The Apocalyptic Downfall of Roman Britain

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  • Опубліковано 4 вер 2024
  • Around 410 Britain become the first province of the Roman Empire to fall into barbarian hands. Following that the British isles would experience one of the worst downfalls in human history. This short history documentory is ment to conrast the severe differences between Roman and Post Roman Britain.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,9 тис.

  • @historyrhymes1701
    @historyrhymes1701  Місяць тому +14

    Check out a brand new video on the same topic The Extermination of England's Natives. How Britain Became English
    ua-cam.com/video/0_ydExmJ1BE/v-deo.html

    • @gordonlekfors2708
      @gordonlekfors2708 25 днів тому

      hi, two facts to point out: some Anglo-Saxons could indeed read and write; their poets wrote one of the most famous epics of all time. as for the thumbnail, Anglosaxons were larger and taller than the average Roman. feels like clickbait.

  • @giromohlaalu5703
    @giromohlaalu5703 Рік тому +8459

    Next question: If the gauls were so inteligent why did they become french?

    • @Malygosblues
      @Malygosblues Рік тому +402

      Lmao

    • @mspoints4fre123
      @mspoints4fre123 Рік тому +486

      Checkmate

    • @jaif7327
      @jaif7327 Рік тому +532

      checkmate frogpeople

    • @leilagorrilla4842
      @leilagorrilla4842 Рік тому +544

      The gauls never became french tho, modern french descend from Franks that mixed with gallo-romans. A mix of a mix

    • @dooleyknoted5951
      @dooleyknoted5951 Рік тому +233

      I fart in your general direction!😂

  • @julianhermanubis6800
    @julianhermanubis6800 Рік тому +3785

    Having visited some Roman sites in Britain, the sad part is how little has survived. The largest remaining intact structures are Hadrian's Wall (which is much reduced from what it once was), Portchester Castle (Portus Adurni), and the Caerleon Amphitheater. The rest are largely just foundations (e.g., Vindolanda and Housesteads Roman Fort). I haven't been to Wroxeter, but there's apparently a basilica wall still standing. There are also some fragmentary Roman defensive walls in other locations. Otherwise, every major building was destroyed or used as the foundation of something else. The destruction was that total. And another phenomenon is that there are a number of Dark Ages structures that are entirely made or mostly made of stones quarried from Roman structures. The fall of the Western Roman Empire in Britain must have been a cultural catastrophe on a scale that's seldom been seen in human history.

    • @t.wcharles2171
      @t.wcharles2171 Рік тому +120

      Having been to Wroxeter I can categorically state that the Old Work is the largest remaining roman Wall in Britain.

    • @julianhermanubis6800
      @julianhermanubis6800 Рік тому +201

      @@t.wcharles2171 I hope I can see it this spring when I'm back in the U.K. One of the worst losses to me was something called Arthur's O'on in Scotland, which made it all the way down to the middle of the 18th century, until some local idiot tore it down to make a mill. It was apparently an intact Roman temple or military shrine.

    • @t.wcharles2171
      @t.wcharles2171 Рік тому +148

      @@julianhermanubis6800 ah the fatal combination idiocy and influence.

    • @maxdavis7722
      @maxdavis7722 Рік тому +58

      Whilst I do agree that Roman civilisation was mostly removed from Britain I must say that most Roman buildings in other countries have collapsed. Even the colluseum(Rome’s most famous building) is technically a ruin.

    • @thomassghedoni4557
      @thomassghedoni4557 Рік тому +68

      The thermes of Bath are still pretty impressive and I would 100% recommend, even for a Southern French like which has the chance to see marvels like the Nîmes or Arles amphiteatres, or the Gard aqueduct.
      I also know that there are baths foundations burried under the square in front of the Exeter Cathedrale. They discovered it, and choose to burry it again to build parking lot. It is now all pedestrian, and talk about excavation are happening every once in a while, to no avail so far.

  • @Tyrannosaur6265
    @Tyrannosaur6265 Рік тому +826

    Romans: Create beautiful, elaborate architecture that last Millenia.
    Saxons: If you mix this dirt with human shit you can build a wall 🤯

    • @irdorath356
      @irdorath356 4 місяці тому +45

      They werent good stone workers, but their metal crafts are noice.

    • @Tyrannosaur6265
      @Tyrannosaur6265 4 місяці тому +35

      @@irdorath356 Yeah and we got the industrial revolution as an eventuality, classic British L

    • @chrisstucker1813
      @chrisstucker1813 4 місяці тому +47

      the Anglo-Saxons had amazing craftmanship.

    • @SugarBlood15
      @SugarBlood15 3 місяці тому +43

      @@chrisstucker1813 compared to who? Not compared to the rest of Europe.

    • @Jannfndnanakid
      @Jannfndnanakid 2 місяці тому +18

      literally obsessed and mindbroken over anglobros

  • @davidcooke8005
    @davidcooke8005 Рік тому +320

    "But besides roads, and education, sanitation, medicine, peace, wine and aquaducts, what have the Romans ever done for us?" -Reg

    • @beaconeersofthesevenmaps3467
      @beaconeersofthesevenmaps3467 Рік тому +5

      Yep, we tried our best!😉

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis Рік тому +15

      Slavery , Murder, Pillage Rapine the Gladiatorial Games TOO.

    • @beaconeersofthesevenmaps3467
      @beaconeersofthesevenmaps3467 Рік тому +51

      @@jacktattis as if those didn't already exist, aside from gladiators

    • @MasterSuchiro
      @MasterSuchiro Рік тому +13

      @@jacktattis You had that before tho.

    • @LeonardoPerdomoMaga
      @LeonardoPerdomoMaga Рік тому +1

      they invented the commissary , in recent years its implemented in cuba rationed food chart, oh and due to that and the inflation they used catolicism to make their ppl resign to the missery, cuz the better life was in the other side

  • @flarednight1455
    @flarednight1455 Рік тому +1096

    The Isle of Wight still has a couple of Roman Villas, fairly well preserved. we still have a lot of buildings/pubs/castles over 1000 years old still in use. and one of our roman villas is from 280AD.

    • @kevinshepard7796
      @kevinshepard7796 Рік тому +31

      Thats insane! I'd do anything to visit them

    • @kkuznetsov2424
      @kkuznetsov2424 Рік тому +6

      Is it open to the public?

