Ancient Celts vs. Romans - Some Things to Consider

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  • čas přidán 26. 03. 2017
  • Sources:
    Peter Berresford Ellis, A Brief History of the Celts
    USA: amzn.to/2n8esWp
    Canada: amzn.to/2nripJ9
    Susan A. Johnston, Icons of the Iron Age: The Celts in History
    amzn.to/2nE1kvW
    Nic Fields, Roman Republican Legionary 298-105 BC
    USA: amzn.to/2mHcfWx
    amzn.to/2nroghl
    A forum thread discussing Roman criticism of Celtic swords
    myarmoury.com/talk/viewtopic....
    Mike Loades, Swords and Swordsmen
    USA: amzn.to/2n86Vqv
    Canada: amzn.to/2nmy7nj
    Accurate reproductions of Celtic swords by Patrick Barta
    templ.net/english/weapons-anti...
    ********************************************************************************
    My favorite online store for buying swords (worldwide shipping):
    ww4.aitsafe.com/go.htm?go=kult...
    Channel-related shirts and stuff:
    skallagrim.spreadshirt.com/
    My Facebook page:
    / skallagrimyt
    Want to help fund future videos?
    / skallagrim
    Some recommended knife makers on Amazon:
    amzn.to/1qjwMNL
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Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @TheLiam14141
    @TheLiam14141 Před 5 lety +938

    The Celts also had a fun sense of humor, there have been multiple findings of lead balls (ammo for slings) with celtic engravings that read things like "ouch"

    • @thomas-pd9hm
      @thomas-pd9hm Před 4 lety +181

      Marcus:Hey ruleius look at this sling ball its from one of those filthy Celts
      Marcus: *shows ball*
      Ruleius:I do not know
      Celts: *snickers* tehehehe it says u gay

    • @CerberusGX
      @CerberusGX Před 4 lety +95

      Interesting fact! A precursor to us painting up our planes and bombs in WW2 and onward. Really gives perspective to how far we've come and yet how little we've changed.

    • @crwydryny
      @crwydryny Před 4 lety +60

      As a celt i have to say i'm not surprised, we still have the same twisted sense of humour today

    • @silver_tongue9644
      @silver_tongue9644 Před 4 lety +12

      Shawn nobleki
      they were gay lol
      And so were the celts
      And non monogamous haha

    • @xnadegod1053
      @xnadegod1053 Před 4 lety +31

      @@CerberusGX EXACTLY!
      From tribal warfare with clubs and bows, to medieval warfare with legions of men squaring off, to modern guerilla warfare; weapons have changed but humans remain the same. We are progressing faster than we are evolving.

  • @Necroskull388
    @Necroskull388 Před 7 lety +828

    With the Carthaginians, I would say that the main factor in Rome's win was unity of purpose. Hannibal, although he was a true genius, wasn't supported by his state the same way that Rome supported her armies--Rome considered the second Punic war a death struggle and drafted a massive new army after every major loss. Carthage on the other hand, if you judge by the actions of its leaders in Africa, seemed to take the war a lot less 'seriously', for lack of a better word--they had one of the greatest generals of antiquity on their side and didn't support him anywhere near as much as they should have because of internal politics.

    • @akatsukami9578
      @akatsukami9578 Před 7 lety +73

      Dagda Mor: To do Carthage justice, the Iberian expansion between the First and Second Punic Wars was essentially a Barcid enterprise, not a Carthaginian one. It's not difficult to imagine an AH in which Hannibal establishes a kingdom of Iberia independent of Carthage.

    • @marcomendicino3997
      @marcomendicino3997 Před 7 lety +26

      Dagda Mor they also couldn't really call their people into fighting and raise men into a shared "way of war", since they mostly relied on mercenaries which could grant some form of experienced units avaiable in short time but at the same time some of them may not always meet certain tactic requirements and would also be very expensive.

    • @moonknightish
      @moonknightish Před 7 lety +26

      That is not true, Hannibal was supported by the Carthagians. Problem was that the Carthaginians were not a military empire, but a commercial one, which made very difficult to support Hannibal, which was stuck in the italian peninsula. Also, a great deal of the Second Punic War was fought in Iberia, and not by Hannibal.

    • @moonknightish
      @moonknightish Před 7 lety +30

      They sent his brother in Cisalpine Gaul to help him out, after a previous army couldn't make it through the sea.
      But again, the real fight was in Hispania against the Scipios, not in Southern Italy with Hannibal. What Hannibal had to do was to turn Rome allies against them, and thus eroding Rome's power bit by bit. But he didn't manage to do that, so he eventually was forced to withdraw to Carthage when Scipio invaded.
      Carthage also orchestrated the treason of Syracuse.
      Hannibal could have never won Rome in a pitch battle, expecially because Rome refused to fight him directly after Cannae. And Hannibal also knew that, because he was in constant search for food in miles and miles of enemy territory and in numeric inferiority. And expecially after losing sicily. Rome could have manage to lose other battles, but one victory and Hannibal would have been forced to hide like a bandit.

    • @PureMetalDragon
      @PureMetalDragon Před 7 lety +12

      I remember reading a theory that said that some historians suspect Hannibal's military achievements were greatly exaggerated. I don't remember the names, but many of Hannibal's exploits where told by a Roman historians who happened to be very close to a roman general who became famous for defeating Hannibal. This, and considering that Hannibal did make more that a few glaring tactical mistakes, most notably, trying to cross the Alpes with his elephants and thin linen clothing.

  • @GCurl
    @GCurl Před 7 lety +1418

    The Gauls were so strong because of their magic potion don't you know that? I watched some very historically accurate documentaries by René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo!!!

    • @drasje1
      @drasje1 Před 7 lety +41

      GermanCurl i love you

    • @deusvult6900
      @deusvult6900 Před 7 lety +10

      Dries van Esch i love you too

    • @tanegurnick5071
      @tanegurnick5071 Před 7 lety +140

      GermanCurl they were strong from their fish fights usually instigated by the blacksmith and unassumingly encouraged by the local bard.

    • @TheLordIdanZiegeL
      @TheLordIdanZiegeL Před 7 lety +22

      GermanCurl La potion magique!

    • @Krieszak
      @Krieszak Před 7 lety +44

      Par Toutatis!!

  • @MpowerdAPE
    @MpowerdAPE Před 7 lety +107

    Also : the Roman understanding of logistics and lines of communication.... it could be argued that every Roman soldier was a battlefield engineer in one form or another. The battle of Alesia is a perfect example.

  • @jordanbonacci5725
    @jordanbonacci5725 Před 7 lety +1819

    Rome: Recently voted "Best State Ever" by Everyday Patrician Magazine. Article by Cicero.

    • @powerofanime1
      @powerofanime1 Před 7 lety +18

      Your name might just be perfect, Emperor Palpitoad.

    • @khornedmaple
      @khornedmaple Před 7 lety +21

      He's is telling you not to talk about patrician matters.

    • @MikaelKKarlsson
      @MikaelKKarlsson Před 7 lety +32

      Cicero - the lone reporter ever to win three consecutive "Fair & Balanced" awards.

    • @harristurpin3503
      @harristurpin3503 Před 7 lety +2

      Good evening...

    • @jordanbonacci5725
      @jordanbonacci5725 Před 7 lety +2

      What a fitting place to find me.

  • @SoggyNelco
    @SoggyNelco Před 7 lety +48

    This is why I really love ancient Rome, whenever they found something that was good or effective, they took it, adapted it, and made it better. Basically all their weapons, gladius was from Hispania for example. I think the entire empire's ability to adapt is what made it truly great.

    • @person8834
      @person8834 Před rokem +4

      I agree, taking ideas from other cultures isn’t always bad (with or without permission), especially when it comes to knowledge and survival. Adapting is a survival technique and it’s likely that every culture does it. If it’s useful, use it. Idk why people nowadays get so angry when other cultures make their ideas better.

