Americans Learn British History At The Tower of London

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TRIPPING THROUGH ADVENTURES

TRIPPING THROUGH ADVENTURES

28 күн бұрын

HEY GUYS WE ARE AT THE TOWER OF LONDON ONE OF THE TOP HISTORICAL SIGHTS IN THE UK THE TOWER OF LONDON. WITH TONS OF RICH HISTORY THIS HAS TO BE A MUST DO WHILE IN LONDON
#london #americanstry #history #towerbridgelondon #toweroflondon
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Пікірлер: 304
@nigelturner3251
@nigelturner3251 24 күн бұрын
Don’t beat yourself up over our history. We never stop learning on a history journey. Love the content.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 24 күн бұрын
I love the history it just makes me laugh that I came over to see Harry Potter sights and it slowly evolved to having an emotional breakdown in the British museum 😂😂
@johnm2714
@johnm2714 21 күн бұрын
There were animals at the Tower for about 500 years. They were moved to London Zoo in about 1820.
@monza1002000
@monza1002000 25 күн бұрын
I love your attitude and open mind, so refreshing. As Brits we grow up with all this history and tend to take it for granted. 2 miles from my home there is a "hill fort" built 4,000 years ago, the tumulus built 3,500 years ago, etc. You open our eyes again. Thank You
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
4,000 years ago 😧 our oldest city in America is 458 years old, st Augustine Florida. That’s the best we got. It’s not that I am ignoring or downplaying Native American history, it’s just they didn’t keep records or much of anything to really trace back too far. In England you see the foundation of modern civilization and it just amazes me.
@orbytl2799
@orbytl2799 25 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures skara brae in orkney is over 5000 years old, it pre dates the pyramids and stone henge. footings and walls etc are still there. ive not yet got to visit it even though im in the uk but its on my list for sure kind of mind blowing seeing these places
@beverleyarscott8589
@beverleyarscott8589 21 күн бұрын
Opposite the tower there is an office building in the basement is the original London wall that the romans built. My husband used to work there and they made the canteen there with a glass sheet so you could see the wall.
@Simon-hb9rf
@Simon-hb9rf 15 күн бұрын
i agree, as a kid i grew up walking the family dog around the local castle ruins without a second thought, it wasn't until we had guests from other countries, especially the US, that i realised how special it was to be around something so old and full of history.
@karenthomas5358
@karenthomas5358 24 күн бұрын
There is nothing more awe inspiring than walking along the path of people in history
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 24 күн бұрын
Agreed what’s the saying, “in order to see where your going, you have to know where you came from “
@ronturner9850
@ronturner9850 25 күн бұрын
I’m sure no one on here watching your videos thinks you’re dumb. It’s obvious that you’re both overwhelmed, in a good and positive way, by what you’re learning and it’s a real joy to be experiencing it with you! I have a personal connection to the Tower: my Father in Law was a Yeoman Warder (Beefeater) and I got married there at the Chapel Royal. The family lived in the outer wall (The Casemates) which had been converted into accommodation and overlooked the moat.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
First off thank you 😊 that is one of the coolest things I ever heard, I bet your father in law got some amazing stories to tell. You might know better, the body of the Duke of Monmouth, he wasn’t in the 4th floor chapel in the white tower right ?
@ronturner9850
@ronturner9850 25 күн бұрын
Monmouth’s in a different place in the Tower grounds, the Chapel Royal of St Peter ad Vincula (where I got married) which is open to the public so you might have seen it on your visit. There are a lot of others there including two Queens of Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn and Katharine Howard, both beheaded by Henry. There’s some decent info available if you search the name of the Chapel. It’s not a spelling mistake by the way, it’s ‘ad’ not ‘and’.
@ronturner9850
@ronturner9850 25 күн бұрын
Sorry forgot to mention my late Father in Law. He had an amazing life including many years in the British Army during WW2 mostly in Burma. I cant remember the details of the rule, if they still apply, but to be a Yeoman Warder you have to have served for a set number of years in the Army or, I think one of the other services, to be eligible to apply…
@alexshapley8331
@alexshapley8331 25 күн бұрын
@@ronturner9850 a very senior nco (eg warrant officer) and with a long service and/or good conduct medal - from any branch of the military
@ronturner9850
@ronturner9850 25 күн бұрын
@@alexshapley8331 Thanks, he was an RSM.
@mrnemo1480
@mrnemo1480 25 күн бұрын
Look into British Inventions. You will be surprised.....And Everyday the People of Britain are Walking Through History.....
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
That’s something that amazes me, if towels of London was in American you would not be able to walk inside them buildings, but in England the tour guides actually live there 😂. It’s baffles me but if you guys didn’t integrate it into modern times you would have to build a completely new city lol.
@claregale9011
@claregale9011 25 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures Hi , the tour guides are Yeoman warders they are all ex military and the oldest formed body of men in the world, they are the kings ceremonial bodyguard on state occasions , weddings and funerals . They do consider it an honor to serve His majesty who is also commander and chief of our armed forces . 🙂
@tobytaylor2154
@tobytaylor2154 25 күн бұрын
When Ann Boleyn was taken through traitors gate I had family living on the opposite bank of the river. My 8th x grt grandfather was one of King Henry's high constables at the time. His father my 9th x grt grandfather paid for stain glass windows in his parish church which is still there today over 500yrs later. ✌️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Holy crap that’s cool, this text cannot express how I’m reacting to this story, like this is real stuff with real witnesses, thank you for sharing this 🥲
@tobytaylor2154
@tobytaylor2154 25 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures glad you're enjoying our history, I've had great satisfaction researching my family's history, there's an Anglo saxon sword in the British museam that my 2 x grt grandfather found whilst working on the bank of the Thames in the 1890s which when I go to the museum they take me out the back to look at it closely with the original letter my 1 x grt grandfather wrote explaining how his father found it, because his father couldn't write. I recommend everyone research their history, the further you go back the odds get less of finding out you're related to an historic character or had a relative at an historic event. A couple of yrs ago we visited our family homes on the sth Bank and drank in the local pubs they drank in just east of Waterloo stn. Only the properties from about 1800 were still there. We are still living in London today. Enjoy your stay aswell as our 🍺. ✌️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
@shaunfarrell3834
@shaunfarrell3834 10 күн бұрын
You are lucky it's still there, the puritans were a tad unkind to such things, nowadays we appreciate it for its beauty and history.
@AnneDowson-vp8lg
@AnneDowson-vp8lg 21 күн бұрын
The 2 Princes in the Tower were not twins, there was about 2 years between them. The bodies of the 2 young boys that were found were never proved to be them because there wasn't DNA or anything like that then. It's a complicated story. They may have disappeared because they were sent abroad for their own safety. Their uncle who became Richard III was blamed for killing them and because he was killed at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, he was easily vilified, so 100 years later, Shakespeare turned him into the greatest theatrical villain of all time. Many people myself included, believe this was not true and the usurper Henry Tudor, who became Henry VII had more reason to kill the young Princes. His son was Henry VIII, and his family very flimsy claim to the throne explains why he was so desperate for a son, and so paranoid.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
Idk why I assumed they were twins at no point did anyone or anybody ever say they was twins, but my mind just said …. Twins. We didn’t explore anything with Shakespeare besides walking into the Shakespeare theater on accident cuz I needed the to use the restroom (it was a photo finish ). Walked out and was like “ what’s up with all the Shakespeare merch? 😂 I know you didnt say look into Shakespeare but your comment reminded of that lol 😆
@WITYTRAVELS
@WITYTRAVELS 25 күн бұрын
You guys are living your best life; and we're here for it!
@jezlanejl
@jezlanejl 25 күн бұрын
I think as Brits we take it for granted, i live in Portsmouth home of the Royal Navy, at the end of my road is a Church that was built in 987ad, we have Nelson's flagship the HMS Victory it smashed the French and Spanish and secured the British Empire, all of this to us is normal... great video though glad to see you appreciating the History.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
It’s not very comparable but we live maybe and hour from Disney world, been going since I was a kid, it’s a weekend thing, I forget that some people save their whole life just for the opportunity to bring their family there. Sometimes when you live so close to things you grow numb to its significance.
@wilsonfamily1762
@wilsonfamily1762 21 күн бұрын
I am a Londoner and have visited the tower about 4 times. As child, adult, parent and guide. Each time it's an incredible experience and totally overwhelming as you say. It also can't be done in a day... there is too much to see and even more to try to take on board.
