The Varangian Guard: The Brutal Special Forces Of Dark Age Byzantium | Ancient Black Ops | Chronicle

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Chronicle - Medieval History Documentaries

Chronicle - Medieval History Documentaries

Ай бұрын

The Varangian Guard were brutal Viking mercenaries serving the Byzantine Empire. Renowned for their brutality and loyalty, they became the elite fighting unit of the Emperor Basil II, tasked with suppressing revolts and protecting the Emperor. They are the prime example of military brutality in the dark ages.
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Пікірлер: 297
@johnmark150
@johnmark150 29 күн бұрын
Byzantium did not have a Dark Age. As the late Merle E. Severy, Editor, National Geographic, wrote: "The Dark Ages are only dark if you look at Western Europe, for long centuries a back-water: decaying towns, isolated manors, scattered monasteries, squabbling robber barons. In the East blazed the light of Byzantium, studded with cities such as Thessalonica, Antioch, and Alexandria, more cosmopolitan than any Western society before the modern age."
@VulcanM61
@VulcanM61 19 күн бұрын
Byzantine Dark Ages is a historiographical term for the period in the history of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, during the 7th and 8th centuries, which marks the transition between the late antique early Byzantine period and the "medieval" middle Byzantine era.
@texassteaks6172
@texassteaks6172 18 күн бұрын
That’s right and true !!
@stanbatakarata6081
@stanbatakarata6081 15 күн бұрын
True Only Bulgarian Empire Capital Great Preslav is Seccond Constantinople
@texassteaks6172
@texassteaks6172 15 күн бұрын
@@stanbatakarata6081 were and how you come up with that statement ? Really ??
@roberttravers5286
@roberttravers5286 Күн бұрын
Western Europe suffered the consequences of the Roman Empire and, later, the Catholic Church.
@KernowekTim
@KernowekTim Ай бұрын
"Basil! Basil! Basil, what, do you thing you are doing rubbing shoulders with Vikings and Templar Knights?"......."Just a spot of, um, of...'hunting' Sybil dear".
@johnmark150
@johnmark150 29 күн бұрын
“For nine centuries the great City (Byzantium/Constantinople) had been the capital of Christian civilization. It was filled with works of art that had survived from Ancient Greece and with the masterpieces of its own exquisite craftsmen.” - Sir Steven Runciman, pre-eminent British historian and author
@Mjdeben
@Mjdeben Ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure Andrew Gough just pre-records a bunch of vauge commentary in a room somewhere and then the editors compile it to match whatever the topic is.
@smurfy181
@smurfy181 Ай бұрын
haha thank you - I'm 15 minutes in and it's just a bunch of random clips of violence and 100 different ways of saying, "The Varangians liked fighting". Wow. Thanks. I've learned so much.
@Gspawt76
@Gspawt76 Ай бұрын
Yeah agreed. He's terribly off-putting.
@EstbXCIII
@EstbXCIII Ай бұрын
I came to the comment section first about 3 seconds in the video. Ill pay attention to this and return with my own remarks lol..
@AlphaSniperAcademy
@AlphaSniperAcademy 21 күн бұрын
I would like to mention that Amon Amarth even has a song about them. "Varyags of Miklagaard." "Miklagaard has been our home for 20 years or more We've lent our axes, spears, and swords In service of the emperor We are loyal warriors That's the oath we gave To protect the emperor even to a violent grave"
@adamwee382
@adamwee382 Ай бұрын
12:55 There actually weren't that many Byzantine Emperors who were assassinated, The main purpose of an emperors "bodyguard' was not to prevent him from being assassinated, it was his private military force paid directly by himself, the emperor. If one of the emperor's vassals rebelled then that vassals soldiers would almost certainly remain loyal to him rather than the emperor. So the Varangian Guard did whatever the emperor required them to do, they did act as a literal bodyguard, even being trusted with the keys to the city while the emperor was away, but they also acted as law enforcement as well, but the main purpose was to act as loyal retainers ready to defend the emperor in case of rebellion which was incredibly common in the Eastern Roman Empire. They were his insurance against the scheming nobility, so they were very well paid and had their own special privileges. So while assassination was a threat, more emperors were deposed through military coups than assassination. That's the purpose of having a private army rather than lets say Game of Thrones Kings Guard.
@nebojsanesic5326
@nebojsanesic5326 Ай бұрын
Westerners and their "Academia" are trying to represent Orthodox leaders as they are Vatican leaders. Not a word about them destroying, or directly helping destruction of all 3 Orthodox Tzars.