    • @bunnylarese2161
      @bunnylarese2161 Рік тому +4

      There are great photos if one searches Brading Roman Villa.

    • @ARCPolus
      @ARCPolus Рік тому +9

      1000 years ago wasn't Roman times. Rome collapsed between 400-500 AD, you're talking 1000 AD

    • @flarednight1455
      @flarednight1455 Рік тому +34

      @@ARCPolus , you're correct, but you misread what I said. We have buildings around 1000 years, such as Carisbrooke castle still in use and we also have Roman villas from 280AD.

  • @murdockhancock1660
    @murdockhancock1660 Рік тому +2482

    Rome's once invincible domain shattered into a million pieces, each one controlled by a military strongman who wanted to collect them all. the glory of Rome was gone for good and the dark ages had begun.
    One of the best lines from a documentary

    • @dracodeanglicus3857
      @dracodeanglicus3857 Рік тому +116

      I highly doubt it was like that. For one thing, Christianity survived; so did Latin as a language, some of the *military strongmen* adhered to Roman civilisation so much they aspired to claim the former crown of the West, e.g Charlemagne.

    • @gs7828
      @gs7828 Рік тому +92

      Rome was already ruled by local armies long before. The narrative of the empire shattering like that has been disproven and is mostly a projection from the Renaissance.

    • @mihaimercenarul7467
      @mihaimercenarul7467 Рік тому +5

      @@gs7828 shush

    • @gs7828
      @gs7828 Рік тому +40

      @@mihaimercenarul7467 No, this is history.

    • @mihaimercenarul7467
      @mihaimercenarul7467 Рік тому +4

      @@gs7828 child, go to sleep since it seems you don't know much about history either

  • @FearlessP4P1
    @FearlessP4P1 Рік тому +567

    It’s always astonishing how Britain such a small place with an abundance of domestic turmoil at home throughout its history still managed to conquer a large portion of the world.

    • @ice843
      @ice843 Рік тому +21

      If you look at the history it’s no wonder uk wanna the bloodiest places on earth
      No wonder they was good at it

    • @arpadedes1560
      @arpadedes1560 Рік тому +74

      They learned how turn their inner agression outward!

    • @djyork8634
      @djyork8634 Рік тому +71

      ​@@ice843 to over simplify Britain developed a strong navy which led to the empire but this is overplayed the empire lasted 200 years or so, brittania has a history stretching back millennia. It was also Britain that stood alone in Europe more recently whilst everyone else surrendered, ensuring that we have the modern Democratic Europe enjoyed by Europeans today and envied by other parts of the world.

    • @wesleyfilms
      @wesleyfilms Рік тому +20

      Now look at them.

    • @madtechnocrat9234
      @madtechnocrat9234 Рік тому +68

      @@ice843 By that logic balkans should be undisputed rulers of the universe.

  • @ClayandPapyrus
    @ClayandPapyrus Рік тому +601

    The downfall of the Roman Empire is much like the Bronze Age Collapse, where the aftermath was apocalyptic. As your channel name suggests, History does Rhyme.

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Рік тому +52

      Eh depends on the region. Britain and Gaul sure. The Mediterranean less so.

    • @ClayandPapyrus
      @ClayandPapyrus Рік тому +65

      @@baneofbanes you could say the same for the Bronze Age Collapse. Places like Canaan, Hatti, and the Agean were desolate while in Egypt, Mesopotamia and Cyprus it wasn’t as bad (in fact Cyprus had a golden age during the time period).

    • @camulodunon
      @camulodunon Рік тому +1

      @@baneofbanes gaul was fine.

    • @Innerste_
      @Innerste_ Рік тому +4

      @@baneofbanes North Gaul did great under Clovis

    • @see8852
      @see8852 Рік тому +23

      most rural communities wouldnt have even known the empire had fallen apart. in fact many preferred gothic/barbarian rule because they themselves imposed less taxes.

  • @chongxina8288
    @chongxina8288 Рік тому +611

    What a great video. I live in England and haven’t seen any Roman stuff personally. I assumed there wasn’t that much. Amazing how there’s hardly anything left, truly cataclysmic.

    • @hmmm9658
      @hmmm9658 Рік тому +48

      there is more than youd think, the roman walls of the city of london still stand in places, as well as the entire roman wall around colchester, there are roman villas all over the countryside and places like porchester castle are still standing tall as it was when t was built

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому +5

      The Roman's were very cataclysmic, the dark ages were very bad for britain

    • @Tethloach1
      @Tethloach1 Рік тому +4

      The passage of time seems to erase things that aren't empires. We all know that history is written by the winners and history will remain until the end of time.

    • @nostalgiatrip7331
      @nostalgiatrip7331 Рік тому +19

      @@hmmm9658 Colchester is still in the dark ages

    • @baldrickthedungspreader3107
      @baldrickthedungspreader3107 Рік тому +3

      The city of Exeter has some remnants, it has parts of the original Roman wall still in tac, bath not far from the city of Bristol is where you'll see the best Roman relics though

  • @petertwins7223
    @petertwins7223 Рік тому +48

    To be fair, the Romans first set foot on the Island with Caesar’s expeditions in 55 and 54 BC. While they couldn’t establish themselves at the time, it was still the earliest

  • @kanebarton6212
    @kanebarton6212 Рік тому +172

    He's back and covered one of my favorite subjects in European history win win!!

  • @polignac
    @polignac Рік тому +40

    got recommended this thinking it was some 1 million subscriber channel with how impressive your scripts and visuals are. keep this up. you earned a new subscriber.

    • @THEVISIONOFAITH
      @THEVISIONOFAITH Рік тому

      I thought the same and it was recomended to me too so i subscribed

  • @tiffanywyatt5137
    @tiffanywyatt5137 Рік тому +500

    Britain really has an interesting story. It was a land where cultures merged it's just so interesting. Celts. Native Bretons. The Viking invaders. Romans. Eventually came anglo Saxons. It would be interesting to see a britian that wasn't invaded like imagine all the picts, celts, jutes and such being all around the islands there.

    • @scintillam_dei
      @scintillam_dei Рік тому

      The only true Brits are Celts. Everyone else is invader blood. That includes Viking types and the Anglo-Saxons.

    • @dcmuggamuga407
      @dcmuggamuga407 Рік тому +79

      Celts are Native Britons and Anglo-Saxon people came before the Vikings btw.

