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Ahromiga
Приєднався 10 гру 2016
Seigneurs 1180 [partie 1]
Voici la vidéo qui reprend le premier siècle de jeu, de 1180 à 1280. Les seigneurs régnant sont visibles.
Cette vidéo reprend des éléments d'un jeu de rôle uchronique où des joueurs prennent la place de seigneurs médiévaux. La partie a commencé le 22 janvier 2021 et continue encore… Le jeu suit un déroulement selon des règles (plus de 30 pages dans sa version actuelle) et sur une période saisonnière : le printemps le temps de la diplomatie, l’été le temps de la guerre, l’automne le temps de l’administration, et enfin l’hiver le temps du complot.
Musique utilisée : Medieval Music "Vox Vulgaris - La Suite Meurtriere" ua-cam.com/video/AqJMVSnwg_Y/v-deo.html
La partie 2 de cette vidéo ne sera pas publiée avant d'avoir atteint un autre siècle, c'est-à-dire 1380.
Cette vidéo reprend des éléments d'un jeu de rôle uchronique où des joueurs prennent la place de seigneurs médiévaux. La partie a commencé le 22 janvier 2021 et continue encore… Le jeu suit un déroulement selon des règles (plus de 30 pages dans sa version actuelle) et sur une période saisonnière : le printemps le temps de la diplomatie, l’été le temps de la guerre, l’automne le temps de l’administration, et enfin l’hiver le temps du complot.
Musique utilisée : Medieval Music "Vox Vulgaris - La Suite Meurtriere" ua-cam.com/video/AqJMVSnwg_Y/v-deo.html
La partie 2 de cette vidéo ne sera pas publiée avant d'avoir atteint un autre siècle, c'est-à-dire 1380.
Переглядів: 114
Відео
Mmh le goût du printemps
Переглядів 862 роки тому
Allez voir la vidéo originale ici : ua-cam.com/video/ZHKyX9_MVHI/v-deo.html Et abonnez-vous à sa chaîne !
Jones Lisa Wilson Sandra White Anthony
Thompson Laura Williams Susan Brown Brian
Jeremy Zuckerman is genius, lol
I feel that there are still tracks missing such as music cues when Ozai first arrives to the fight and when he unleashes a raging inferno on Aang before he entered the Avatar state.
If you’re reading this…..will you go penguin sledding with me?
No.
A jamais le premier
우리는 너무도 뒤처지지 않았다
First
After countless generations of Fire Lords failed to find you, the universe presents you to me as an act of providence.
Summary Act I, scene i Summary: Act I, scene i On a dark winter night outside Elsinore Castle in Denmark, an officer named Bernardo comes to relieve the watchman Francisco. In the heavy darkness, the men cannot see each other. Bernardo hears a footstep near him and cries, “Who’s there?” After both men ensure that the other is also a watchman, they relax. Cold, tired, and apprehensive from his many hours of guarding the castle, Francisco thanks Bernardo and prepares to go home and go to bed. Shortly thereafter, Bernardo is joined by Marcellus, another watchman, and Horatio, a friend of Prince Hamlet. Bernardo and Marcellus have urged Horatio to stand watch with them, because they believe they have something shocking to show him. In hushed tones, they discuss the apparition they have seen for the past two nights, and which they now hope to show Horatio: the ghost of the recently deceased King Hamlet, which they claim has appeared before them on the castle ramparts in the late hours of the night. Horatio is skeptical, but then the ghost suddenly appears before the men and just as suddenly vanishes. Terrified, Horatio acknowledges that the specter does indeed resemble the dead King of Denmark, that it even wears the armor King Hamlet wore when he battled against the armies of Norway, and the same frown he wore when he fought against the Poles. Horatio declares that the ghost must bring warning of impending misfortune for Denmark, perhaps in the form of a military attack. He recounts the story of King Hamlet’s conquest of certain lands once belonging to Norway, saying that Fortinbras, the young Prince of Norway, now seeks to reconquer those forfeited lands. The ghost materializes for a second time, and Horatio tries to speak to it. The ghost remains silent, however, and disappears again just as the cock crows at the first hint of dawn. Horatio suggests that they tell Prince Hamlet, the dead king’s son, about the apparition. He believes that though the ghost did not speak to him, if it is really the ghost of King Hamlet, it will not refuse to speak to his beloved son. Read a translation of Act I, scene i → Analysis Hamlet was written around the year 1600 in the final years of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, who had been the monarch of England for more than forty years and was then in her late sixties. The prospect of Elizabeth’s death and the