Every Genius Detail That Made Viking Longships Remarkable
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- čas přidán 24. 06. 2020
- Vikings were expert shipbuilders, and the longships that survived from the era are a testament to their ingenuity, as well as the strength and durability of their preferred wood type: oak.
From the Series: Combat Ships: Viking Longships bitly.com/2NcenjI - Zábava
I'm always pleased to see ancient traditions being upheld. Truly a genius way of building a vessel!
I’ve stood there looking at these ships. Worth the trip.
How fortunate that there are craftsfolk willing and able to carry this on these highly specialized techniques, else they would be doomed to be lost forever...
Indeed. It's a shame when stuff like this gets lost to history.
@@LookBackHistory Watch history channel. 😆
@@LookBackHistory remember when that huge library burned down?
I came from Terengganu, there’s an ancient boatman village. Only handful still alive making remarkable boats using traditional method. During our prime, we made big boats for the Chinese and Japanese too. Traditional way, is the only way.
Guy's!
This was only a 3½ minutes advertisement for the channel.
There are lots of serious CZcams channels that handle the Viking world a lot more seriously!
Seems like it just ended with the story half-told.
I was just going to say the same thing. Where's part 2?
Welcome to the smithsonian channel
Because they dont give there secrets up
This was not every genius detail that made viking longships remarkable.
Yeah that was barely any detail... CHILDHOOD RUINED!
Before watching. Alright, ready for the entire video to be vaguely related to the title without actually answering the question! Here we go!
Edit after watching:
Went over material choice and basic wood working. Not really any of the "Genius details" that they said they'd explain.
finally I can remember which side "starboard" refers to!
Port and left of h
Port and left both have four letters it’s that easy
@@jackwinemiller8358 - Good call; that's how I remember it. I just think of the number of letters in the words "red," "left," and "port." The right words, nautical terms and marker light colors, all easy to remember.
That'd be the side stars are visible in the night sky, correct?
Wait a minute!
The easiest way to remember is that Left and Port are 4 letters so they go together
What makes me annoyed is that this video has ended abruptly! Great carpenter that is building a Viking ship👍👍👍
Vikings also did a lot of metal extraction from earth. Many viking sites were next to marches, where they mined the bottom layer to get iron.
Funny enough it's called Bog Iron :P
True, but the iron we have (and had) in Denmark are of poor quality, so we had to trade us to better iron.
@@darth_yoda mainly because it is found and extracted from bogs :)
They were called "clinker" from the clinking of iron rivets.
Viking ship designs are bizarre looking, yet their design were built with purpose. To be durable, swift, & fast. Boat builders are one of a kind. Every cut, measurement, & hammer strike has to be just right or else the boat turns into a sinking canoe.👍
Spectacular. Good ship making.
So proud of my ancestors!
Bless you, for so many do not have pride in their ancestry.
Lucifer became prideful and rebeled against the most high.
Good video, but please make them longer so more detail and facts can be aired.
This old world technology so wonderful to know about. Proud of my Viking heritage and that tradition is kept alive ... these days it may be a time of deja vu !!
nice video, thanks for this, from Brazil
Now I'm gonna build a paddle board, inspired by this guy. A little mini viking ship with an oak steering board
Progress?
I'm interested in how these small vessels survived the monster waves they must have seen.
Floki's engineering sorted that out.
Amazing
Doesn’t seem like the whole video is there. Very abruptly ended.
Watching this cuz of Valheim
🌺 Love looking back at these ancient weapons and technology. So fascinating to see how advanced they were given their lack of precision machinery and education. - H
Just gave the 1k like for this video 😎
Impressive.
Amazing craftsmanship both in the past and present.
Incredible how brave humans are.Crossing oceans in a vessel like that with very little protection against the sea.
Lastly I hope that guy swinging that axe has made good use of his sausage and beans coz that looks a bit scary.
How does it look scary? He is on the other side of the plank.
wedging planks is easier in extremely cold weather and first growth wood; no knots, straight splitting at minus 40 below. My grandfather did this making beams in northwest Ontario, homesteading.
Smithsonian Channel: bait and switch teasers, as usual.
The viking ship used phantom rudder, narrow with a spoiler to cut the turbulence behind the rudder. You show a traditional rudder.
Where can I find the rest.
2:42 24 cell phone theme
1:32 how did the vikings make their hull waterproof?
Is this narrator going to say the basic logic of the design of these ships was sailing forward and backward?
amazing... though i always wondered how the vikings managed to navigate what tools did they use
Pretty. Neat
What documentary is this?
How did they carry and drag them across land??
thank yew
We were the greatest then. We are the greatest now. Look up which countries have the highest quality of life.
so true
Was it possible to lower the mast like in the video game?
Were the iron nails a weak point? I expect they would rust out fairly quickly after a few voyages. Did they replace them frequently?
