"We are doing this for your benefit." I love this man's whole demeanor.
@mrfancypants292 ай бұрын
You don’t want peritonitis. It’s for your own good…
@TrungCyf2 ай бұрын
I bet he has a "killer" basement at home... 😐
@annekeneef11444 ай бұрын
My goal in life, is to get a job where I am as happy as Kevin is explaining things in these video's
@akademikz234 ай бұрын
Me too 😂 as long as I don't have to torture people.
@craigrobbins24634 ай бұрын
This friendly, practically banter really is a joy. His bedside manner is on point.
@GlobalDrifter10004 ай бұрын
What?
@LunarBulletDevАй бұрын
@GlobalDrifter1000 if you cannot understand him, you need to read more books and play less games, it was very well written
@GlobalDrifter1000Ай бұрын
@@LunarBulletDev is clearly a woman nobody else would say deliciously written
@LunarBulletDevАй бұрын
@GlobalDrifter1000 nope, and I was experimenting with words :P, tis important to experiment!
@craigrobbins2463Ай бұрын
@@LunarBulletDev Thanks for reminding me this video exists. So nice. Adding it into my faves.
@prismstars4 ай бұрын
Y’all need to give Kevin Goodman his own show. I could watch him talk about macabre historical topics all day!
@CapricornLetsplays4 ай бұрын
I had the pleasure of meeting mr Goodman recently as he acts as a reenactor pharmacist at the Black Country living museum. He was wonderful!
@prismstars4 ай бұрын
@@CapricornLetsplays I am so envious! I need to plan a trip to the UK soon!
@bowers893 ай бұрын
I've met him aswell, he is awesome in person so knowledgeable and engaging. An extremely interesting man.
@swagm89192 ай бұрын
But he doesn’t get laid so what’s the point?
@marsspacex60654 ай бұрын
This channel is what the history channel should be. Love it.
@archie3k433Ай бұрын
Well, the content; yes, I agree. But those sound effects were lame and something the History Channel would do. So it's 50/50. lol
@Burningwhisky963 ай бұрын
I love that he gives him all the time in the world to explain things, most interviewers always talk over one another
@andrewdobin11 күн бұрын
Helps greatly that Kevin is so dang good at explaining things. He's a great educator.
@giraffesinc.21933 ай бұрын
Both Matt and Kevin are wonderful, but Kevin especially so! His macabre glee when describing the most horrific procedures just have me rolling. Also, your sound guy is hilarious!
@InglouriousBradsterd4 ай бұрын
01:16 The Wilhelm Scream added for terrific effect.
@cmans79tr72 ай бұрын
And 22:11 unnecessary squishy sounds.
@willambernahecooking4036Ай бұрын
I was looking for the comment button, about to comment, and when I looked down, this was already there.
@andrasszabo15704 ай бұрын
I find Kevin Goodman informative and hilarious. But something is disturbing about him smiling ear to ear while describing the most horrifying treatments!
@cleverusername93694 ай бұрын
I think it's more that he takes great pleasure in educating and sharing his knowledge and expertise, rather than any pleasure at the idea of grievous bodily harm. It's undeniable that he's a very engaging and charismatic gentleman
@serwalkerofthekeynes87613 ай бұрын
Its what I call a "blind man's smile" if you've seen a blind man smile, you'll see exactly what I mean, it's a very drawn out smile with an almost sinister undertone.. I know a medically blind guy who also has the exact same smile 😅
@philipminns39332 ай бұрын
The dark unmoving eyes juxtaposed against the gleeful grin. Tirrefoiin'.
@zma75652 ай бұрын
He's a Northerner - what did you expect? Injuries like these are a part of their daily life.
@Bubba-23nineteen2 ай бұрын
100%
@Zippsterman4 ай бұрын
"This video contains footage some viewers may find upsetting" is a great sign when you see it on this channel. Keep it up! I work in medical technology and my sister is a surgeon, no problems here
@LudvigMarntell4 ай бұрын
Uiiixedowwuoö15855:( b ok k
@LudvigMarntell4 ай бұрын
😅
@chrisbrown86404 ай бұрын
Surgery back then could cost you an arm & a leg.....it isnt cheap today either....