@Valchrist1313
@Valchrist1313 Ай бұрын
There are suspicions that Basil II's father was assassinated, having died at age 26. His father ruled for only 4 years. His father, Basil II's grandfather is suspected of having been assassinated. Basil was made co-emperor with his brother, both children. As such, their regent Nicephorus Phocas became emperor. He was assassinated. He was followed by John Tzimiskes, who was suspected of having been assassinated. Not to mention the civil war led by Phocas's relatives. After Basil II and his brother died, the next emperor was Romanos III..... who was assassinated after ruling for 6 years. So if assassinations of Byzantine Emperors was rare... it certainly wasn't in the time-period!
@adamwee382
@adamwee382 Ай бұрын
@@Valchrist1313 in that time frame how many disloyal vassals tried to rebel? Read what i said more carefully. i didn't say that emperors weren't assassinated, I said that the point of the varangians was not primarily as a literal bodyguard, but his personal private army. So whats your point? An emperor didnt employ as many Varangians as he possibly could to stand outside his chambers. What about the Varangians of the sea? were they standing guard at night? Calling them "bodyguards" is not a great description. It may have been more prestigious than referring to them as retainers, but that's what they were. The elite standing/professional troops of the Byzantine Army, paid directly by the emperor, and recruited from outside the empire in order to ensure loyalty to the emperor rather than a noble family.
@Valchrist1313
@Valchrist1313 Ай бұрын
@@adamwee382 You said 'there weren't that many' implying it was uncommon. Yet, the two predecessors and two successors were likely assassinated. The video actually does go over the other stuff too!
@adamwee382
@adamwee382 Ай бұрын
​@@Valchrist1313 No, you're making the assumption and you're imposing it onto me. Read carefully the context of what i've said. I implied that rebellious factions leading armies were statistically more dangerous than assassinations. That does not mean that I said or even implied that assassinations didn't occur, or were even rare. I was merely stating that calling the Varangians "bodyguards" is misleading, even if that's how they were referred to at the time. No eastern Roman Emperor retained hundreds of Varangians to act as his literal bodyguard. Nothing you've said contradicts my original argument, which was "The main purpose of an emperors "bodyguard' was not to prevent him from being assassinated, it was his private military force paid directly by himself, the Emperor" So again, and for the last time, i really don't understand your point.
@sotiriosvanikiotis3144
@sotiriosvanikiotis3144 Ай бұрын
I like the way you name the Byzantium Empire the dark ages... The East never experienced dark ages like the west... It was only after the fall of Constantinople and the invasion of the "utman Turk" did the East experience dark ages Most of the elite and educated East had escaped to the west and Italy after the fall of Byzantium which began the revival or the renaissance of Europe
@VulcanM61
@VulcanM61 19 күн бұрын
Byzantine Dark Ages is a historiographical term for the period in the history of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, during the 7th and 8th centuries, which marks the transition between the late antique early Byzantine period and the "medieval" middle Byzantine era.
@laifnow
@laifnow Ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure Halfdan would’ve graffitied several different places, but none of the other buildings are still standing to this day.
@zoetropo1
@zoetropo1 Ай бұрын
In 1081 at Dyrrhachium, the Varangian Guard faced the same person whose feint and charge broke the English shield wall in the Battle of Hastings: Brian of Brittany. The result was very much the same. Although Brian was instrumental in that defeat of Alexios Comnenos, the Emperor's daughter Anna Comnene described Brian as "the most courageous and most honourable of all the Gauls".
@ilijas3041
@ilijas3041 Ай бұрын
Wasnt that her impression of Bohemond?
@howwwwwyyyyy
@howwwwwyyyyy Ай бұрын
Where did you find out about that?-I always thought that the main information about Hastings was from the tapestry.
@JulieCaptivatedinFl
@JulieCaptivatedinFl Ай бұрын
Andrew Gough- The man of a thousand titles.
@gregkientop559
@gregkientop559 Ай бұрын
Clearly, Harald Hardrada was an out-of-the-box thinker and charismatic leader. He believed in the power of the Skald, the Norse record-keeper/storytellers very much. Probably the main reason we have these tales. It is ironic though that after roaming the eastern Med, that his eventual undoing likely involved inclemently warm weather, former Roman roads (and the English longbow) at the Battle of Stamford Bridge. His force at Stamford Bridge in 1066 had left much of their armor at the boats due to the heat, and had underestimated the speed in which Harald Godwinson's army would arrive from the south via Roman-built roads. Even though Harald H. caught an arrow to the neck and perished with his army, they damaged Harald G.'s army bad enough that they lost their next crucial battle for control of England at Hastings. Even in death, Harald Hardrada's impacts on the western world are felt yet today via the Normans, another Norse-derived culture. The arrival of Haley's Comet in early 1066 was to portent a very eventful year-and did not disappoint.