question of who would succeed her was a subject of grave anxiety at the time, since Elizabeth had no children, and the only person with a legitimate royal claim, James of Scotland, was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots, and therefore represented a political faction to which Elizabeth was opposed. (When Elizabeth died in 1603, James did inherit the throne, becoming King James I.) It is no surprise, then, that many of Shakespeare’s plays from this period, including Hamlet, concern transfers of power from one monarch to the next. These plays focus particularly on the uncertainties, betrayals, and upheavals that accompany such shifts in power, and the general sense of anxiety and fear that surround them. The situation Shakespeare presents at the beginning of Hamlet is that a strong and beloved king has died, and the throne has been inherited not by his son, as we might expect, but by his brother. Still grieving the old king, no one knows yet what to expect from the new one, and the guards outside the castle are fearful and suspicious. The supernatural appearance of the ghost on a chilling, misty night outside Elsinore Castle indicates immediately that something is wrong in Denmark. The ghost serves to enlarge the shadow King Hamlet casts across Denmark, indicating that something about his death has upset the balance of nature. The appearance of the ghost also gives physical form to the fearful anxiety that surrounds the transfer of power after the king’s death, seeming to imply that the future of Denmark is a dark and frightening one. Horatio in particular sees the ghost as an ill omen boding violence and turmoil in Denmark’s future, comparing it to the supernatural omens that supposedly presaged the assassination of Julius Caesar in ancient Rome (and which Shakespeare had recently represented in Julius Caesar). Since Horatio proves to be right, and the appearance of the ghost does presage the later tragedies of the play, the ghost functions as a kind of internal foreshadowing, implying tragedy not only to the audience but to the characters as well. The scene also introduces the character of Horatio, who, with the exception of the ghost, is the only major character in the scene. Without sacrificing the forward flow of action or breaking the atmosphere of dread, Shakespeare establishes that Horatio is a good-humored man who is also educated, intelligent, and skeptical of supernatural events. Before he sees the ghost, he insists, “Tush, tush, ’twill not appear” (I.i.29). Even after seeing it, he is reluctant to give full credence to stories of magic and mysticism. When Marcellus says that he has heard that the crowing of the cock has the power to dispel evil powers, so that “[n]o fairy takes, nor witch hath power to charm,” Horatio replies, “So have I heard, and do in part believe it,” emphasizing the “in part” (I.i.144-146). But Horatio is not a blind rationalist, either, and when he sees the ghost, he does not deny its existence-on the contrary, he is overwhelmed with terror. His ability to accept the truth at once even when his predictions have been proved wrong indicates the fundamental trustworthiness of his character. His reaction to the ghost functions to overcome the audience’s sense of disbelief, since for a man as skeptical, intelligent, and trustworthy as Horatio to believe in and fear the ghost is far more impressive and convincing than if its only witnesses had been a pair of superstitious watchmen. In this subtle way, Shakespeare uses Horatio to represent the audience’s perspective throughout this scene. By overcoming Horatio’s skeptical resistance, the ghost gains the audience’s suspension of disbelief as well. Summary Act I, scene i Summary: Act I, scene i On a dark winter night outside Elsinore Castle in Denmark, an officer named Bernardo comes to relieve the watchman Francisco. In the heavy darkness, the men cannot see each other. Bernardo hears a footstep near him and cries, “Who’s there?” After both men ensure that the other is also a watchman, they relax. Cold, tired, and apprehensive from his many hours of guarding the castle, Francisco thanks Bernardo and prepares to go home and go to bed. Shortly thereafter, Bernardo is joined by Marcellus, another watchman, and Horatio, a friend of Prince Hamlet. Bernardo and Marcellus have urged Horatio to stand watch with them, because they believe they have something shocking to show him. In hushed tones, they discuss the apparition they have seen for the past two nights, and which they now hope to show Horatio: the ghost of the recently deceased King Hamlet, which they claim has