@pennybunny3 ай бұрын
In battlefields you didn't pay for surgery lol @@chrisbrown8640
@rivergreen17273 ай бұрын
@@chrisbrown8640 Not only could it cost you an arm and a leg, it was pretty expensive too! 🤪
@kommissarkillemall28484 ай бұрын
After seeing Kevin doing dentistry, and now surgery i'm pretty sure they found him in the deep basements of MI6 Headquarter "kindly asking" some foreign spy for some information with a big grin on his face.. Love that guy !
@KASeltzer2 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@bryceanwhimsey2 ай бұрын
Well, he'd be doing it for their own good.
@allanhiggins3134 ай бұрын
Dr. Goodman! So perfect. He's for our own good.
@jordanbooth44704 ай бұрын
Kevin is just awesome. The absolutely perfect blend of knowledge and wit
@baker7493 ай бұрын
Could listen to this man all day.Needs his own channel.
@TheSauxyFxcker2 ай бұрын
This guy is a brilliant teacher. The way he speaks is really engaging. Top class 👏🏽
@DrTarrandProfessorFether4 ай бұрын
I portray a US Civil War surgeon. 1862. For a quick arm/leg amputation, he skipped a key part. Once you cut around the arm to the bone, you need to grab the arteries/viens and tie them off with boiled horse hair or cat gut. Then you need to cut back this membrane that covers bone… and cut tendons. That requires a very very sharp knife. Then the bone saw (like a wood saw) cuts the bone. You also need a skin flap so you cut out some muscle so you can make a flap. Pack it with cloth, and hope for the best. A good healing is copious pus that lessens over time and stops. A productive would is thus. Not much difference from 1250 vs 1862. Bacteria (bacilli) not published medical not until 1864.
@sniddley4 ай бұрын
I had read some years back that the record for fastest lower extremity amputation during the civil war was 13 seconds. It noted the surgeons assistant lost two fingers during the amputation .
@arnoldcohen12504 ай бұрын
As stated by the presenter, the hot cautery was used for hemostasis and to close the wound rather than ligating vessels.
@terrigaines18124 ай бұрын
I think you meant pus, not puss 😂
@gordonlekfors27084 ай бұрын
wasn't the vessel cauterized?
@historicalcucumber4 ай бұрын
Thank god we have anesthesia now.... Because that sounds absolutely horrendous!
@smithnatalie48034 ай бұрын
Love how Kevin brings his own style and drama 🎭 serious topic had me chuckling 😂 love the humour
@gromhellscream44874 ай бұрын
I'm very interested in this subject, please bring this gentleman back for future videos.
@IneptOrange2 ай бұрын
I feel like the one thing most people don't realize is that in antiquity, if you have an injury, you're either completely fucked/dead, or you have enough money to risk a procedure that could kill you anyway. There was no such thing as a medieval peasant soldier returning home with bandaged stubs in a wheelchair. If you have a shattered arm, you're dead. If you have a broken femur, you're dead. If you got stabbed in the torso, there's no recovery period, you're dead. Vikings had a guy who would sniff your stomach wound, and if they could smell your lunch, you'd be declared effectively dead immediately. We're extraordinarily fortunate to live in the times we do, in which the malfunctioning appendix can be removed with a ludicrously low mortality rate in under an hour, and you can be up and doing whatever in 72 hours with no lasting effects. Your appendix blows a head gasket in the 1400s and you're fucked mate. Medical science is by far the most important field for the every day human.
@KarlswebbАй бұрын
We also didn't need nearly as much medical care back then. Teeth? Mostly fine; our modern diet fucks our teeth. Peasants almost never lost teeth or needed them pulled. Mental healthcare? Unnecessary; people back then had almost no mental illness. The human brain breaks down in our modern environment/lifestyle, apart from schizophrenia most mental illness is a modern phenomenon. Obseity related disease? Not a thing. Cardio problems? Again; people were active, not really a thing. We're WAY better off today vs back then, but a lot of the modern disease burden is preventable. I'd say something like 80%.
@iimuffinsaurАй бұрын
@@Karlswebb Mental Illness 100% existed in the past. Even documented the amount of people described as having either learning disabilies (usually as being slow etc) or just more on the crazy end (george the 3rd, nero, caligula, although some of these people it could be questioned that its popoganda against them). I think there has also been many people with depression of some sort too. Mental illness has always been around, its heard about more because its more understood. People arent as shamed about it anymore. And even then both those arent the best they could be.