@howwwwwyyyyy
@howwwwwyyyyy Ай бұрын
He was quite a boy wasn't he, fighting for his half brother at 15& escaping afterwards,shows how rich Constantinople must have been that he used his loot to become king of Norway, love his escape from there too, just read a book about him but you get the feeling that there was so much more to tell
@howwwwwyyyyy
@howwwwwyyyyy Ай бұрын
Whoops, I really should watch until I comment
@BlackQback
@BlackQback 23 күн бұрын
Not only did Harald Hardrada believe in the power of the Skald, but was reportedly a poet himself, and according to saga was making up poetry while fighting at Stamford Bridge. Tom Shippey in his book "Laughing shall I die" writes about that.
@johnking6252
@johnking6252 Ай бұрын
Just a bunch of good ole boys out looking for fun . Ya gotta luv the Vikings. 👍
@sebastienloyer9471
@sebastienloyer9471 Ай бұрын
And theyr woman's 😊
@SIBquake
@SIBquake Ай бұрын
Yeah they were Vikings but they were Russian
@aephos-overwatch
@aephos-overwatch 8 күн бұрын
Except when they pillage
@kennethquinnies6023
@kennethquinnies6023 Ай бұрын
I like when Harald Hardraad had enough of the empress and took the Varangian gurd to the port, having to fight through several legions to do it, then took the ships necessary and sailed to norway. He then built an army large enough to invade england.
@mickvonbornemann3824
@mickvonbornemann3824 Ай бұрын
“Lush tropical climate” - WTF, it get’s below freezing in Istanbul in winter.
@sebastienloyer9471
@sebastienloyer9471 Ай бұрын
IT gets in the -40 to -50 In Alberta Canada
@sebastienloyer9471
@sebastienloyer9471 Ай бұрын
-5°© to -15°© Am still in t-shirt outside.
@Marcelocostache
@Marcelocostache Ай бұрын
For us Norseman is summertime!. 😂
@FranciscoHernandez-lt1mo
@FranciscoHernandez-lt1mo Ай бұрын
Sweden and other counties around can get -40c and lower so yeah it’s tropical for them
@johnmark150
@johnmark150 29 күн бұрын
"Far from being a moribund society..., it (Byzantium) was the greatest, most active and most enduring political organism that the world has yet seen..." - F.M. Powicke, English historian
@sunlightpictures8367
@sunlightpictures8367 Ай бұрын
Great documentary. Harold was a very interesting person.
@tomasabrahamsson
@tomasabrahamsson 16 күн бұрын
Constantinople was called Miklagard by the Varangians and Vikings.
@Marcelocostache
@Marcelocostache Ай бұрын
Vikings/norseman+Roman training and equipment = Varangian Guard.
@jonomasonILoveU
@jonomasonILoveU Ай бұрын
I`ve heard of flaming arrows but not flaming sparrows -brilliant-, my neighbours better be nice I got seagulls🤣.
@morganfreeaimthebountyhunt7682
@morganfreeaimthebountyhunt7682 Ай бұрын
"The Brutal Special Forces of Early Medieval Eastern Rome" Fixed.
@jchiblitz9238
@jchiblitz9238 25 күн бұрын
Lots of Anglo Saxons fled to Constantinople and joined the Varangian Guard after William The Conqueror won the Battle of Hastings. It's worth a Google.
@AlphaSniperAcademy
@AlphaSniperAcademy 21 күн бұрын
Thanks for this! Will check it out
@TihetrisWeathersby
@TihetrisWeathersby Ай бұрын
Funny enough I've been watching Vikings Valhalla, I think Harald is well portrayed
@poohtisdispenser7106
@poohtisdispenser7106 Ай бұрын
The real Harald journey was much more insane. He began his lifelong journey to avenge his brother and reclaim the throne of Norway since he was only 15 years old. His journey was filled with war and battle in many foreign lands. His life was literally one of those protagonist story you would only think existed in movies. He began as a young inexperienced second son return to where his journey began as one of the most battle hardened warriors with cunning political skills.
