Torches (alternatives)

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • Having said that torches were not very useful indoors or outdoors, I should present some of the authentic alternatives. Here they are.
    www.LloydianAspects.co.uk

Komentáře • 325

  • @MrTomte09
    @MrTomte09 Před 8 lety +541

    I really do appreciate the vids on weapons and ancient warfare. But what I appreciate more is these vids on ordinary life in the past, how they lived, far more informative of people of the past. More of these please!

    • @celestialshroom7330
      @celestialshroom7330 Před 8 lety +6

      My thoughts exactly.

    • @kicktheghost2974
      @kicktheghost2974 Před 8 lety +1

      Yes, please.

    • @Rudofaux
      @Rudofaux Před 7 lety +1

      I concur.

    • @ottopike737
      @ottopike737 Před 7 lety +1

      I liked his tips on thatching a roof. roofs are often one of the harder parts of survival, (which I'm supposed to be good at) so I appreciated the information.

    • @jaojao1768
      @jaojao1768 Před 6 lety

      Karl-Johan Embretsen agreed

  • @danielschilling2011
    @danielschilling2011 Před 8 lety +418

    "Who but the Italians would invent degrees of virginity?"

    • @spiderfarmsltd.9485
      @spiderfarmsltd.9485 Před 8 lety +26

      .. Indecisive Paedophiles?

    • @spiderfarmsltd.9485
      @spiderfarmsltd.9485 Před 8 lety +14

      ISIS when they to heaven?

    • @drops2cents260
      @drops2cents260 Před 7 lety +8

      US Republicans, of course.
      Because there's legitimate virginity, which means a woman's body just shuts down the defloration and regrows the hymen.
      And then there's non-legitimate virginity which just leaves a woman being called a slut or the like - i.e. the kind of woman conservative politicians prefer as long as nobody notices - and in case somebody does, results in public grovelling, confessing to be "just a sinner" and unintentionally reminding everybody how easy a pretty unplausible God can be tricked into forgiving for the umpteenth time just by confession etcetera. I guess you know the drill.

    • @AnnaMarianne
      @AnnaMarianne Před 6 lety +18

      Drops2cents Liberals call women sluts too. In fact, conservative females get called sluts and whores and bitches all the time by liberals who imagined that their genitalia would decide their political party. Same with non-whites and LGBT who are right wing. They get racism and homophobia from the supposed liberals.

    • @pasijutaulietuviuesas9174
      @pasijutaulietuviuesas9174 Před 5 lety +10

      Who would have imagined that this comment will turn into a political blabber...

  • @Rudofaux
    @Rudofaux Před 7 lety +176

    seems like juggling three torches gives off a good amount of light. Now I know what I can make our bard do next time we are in a dark dungeon.

    • @drops2cents260
      @drops2cents260 Před 7 lety +3

      It would also certainly be prudent to advise your bard to throw a torch in the general direction of your enemies if he notices that he's about to drop one. Just saying.
      You might also ask your resident mage nicely to cast a spell which would light up your surroundings. Or you just use a magical mace which starts to glow in the vicinity of orcs, like one of our fighters had when we were plaing MERS years ago (albeit such a weapon could be quite cumbersome if you're trying to sneak up on a camp full of orcs, as we we were forced to find out).

    • @alexzandermueller29
      @alexzandermueller29 Před 5 lety +1

      Rudofaux I will do the same great idea

  • @ARandomUsernameForMe
    @ARandomUsernameForMe Před 8 lety +245

    Why didn't people just turn the brightness up?

    • @trevorh6438
      @trevorh6438 Před 7 lety +36

      Maybe they couldn't find the gamma adjustment.

    • @gralha_
      @gralha_ Před 7 lety +4

      It looks very bad

    • @drops2cents260
      @drops2cents260 Před 7 lety +21

      +Trevor H
      You know, they just knew Latin back then. So they probably never found out what Gamma meant and just mistook it for some arcane heathen symbol which should best be ignored, which resulted in them stumbling around in the dark.
      Hence the term "Dark Ages", because they needed a *lot* of trial and error to get around in the dark without hurting their shins and toes too badly.

    • @trevorh6438
      @trevorh6438 Před 7 lety +1

      Drops2cents
      This makes sense. Well played.