appeared before them on the castle ramparts in the late hours of the night. Horatio is skeptical, but then the ghost suddenly appears before the men and just as suddenly vanishes. Terrified, Horatio acknowledges that the specter does indeed resemble the dead King of Denmark, that it even wears the armor King Hamlet wore when he battled against the armies of Norway, and the same frown he wore when he fought against the Poles. Horatio declares that the ghost must bring warning of impending misfortune for Denmark, perhaps in the form of a military attack. He recounts the story of King Hamlet’s conquest of certain lands once belonging to Norway, saying that Fortinbras, the young Prince of Norway, now seeks to reconquer those forfeited lands. The ghost materializes for a second time, and Horatio tries to speak to it. The ghost remains silent, however, and disappears again just as the cock crows at the first hint of dawn. Horatio suggests that they tell Prince Hamlet, the dead king’s son, about the apparition. He believes that though the ghost did not speak to him, if it is really the ghost of King Hamlet, it will not refuse to speak to his beloved son. Read a translation of Act I, scene i → Analysis Hamlet was written around the year 1600 in the final years of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, who had been the monarch of England for more than forty years and was then in her late sixties. The prospect of Elizabeth’s death and the question of who would succeed her was a subject of grave anxiety at the time, since Elizabeth had no children, and the only person with a legitimate royal claim, James of Scotland, was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots, and therefore represented a political faction to which Elizabeth was opposed. (When Elizabeth died in 1603, James did inherit the throne, becoming King James I.)
Horatio is skeptical, but then the ghost suddenly appears before the men and just as suddenly vanishes. Terrified, Horatio acknowledges that the specter does indeed resemble the dead King of Denmark, that it even wears the armor King Hamlet wore when he battled against the armies of Norway, and the same frown he wore when he fought against the Poles. Horatio declares that the ghost must bring warning of impending misfortune for Denmark, perhaps in the form of a military attack. He recounts the story of King Hamlet’s conquest of certain lands once belonging to Norway, saying that Fortinbras, the young Prince of Norway, now seeks to reconquer those forfeited lands. The ghost materializes for a second time, and Horatio tries to speak to it. The ghost remains silent, however, and disappears again just as the cock crows at the first hint of dawn. Horatio suggests that they tell Prince Hamlet, the dead king’s son, about the apparition. He believes that though the ghost did not speak to him, if it is really the ghost of King Hamlet, it will not refuse to speak to his beloved son. On a dark winter night outside Elsinore Castle in Denmark, an officer named Bernardo comes to relieve the watchman Francisco. In the heavy darkness, the men cannot see each other. Bernardo hears a footstep near him and cries, “Who’s there?” After both men ensure that the other is also a watchman, they relax. Cold, tired, and apprehensive from his many hours of guarding the castle, Francisco thanks Bernardo and prepares to go home and go to bed. Shortly thereafter, Bernardo is joined by Marcellus, another watchman, and Horatio, a friend of Prince Hamlet. Bernardo and Marcellus have urged Horatio to stand watch with them, because they believe they have something shocking to show him. In hushed tones, they discuss the apparition they have seen for the past two nights, and which they now hope to show Horatio: the ghost of the recently deceased King Hamlet, which they claim has appeared before them on the castle ramparts in the late hours of the night. Horatio is skeptical, but then the ghost suddenly appears before the men and just as suddenly vanishes. Terrified, Horatio acknowledges that the specter does indeed resemble the dead King of Denmark, that it even wears the armor King Hamlet wore when he battled against the armies of Norway, and the same frown he wore when he fought against the Poles. Horatio declares that the ghost must bring warning of impending misfortune for Denmark, perhaps in the form of a military attack. He recounts the story of King Hamlet’s conquest of certain lands once belonging to Norway, saying that Fortinbras, the young Prince of Norway, now seeks to reconquer those forfeited lands. The ghost materializes for a second time, and