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@anon20345 ай бұрын
Can you make a video on Machiavelli's failed militia? I read that they "had a few successes" but ultimately "were defeated by mercenaries" to the chagrin of Niccolo. But can't find anything specific. Great video!
@KillerAngelPilot14 ай бұрын
I love your siege videos! I would absolutely love to see a video on the siege of Ceuta, the longest siege in history. I can’t seem to find any KZbinrs who have made a good video explaining in depth how the siege went
@theliato38095 ай бұрын
"Captain John Hawkwood." Sounds like a name straight from a Fantasy book. No wonder his rep was so good.
@MM229665 ай бұрын
Hawkwood and the White Company was popularized in English historical/fantasy fiction by the likes of Arthur Conan Doyle. Interest and historical awareness of him has flowed from that.
@EndingSimple5 ай бұрын
Gordon R. Dickson used him as a character in his Childe Cycle SF novels. Which is why I know about him. Interesting to learn of the real man. Btw is name was not pronounceable among non English speakers so his name was Latinised as Johannes Acutus ("John Sharp"). So there was a Sharp in Italy before there was one in Portugal.
@ingold14705 ай бұрын
This is because the fantasy genre is a close relative of late Victorian historical novels, which were often written about men like Hawkwood.
@MrVvulf5 ай бұрын
@@EndingSimple Giovanni Acuto was what the Italians called him. As in English "Acuto" (Sharp) has the multiple meanings - dangerous as well as clever and wily. I own the Caferro book the narrator referred to many times, as well as another on Hawkwood by John Leader. It baffles me a bit why no movies have been made about his life. Fiction authors have certainly based many tales upon him, including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ("The White Company") who created Sherlock Holmes. Chaucer's own story "The Knight" isn't based on solely on Hawkwood, but there's no doubt he was influenced by his time spent as Hawkwood's companion and fellow negotiator.
@MM229665 ай бұрын
@@ingold1470 Good point.
@Cahirable5 ай бұрын
Hawkwood is fascinating, because he doesn't seem to have amounted to much before the 1360s, despite the advantages he had. His mother had probably been from at least the gentry, and his first wife was probably also from the gentry or nobility, but we see him brawling and "borrowing" a neighbour's horse to plough his fields. This doesn't mean he was ploughing his fields - or perhaps more likely, his brother's fields - himself, but more likely he was simply managing the farm and his brother's properties in the area. Froissart calls him "the poorest knight in the army" when the routiers attacked Avignon, so he'd been knighted between 1351 and 1360, but doesn't seem to have gathered any notable group or acted as an independent captain worth noting. From 1360 on, though, he begins to skyrocket in prominence. It would be *fascinating* to know what changed to drive him onwards. If only he'd commissioned a poem or chronicle like Bertrand du Guesclin and other prominent men of the period.
@konstantinriumin26575 ай бұрын
daemonic pact is a hell of a drive
@Cahirable5 ай бұрын
@@konstantinriumin2657 I'm sure Hawkwood's enemies would agree with the sentiment!
@anon20345 ай бұрын
@@konstantinriumin2657 Griffith is that you?
@rune.theocracy5 ай бұрын
@@anon2034 I was looking for these kinds of comments LOL glad I'm not the only one who thought about the 'Company of Hawk'
@lcmiracle4 ай бұрын
@@konstantinriumin2657 How might I serve the great lord Tzeentch, the changer of ways?
@GAarcher5 ай бұрын
*The OG Band of the Hawk, no comment*
@primordialpouch11395 ай бұрын
Came down for this comment
@tenshrimp5 ай бұрын
OG the Hawk of White
@gregoireaurelien82055 ай бұрын
For real in my mind I was thinking about berserk all along
@eldorados_lost_searcher5 ай бұрын
"So put your glasses on, Nothing will be wrong."
@Cormano9805 ай бұрын
Miura took heavy inspiration from famous historical figures and events
@TheStrategos3925 ай бұрын
Hawkwood was a terrifying mix of Sun Tzu and Machiavelli, and lived to be over 70 years old and amassed great wealth. An incredible life.