    • @pasijutaulietuviuesas9174
      @pasijutaulietuviuesas9174 Před 5 lety +4

      Because they were told that they needed to adjust brightness so that the symbol on the left would be barely visible, but that just left them in total darkness. Those darn symbols at the start are never accurate.

  • @Genbor
    @Genbor Před 9 lety +73

    We've got lovely big lumps of it 'round the back. - Lindybeige, Medieval Smuggler

  • @lomax343
    @lomax343 Před 9 lety +77

    Lanterns were indeed originally made of thin sheets of animal horn. This is why the original spelling (still used by Shakespeare) was lanthorn.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před 8 lety +8

      They are also called horn lights in Danish.

    • @DBT1007
      @DBT1007 Před 2 lety

      only for the west world. in the east, they use paper. or just that arabian oil lamp thing

  • @BountyFlamor
    @BountyFlamor Před 9 lety +71

    No, I expected a torch inside that lantern

    • @ScienceDiscoverer
      @ScienceDiscoverer Před 8 lety +6

      +BountyFlamor well, candle is, basically, a mini-torch! So you where right!

    • @mrwindupbird101
      @mrwindupbird101 Před 8 lety +7

      +BountyFlamor I expected a light bulb, stupid medieval age lighting systems.

    • @jabberw0k812
      @jabberw0k812 Před 4 lety +2

      I expected a flaming pommel....

  • @gavinjenkins899
    @gavinjenkins899 Před 8 lety +10

    Please do more videos like this! Oceans of info on weapons is out there and it's such a small part of life. This sort of thing is more important and gold!

  • @anaamari5643
    @anaamari5643 Před 9 lety +95

    Lindybeige: Archaeologist, War Gaming Enthusiast, LARPer, Fire Juggler, Professional Lindy Hopper. (Is that the right name for one who preforms the lindy hop?)

  • @afterwalker6773
    @afterwalker6773 Před 8 lety +14

    Oh lord, the ending caught me by surprise. Sent me into a laughing fit.

  • @immortaliserwow
    @immortaliserwow Před 11 lety +4

    When trecking or just going out I've always considered the flashlight the most important tool of our time (after the good shoes). Everything else you can use streight out of the 13th century- a knife, rope, backpack, cloak etc...but having light at night that is stronger and more effective than fire, yet doesnt tread to burn the whole forest down-that sure is magic!

  • @tomaszjackowski1981
    @tomaszjackowski1981 Před 10 lety +2

    Every fan of Fantasy should watch you to get their knowledge fix up. Also you are awesome source of knowledge to play any medieval RPG properly.

  • @Abelhawk
    @Abelhawk Před 7 lety +1

    So glad I discovered this channel! I've been looking everywhere for an engaging source of useful information about the middle ages.

  • @AndeliaM
    @AndeliaM Před 7 lety

    Almost went to look up what tallow was to make sure I was right, and then you explained it below. That's the sort of useful thing that you do consistently, and it's quality that I really appreciate. I just started watching your videos yesterday, but I'm already a massive fan and have shared a fair amount of things I find useful to the players in my group.
    Thanks for all the great content, and here's to you!

  • @nicholas2198
    @nicholas2198 Před 6 lety +21

    I honestly think I would rather a medieval film be historically accurate with slightly crappy lighting using candles/lamps for indoors and moonlight/lamps for outdoors than just using tons of torches to create lots of light for "film effects". Just my thoughts

    • @pasijutaulietuviuesas9174
      @pasijutaulietuviuesas9174 Před 5 lety +4

      Yes, but you would be in the minority. The general public would not receive the movies well had they poor lighting. They don't know or care about torches. Also, torches are pleasing to look at, more so than candles. Even if not historically accurate, it makes people respond with positive emotions to the movie and that's what will make money in the end.

    • @jabberw0k812
      @jabberw0k812 Před 4 lety +2

      A lot of excellent, influential films were shot using only natural light. French New Wave and Italian Neorealism are both famous for it, in addition to mostly shooting on location. I would love to see modern filmmakers bring that sort of focused aesthetic to medieval historical dramas.
      But I don't think most movie scenes are actually being lit by torches, anyway. The torches are just set dressing. You could remove them without affecting the lighting at all.