@zorgfleeterАй бұрын
@@Karlswebb that is some amazing bullshit said with the utmost confidence.
@MisterS1r007Ай бұрын
@@KarlswebbActually people back then were more susceptible to health issues relative to today
@MisterS1r007Ай бұрын
This surgeon’s got that Ray Shoesmith smile
@Luke96-sy9jv3 күн бұрын
This is the type of stuff I wish was on TV but it never seems to be this is one of the many reasons I absolutely love KZbin ❤
@DankBlastBeats3 ай бұрын
Seems like a more genuine looks at medieval medical care to me. I know Medieval doctors are portrayed as butchers, but I believe most doctors were doing the best they could for their patience with the knowledge and tools available to them.
@Kitsune19892 ай бұрын
Exactly. It's easy for us from a modern standpoint to say that infection was caused because the wound wasn't clean, cleaned properly, or whatever was used to clean the wound contributed to infection. But a medieval doctor would not know why what they did 50 times didn't work this time. Or why an infection flourished when they took what they understood to be every precaution against the wound going bad. They had rudimentary tools compared to ours today so they seem to be more clumsy in their surgeries. The fact that they understood enough about anatomy to still have success at such procedures is a testament to what skills the did have. On to of that when something DID seem to work they didn't know why it worked. For instance a lot of poisons would be used because the effects would suppress what was already wrong. But they didn't know that. They just knew that when you touched this metal statue you seemed to have a brief reprieve. They never made the connection between the type of metal used causing chemicals to seep through the skin. Which is why a lot of so called cures or preventative medicine seems so ridiculous to us.
@staceygrantham36615 күн бұрын
Patients*
@Linnas793 ай бұрын
"Horryfying!" Kevin smiles joyfully "yeah!"
@Deluxedracula7 күн бұрын
More proof that anyone who casually desires war has never been in war.
@Oleanderlullaby2 ай бұрын
The arrow removal technique makes so much more sense than we see in the movies. Instead of violently punching my the arrow through it’s a gentle ease forward than a controlled open instead of ripping through the other side with the arrow head I always understood that fundamentally the push through caused less damage from the barbs but I was like “well it can’t be that much less when you’re punching it through like that”
@Noah_E3 ай бұрын
Adrenaline is a hell of a drug. I grew up working with my dad's dad's construction crew off and on and my mom's dad's pulp wood business in the summers, and currently own a saw mill and tree farm. I've fallen off a roof and was nearly killed by a drunk driver in 1999. I'm well into triple digits for stitches and have broken half a dozen ribs, almost all my fingers, a few toes, an eye socket, and knee cap, and dislocated a shoulder. Every time my brain totally shut off the pain for at least a few hours. I was even able to walk for a half mile with the broken knee cap. I knew there was something seriously wrong, but again, a split second of intense pain followed by none until after getting to the hospital.
@prophetedubaroque51362 ай бұрын
Damn that's a pretty impressive cv but are you ok now?
@Noah_E2 ай бұрын
@prophetedubaroque5136 I'm on the right side of the grass, so can't complain. The only thing that consistently hurts is my right shoulder, but I foster 50-100 lbs hounds (currently three) so it never gets a break.
@Hei1Bao42 ай бұрын
It's when it wears off that the real pain begins. Then you cycle between relief and agony over and over as endorphins kick in and wear off. Speaking from experience as well.
@milagrosgranados131613 күн бұрын
I love the man who is explaining all the procedures and tools. I really enjoyed this. This video was so educational and interesting to watch. ❤
@chrisforsyth83234 ай бұрын
Around 15:25 or so, the presenter mentions Guy de Chauliac as the inventor of the arrowhead spoon. This french doctor was the personal physician to Pope Clement VI in Avignon during the Great Mortality; he kept Clement from contracting the Plague while in Avignon, and when the pope finally fled, he stayed behind to treat the dying in the city "...to avoid infamy."
@TheCheshireWanderer2 ай бұрын
I am someone who's had peritonitis multiple times from a PD catheter. I can honestly say it is without doubt the most painful experience I've had in my life, and it comes on quick. It feels like your belly is being pulled out. It's tough to even get to the hospital because you're bent over and tense with the pain. Luckily, i had it treated. I feel for anyone who had to go through that without antibiotics 😳 you'd probably ask to be put out of your misery.