    • @divergent4926
      @divergent4926 Před rokem +1

      Well the thing is you can't really say the Romans "bettered" it. A lot of things we see in medieval warfare didn't come from Romans, rather from things they took, and a lot of the things that are universally used of course were spread by Romans but weren't created. The Romans never officially used chainmail (invented by Celts) until the late Roman era (Some time before the Western Roman decline), and would use plate armour. Though many Romans preferred the Hamata, it was still very expensive and took lots of time to create.
      A lot of Roman technology was lost when Rome had collapsed hence is why we call this "The Dark Age." Therefore in short we CAN say that do a lot of medieval warfare weaponry like artillery and other stuff exist because of Rome? yes. But do things like sword weaponry and armoury and all of these other things exist because of Rome? no, as do many other things. Rome spread some big things that we know like Aqueducts, but I feel that when it comes to military history, people do not understand that Rome hardly contributed at all and a lot of the military history that we see originated from old civilizations that the Romans had subjugated, and from what I personally know I'd subject these civilizations as the Celts and Greeks as the Celts had made practical military inventions for weaponry, armour, cavalry, etc, and the Greeks had made revolutionary tactics and naval vessels, although the Romans had inspired their navy off of the Carthagian navy.

    • @seanharris8419
      @seanharris8419 Před rokem +2

      @@person8834Because people are unhinged today. Humans have always interacted with other cultures and shared/adopted ideas. For some reason that’s offensive today. I think some people just want something to be upset about honestly.

    • @wyattrota9070
      @wyattrota9070 Před rokem

      Same with mail

  • @missjayspeechley9213
    @missjayspeechley9213 Před 7 lety +25

    For anyone into heavy metal, Eluveitie did a concept album named "Helvetios" about on the Gallic Wars (58 - 50 BC) from the viewpoint of the Helvetians.
    The album tells the history from the first enounter with the romans, through the slaughter at Avaricum and on to the battle of Alesia
    Definitely worth a listen

  • @waltermattiko23
    @waltermattiko23 Před 4 lety +152

    "They had quite a bit of success, but at some point, Rome just steamrolled everything." Is the most beautifully accurate sentence I've heard.

    • @do0m556
      @do0m556 Před 2 lety

      lmao yes

    • @laisphinto6372
      @laisphinto6372 Před rokem +1

      pretty much roman style it went full nuts in the punic wars lost 5 armies to defeats or storms i hear no bell damn punic wait for the next round i bring the salt with me

  • @fisklars3579
    @fisklars3579 Před 7 lety +709

    make a fighting reaction of the fights in shrek movies

  • @vercingetorix2923
    @vercingetorix2923 Před 7 lety +352

    Please, do more about celts!

  • @mikefule330
    @mikefule330 Před 6 lety +83

    The Roman empire, when it was expanding, was similar to the Zulu empire under Shaka. When The world was made up of separate tribes and loose alliances, and fighting was typically about local disputes, honour and feuds, and everyone needed to get back to work on the farm as soon as possible. Then one state decides to expand. They develop a full time army that trains together, under a set command structure and they work towards a long term goal. Their equipment is a little bit better, and it is more uniform in style and quality. A small improvement in equipment and a big improvement in organisation combine to give them an enormous advantage on the battlefield. Once the flow of wealth (tribute and plunder) reaches a certain point, it becomes self sustaining because the empire is richer and more powerful than anyone who might resist it. And so it carries on until either they meet someone more powerful, or they simply collapse as they become decadent and fractured.

    • @cbeaudry4646
      @cbeaudry4646 Před 3 lety +7

      This is probably the best non-humor CZcams comment I've ever come across 👏

    • @bluebird3281
      @bluebird3281 Před 3 lety +8

      I would add a little Alexander the great in too. Shaka's new spear design and "bulls horn" tactics of rapid encirclement seemed a game changer on par with the Macedonian phalanx and rabid cavalry charges on the flanks. Nobody around either of them could deal with new style. DISCLAMER I am no historian.

  • @UsenameTakenWasTaken
    @UsenameTakenWasTaken Před 6 lety +39

    "Try that as a Roman soldier."
    I can't. I can't find a Roman recruiter that will take me.

  • @SmileyFace08121996
    @SmileyFace08121996 Před 7 lety +35

    When researching archeology it is important to know that the term "culture" is misleading. It doesn't describe a homogenous group of people, but a group of people that produced similar objects, often classified by ceramics and later also by metalworks.

  • @anderwmarcell9503
    @anderwmarcell9503 Před 7 lety +73

    The Celts were not a monolithic culture. There were arguing and feuds between the tribes. It is also true that Rome exploited these divisions, as they did everywhere. Rome had a disciplined and well supplied army and auxiliaries drawn form the lands where they fought. The Celts did have organization but Rome's was better for war.

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 7 lety +7

      doesn't help when some Celtic Warriors did not wear anything during battle

    •  Před 4 lety +1

      Yup the celts and britons/celts often had help from Rome defeating their neighbours then found themselves paying massive tributes

    • @nutyyyy
      @nutyyyy Před 3 lety +8

      The other aspect is the commanders, manpower etc. Rome suffered a number of pretty bad defeats at the hands of the celts but as was seen during the second Punic War they could suffer immense loses and keep fighting.

    • @GAMER123GAMING
      @GAMER123GAMING Před rokem +2

      @@christiandauz3742 Its not as if this took away from the celtic armies??? I mean having a bunch of maniacs in your army isn't always a bad thing and they were of course a minority

  • @visageliquifier3636
    @visageliquifier3636 Před 6 lety +96

    When looking at ancient military accounts, the thing that often tells the story is timetables and supplies.
    HQ: "How goes the campaign?"
    Field CMDR: "Oh man, these guys are idiotic savages, etc, etc"
    HQ: "Great!, so you're on schedule?"
    Field CMDR: "Not quite, um >insert lame excuses< we'll need two more months and another legion" translation: they're giving as good as they're getting

    • @matthiuskoenig3378
      @matthiuskoenig3378 Před 6 lety +2

      except the romans took the celts with low causalties and basically no reinforcements, what you describe sounds like fighting germans/eastern countries in that time period

    • @sethbennett617
      @sethbennett617 Před 4 lety +13

      @@matthiuskoenig3378 theres a big difference between getting away with low casualties and no reinforcements and winning. also you cant they took the "celts", celtic tribes spanned across most of europe and had vastly different fighting tactics and lived in vastly different terrains. for example, the romans steam rolled the gauls and iberian celts pretty effectively but ran into issues when they left the continent. i mean the romans didn't do well against the picts, or the welsh for a long time, and ran into problems when they tried to cross the rhine. you cant say the celts got steam rolled. some celtic tribes were beaten with relative ease but many others weren't a walk in the park by any chance.

    • @sillwullivan83
      @sillwullivan83 Před 4 lety +14

      seth bennett oh yes, the Romans steam rolled the Gauls. It’s not like Gauls at one point they had Julius Caesar himself in a fast retreat back to Rome. Not to mention the wars in Gaul took over a decade to conclude.
      Also we have no record of the Romans ever actually fighting the Picts. While the legion of the ninth did go missing past the Britannia boarder, we still don’t know what happened to them. For all we know they could have died from exposure. They went missing and we have no record of what happened to them. They just disappeared into the wind.

    • @sethbennett617
      @sethbennett617 Před 4 lety +5

      @@sillwullivan83 no record? Mons graupias? If there was no record then why did Hadrian build a wall? Also by steam rolled I mean that the Romans took less than 20 years to go from the alps to the coast

    • @sethbennett617
      @sethbennett617 Před 4 lety +3

      @@sillwullivan83 also, i need to add. we don't know that the 9th legion went missing over the border between roman britain and traditional pictish lands, they were last recorded in what is now york it is not known where they went from there. and the thing about that rapid retreat you mention, that only happened because for a small amount of time all the big gallic tribes united and fought back against roman occupation. peoples like the picts were able to repel roman occupation entirely, without being united. i could also mention the flop of a failure that the roman attempt to cross the rhein was. i accept your defense of the gallic tribes but you need to add context before you start spitting facts

  • @jgraham6267
    @jgraham6267 Před 7 lety +83

    Talk about slanders against the enemy:
    Germans offer to help the romans get across the Rhine
    *"THAT IS BENEATH THE ROMAN PEOPLE"*

    • @jgraham6267
      @jgraham6267 Před 7 lety +11

      Seriously though, Historia Civilis is a great channel that I think a lot of people on this channel would like.