  • @kevindraco8185
    @kevindraco8185 Před 7 lety

    This is the 3rd video I've seen from you and I appreciate the practicality of thought as well as the energetic presentation. (1/4 staff, torches, and this). Cant wait to see more :) subscribed.

  • @diaz5292
    @diaz5292 Před 9 lety +1

    Best channel on the interwebs, this is!!

  • @blasterofmuppets4754
    @blasterofmuppets4754 Před 3 lety +4

    Stanley Kubricks Barry Lindon has probably the most realistic lighting you'll ever see in a movie.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety +2

    Get a long tube of card from the core of a roll of kitchen foil, fill it with molten wax. Wait for it to solidify. Light. BIG bright flame. Warning: keep upright at all times and work out a way of extinguishing it in advance (bucket of water).

    • @davidhansen951
      @davidhansen951 Před rokem

      Put the candle thru an upside-down Frisbee. Fasten it somehow. This will Atchison a lot of the wax

  • @Erkynar
    @Erkynar Před 9 lety +6

    I just used this as an actual real source for information that I actually really needed.
    I have come upon some old looking things and I thought they might be ancient lamps. Based on the facsimile in this video, I now think I might actually have been right.
    Thanks mr. Beige!
    Needless to say I shall now pursue the matter further.

  • @iPervy
    @iPervy Před 7 lety

    Every time our power goes out and I break out the candles I'm always impressed how much light a single candle emits. A nice glow that makes everything pretty darn visible especially as your eyes adjust. Add one more candle and everything is pretty well lit.

  • @greyareaRK1
    @greyareaRK1 Před 8 lety +1

    Movies used a combination of double-wick candles (kept in fridges until needed as they burn very quickly), and inkies with barn doors. Inkies are small ~100W production lights. You'd need one per character and probably some spun (sheets of spun glass used as diffusers) to soften the light enough. I dont' know if any of that is needed anymore, between digital camera and led lights. Makes for a MUCH cooler set.

  • @SirEldricIV
    @SirEldricIV Před 11 lety +1

    Modern material science has loads to teach us about glass. Most examples of glass that spring to mind (windows, windshields, bottles/glasses/jars, globes) are quite far removed from "old-school" glass.

  • @OutbackCatgirl
    @OutbackCatgirl Před 11 lety +1

    Candles are so much fun. It could just be my inner pyromaniac speaking here, but fire - when handled safely and properly - seems to have been possibly the most important "resource" (so to speak) in medieval times. Hell, even today it's used quite a lot - gas cooktops, power plants, and so on.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety

    Don't I mention the horn windows?

  • @valinhorn42
    @valinhorn42 Před 11 lety

    There was once a power outage in my town in the middle of one cloudy summer night. I was reading in my bed, and suddenly all the lights went out. TOTAL darkness.
    So I went into the kitchen, fetched myself a nice candle, lit it and wandered around the town barefoot in my pajamas and bathrobe until the lights came back on.
    Ever since then I wish for more power outages at night, so I can go on another nightly adventure!

  • @beez811
    @beez811 Před 7 lety

    dude....'great big lumps of it round the back'....I use that as a repost when acosted by crazy people...the looks you get !...never fails to make em bugger off ....your the only person ive ever heard use it :)......Jailer...wise man !

  • @kindermord
    @kindermord Před 11 lety

    Another quality lindybiege offering - keep up the good work.

  • @gebatron604
    @gebatron604 Před 10 lety +8

    You're not sorry to disappoint, you love it!

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety +1

    Yes, but it is a skill quickly acquired. Try walking around your home at night without lights. You'll be slow and careful at first but quickly speed up.

  • @jcohasset23
    @jcohasset23 Před 2 lety

    I can attest to the usefulness of candles in a house as after an ice storm last year we had no power for 10 days. Even with many modern candles being designed for decoration instead of lighting a single one still does a nice job of lighting up a room enough to be able to see to safely get around and find things. Sure I still often used a flashlight if I was going to different sections of the house as decoration candles aren't really designed to be moved around when lit (unless I was going into the living room since we used a fire in the evenings for lighting and heating) but a candle does provide a useful alternative even in modern times.