@turloughkennedy6579Ай бұрын
I'd happily sit down for a few drinks with this gent
@dianejohnson99044 ай бұрын
This was so interesting! That guy explained things so well. Back then, he would have made a great teacher of surgical techniques.
@jake9854Ай бұрын
but gurIs think this is boring n nerdy tho
@NicholasNappi4 ай бұрын
I had the surgery that I had a hole drilled into my head I still have the hole in my skull from it and a scar that hair never grows on. I have the scar which my skin was pulled to do the surgery as well across my head. In today’s time it is a rare surgery but it is still very much still practiced if needed. I was not fully awake nor asleep when I had it done I was in a semi coma so I couldn’t move but I was able to feel to an extent and hear. It was painful 😣.
@mrfancypants292 ай бұрын
I had a tire explode in my face in 2000. In order to save me and reduce the pressure building in my head, they had to drill holes in my skull. My mom told me my head was swelled to about the size of a basketball. I still bear the scars of where they peeled the skin on my head down and can feel the holes where the holes were drilled. I don’t know I’d any filler was put in there place or not. They still used powered hand drills like you would find in a hardware store with depth limiting bits to perform the procedure.
@easycake32512 ай бұрын
When he said "If God wills it" in a sarcastic voice, I was done xD This gentleman is a true legend.
@daemonharper39284 ай бұрын
Im veggie now but used to hunt and butcher deer years ago. Any shot or arrow that penetrated the stomach area was problematic - bullets and arrows dont keep going in a straight line once they impact something, so an ethical heart shot causing almost instant death could easily go through the heart, bounce off a rib and go into the stomach. You'd always cut away meat with wide magins from that area - as shown here, all the germs and poop and urine get released and its really not good.....for surgery or food. Butchery, like surgery - requires extremely sharp tools and a deft touch. As others have commented - amputation is no easy thing, tendons and cartilages are incredibly tough. The skill level of the early surgeons pre anesthetic is staggering.
@JessTheEnigma4 ай бұрын
LMAO, I'm loving this guy - he's clearly having the time of his life!
@CassiBlack4 ай бұрын
I see Kevin Goodman in the thumbnail and I just have to watch! Medical history fascinates me and I adore the way he presents it.
@johnwelbourn38114 ай бұрын
Ha, I definitely feel a bit queasy after watching that. What a brilliant video.
@Zippsterman4 ай бұрын
Your sound effects guy had some fun with this video 8:11 got me good with headphones
@arualblues_zero4 ай бұрын
Also, the Wilhelm Scream got my heart at 1:16
@Zippsterman4 ай бұрын
@@arualblues_zero Nice catch. Wilhelms were a meme for decades before the internet and I love it
@lucyj82044 ай бұрын
The *squelching* from 20:00 ish!!
@GexMax3 ай бұрын
A bit too much fun imho.
@Hillbillyhound3 ай бұрын
they realy went to town with the mac and cheese lunch must have been good
@berrenrees63143 ай бұрын
Such in depth explanations by John Fury in this video!
@ClintWestVood3 ай бұрын
Very well put together video. very informative. thank you! i also love his cheeky smile when stuff is gruesome
@raginasiangaming9102 күн бұрын
There is some evidence that at least low ranking knights did know how to do first aid. For example, William Marshal (before he became famous) is recorded as bandaging and packing his own wound. This would suggest that knights at least had some knowledge/training subce martial at this stage was quite young and relatively inexperienced.
@nickdial85282 ай бұрын
They may not have understood germs, but they clearly knew honey helped fight infection.
@RileyZilla10012 ай бұрын
"Does this look clean to you? No? *spits*" lmao 🤣
@Dead_or_Wild3 ай бұрын
Terrifying, yet brilliant, gentlemen!
@edwardnendick97383 ай бұрын
Love the video ! As a medic I would love to see this themed continued into different historical periods
@billyshane38043 ай бұрын
This is really interesting stuff. Thanks for posting.
@sarahmusk77933 ай бұрын
This presenter is excellent. Making a very gory subject palatable. And fun - if that is the right word!
@Sketch_Sesh7 күн бұрын
I like Kevin’s intensity!
@nancytestani14708 күн бұрын
So fascinating.
@nancytestani14708 күн бұрын
This is amazing, they were not as uninformed as we might thought.