    • @AGrumpyPanda
      @AGrumpyPanda Před 6 lety +8

      You forgot this one: "If my armies land on Spartan shores, your people will fall." "If."

    • @soyderiverdeliverybeaver8941
      @soyderiverdeliverybeaver8941 Před 4 lety +3

      The roman loved crossing rivers with their engineering

    • @pesii1452
      @pesii1452 Před 3 lety +3

      @@killerx9009 Romans are so mighty that they make their enemy work for them

    • @RexidusUR
      @RexidusUR Před 3 lety +1

      @@pesii1452 Ave Caesar

  • @Vexclorion
    @Vexclorion Před 5 lety +14

    As a historian, I agree with his intro.
    New information comes out that contests the old, we specialize in different things and even with the same info can argue radically different perspectives.
    Also as a Historian and teacher, I highly advocate Skallagrim and recommend his videos

  • @NegotiatorGladiarius
    @NegotiatorGladiarius Před 7 lety +68

    Skal, IMHO the equipment was a bigger problem than you seem to think. There is no doubt that they had the same armour and sword models as the Romans did. Hell, the gladius hispaniensis was literally a reproduction of a celtiberian sword.
    The problem is precisely that they had fewer of them. You already mention the fact that most celtic soldiers didn't actually have a maille shirt. I'd also add though that an estimated only 1 in 10 celtiberian soldiers actually had a sword. Only exactly two armies in Europe had swords for almost everyone, and those were the Romans and the Dacians.
    The disparity isn't in equipment models, the difference is in the AVERAGE equipment of a soldier. Heavy shock infantry tends to handily defeat light infantry, and the average Celt was really the latter.
    And let's think of the battle tactics, as per Caesar's own account. For light infantry, the scutum was their main defense, and if you could somehow deprive them of that protection, they'd be in huge trouble. And the pilum as exactly an anti-shield weapon. Essentially the whole first rank had to discard their shields after a volley of pila, and that sucks if you're light infantry. And if they somehow didn't discard the shield, the Romans just had to step on the shaft to force the shield off protecting your body.
    I'd add, and this again is supported by Caesar's own accounts, getting hit by a pilum was quite a horrible experience anyway, if you didn't actually have a second layer of armour behind that shield. We have the description of pila shafts getting stuck in the ground and warriors being pushed by the rest of the formation towards that deadly point poking through the shield.
    Swords were also a very big deal at the time, since basically nobody had invented a 15'th century halberd yet. If you put it in the context of fighting from behind a tower shield, and read about the kind of poking around a shield, or hooking around, and stuff like that, you couldn't really do that with a spear. There's a reason the Romans moved their Hastati (literally meaning: spearmen) away from spears and towards swords a long time before.
    So basically IMHO the fact that most Celts couldn't afford one of those maille shirts, nor a sword, was a huge problem.

    • @mondaysinsanity8193
      @mondaysinsanity8193 Před 6 lety +1

      NegotiatorGladiarius idk if it's European technically but pretty much every thracian had a falx

    • @commiesquid4620
      @commiesquid4620 Před 6 lety +4

      I think the success of Rome was based especially on the slave system that extracted huge profits for the aristocracy and on taxes of the farmers, plebs, nobiles,equestrians and finally the aristocracy to some extent, which was how the army was paid for by the state, as well as plunder by the armies themselves which would translate into conquering new territory for slaves and lands for the slaves to work on. This also explains Romes decline and civil wars and political conflicts; slavery was no longer profitable and the mass of peasant farmers and landless poor could not bear the high taxation so they fled onto the farms of the aristocracy, to get away from the states recruiters and taxmen as well as the horrible exploitation of labour by the Romans during the fall of Rome, so instead they became peasants who would rely on their lord for protection in return for exploiting their labour surplus. Generals would pay and look after their soldiers instead of the increasingly corrupt and bureaucratic and incompetent state. Eventually the Emperor gave into the all-powerful senatorial class aristocracy and legitimized this and tied the peasants to the land via law. This brought about the proto-feudal type of peasant society during the fall of Rome.

    • @thebath6653
      @thebath6653 Před 6 lety +1

      zaco21 pila is the plural of pilum

    • @matthiuskoenig3378
      @matthiuskoenig3378 Před 6 lety +6

      the whole slave thing has been disporven, rome had very little slavery when we look at actual evidence. also can you give a source for this proto-feudalism as from what i have read they were not tied don to tha land at any time. but i have read tons of books about the 'fall' of rome and how the slavery idea is a myth and that the roman army never had the payment dificulty made out. also there was no fall of rome, there was a fracturing of the roman empire with each fracture running like the empire did in till the lat 700s early 800s when feudalism in its basic form was introduced.

    • @Userius1
      @Userius1 Před 5 lety +1

      @@mondaysinsanity8193 You mean rhomphaia and it's rather unclear now whether the falx has anything to do with the rhomphaia or the Dacians and Thracians are even that related.
      All unearthed rhomphaia blades were rather thin and long, basically more of an "all iron spear" as they were historically described rather than an armor destroying chopping blade. The falx is more effective at that, basically being a war scythe. The blade would still tend to be only 1/3 of the total length. So you'd have for example an 18 inch blade with a 36 inch or so haft on the falx. A long blade would be too expensive and not all that beneficial in the falx's purpose.
      Random lesson after 1 year. Enjoy.

  • @RealEnglishNow
    @RealEnglishNow Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you for ensuring that the audio for your videos is crisp and professional sounding - too many youtubers neglect this vital portion of video making and it definitely shows that you are not one of the amateurs. Keep up the excellent work!

  • @Neonhelmet
    @Neonhelmet Před 7 lety +354

    Told my wife to practice the oral tradition, I was not disappointed

    • @notvictor7650
      @notvictor7650 Před 5 lety +28

      ┬┴┬┴┤ ͜ʖ ͡°) ├┬┴┬┴ I see what you did there

    • @leafyisqueer7155
      @leafyisqueer7155 Před 5 lety +36

      I told my wife to practice the oral tradition as well... she is now able to entirely recite 100 tales of early english folklore

    • @Emanresuadeen
      @Emanresuadeen Před 4 lety +10

      So, she finally brushed her teeth!

    • @JohnSmith-ty2he
      @JohnSmith-ty2he Před 4 lety +3

      @@Emanresuadeen The man said English. So obviously not.

    • @LeadHerring
      @LeadHerring Před 4 lety +1

      Make sure she orally passes down what she knows to your children

  • @fabiovarra3698
    @fabiovarra3698 Před 7 lety +22

    A big oval shield like the scutum was used by the Sanniti, another italic tribe that roman fought against in the early period of the republic
    there is a debate if the roman take the scutum from them or from the celts of Brenno who pillaged Rome
    while the story of the easly bent swords maybe originated by the celts tradition of bending their swords after surrender

    • @matthiuskoenig3378
      @matthiuskoenig3378 Před 6 lety +4

      doesn't the roman scutum come from the Etruscans, i used to have this very nice book that explained that the scutum is essnially the evolution of the shield used by 2nd and 3rd group etruscan soldiers, which if i remember actually comes from the ilyrians but i could be wrong

  • @MrGameAMV
    @MrGameAMV Před 7 lety +568

    Why is there no sound in the Intro ? :o

  • @itsDJGreene
    @itsDJGreene Před 7 lety +1

    I am a huge fan of the way that you present ancient history! Thanks for your amazing content!
    Cheers!
    -Skaald

  • @Akuryoutaisan21
    @Akuryoutaisan21 Před 7 lety +1

    Thanks for adding your sources in the description.