@lolasdm69594 ай бұрын
Sun Tzu and Machiavelli gave similar advises
@winzyl95464 ай бұрын
Sun Tzu is much worse than Machiavelli's book.
@lolasdm69594 ай бұрын
@@winzyl9546 bro literally does not understand Sun Tzu’s book is about common sense in war. Many of Machiavelli’s advice are outdated, the art of war never goes out of style.
@SteveB-nx2uo4 ай бұрын
Machiavelli was not a bad person, the book he wrote is not a 'how to' it is "this is what these shit lords are doing" he was basically the guy giving away the magicians tricks, but the magicians are harsh feudal overlords. he gave people a glimpse behind the curtain as to how the elites think, and control us to this day.
@morriganmhor507816 күн бұрын
@@lolasdm6959 Machiavelli was an astute politician, not tactician. However, good teacher of Saul Alinsky.
I mean, they were literally just bandits and marauders. Only that they would occasionally fight on your side if you paid them enough extortion money. They might also just take your extortion money and join your enemies.
@lolasdm69594 ай бұрын
There is a reason why Geneva convention does not protect mercenaries
@Dave.Barlow3 ай бұрын
@@lolasdm6959 That's why they were rebranded to private military contractors or security personnel lol.
@samblackstone34003 ай бұрын
@@Dave.Barlow And then you end up like Russia with a rich PMC attempting to storm your capital
@Dave.Barlow3 ай бұрын
@@samblackstone3400 Yeah, and wasn't smart recruiting mostly from the prisons
@cartesian_doubt62305 ай бұрын
" In the 30 years that he served as a captain, Hawkwood's earnings ranged between 6,000 and 80,000 florins annually (in comparison, a skilled Florentine craftsman at the same time earned 30 florins a year)"
@maximillianscholtz91094 ай бұрын
Holy😮
@cronykil742 ай бұрын
It's interesting how little things have really changed over the centuries. We still have the oligarchs and bankers Scrooge Mcduck diving into piles of cash, and the skilled artisans left with the table scraps.
@UkSapyy2 ай бұрын
@@cronykil74 Creating stuff brings wealth into existence but it doesn't make you rich, rich people are the ones who end up with the stuff the other people make and then rent or tax that stuff back to them. Noble families are the ones who stole land originally and then taxed the people who once had the land, Bankers take peoples money and give it to other people with interest payments, etc... The people who matter create wealth. The people who are rich are those that end up taking the stuff people create. Modern society seems to be okay with that as we've got TV and fastfood...
@removedquasar6505 ай бұрын
Ooooh John Hawkwood! Called Giovanni Acuto here on Italy
@MarktheRude5 ай бұрын
So what exactly led to the end-situation where renaissance Italy essentially became Europe's dedicated PVP zone?
@iseeyou50615 ай бұрын
When France arrived
@Swift-mr5zi5 ай бұрын
@@iseeyou5061 I'm not sure that ended it
@iseeyou50615 ай бұрын
@@Swift-mr5zi The question is what started it
@fuferito5 ай бұрын
A lethal combination of strong neighboring kingdoms while Italy insisted on remaining divided, yet extremely rich and productive, whose squabbling factions kept inviting foreign mercenaries or foreign crowns directly to settle their conflicts.
@jakemocci39535 ай бұрын
Very wealthy city-states rather than centralized power.
@Pentagathusosaurus5 ай бұрын
Virgin Italian Despot vs Based English Mercenary
@vasilykatuma56895 ай бұрын
*versus the TYPICAL english LOOTER...
@thenoblepoptart5 ай бұрын
hawkwood might have been a chad but mercenaries are such a massive pain in the ass. People who know history know that the moral of “the pied piper” isn’t about not trusting strangers, it’s about always remembering to pay your freelancers…
@MrVvulf5 ай бұрын
It should be noted that the 130,000 florins that Hawkwood extorted from Tuscany would be worth about $25 million today. And that was just ONE of his more successful campaigns. He was one of the most interesting Englishmen of the 14th century.