@ThumperDaeTimeАй бұрын
Matt Lewis: and also [an injured person's survival depended on] -believe it or not- how rich you were. me (an American):oh, ill believe it! Joking aside i appreciate the explanation of how class (and therefore living conditions) can affect the overall health of an individual. i feel that point is often overlooked in the discussions of healthcare i have seen. I'm so glad that there are people out there keeping this information around and sharing it with others. thank y'all for the new knowledge!
@asmith78763 ай бұрын
Imagine being a blacksmith and one of your best customers is a surgeon...absolute genius for both parties to figure out what is needed and then fabricate it by banging out some metal.
@b4d693 ай бұрын
an exceptional documentary and some really deep knowledge is shared with the audience - thank you.
@AntonioGarcia-ph5we4 ай бұрын
Phenomenal video I really enjoyed it
@airkiller99803 ай бұрын
Shout out to the editor picking Chiv 1 and Dark Souls clips. Two of my most favorite games of all time
@lestupidunicorn3 ай бұрын
"there's no antibiotics; got peritonitis; that's a problem" i love him so much 😂
@perroraton95154 ай бұрын
Awesome! I was horrified the whole time, and I loved it!!!
@Justin_RoseАй бұрын
Love this video. Swift delivery of a lot of really interesting info.
@Stonewall18614 ай бұрын
Thank you for the information. Because I enjoy learning from you on History Hit.
@taylorosborne3383Ай бұрын
I always think about these medieval battles! Imagine hearing the sound of thousands of screaming horses and stuff😮 must’ve been horrific
@johnslaughter54754 ай бұрын
Let's, also, be thankful for x-rays. They can take pictures and find out just exactly where the object is before starting in after it. There was a doctor in the 19th Century, perhaps Civil War time, that could do an amputation in 30 seconds. He was so fast that, one time, he took off some of his assistant's fingers. They would use a curved knife for the first cut.
@Volundur95674 ай бұрын
And they died of infection
@n.w.flannel346327 күн бұрын
Only surgery with a 300% mortality rate. Patient died of blood loss, assistant died of sepsis and a spectator died of shock.
@FranssensM3 ай бұрын
Love those antiques for the garden. I’d sell my house for those, if my wife let me. Also liked the photograph. Not antique but has that feeling of grisaille decoration or a delicate Chinese painting. Lovely.
@vaevictis2213 ай бұрын
Really vibing with the dark, dry humor 😂. These guys must be loads of fun after work, in a bar ,😁
@eviedeafaussie23 күн бұрын
Do you have any good book recommendations on this topic? Thank you!
@lucaventuri48823 ай бұрын
Me listening at Kevin's explanations: ✨️👄✨️
@DrTarrandProfessorFether4 ай бұрын
A Barbed (like a triangle or hunting head) are hard to pull out… and they do not penetrate amour (chain maille and plate). Romans used special pliers to open up the wound (OUCH!) so the arrow can be extracted without causing more damage. One would never push an arrow through the main body but I see OK if in Leg or arm. Having two holes in you is very serious… not sure an arrow head would pull out and stay in the would… depends. Infection takes days to kick in. Armor piercing arrows have no barbs so they go through chain maille but cause limited damage unless hitting an organ or blood vessel or the head. Easy to pull out.
@derfritz45504 ай бұрын
well pushing trough was meant specialy for a wound like a hit in the arm they also said it at the start " a wound like that..." you CANT effective push a arrow trough the main body my boy.....
@soultraveller50274 ай бұрын
fortunately then we don't live in the 13th 14th century lol
@DrTarrandProfessorFether4 ай бұрын
A Barbed (like a triangle or hunting head) are hard to pull out… and they do not penetrate amour (chain maille and plate). Romans used special pliers to open up the wound (OUCH!) so the arrow can be extracted without causing more damage. One would never push an arrow through a body!! Infection takes days to kick in. Armor piercing arrows have no barbs so they go through chain maille but cause limited damage unless hitting an organ or blood vessel or the head. Easy to pull out.
@venpeddapalli71894 ай бұрын
Calling this guy a doctor is a stretch. He is more like a historian! He did not mention the anesthesia used in the battlefield surgeries until the reporter asked him about it. Surgery is easy. The pain management is hard.