  • @tefras14
    @tefras14 Před 7 lety +732

    Rome OP plz nerf

    • @bfnvalley
      @bfnvalley Před 7 lety +174

      tefras14 If you check the Changelogs, the faction was nerfed in the 476 A.D. Update.

    • @tefras14
      @tefras14 Před 7 lety +23

      Good one!

    • @sokandueler9578
      @sokandueler9578 Před 7 lety +49

      Rome was only OP because they brought modern tactics (which is somewhat of a circular idea since modern tactics are based mostly off of Roman practice) to a world that was still very much in a victory through numbers mentality. Rome was able to adapt to the circumstances because the had educated and experienced commanders who had studied the art of war. If you had the Romans fight something like the Holy Roman Empire or Late period France, it would be a much more even fight, even despite the 1000 year discrepancy with the technology and the addition of pommels on sword. (Sorry, couldn't resist)

    • @bfnvalley
      @bfnvalley Před 7 lety +30

      Sokandueler95 Yeah I agree the game was so P2W.

    • @sokandueler9578
      @sokandueler9578 Před 7 lety +5

      +Low Standards I know, impossible if your were on the wrong tean

  • @paulpeterson4216
    @paulpeterson4216 Před 7 lety +54

    The trap, which Skall seems aware of, with "Why did X happen and not Y" in history is the presumption that the outcome was inevitable. In some cases it may have been, in others it may not. If the Celts had defeated the Romans, we would have historians looking at the same set of preconditions that currently say that the Roman victory was inevitable, and they would declare that the Celtic victory was inevitable. Sometimes, when humans are involved, the humans have something to say about the outcome.

    • @pingouin3664
      @pingouin3664 Před 6 lety +1

      well yeah, but the romans defeated a bunch of country, making them extremely interesting

    • @matthiuskoenig3378
      @matthiuskoenig3378 Před 6 lety +4

      also 'roman' culture has survived as most cultures from europe were significantly affected by the romans, directlyor indirectly

    • @3goats1coat
      @3goats1coat Před 5 lety +8

      @Jhoshua Wolfox the answer is easy, the Romans won unnumbered battles against superior enemy numbers due to organization, a legion was a well oiled war machine.
      And most importantly, for inventing war engineering. Rome rarely fought on an open field, they've built forts within a few days wherever they went. One of the most clear and detailed account that depict this is Caesar's victory at Alesia.

    • @josephpeck8723
      @josephpeck8723 Před 3 lety +4

      @@3goats1coat You realize Rome copied numerous things from their neighbors, right?

  • @chevypbrdipper
    @chevypbrdipper Před 7 lety +1

    MORE VIDEOS LIKE THIS PLEASE! really like your historical analysis would love to see more on the same and on different topics if you could, thank you for the great vids!

  • @papacomms7372
    @papacomms7372 Před 7 lety +14

    You're one of my favorite history CZcamsr. I always really liked history but when I came across you're CZcams channel my interest in history exploded. I started to love history so much my teacher is going to place me in Honors history. I just want to say thank you for being a cool history CZcamsr!! Keep up the good work!

    • @Skallagrim
      @Skallagrim  Před 7 lety +7

      Thanks!
      Although I wouldn't necessarily call myself a history CZcamsr. I'm usually more focused on the practical aspects of modern reproductions of historical stuff. :)

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 7 lety +2

      You, Metraton, Shadiversity and Linderbeige are amazing!
      Good thing the Romans DID NOT have muskets and cannons, otherwise, they might have conquered all of Germany and the British Isles!

  • @renzocoppola4664
    @renzocoppola4664 Před 7 lety +455

    Dude, most of your videos are marked as inappropriate. Have you noticed that? It seems ius tube cesorhip got you.

    • @Debilinside
      @Debilinside Před 7 lety +265

      Sure, the racist political agenda, the excessive violence, the lack of diversity and sexual acceptance makes Skal inappropiate. How can you not see that. Shame on you, you misogynistic rightist nazi pig! (Dont take it seriously please)

    • @hughjass5156
      @hughjass5156 Před 7 lety +276

      Its probably because he talked shit on katanas that one time, how xenophobic!

    • @sterlingmuse5808
      @sterlingmuse5808 Před 7 lety +14

      They aren't marked that way for me... Maybe it's just marked that way in your area? I live in US, so if you live there too that probably isn't why, but I figured I would mention it.

    • @bbdawise
      @bbdawise Před 7 lety +69

      It's because he brought back the lost art of pommel throwing. The man doesn't want people to know how to "end him rightly."

    • @absentiambient
      @absentiambient Před 7 lety +39

      he's too erotic

  • @raptorjesues1445
    @raptorjesues1445 Před 7 lety +156

    No intro theme felt weird as fuck. Also *generic pommel throwing joke*

  • @Sweatykeyboard
    @Sweatykeyboard Před 7 lety +2

    As a history student i found this video to be surprisingly erudite, good work skall! Also thanks for posting the sources, sometimes helps me for my own work

  • @Pjvenom1985
    @Pjvenom1985 Před 6 lety +2

    Very nice video man. Recently been brushing up on Celtic history and stumbled across this little well spoken thought out jem.

  • @timzhou3304
    @timzhou3304 Před 6 lety +6

    A well reasoned, balanced treatment of some of the misconceptions surrounding the Celts. Thoroughly enjoyed watching this!

  • @cknmikee
    @cknmikee Před 7 lety +16

    For people who like adventure books set in historical times: there is a wonderful series called Eagles of the Empire by Simon Scarrow, that tells a story of two Roman centurions, in large part during Claudius' invasion of Britain. It's really well written, and it's centered about legions' actions, the way the author writes about how the Roman armies operated is just fantastic. Though I have to say that these books are not 100% historically accurate, especially Roman's organization and military proficiency is a little bit overestimated.

    • @TomSmith-li5se
      @TomSmith-li5se Před 5 lety

      The Romans invented the organization like it is intended today. How could it be overestimated?

    • @spikem5950
      @spikem5950 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TomSmith-li5se Right, like the Romans "invented" their arms and armor, tactics, culture, and gods, amirite? Let me guess, the Romans also invented theater, astronomy, and civility as a whole.
      Rome's organization was taken from its neighbors, they simply took the best ideas that they saw others using.

    • @TomSmith-li5se
      @TomSmith-li5se Před 3 lety +3

      @@spikem5950 that's not totally true. It was their ability to merge what worked of their neighbors that made the Roman an organized force to be reckon with.

  • @MrB16M4C
    @MrB16M4C Před 7 lety +2

    I'm so glad you're talking about the Celts. it's my favourite history to learn, anything from Greek Celts to Irish Celts. not enough historical youtubers i watch talk about them.
    i know you could say we don't know enough about them to talk in detail about them. but if talk about what we do know, people may be interested in finding out more in their own personal research

  • @TheNorbyAKANorbz
    @TheNorbyAKANorbz Před 7 lety +1

    love this type of historical content. keep it up!

  • @ealing456
    @ealing456 Před 7 lety +33

    12:36 Single combat such as this is attested in at least one prominent Celtic tale from Welsh mythology (the mabinogi). After several days of two Celtic armies (the northerly Venedotian and the southern Demetians) fighting but with no conclusion in sight, it's decided the battle will be decided by single combat between the trickster hero of the north Gwydion and the southern king Pryderi. Unlike Pryderi, Gwydion was not only an apt swordsman but also a powerful magician, and cheated a little by using magic to bolster his fighting capabilities. ;)

    • @Psydork64
      @Psydork64 Před 6 lety +3

      Pryderi needs to buff his XP and Health points. He may also need an armor upgrade.