@lolasdm69594 ай бұрын
@@MrVvulfextort treasure from despots average mercenary W
@lou_-mg7mb4 ай бұрын
Long live the true Protestant Faith! Praise Christ! Down with Popish witchcraft and trickery!
@adrian90985 ай бұрын
"John Hawkwood, British knight, most prudent leader of his age and most expert in the art of war" Thats how bad badass this guy was
@zebwheeler56835 ай бұрын
Instantly here after the upload - I already know this will be great!
@Pentagathusosaurus5 ай бұрын
Chrsitian Cameron's Chivalry Series is set in this era and follows the career of a largely fictional character inspired by John Hawkwood (Hawkwood is also a character in the series). He's an excellent author of historical fiction (and sci fi and fantasy) and he's a keen reenactor himself which adds a lot of authenticity to his stories (alongside doing a ton of research).
@Cahirable5 ай бұрын
There's a few changes made to history and occasionally a interpretations that I think are outdated or a stretch, but he's the only historical fiction author I know of who has actually gone to visit an archive to look at unpublished manuscripts as part of his research process, and his deviations are usually to highlight some aspect of medieval society that might not have otherwise been worked in so well. Definitely recommend the series!
@awilk4184 ай бұрын
One of my favorite series! I’m going to be sad when we say farewell to William Gold.
@shovelhead21554 ай бұрын
I'll check it out. You might like Glen Cook's "Chronicles of the Black Company". Amazing 9 book series
@JohnDoe-ug3su3 ай бұрын
There's a manga "Hawkwood" about his fictional involvement in the battle of Crecy
@Cahirable3 ай бұрын
@@JohnDoe-ug3su I gave it a couple of chapters, but it's absolutely terrible. No grasp of Hawkwood's career, medieval warfare, 14th century armour or the Crécy campaign.
@kimberlyperrotis89624 ай бұрын
The Italians had trouble pronouncing Hawkwood, so the called him by the closest-sounding Italian word, Acuto, which means needle. Very apt.
@SandileNgwenya-gv7nx4 ай бұрын
Acuto meant Sharp I think
@robeerob4 ай бұрын
@@SandileNgwenya-gv7nx or acute
@jameswilliams3241Ай бұрын
Giovanni Acuto
@duncanself51115 ай бұрын
Hawkwood is a strong surname
@Doc_Tar5 ай бұрын
I've seen Hawkwood's monument in Florence have always wondered how a man so far from home could rise to such heights as to be memorialized by the people he often extracted wealth from. Now I know, thanks for this video.
@SB-1295 ай бұрын
4:14 "Honey... Why is it that no matter where we go, everyone has to torment us in some way?"
@Arcadius-ss3zp5 ай бұрын
Another amazing video by SandRhoman as alway. Love your work, it is gold. Please do a video on the Army of Flanders in the future.
@MajesticOak4 ай бұрын
The guy's life showed up in the English textbook New Concept English, which led to tens of millions of people outside of Europe to learn of his tales. He was also mentioned a few times in the Childe cycle series of sci-fi novels, leading to many American sci-fi fans to learn of his exploits.
@Uberdude66664 ай бұрын
Very interesting video! The Angevins seems like another good example of feudal marriage-alliances being used for actual empire building. I did not know they had a cadet-branch in Hungary.
@ThePaculdop5 ай бұрын
Damn, even before the coming of the Empire, the English were already making waves.
@CMitchell8085 ай бұрын
England has been a player in European politics for as long as there has been an England.
@ThePaculdop5 ай бұрын
@CMitchell808 Not just a player. But a Prominent Champ of a player at times.
@andreoliveira6855 ай бұрын
@@ThePaculdop Conquered by Romans, then conquered by anglo-saxons, then by vikings, then by Normans, then tried to conquer France but failed... went on plundering France and there's this mercenary in Italy. Two centururies later were using piracy to try and get some level play with the great empires. Got lucky in the 18th and 19th century and got finally beaten back to almost oblivion by the nazis.. Champ?