@Riceball013 ай бұрын
I love videos like this because it helps to dismiss that age old that people in the Middle Ages and Renaissance were completely ignorant about medical practices and they had only 2 ways of treating wounds, prayer and bleeding/leeching. I feel that medicine and medical practices from this period is something that's largely ignored by many people. A lot has gone to dimissing myths about the arms and amor of the Middle Ages and Rennaissance, not enough has gone into their medical knowledge where a lot, if not most, people something as minor as a paper cut was effectively a death sentence due to infection.
@TheRealTburt3 ай бұрын
People in those days seem to care more about whether it works and less about why. They didn't know about bacteria but they knew that dumping wine and honey sometimes/usually worked.
@torreeric4993 ай бұрын
Lesson learned, just try to avoid being drafted in the army during the medieval period to avoid horrific injury and horrific injury treatment...
@Oj1232314 күн бұрын
This guy reminds of Ray from Mr Inbetween the way he smiles lol I love it
@secretsix64 ай бұрын
i remember when working under ground in a coal mine we were pushing a tub with a gear box in it my mate had is fingers over the edge of tub when the gearbox moved crushing one of his fingers when he took his glove off his index finger was hanging off he promptly pulled it off an threw it on the coaling belt i said they would have sewn back on he told me he had been through that before an wasn't going to suffer 6 months of pain an agony for a finger he could not use again
@bigdollaz4 ай бұрын
Your mate is a maniac 😂😂 why can’t u use a finger that’s been sowed back on ??
@RodrigotheSpic3 ай бұрын
That's bad ass.
@le135793 ай бұрын
And yet he hadn't learnt the first time.
@mrfancypants292 ай бұрын
That’s why thought and care should always be practiced on the job where such things could occur. You are responsible for your own safety.
@bluemouse50393 ай бұрын
What happened to soldiers in that era that returned home after the war was over? Crippled or missing limbs and so on unable to do the work that most people did back then, that relied on being physically able. Did they become beggars or thieves? I don't think they had any type of social safety net for wounded vets or disabled people
@zuja66629 күн бұрын
I have a sense that the saying "No, thanks. I think I'll fall on my own sword instead." was very popular back then.
@andykellens72374 ай бұрын
Kudos for the high amount of Wilhelm screams the audio people managed to sneak in 😂 Interesting video!
@HistoryHit4 ай бұрын
glad you noticed!
@NeyGeneral4 ай бұрын
Lol
@nayon93793 ай бұрын
✅️THE GOSPEL OF THE WORD OF ALMIGHTY GOD "the Salvation of the last day that Christ brought in the second and last incarnation of the His new and holy name" (Behavior that cannot fully obey Me is betrayal. Behavior that cannot be loyal to Me is betrayal. Having many understandings and spreading them everywhere is betrayal. The inability to affirm My testimonies and interests is betrayal. These are all acts of betrayal that you have always been able to do, and they are common to you as well. None of you may think this is a problem, but I don't think so. You think that some act of treachery is only an occasional occurrence, not your characteristic behavior, and should not be discussed so seriously, in a way that damages your pride. To think like this is to be an example and example of rebellion. Man's nature is his life; it was a principle on which he depended to stay alive, and he could not change it. This is also the nature of betrayal---if you can do something to betray a relative or friend, it proves that it is part of your life and you were born with this nature. For example, if a person enjoys stealing from others, this "joy of stealing" is part of their life, although they may steal sometimes and not steal sometimes. Whether they steal or not, it cannot prove that their stealing is just a form of behavior. Rather, it proves that their thieving is a part of their life--that is, their nature. This is why I say that the source of this thought is not something that just breaks out from time to time, but is in this person's own nature.) Almighty God said BEHAVIOR that CANNOT FULLY OBEY Me is BETRAYAL. BEHAVIOR that CANNOT be FAITHFUL to Me is BETRAYAL. CHEATING on Me and USING LIES to DECEIVE Me is BETRAYAL. HAVING MANY UNDERSTANDINGS and SPREADING them EVERYWHERE is TREASON. The INABILITY to AFFIRM My TESTIMONIES and INTERESTS is BETRAYAL. OFFERING FALSE SMILES when the HEART is FAR from Me is BETRAYAL. These are ALL ACTS of BETRAYAL that YOU have ALWAYS been ABLE to DO, and they are COMMON to you as well. ☀️🙏 NONE of YOU may THINK this is a PROBLEM, BUT I DON'T THINK SO. I CANNOT TREAT SOMEONE'S BETRAYAL of Me as a SMALL MATTER, and I ESPECIALLY cannot ignore it. 