligible for a Modern English speaker.

    • @CircusFoxxo
      @CircusFoxxo Před 4 lety +28

      @@TheRtRevKaiser I spent approximately thirty hours of research translating a character's dialogue in a single paragraph into true Old English, and wow did I want to die

    • @MikhalisBramouell
      @MikhalisBramouell Před 4 lety +2

      @@CircusFoxxo Literal translation is a lot of work if you are not completely fluent in both languages/dialects...

    • @markuskarl5776
      @markuskarl5776 Před 3 lety +9

      In Germany we have "medieval rock bands" for decades :-) like In Extremo, Schandmaul, Saltatio Mortis or Faun. But it is nice to see this bardcore trend here on youtube.

    • @CentauroVici
      @CentauroVici Před 3 lety +10

      Shakespeare didn’t speak Anglo Saxon.

  • @coolground
    @coolground Před 4 lety +246

    This is actually my first time hearing Anglo-Saxon. I gotta admit, it made me wanna learn it

    • @mattreynolds3178
      @mattreynolds3178 Před 4 lety +26

      my first time hearing Anglo-Saxon was on the ABAlphaBeta video "Evolution of Music" and, yeah, same. I wanted to learn it. I purchased the book Beowulf to help. Good book!

    • @hippyjoe
      @hippyjoe Před 4 lety +14

      Look up on youtube "Leornonde eald Ænglisc"

    • @wilsonsticks
      @wilsonsticks Před 4 lety +21

      Simon Roper has a lot of Old English videos for learning how it works and its history

    • @Fortigurn
      @Fortigurn Před 4 lety +10

      @@wilsonsticks Simon Roper is ace. I love the way he speaks Old English so fluently. Like a native!

    • @iordanneDiogeneslucas
      @iordanneDiogeneslucas Před 3 lety +2

      i got into bardcore then found this.
      Now im waiting for my copy of 'complete old english: a comprehensive guide to reading and understanding old english, with original texts'
      so excited

  • @Dat_Boy_Dale_Gribble
    @Dat_Boy_Dale_Gribble Před 2 lety +8

    The fact that the Rohirrim from LOTR speak Anglo Saxon just makes this better

  • @iancraigbintliff9738
    @iancraigbintliff9738 Před 11 měsíci +2

    This just might be my favorite rendition of a song I ever heard.
    It just does something magical to me. I really love to hear the language of my forefathers in such a beautiful demonstration.
    Thank you 🙏 so much for creating this record!!!!

  • @samuelbousfield4342
    @samuelbousfield4342 Před 3 lety +1876

    When some kid says English isn't a Germanic language.

    • @tesstickle7267
      @tesstickle7267 Před 3 lety +52

      It's a language of all sorts lol lots of Latin in it

    • @samuelbousfield4342
      @samuelbousfield4342 Před 3 lety +204

      @@tesstickle7267 pure vocabulary it's grammar it's sentence structure it's base is Germanic and fairly obviously at that.

    • @iordanneDiogeneslucas
      @iordanneDiogeneslucas Před 3 lety +25

      @@tesstickle7267 i was under the impression that latin is a bastardisation of greek and romanian

    • @bleddynwolf8463
      @bleddynwolf8463 Před 3 lety +123

      @@iordanneDiogeneslucas you have provoked a gang war.

    • @fionn5325
      @fionn5325 Před 3 lety +10

      @How winnie the pooh became emperor of china username checks out
      (His name used to be “I am a dumbass” or something)

  • @SgtZaqq
    @SgtZaqq Před 3 lety +393

    As someone who studied the history of English, I gotta say the pronunciation is totally on point.

    • @the_miracle_aligner
      @the_miracle_aligner  Před 3 lety +41

      TYYYY 😁❤

    • @HasufelyArod
      @HasufelyArod Před 3 lety +2

      Is the letter C pronounced as CH or K?
      It's like Latin : I prefer classical pronunciation over ecclesiastical

    • @Zenn3k
      @Zenn3k Před 3 lety +4

      I find it interesting how much of it sounds similar enough to modern English to get some idea of what he is saying without the translation. Cild...still sounds like Child, for example.

    • @Raziberry
      @Raziberry Před 3 lety

      How are we sure of the pronunciation without audio recordings from back then?

    • @SgtZaqq
      @SgtZaqq Před 3 lety +1

      @@Raziberry linguists can reconstruct the original pronunciation by analyzing ancient documents, comparing modern English with other languages, etc. It's not 100% precise, but is a decent guess.