    • @tiffanywyatt5137
      @tiffanywyatt5137 Рік тому +4

      @@dcmuggamuga407 I know the anglo Saxons came later.

    • @lolapanola282
      @lolapanola282 Рік тому +20

      It's the only nordic country which can boast Roman history

    • @SoaringSuccubus
      @SoaringSuccubus Рік тому +5

      Isn't Ireland exactly that - a comparatively not invaded island with original population intact?

  • @kristianferencik8685
    @kristianferencik8685 Рік тому +321

    A couple of things:
    1. The ability to read and write wasn't gone. The ability to read and write in Latin was gone for the general population was gone. Literacy in the medieval times was based on the ability to read and write in Latin but general population still needed to be able to write reciepts and their name in their own language in order to keep track of taxes.
    2. The Anglo saxons did admire the roman architecture, so much so that they ended up replicating it in some of their own architecture, it was just that they didn't have the knowledge or resources to maintain it. Over time the buildings break down and then get demolished to make room for other structures, which the same thing happened in Italy to many Roman architecture after the fall of the western roman empire.
    3. The people of England still saw themselves as roman, once Anglo saxons invaded Britain, they did not force the inhabitants to change their culture, they wanted to integrate themselves to become and inherite Roman culture. Their coinage based on Roman currency, changing their religion to the new religion to the one that came from Rome.

    • @benman540
      @benman540 Рік тому +41

      I'm mostly annoyed that I had to scroll so far down to see at least some corrections.

    • @kalidwapur
      @kalidwapur Рік тому +67

      Yeah this vid was pro Roman fanfic at best.

    • @dracodeanglicus3857
      @dracodeanglicus3857 Рік тому +17

      Thank you so much for writing this. Honestly if you listened to this video you’d think my people were like a plague 💀

    • @ayreign
      @ayreign Рік тому +2

      Interesting - thanks for this informative comment! Quick question - when the anglo-saxons invaded do you know if there was a turnover in population? Or are the modern day inhabitants of Britain more related to the pre (anglo-saxon) invasion population?

    • @kristianferencik8685
      @kristianferencik8685 Рік тому +13

      @Ay Ob good question, it varies on location. So for instance most people in england have heritage that lies between Anglo Saxons and Norse, while in Wales there is a stronger lineage to pre-Anglo saxons, e.g. roman empire colonisers/celtic

  • @teenagestacker6063
    @teenagestacker6063 Рік тому +68

    The topic of after the collapse of Western Rome has always fascinated me. Living in the ruins of a once great civilization is the stuff of great fiction, and one of my favourite topics. The fact that it happened so dramatically in our own time is beyond fascinating in every way and why I got into classics in the first place. It's also why I love breath of the wild so much

    • @teenagestacker6063
      @teenagestacker6063 Рік тому

      @Viktorian88 I completely agree

    • @snowys4168
      @snowys4168 Рік тому +3

      @Viktorian88 British history is just the island being conquered by one foreign peoples after another, should be used to it by now.

    • @zippyparakeet1074
      @zippyparakeet1074 Рік тому

      ​@Viktorian88britian has been multicultural since the time of the celts bruh what are you rambling about? Just admit it openly that you hate people having skin tones darker than white because this is not about "culture". The scots have different culture, so do the irish, and the Welsh and the English. In the past, when the entire island was divided into like 5 billion realms, each one had different culture.
      Each Celtic tribe had different culture, Romans brought an entirely different culture, the Anglo-Saxons were an entirely different culture, the Normans and Vikings were different culture.
      So, yeah, you're just a racist who hates people of a different color. A tale as old as the Island of Britain itself.

    • @embreis2257
      @embreis2257 8 місяців тому +2

      as you rightly say: *the Western Roman empire fell,* not just the part in Britannia. this [US?] docu is a bit too centred on the British Isles. *all of Western Europe was conquered by Germanic tribes* and petty kingdoms popped up everywhere. they just were a bit more powerful on the continent but stone buildings and literacy were out of fashion for several centuries - even among the nobility. all of Europe was plunged into chaos and needed a thousand years to get back to a level of civilisation comparable to Roman times.
      what happened in 536 had a global impact too. everyone was struggling. the plague mentioned was called the _plague of Justinian_ after the Roman emperor and was just recently confirmed as being caused by the same bacterium as the _bubonic plague_ or 'Black Death'.
      Britannia/Britain shared much of its fate with the rest of western Europe. nothing special. get over it.

    • @3goats1coat
      @3goats1coat 8 місяців тому

      A civilized empire, that thought it can incorporate and uplift foreign elements for the purpose of labor.
      Draw whatever parallels and conclusions you wish.

  • @rafaelomansan
    @rafaelomansan Рік тому +20

    The plague that affected Britain was the Jutinian Plague, which means some of the old trade connections ( or maybe new ones created by the saxons ) with the still very much Roman Mediterranean Sea were still present.
    The same plague and vulcanic eruption were also responsible for stopping the Roman Reconquest of the West by the Eastern Empire, perphaps if it did not happen, it would be very possible that the dream of Roman Civilization returning to Britain would have happened in the next decades. One can only imagine Eastern Roman ships arriving in Britain, and Greek speaking Legions reconquering the island...
    Alas, Great video.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Рік тому

      Why would they do that? They didn't care for Britain. Britain cost most money to the Empire than it returned in profit.

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis Рік тому +1

      Slavery Slavery Slavery would be what they would have got. Rome had more slaves /household than any other 5 nations I would say.

    • @marzbanofmerv2324
      @marzbanofmerv2324 Рік тому +2

      Doubt any eastern Emperor would waste money on reconquering Britain, even Hispania and Italy were a large overextension for Eastern Rome, drying up Imperial coffers and basically leaving the Eastern frontiers at the mercy of the Sassanids, to retake Gaul presumably if Hispania and Italy has been retaken would take away significantly from Danube and Eastern fronts, perhaps triggering the Slavic conquest of Imperial Balkans a century early, or total collapse of the Asian provinces, retaking Brittania would be unthinkable.

  • @Grombrindal91
    @Grombrindal91 Рік тому +144

    This video is fantastic I don’t know how this channel doesn’t have a million subscribers. History is so fantastic yet terrifying-we hope so dearly our modern civilization survives and we hardly think it’ll ever die out yet every example from history tells us it won’t last.