@grahamlong6870
@grahamlong6870 16 күн бұрын
We are proud of our history, although we do not shout it out enough in my opinion. I also live near to Portsmouth and am really pleased to show friends (and people that I just meet when there) HMS Victory, where my ancestor was in fact a member of the crew at Trafalgar. He was William Elliott, and he was Master at Arms on board. He survived the battle. So it is not only the sites/places that should hold your attention, but please bear in mind that you may well be rubbing shoulders with descendants of people who took part in important and famous events.
@topguydave
@topguydave 4 күн бұрын
Never call yourself dumb, you seem to have fallen for, or have awakened a passion for our history, that many of us Brits just take for granted. We are the dumb ones. I hope you come back here often and explore more. Their is so much to see. Try and go beyond London too. You will love Stonehenge and pretty Cotswolds villages like Bibury and Roman Spa in Bath. I love your enthusiasm and can't stop watching you vlogs.
@vickyingramnymann8543
@vickyingramnymann8543 20 күн бұрын
On a flight into Heathrow the Captain announced thàt we were flying over Winsor Castle . He explained there had been a castle here since the 11th century and it was home to the Queen. An American seated across from said "I wonder why it was built so close the the flight path into Heathrow"!
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
Well yes ever since that event over here with planes, we just confused when people build stuff like that so close to airport. It’s like Jeffrey wyatville didn’t even consider air traffic while he was constructing it. It’s like it wasn’t even a thought in his brain… and they call us the dumb ones 🤣😂🤣😂
@user-cp4px2be7p
@user-cp4px2be7p 11 күн бұрын
The story of the Princes in the Tower being killed by Richard 111 has since been disproved.
@albamartinez4987
@albamartinez4987 18 күн бұрын
You guys are a prime example of why it's so important for people, and especially kids, should travel. There is only so much you learn at school, and some of it feels so detatched that they may as well be teaching fairy stories, but visiting countries and learning about different cultures and history first hand just hits differently. It's just such a shame it's so expensive, I think if we all travelled more we'd understand eachother better and there would be less conflict. But I'm thankful for the internet and people like yourselves who share your experiences with others so they can see things through your eyes and better understand the world they live in. ❤
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 18 күн бұрын
It is expensive, but not as expensive as it has been in the past, actually world travel (at least for Americans ) has become more affordable than trips in country like Disney lol. I agree though, you will see that with us as the series progresses.
@jasmineteehee3612
@jasmineteehee3612 23 күн бұрын
I’m so glad I found and subscribed to your channel. What a lovely couple you are. Welcome to the uk. I’m so pleased you’re enjoying the experience of the Tower of London. It’s one of our favourite trips. Please do not feel silly about history, the uk has a very long and complex history of wars, fighting for its own survival, fighting within. Thank you.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
Thank you very much it’s such an amazing history and some of it just sounds to crazy to be real 😂
@skoodledoo
@skoodledoo 21 күн бұрын
I've been living in London for over 20 years and I'm still in awe every time I walk around. I do find it emotional sometimes when it hits that where I'm standing that someone was here 2000 years ago. I love watching videos of people visiting London for the first time, seeing the same awe that I felt at the time. No one thinks you're dumb, you're just overwhelmed. You can tell a difference between a 'dumb yank' visiting and someone who's invested in what they're seeing. You both fall in to the latter category. The dumb ones are those that ask why they built Windsor Castle on the approach to Heathrow.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
How do explore a thousands of years of history, in a life time? Lol funny thing is we know about the Americans that do stuff like that to the point it’s evolved into an American parable lol. It goes like this A rich guy buys a trip around the world he goes to Italy and says “ why did they build that tower leaning why didn’t they build it straight” then he goes to china hears the Chinese talking and says “ how does the one know what the others saying? “ then he goes to England and says “ why they build the castles so close to the airport” then he goes home….. Moral of the story “ money can buy you a trip around the world but it can’t buy you common sense”
@margwally5849
@margwally5849 16 күн бұрын
You are not dumb, it's grest you are learning about our history. London
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 12 күн бұрын
Thank you we can’t wait to learn more
@TimeyWimeyLimey
@TimeyWimeyLimey 25 күн бұрын
If you want to see more of how and where Henry the Eighth lived then take a tour of Hampton Court Palace in southwest London which was one of his main residences. You'll even find one of the very first tennis courts there.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
This is something we want to check out thank you 😊
@alexshapley8331
@alexshapley8331 25 күн бұрын
Pleased that you enjoyed your visit. I always recommend Tower of London to any visitors to the UK, because it is such a good (and interesting) potted history of England for the last 900+ years... and when you have had a quick tour of the Tower, you can then start to explore the rest of our history (there's a lot of it!). If you ever go to Leeds, and you are interested in the arms/armour of the UK, much more of the Tower of London's collection is in the Royal Armouries museum in central Leeds (and some days they have jousting too). Looking forward to your next video.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Wow that sounds amazing that is definitely something we will need to remember. Hopefully we can check that out on our next visit
@johnmannymoo8626
@johnmannymoo8626 25 күн бұрын
Refreshing that you didn't add that awful hypnotic, manipulative music, so many Americans add.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
We added music lol but the vlogger that gets me is the ones who get emotionally lost and give out life advice while they never had a bill and are living on their parents money or student loans to do it and their like “ sometimes you just got to let go “ Sweetie I am 34 with 2 kids a wife and a mortgage, these videos are coming out slow cuz if I let go, someone’s going to take it 🤣😂🤣😂
@paulbriggs5238
@paulbriggs5238 25 күн бұрын
I'm so pleased you had a good time. I watched an Australian lady on here saying it was when she was looking at the armour at the tower that she realised fairy tales were real. I loved that. I have a medieval church near me thats nearly 900 years old. There was a survey done before some housing were built nearby, and they found evidence of a roman farmstead. Hope you return soon. I am looking forward to your next video. 🙂🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
I agree with that lady! Thank you for watching! That would be cool visit, there is so much to see. We can’t wait to come back!
@martinshepherd626
@martinshepherd626 25 күн бұрын
Im glad you enjoyed your visit, its refreshing to hear Americans who respect our history' and now understands why us English/Brits who at one point in history ruled one third of the globe. Did you see Henry V111's body armour' and the armour for his horse?
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
We may have but it was so overwhelming so many people is adding so much we want to go back a see all the things we missed. It’s just so impressive not only the amount of history but the history that’s been preserved.
@martinshepherd626
@martinshepherd626 25 күн бұрын
The Tower was built after the succesful invasion by William the Conquerer and his Norman Army in 1066.......710 years before the Americans defeated a British Expeditionary Force in 1776 etc etc We can trace our history back as far as the Romans BC until they left in AD. Well over 2000 years of written History on these sculptured Isles
@robertgrant4987
@robertgrant4987 25 күн бұрын
There are castles everywhere in the UK. There's one up the road from me, Hadleigh Castle circa 1215. It was fortified and occupied by King Edward lll, overlooking the southeast Thames estuary 😊
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
That’s so amazing, hopefully we can go check it out on our next trip. I love looking at all the castles!
@paulbriggs5238
@paulbriggs5238 25 күн бұрын
I live not to far from you by the sounds of it. Was it constable that did a famous painting of Hadleigh castle? Could be wrong 🙂
@robertgrant4987
@robertgrant4987 25 күн бұрын
Bang on sir! Yes, John Constable portrayed Hadleigh Castle with a beautiful painting. It's such a shame there's so little of it left. There's a picture on Google of the Castle in its hay-day,it used to be magnificent. Anyway, it's a pleasure to associate with a fellow Southeast Essex er. I wish you all well and hope you are in good spirits 😊
@paulbriggs5238
@paulbriggs5238 25 күн бұрын
@@robertgrant4987 excellent, small world lol, great to talk 🙂
@robertgrant4987
@robertgrant4987 25 күн бұрын
@paulbriggs5238 Bless u mate, it's great to talk to you too, and yes, it's a small, beautiful world 🌎 😀 Thank you for your communication 🙏 👏
@marcuswardle3180
@marcuswardle3180 20 күн бұрын
I work in the Cultural Sector here in England and met a lady who worked at the Tower of London. One of her jobs was when the Crown Jewels were taken out for use was to put into the display a sign saying that they were removed for being 'in use'! She said it was the best part of her job!