  • @mj2061
    @mj2061 Před 6 měsíci +5

    It's amazing that foster the people knew about this song and were able to do a cover in modern English

  • @johnronald9767
    @johnronald9767 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Why is this actually so good, people are just so creative sometimes

  • @bigman7856
    @bigman7856 Před 3 lety +2935

    We need to revive old English . Such a beautiful language.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před 3 lety +77

      @Jerome Wilshank - Bernadette Banner, who publishes videos on historical clothing, took Old English in college in England, I believe.

    • @AdityaDeo-cg6eu
      @AdityaDeo-cg6eu Před 3 lety +8

      Revive as in ?

    • @bigman7856
      @bigman7856 Před 3 lety +59

      Aditya Dev bring it back lmao what you think I mean?

    • @AdityaDeo-cg6eu
      @AdityaDeo-cg6eu Před 3 lety +23

      @@bigman7856 and start using it all of a sudden ?

    • @bigman7856
      @bigman7856 Před 3 lety +52

      Aditya Dev I’m not being serious, but it be interesting if that happened. I mean, some Chinese still speak mandarin which is pretty ancient.

  • @Godofdeath805
    @Godofdeath805 Před 3 lety +578

    When the quite kid says don’t come to the monastery tomorrow

    • @Pteromandias
      @Pteromandias Před 3 lety +11

      I'm pretty sure everyone's quiet in the monastery. Unless you're referring to the scratching of the quill pens on the parchment.

    • @Shadyganleymawn
      @Shadyganleymawn Před 3 lety +47

      When the Pagan kid starts casting runes

    • @henloampepe
      @henloampepe Před 3 lety +14

      Some of you Anglo's are cool, don't come to the monastery tomorrow...

  • @Random0890_
    @Random0890_ Před 6 měsíci +2

    i still thank this channel for igniting my interest in historical linguistics

  • @dilophosauruschannel9525
    @dilophosauruschannel9525 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Really cool hearing old English in the modern day and hearing some words that are similar in pronunciation and meaning

  • @scponyoutube313
    @scponyoutube313 Před 3 lety +298

    When you help the Anglo Saxon kid pick up his books in literacy class and he says “ðrôwian nâ spryttan ûtâðýdan leornungscôl neoðanweard mônandæg”

    • @mimisezlol
      @mimisezlol Před 3 lety +35

      I can't believe that in Anglo Saxons called School "Learning School", essentially

    • @captainbarbossa5325
      @captainbarbossa5325 Před 3 lety +21

      Ngl being able to get that sentence in our ancient tongue kinda got me diamonds

    • @kets4443
      @kets4443 Před 3 lety +9

      @@mimisezlol People must've actually learnt in school back then

    • @water9892
      @water9892 Před 3 lety +2

      Translation please

    • @captainbarbossa5325
      @captainbarbossa5325 Před 3 lety +5

      water “dank OC Anglo Saxon roblox maymays that’ll make your gran touch her yamyams “

  • @kenzo2909
    @kenzo2909 Před rokem +8

    0:50 "Run from my arrow"
    XD He change it from bullet to arrow lol!

  • @alimatorstudios2692
    @alimatorstudios2692 Před 3 měsíci +8

    My English teacher was showing us old English and accidentally played this

  • @jaimefox7762
    @jaimefox7762 Před 3 lety +1430

    Old English sounds like a mix of English, Latin, and German.

    • @Cneq
      @Cneq Před 3 lety +149

      holds the best sounds of all three, incredible stuff

    • @Cnut_the_grape
      @Cnut_the_grape Před 3 lety +178

      It kinda is

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 Před 3 lety +170

      Descended from the same language group German did, so not surprising.

    • @kenny5577
      @kenny5577 Před 3 lety +9

      No it’s not

    • @huehuecoyotl2
      @huehuecoyotl2 Před 3 lety +150

      Closest modern language to Old English in words and structure would be Frisian or Dutch. Old English is English before the influence of Latin and Norman French.

  • @touch_of_cobalt
    @touch_of_cobalt Před 4 lety +977

    As a historian:
    Historian: I prefer the medieval version of "Pumped Up Kicks"
    *Plays in modern English*
    Historian: I said the *medieval* version.
    *Plays in Anglo-Saxon*
    Historian: Perfection.

  • @davidfreja7162
    @davidfreja7162 Před 3 měsíci

    Beautiful, love to hear old English sung or spoken. Excellent job.

  • @marcinstrogg
    @marcinstrogg Před 8 měsíci +4

    Great cover, always on my playlist.