  • @Erakius323
    @Erakius323 Před 8 lety +2

    Good juggling at the end. :)

  • @joshtaylor731
    @joshtaylor731 Před 6 lety

    I love this guy so much

  • @braydenpendlebury2131
    @braydenpendlebury2131 Před 8 lety

    I know I'm a little late to the party but pro point, whenever there is a black out we use modern torches to find and light our store of candles which we then use to light up the entire house until power comes back . . . it's amazing how useful these little bundles of wax and flame can be even in the modern era

  • @darkblood626
    @darkblood626 Před 10 lety +12

    They must have had better eyes back then.
    the other week the power went out and one of my family members though they'd been really cleaver by stocking up on candles...
    Yea, we had enough candles going to be considered a fire hazard and couldn't see anything, and Insistently, reading by candle light sucks too.

    • @shaneschannel9289
      @shaneschannel9289 Před 10 lety +11

      Modern candles are decorative. The wicks are generally smaller and provide less light than many traditional ones. Also despite what Lindy says candles were very expensive and not used as much as you may think.

    • @SoulTouchMusic93
      @SoulTouchMusic93 Před 10 lety +6

      you'd be surprised at how well you actually see at night, but you need half an hour for full effect.

    • @mikeromney4712
      @mikeromney4712 Před 10 lety +1

      shanes channel
      You can imagine the cost of beewax (and honey) by this fact, that a beekeeper or "Zeidler" in medieval german in some region not must go to the "Fron" on the crops of his lord, mend ways, or whatever he has to do as a serf for his lord. Instead of this he produce and deliver more wax and honey as tax. This brought much more income to his lord as simple serf labor.

    • @Sergei_Ivanovich_Mosin
      @Sergei_Ivanovich_Mosin Před 9 lety +2

      You're using the wrong candles, I had a power outage recently and all it took was one candle to see well enough to move around and even read.

    • @goblinrat6119
      @goblinrat6119 Před 9 lety +1

      Thing is, if you use candles in total darkness, they're really nice. But I've noticed that they're basically worthless if you try to lighten up the place when it's just kinda gloomy. Like, say, it's dark enough that reading will be a pain, but not so dark that you can't see where you're going. For some reason, candles really don't help in this situation at all.

  • @Luciffrit
    @Luciffrit Před 11 lety

    I remember making a comment about lanterns in one of the earlier torch videos. I didn't know that they used rawhide or horn as a semi transparent material. What I was getting at was a kind of wind break with holes in it to let light out and air in. Some countries used woven leaves or grass while others used ceramic or wood.
    These holes would seem to shoot a beam of light out which would illuminate anything close enough in that general direction.

  • @TanitAkavirius
    @TanitAkavirius Před 11 lety

    we are given paper lantern once a year here in my town for a parade in the streets. (candle in a paper lantern, held with a wooden stick). It last for as long as the candle burns. But sometimes the paper catches fire, this happens quite often, especially if you intend to walk with it (i'd say 1 on 50 catches fire), if it's simply for lighting your house, i think it can last forever.

  • @frepi
    @frepi Před 7 lety

    Wax candles were expensive in the old days. The common people used what in french is called "chandelle" which was either a wick in the middle of a piece of fat or a dried reed filled with fat.

  • @WakarimasenKa
    @WakarimasenKa Před 11 lety

    Lanterns were also made with slivers of horn for the "windows" And in Greenland they fueled their lamps with blubber and used moss for a whick. And I think I heard that the chineese also had lamps made from a bamboo pipe and a bladder filled with coal gas.And finally there are "rush lights", which are reeds soaked in tallow.

  • @christosvoskresye
    @christosvoskresye Před 8 lety +1

    I was a bit surprised at your description of how painful the molten (no, boiling) wax was, but then my experience is with paraffin, and sure enough, paraffin has a significantly lower melting point.

  • @gralha_
    @gralha_ Před 7 lety

    The torch transitions are pretty cool

  • @jankarieben1071
    @jankarieben1071 Před 5 lety +2

    "Oh don't mind him sir, he's mu-mu-mu-mad sir!"

  • @zoetropo1
    @zoetropo1 Před 6 lety

    Tallow was much used in the 1800s. There’s a beach in eastern Australia where a shipment of tallow was spilled all over.

  • @billd.iniowa2263
    @billd.iniowa2263 Před 3 lety

    Thin leather with grease smeared on it, inches away from an open flame. What could go wrong? But hey, I learned something today, and that's always good. Thanx Lindy!