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
I wonder what it feels like to hold priceless jewels 💎, lol that’s more of a life highlight and a highlight of the job l… when we seen the crown, I thought back to an interview with the queen about it and she said “ oh I don’t like wearing the crown it’s dreadfully heavy “ 🤣😂🤣
@marcuswardle3180
@marcuswardle3180 18 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures For you it would be a life highlight but for her it was part of the job. Also every time it went out it had to be cleaned when it came back! The Crown takes a lot of cleaning.
@MrChasanDayve
@MrChasanDayve 19 күн бұрын
I've lived in London for my entire life and I've not seen even half of what there is to see. From my mum taking me to all the museums when I was a child, to school trips to galleries and landmarks, visiting places on weekends, to just walking round the city in my lunch hour, I've been quite active. I'd also say that many Brits are not as versed in our history as you'd expect. Of course people know the basics, but I think when it's on your doorstep, you need to have an active interest in history, or it just becomes background. I worked with people who had no idea that they were sitting less than 100 metres away from the last remaining piece of the Roman London Wall still standing. Also I'd add that when I saw Hoover Dam and the Grand Canyon I was as in as much awe as you are in your video. The saying "A big difference between Americans and the British is that Americans think 100 years is a long time and the British think 100 miles is a long way" is always evident when we're on each others side of the pond. I also find it very enjoyable to see people react naturally, rather than seeing a presentation where things feel staged, if I wanted to find out all the history of The Tower, I'd watch a BBC documentary, or something similar. So keep doing things the way you are, it's unique to you and I for one love it.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
Thank you very much, funny how a few miles completely changes a persons point of view lol
@ianoo23
@ianoo23 24 күн бұрын
I live in a village where the church was built 900 years ago- that alone blows my mind; however I walk through that churchyard to the pub right next to it all the time so I’ve almost become so used to it just being part of the scenery- the landlord of the pub was telling me one day that it was built in the early 1600’s so as modern as it may look today you can’t help but sit in that pub and look around and try to comprehend just in this tiny village how much history there is let alone castles, abbey’s, Cathedrals etc etc around the country… you could spend the rest of your lives coming back and forth to the UK and you still wouldn’t experience every place with unique history and stories; when you said we probably learned about everything in school or visited the likes of the Tower of London on a school trip- I grew up in the North East of England so wasn’t really a chance to do that so did it as an adult! As for school and what we learn about- a huge part of history in school for me would have been covering more recent events like the world wars, important dates and battles, treatys and documents of historical importance but kings and Queens aside from the obvious more well known ones I don’t remember learning them all like you guys do presidents… I’ve learned far more as an adult with a genuine interest and visiting places than I ever learned in a classroom. By the way I don’t think anyone is thinking you’re not smart- you guys have been nothing but respectful in every video and open to hear and learn the things you don’t already know and that’s worth more than anything- nothing worse than a smart ass thinking they know it all cos they read it in a book- you guys are out there experiencing it and soaking it all in. Loving the channel. Keep up the great videos 👍👍
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 23 күн бұрын
Thank you believe or not we are taught presidents but mainly the historically relevant ones to historical events, there is a light lesson around grade 3-4 they try to teach you but that’s it, the rest we learn is probably the same amount you guys do. Washington, Lincoln, Kennedy, Truman, Eisenhower. And teddy Rosevelt ( he started the state parks in American and they gifted him a stuffed bear, hints why Americans call stuffed bears teddy bears lol). But to see things from even 500 years ago is amazing to an American, st Augustine’s fort here in Florida is the oldest European structure in North America. We would love to explore so much more and get more into the Celtics and Roman history.
@ianoo23
@ianoo23 23 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures I live now in the south east of England in Essex and only recently when my partner’s children got a metal detector I got chatting to someone about metal detecting and where to go and he told me that the farm across the road from my house has the remains of a Roman villa and if I ask the farmer he’ll probably be fine with the kids exploring the foundations etc… I haven’t done this yet as this was last week I had the conversation but I since went online and googled Roman villas in my local area and 5 came up that have been discovered within 7 miles of my home 🤣… the children collect old coins and have been given some Roman Grots by a friend who discovered them on his own land nearby years ago, not far into the next county North of here is Suffolk where one of the oldest and most well known Saxon treasures was discovered in the summer of 1939; you can visit the place now for a fee and look around- it’s a very unique site:- they discovered a Saxon burial ground within one of the many raised mounds which contained a huge wooden ship; sadly too long ago to be preserved but the imprints were still underground and the only things left were the treasures buried with the person… it is believed to be the king of east anglia dating back to the 6th century, there is a museum on site with articfacts or replicas of artifacts as some are in the museums in London. They did rebuild a replica of the ship which is on site in the main entrance area which is cool. If you look up Sutton hoo online and see some of the pictures for yourself it’s an amazing place to visit if you have the interest in history etc All the best 👍👍
@shaunfarrell3834
@shaunfarrell3834 10 күн бұрын
@@ianoo23 I have a feeling the king they think was buried there was called Redwald?
@HankD13
@HankD13 24 күн бұрын
I always love the Tower. Living history indeed. But - Yeoman Warders are not "Beefeaters" - that just comes from their picture on Beefeater Gin! "Beefeaters" originally referred to a body of "Sovereign's Body Guard of the Yeoman Guard Extraordinary" - quite separate from the Yeoman Warders of the Tower. They look similar so it has sadly become the common name for them though - and they don't actually like it - as I have seen tell nosy tourists more than one. "Do I look like a gin bottle!" 😁
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 24 күн бұрын
The beefeater that we talked to was set next to the queens guards and was not the yeoman that was touring us however, the only reason I know this is cuz I asked the beefeater if the queens guard was beefeaters into which she said “no, I’m a beefeater” lol
@HankD13
@HankD13 24 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures Think the younger generation have just accepted "Beefeater" as it is what ALL tourist's call them today - even Wiki accepts the change! (Women are VERY new). "Queens/Kings Guard" are just a duty post for the Guards Regiments (Coldstream, Grenadier, Scots, Irish, Welsh - and any other Regiment doing that duty). Sorry! Military nerd speaking.
@johnadey3696
@johnadey3696 24 күн бұрын
In the earliest times, the hill on which the tower stands was believed to be the place where Bran the raven god, 's head was buried hence the ravens, 'Bran Gate" is a town gate next to the tower.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 24 күн бұрын
Thanks for the info Never heard of bran got to do some research on him .
@stonkr
@stonkr 21 күн бұрын
He was a regular visitor...I'll get m' coat...
@paulallaker8450
@paulallaker8450 11 күн бұрын
Don't be so hard on yourself, you're not dumb, I'm a 50yr old British man born & bred, and I'm still learning about the history of the UK. We take our history for granted as there's so much of it. Great vlog and channel. 🇬🇧🤝🏻🇺🇲👍🏻
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 11 күн бұрын
Thank you for the kind words
@marcuswardle3180
@marcuswardle3180 20 күн бұрын
The children in the Tower have actually been found twice! The bones that were found under the staircase (which had not been built at the time) are interred in Westminster Abbey. These were found in 1674. There were claims of velvet rag found with the bones but there were also animal bones as well. In 1789 workmen accidentally broke into the tomb of Edward IV, the father of the two brothers, and found an undisclosed vault. This contained the skeletons of two children. These were attributed to a son, who died at 2 and a daughter who died at the age of 14. The coffins were not disturbed and therefore the skeletons not examined. Later the coffins of these two children were found elsewhere! In the 1990's construction work was being carried out where the two unidentified children lay and it was requested that an inspection of the two coffins be carried out by fibre-optic camera. To do this permission would have to granted by Queen Elizabeth. She never granted approval but King Charles has been found to be more amenable to the idea and may give his approval. This has also been strengthened by the finding of the body of their uncle, Richard III, who has been blamed for their disappearance and possible murder. After he was defeated in the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, by Henry Tudor father of Henry VIII, he was hastily buried. Many years later his body was found in a car park appropriately under the letter 'R' of the word PARK in the city of Leicester. He is now buried in Leicester Cathedral.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
So there’s more than 1 candidate but only the tower one is considered cannon lol
@Simon-hb9rf
@Simon-hb9rf 15 күн бұрын
the real problem is that many former kings may have interred the remains of unofficial children they had with the maids that died in infancy either in or near their own planned graves. these would've been unlikely to ever be recorded especially if the mother was of the lower classes.