    • @lightfootpathfinder8218
      @lightfootpathfinder8218 Рік тому +7

      There is a number of inaccuracies in the video

    • @lightfootpathfinder8218
      @lightfootpathfinder8218 Рік тому +5

      @@Deepak_Dhakad on the map he puts "eberacum" where modern day Newcastle is when most people know that it's modern day York lol. Also I'm Anglo-Saxon

    • @tanner4280
      @tanner4280 Рік тому +4

      Probably the complete lack of sources, failing to go into detail about an apparent “global cataclysmic event that caused empires to fall”. And the thumbnail? It’s weird internet obsession with “Roman purity” and eugenics. This channel has no subs for a reason and I hope it stays that way

    • @lightfootpathfinder8218
      @lightfootpathfinder8218 Рік тому +4

      @@tanner4280 I agree. The video also says the Anglo Saxons lived in "shacks"??? . They built castles, cities(Durham being one example) and large halls for great feasts. The maker of this video has a particularly low opinion of Germanic peoples in my opinion

    • @lightfootpathfinder8218
      @lightfootpathfinder8218 Рік тому

      @Derrick Bridges that's correct modern day York is eberacum and the true "English" speakers (people descended from the angles) are the northern English and the English midlanders. Southern English people are Saxons and jutes.

  • @Sirxchrish
    @Sirxchrish Рік тому +34

    As bad as things sounded after the fall of western rome, it sure does make for a hell of a story.

    • @blenderbanana
      @blenderbanana 11 місяців тому +1

      Apocalypses generally are.

  • @kazaddum2448
    @kazaddum2448 Рік тому +152

    Fun fact: For most people nothing really changed. Because only the nobility really had those baths, went to school and stuff. For the rest it was "meet the new boss, same as the old one"

    • @Innerste_
      @Innerste_ Рік тому +27

      I wouldn't say freed, more like, under new management

    • @dunamoose3446
      @dunamoose3446 Рік тому +23

      @@smokeyhoodoo the Jews were still stuck in Judea paying the Roman tax lmao

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому

      @@dunamoose3446 You can't be serious...

    • @dictionarypictionary9872
      @dictionarypictionary9872 Рік тому +26

      Actually, everything changed because when the Roman Empire collapsed the aqueducts throughout Europe were destroyed and people began sanitising the polluted water with alcohol, normalising the drinking of mead, and people were throwing facies about and spreading disease - I read in an engineering book that Europe only surpassed the Roman Empire for water distribution in the 1950's. So, for 1600 years, people were worse off with drinking and bathing water and sewage systems ect. Kind of Affected everybody.

    • @matthiasachatz9899
      @matthiasachatz9899 Рік тому +15

      @@dictionarypictionary9872 Even with the Romans, only the city dwellers were supplied with the aqueducts, a maximum of 20% of the population. And alcohol was mainly consumed as a stimulant (also by the Romans) and not because of the dirty water.
      The water from a medieval well in the countryside should not have been more polluted than the water from an aqueduct.

  • @RANDALLBRIGGS
    @RANDALLBRIGGS Рік тому +31

    Julius Caesar first invaded Britain in 55 B.C. From that point to 200 A.D. is 255 years, not "barely a century and a half." (0:06)

  • @lerneanlion
    @lerneanlion Рік тому +157

    I never get one thing. By the time of the "fall" of the Western Roman Empire, there are still two Western Roman remnant states existed in Western Europe. The first one is the Dalmatian stronghold of Julius Nepos and the other one is Domain of Soissons of Syagrius in Northern Gaul. So why don't Syagrius' family escaped to western part of England or Wales, where there are still strong Roman cultural presence there instead of living under the Frankish rule? I know that the family prospered but they never again become the rulers of their own domain, let alone be able to form an attempt to revive the Western Roman Empire.

    • @theroaringdragon306
      @theroaringdragon306 Рік тому +65

      Well I may not know the answer I can guess to why if I was in their position.
      1. How the hell am I gonna move my entire family, resources, army, skilled personal, across the English channel without being attacked or losing my current home if this move fails?
      2. Okay we moved there now what? There are still the rulers when the fell came. Do I start chopping heads to take the land? Will I even be able to pull off a naval invasion?
      3. Why move to this pitiful and small island when I have some of the best soil right here to keep my family going for generations?

    • @lerneanlion
      @lerneanlion Рік тому +24

      @@theroaringdragon306 Sygarius did not get to make that decision. He was assassinated while being jailed by the King of the Visigoths before he could even talk with his family about this. So I guess the decision was up to his wife and the rest of his family.
      But if they succeeded those who believed that they are still Romans, Sygarius' successor might be able to turn western portion of England and Wales into the new Western Roman Empire. After that, all that this successor has to do is sending an imperial regalia to he current Imperator in Constantinople as a proof to show that the Western Roman Empire is still existing in some form.

    • @see8852
      @see8852 Рік тому +17

      because the "roman" aspects of society were well accommodated under frankish rule. gaul was still an ultimately roman state but it was managed by a germanic martial aristocracy.

    • @lerneanlion
      @lerneanlion Рік тому +14

      @@see8852 But as time went on, the Roman aspects only existed in religious rites and almost everything became Germanic for the time being until the translation movement started to bore some fruits. Am I correct with this? Because this is my summed up conclusion when it comes to the society after the Roman Empire is gone but before Western Europe will relearned the works of the Greeks and the Romans.

    • @see8852
      @see8852 Рік тому +19

      @@lerneanlion you're half right. christianity was historically the pinnacle or most important role of roman culture. in that regard the romans prevailed over the converted conquerors. latin was the lingua franca well into the late medieval ages. the only real change was that frank families owned the estates but they employed and preserved many roman institutions, most notably the church.

  • @santiagoparra242
    @santiagoparra242 Рік тому +9

    Great to have you back old friend

  • @TVScully
    @TVScully Рік тому +13

    Please please please keep doing these. History is highly valued to alot of us. You have blessed us with this content. I bless you back. Wish I had the money to give, but tough times financially speak otherwise. I will keep watching though!

    • @TVScully
      @TVScully Рік тому

      @Shep Raynham dude I think you're looking to the literal wording too harshly. Much of this is lost to time and I'm pretty sure anyone with a proper idea and respect for this stuff comes to understand these sort of videos are just retelling of what we know mixed with potential reasoning of past events. Work with what you have man.