@domsmithsen
@domsmithsen Ай бұрын
The last kingdom as well lol
@eddiemartin1671
@eddiemartin1671 Ай бұрын
Great 👍
@ragnarok6521
@ragnarok6521 Ай бұрын
The ploy of faking death was not an homage to the Greek Trojan horse. It is far more likely that he remembered one of many famed tales of Ragnar Lothbrok and his sons, as Ragnar did the exact same ploy many years prior to this. Even Netflix managed to put this ploy into the show before leaving the source material very early on and goes full Hollywood. To bad we never got to see any of the very clever ploys of Ivar the boneless in the show. Interesting how he used the ploy of setting birds on fire several hundred years before Ghengis Khan got the same idea, which might indicate that it probably happened more often than its written down.
@sanjayeasycutz7195
@sanjayeasycutz7195 14 күн бұрын
Good Video ❤❤❤❤❤
@cassiuscrassus3887
@cassiuscrassus3887 24 күн бұрын
These are the kind of documentaries i grew up with on the history channel. Such a shame what happened to it, thank you for making these. Question though, are these done for a tv channel or are these old documentaries that were shown on tv?
@BadBoyBoogie-ko6rj
@BadBoyBoogie-ko6rj 21 күн бұрын
Yes,the history channel is a bad joke now.
@jeffmorin5867
@jeffmorin5867 20 күн бұрын
This is not a documentary. It's the imaginings of somebody who wants you to click on it and never do any reading for yourself. Lest you realize how crappy this really is.
@keenannorris3309
@keenannorris3309 11 күн бұрын
This is a terrible documentary. Hate to break it to you.
@cassiuscrassus3887
@cassiuscrassus3887 11 күн бұрын
@@keenannorris3309 point me towards a good one then please
@aephos-overwatch
@aephos-overwatch 8 күн бұрын
@@jeffmorin5867 point me towards a good one then please
@damonreitmeier4539
@damonreitmeier4539 14 күн бұрын
Bob was here. Thousands of years and bad boys are still children.
@zeljko612
@zeljko612 Ай бұрын
Seems we are at that point where making a history documentary can be what ever you want as long as you can present it skilfully. What a sad time we live in
@keenannorris3309
@keenannorris3309 11 күн бұрын
What's skillful about this crap? The soundtrack is disruptive. The commentary is bullshit.
@paulsmyth3580
@paulsmyth3580 26 күн бұрын
we need them on the coasts now
@aephos-overwatch
@aephos-overwatch 8 күн бұрын
to do, what?
@richardparnell992
@richardparnell992 Ай бұрын
the birds were like modern day missiles
@philippekogler
@philippekogler Ай бұрын
The vikings called Konstantinopel "Mikklegard" (the Big City)
@dis_f30
@dis_f30 Ай бұрын
It's Miklagard = Great City
@AlphaSniperAcademy
@AlphaSniperAcademy 21 күн бұрын
There's a song by a band called Amon Amarth, titled "Varyags of Miklagaard" thats about them haha
@NiclasHorn
@NiclasHorn 23 күн бұрын
40:00 Only a Scandinavian Viking would come up with that brave plan 😄
@Celtopia
@Celtopia Ай бұрын
Fascinating subject,thank you.
@JoeSmith-vs5sy
@JoeSmith-vs5sy Ай бұрын
Well Done!
@enriquehartmann8642
@enriquehartmann8642 Ай бұрын
I think if I was a Veringian , id use my earnings to build a city and make myself nobility
@howwwwwyyyyy
@howwwwwyyyyy Ай бұрын
Or king like Hardrada did
@A.P.1821
@A.P.1821 20 күн бұрын
Dark age existed only in western medieval Era. The Greco-roman kingdom falsely called Byzantium had been THE beacon of high culture for 11 centuries!
@gman509
@gman509 8 күн бұрын
Fun fact after the Norman invasion of Anglo Saxons England 300 ships fled from the country and headed to join byzantines vrangian guard. It is said that after this soon the majority of their men were Anglo Saxons. Unfortunately thjs is undermined and not acknowledged to the same extent as the viking culture despite contributing just as much.
@podsmpsg1
@podsmpsg1 Ай бұрын
The Vikings in the 13th Warrior were Varangians I think.
@dis_f30
@dis_f30 Ай бұрын
They weren't Varangians, they were Geats and Danes.
@mk.4x785
@mk.4x785 Ай бұрын
The guy playing Harald looks corny as hell lol.
@64fairlane305
@64fairlane305 29 күн бұрын
Hardraade = strongheaded. Brits has never ever understood or known much about their northern neighbours. They have their own silly version of history. The illustrations here is wery naive, wery few are capable of recreating the vikings skill level. But if you want to get a glimse, take a closer look at Gannicus in "Spartacus" (2010). Notice how this skilled fighter prefer to move light carrying one sword in each hand, fighting bare wearing no armour or "serk". This fearless fighting-style was later known as "going berserk". Even the "story" about the battle at stamford bridge in 1066 is not correct. the norwegians met an army of normanners first and won the battle. Then when they were on their way back to they`re ships, tired and unprepeared the english king saw his chanse and attacked them when they were tired and not wearing their armour.