@richardharrison284
@richardharrison284 25 күн бұрын
FUN FACTS Courtney Cox (Monica from Friends ) was on an ancestry tv show and found to be a direct descendants of William the Concorer. One king once was gifted a polar bear, they kept it on a chain and it swam in the Thames river.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Do you realize how made up that sounds, the royals was the original extreme influencers 😂🤣😂
@theoldgreymare703
@theoldgreymare703 13 күн бұрын
Whoa that warden was certainly born in London at the sound of "Bow bells"
@trytellingthetruth.2068
@trytellingthetruth.2068 22 күн бұрын
As an Englishman that was born 15 minute drive from the Tower, but has never visited it, you have experienced more of my heritage than i have.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
You’re missing out, we get to go see a rock and then a dock where they spilled a box of tea and don’t want to shut up about it. 😂🤣😂 and then there’s the civil war half the country is obsessed with it and the other half don’t want to acknowledge it ever happened… historical side not the political mumbo jumbo parts. And that pretty much sums up our history, all the other important American history things happened in Europe 😂
@seeker1432
@seeker1432 25 күн бұрын
You have explored History that a lot of Brits haven't. I live in the North and gone to numerous castles, But not London. Expensive and crowded. I love the North more.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
We are hoping this series does good Enough we can travel into the north, wales and Scotland more. We actually started this channel doing little towns in Florida, we would like to do that in England the uk as well.
@seeker1432
@seeker1432 25 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures Well i wish you well and will keep my eye on ye.
@TheStruggleUK.
@TheStruggleUK. 22 күн бұрын
Hi guys from the UK. Really enjoyed your vlog and your thoughts. As an Englishman approaching 50 I haven't been out of the UK, except for northern France a long time ago! What's funny to me is that I never really think about any of the stuff over here that my curious, intelligent cousins from the new world 😊 find so amazing. It's just because we are so used to very old buildings and history around us every day of our lives and take it for granted. I live in North Wales which is THE place to come for the greatest and best preserved ancient castles all about the same age 900 years. It's like living in King Arthur's land, dark giant mountains and forests on one side with non-stop beaches and sea on the other and castle after castle between them. And then you get the the island of Anglesy where the Druids lived 2000 years ago and fought of Julius Ceasar and his invading army.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
My friend my British cousin, your homeland inspired almost every fairy tale every magical tale that us Americans have ever encountered, you live in the land of the sword in the stone, the fair people, the wizarding world, the land of kings, Vikings, brave knights, conquer s, merry men, people who rob the rich to give to the poor, the land that conquered the world, the land that created the new world, the land that created kings, rippers, Romeo’s, Juliet’s, and Merlin’s you live in an empire that was built on an empire that was built on and empire… how could you over look that 🤣😂🤣🤣 I want to go to Wales they give the whole OJ Simpson defense on king author’s court with wales … you know the whole “ KING AUTHOR PROBABLY WASN’T REAL BUT IF HE WAS, HE WAS PROBABLY HERE IN WALES “ 🤣😂🤣😂
@marcuswardle3180
@marcuswardle3180 20 күн бұрын
Never apologise for learning History. History though does change when we learn more. The history we learn at school is what I like to refer to is Base History. It's the history everybody knows. As we learn more through life we add bits which may reinforce or change what we have learned. I work as an Archivist and am constantly looking at old documents (I have a will in front of me at present from 1667, literally!) which I am transcribing. For older history it has to be something monumental to change the story of history but for Modern History; the last couple of hundred years, the complexity of the storyline will change as more documents come to light or people come forward who can remember something differently.
@benbo18
@benbo18 21 күн бұрын
If you visit the UK 🇬🇧 again ,you must visit the city of Bath ,is awsome
@user-lm2vs1sl3v
@user-lm2vs1sl3v 15 күн бұрын
and go to Stonehenge on the way
@bogarte7185
@bogarte7185 21 күн бұрын
You were right to put in the popup of Edgar Allen Poe. The Ravens were probably introduced into the Tower in the latter half of the 19th century when keeping Ravens was a thing. (Dickens had one called 'Grip') The Tower became more a tourist attraction then and they were introduced to add Gothic colour. They are first mentioned in a guidebook during the First World War and it's 'we have Ravens what jolly chaps they are'. The legend doesn't appear in any guidebook until the Second World War.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
I know what you’re getting at… but I can’t buy a raven, no matter how edgy and cool it would make me 😂🤣😂 Tiffany would kill me.
@user-lm2vs1sl3v
@user-lm2vs1sl3v 15 күн бұрын
I congratulate you on doing this series. I’ve lived in The USA for 14 years now and am still shocked by the deep ignorance of many Americans.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 14 күн бұрын
Yea the idea that not everyone wants to move to America, because, Americas the best, as to its a modern society and people move everywhere for anything. Is kind of hard for Americans to understand. When we went to the UK we seen a lot of things that, if we moved there, things that would add stress to our life but we also seen a lot of thing that would of relieved a lot of our worries and stress in a major way. A lot of Americans don’t want to comprehend that it’s not the 1920s any more and a lot of things are done better in other parts of the world and it’s not land of opportunity any more… it’s a world of it, all to where it suites a person best.
@lizvickers7156
@lizvickers7156 25 күн бұрын
I have a castle by me and Oliver Cromwell fought a battle there and raised it to the ground near enough. All thats left are the outer walls and the gate house.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 18 күн бұрын
Not going to lie, about 4 days ago I read your comment, then researched Oliver Cromwell cuz i didn’t know who that was 😂 I know kind of know and I want to see this castle lol
@Kingshieldwall
@Kingshieldwall 25 күн бұрын
Glad you appreciated it. Well done to you both. 😉👍🤘
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Thank you 😊
@philplace2726
@philplace2726 10 күн бұрын
Hi guys, just discovered your channel. Don't put yourselves down about not knowing about us Brits and our history... You are NOT dumbe! you said you were here to learn and you did learn... a lot!!! also you enjoyed learning and I (we) have enjoyed it with you. Great video and love your attitude, you've got a new subscriber! Thanks for this.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 9 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for the kind words, we got a lot more coming up.
@pauldryburgh6346
@pauldryburgh6346 25 күн бұрын
Thanks very much for your video, I enjoyed watching that. Don't belittle yourselves, to visit such places is to learn from but also enjoy the experience which you clearly did. I look forward to the next adventure. Be well, cheers from Scotland 🍻
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for watching! We loved it! Cheers!
@jpatpat9360
@jpatpat9360 25 күн бұрын
£69 is an exorbitant entrance fee to the Tower....as a South African where the exchange rate is 23 to £1 I can't even afford to visit my son in the UK let alone tour anything (that's R1,610 which is about half my monthly grocery bill ). I think its high even for Brits and Americans.
@claregale9011
@claregale9011 25 күн бұрын
It is expensive but you could spend a whole day at the Tower it's got so much information and exhibits to see plus the guided tour the Beefeaters give is worth it on its own 😊
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
I agree with @claregale9011 in American you have to pay $175 per person to see a plaster castle and a fake mouse so half that for two people to see something that took 1000 years in the making seems like a good deal lol.
@alexshapley8331
@alexshapley8331 24 күн бұрын
I think 69 was for both tickets combined, ie 34 and change each. Not cheap, but by London standards, that is good value for how many hours of 'entertainment' you receive.
@ChrisJordanUK
@ChrisJordanUK 22 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures that's a great way to justify it! Never thought about the mouse comparison :)
@littleannie390
@littleannie390 19 күн бұрын
Many museums in London and throughout the UK are actually free, so if you can’t afford the entrance fee for places like the Tower you can always go to the Natural History Museum or the British Museum.
@simonscott7312
@simonscott7312 25 күн бұрын
Has anyone ever told you that you look like the guy that plays Adam Ruzek in Chicago pd TV show. Great channel, keep up the good work
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
This is the 4th time and I’ve yet to actually watch an episode 🤣😂🤣😂
@user-ze5tu4ck1t
@user-ze5tu4ck1t 25 күн бұрын
William the Conquer invaded in 1066 .He was a Norman from France 🇫🇷. But Norman in old French means North/ Norse Man ,They had come a Viking to France but Stayed and Settled. He did have a Legitimate claim to the English Throne ,English wasn't spoken in 1066 .it took another 400 years to develop. Anglo-Saxon and French was the Language.