@stevshaboba74765 ай бұрын
@@andreoliveira685 Got lucky in the 18th and 19th century ? Is that what you tell yourself
@andreoliveira6855 ай бұрын
@@stevshaboba7476 uh... hurt feelings... love it. I have some time now so let me try and list it for you. - by the end of the 17th century England got it's first indian colony as a gift from portugal and a great reform was done by Cromwell - the Dutch fought bravely against the Spanish empire andEngland got a lot of opportunities from it - Irish and scotch people loved making silly regiments and dying for the king - Spanish war of succession led to some chaos in mainland europe and england benefited from it - technical developments on the wool industry and england benefited from it - a great age of maritime trade issued and england found the spanish empire in decline - no mass media and england benefited from it by exterminating local people in oceania and north america - napoleon causes chaos in mainland europe and england benefited from it - liberal revolutions in europe and americas and england benefited from it To be fair the English did a good job benefiting from all of it... but in 1946 was desperately begging for a loan from the US.
@jeremiedelusignan9505 ай бұрын
Hello ! I’m a descendant of John Hawkwood. His story always fascinated me. Thank you really much for this video about his company and his fights.
@omarab8374 ай бұрын
How are you related to him?
@Tjalve703 ай бұрын
A generation would roughly be between 25 and 33 years. Meaning 3-4 generation in a century. John Hawkwood lived about 650 years ago, which means about 20-25 generations. For each generation, you have 2 ancestors. So that means in 20 generations, you have 1 million ancestors. In 25 generations, you have 30 million ancestors. Given that some of John Hawkwood's children grew up in England, and presumably some grew up in Italy, that means a large number of people who has ancestry from south-eastern England or Northern Italy, is a descendant of John Hawkwood.
@andreattafabio5 ай бұрын
Best History Channel!
@spartan-s0133 ай бұрын
First error: Being a mercenary doesn't mean someone wasn't a noble. Many nobles/knights were mercenaries at that time
@QuantumHistorian3 ай бұрын
I know this is an old(ish) video, but the conversion table at 15:18 is amazing. It shows that there really is no good way to convert between currencies when the relative value of what you could buy with it changes so drastically. Also illustrates shockingly well just how cheap food is today: 1h of labour today buys you 28x more grain than back then.
@juliantheapostate82953 ай бұрын
And land back then was far cheaper than it is now. There is a book called 'Making a Living in the Middle Ages'. I forget the author's name now, but it goes into all this
@Tjalve703 ай бұрын
It's not so much that food is cheap now. It's more than workforce is very expensive now, because the workforce is incredibly much wealthier than it was in the Middle Ages. I know that after the discovery of the Americas, the value of gold in Europe went down quite a lot. So I think the most "correct" conversion rate, would be that of wheat. But you would have to keep in mind that the general population was a lot poorer than they are now. But then, the question is really what you want to convert.
@QuantumHistorian3 ай бұрын
@@Tjalve70 Even using wheat is problematic: to use the threshed grains, flour, or bread as the good with fixed price? In modernity the cost to go from one to the next is entirely negligible. In history, even the cost of moving the grain from farm to mill could be significant! Diocletian's price edict (300 AD Rome) allows us to track how expensive moving bulk goods was - a hundred kilometres overland would double the price of grain. So if we use grain, we have to use an exchange rate that varies drastically with distance. At the end of a day, accurate conversion is not possible. Money is a measure of purchasing power, and when the things being purchased are drastically different, comparing the ability to buy them is unquantifiable.
@Tjalve703 ай бұрын
@@QuantumHistorian I agree that using what is problematic. I remember there was an economic historian who concluded that cattle was the best "item" to use for looking at prices through history. But I'm not an expert, so I won't say too much about that.
@zetectic79685 ай бұрын
Very interesting & informative about a chapter of history I was unfamiliar with.
@PennyWoo-rr6io5 ай бұрын
another sandrhoman W
@Nodnarbero5 ай бұрын
I have been waiting for this since I first found about them in the Tsardoms mod
@joshuaverret40964 ай бұрын
I am in love with the mercenary series!!!
@Vhite5 ай бұрын
This guy sounds few war crimes short of being the real world Griffith.