@KushKing42O
@KushKing42O 25 күн бұрын
16:29 😂😂😂😂 hold on what🤯🤯 no you lost me after that. I know for a fact they didn’t have electricity let alone neon signs and tv🤔🤨🤨
@Valchrist1313
@Valchrist1313 Ай бұрын
16:28 lmao, wtf. The Varangian guard were touring around the Red Light district, were they? Apparently they were big fans of the 10th/11th century neon lights!
@user-ke8if6ri9r
@user-ke8if6ri9r Ай бұрын
I am a second generation Swedish American. My Mom's parents came from Sweden. I grew up listening to my grandfather tell stories about our ancestors and their travels. I was lucky enough to go to Sweden with my grandfather. Met my relatives in the village thats been home for generations. Got to be tough to survive a place where bears roam around trying to fstten up for winter.
@benparrish672
@benparrish672 Ай бұрын
You should leave Merica & visit Sweden permanently. We'd appreciate it.
@user-ke8if6ri9r
@user-ke8if6ri9r Ай бұрын
@@benparrish672 Why would you tell me to leave the country I am a citizen of?. I love my heritage. My ancestors traveled through the Russians to the Middle East. Fought in the Crusades. My ancestors raised an army to restore Gustav Vasa as King of Sweden. I've traveled all over Europe several times. I love being an American.
@JoshSnowden0
@JoshSnowden0 Ай бұрын
the white flashes, the modern footage makes this less as good as it could have been
@auraledgereal
@auraledgereal Ай бұрын
So The ruling class of the Kievan Rus were actually Vikings? 😮
@deborahdauray8933
@deborahdauray8933 Ай бұрын
yes
@Marcelocostache
@Marcelocostache Ай бұрын
Yes Rurick was a Viking noble called by the Slavic nobility to rule over them hence the formation of the Kievan Rus the ancestors of modern Say Russians and Ukrainians.
@leonidbochev7122
@leonidbochev7122 Ай бұрын
@@Marcelocostache Belorussians as well....lol
@leonidbochev7122
@leonidbochev7122 Ай бұрын
Did everyone miss the part where he says The Grand Prince of Kiev in WHERE????? Ukraine?????? Hey England PHD and so on.....Stop it with these cheap shots they are quiet sad.......for someone of your status.
@guycalabrese4040
@guycalabrese4040 Ай бұрын
This means that the Ucranians should rule russia, right?
@misaghkhosravi4541
@misaghkhosravi4541 Ай бұрын
NICKWELL :)
@charlesmartel6103
@charlesmartel6103 Ай бұрын
Were there also joyfull moments in History? Or was there only slaughter end disease?
@RickR69
@RickR69 Ай бұрын
A child once laughed in what is now the Czech Republic but was then beaten.
@timw6928
@timw6928 Ай бұрын
😅 that's a question I've often thought about, seems like all doom and gloom .
@irishgrl
@irishgrl Ай бұрын
@@timw6928 Well it WAS the Dark Ages after all
@letsdothis9063
@letsdothis9063 Ай бұрын
Monty Python says it was all bad.
@irishgrl
@irishgrl Ай бұрын
@@letsdothis9063 Bring out yer dead 💀
@richardparnell992
@richardparnell992 Ай бұрын
I think it would have been better to fight and take as many of the enemy with you as you can. Never surrender. It'll just get you killed.
@LazarusRiza
@LazarusRiza 14 күн бұрын
Literally me
@zimsonh4332
@zimsonh4332 Ай бұрын
Pretty sure Halfdan was the first memelord.
@johnmark150
@johnmark150 29 күн бұрын
There was no "Dark Age Byzantium". Read what the famous Medieval French crusader wrote about Byzantium: "One could not believe there was so rich a city in all the world. All those who had never seen Constantinople before gazed with astonishment at the city. They had never imagined that anywhere in the world there could be a city like this. They gazed with wonder at its rich palaces and mighty churches, for it was difficult for them to believe that there were indeed so many of them. As they gazed at the length and breadth of that superb city there was not a man, however brave and daring, who did not feel a shudder down his spine." - Geoffrey de Villehardouin
@VulcanM61
@VulcanM61 19 күн бұрын
Byzantine Dark Ages is a historiographical term for the period in the history of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, during the 7th and 8th centuries, which marks the transition between the late antique early Byzantine period and the "medieval" middle Byzantine era.