@bryan7938
@bryan7938 22 күн бұрын
Whoever was saying entry is expensive, you can get free carer tickets if you are Disabled. I think you can get discounts combining your rail ticket (you used to) The museums are all free. It’s not that bad. The graffiti is amazing to see.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 22 күн бұрын
We come from Disney $175 per person to walk in $5 for a coke $20 for a cheese burger 😂 needless to say, we didn’t think anything in London was overpriced lol. As well as mind blown at free entry.
@anniemoore6455
@anniemoore6455 21 күн бұрын
Most Heartfelt & Honest Reaction I Have Seen, Well Done Guys, Cheers from England
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
Thank you very much ☺️
@petermartin1967
@petermartin1967 24 күн бұрын
Really great video 😀👍🏻
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 18 күн бұрын
Thank you
@meleahkissner3969
@meleahkissner3969 25 күн бұрын
Amazing stories…London is such an amazing place with so much rich history! Would love to go again.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
It really is!
@sandraback7809
@sandraback7809 25 күн бұрын
I enjoyed your visit to the Tower. I love history and I’m always interested and intrigued by the footprint of the past that surrounds us. Just yesterday, we had to take a diversion and ended up on a road that follows the route of a Roman road. A dead straight road that’s now part of the A30. I imagined then the Roman armies that probably marched it.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
I can safely say I have never taken a diversion onto a Roman road in America. However I too would like to see a Roman road. The fact they still exist so strongly today. The closet I’ve seen to a Roman road is the ball in Epcot at Disney talking about talking about Roman roads. lol
@appytight8468
@appytight8468 22 күн бұрын
The actual legend about the ravens is that not just the Tower of London, but the whole KIngdom will fall if the 6 resident ravens ever leave the fortress. In 1944 the number of ravens was down to just one (over the course of WW2 the others had died from the bombing or from the general stress of the wartime situation). Winston Churchill arranged for the Tower's raven community to be "restocked" They are officially enlisted as soldiers, and thus required to be present, entitled to be fed and cared for from military funds etc.. They can also be dismissed for "disorderly conduct" ;-)). There is a similar arrangement based on a similar legend for the Barbary Apes of Gibraltar
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
They should make a whole ceremony of kicking out the ravens… just set in a cage in the middle of the Tower of London, have a high commanding officer come out and tell it off, rip off a fake badge from its cage, throw the badge on the ground and walk away angry horn trumpets and drums and all… I’d pay to see it 🤣😂🤣Makes me wonder how serious the current royals take that superstition🤔 but if you will excuse me, now I got to look up what the whole ape situation is lol 😂
@cazzyuk8939
@cazzyuk8939 25 күн бұрын
The Beefeaters (nickname) are Yeoman Warders are the Monarch's bodygaurd. Back in the day they would have travelled with the King/Queen. The 32 current Guard are all drawn from the military (mainly the Army), need to have served for at least 22 years, have acheived a certain rank & awarded both a long-service & good-conduct medal. I think the White Tower was completed in 1067?
@tollyt7465
@tollyt7465 25 күн бұрын
They must have been Warrant Officers ( highest non commissioned rank in UK forces).
@alisonrandall3039
@alisonrandall3039 23 күн бұрын
Apparently they have let the RAF and Royal Navy in. 🤣🤣
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 18 күн бұрын
Okay until this moment I didn’t know yoeman and beef eaters was the same thing. Lol
@Loki1815
@Loki1815 25 күн бұрын
Go over Tower Bridge, keep walking, go down Borough High Street, keep walking, you'll come to the Elephant and Castle, on the right was Lambeth Hospital, Brook Drive, that's where I was born! And "Come on Eileen" was filmed, walk down the Drive and at the bottom is a Park that we called the Bedlam Park because it was a Mad House but is now The Imperial War Museum, where we played Football on one of the three pitches, played Cricket, swam in the open air Lido. You are now on Westminster Bridge Rd, keep on walking, walk past St Thomas's Hospital, where my eldest was born, on This Date, TODAY, 22.O4.19**. Over the Thames you can see Big Ben, Houses of Parliament. Below Big Ben, on Victoria Embankment is a, No, THE.. Statue of Queen Bodica and her two daughters that waged war against the Invaders known as the roman Army! The start of the fall of the roman empire! Turn right up Whitehall for 10 Downing St. and the Horseguards.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 9 күн бұрын
I love come on Eileen 🤣😂🤣 too ra la ru ey eh lol
@stewrmo
@stewrmo 22 күн бұрын
Firstly, great video, I really enjoyed it. Thank you for your obvious hunger, Interest and passion for our wee Islands history. Yes, we here have been steeped in our history but never think people learning are "dumb". You are just learning! Thank you for respecting, and not filming our Crown Jewels. I wonder if the people filming would act differently if they were in their own countries... I look forward to your upcoming videos. One love from Glasgow, Scotland. 💙 And "haste ye back" (come back soon in old Scots). 👌😁👍
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
So thank you we didn’t film it, because 1. Respect 2. As an American we learned when a person with a large “gum “ tells you to do something… you do it. 😂🤣😂 3rd that’s actually the reason we are having such a hard time with our next vlog. It’s at St. Paul’s, they have no filming when we was there but pictures are fine, and the person at the front desk was very ..not rude …but overly firm with us when we walked in when she seen the camera… but when we walked away another person who either work for the tourist part or the church part said ( not verbatim). “ this is an active church people come here to worship, however I understand your tourist as long as you don’t get the people worshiping And the main cathedral, out of respect, you can film little clips here and there.” Which was fine because we wasn’t monetized then so we wasn’t making money from KZbin, now since then we are. So idk how to go about this, maybe just pictures in the cathedral and video in the stairs to the top but only showing us, out of respect? Idk. We are at a standstill over this cuz we want to be respectful but we also want to make the vlog because it’s an impressive site.
@stewrmo
@stewrmo 17 күн бұрын
@Trippingthroughadventures Far from me to tell you guys how to do your great videos, but perhaps a mix of pictures and video where it is not showing the folks there to worship? I do hope some of our strange rules and quirks don't leave a bad impression. I have seen how respectful you are. I the UK traditions are massive. Keep up the great work, please!
@pipercharms7374
@pipercharms7374 24 күн бұрын
welcome! Hope you enjoyed your visit! I get to visit the Tower of London very very regularly recently due to some circumstances, so who knows, we could've been there at the same time! No idea if this is true or not but its what I heard, apparently during WW2 when we were bombed, all the ravens apart from one, died, which many people think about the legend (they all die or fly away and the tower or kingdom falls) really could symbolise how close we were to falling, how we hung on by a thin thread... one raven survived. I have to say I was also watching this video carefully to see if I could spot myself, so far no luck XD I also heard stories of ghosts in this tower!
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 18 күн бұрын
You know we heard that story about WWII . I never made the (idk the right word) “ symbolic” connection to all the ravens dying and the actual state of Britain at that time. Almost as if the raven s was Britain’s own doomsday clock “1 raven till midnight “ lol
@pipercharms7374
@pipercharms7374 18 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures exactly! It felt cool but creepy hearing about it!
@alisonrandall3039
@alisonrandall3039 23 күн бұрын
The twins you refer to were not twins but brothers Edward v who was 12. He became king when his father died. But Edward was never crowned and his brother Richard about 10. It is thought that their uncle Richard 111 had them murdered. But it has never been proven who arranged for the assassination of the boys.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
One person in our entire trip said they was twins, and that was me, right there looking at that camera😂🤣😂 why I said that I had no idea😂🤣😂
@normanwallace7658
@normanwallace7658 25 күн бұрын
I live in Pembroke shire St Wales some of the Ravens are bred in Wales they are paid a wage by the Crown( not money but food one of their favorite is raw pigtails) they cracked them with their beaks to extract the marrow the also have their own sick ward & vet & are cared for by one of the Yeoman Warders who holds the position of Raven Master The White tower is the oldest part & is built of Kentish Rag Stone with Dressed stone from CAEN In France!! TheTower what been a FORTRESS,a PALACE,a PRISON, the First ZOO, the First OBSERVATORY, a MINT(COINAGE), a Place of Exicution 3 Queens & 1WW2 German SPY,& IS HOME TO THE CROWN JEWELS,(That were stolen in the 17th Cty the culperate "Colonel Blood ") was caught in the act then pardoned after being questioned by the King & given a pension of £500 per year & land in Ireland.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 18 күн бұрын
I mean pig tails got to be steak to a raven, or maybe a traitor to the crown is like steak to a raven lol idk I hear so much about Wales. I want to go
@philipcollins3849
@philipcollins3849 Күн бұрын
This my history as an English man with over a 1000 year of history in my family but it also yours and we both share that common ancestry in these great islands
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures Күн бұрын
I came home never feeling more prouder of my British ancestry in my life, people say British can be stuck up, I love it I want to be stuck up Brit too with a proud history to back it 😂🤣😂
@nicksykes4575
@nicksykes4575 2 күн бұрын
The Guardsmen look as though they have no plume on their bearskins, which makes them the Scots Guards formed in 1642. There's 5 regiments of Footguards and 2 regiments of Horseguards. The Beefeaters are all ex-service men and since 2018, women, with at least 22years service. One of them looks after the ravens, and has the title of "Raven Master" Beefeaters are actually older than the army, they were formed in 1485 as bodyguards to Henry VII.