    • @galinor7
      @galinor7 Рік тому

      Some historical accuracy might be good though.

  • @DzhonijsDeelis
    @DzhonijsDeelis 27 днів тому +2

    Amazing video. The way you animated the Roman Eagle when talking anout the Roman culture revival on the island gave me goosebumps. Subscribed.

  • @mahbuburrahman926
    @mahbuburrahman926 Рік тому +16

    0:30 Mark Zuckerberg??

  • @ucminhvo295
    @ucminhvo295 Рік тому +71

    Woah no wonder the Wales are so different than the Scott's and English. They're truly the last bastion of Roman identity on that island nation.

    • @naughtiusmaximus3690
      @naughtiusmaximus3690 Рік тому +29

      more celtic than roman, even during the roman era wales was barely romanised(except for part of its southern coast)

    • @JP-ly2et
      @JP-ly2et Рік тому +14

      Not really. "Roman-ness" was re-introduced to what would become England in the 6th and 7th century from missionaries sent by the pope. A strong tradition of Roman Catholicism, Crusading, Latin and other vestiges of Roman culture would hold out in the Island until the reformation in the 16th century. The Dark ages can be seen as a brief intermission before almost a millennia more of Roman influence.

    • @shawnv123
      @shawnv123 Рік тому

      @@JP-ly2et 8th century*

    • @urmum3773
      @urmum3773 Рік тому +8

      lmao no

    • @chico9805
      @chico9805 Рік тому +1

      @Zoomer Stasi You ain't wrong there 🤣

  • @rawka_7929
    @rawka_7929 Рік тому +80

    Man disappears and comes back with a new style, honestly huge respect dude.
    And while I was a fan of the old style, this new one is pretty amazing too I must say.
    Tbh I must say though, this feels a lot more like a documentary than your precious style but it's interesting.

    • @tobe1207
      @tobe1207 Рік тому

      Oh I thought you meant GB at first lol

  • @UntoldHistoryAnimations
    @UntoldHistoryAnimations Рік тому +95

    HE'S ALIVE ! PRAISE THE BULGARIAN TZAR

  • @tyrohere7234
    @tyrohere7234 Рік тому +8

    This has the qualities of real documentary, great work!

  • @kakarotwolf
    @kakarotwolf Рік тому +63

    Took a few replays and a bit of research to understand what was going on, but afterwards I understood it all perfectly with context & it was incredibly interesting. Love the quality of the video as well. Honestly didn't know the story of King Arthur led so far back in British history. Obviously, I knew it was extremely old, but not so young In the country's history.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 Рік тому +1

      We don't know if there ever was a King Arthur. One theory (among many) is that Arthur was a much earlier hero/king whose name was applied (like Caesar's by the Romans) to Ambrosius Aurelianus or a successor. The Christians and the Barbarians jointly wiped out all records and almost all memory of want went before. The only hints are in Geoffrey of Monmouth's History, but we don't know how much of that was made up - some say all of it.

  • @ian_b
    @ian_b Рік тому +47

    *posted 1.622 years ago*
    Hi, as a citizen of Roman Britain, I don't think the Empire is so great. The local council do a poor job, rubbish collection is really bad, and my second cousin Marcus was robbed on the road just last week. I think a change of governance will be good for Britannia. Migration is good for the economy and while the Germans can be a bit rowdy, they have opened some great restaurants with a great "barbarian" vibe.
    Also property prices are way too high. I wouldn't be able to afford even a hovel in Londinium. And the Christians are way too square with all their morals. I think a bit of a shake up will do us good.

    • @MrRedsjack
      @MrRedsjack Рік тому +15

      *Posted 200 years in the future*
      In Londonistan, after another financial crysis, people look at the building from the victorian era and think, how could have the people that lived here before us build such beautiful things? Sadly soon they proceed to demolish them as the new PM Mohammed decided that they are symbols of colonialism and evil and build more of the new 23m² standard-sized living units for the average Londonistani family and a modernist statue to remember the suffering that the UK colonizers brought upon Pakistan.

    • @69Jackjones69
      @69Jackjones69 Рік тому

      @@MrRedsjack **Posted 20 years in the future*

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ Рік тому +16

    Great video! The graphics are truly fantastic! ⚔️

  • @JCATG
    @JCATG Рік тому +25

    I love how concise yet informative you were with the content of this topic. I am sure that you did and will be doing the same for your other planned videos, too.
    For that, I liked and subscribed. I will be checking your other videos!
    God bless you!

  • @PAXperMortem
    @PAXperMortem Рік тому +25

    Three main takeaways from this:
    1. Not all cultures are equal
    2. It is okay to want to protect your home from others.
    3. The fall of the West Roman Empire was one of the greatest disasters in human history.

    • @LD-wm7jm
      @LD-wm7jm Рік тому +2

      Na it wasn't a disaster

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis Рік тому +2

      No it was a blessing in disguise Democracy stemmed from it

    • @gabrielmatos7529
      @gabrielmatos7529 Рік тому +2

      "Not all cultures are equal"
      Really? Did it take this video for you to realize that????

    • @DaniG.German883
      @DaniG.German883 20 годин тому

      @@jacktattis blessing?

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis 20 годин тому

      @@DaniG.German883 Yes the Romans were cruel oppressors e.g Gladiatorial Games for the Masses
      Christians burnt and fed to lions for the crowds amusement/

  • @rogersmith8386
    @rogersmith8386 Рік тому +41

    The “end” of the Western Roman Empire was not an abrupt/ clear cut event - Romano-British culture continued after 410AD. Furthermore the idea of the “dark” ages is a very outdated one, with the caveat that in the years following Roman military withdrawal there was a significant economic recession.

    • @vvmmuu
      @vvmmuu Рік тому +5

      It's good to see someone knows history around here. ALL the best.

    • @see8852
      @see8852 Рік тому +8

      finally someone who didnt get their history from total war games

    • @colleen6341
      @colleen6341 Рік тому +1

      Thank you, "apocalyptic" isn’t a word I would use to describe how the Romans pulled out of Britain. I sent this video to a medieval European history professor of mine to review.