@stanbatakarata6081
@stanbatakarata6081 15 күн бұрын
Yep in Bulgaria have Seecor Constantinopol.Bulgarian Empire capitals Great Preslav.Seecond Europe Capital in 9-10 century
@brianbushfamily1814
@brianbushfamily1814 Ай бұрын
They got this wrong they didn't gust kill to kill they killed wishing to be killed in battle. Glory to Valhalla.
@guycapozzola2573
@guycapozzola2573 Ай бұрын
⚔🏴‍☠☠👍👍
@user-up2ce1ow8y
@user-up2ce1ow8y Ай бұрын
Not TRUE I have experiment myself the last part..
@danichicago9140
@danichicago9140 Ай бұрын
Their cousins the Normans ran them out.
@frankieshankly5368
@frankieshankly5368 17 күн бұрын
As an Norwegian I detest these alliegations! ;)
@destonlee2838
@destonlee2838 20 күн бұрын
Special forces, no, skilled pirate goons, yes.
@TommyWinters-sk1sk
@TommyWinters-sk1sk 3 күн бұрын
🖤
@antonkwanton5620
@antonkwanton5620 Ай бұрын
dark age byzantium - macedonian reneissance 😐
@Marcelocostache
@Marcelocostache Ай бұрын
Best Roman recovery in over 500 years The Macedonian Dinasty manage to double the size of the Eastern Roman Empire, at that time the Empire was at its peak an army of over 125000 strong powerful economy and stretching from Italy to Syria!.
@MrWolftamer
@MrWolftamer Ай бұрын
My ancestors were all vikings!!! It's awesome to have viking blood going thru my veins!
@wesleysexton6102
@wesleysexton6102 Ай бұрын
Im proud of my scandinavian heritage as well.
@mk.4x785
@mk.4x785 Ай бұрын
Your ancestors were probably farmers. And that's just cholesterol in your veins.
@derricklarsen2919
@derricklarsen2919 Ай бұрын
Sailing around causing mischief in little boats 😊
@frankezane583
@frankezane583 28 күн бұрын
@@mk.4x785or prescription drugs and alcohol 😂
@NorwayT
@NorwayT 22 күн бұрын
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ It took a 🇳🇴 Norwegian 🇳🇴 King! This documentary gets five stars for getting ALMOST everything right. But it's a load of nonsense that, at least Norwegian and Danish Vikings didn't know how to fight disciplined! They had to have an extreme degree of discipline, because they almost always fought vastly outnumbered abroad. You don't win such battles by running around like headless, leaderless chickens. You needed Brawns AND Brains! Take it from a descendant of Harald Fairhair!
@VulcanM61
@VulcanM61 19 күн бұрын
De prøver å si vi var blodtørstige idioter som springer rundt som hodeløse kyllinger. De vet ingenting om vår historie. Hadde vi hadd samhold og ikke kriget med hverandre hadde vi tatt over Europa.
@youtubeistryingtocensorme
@youtubeistryingtocensorme Ай бұрын
Actually the right term is Dark age Eastern Roman Empire
@jacquelinevanderkooij4301
@jacquelinevanderkooij4301 Ай бұрын
😂 So who were the inventers of the shieldwall? English or Scandinavians?
@spacewater7
@spacewater7 Ай бұрын
Greeks? Romans? Hopelites?
@jacquelinevanderkooij4301
@jacquelinevanderkooij4301 Ай бұрын
@@spacewater7 Round shields?
@christopherwiles543
@christopherwiles543 Ай бұрын
Angle and Saxon origins are Scandinavian
@SkunkApe407
@SkunkApe407 Ай бұрын
​@@christopherwiles543 the Angols, Saxons, Jutes, and Geats(Goths) were Germanic peoples. Scandinavians are also Germanic. They originated from Germania, not Scandinavia.
@SkunkApe407
@SkunkApe407 Ай бұрын
​@@jacquelinevanderkooij4301it depends on the form of shield wall you're referring to. The Greco-Roman Phalanx was created by the Myceneans, was perfected by the Spartan hoplites, and subsequently spread to the rest of the Helenic world, where it was adopted by the Romans. The shield wall you're likely referring to was created by the Jutes and Geats, and perfected by the Norse and Danes. It spread to the British Isles by way of Norse invasion, and was adopted by English armies to combat the invading Norse vikingr. The Norse eventually assimilated into English society, becoming knights and soldiers, meaning their tactics and strategies were folded into the English way of doing battle. It was very much the same everywhere that the Norse landed.