  • @regularguy8110
    @regularguy8110 Před 7 lety +3

    Enjoyed your video and your right on about the aspects of the cultures. The Romans were very well known for adapting armor, weapons and techniques from other forces. They used what worked. Irregular/tribal forces typically vary in how they fight, depending on the Culture/Leader/Commander. You mentioned the shield wall and it reminded me of William trying to break through at Hastings in 1066. Smaller scale production/scavenging equipment would always mean variations in quality. Your reading and knowledge shows in what you present.

  • @heishephaestion4178
    @heishephaestion4178 Před 7 lety +1

    Incredible video, thanks for taking the time.

  • @Rogerfrasier4935
    @Rogerfrasier4935 Před 7 lety +113

    But celtic is to broad of a ethno-linguistic group. the Gauls, Picts, Brittonic celts, Goidelic celts, etc are all celtic and are different in one way or another.

    • @bionictech9902
      @bionictech9902 Před 7 lety +4

      ian simmons Picts are not celts

    • @Memento--Mori
      @Memento--Mori Před 7 lety +1

      ian simmons Goidelic Celts best Celts.

    • @superduperfreakyDj
      @superduperfreakyDj Před 7 lety +5

      Bionic Tech They are believed to be celts, but really different celts.

    • @bionictech9902
      @bionictech9902 Před 7 lety +2

      Ducky McDuckface I'm not so sure, they certainly look very different, Pictish people (or People with strong Pictish ancestry) tend to be shorter, broader and have a darker hair, while people with strong Celtic ancestry are taller, leaner and have red hair. am not saying that Picts and Celts didn't intermingle, but Picts are a much more ancient British people than Celts, exactly how ancient on the other hand is a very different matter

    • @superduperfreakyDj
      @superduperfreakyDj Před 7 lety +15

      Bionic Tech That's really stereotypical mate. And there is a lot of variety in ancient celts. Most acclaimed scholars think they are Celtic people but just really different.

  • @rudolfschrenk9411
    @rudolfschrenk9411 Před 7 lety +28

    The basic difference was: the typical celtic warrior was a farmer who could only train and go on campaign when the farmwork was done. The typical roman legionary could train and go on campaign all the time, while the bulk of the farmwork was done by slaves. So with multiple times of available training time for the fighting men and bein able to attack when the celts were busy bringing in the harvest, the romans usually had the edge. There were exceptions, but those were, well exceptions from the rule.

  • @JaM-R2TR4
    @JaM-R2TR4 Před 6 lety +7

    Actually, Scutum appeared in Italy a lot sooner, there are tomb painting from 6 century BC, while Gauls started to use it by the 4th century BC.. plus, Roman Scutum was not flat.

  • @sleekeditingco8741
    @sleekeditingco8741 Před 7 lety +1

    don't be so humble. you've been doing this for long enough now to consider yourself a very experienced and reliable source of information on these topics. ily btw

  • @timflatus
    @timflatus Před 4 lety +6

    There were many different styles of 'Celtic' swords and there is strong evidence to suggest that bronze was preferred during the early iron-age. Those that didn't like to fight naked preferred leather armour and wooden shields because it was more effective. The ornate metal versions may have been ceremonial. La Tene also seems to have influenced the material culture of the Saxons.

  • @CharlysBonada
    @CharlysBonada Před 7 lety +328

    The legend says that if you say I'm first, even if you are, you get ended rightly

  • @polishedpebble4111
    @polishedpebble4111 Před 7 lety +46

    "Celts, good at siege, unique unit the Woad Raider."

  • @MilestheAshura
    @MilestheAshura Před 7 lety

    I really enjoy your content man keep up the good work 😊

  • @leighchristopherson2455
    @leighchristopherson2455 Před 3 lety +1

    So cool to hear Patrick Barta mentioned. Learned of him twenty years ago, a true talent in repro weapons.

  • @Yzaias15
    @Yzaias15 Před 7 lety +44

    Hi Skall, could you possibly do a video talking about people who use weapons in the left hand against someone using a weapon in the right hand?

    • @stitchowi
      @stitchowi Před 7 lety

      Yzaias Tf is so special about that?!

    • @jjgodbey8395
      @jjgodbey8395 Před 7 lety +7

      +Stitchowi Probably because only around 10%-15% of people in the world are left handed so most right-handers trained exclusively against other righties meaning less experience against lefties whereas lefties would have more experience against righties.

    • @stitchowi
      @stitchowi Před 7 lety +3

      JJ Godbey Im glad to be a leftie!

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 7 lety

      Now try to form a leftie shield wall. For animals group behavior favors one sided lateralization (the romans) where individualism gives a mix (the celts)

    • @Marcusjnmc
      @Marcusjnmc Před 7 lety +1

      from what few sources I can half remember in cultures that used shield wall left or right handed made little difference to what hand you held the shield in, you might be a little better at manipulating the shield and a little worse at swinging the sword but you'd train to use the same hands for each as everyone else

  • @DwarfLordAirsoft
    @DwarfLordAirsoft Před 7 lety +3

    From what i know i can tell you are right about single combat. The Germanic people especially were obsessed with single combat, and ancient germano-celtic shields are perfectly designed for single combat, straight through the Viking age.

  • @Kardia_of_Rhodes
    @Kardia_of_Rhodes Před 7 lety +1

    Very nice video Skall, I actually remember commenting on one of your previous videos regarding this exact topic (starting to wonder if I inspired you). I'll admit that last comment was more intended as a joke, however I am well informed that the old Celtic tribes had well versed fighting styles and battlefield tactics and didn't just rush into battle half-naked kicking and screaming (though some did...looking at you Arverni). Even Julius Caesar admitted that when he fought Vercingetorix that their cavalry was better than his own.

  • @Gaisowiros
    @Gaisowiros Před 7 lety +3

    Great video Skall, I hope the Celts become a more popular topic to study and talk about, at least on CZcams!

  • @trondsi
    @trondsi Před 6 lety +5

    Having read some pretty decent history books on Rome and various European cultures, I have noticed one thing that many people tend to forget about Roman success in war: after Rome managed to control central Italy, they had a huge source of manpower (this was one of the most fertile regions of Europe). The were often beaten in battles, in setbacks that would have killed off many of their enemies, but the Romans came back with fresh men, sometimes adjusted their tactics a little, and then won the war.

  • @crezychameau
    @crezychameau Před 7 lety +48

    If you want additional extremely accurate info on the celts, you can read the series named "Asterix" :)

  • @brennanjoseph2716
    @brennanjoseph2716 Před 7 lety

    Great video. Keep up the good work

  • @Psiberzerker
    @Psiberzerker Před 7 lety

    Great video. Awesome, one of your best.

  • @BlackJar72
    @BlackJar72 Před 7 lety +3

    I remember reading years ago that the quality of Celtic sword varied highly based on the warrior's wealth and social status -- at least that's what they thought at the time. Also, that they had a "no ganging-up" rule in their code of honor but probably set it aside for the use of group formations against enemies that used formations.

  • @Pablo668
    @Pablo668 Před 7 lety +44

    It is worth remembering that the Romans didn't conquer all of the Celts. There was a small village in Amorica...

    • @adamcochran1309
      @adamcochran1309 Před 5 lety +1

      Where you think the metals and all there gold came from?

    • @toast4251
      @toast4251 Před 3 lety +1

      Long live Vercingtorix

    • @spikem5950
      @spikem5950 Před 3 lety +2

      Or... You know, Scotland and Ireland. Who the Romans took one look at Scotland after they invaded England, saw a lone buff Scotsman with woad and a claymore on top of a hill, and said "Right, we're building a wall here."

    • @camulodunon
      @camulodunon Před 2 lety

      @@spikem5950 some roman guy actually did try to conquer Scotland but failed.

    • @spikem5950
      @spikem5950 Před 2 lety

      @@camulodunon And they immediately built a wall.