@julianbarber4708
@julianbarber4708 16 күн бұрын
Great video! Bit different from when I visited in 1965!
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 9 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@user-bo5ys7bi1d
@user-bo5ys7bi1d 3 күн бұрын
I'm sure that if a UK couple of your age group had the same experience their reaction would be similar to your own. Your reaction is refreshingly sincere and honest. You're definitely not dumb. Don't be hard on yourself. Best wishes from Sheffield, South Yorkshire.
@gmdhargreaves
@gmdhargreaves 22 күн бұрын
Excellent reaction ❤❤
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 22 күн бұрын
Thank you 😊
@astralnomad
@astralnomad 25 күн бұрын
@Tripping through adventures - The "Crown Jewels" are kept under armed guard in one of the buildings at the tower. Theyve been there since the 1660s. - James Scottt wasnt the only violent beheading.. look up Margaret Pole - Countess of Salisbury, and Mary, Queen of Scots. Those were messy too. Over 1000 people died at the tower over the years. - You had to pay the executioner for your own execution, and pray the axe got sharpened that day. The better you paid, the more likely it was gonna be clean and swift.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
There’s just so much I seen those while I was editing and got distracted reading about Margret pole lol I think you would need Bible print and books about the size of the Harry Potter series to truly justify the the amount of historical things that went on in the Tower of London alone lol.
@astralnomad
@astralnomad 25 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures lol.. pretty much - thats why i only mentioned a couple names lol
@DazUK1
@DazUK1 25 күн бұрын
Don't put yourself down mate. You have A beautiful wife, so your'e winning in life. Great vid. Nice one folks.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Thank you very much sir 😊 she is a looker ain’t she lol.
@Brookspirit
@Brookspirit 7 күн бұрын
Parts of the Tower of London are Roman, built around 200AD. I think part of it is the wall around the 5:20 mark.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 4 күн бұрын
we didn’t know that until after we posted the video and I went back to that spot and stared at it lol. I seen a Roman wall and didn’t realize it lol.😂
@philipcochran1972
@philipcochran1972 25 күн бұрын
The White Tower is the original 'Tower of London'. All the other building have been added over time. You may want to watch Billy Beefeater on KZbin giving guided tours; very funny. William the Conqueror invaded England in 1066. He and his followers spoke French. This is why there are many French words in English such as why we say beefburger instead of cowburger. Would love to hear more from your wife, if she is comfortable doing that.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Thank you I will check him out, she is trying and getting more and more comfortable she’s got a couple of solo vlogs coming up. But she is getting more and more comfortable with it. Couple of things though, this was our first time away from our 2 children, 1-5 since the they was born, so literally never away from them for longer than 2-4 hours since the birth of our 5 year old. So she was constantly off checking on them running back just being a nervous mom lol. And to be fair we was not expecting this type of reaction to our vlogs 😂
@LoisPallisterCIY
@LoisPallisterCIY Күн бұрын
As Anne Dowson commented, I too am not convinced that Richard lll killed the princes in the tower at all. Are you guys aware of when Richard lll's skeleton was discovered under a car park in Leicester right where Philippa Langley thought it would be? It was a million to one that they might find him and the first skeleton they discovered ended up him! Then there is Dominic Smee who had the same body and they put him in armour and on a horse to find out what Richard may have been capable of. These two videos are so worth a proper watch. It's a fascinating story and there are so many mysterious happenings around the discovery too. kzbin.info/www/bejne/hmm0dZRnr9qImpY kzbin.info/www/bejne/gZ7Yp5SXd75-l7c Hope you both make the time to enjoy these videos.
@bryan7938
@bryan7938 22 күн бұрын
Walked through the Tower walkway regularly when working in London as a Customs Officer. They’ve just in the last few years sold off all the historic Custom House’s. Tragic..
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 22 күн бұрын
What’s the historic custom houses ?
@keefsmiff
@keefsmiff 25 күн бұрын
That was great, i love that you got star struck on objects and places when the reality of their history sank in ,which only really happens to deep thinkers , looked like a great day, nice one
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Thank you very much but the real heavy one was the British Museum, that had me in an emotional wreck 🤣😂😂 that vlog is coming up in couple of weeks
@edwardsacharewicz5511
@edwardsacharewicz5511 22 күн бұрын
I am a veteran of the British Army with over 25 years service to the Crown. I was posted there, while in residence decided to get a cat. Her name was Smokie. She loved it there spoilt by both theother residence and the tourists that visited. But, she got me in a lot of bother sometimes. She made friends with one of tthe Ravens. She would sit near the guests and be given tit bit's. But, what was not seen was the Raven, sneaking up from behind and taking their lunch. Or she would take a nap in the museum holding the Crown Jewels.Many a time get a phone call to come and get her.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
Well thank you for your service, it’s always been a joint effort between our two nations that kept us safe, so your actions in your time of service was just as important to me and my fellow country man as it was to your own, Rather you never seen a day of battle, or fought from day one, or anywhere in between. You chose that gamble, chance and time decide the rest. So thank you deeply for your service. Secondly this literally sounds like a children’s book. 😂🤣😂 you’d probably get good money writing down your old pals antics, I sure got a kick out of it lol.