🛑 Now, when I work among you, you act in this way---if the day comes when no one is there to watch over you, will you not be like bandits who have declared themselves kings? When that happens and you cause a major disaster, who will be there to fix the problem? You THINK that some ACT of TREACHERY is ONLY an OCCASIONAL OCCURRENCE, NOT your CHARACTERISTIC BEHAVIOR, and should NOT be DISCUSSED so SERIOUSLY, in a way that DAMAGES your PRIDE. If you really think like this, you lack common sense. To think like this is to be an example and example of rebellion. MAN'S NATURE is his LIFE; it is a PRINCIPLE on which he DEPENDS to STAY ALIVE, and he CANNOT CHANGE it. THIS is ALSO the NATURE of BETRAYAL--if YOU CAN DO SOMETHING to BETRAY a RELATIVE or FRIEND, it PROVES that it is a PART of your LIFE and you were BORN with THIS NATURE. 🛑 😪 THIS is SOMETHING that CANNOT be DENIED to ANYONE. For EXAMPLE, if a PERSON ENJOYS STEALING from OTHERS, this "pleasure to steal" is PART of THEIR LIFE, although they may steal sometimes and not steal sometimes. WHETHER they STEAL or NOT, it CANNOT PROVE that their STEALING is JUST a FORM of BEHAVIOR. Rather, it PROVES that their THIEVING is a PART of THEIR LIFE--that is, their NATURE. 🛑 Some people will ask: Since this is their nature, then why, when they see beautiful things, don't they sometimes steal them? The answer is very simple. There are many reasons why they don't steal. They may not steal something because it is too big to snatch from watchful eyes, or because there is no suitable time to act, or something is too expensive, too closely guarded, or maybe they are not particularly interested here, or notthey see how it will be of use to them, and so on. All of these reasons are possible. But anyway, whether they steal something or not, it cannot prove that this thought only exists as a fleeting and fleeting moment. On the contrary, it is a part of their nature that is difficult to change for the better. Such a person is not satisfied with stealing only once; such attitudes to claim other people's possessions as their own are formed whenever they encounter something beautiful, or a suitable situation. ☀️ This is the REASON WHY I SAY that the SOURCE of this THOUGHT is NOT a THING that just CUT off SOMETIMES, but is in this PERSON'S own NATURE. 🙏 From The WORD, Vol. I. The Manifestation and Work of God. A Very Serious Problem: Infidelity 1 📩 All who have "ears to listen" are led to what the Spirit of God is saying in His lowered and built kingdom/Church engraved with His new name, His totality, the ownership of this disposition, "THE CHURCH OF ALMIGHTY GOD "💐 fulfillment from what was said He to Peter 2,000 years ago recorded in (Matthew 16:18-19). His Coming is the fulfillment of all that was prophesied in the great book of Revelation, so the last "Salvation" He brought the whole truth, the way for eternal life. So the "victorious" ones who will receive them are the wise "virgins" because as recorded in the prophecy of His return no one knows it except the one who will receive it! So "come" and come to His kingdom/church standing in the holy place in the air/KZbin! This is also a fulfillment from the book of (Isaiah 2:2/9:6) which He first fulfilled in His first incarnation. 📥 "They say with a loud voice, "Salvation comes from the Lamb, and from our God who sits on the Throne!" (Rev. 7:10). ... and (Isaiah 2: 2 / 9:6) "On the Last Day, the mountain on which Jehovah's temple stands will stand out above all the mountains. All nations will flock there. " . "For a baby boy is born to us. The rule will be given to him; and he shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Almighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace." 💌
@keentrasborg25662 ай бұрын
Also imagine being a modest foot soldier without a retinue of surgeons. You get ordered to enter a breach in the walls of some city but then you get injured relatively quickly. Ok, well now you can't get back because all of your mates are being ordered to push through a narrow gap in the wall, and you can't go forward because that's where the enemy is. I imagine a lot of people died simply due to bloodloss or infections setting in to wounds that potentially could have been treated. But since you had to either be carried back by your mates, or walk back yourself to find a surgeon that would treat you all the way back in the baggage train. Big oof and it makes me sad to think about :( Also lends credence to the ,generally accepted belief, that for example, most sieges weren't actually fought but were instead battles of attrition (supplies). You REALLY didn't wanna get injured in places that you couldn't with relative ease get back out of to look for a surgeon as soon as possible. Anyways, loved the presentation in the video. And the energy :) Keep it up!