Horatio tries to speak to it. The ghost remains silent, however, and disappears again just as the cock crows at the first hint of dawn. Horatio suggests that they tell Prince Hamlet, the dead king’s son, about the apparition. He believes that though the ghost did not speak to him, if it is really the ghost of King Hamlet, it will not refuse to speak to his beloved son. On a dark winter night outside Elsinore Castle in Denmark, an officer named Bernardo comes to relieve the watchman Francisco. In the heavy darkness, the men cannot see each other. Bernardo hears a footstep near him and cries, “Who’s there?” After both men ensure that the other is also a watchman, they relax. Cold, tired, and apprehensive from his many hours of guarding the castle, Francisco thanks Bernardo and prepares to go home and go to bed. Shortly thereafter, Bernardo is joined by Marcellus, another watchman, and Horatio, a friend of Prince Hamlet. Bernardo and Marcellus have urged Horatio to stand watch with them, because they believe they have something shocking to show him. In hushed tones, they discuss the apparition they have seen for the past two nights, and which they now hope to show Horatio: the ghost of the recently deceased King Hamlet, which they claim has appeared before them on the castle ramparts in the late hours of the night. Horatio is skeptical, but then the ghost suddenly appears before the men and just as suddenly vanishes. Terrified, Horatio acknowledges that the specter does indeed resemble the dead King of Denmark, that it even wears the armor King Hamlet wore when he battled against the armies of Norway, and the same frown he wore when he fought against the Poles. Horatio declares that the ghost must bring warning of impending misfortune for Denmark, perhaps in the form of a military attack. He recounts the story of King Hamlet’s conquest of certain lands once belonging to Norway, saying that Fortinbras, the young Prince of Norway, now seeks to reconquer those forfeited lands. The ghost materializes for a second time, and Horatio tries to speak to it. The ghost remains silent, however, and disappears again just as the cock crows at the first hint of dawn. Horatio suggests that they tell Prince Hamlet, the dead king’s son, about the apparition. He believes that though the ghost did not speak to him, if it is really the ghost of King Hamlet, it will not refuse to speak to his beloved son. On a dark winter night outside Elsinore Castle in Denmark, an officer named Bernardo comes to relieve the watchman Francisco. In the heavy darkness, the men cannot see each other. Bernardo hears a footstep near him and cries, “Who’s there?” After both men ensure that the other is also a watchman, they relax. Cold, tired, and apprehensive from his many hours of guarding the castle, Francisco thanks Bernardo and prepares to go home and go to bed. Shortly thereafter, Bernardo is joined by Marcellus, another watchman, and Horatio, a friend of Prince Hamlet. Bernardo and Marcellus have urged Horatio to stand watch with them, because they believe they have something shocking to show him. In hushed tones, they discuss the apparition they have seen for the past two nights, and which they now hope to show Horatio: the ghost of the recently deceased King Hamlet, which they claim has appeared before them on the castle ramparts in the late hours of the night. Horatio is skeptical, but then the ghost suddenly appears before the men and just as suddenly vanishes. Terrified, Horatio acknowledges that the specter does indeed resemble the dead King of Denmark, that it even wears the armor King Hamlet wore when he battled against the armies of Norway, and the same frown he wore when he fought against the Poles. Horatio declares that the ghost must bring warning of impending misfortune for Denmark, perhaps in the form of a military attack. He recounts the story of King Hamlet’s conquest of certain lands once belonging to Norway, saying that Fortinbras, the young Prince of Norway, now seeks to reconquer those forfeited lands. Because of the night of the King in the kitchen.
i have all the power in the WORL- No fire lord Ozai youre not wearing pants
I shall suck thee
my royal parts are showing!
V bucks ici ua-cam.com/video/WJJqaR6IVUo/v-deo.html
곰세마리가 한 집에 있어 아빠곰, 엄마곰, 아기곰 아빠곰은 뚱뚱해 엄마곰은 날씬해. 아기곰은 너무 귀여워 으쓱! 으쓱! 잘한다.
Je fais plus de tractions que toi mec, alors fait pas le chaud
? Hola qué tal ?
Ve meilèu commentar la navèra videò
This show is a masterpiece
No u
@merlu g NANI !?!
@@erichard9999 ? Te gusta el salcison ?
@@erichard9999 A mi me gusta la hamburgesa con mayonesa
Wrong! It is THE masterpiece!