  • @ihy90
    @ihy90 Před 11 lety

    Of course a candle is a great light source. If it wasn't then the unit for luminous intensity would not have been called candela :P. Oh, and congratulations on your first 10 000 subscribers.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety +1

    Wick, yes, wood, no. Certain woods burn well.

  • @andrewfairbrother6970
    @andrewfairbrother6970 Před 9 lety +2

    Can you make a video showing how to make a mantle with a hood like your wearing in this video ?? I really want one

  • @NikovK
    @NikovK Před 9 lety

    Through the Boy Scouts I have attended several mass ceremonies which I am not at liberty to divulge details of, however, with a large number of torches they can be useful. Ours were toilet paper rolls soaked in diesel oil on rather long sticks, held overhead, and burned almost a greasy yellow-orange. With several dozen around a football field area was illuminated, and afterwards individual parties with one or two torches could easily navigate the roads. Your torch might be too short and too bright to be practical due to the obvious night-blinding.

  • @CptWerQ
    @CptWerQ Před 11 lety +1

    I love these, "everyday items" videos. Do you have any plans for similar?
    I feel they are just as interesting than weapons, shields and such.

  • @lunhil12
    @lunhil12 Před 11 lety

    Interesting is what changes came with cheap, universally available illumination. Today in parts of Africa people are studying at night in remote areas by led lights charged by solar cells in the daylight.

  • @Wirrn
    @Wirrn Před 11 lety

    This..this is genius!

  • @jwpretd
    @jwpretd Před 11 lety +1

    In this series on torches, which I've enjoyed quite a lot, it would have been nice if you'd mentioned at least one practical use of torches, viz. link boys (or "linkboys" if you prefer). The earliest reference I can find quickly is late 16th century, but as a practical matter the service must have been available for millennia.

  • @zoetropo1
    @zoetropo1 Před 6 lety +1

    When we had power outages in the 1960s, we often relied on candles.

  • @TheDrunkinMunkee
    @TheDrunkinMunkee Před 6 lety +1

    A subscriber from 2018 explores the catacombs of Lindybeige's channel.

  • @MrMartinSchou
    @MrMartinSchou Před 11 lety

    It doesn't apply high up north either. I live in Stockholm, and at this time of year, there's not really a dusk. Sure, the sun sets, but there's still plenty of light outside to do photography with a regular cellphone camera.

  • @ScienceDiscoverer
    @ScienceDiscoverer Před 8 lety +20

    Oh, so that's why all Japanese windows and walls and doors was made out of paper - cos they had no glass? And paper was really cheap?

    • @TheKlink
      @TheKlink Před 8 lety +5

      +ScienceDiscoverer once you get a critical mass of people doing something, it ends up cheap. they ended up using wood and paper for everything cos they didn't have much else.

    • @kk234th
      @kk234th Před 8 lety +7

      +ScienceDiscoverer Well the rich people did, the poor lived in wooden shacks with reed thatch. Much like the people in the west. Paper walls were to cope with the heat during the summer, with wooden/stone parts of the house for the winter.

    • @dagooncore953
      @dagooncore953 Před 6 lety +4

      Also... the environment didn't support expensive structures.....

    • @michaelcrockis7679
      @michaelcrockis7679 Před 5 lety +3

      Maybe, in part. But mostly because from some point henceforward there were too many people in Japan and too little trees. The technology was used to save lumber.

  • @JStrange13
    @JStrange13 Před 5 lety

    I always wondered about the wisdom of paper lanterns. Paper burns...

  • @lentulus01
    @lentulus01 Před 5 lety

    I used to own an early 20th century lamp with sheet mica panes. Any idea when they started using sheet mica?

  • @brandonwayne1998
    @brandonwayne1998 Před 4 lety +1

    A savage bandit from the medieval times in the woods 😂 4:35

  • @duckgoesquack4514
    @duckgoesquack4514 Před 11 lety

    lol, i love your videos :D

  • @thinh7993
    @thinh7993 Před 11 lety

    please do one video on the bull-eye lantern

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety

    They would be prohibitively expensive for most people.

  • @amitabhakusari2304
    @amitabhakusari2304 Před 6 lety

    No mention of rushlight? I am surprised you didn't mention this.