  • @brennanrutan-heningham8433

    Barry cunliffe is one of the best entry authors on the Celts from what I've read. Awesome video, always appreciate when you cover Celts and ancient history.

  • @mattbrown1277
    @mattbrown1277 Před 7 lety

    Great information, thank you for sharing.

  • @x5CiNEMA
    @x5CiNEMA Před 7 lety +39

    Although you may not like For Honor, it's what brought me to your channel and has sparked a big interest in the European history. Love your stuff!

    • @sayanorasonic
      @sayanorasonic Před 7 lety

      x5 CiNEMA same here lol

    • @eduardofili7
      @eduardofili7 Před 6 lety

      To me it was assassins creed, i saw his video about the hidden blade and been a fan ever since

    • @akaaoife2312
      @akaaoife2312 Před 6 lety +1

      Eduardo Santos i guess it was something like history or something for me, or maybe a rambly video

    • @ittah_2770
      @ittah_2770 Před 6 lety +1

      I was watching ZNA Productions, and he mentioned Skall in some point, so I searched him and I kinda instantly-subscribed

    • @whitephillip6997
      @whitephillip6997 Před 5 lety

      I know this is 2 year old post but play Mordhau! Its a fun (unrealistic & historically inaccurate) computer game. Like a better version of For Honor or Chivalry imo 😬

  • @BoarhideGaming
    @BoarhideGaming Před 7 lety +20

    Oh god, in a few days the German news channel 'N-TV' will air it's new show called something like "Resistance of the Barbarians" one of those "semi-historical-reconstruction-but-with-added-drama-but-still-presented-as-absolute-historical-fact"-shows.
    I watched the teaser where they showed several Germanic tribesmen rush a Roman formation, and...
    _The more sensitive amongst the readers might want to stop reading here. Final warning_
    ...rush the formation, and jump up into the air to strike down like Superman.
    I saw so many twirls and flips in that fight. The Romans instantly gave up their battle lines and resolved into a man-to-man skirmish.
    I don't think I will ever recover from seeing this attrociety

    • @gustaf3811
      @gustaf3811 Před 4 lety +1

      Aha, similar to Asterix and Obelix then.

  • @Mathijspk1
    @Mathijspk1 Před 7 lety

    Your videos are so great!

  • @flexbuttkiss7698
    @flexbuttkiss7698 Před 7 lety +2

    The part about the Celtic emphasis on one-on-one duels and personal honor is highly interesting to me. The Japanese went through a similar phase of warfare culture, where battles were highly ritualized (there was usually an exchange of arrow fire before the armies would meet in melee). I think it results from a lot of internal strife between members of the same overarching culture, especially in areas with not that many resources and harsh weather (Japan and Europe fit that bill fairly well), because at that point both warring armies understand that the loss of too many men means neither of them may survive the next winter.

  • @metatronyt
    @metatronyt Před 7 lety +424

    I very much enjoyed this one :)
    ps: Rom.... ok no I'm not gonna say it....
    pps: ROMA INVICTA!!! :D

    • @celtofcanaanesurix2245
      @celtofcanaanesurix2245 Před 6 lety +3

      Metatron ESTI KELTA KRIMUM

    • @mooncorp212
      @mooncorp212 Před 5 lety +14

      390 BCE Brennus disagrees :)

    • @EltheMura
      @EltheMura Před 5 lety +3

      If you didn't say it I was going to. lol

    • @EltheMura
      @EltheMura Před 5 lety +7

      And he said it... WINNERS write history.

    • @mooncorp212
      @mooncorp212 Před 5 lety +1

      I liked the first heroic-fantasy novel of the history, autor was said to be Julius Cesar :)
      Didn't wrote tome 2 though, it seems to be Rome had sligth problems with the number 390 or something :)

  • @buineto
    @buineto Před 7 lety +19

    I remember reading in a French History magazine that it wasn't so much the Celtic sword that was prone to bending as its scabbard which was made of a thin sheet of iron that was rolled up on itself.
    Sorry for the possible mistakes, English isn't my first language so please don't hesitate to correct me.

    • @sterlingmuse5808
      @sterlingmuse5808 Před 7 lety +17

      You didn't make any mistakes though... In fact, you wrote better than most native English speakers.
      It's good to be humble, but it usually works a lot better to keep the apology for after you make the mistake XD I would try to say it in French, but my French was elementary level before I stopped studying it years ago, so I won't let myself butcher your language when you've used mine so well.

    • @Rasgonras
      @Rasgonras Před 7 lety +2

      There are many theories as to what Polybius was describing. I have also heard from a history professor that Polybius probably was mistaking sacrificial practices.
      But I like the theory skall puts up here, for it is done with ACTUAL testing.

    • @matthewmuir8884
      @matthewmuir8884 Před 6 lety +4

      Of course, anything a Roman wrote about enemies of Rome should be taken with as much salt as they allegedly poured on Carthage.

    • @garn3590
      @garn3590 Před 6 lety

      the salt on carthage is a modern story, made in the 1800, there are no roman fonts for that, heck rome rebuilt carthage like around 100 years later

  • @Garybonn
    @Garybonn Před 3 lety

    That was a superbly well presented talk

  • @neutronalchemist3241
    @neutronalchemist3241 Před 7 lety +1

    The picture on the right at 14:37 shows Samnites warriors of IV sec. BC, whose equipment can be reconstructeb by many contemporary depictions and archaeological findings. As seen in the picture, the oval shield and the helmet with hinged cheekplates was in use among several Italic populations, and, if there are doubts for the origin of the Roman helmet, the Romans themself said to have taken the shield from the Samnites and the lorica hamata from the Gauls.

  • @darthnihilusthebestsith
    @darthnihilusthebestsith Před 4 lety +3

    The differences between Celts is something Julius Cesar explains very well and insosts over in the de bello gallico

  • @cliffordjensen8064
    @cliffordjensen8064 Před 3 lety +5

    The Celts seem to have fought the best for Hannibal. With Carthaginian training and leadership they performed a masterful fighting retreat at Cannae, which sealed Hannibal's victory.

  • @AngryHistorian87
    @AngryHistorian87 Před 6 lety

    I really like that you cite your sources. Very nice. Keep it up.
    However, I wish to ask you for the source(s) that state(s) that the scutum may have been borrowed from the Celts?

  • @bretthines1020
    @bretthines1020 Před rokem

    Love your channel!

  • @KevDaly
    @KevDaly Před 7 lety +22

    The problem of Irish sources describing the weapons and equipment of their own time is quite similar to the way medieval manuscripts show biblical and classical figures dressed & armed as contemporary knights

  • @cormachayden1614
    @cormachayden1614 Před 5 lety +3

    If you want a sword, and you have the specs for it... have you tried reaching out to Alec Steele? He's usually up for a challenge, and it could make for some good crossover videos.

  • @mver191
    @mver191 Před 7 lety

    Very interesting video. Thank you! :)

  • @4youp
    @4youp Před 6 lety +2

    I think lots of people underestimate how important single combat was for the Romans themselves. The emphasis is always on their military efficiency as an army because, of course, that is what they excelled at. But there are also many examples of duels between Romans and their enemies. Showing your own bravery and prowess, was actually one of the best ways of acquiring fame and status.

  • @sergeibelozorov4428
    @sergeibelozorov4428 Před 6 lety +31

    Also, roman armies were extremely mobile, far more adept in fortification than any hellenic or barbaric peoples and soldiers were used to hard labor, digging trenches, building towers etc. Unlike any other military of that period

    • @camulodunon
      @camulodunon Před 2 lety +3

      I'm pretty sure "barbarian" warriors were pretty used to hard labor.

  • @AeolethNionian
    @AeolethNionian Před 6 lety +20

    2:11 How would they get milk without agriculture?...

  • @truthornothing666k
    @truthornothing666k Před 2 lety

    Your honesty was very refreshing thank you for not pretending to be like a scholar you have more freedom to explore information they are denied. You are not limited by what you dont know you are limited by what you know for a fact what is true and what cant be. They took test in expensive schools to be able to regurgitate what someone else heard about another scholars word on a discovery...