@rune.theocracy5 ай бұрын
Except it seems he didn't aim to create his own kingdom but yes! I was screaming Griffith the whole video
@cc07675 ай бұрын
Imagine living through this era as a normal person and getting raided by mercenaries every other day. Life must have truly sucked.
@SandileNgwenya-gv7nx4 ай бұрын
Not really tho it's just those unlucky towns but in usual wars most people wouldn't be affected at all
@HannibalBarcaRTW5 ай бұрын
Did the English mercenary rank and file settle in Italy or did they travel back to England?
@Gudha_Ismintis5 ай бұрын
best vid of the channel
@Stroopwaffe15 ай бұрын
Great, I think You piqued my intrest, liked and subbed.
@Thraim.5 ай бұрын
I, for one, welcome our new mercenary overlords.
@Hikurac4 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Hawkwood and the White Company were the inspiration for Griffith and the Band of the Hawk in Berserk.
@blake-814 ай бұрын
This guy's life reads like the most successful Mount & Blade game EVER...
@Kingedwardiii20035 ай бұрын
4:00 Englishmen going on holiday to Italy what can go wrong
@dao_jones3 ай бұрын
I would think that the simplest explanation for their adopting or being given the moniker of "White Company" would be that an army of Englishmen in Florence would literally be whiter compared to the relatively swarthy populations of Mediterranean descent in Southern Europe.
@bigsarge20855 ай бұрын
Incredible!
@manatarmsfittness88744 ай бұрын
The white company and sir Nigel by sir Walter Scott are still my favorite historical fiction novels anyone who hasn’t read them should.
@MyVanir3 ай бұрын
It is fairly easy to say "we won't fight England" when you're in Italy and England is fighting a war elsewhere.
@Tjalve703 ай бұрын
Keep in mind that at this point in time, the King of England also owned Aquitaine. So it wasn't THAT far away.
@morriganmhor507816 күн бұрын
@@MyVanir In that time Italy was ONLY a place, not nation/state.
@MyVanir15 күн бұрын
@@morriganmhor5078 And?
@Swedishmafia101MemeCorporation5 ай бұрын
His drip do be impeccable, I must say
@voidrenon5 ай бұрын
"GRIFIIIIIIIIIIITH!"
@SteveB-nx2uo4 ай бұрын
the white company also could refer to the white cliffs of dover, something people not from Britain may have heard of or seen Hawkwoods early 'mistakes' could have been a way to harden the unit, or weed out those disloyal to him. it gives deserters and traitors a chance to show their colors, and lets him know who will handle adverse conditions well. he may have been shit testing his own unit to see how they handle stress and loss.
@IliaF-v5q5 ай бұрын
Hawk Tuah algorithm must have brought this into my recommendations 😂😂👍
@danielchen90945 ай бұрын
Great video on a very slept on part of history. Can you also please do a documentary about Francesco Sforza?
@AnimeSunglasses4 ай бұрын
Ahhhh, so THIS man was the inspiration for BattleTech!
@rustyshackleford15084 ай бұрын
"Hawkwood's loyalty to Pisa was financially based." So, based?
@sarahsidney19885 ай бұрын
Great video
@corpchannel25235 ай бұрын
Can you do a Video about Longbowmen(Welsh Bow And English Longbow)
@Lo-tf6qt5 ай бұрын
Did Hawkwood occassionally say "Gives me conniptions" too?
@iseeyou50615 ай бұрын
Right now the work seems focused on Italy. But would there any chance for a more German region focused content?
@bobskywalker27075 ай бұрын
THE WHITE COMPANY LETS GOO
@shovelhead21554 ай бұрын
Wow, now I know where Glen Cook got the inspiration for themes and characters from for The Black Company series, Dread Empire series, and StarFishers trilogy. If you like mature dark fantasy, that's a like a cross between Lord of the Rings and Platoon, then Glen Cook is your guy.
@dervolkstribun62404 ай бұрын
Giovanni Accudo was his name in italian. He was a real badass, otherwise he wouldnt have lived as long as he did. He also worked with germans as Baumgarten. A very interesting period of european history! Splendid and cruel alike.