  • @Durzoblind
    @Durzoblind Před 8 lety

    I have the same oil lamp for larping works good for going to bed or to toilet ;)

  • @Pariah1974
    @Pariah1974 Před 11 lety

    I think some of the interesting differences between modern culture and medieval culture are the food and the music. What the films portray and what was really going on are two different things. The king is often shown eating some huge chunk of meat off the bone, but really the organs were the delicacy, and a more accurate portrayal would be the king chowing down on some beef lungs.
    The difference music is probably too difficult to explain in comments, with 45 characters left.

  • @JTMC93
    @JTMC93 Před 11 lety

    Charcoal Grey is best.
    On the cardboard tube candles: Which didn't you guys make a Holder/Sconce for it?
    Think the Roman wax torches.

  • @junoguten
    @junoguten Před 9 lety +8

    Was paper a superior solution to rawhide? When did we start having paper in Europe?

    • @goblinrat6119
      @goblinrat6119 Před 9 lety +16

      It really depends on the use. Paper was made in Europe from around the year 1080 onwards, so it was at least some use during much of the medieval times, but it was rare in the beginning. It was likely a luxury thing used mostly for books and the like. Paper as a lantern screen had the unfortunate downside of being rather flammable and not being very durable. It'd break easily, and could even catch fire very easily ff the candle flame touched it. So, not very brilliant for this purpose.
      Paper was also quite a bit rougher and less fine back then. It was basically made by crushing plant fibers into pulp and then drying the mass (which was mixed with some chemicals) in thin sheets they obtained by using square frames with sieves in them. Kinda like the insects screens you put in windows. You'd put the frame into the water tub, and then add the pulp in, and lift up the frame so that a layer of pulp stayed on top of it while the water drained through the mesh back into the tub. When this layer dried, it became stuck together and became a sheet of paper. As you'd expect, it wasn't exactly as nice as the modern paper we have, and was likely lot darker. Probably not brilliant for lanterns, as I said.

    • @LarsaXL
      @LarsaXL Před 9 lety +2

      Paper is better to make books out of, while it gives shitty protection to pretty much anything. Rawhide is not as good for writing at, and has become much more expensive than paper, but it makes for a good shield.

    • @observationsfromthebunker9639
      @observationsfromthebunker9639 Před 8 lety +2

      +Goblin Rat If you watch enough samurai movies you will see the paper lanterns catch on fire and burn when dropped or jostled. The Japanese paper lanterns(still made today) provide decent soft light that is easy on the eyes, but they should be handled gently!

  • @fantasyking99
    @fantasyking99 Před 11 lety

    Keep calm and juggle on

  • @Laluush
    @Laluush Před 11 lety

    So how do you put out a candle that has alot of excess wax in it then?

  • @takemedown2funkytown
    @takemedown2funkytown Před 11 lety +1

    Another question; How did they actually light and put flames on these things?

  • @EddieSchirmer
    @EddieSchirmer Před 7 lety

    i cracked up laughing to the Monty Python: Life of Brian reference there lol

  • @TerribleHamster
    @TerribleHamster Před 5 lety

    What are these lumps around the house ?
    I need to know !

  • @sygos
    @sygos Před 11 lety

    Do you soak the wick and/or wood in the oil?

  • @porgy29
    @porgy29 Před 10 lety

    At that point did they use candle holders with a mirrored back (like some polished copper or tin) to amplify and direct the light, or was that a later invention?

  • @themomaw
    @themomaw Před 11 lety

    Wonder if any enterprising souls tried mica. You generally can't get natural mica in huge sheets like your lantern, but then, since mica is in non-flammable and won't melt until it reaches a few hundred degrees you can also put it right up near your candle to make a smaller lantern...

  • @acciaiomorti
    @acciaiomorti Před 8 lety

    I once blew out a candle quite violently and I got hot wax on my face, it hurt but only for a little while

  • @MalletMann
    @MalletMann Před 9 lety

    Could one put an oil lamp inside a lantern?

  • @Sherpa403
    @Sherpa403 Před 8 lety +26

    What the hell was that at 3:17, spooky!

  • @DudeWatIsThis
    @DudeWatIsThis Před 3 lety +1

    "Italians invented this oil, which is extra virgin."
    Greeks, the inventors of olive oil: **SEETHING**
    Spaniards, the inventors of extra virgin olive oil: **SEETHING**

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety

    MP's The L of B.