@TihetrisWeathersby
@TihetrisWeathersby Ай бұрын
I always wondered If their was evil a medieval Black ops type
@michaelhendricks9462
@michaelhendricks9462 6 сағат бұрын
Less than 7 minutes in, and you're already historically fictional. Not wasting my time.
@joelamthach5812
@joelamthach5812 26 күн бұрын
What a good documentary
@Proud2bGreek1
@Proud2bGreek1 Ай бұрын
"He sells his sister", and that's supposed to be a historical documentary?
@phhdvm
@phhdvm Ай бұрын
All the b roll footage of reenactors is just foolish and makes it nearly unwatchable.
@thornil2231
@thornil2231 Ай бұрын
Putting a thumb down is not enough, remember to click "don't recommend channel"
@Gspawt76
@Gspawt76 Ай бұрын
The American sharing his opinions seems very out of place in this otherwise interesting video. This gentleman seems to get his knowledge of Vikings from comic books or hundred year old outdated debunked research. He probably still thinks Vikings wore horned helmets.
@justinplaysguitar
@justinplaysguitar 24 күн бұрын
Without any antibiotics how did they survive any wound
@seansimmons73
@seansimmons73 23 күн бұрын
They typically burned the wound with a red hot piece of iron. Stop the bleeding & disinfect the wound
@ravenhill_the_cryptic_of_1968
@ravenhill_the_cryptic_of_1968 Ай бұрын
hmm, not keen on the idea of incorporating modern terms like 'black ops' into medieval history videos.
@RickR69
@RickR69 Ай бұрын
Nobody asked. Make your own documentary then.
@bine35
@bine35 Ай бұрын
its an old show that did same with samurai etc describing the similarities, u've always had mass troops and then individual highly specialized roles
@thornil2231
@thornil2231 Ай бұрын
Putting a thumb down is not enough, remember to click "don't recommend channel"
@SkunkApe407
@SkunkApe407 Ай бұрын
Where do you think the concept of black ops units comes from?😂 Modern militaries didn't just magically get inspired to create small groups of highly-skilled, highly trained, covert operatives. Ancient armies had recon scouts, demolitions specialists called sappers, assassins, spies, espionage experts, and even small units.of shovk troops that were the ancient version of SEAL teams. Using modern common parlance to convey a thought or concept isn't new, nor is it inappropriate. It is, however, pretentious as hell, to think you have the authority to judge everyday common vernacular. Hop on out of the saddle, and give the high horse a break.
@thornil2231
@thornil2231 Ай бұрын
@@RickR69 How can you tell you are about to watch a stupid useless video about some elite military unit? They use the term "special forces" in the first 2 minutes. Because as we all know "special forces" operate in the palace and charge in the hundreds, riding horses.
@docstockandbarrel
@docstockandbarrel Ай бұрын
👍🏻
@loganus9114
@loganus9114 Ай бұрын
Meager evidence for their existence. They were kept as oddities and a Greek Woman defeated one of them in hand to hand combat.
@howwwwwyyyyy
@howwwwwyyyyy Ай бұрын
Where did you read about that? genuinely interested
@loganus9114
@loganus9114 Ай бұрын
@@howwwwwyyyyy I read about the fact that they were never used in actual warfare. the same as Arabs kept Sub Saharan guards. Also, one of the Varangians tried to rape a Greek Woman and the Hellen woman handed his Varangian Buttocks back to him. do a basic Google search and informed yourself.
@domsmithsen
@domsmithsen Ай бұрын
Well setting birds a light to burn houses done clever but cruel and a ready cooked bird to eat after the battle yum a win win if your a viking not the bird lol
@spacewater7
@spacewater7 Ай бұрын
Look up Bat Bomb from WW2.
@karlgimmedatforfreemarx
@karlgimmedatforfreemarx Ай бұрын
I won’t have some metropolitan effeminate historian tell me how to judge Vladimir the Great for his day.
@Valhalla88888
@Valhalla88888 Ай бұрын
The real special forces were the Scottish Gallowglass Warriors a mixture of Pictish, Scottish, and Viking DNA ❤
@jeffhahn2478
@jeffhahn2478 Ай бұрын
The soundtrack immediately put me off.. The crappy bedroom metal and lame cut away re-enactments. Boo
@TealeafRogers
@TealeafRogers Ай бұрын
The rock music was very out of place, really took me out of the listening experience
@MatthewHouck-np3wr
@MatthewHouck-np3wr 10 күн бұрын
They have to find a way to take something potentially fascinating and make it unacceptably dull 😡😡😡
@airborneranger-ret
@airborneranger-ret Ай бұрын
Ok, lot's of clickbait?