@serenityphawx4 ай бұрын
What music is playing at 1:31 please? It sounds fantastic!
@Joseph-mm4zu3 ай бұрын
Darude - Sandstorm
@serenityphawx3 ай бұрын
@@Joseph-mm4zu Thanks, but I meant the part with the violin.. maybe it begins a second later 1:32
@Joseph-mm4zu3 ай бұрын
@@serenityphawxAh yeh sorry! I believe the violin part is from Bitter Sweet Symphony by The Verve
@angun7035 ай бұрын
Hawk? White?...... GRIFFITH
@lycanoidtyphoon4 ай бұрын
😂
@morriganmhor507816 күн бұрын
@@angun703 IT could have something with the English Saint George flag, red CROSS on the White Field.
@Mifune414 ай бұрын
I was not expecting a Chaucer connection.
@michaelrredford5 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@CelticHound3574 ай бұрын
Why am I suddenly reminded of the Rutger Hauer movie. "Flesh and Blood."
@murrayscott95464 ай бұрын
Guns, Germs and Steel. Recommended by me, who is nobody. A real deep - dive. Not the easiest read but worth it.
@murrayscott95464 ай бұрын
The guy liked the action and was good at it
@klappspatenkamikaze4 ай бұрын
@sandrhomanhistory interesting video, just one strange detail: do you have a source for the multi-person-pike-usage mentioned ~7:00? I've heard it a few times but never with a source.
@SandRhomanHistory4 ай бұрын
We mention two medieval chroniclers in the video. I think both describe it, if I remember correctly. For a modern source, check out Wiliam Caferro (see bibliography in the description). He explains this well in his works.
@iseeyou50615 ай бұрын
As rich as Italian was, can they even afford John Hawkwood payment? And if they could, for how long?
@vgamedude124 ай бұрын
Guy was playing mount and blade in real life.
@V.B.Squire5 ай бұрын
From White Company to Blackwater
@Lunibruniful5 ай бұрын
I guess theres a learning curve for everything
@fuferito5 ай бұрын
It's amazing to read how quaintly out of touch (Saint) Catherine of Siena seems about her changing world when she writes to "Giovanni Acuto" (John Hawkwood) about going on Crusade instead of waging war in Italy; _Dearest and sweetest brother in Christ Jesus, it would be a great thing now if you would withdraw a little into yourself, and consider, and reflect how great are the pains and anguish which you have endured by being in the service and pay of the devil. Now my soul desires that you should change your way of life, and take the pay and the cross of Christ crucified, you and all your followers and companions; so that you may be Christ's company, to march against the infidel dogs who possess our Holy Place..."_
@MBP19185 ай бұрын
insane lore
@guillembonet33505 ай бұрын
He might habe been the inspiration for Griffith from Berserk
@andrewrobertson3894Ай бұрын
Not sure why this occurred to me but ...what would happen if a knight was known to have had several squires die while in his service?
@clintmoor4225 ай бұрын
This is going to be great. I'm already seeing a bunch of Italians who will come in and claim Hawkwood was not that important.. as always.
@andrex628828 күн бұрын
I wonder if this is what berserks author got inspired to write about the band of the hawk
@anon20345 ай бұрын
Yes, yes. This is all well and good, but does he have a behelit?
@KingTrouser5 ай бұрын
One thing I want to know, is these mercenaries regularly accumulate vast sums of wealth, only to need to go on the plunder again a few years later. What the hell were they spending all their money on??
@awilk4184 ай бұрын
The same thing soldiers always blow their money on: Dodge Chargers with 35% interest.
@Tjalve703 ай бұрын
Food, wine, and horse (sp.).
@feral75235 ай бұрын
Hawkwood is the great great great uncle of Hawk Tauh.
@Sarsgnu5 ай бұрын
Chaucer, the writer?! Maybe he’s allegorical, but we won’t hold that against him!
@Ravenclanner5 ай бұрын
Aight bro. I signed up for the imprint thing and you got credit. You know what that means. You better pat yourself on the back and get back to god's work!!