@jonathangoll2918
@jonathangoll2918 22 күн бұрын
We had a major dispute about who should be King about 1455-1487. Different branches of the royal family claimed the throne. The branches were called Lancaster and York; the emblem of Lancaster is the Red Rose, that of York the White Rose. Therefore later historians called this civil war the Wars of the Roses, but at the time it was called the Cousins' War. King Henry VI ( of Lancaster) - later imprisoned and murdered in the Tower - had mental health problems, and eventually Richard, Duke of York tried to get the throne off him, because in strict hereditary succession he had the better claim. He got executed - in Yorkshire - but his son, Edward IV, got the throne. But in their triumph York had problems. If you get the throne on a legitimacy ticket, it is bit unfortunate if you're the result of your mother playing away, as may have been the case with Edward IV. This may have been the reason that his younger brother, George, Duke of Clarence, seems to have resented him, and at one stage betrayed him. When George's wife died, he went off the rails, and executed a woman for bewitching his wife! He was convicted of treason; this was difficult, because the punishment was hanging, drawing, and quartering. So he was offered - I've checked the truth of this - a choice of how to go. So, by his request, he was drowned in a butt of wine! ( In the Tower!) (1478.) A still younger brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, was horrified, and blamed Edward IV's Queen, who had a large and rapacious family. Edward IV died unexpectedly in 1483. The next King was his elder son, Edward V, aged 13. But Richard, Duke of Gloucester thought Edward's mother's relatives were going to have him killed. So he took over the kingship, as Richard III. It was simply too dangerous to leave Edward V and his brother (Richard, Duke of York) alive. So they were murdered. I do think Richard III got it done. In the end, this alienated public opinion, and Henry, Earl of Richmond, the Lancaster claimant, defeated and killed Richard at Bosworth in Leicestershire in 1485, takìng the throne as Henry VII. Richard's body was buried hastily in a monastery in Leicester. Recently his body was discovered - in a car park ! We held a solemn Re-interment ceremony in Leicester Cathedral. I believe the English throne does not go in strict hereditary succession, but the most ancient way is for Parliament - or its predecessors - to choose a member of the family, not necessarily the next in line. ("King' means a member of the royal family. )
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
So… I got a couple of questions( sorry it took so long to write back but we got a lot of comments and we want to make time for stuff like this ) 1. Is this where the term war of the roses comes from ? 2. Why does all these royals do stuff that’s sounds made up. Executed in a tub of wine ? 😂🤣😂 3. How have you committed all this to memory 😂🤣😂
@jonathangoll2918
@jonathangoll2918 18 күн бұрын
Shakespeare started out, in the 1590s, by making a series of history plays, which get steadily better. First of all he wrote Henry VI Part I, Henry VI Part II, and Henry VI Part IIII; these covered the period 1422-1471. He then wrote Richard II; he reigned 1377 to 1399, but the play covers the period 1397-1400. It contains magnificent speeches. Then he covered the reign of Henry IV (1399-1413), in Henry IV Part I and Henry IV Part II, where he introduced humour; then Henry V (reigned 1413-1422). Finally, this all culminated in 'The Tragedy of King Richard III', who reigned 1483-1485. Shakespeare has been criticised for making Richard III too much of a caricature of a villain. Now, I think Richard III did kill the 'Princes in the Tower' ( Edward V and his younger brother Richard, Duke of York), but, although he was a capable man, it was a bit more like 'Breaking Bad'; one decision led to another. Remember, Shakespeare was writing in the reign of Elizabeth I, who was the grand-daughter of Henry VII, who defeated and killed him, so he couldn't very well praise Richard III. Anyway, all this is leading up to a famous scene in the play Henry VI Part II, when the nobles pick sides in a London garden, by choosing either red or white roses. Therefore later historians call the civil war that then broke out the 'Wars of the Roses'. Somehow history teachers manage to make history so dull! The whole of our UK history is full of extraordinary incidents! Shakespeare's plays are a good place to start, and many of the plays have been made into films. In particular, the Royal Shakespeare Company has put some of it together in a compilation called 'The Hollow Crown'. The way George, Duke of Clarence met his end has been doubted, but there is evidence that he was indeed drowned - as it's traditionally put - in a 'butt [ a large barrel] of malmsey'. (Malmsey was I think then a common sweet wine.) Ambassadors of other countries were safe to report on what was happening, and it is from their reports that we originally got the story. Two things corroborate the story: one was that Clarence's daughter, Margaret, Countess of Salisbury - herself executed by Henry VIII in her old age - being a pious Catholic woman, was painted having a pendant with a barrel on it, presumably in memory of her father; and the fact that, since Clarence had been convicted of treason, he would otherwise have had to be hung, drawn, and quartered. ( Shakespeare, by the way, makes Richard, Duke of Gloucester ( later Richard III) get the murder done, but, although the brothers were estranged ( over an inheritance), I think Richard was horrified by it.) And I've seen George! Many years ago, I was with our school choir when we sang Evensong in Tewkesbury Abbey, in Gloucestershire, where George, Duke of Clarence is buried. I was permitted to go down the stairs - by the light of a candle - into the Clarence Vault. There, in what looked like a dusty museum case, was a pile of bones, and I remember a skull looking at me... What had happened was this. Much later an older couple had been buried in that Vault; but in 1760 a terrible flood has disrupted the burials. Any bones they could find were later swept up and dumped in that case. Recently, they have tried to sort out the bones; they have found four incomplete skeletons, of a younger couple, and an older couple. The younger man's skull shows signs of recovery from a head injury; now we know that George suffered a head injury at the Battle of Barnet in 1471, seven years before he was drowned, so that corroborates that. Incidentally, also in that Abbey is a tomb that was prepared for one of the nastiest nobles in our history, Hugh le Despencer the Younger. Now he got hung drawn and quartered in 1326, and it is recorded that his wife received one shoulder, which is presumably buried in that tomb. But in the 1970s they were digging in the ruins of Hulton Abbey in Staffordshire, and they found three-quarters of a person... It is believed that that's the rest of Hugh le Despencer...! I have studied these histories all my life. ( By the way, the history of Scotland is worse...)
@Simon-hb9rf
@Simon-hb9rf 15 күн бұрын
i think they have perfectly replicated the experience of a British schoolchild, i remember walking around the tower at 9 years old in much the same way, knowing the broad strokes of its history and experiencing the awe, but it wasn't until later when i learned more of the history i could really appreciate the memory of things i had stumbled past at the time. at some point they will realise that during this day trip they wandered past an old crumbling wall that was built by the roman empire a couple of hundred years after the birth of Jesus. im sure that will melt their brains for a day just as it once did mine :)
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 15 күн бұрын
Some told us about the wall….. it did, we was like “ THERE WAS A ROMAN WALL THERE ?🧐😧😲”
@terrywaywell6759
@terrywaywell6759 3 сағат бұрын
Great T-shirt.
@user-lb3hd7ip4o
@user-lb3hd7ip4o 10 күн бұрын
Am a BRIT been to the Tower of LONDON. They are not insafe they are TRUE. 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
@michaels640
@michaels640 21 күн бұрын
London Zoo was first started by Stamford Raffles. He created the Zoo after he returned to England after developing the port/trading station and ultimately colony of Singapore - a port on the way back from Hong Kong. When Malaya left the British Empire, Singapore was part of Malaya but had a majority off Chinese settlers who moved there under the British. They and the Malayans didn’t get on, so Singapore left the state of Malaya and became its own country.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
See that’s British, “yea the zoo was a little side project after creating Singapore” 🤣😂🤣 really cool history!
@alisonrandall3039
@alisonrandall3039 23 күн бұрын
I have seen that picture of the Duke of Monmouth it’s very creepy.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
Yes it is… unless you don’t know the history of it, then it just looks like he’s having a good nap 😂🤣😂
@davidhoward5392
@davidhoward5392 24 күн бұрын
There is a lot to take in, you've just scratched the surface, especially with London, although each City, Town and Village has its own unique historical story going way, way back from Vikings, Romans, there is a lot of history on these small islands., just stay curious, your curiosity will be rewarded..
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 24 күн бұрын
That’s what we love, I know it’s hard for people to watch cuz we walk into these sites at zero lol we are trying to figure out what we are looking at before we can figure out what it’s about 🤣😂🤣😂
@davidhoward5392
@davidhoward5392 24 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures you will be fine, there is enough history here, perhaps pick an era or subject your interested and start with that, good luck and enjoy the adventure
@MsGeoffh
@MsGeoffh 25 күн бұрын
Damn even DEI hires as wardens what a shambles we’ve become.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Idk what that means lol
@shaunfarrell3834
@shaunfarrell3834 10 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures I'm British and neither do I?
@sandrahilton3239
@sandrahilton3239 12 күн бұрын
the tower is very old and was built by William the Conquere who invaded Britain in 1066.
@claregale9011
@claregale9011 25 күн бұрын
Very cool love all of our historic places here , I don't think a lot in the US can appreciate how we actually live amongst our old buildings etc my local church dates back to 1080 we just walk past it everyday to work think nothing of it my local pub is dated back to the 1500s which to us is considered pretty new lol 😊.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
You can’t blame us, cuz we don’t experience it. Even when we go a lot of us don’t grasp the importance when we look at it. We see Great Britain, we see the castles, but a lot of Americans don’t see the historical significance to their modern life “ this is the home of king James “ “Who ?” “You know the Bible you read, that king James “ 😂🤣😂🤣😂
@claregale9011
@claregale9011 25 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures 🤣
@peterdubois4983
@peterdubois4983 5 күн бұрын
You are learning. The history of the world goes back thousands of years. I am from India originally and you won't believe that our civilisation is ten thousand years old!
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 5 күн бұрын
Besides the perfecting of recipes one could only imagine. I’d like to see India one day.
@captaincaveman5175
@captaincaveman5175 25 күн бұрын
Thank you . For respecting our history . And your videos are fun to watch . Seeing an outsiders view who seems to enjoy learning our history is a refreshing change from other touristy videos. Keep up the great work . New sub from me .
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Thank you very much for the kind words 😊
@davidberesford7009
@davidberesford7009 18 күн бұрын
Just enjoy! & Keep Reacting!
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 18 күн бұрын
Thank you
@user-me4bd1vj2s
@user-me4bd1vj2s Күн бұрын
Kings Richard 111 bones were unearthed in a car park in Leicester Leicestershire. He was killed at the Battle of Nazeby 1485
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures Күн бұрын
What model car was he in ….? 😂🤣😂 that really crazy to think in England if you decide to remodel or redo something there’s a chance you are going to dig up something or find something of historical significance. It’s mind blowing 🤯
@johnhood3172
@johnhood3172 22 күн бұрын
You should look into why the tower was built, react to the secret city of London cg grey .