  • @harrietlyall1991
    @harrietlyall1991 Před 4 lety +714

    This works really well as an Anglo Saxon poem, it’s got the same kind of zany, dead-pan humour you find in Piers Plowman and all those A.S. riddles. Over the top bragging was perfectly acceptable in a poem. Even the stuff about the smoking pipe and the dinner laid on ice would have been seen as some sort of metaphorical allusion to his smoking rage and his dad being an ice-giant or something. The kids in fancy shoes could just mean spoilt, soft kids. I can really imagine a hall full of drunken churls all sitting round banging their ale-horns in time to the chorus 👏🏼✊🏼 The illustration is very well done, it looks like it’s from the Bayeux Tapestry.

    • @tzCombot
      @tzCombot Před 3 lety +27

      "The kids in fancy shoes could just mean spoilt, soft kids."
      Wait... So it's something else than that? I thought of this one since first hearing the song.

    • @timtams_6
      @timtams_6 Před 3 lety +14

      @@tzCombot well it also means that but in the original it also takes a much more literal meaning

    • @Kyro4Productions
      @Kyro4Productions Před 3 lety +6

      The illustration was probably done using htck.github.io/bayeux

    • @101jir
      @101jir Před 3 lety +3

      A bunch of commoners singing this in a tavern, then whatever the position equivalent to an overseer is walks in...

    • @user-ru5er5nf3t
      @user-ru5er5nf3t Před 3 lety +1

      I think it is characters from the Bayeux Tapestry.

  • @hansstrudel9614
    @hansstrudel9614 Před 4 lety +1904

    Isn’t it kinda weird how we know Anglo Saxon despite it being a dead language that *wasnt* kept alive due to it being used as a liturgical language? It’s like how the Chinese almost completely eradicated Manchu as a language until they realized that all their historical records were written in Manchu so they hastily went and found the 20 known remaining speakers and managed to revive the language

    • @hansstrudel9614
      @hansstrudel9614 Před 4 lety +57

      WHY WAS THIS LIKED

    • @earendilthemariner5546
      @earendilthemariner5546 Před 3 lety +145

      We need to do this with Gaelic and Manx Gaelic so they dont die out

    • @danielmccollum5451
      @danielmccollum5451 Před 3 lety +83

      @thunder key Irish has been a required subject in Irish schools for a while now. Pretty much since independence. Unfortunately it has never really stuck, which is a shame (though there are some young activists that are making a push to make Irish 'cool'. Translating popular music into Gaelic and so forth).
      Really, the best example of this is Wales, where the language has taken off again.

    • @ori8107
      @ori8107 Před 3 lety +54

      @@danielmccollum5451 so from now on wales is jdiajajskoxidjfjfkdoekwkaosmmsosi again?

    • @ereynolds72
      @ereynolds72 Před 3 lety +21

      The Banana Bender Wales is simply Cymru in Welsh, or Cymraeg I don’t know what you’re trying to say.

  • @thethumbisafinger
    @thethumbisafinger Před 6 měsíci +8

    I want more Old English songs so bad man

  • @ThisisFit
    @ThisisFit Před rokem +3

    I like how it's the relatable tale of a working-class peasant boy...

  • @kreaux3479
    @kreaux3479 Před 3 lety +138

    Me trying to sing the song:
    My furniture: **starts dancing**

  • @Thecognoscenti_1
    @Thecognoscenti_1 Před 4 lety +166

    When the French and Norman kids in Paris University mock you for being the only Anglo-Saxon there.

    • @chilliam00
      @chilliam00 Před 3 lety +1

      Bro, the Chinese character on your pfp is my name wtf. 😂🤣🙌🏼

    • @Thecognoscenti_1
      @Thecognoscenti_1 Před 3 lety

      @@chilliam00
      是你父母希望你的智商高吧?😂
      我的 profile pic 是為了諷刺自己自以為是的態度啊 呵呵

  • @ryahanse8031
    @ryahanse8031 Před rokem +1

    this is beyond cool, please make more song covers like this

  • @knightedcolor
    @knightedcolor Před rokem +8

    Great song, really mades you wonder how languages change over time, especially the words that are the same, and the ones that are different.

  • @sisasickletter
    @sisasickletter Před 3 lety +96

    I love how much German I could find in these old lyrics and sounds.
    It becomes so clear, that English is an Germanic language

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin Před 3 lety +3

      Germaniac here.
      We are Ger and we are many.
      You better bow.