@lincs4life5 ай бұрын
I'm here after reading the chivalry books series.
@constable1175 ай бұрын
LETS GO LADS!!!!! 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
@carnifex20055 ай бұрын
The most I got from this video is that the Italians were way too rich for their own good.
@piggypoo4 ай бұрын
Imagine not naming your company the Band of the Hawk(wood).
@zaku2principality0fze0n64 ай бұрын
Dude was the inspiration for griffith and the band of the hawk in berzerk
@billder26554 ай бұрын
how have both Chaucer and Petrarch wound up in a video about mercenaries 😂 two of the finest poets of their century
@RedTom03 ай бұрын
But, how many men where in the company?
@TheSilentPrince-mt5mx5 ай бұрын
I'll have to pay a visit to St. Peter's Church in Sible Hedingham to look at the arch which honour's him. I keep meaning to go to The Church of St Nicholas in nearby Castle Hedingham to pay respects to the de Vere family members commemorated there (I have reasons) and Alderford Water Mill so it will make a good day out.
@kentallard88524 ай бұрын
The Lance was 2 men-at-arms to handle Lance + their squires/pages
@pauldavies56553 ай бұрын
HAWKWOOD isone of my ancestors ! same as john hughes from russia.
@Tjalve703 ай бұрын
A generation would roughly be between 25 and 33 years. Meaning 3-4 generation in a century. John Hawkwood lived about 650 years ago, which means about 20-25 generations. For each generation, you have 2 ancestors. So that means in 20 generations, you have 1 million ancestors. In 25 generations, you have 30 million ancestors. Given that some of John Hawkwood's children grew up in England, and presumably some grew up in Italy, that means a large number of people who has ancestry from south-eastern England or Northern Italy, is a descendant of John Hawkwood.
@TonttuTorvinen5 ай бұрын
Black company operated in 1363. I feel that it is just very natural for humans to name a company the "white company" if black company is in existence just to distinguish those two.
@justdracir81974 ай бұрын
@SandRhomanHistory i have a question is this an authorized or someone from you guys making a german version of the channel? Or did i find an imposter? www.youtube.com/@SandRhomanGeschichte/videos
@SandRhomanHistory4 ай бұрын
that‘s us! its‘s Roman doing the voiceovers!
@justdracir81974 ай бұрын
@@SandRhomanHistory oh good to know. I was super confused after i typed in SandRhoman and saw 2 channels ^^"
@maxbench30894 ай бұрын
it is a lovely video and I am thankful for it, and that is the main thing, and it will be even better if the Italian pronunciation was accurate. Why not? that is not so difficult, just talk with any Italian person. I would be happy to help, and I don't want anything for that, zero. Just the fact you are saying the right names is enough for me.
@CBass-mn5dy5 ай бұрын
Damn...they were Blackrock before Blackrock.
@AdventureThroughLife5 ай бұрын
Band of the Hawk?
@alex-E7WHU4 ай бұрын
Hawkwind surely..?
@The_ZeroLine4 ай бұрын
Hawkwood was good, but comparing him to Hannibal is not just a bridge too far. It’s blasphemy. Anyway, I feel like you’ve posted this video before, but maybe I’m confusing this with another channel’s video. I’m subscribed to at least 10 channels that put out similar content.
@FranceIsPropertyofEngland4 ай бұрын
Interesting fact: During the 100 years war, the Germans and Spanish raided France so much that the French gave up distinguishing them and just called them all English.
@ItsLunaRegina3 ай бұрын
You say it's not known why they were initially called "company of English and Germans" then later say how they are continually reinforced with more German mercenaries.....?
@alexjn54604 ай бұрын
Your pronunciation of 'marriage' is slightly off. Its usually said more like 'marrij' by native speakers. Rhymes with 'carriage'. The 'i' is silent. Great video though, so thanks, I enjoyed it.
@Tjalve703 ай бұрын
He also consistently mispronounces "shrapnel" as "shARpnel".
@megalonoobiacinc48635 ай бұрын
There's a pretty dark manga which goes by his name, too bad it seems to have ended