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
What would I type to find this and what is it ?
@Captally
@Captally Күн бұрын
What Americans need to understand, those with British sounding surnames, anyway and can trace their ancestry back to these islands, is that this is your heritage also. It's why, instinctively, regardless of 1776, we are close allies and friends.
@orbytl2799
@orbytl2799 25 күн бұрын
Alexander the Great built the tower of london? 😅 love it wales has some of the best castles in the uk, Edward I built hundreds in wales called the ring of iron to control the welsh
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Nailed it 🤣😂😂🤣😂 we want to go to wales next I hear a lot of good things when peoples not, as you would say “ taking the piss “ lol
@heatherboardman7004
@heatherboardman7004 22 күн бұрын
Been to Northumberland?
@alisoncauser2955
@alisoncauser2955 22 күн бұрын
One of my ancestors' Gervase Babington, his c cousin was Anthony Babington was held at the tower, he was hung, drawn and quartered for high treason against Elizabeth I, For hispart in the Baington plot. In the mid 1500s.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 22 күн бұрын
Great now I got to research that 🤣😂🤣
@MrDunkycraig
@MrDunkycraig 25 күн бұрын
Dont ever feel stupid stupid is not asking questions or not want to know things. Were not as smart as you think believe me, we dont get taught much history in school so you have to find it yourself. Just in my city we have a 900+ yr old cathedral thats the fourth oldest in the country! Im in Peterborough on the edge of the fens 80 miles due north of London. The cathedral could see for miles as the land east was sea level or below much like Florida
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Oh I like saying I’m dumb cuz it makes people comfortable to share information with me so I can learn more lol. In situations like this, being humble with your intelect it tends to make people want to help you as to talking about misinformation confidently and people attacking you for getting wrong lol 😂
@mattmurdoch5575
@mattmurdoch5575 25 күн бұрын
Just a gentle heads up. The film Braveheart with William Wallace is completely inaccurate to actual history. He obviously existed but the story "Braveheart" tells is a fabrication. It's well worth your reacting to a historical video about William Wallace. There is a KZbin channel called "history hit" which does review the braveheart film And points out all of its inaccuracies if you want to look at that privately or just as part of your learning on your channel. Probably best to try to find something that taught about the history of William Wallace himself.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
lol we got to keep in mind that we have an American audience and Americans know William Wallace as brave heat and Guy Faux from V for vendetta film. It would be an interesting concept in the future to compare these fictional cinematic hero’s to their factual counterparts. I’m writing down that channel, cuz I been doing that recently with Jack the Ripper to get a real idea of that and king Henry the eighth, and kings James studying the formation of the modern church…
@carolfuller-tt7vo
@carolfuller-tt7vo 11 күн бұрын
If your ancestors were from Britain, then this is your heritage too
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 11 күн бұрын
Yes they are I’m kind of mixed I’m mainly English Romany my mothers father was Italian and the rest is English Romany. Why I got an English face and darker features lol
@Colourmad314
@Colourmad314 5 күн бұрын
Your colouring is no different to a Celtic have a look at Welsh, Cornish, Breton, Basque
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 5 күн бұрын
@@Colourmad314 oh yea I’m not without English blood, but mixed, I always wonder how many Brit’s carry a little Romany blood. The slang is a lot of our language to the point I was really watching my words when I spoke. When I say chav or Chavi I mean a kids, but apparently in England it can come off as in insult lol. Easy way to get a nob on top of my head 🤣😂🤣
@diannegooding8733
@diannegooding8733 8 күн бұрын
The Tower was started by William (the bastard) Duke of Normandy after he won the Battle of Hastings 1066. The last time that the UK was successfully invaded. Much was added after the Conqueror started it. This is your history. Just that you did not realise it, if you were originally European.
@originaldissident151
@originaldissident151 19 күн бұрын
Just be you bro, 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇬🇧
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
💯💯lol
@saripettes8710
@saripettes8710 25 күн бұрын
True fact about London Bridge and Tower Bridge. An American brought London Bridge but he thought he had actually brought Tower Bridge to his surprise when the Bridge arranged somewhere in the US he realised what he actually purchased 😂 So if a Brit say I got a Bridge to sell you we are taking the p*ss 😊. I also heard a story based on a visit to the Tower of London that a American ask 'why did they build a castle under the flight path' I don't think the warden quite believe what he was asked 😂😂😂
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
We have the same joke, but we say “if you believe that than we have a bridge to sell you in Brooklyn” it actually ended up somewhere out of las Vegas, I didn’t know this part of that story, but someone mentioned in our live stream that someone bought and shipped it to Nevada. As much as I don’t want to admit it, yes that does sound like something an American would say. 😂🤣😂🤣
@martinevans7090
@martinevans7090 20 күн бұрын
Still seems a bit weird seeing CiiiR on the yeoman warders uniforms.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
What’s CiiiR stand for king Charles?
@martinevans7090
@martinevans7090 19 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures the King’s cipher “C” for Charles, “R” for Rex, and III for the 3rd. For some reason whenever they design royal ciphers they always seem to display the numerals in the middle, hence why Elizabeth II’s looked like EIIR, and Charles III’s looks like CIIIR.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 17 күн бұрын
@@martinevans7090what’s ? Rex, I thought there last name was Mountbatten ?
@martinevans7090
@martinevans7090 17 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures Rex is Latin for King - also Regina is Latin for Queen. And the last name is Windsor.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 17 күн бұрын
@@martinevans7090 well thank you for teaching us something 😇
@dorothysimpson2804
@dorothysimpson2804 25 күн бұрын
The two Princes were brothers not twins, the elder brother was the rightful King. The bones have not had a DNA test done. The Romans had a fort on the sight and a small part of their wall is still there.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
See this is the stuff we like, I don’t think anyone mention the Roman link to the site, I’m sure it’s there but we would have never knew. Thank you 😊
@seanmc1351
@seanmc1351 23 күн бұрын
Pal, you thinking to hard, your videos are as good as they get, i have watched hundreds, the best, are people just being yourself, , There is a wonderful couple who came to england last year, they did the costwolds way, which is 102 miles walk, they did it over 9 to 10 days, they filmed for there family to see, they were just themselves, the tears, emotions, blisters, Their channel blew up like yours will, you will find, that 90% of your subs will be british, will give help, little facts, and be supportive to your channel, keep it going and be honest, brits will love you i promise, And if you come back, get ready for more help than you will know, from lifts, guided tours, accomadation, advice
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 23 күн бұрын
Thank you for the kind words, we 100% fell in love with the British people and culture. If we dedicated the rest of our life to exploring the uk and learning its history, we would be beyond content lol.
@seanmc1351
@seanmc1351 22 күн бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures great to hear, i could hear that in your videos, what do ask people who come to our shores, what you think of the pubs, the pub culture, people have tried to replicate it around the world, but never will, its unique to us, glad you loved our small island, the history, when you think texas and 10 other states are bigger than us, lol, texas has 9k bars, uk has 47k lol
@Aras012
@Aras012 22 күн бұрын
Yes female beefeater! I think she is a nurse in the royal air force?
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 19 күн бұрын
Female beefeaters means nothing shocking to us lol, not in the sense we don’t care for woman being beefeaters, but the fact we didn’t really know what they was, and up until we posted this video we didn’t know there was ever a gender thing behind it. She told she was a beefeater and explained what they was and we was like “ okay kool, we now know” 😂🤣😂 not at any point was we like “ women don’t eat beef, shut up “ 😂🤣😂
@SirHilaryManfat
@SirHilaryManfat 25 күн бұрын
You have a really lovely channel going here, and I think you're a bit harsh on yourselves for not knowing about the history of another country. Guaranteed a large percentage of Brits don't know a lot of the things you learned on this trip, so you really don't have a learning deficit or are you dumb. British history is so deep and complex that it takes a lifetime to learn everything, so you're doing alright.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 25 күн бұрын
Thank you very much lol. I just try to be level with my viewers I keep words simple, I say dumb instead of ignorant. I feel like it helps to show people I don’t think I am smarter than them and showing my mistakes, shows I willing to learn from people and it’s okay to share the information you know with us because we love seeing all these little facts from our previous video and our last few. 😁 thank you so much 😊
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