  • @JP-8469
    @JP-8469 Před 5 lety

    Glass alternative? Micah. Yes micah, the kind in the ground. The mineral, crystal, rock, type substance. They used it in lanterns.

  • @ayebraine
    @ayebraine Před 9 lety

    What about mica? or how is it called? in the old books, people are constantly using windows and lanterns with translucent sheets made out of mica.

  • @pmendes99
    @pmendes99 Před 11 lety

    The only way I could see a Hollywood movie following lindybeige's accurate advice would be if an established director found it in himself to make an accurate medieval recreation movie. A director who previously demonstrated an obsession with historical and/or scientific accuracy, like a James Cameron, a Darren Aronofsky, a David Fincher.

  • @deadextra
    @deadextra Před 11 lety

    I have to disagree with the annotation on tallow. I have made it several times for use in my little terra cotta lamp. While there was some minor odor during the rendering process, after the second straining this was nearly eliminated. In actual use, the lamp preforms comparably to candles in terms of light, soot, and odor.

  • @motonerd14
    @motonerd14 Před 11 lety

    I once remember reading that matches were banned for a time in England, I think, possibly during the dark ages. How did people during this era light things? Did they have one big fire going and light everything off of that?

  • @matthewsinnott773
    @matthewsinnott773 Před 8 lety

    Where could I get one of those Roman Oil lamps ?

  • @arte0021
    @arte0021 Před 2 lety

    Did houses in the past not have glass in windows? If it was so expensive?

  • @TrollDragomir
    @TrollDragomir Před 11 lety

    3:16 - Was that a moth? :P
    Aside from that - I noticed something interesting. Don't you think that a lantern, even though it blocks some of the light of the flame is more useful in dark than a candle (and especially torch)? It surely spreads the light more evenly and makes it softer, therefore making everything more clear and easier to look at. It also doesn't nightblind you as much as a candle flame.

  • @newtronix
    @newtronix Před 5 lety

    What you need is a continuous light 15' radius spell!

    • @mariosebastiani3214
      @mariosebastiani3214 Před 4 lety

      My dark elf character begs to differ. and can you please turn of that damn light, since his eyes find it painful? Thanks.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  Před 11 lety

    Peasant rampages!

  • @Ederick1936
    @Ederick1936 Před 11 lety

    this is also the truth to a pirates eye-patch, they didn't use them to look cool or because they just couldn't get the hang of friday night darts, they would use them for boarding ships so that when they went below deck they would have at least 1 eye already perfectly adjusted to the dark.
    however, i think TheDondaffno is making more of an evolutionary argument. it is possible that our night vision 400 years ago was better than it is now.

  • @Bird_Dog00
    @Bird_Dog00 Před 7 lety

    Didn't they use thin sheets of mica for lanterns?

  • @UrbanArmada
    @UrbanArmada Před 11 lety

    3:17 , what happened there? did the candle flair up or something?

  • @editsonimovie8681
    @editsonimovie8681 Před 4 lety +1

    Anyone else notice be never blinks?

  • @Pipedog42
    @Pipedog42 Před 11 lety

    Sire I was wondering if you could put all these, medieval/LARP/RPG type thinggies in one playlist?
    I would love to have my D&D crew have a gander at them all at once.
    Thank you for your attention, and once again an interesting vid.

  • @sindrehsoereide
    @sindrehsoereide Před 9 lety

    In norway it was not to uncommn to use fishoil for lamps. Fishoil was abundant but not very useful for this task because it made everything reak of fishoil. I have tried this with fishoil and even though i imagine the fishoil we use now ismuch more purified, it was still quite rank.

  • @cruorek
    @cruorek Před 5 lety

    How long any of those can be lit on "one go"? I mean from historical perspective.

  • @bluesrocker91
    @bluesrocker91 Před 8 lety

    I can see Peckforton and Beeston Castles from my house.

  • @WakarimasenKa
    @WakarimasenKa Před 11 lety

    You did, must have had a car drive by my window just then, because I was paying attention :P

  • @tonyhedgewolf
    @tonyhedgewolf Před 6 lety

    4:36 - a true Pythonist 🙂