    • @gambigambigambi
      @gambigambigambi Před 3 lety +6

      English was kidnapped from her Germanic sisters and forced to wear a Latinized dress.

    • @Chitario
      @Chitario Před 3 lety +4

      Its a wild mix of german, english, dutch, Latin and nordic influences and as someone who speaks dutch, german and english fluently, the lyrics are very understandable. Thats interesting

    • @mrcharles1602
      @mrcharles1602 Před 3 lety +3

      English doesn’t borrow words from other languages, it mugs them in dark alleys.

    • @suclox12yearsago56
      @suclox12yearsago56 Před 3 lety

      Germs

  • @dan9864
    @dan9864 Před 3 lety +1343

    As a Dane, I find a lot of it strikingly similar to my mother tongue.

    • @phoenix1026
      @phoenix1026 Před 2 lety +211

      Makes sense, the Anglo-Saxons were germanic, and the danish are germanic.

    • @mikeswem
      @mikeswem Před 2 lety +289

      @@phoenix1026 More than that, even. The Angles and the Jutes, two of the Germanic tribes that eventually formed into the Anglo-Saxons in England, were from what is now Denmark, and Anglo-Saxon would have been partially intelligible to the Danes of the period. The repeated Norse invasions of England were basically cousin vs. cousin.

    • @thomasdavid7364
      @thomasdavid7364 Před 2 lety +25

      @@phoenix1026 The Anglo-Saxons are still Germanic

    • @thomasdavid7364
      @thomasdavid7364 Před 2 lety +82

      @@mikeswem They were from Jutland which is now part of Denmark, yes, but the Danes had yet to settle there, they were still up in Scania
      Genetically and linguistically the Anglo-Saxons were most similar to the Dutch, Frisians especially

    • @dan9864
      @dan9864 Před 2 lety +42

      “Eall the other cild mid findgum soccum shulon betera rinnen fram minnum earhum”
      In modified Danish:
      “Alle de andre “kid” med fine sko skulle bedre rende fra mine pile” (I wouldn’t say it like that in Danish, but it can be understood)

  • @Hand-to-handWombatCombat
    @Hand-to-handWombatCombat Před 4 měsíci +3

    Everyone's a squire till the jester pulls out thier longbow

  • @WilliamJacobs-oi9gg
    @WilliamJacobs-oi9gg Před 5 měsíci +3

    This is one of them songs i would love to hear in like a live concert

  • @yaklin104
    @yaklin104 Před 3 lety +779

    It's so frustrating cause enough of the words are close enough to English that I can sort of understand some of it lol

    • @ChronicNewb
      @ChronicNewb Před 3 lety +75

      I find that I feel like I can understand it if I'm not paying attention, but if I start trying to listen to the words, I lose all sense of meaning

    • @daltonslayton6766
      @daltonslayton6766 Před 3 lety +67

      If you know German and English it works out really well

    • @wet_camo_crocs_0041
      @wet_camo_crocs_0041 Před 3 lety +11

      English and German. Like the word mid is with but in german its Mit. Lol. Amazing

    • @wet_camo_crocs_0041
      @wet_camo_crocs_0041 Před 3 lety

      @@daltonslayton6766 lol yeah.

    • @daltonslayton6766
      @daltonslayton6766 Před 3 lety +4

      @@wet_camo_crocs_0041 also ic and ich for I

  • @ArvelCrynyd
    @ArvelCrynyd Před 3 lety +1327

    “If thou receivest this parchment, then thou art one of the few Anglo-Saxons who art dear to my heart, and I must warn thee not to come to Hastings on the ‘morrow. Regards from Duke William of Normandy.”

  • @DracoInduperator
    @DracoInduperator Před rokem +11

    I love how you adapted the lyrics for the time period. (Admittedly the words gun and bullets probably don't exist in Old English but still)

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 Před 8 měsíci +1

      A bullet was a purpose-made slinger's missile (if natural it was a sling-stone, usually a river-worn or beach-shingle smooth stone), sometimes cast in lead, long before guns existed.
      It's one of those old words we re-purpose so easily, like Irisc-wort, Irish-wrought, Irish-made in this song.
      - and 'bogan' might just be the origin of both 'bow' and 'gun'.

    • @DracoInduperator
      @DracoInduperator Před 8 měsíci

      @@stevetheduck1425 that's so cool! Thanks for telling me!

  • @enderjake6614
    @enderjake6614 Před rokem

    I absolutely love this from now im gonna listen to this every weekend