  • @jaspermeijer7569
    @jaspermeijer7569 Před 7 lety

    Hey Skallagrim, really like your vids and found this one quite interesting. I was wondering if you, perhaps, could make a simmilar video about ancient Germans vs Romans?

  •  Před 7 lety +5

    00:28
    "Do your own research."
    --Andrew Wakefield

  • @Gnomelord0
    @Gnomelord0 Před 7 lety +13

    Its entirely possible that the celtic tribe's had tactics that differed depending on the tribe which would explain the inconsistency. Or that they used their more traditional tactics against the romans and when thoys failed, they adapted with the shield wall stuff. Or sometimes they used the shield wall and sometimes they formed up. Mentions of them using shield walls are outnumbered by mentions of them fighting individually (though many romans said they were individually quite skilled)

    • @breaden4381
      @breaden4381 Před 7 lety

      Gnomelord0 The celts being good in single combat compared to the Romans is impressive considering that the actual sparring in Roman training was 1v1

    • @allantrvsn
      @allantrvsn Před 7 lety +1

      Gnomelord0 The majority of germanic warriors were actually farmers. So probably they would lose to Roman soldiers in single combat. The Roman's were professional soldiers.

    • @breaden4381
      @breaden4381 Před 7 lety

      Allan Trevisan What Caesar describes of the Germanic tribes in general says that they are part time soldiers, serving every other year or multiple years. The troops of Ariovistus were on campaign and were more experienced than a couple of Caesar's new legions. Caesar never relied on his inexperienced legions much, and they didn't perform nearly as well as his others.

    • @18Krieger
      @18Krieger Před 7 lety

      That is not a good argument. Being a farmer doesnt prevent you from knowing how to fight. They were farmers but fighting was a important part of their life. They had to protect their land, had to join wars and raids. Accounting to sources and archaelogical evidence you can assume that at least a part of every household knowed how to fight.

    • @reporterid
      @reporterid Před 7 lety

      @Gnomelord0, good theory.

  • @coralmar5329
    @coralmar5329 Před 7 lety

    Thanks for the video Skall - I've been dying for some Celt material - can't wait to see the Celtic sword tests - btw on the question of personal glory among the Celts and duelling; It is far more likely that the Celtic way of warfare was more like the early greek way of warfare (like in the Iliad). The heroes (for honor ref.) and chiefs were looking for personal glory for themselves, but in a battle they would be protected by their band of warriors who would seek glory for themselves by serving their lord. Duels could have been a custom (same as greeks), but it was abandonned for a more flexible group fighting style in a battle (more like later schiltrons) without a true formation but still with one man looking after the other and protecting their lord.

  • @NickLongFilmmaking
    @NickLongFilmmaking Před 7 lety +1

    Loved the video! Currently working on a Feature film exploring Welsh culture (not historically accurate, for the purposes of craming the culture into the film) - anyway, as a proud Welshman, whenever Celtic history is talked about, aside from the Irish, the Welsh need to be talked about and explored a lot more, our history is very significant in Britain. We've been around since the 1st century, whereas the saxons didn't invade until the 5th century. Unfortunately we are forgotten about a lot - the way I see it anyway, I could be wrong

  • @caililly
    @caililly Před 6 lety +3

    2:29
    I was like, "Oh shit, Monika escaped!" haha.

  • @cjmcc5231
    @cjmcc5231 Před 7 lety +8

    You could have mentioned the use of chariots in warfare which the celts (especially from Britain and Ireland) were very skilled at.
    I'm sure the Romans invaded Britain because the celts tried to help the Gauls and vercengetorix.
    Could have mentioned how Boudicca managed to sack Londonium (london) but her (supposed) 200,000 strong army was defeated by 10,000 romans. Obviously that seems inflated, however, this battle (had Boudicca won) would have convinced Nero to withdraw troops from Britain.
    Also the Picts were never conquered by rome.

    • @Shaniflewog
      @Shaniflewog Před 7 lety +7

      Wales was not completely ruled by Romans either, still proud of my Welsh celtic heritage, never beaten outrightly, and still remain the most celtic in the Uk today

    • @mojowarrior4578
      @mojowarrior4578 Před 7 lety

      Owain LLion Kymrys am Bith

    • @LouisKing995
      @LouisKing995 Před 7 lety +1

      Owain LLion That's debatable

    • @pingouin3664
      @pingouin3664 Před 6 lety +3

      her army was far from being all warriors, and there were 20 000 roman veterans facing her, so those numbers aren’t seen as far from reality

    • @matthiuskoenig3378
      @matthiuskoenig3378 Před 6 lety +2

      also she was a reble and a traitor and the cities she attacked was essentially a roman retirement village so she killed a bunch of oldish unarmed men, their wives and children. then faught a real roman army and lost (but the only reason she got smashed was self impossed no retreat as her wagons blocked the retreat path hence she was defeated in one battle. had she won, then the romans would send more troops as they had their pride and investments in england aswell as a bunch of allies (unlike germany which is the only invasion they ever gave up on, even in scotland where they won all their battles but could never control the locals they were still trieing throught the empire.

  • @Kanonamos
    @Kanonamos Před 7 lety

    This was really interesting Skall, lots of cool stuff to think about.

  • @mathm7401
    @mathm7401 Před 7 lety

    Thank you so much for this. I've always been deeply connected to celtic culture and history (mostly because of my heritage) and I feel like more often than not they are shown in a very bad light. Thank you again for clearing things up for other people :)

  • @johnwhite511
    @johnwhite511 Před 7 lety +13

    Picts, the ones the Romans never conquered! They really didn't like the Fried Mars Bars.

    • @jkkennedy9280
      @jkkennedy9280 Před 4 lety +2

      and the gaels

    • @jnes624
      @jnes624 Před 4 lety

      they won plenty of battles vs them, it wasnt worth the expense to garrison permanently

    • @yeoldchief7711
      @yeoldchief7711 Před 4 lety

      @@jnes624 like they had to in the South West which also included large bribes not to kick the Romans arses

  • @Imakebootysclap
    @Imakebootysclap Před 7 lety +11

    I think the Romans where so effective in their time do to being more of a professional army where as other tribal type peoples armies where more mob like and less structured.

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 7 lety +1

      Same with the Byzantines, Mongols and Turks

    • @SoftBreadSoftware
      @SoftBreadSoftware Před 4 lety +5

      They had legitimate tactics, reconnaissance, and communication. They lacked numbers and connections to resources. They overtook a number of Roman armies with much smaller numbers. One time, with trees. They were indeed formidable.

    • @SoftBreadSoftware
      @SoftBreadSoftware Před 4 lety +4

      ​@Lord Voldemort Most of Rome's engineering skills weren't skills, they were slightly improved ideas copypasted from their neighbors. Especially their armor and weaponry. They copied the Celts helmet, chainmail (which Celts invented), and spears almost identically. Romans were the real earth equivalent of the Goa'uld.
      Celts either made their own weapons or hired someone to do it cheaply, so the average one would be of questionable quality - that is not the epitome of Celtic engineering or craft, master Celtic smiths made arms of far superior quality to Rome, why do you think they (Rome) so desperately copied them? They just weren't mass produced and sold at Gall-Mart like in Rome.

    • @spikem5950
      @spikem5950 Před 3 lety

      @@SoftBreadSoftware Gall-Mart XD

    • @boguslav9502
      @boguslav9502 Před 3 lety +2

      eh... we have plenty of examples of barbaric peoples using advanced tactics and having what are essentially proffesional soldiers or at least a mandatory set of conscription in their societies. Slavs are one such example and we have historical texts referencing how they used advanced tactics to take on numerically superior roman troops as they raided into greece and eastern rome. Rome had a habit of also... downplaying their opponents in how they were written. (naked barbarian type comes to mind) which most likely was not the case as we have many armor finds in slavic lands that match the era described..