    • @nsa6865
      @nsa6865 Рік тому +1

      about as roman as a briton could get lol

    • @djyork8634
      @djyork8634 Рік тому +5

      No dark ages is the correct term it's just wrongly assumed to mean 'things got bad'. It doesn't it means history stopped, which it did. As in someone switched out the lights on history as very few people are writing things down and what they do write is highly questioned by modern historians. The dark ages are great fun for a fictional writer because you can put anything you want in there, even invent a king called Arthur😂

  • @kevinshepard7796
    @kevinshepard7796 Рік тому +20

    This video is downright amazing. It puts together the long, murky history of the isles so well. It filled many gaps in my knowledge.

  • @DontKnow-hr5my
    @DontKnow-hr5my Рік тому +8

    This is what UA-cam should be for. Thank you for doing this!

  • @whiskeywight7844
    @whiskeywight7844 Рік тому +17

    *_"We owe London to Rome"_*
    -Winston Churchill

    • @galinor7
      @galinor7 Рік тому

      London was never a Celtic, Viking o'r Saxon capital.

    • @no15minutecities
      @no15minutecities Рік тому +2

      @@galinor7 No, but it did exist before the Romans arrived...

  • @michaeldriskell2038
    @michaeldriskell2038 Рік тому +3

    Thank you! You made information about what happened in Britain that I was unaware of. Only bits and pieces of it. An EXCELLENT presentation!

  • @Kurotaisa
    @Kurotaisa Рік тому +54

    Last year I was playing Asscreed Valhalla, and as you start on the north-osh side of the game's map, and you see what you'd expect, loads of hill forts, huts, some castles.
    Then you make your way south and see these huge pillars and arches jutting out, the ruins of Rome, and yet you make your way further south and you get to Lundum and see a colosseum, 5 times taller than the average hut, twice as high as fucking guard towers around the city, as wide around as a whole block, and people living in tiny brick housescluttered around it, I could finally understand the ruin that came with the fall of Rome.
    It was like they were living in fallout 4's diamond city.

    • @djyork8634
      @djyork8634 Рік тому

      Great game but history doesn't tally with that. Eboracum in the north was the capital and a full colonia from the 3rd century onwards, and there are no castles in England pre 1050ad or so, they are a Norman import to implement fedualism

    • @kingt0295
      @kingt0295 Рік тому

      @@djyork8634 there were castras tho right, Roman forts that over time morphed into trade hubs and cities?

    • @djyork8634
      @djyork8634 Рік тому

      @@kingt0295 the word castra is absolutely derived from the roman fort, but the fortifications seen in England are new architectural forms introduced in the 11th century. One interesting crossover is Porchester- a roman fort which was reused as a Norman castle later on. But they only reused the site. It wasn't a natural evolution.again the medieval castle is a symbol of feudalism which isn't the purpose of a roman fort

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Рік тому +2

      Assassins creed valhalla is about as true to historical record as Star Wars

    • @djyork8634
      @djyork8634 Рік тому +2

      @@robinrehlinghaus1944 naturally. Go and make a truly accurate viking game reflecting the actual world as people experienced it. It will be boring as fuck, no one will buy it and you'll go out of business🤣

  • @onix5491
    @onix5491 Рік тому +52

    It all began when they lost their toothpaste

    • @Orthosaur7532
      @Orthosaur7532 Рік тому

      Most Probably

    • @CindyRoy57
      @CindyRoy57 Рік тому +8

      Starting a iconic English tradition of poor dental health that endured for the next 1,600 years.
      Then, in a great though unsung cultural renaissance, the English rediscovered bathing as well.

    • @gabork5055
      @gabork5055 Рік тому

      Or they got in contact with Walter White's distant ancestor.
      If we go by the thumbnail's indication.

    • @aroutledge9565
      @aroutledge9565 Рік тому

      ​@@CindyRoy57 is this before they invented soap for the non euro hybrids to try?

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Рік тому +1

      And now in the modern day Brits have higher quality dental care than the USA. Really the bad teeth joke should apply to them instead...

  • @voiceofreason2674
    @voiceofreason2674 Рік тому +104

    The fact that King Arthur was turned into a super hero in fiction means that the real historical figure was pretty great or at least came before the most miserable period in history

    • @slaviclungdonator9463
      @slaviclungdonator9463 Рік тому

      or it was used to fabricate a version of history where the britons defeated the anglo saxons (which didn’t happen)

    • @kingbjorn1832
      @kingbjorn1832 Рік тому +35

      If Arthur is between those periods of Britannia's time, then prob Arthur spoke Latin and prayed Jesus at the time

    • @rotciv1492
      @rotciv1492 Рік тому +28

      He most probably lived exactly during that miserable period.
      There is a thing about very dark times with an almost nonexistent written history, which is a void of cultural memory that people fill with tales and myths.
      "If we know nothing about it, that means this is a blank slate where we can run our imagination"
      There is a good reason why we know nothing about the hypothetic war of Troy apart from a famous epic tale written by somebody who lived 4 centuries after such war supposedly happened, or why the vast majority of Greek "heroes" lived during or way before the Minoic Era, or why there are so many fantastic stories based on the Medieval Dark Ages.

    • @dictionarypictionary9872
      @dictionarypictionary9872 Рік тому +6

      I came across an a scroll in a book shop in Alnwick built inside of an old railway station, it had all of the monarchy lineage with different family crests and stuff, it's hard for me to remember, but it had a lot of well researched stuff and at the side some honourable mentions; one which claimed 'King Arthur' was a son of a Roman General in charge of an invading legion who took a British wife, and he was only referred to as King of the Cornish affectionately because he was the most powerful Britain in the first era of Roman occupation, also Camelot, Camelod, Camulodunum, Colchester - was the original capital city for about 50 years before they moved it back to Londinium

    • @ColoradoStreaming
      @ColoradoStreaming Рік тому +10

      @@kingbjorn1832 The 2004 movie 'King Arthur' was at best a B rated movie with a lot of problems but they did a good job showing Arthur as being part of the Roman empire and the subsequent invasion of the Saxons.