@CleHasToSayIt3 ай бұрын
The guy explaining in the waistcoat is so good at his job
@zvezdanjasovic31854 ай бұрын
It amazes me that people will be watching videos about our medicinal practices in like 100-200 years from now, and they will say something like “can you believe they actually did that?” or “they didn’t discover ??? yet”
@loading...85123 ай бұрын
Think you mean in 1000 years or so they are talking about medieval times so around 1000 years ago 1924 was 100 years ago now and if we know anything Futurama tells us it'll be holograms
@edmundblackadder27413 ай бұрын
This actually reminded me of McCoy in Star Trek when he talks about how they treat people in their current time to what would be our modern age. Things like use of needles like being a human pin cushion and being sewn up like dolls 😅
@ShinigamisBlade3 ай бұрын
@@edmundblackadder2741 in the voyage home when he gets so offended in the hospital is my favorite 😂😂
@JimmyJohn-r1y6 күн бұрын
I passed out twice watching this
@RileyZilla10012 ай бұрын
14:58 the Yakuza still use this method today. Tourniquet with a rubber band and cut the pinkie off with a wood chisel.
@nopeguynope14532 ай бұрын
What à time to be alive 😅😮
@bevgordon76193 ай бұрын
I think it would be very interesting to make a production with attention to detailed interesting information, like this one, about gynaecological instruments/tools, surgeries, treatments, etc through the centuries.
@skotwilt2 ай бұрын
i wonder how many accidental knots and crimps were put into people intestines as they "placed" em back in.
@desertweasel69653 ай бұрын
The back of that skull may not have been an exit wound. It could have been a bash to the head with a mace or something in addition to the arrow impact. Or, that could have been intentional surgery as a medical specimen after the battle. They disected people all the time to examine their organs. They would have had a really good knowledge of the anatomy.
@ilirlluka6789Ай бұрын
The fact that you can just scoop your guts after having fallen out and stick them back in (if not damaged of course), seal the wound and have a chance of surviving is batshit insane. Of course it would most likely be fatal but the fact that you do have even the slightest chance to survive it's impressive, always thought of it as fatal by default. Never too old to learn something new.
@dreamingdesoАй бұрын
Excellent presenter
@sehirosu41235 күн бұрын
Poor Joe. Was really interesting to watch.
@AlbinoKiwi472 ай бұрын
early medicine was really just a coin toss for if you get septic or not
@Wayne-O-51698 күн бұрын
“Surgeons were on the cutting edge…” Well, I would certainly hope so!
@ohdannyboy47273 ай бұрын
well shit i thought my day was bad. This shit is horrifying but I am so happy I am alive during this time.
@jhsalem5480Ай бұрын
And people wonder why healthcare costs so much today. A lot of these people back then would have been glad to pay $20,000 or $40,000 for an operation with anesthesia, antiseptics and actual surgical tools.
@beckyboo50972 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this ☺️❤
@jake9854Ай бұрын
but gurIs think is is boring n nerdy tho
@Freestyle420z12 күн бұрын
Love this
@cengizeren3662 ай бұрын
nice sound effects, especially the electrical drill
@Marauder999914 ай бұрын
This guy is delightful, he seems to really enjoy his work. I hope I never need him. Heh.
@miaow86703 ай бұрын
Ohhh yes, Kevin and his demonic sweet smile are back! 😈 15:02: "That's horrifying, though! It's horrific!" Kevin: "Yea 😃"
@ALW-nc25 күн бұрын
Love this ❤
@castlebravocrypto16152 ай бұрын
I can't watch this whilst trying to sleep
@ninjeti03Ай бұрын
Great sense of humor and extremely informative..thank you
@jonathanredman84973 ай бұрын
Love the sound FX. 🤪
@hirakjoytidhar79162 ай бұрын
Ancient Surgery was invented by Indian Sage Susrut. He noted all the medical rules in his book " Sushruta Samhita ". ❤