They used, as you say, iron nails. Iron nails with very low, almost zero carbon. That would make them easy to deform when they hammered the nails. Another very important aspect of low carbon iron besides its malleability, is that the less carbon, the more corrosion resistant it is. If you look at modern stainless steels that is an alloy of iron, nickel and chrome, you will find very little carbon, as it infact decreases corrosion resistance. The ship itself was also covered in tar so that would also protect the nails. In most vikingship burials, the oak is long gone but the nails are still there, but of course corroded. The vikings knew how to make iron and steel from bog iron, which is available everywhere so replacing and repairing nails would have been straight forward. I would imagine that they carrier some spareparts as well.
@@motordude67 Thank you for your reply & explanation. I’ve wondered about the nails issue for quite awhile. I used to help a friend maintain his wooden sailboat & observed how much work went into caulking, oiling, painting & metal maintenance was required.
0:48 the narrator says that planks were built up on either side yet the animation shows both sides so which is it?
are you joking or just bad at english?
either side means every side which in this case are both
All hail Floki!!!
💛 Ha Ha Ha Ha 💛
@@paapiajahan8431 finally someone got the reference lol
The narrator sounds like the fellow in the psychedelic TV commercials that put me off Heinz for life.
It really is quite surprising they managed to cross some of the most treacherous seas on the planet in these. Not what one would think could handle rough seas.
The boats flexed which allows them to ride through huge waves. Look for videos of Draken.
No wonder they became experts with axes as a weapon.
this channel is frustrating because they make me want to watch more and the videos just end
Bruh I've been pissing for 2 minutes, is it a new world record?
Hey, Smith, you got it wrong its called lapstrake
These ships are gorgeous but I'd honestly rather have the 200+ year old tree still alive. 😭
Don’t know for sure, although many times they are using timber that has already been felled by storms, fire or other reason.
Would the Vikings cut down one large tree or several to build the ships?
Several, at last 5
Me watching this while playing AC VALHALLA .
So cool
JUST A LITTLE HOBBY.. CALM DOWN LITTLE GIRL
Viking boat come to indo pasific ocean..meet with java lung . Borneo long ship n others
Don't bother explaining what the clinker part is.
it was plank wood on each other
Wow i am the 4th comment. Never been so early on this channel.
الفايكنج محاربين اشداء وسفنهم سريعة
Hey i found a new way to sailing to the west lol
Doing work with old techniques is cool and all, but I'd suggest we should leave 200 year old trees alone for the time being.
valheim sent me
I prefer my Viking ship built by Lego Inc.
I guess I'm in that side of the internet again
I was told vikings were savages, and frankly I'm not buying it.. murderers yes, but not savages
I don't know if "dominant force in Europe for over 200 years" is necessarily an accurate characterization of the Vikings. For one, they were hardly a unified "force" as different raids/conquests occurred under different leaders at different times with different amounts of success and for another, while they did reach much of Europe they were only able to really establish themselves in England and Normandy and to some extent, Russia. Besides Scandinavia itself, obviously.
Why did they cut down a 200 year old oak tree?
Jaime...
uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh ya
Remind me how complete this is well I guess it's just like everything else that's the Smithsonian famous for to incomplete and controversial
its only a segment from a full documentary.
Eow viedeo
asberg ship?? lol
I doubt the ancient shipwrights split massive oaks with simple wedges. It takes too long with too much effort and men involved. They needed thousands of boards and built large fleets. Ever watch how long it takes modern men to get one board from an oak using wedges? It's ridiculous. I think the ancients had other techniques and tools that were lost to history.
arrrrrrrrr☠️
Was it really justified to use a 200 year-old tree just to make a historically accurate longboat?
Yes
Yea fool.
Trees grow.
Ex
Haha valheim tide
Why put up a teaser,? About time that history started to credit vikings did not invent this type of boat or construction. Don't believe me, then take a look at the Sutton Ho ship. Saxons were raiding the east Anglian coast before the Romans left the British Isles in very similar ships.
So much drama!
Gvtz in tränceeggschön För dna and ship täch ^?^
Ez
: me I’m dead
Every genius detail in less than 4 minutes. All of them. Yep. Four minutes not even. Thumb down.
Incomplete
It's amusing the movies and depictions of horses leaping off of these ships . The predecessor to the Portuguese Man of War could carry horses during the same historical time frame as the Vikings . It's no wonder why the Vikings stayed away from the areas of Portugal .
(sigh) Here we go again.
The Vikings didn't build ships. Their slaves built the ships . The expertise for shipbuilding was with their slaves .
Even if that's true, I don't think the slaves designed them.
How did the Vikings travel to get their slaves? On long boats. The tools, the design and the skill needed to build these boats took years to acquire. The knowledge was then passed down through the generations. Not possible for captured slaves to make the tools, come up with the design and then actually build a long boat.
I hate it hen American talks about history
TROLL