  • @doguezter7047
    @doguezter7047 Місяць тому +2

    And they're still like the thumbnail to this day 😭

  • @becalee33
    @becalee33 Рік тому +2

    Great Vid! I'm irritated with myself for not having taken notes! It went by so fast & i didn't realize it because it was so enjoyable! 😀

  • @tinfoilslacks3750
    @tinfoilslacks3750 2 місяці тому +4

    "They are the most repulsive people I have ever conquered"

  • @pedrosabino8751
    @pedrosabino8751 Рік тому +66

    Unfortunately the most romanized region of roman Britannia also became the first anglo saxon region of great britannia

    • @imperialinquisition6006
      @imperialinquisition6006 Рік тому +32

      Doesn’t really make a difference historically. The Anglo Saxons were also successful, though I don’t think many nations were so advanced as the romans for a long time.

    • @pedrosabino8751
      @pedrosabino8751 Рік тому +2

      @@imperialinquisition6006 Now i wonder if the ones from Kent were the most romanized among the anglosaxons 🤔

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Рік тому +8

      @@pedrosabino8751 no, considering that the Roman Empire was gone when the region was settled by the Jutes.

    • @pedrosabino8751
      @pedrosabino8751 Рік тому +3

      @@baneofbanes But the romanized bretons were still there

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому +1

      @@baneofbanes The roman nobility wasnt, the anglo-saxons were hired to fight judeo-christian genocide

  • @hirohitoedits8620
    @hirohitoedits8620 Рік тому +4

    Great video. I don’t really know much on how the island of Britain was like during Roman rule but this video gave me some info on Roman rule in Britain.

  • @BubonicDruid99
    @BubonicDruid99 Місяць тому +1

    Glad to have a historic video without AI narration

  • @grailness1085
    @grailness1085 2 місяці тому +9

    Brexit is a 2000-year-old tradition

    • @Emiya_Yuuki
      @Emiya_Yuuki 2 місяці тому +2

      Romexit

    • @Art-is-craft
      @Art-is-craft Місяць тому

      The EU is going to fail.

    • @KenEze-k6k
      @KenEze-k6k Місяць тому

      No not on this occasion, they were kicked out for being undefendable under constant attack and then conquered. The Gallic empire was more like exiting the EU

    • @Emiya_Yuuki
      @Emiya_Yuuki Місяць тому

      @@KenEze-k6k France returning to his fraxit tradition

  • @daniels7907
    @daniels7907 Рік тому +61

    Then there is the hilarious fact that so many people are shocked by the realization that many of the English are of predominantly Germanic ethnicity, as if they are somehow unable to make the connection to what exactly an "Anglo-Saxon" is. That's before you also get into Jutes, Franks, Danes, Normans...

    • @ruthmccabe3527
      @ruthmccabe3527 Рік тому +2

      Erm...no they aren't actually. Genetic testing has showed that they are generally between 10-30% Germanic - it varies between regions, obviously, with the south coast showing higher levels of German DNA. Even the later Vikings only made a small impact; generally the ex-Danegeld areas show about 20% Viking DNA, max.
      I am from Yorkshire and only have 3.6% Scandinavian DNA, no Germanic DNA and the rest is pre-Roman era, ie. Yamnaya and Neolithic/Mesolithic. My mtDNA shows I probably came in with the Yamnaya in the early Bronze age.
      I am pretty much typical of an "English" person.

    • @zacharyrollick6169
      @zacharyrollick6169 Рік тому +9

      There are even people that think that the English language is of Latin descent.

    • @daniels7907
      @daniels7907 Рік тому +15

      @@zacharyrollick6169 - Or Celtic. Despite "English" literally meaning "Angle-ish". Sure, it adopts words and features from those languages because there was overlap between speakers of them. But English is a West Germanic language and many of the Romance elements were not introduced until the Norman conquest. Which becomes rather obvious if you paid attention when we covered the story Beowulf (Old English) in high school.

    • @ColoradoStreaming
      @ColoradoStreaming Рік тому +6

      Kind of a strange offshoot but Hitler actually respected the British because he knew they were Germanic and did not want to go to war with England. He saw the English people as brothers of the German Aryan race. In the 1930s Hitler was even quoted saying, "The English nation will have to be considered the most valuable ally in the world...England was a natural ally for Germany and an enemy of France.”

    • @daniels7907
      @daniels7907 Рік тому +4

      @@ColoradoStreaming - Although the Franks were also a Germanic people. At some point old Adolf was going to have rationalize the Celtic ancestry among most Europeans. But when you really look at the history of post-Roman western Europe it is basically a history of Germanic people fighting each other, making alliances, and then going back to fighting again.

  • @RaderGH
    @RaderGH Рік тому +28

    Growing up, I thought the dark ages and general state of decay in Europe was BEFORE the Romans. My mind couldn't perceive how civilizations could backtrack in technology and knowledge. History is fascinating.

    • @ninjaked1265
      @ninjaked1265 Рік тому

      Historians don’t believe the dark ages exist because plenty of innovation happened during the medieval period

    • @evzenvarga9707
      @evzenvarga9707 Рік тому

      They didn't really backtrack in technology that much, late western Rome was already decaying and ran by the most incompetent ruling elite in its history, not even some of the best Roman generals could save it.

  • @DS-rv2fc
    @DS-rv2fc Рік тому +7

    why did Hitler say germans are superior??? It is clear that Latins had a way more sophisticated culture.

    • @widciyamck8677
      @widciyamck8677 2 місяці тому

      he's just lying his @sh off for his dumb voters but in heart he knows roman is way more superior

    • @widciyamck8677
      @widciyamck8677 2 місяці тому +1

      he's just lying his @sh off for his dumb voters but at heart he knows the roman is way more superior

  • @lolapanola282
    @lolapanola282 Рік тому +33

    Romans brought super high civilization, Romans left...Britannia plunged into darkness became again barbarians
    The ROman ruins were so impressive that the Anglos thought they were built by giants

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому

      Roman's brought the darkness, or jews/Christians to clarify. The dark ages began in the 3rd century and can only be described as genocide. The "romans" continued their genocide unabated after the fall of the western Roman empire

    • @galinor7
      @galinor7 Рік тому

      Claptrap and misinformation. Gang rape was a common punishment dish out to the Celts. Celts had no rights. Whatever culture Rome had they didn't share it in Britain. The Saxons knew all about the Romans, because they were defended from Saxonlander in south Germany. The Romans invaded there and they displaced north. Wales exists because Brythonic tribes were murdered of displaced west. Wales is west Britain. It wasn't the Saxons who displaced them. Mainly the Saxons didn't even come. They were nearly all Angles.