  • @Alopex1
    @Alopex1 Před 6 lety

    Very good vid Skall :)

  • @jamesthompson2459
    @jamesthompson2459 Před 5 lety

    Since when did you have 1 mil subs?? Congrats man

  • @mariuslorson751
    @mariuslorson751 Před 6 lety +7

    A few points on Ceasar: his records are notoriously bad (even though they are still considered a primary source since we don't have too many other written sources concerning his campaigns). He has made several claims that simply can not be true (like giving the Helvetii a two week waiting period while he sent for message from Rome. That was a 900km distance and then there would the time the senate needed to debate the issue he put before them... or that he built defences in Geneva - which never could be proven archeologically). The numbers of enemies he described also seem to have been exaggerated. He needed to justify his conquests back home and thus the continuation of the war - otherwise he would have ended up in front of a court back in Rome. He only was immune to persecution as long as he held office, so he continued his campaigns as long as he could.
    Also the contemporary roman helmet during roman times (the Coolus type helmet) was adopted from the celtic tribes of Gaul.
    Ceasar also never fought all of Gaul at once (as Skallagrim pointed out) as the tribes were at each others throats most of the time (just look at Caesars campaign again the Helvetii and the Begiae). Rome stayed out of inter tribal conflict until Caesar used these conflicts in order to further his goals. Vercingetorix is the closest the Gauls came to a king of all of Gaul at that point in time.

    • @AlekseiGriffin
      @AlekseiGriffin Před 6 lety

      Its quite wild claim to say that his commentaries are notoriously bad. Yes there are somethings that were there to spice up story to home. But actually in general his commentaries are pretty damn accurate with many points confirmed by archeology being exactly as written by him

    • @mariuslorson751
      @mariuslorson751 Před 6 lety +1

      And many points disproven as the defenseces in Geneva. Try reading his Helvetic campaign and the one against Ariovistus. Those two are probably the worst offenders of the bunch. He does embelish and twist things like crazy to justify his continued war effort, does not speak about roman policy not to meddle in the affairs of the tribes of Gaul, does not mention that he was the one who declared Ariovistus a friend of Rome and thus empowered the guy to rise the way he did and so forth. His writings have been considered some of the best for a long ass time simply by the virtue of having been studied for such a long time. The more people question his writings and realy test them the more inconsistencies and outright lies they uncover. His writings are still valuable because we can get closer to seeing through his eyes then through any other document available to us. Also look at how he commanded his battles: he was a gambler, a lucky one and a bold one no doubt about that but a gambler never the less. He left behind his baggage train when pursuing the Helvetii and banked on the Aedui to give him their winter reserves - which they could have flat out refused. Then he willingly gave up a supperior position on top a hill in order to pursue the retreating Helvetii forces and let himself be encircled by more Helvetii forces before beating them back in a desperate pitched battle, banking on the discipline and supperior equipment of his soldiers. Tell me that was not reckless - I dare you. Read his works and you will see how reckless he was and how much he did lie, embelish and twist the truth. He was a great general no doubt but that I would mostly attribute to what he accomplished during the civil war that followed his deeds in Gaul and one also should remember that victors write the history books. The Caesarian party under the leadership of Octavian Caesar aka Augustus won out big time in the civil war. Augustus had a vaunted interest in making his adoptiv father appear as big as possible thus enhancing his own prestige. That is why many people venerate Caesars writings today.

    • @pingouin3664
      @pingouin3664 Před 6 lety

      his commentaries weren’t bad. But we must consider the fact that it was sold to the roman people, just like Cicero was selling his texts in large numbers.

    • @pingouin3664
      @pingouin3664 Před 6 lety

      and fact is that he didn’t lose. So you can call him reckless but it worked way too many times to be luck. So yeah, he was one hell of a general

    • @frigorifero5773
      @frigorifero5773 Před 6 lety +1

      Marius Lorson lol where did you learn history? first Caesar wasn't the one to declare Ariovistus king and friend of romans, it was the senate aslo Ariovistus rose to power thanks to the tribes of Gaul the very same tribes that asked Caesar's help against the german king. Second you're saying that Caesar was stupid reliying on the Aedui for supplies but if you studied the Elvetic campaing you would know that the reason the senate approved Caesar's campaing was to protec the Aedui, so they have no reason to refuse to help the romans. I agree with you that Caesar was a gambler but you can't really expect to do great things without taking risk and can you tell what are the inaccuracies and lies that Caesar told in his works?. Last i want you to know that Caesar was already famous among his people and Octavian didn't really need to boost his adoptive father's fame.

  • @MOONGOONJOON
    @MOONGOONJOON Před 7 lety +259

    The vikings couldnt beat irish celts and decided to populate the land instead and learn from them. My city in ireland was founded by the vikings.

    • @cyphrox8555
      @cyphrox8555 Před 7 lety +5

      Jorge Brennan Dublin?

    • @cyphrox8555
      @cyphrox8555 Před 7 lety +58

      William stasholm Actually the Norwegian vikings were the ones to go to Ireland

    • @thotpatrol5159
      @thotpatrol5159 Před 7 lety +42

      Some of vikings were eventually kicked out of Ireland and settled in England instead.

    • @mojowarrior4578
      @mojowarrior4578 Před 7 lety +3

      Jorge Brennan Here too, I'm in Cobh town.

    • @maxtripp2975
      @maxtripp2975 Před 7 lety +49

      I find the difference between the Gallic and Irish Celts kinda funny, with respect to attempted conquests of them. The Gauls were conquered by the Romans because they couldn't effectively unite as a single fighting force, and were too divided between dozens of tribes. Whereas the Irish were unconquerable to the Vikings, because there were seven high kings and about one hundred petty kings, so defeating one king meant nothing, as he was simply replaced by another, while the Vikings' strength was left weakened.

  • @adamarchy
    @adamarchy Před 7 lety

    You get a super like for the Mike Loades mention. Love that guy. Have you read Joan Alcock? Her book "The Daily Life of the Pagan Celts" was pretty good.

  • @Iamleros
    @Iamleros Před 5 lety +2

    Great video with very well researched information. I found that the celts had much in comon with some of the greek states. For example the duels between the best fighters, no central government and even the basic equipment of a soldier (short sword, shield and spear) match perfectly. I live in Switzerland and I have helvetic and greek origin. I always thought that the helvetic halberdiers looked like an advanced form of a spartan phalanx.

  • @brigge7830
    @brigge7830 Před 5 lety +10

    "Hippity Hoppity, Gauls are property"
    - Julius Caesar (52 bc)

    • @user-vu9ky9qm6m
      @user-vu9ky9qm6m Před 5 měsíci

      “Bippity boppity, try taking Scotland bitch”
      -the picts (43 AD(or some shit like that)

  • @vc9752
    @vc9752 Před 4 lety +4

    Roman Soldiers actually had to buy their euquipment by themself, so Therme was a huge difference in Quality, eben though the Design was nearly identical.

  • @arkhaan7066
    @arkhaan7066 Před 7 lety

    At around 10:00 you were talking about the descriptions of loose hordes of men charging around and other sources talking about ordered formations of seemingly well drilled soldiers. I think the two different images could both be accurate depending on the situation. as we can see after the fall of rome, europe turned to basing armies around hardened cores of well trained well armored and armed professional soldiers but bulked out the army with levied citizens, who had worse equipment and much worse training. It makes sense to me that this theory of army organization came from earlier in their history, and could explain the professional groups of soldiers using (at the time) advanced tactics while also having a fairly undisciplined mob of infantry also on the field.

  • @kyuubifox66
    @kyuubifox66 Před 5 lety

    @Skallagrim, you mention both the phalanx and the shield wall, could you explain the difference between both? Aren't they both basically shields locked in the front with spears pointing forward?
    PS as always, great video, really enjoy the way you talk about stuff :)