@glennmuir5617
@glennmuir5617 Ай бұрын
Very, ... _Discovery Channel,_ by which I mean complete shite.
@thornil2231
@thornil2231 Ай бұрын
Putting a thumb down is not enough, remember to click "don't recommend channel"
@100youmiro
@100youmiro Ай бұрын
Yes The Byzantine Empire was strong enough to rely on the 6000 Russian soldiers only, it was strong only in the times of Justinian’s reign, after it became a weak and soft entity loosing all the major battles
@stanbatakarata6081
@stanbatakarata6081 15 күн бұрын
💯 👍 but Heavy Bulgarian cavalery is most powerful cavalery in Europe 3 century.7-10.Byzantine no finght vs Aborigen but for modern Great Warriors .
@Mma-basement-215
@Mma-basement-215 Ай бұрын
Now were talking i can't wait to watch this one
@orionxtc1119
@orionxtc1119 Ай бұрын
"Dark Age" is a misnomer...
@int0thecha0s39
@int0thecha0s39 Ай бұрын
They called themselves Romans. They're the Eastern ROMAN Empire. The term Byzantine didn't come about until the Empire had already fell.
@Marcelocostache
@Marcelocostache Ай бұрын
Basilea Romaion aka Empire of the Romans, Vasileios Romaion aka Emperor of the Romans, funny thing that the west refused the fact that there was a Roman Empire and a Roman Emperor on the Bosphorus for 1000 years!.
@theobessiris9681
@theobessiris9681 17 күн бұрын
I can never for the life of me understand how these documentary makers go out of their way to produce costumes for these sort of videos but they're always inaccurate, especially for the Byzantines. Persians etc. There are so many books on the appearance of Byzantine troops based on historical sources they have no excuse for making such dreadful wardrobes for the people appearing in them. Kings and Generals, History Marche etc I know are animated but at least they try and often times get it right. What is even more annoying is the fact none of these historians point this out. They may have as wall have dressed everyone in Mardi Gra costumes. A lot of documentary film makers are guilty of this, not just this one. I would have enjoyed this documentary but for the dreadful costumes. Yuk!!!
@johnworthington8360
@johnworthington8360 Ай бұрын
Vikings for hire in Ukraine. salve Maria
@gj8683
@gj8683 24 күн бұрын
The music for this? Absurd.
@gra4279
@gra4279 Ай бұрын
HalfDan WUZ HERRE lolol
@howwwwwyyyyy
@howwwwwyyyyy Ай бұрын
Pyramids and Egypt are a cool place for graffiti
@Galvaxatron
@Galvaxatron Ай бұрын
Andrew Gough going heavy with the narrative spin on this. This whole thing is a mess. Mediocre production.
@brianperkins4155
@brianperkins4155 Ай бұрын
Archetypal Thugs!
@user-gj5gb7fd6n
@user-gj5gb7fd6n Ай бұрын
The Varan
@user-ng6sm5gx2c
@user-ng6sm5gx2c Ай бұрын
The big picture wasn't it the Muslim only who were able to stop the Vikings in their tracks.
@marcboblee1863
@marcboblee1863 Ай бұрын
Wtf....seriously....you think the Varangians were about showing off their tattoos? It's cultural...they didn't care...what other people's thought.....
@Lancista
@Lancista Ай бұрын
*_Yes, yes. They were very tough... until they step foot North of the Imperial City and the Thracian Rivers and Mountains started to speak Bulgarian!_* 😂🤣
@billosby9997
@billosby9997 29 күн бұрын
6 minutes in and I call this bs.
@DragonHawk
@DragonHawk 25 күн бұрын
Why don’t my comments show up
@pappelg2639
@pappelg2639 Ай бұрын
Stereotypical regurgitation
@vtvt1996
@vtvt1996 Ай бұрын
Birds and fire story just a joke Birds will not take fire to their nests It’s proved many times
@vladopavlovic4896
@vladopavlovic4896 Ай бұрын
What Dark Ages in one of the most progressive times in our history? READ A BOOK !
@SkunkApe407
@SkunkApe407 Ай бұрын
The term "Dark Ages" comes from the fact that Europe was in a societal decline, genius. You read a book!😂 The term refers to a period of European history, not world history. Learn what "nuance" means, before attempting to play the pedant.
@vladopavlovic4896
@vladopavlovic4896 Ай бұрын
​@@SkunkApe407 this Dark Age term is already debunked! Educate yourself before spreading misinformation.
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