Axe tvfv .kbuc
The reason for the strongest is always the best: We will show it later (1). A Lamb quenched his thirst In the current of a pure wave. A wolf appears on an empty stomach, seeking adventure, And that hunger in these places attracted. Who makes you so daring (2) to disturb my drink? Said this animal full of rage: You will be punished for your temerity. Sire, replies the Lamb, may Your Majesty not be angry; But rather than consider That I'm going (3) thirst-quenching In the stream, More than twenty paces below Her; And that therefore, in no way, I can disturb his drink. You trouble her, resumed this cruel beast, And I know that you slandered last year. How would I have done it if (4) I hadn't been born? Resumed the Lamb; I suck my mother again If it is not you, it is therefore your brother. I don't have any. It is therefore one of yours: For you do not spare me much, You, your Shepherds and your Dogs. I have been told: I must avenge myself. "Thereupon, deep in the forests, the wolf wins and then eats it, Without further ado.
The reason for the strongest is always the best: We will show it later (1). A Lamb quenched his thirst In the current of a pure wave. A wolf appears on an empty stomach, seeking adventure, And that hunger in these places attracted. Who makes you so daring (2) to disturb my drink? Said this animal full of rage: You will be punished for your temerity. Sire, replies the Lamb, may Your Majesty not be angry; But rather than consider That I'm going (3) thirst-quenching In the stream, More than twenty paces below Her; And that therefore, in no way, I can disturb his drink. You trouble her, resumed this cruel beast, And I know that you slandered last year. How would I have done it if (4) I hadn't been born? Resumed the Lamb; I suck my mother again If it is not you, it is therefore your brother. I don't have any. It is therefore one of yours: For you do not spare me much, You, your Shepherds and your Dogs. I have been told: I must avenge myself. "Thereupon, deep in the forests, the wolf wins and then eats it, Without further ado.
Ha ouaient c'est bon en faitent
Je peux pas lire la vidéoent
My father told me that if i listen this music again, he will crush my head on the keyboard djjdvdshkqnSjhsbssnslzjq ssjsbb jsuzis Turbo vrai.
Lourd
Lourd
T'as compris les bails mon frérot
Cette vidéo a été approuvée par le roi LOVIS C.
Vous êtes tellement fort que vous avez plus de likes sur votre commentaire que moi sur ma vidéo.
Firstent
Mon père m'a dit que si je écoutais cette musique encore une fois, il écraserait ma tête sur le claviersjsss shzzhbzjjfjbddjlbbddqzfnqsfbd. Turbo vrai.
Fait pas le chaud
FAIS GAFFE À TOI !!!
Hahahahaa
Calme toi le nain
Vive le grannolisme ! Que Jérusalem nous revienne !!
Do you creuse le jour and drink the nuit? I'm asking to you just by curiosity.
Je sais pas quoi dire. J'ai même pas écouté
J’aime les haricots
Mais c'était bien quand même
Les zzzzaricots
Les zzaricots vert
Firsttttttttt
Also can you sub too my channel
Cheater times thousands
Shut up bruh
Okay
20:04 of nail-bitingly intense music
Don't think so
It sent chills up my spine.
AiRsHiP SlicE!
GO AANG!! AIRBENDING SLICE!!!
No sir
@@arthurwellesley-ditlefuret82 Aye, sir!!!
Pourquoi son compas ???
I agree
Yes me too
No i'm not agréé with you🈷🉐
I agréé with the one who is not agree with de first comentary instead of de scond comentary because i tink that's true and not Wrong. And finlay i déjà vu this vidéo many times and i think i'm very intelligent so i haven't l'ost time too...... LOOK AT MY JOKE L'OST IN PLACE OF LOST LOL. So i haven't L'OST time 4 this comentary very intresting.
No
Sozin's Comet Part 3: Into The Inferno.
Goes hard
it is a beautiful song
I know ;)
More intense then beautiful mate
J’aime les pandas
I know didn’t she was a is a big monster truck a would like
@@lockx4055 tu veux te battre ou quoi
Thank u so much! :3, you created on of my favourite Theme IN the Avatar series as extended version.
Oh oh
ahah
That's incredible!
Salut
Eh fais pas le fou toi