    • @coincollectorofallcoins3098
      @coincollectorofallcoins3098 Рік тому +5

      Lol Roman fanboy just repeating what was stated in the vid

  • @Malthius
    @Malthius Рік тому +4

    Fantastic content, cant believe this doesnt have more views

  • @cancerino666
    @cancerino666 Рік тому +38

    "mom, can we have Britannia?"
    "We have Britannia at home"
    Britannia at home:

  • @danielmcandrew979
    @danielmcandrew979 Рік тому +8

    A lot of ahistorical stuff jammed into this to make it more compelling/pad the length. Literally the title is true and that’s it. I know research is hard but goddamn man

  • @skatee99
    @skatee99 2 місяці тому

    EXCELLENT and very well done effort, one of the best on this subject. Thank you, many do not appreciate the effort it takes to produce such well researched, produced, edited and narrated videos. Thank you.

  • @orlonarsino6729
    @orlonarsino6729 Рік тому +1

    You have earned a subscriber out of me for this video. You have the right voice and clarity in your deliverance. Thank you

  • @gameboyhotline3712
    @gameboyhotline3712 Рік тому +15

    Just to think England, Croatia, and Syria were all once apart of the same empire

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому +3

      It makes one want to puke, and to think such a state looms on the horizon

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому +1

      It makes me shudder

    • @Dryhten1801
      @Dryhten1801 Рік тому +3

      England, Syria, and South Africa were under the same empire too

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому

      @@Dryhten1801 He doesn't like that one

    • @franzjoseph2809
      @franzjoseph2809 Рік тому

      @@Dryhten1801 wasn't Syria french?

  • @Kevin-mx1vi
    @Kevin-mx1vi Рік тому +7

    Judging by the thumbnail, the Romans took the food, soap, and dentists with them.

  • @ColoradoStreaming
    @ColoradoStreaming Рік тому +7

    The next time you watch Lord of the Rings you really get a new perspective of the old superpower relics the characters see as they move through Middle Earth.

  • @thehistorybard6333
    @thehistorybard6333 Рік тому +2

    This video is brilliantly made, stunning work!! More like this please!

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory Рік тому +30

    hey man, I hope you still remember me. I remember when you were a small mapping channel with a few hundred subs and now you have a huge channel with excellent graphics. What program did you use to make this because it is very good.

    • @historyrhymes1701
      @historyrhymes1701  Рік тому +12

      Ofcource I remember you Micah :). I used After Effects, Premiere Pro and Photoshop.

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory Рік тому +10

      @@historyrhymes1701 could you do a tutorial one day? I would really like to know what you do

  • @Kingofportals
    @Kingofportals Рік тому +10

    He’s back and bigger than ever!

  • @comicstripgamer1591
    @comicstripgamer1591 Рік тому +13

    As someone who grew up next to Hadrians wall. It should be noted the wall went up during a peace pact with the north. The Romans were big on taxation. The northern tribes of highlands would trade with the south duty free. The wall had dual purpose. Taxation and protection.

  • @kjdempsey
    @kjdempsey Рік тому +12

    The Roman Baths in the City of Bath, England is really incredible

    • @user-rn2zb6be1u
      @user-rn2zb6be1u 10 днів тому

      Roman 1: another Roman city has fallen
      Roman 2: It's those smelly barbarians again.
      Roman 1: afraid not, They've taken Bath
      Roman 2: they'll be clean as a whistle

  • @rickkearn7100
    @rickkearn7100 Рік тому +1

    This showed up in my daily feed - first time ever. Good content and production. I subscribed. Cheers.

    • @varstick6
      @varstick6 Рік тому

      Are you kidding? This is fake history.
      None of this happened, the British were never celts, that was a small tribe in Northern Italy.
      A miserable academic/priest about 100 years ago daydreamed up all this BS.
      Jeez research stuff for yourself, English history was stolen, the English don't even know it.
      Want somewhere to start?
      Britainshiddenhistory Ross, he's passed away but content is still being uploaded by friends who believe in real research.
      Not fake approved academic version of history.

  • @ThePussukka
    @ThePussukka Рік тому +8

    I like the new style, but wouldn't mind having your own voice back

  • @adge5182
    @adge5182 Рік тому +5

    What's the theme which sounds at 4:08?
    Btw, your comeback is great :)

  • @PNETriffid
    @PNETriffid Рік тому +4

    The lands of Eastern England were infertile? Utter nonsense.

  • @bigdawgpelchee5413
    @bigdawgpelchee5413 Рік тому +11

    Thumbnail shows how ancient Brits looked on left and a modern brit and his homestead on the right

    • @nsa6865
      @nsa6865 Рік тому +2

      britons p much all looked like the ones on the right, the one of the left is more like an italian moved to roman territories in britain lol

  • @Ayyjay1952
    @Ayyjay1952 Рік тому +10

    Wouldn't the vast majority Roman Britain technically be similar to 6-9th century Britain? In what capacity did Roman culture influence or change early middle British one?

    • @historyrhymes1701
      @historyrhymes1701  Рік тому +2

      Britain in the imidiate aftermath of the end of Western Roman control was quite severe compared to the much slower one in the mediterian . 9th 10th century Britain however was not much different than the rest of Europe. Infact with the cultural activity that began during Alfred the Great and onward the Island was doing pretty well

  • @MelBee128
    @MelBee128 Рік тому +21

    Honestly I always thought Britain had the least Roman influence of any other province of the empire. It really wasn't all that important to them because it didn't produce much wealth for them. That's part of the reason why they pulled out in 410 and told them to basically fend for themselves. Decline of cities and literacy was a common thing for many former provinces during the medieval period because the church and elites pretty much had the monopoly on education.

    • @Nick-hi9gx
      @Nick-hi9gx Рік тому

      You are largely correct. But English, and by extension Anglophones, like to pretend otherwise. DESPERATELY seek to pretend otherwise. Britain was an economic backwater, with settlements a fraction the size ofeven across the Channel.

    • @goofygrandlouis6296
      @goofygrandlouis6296 Рік тому +5

      It's also because Saxons and other germanic tribes were illiterate, at the time.
      Back then, the North was the savage part.

    • @ninjaked1265
      @ninjaked1265 Рік тому +5

      The Church tried to increase literacy rates but it was difficult to maintain

    • @mohelemadembe2630
      @mohelemadembe2630 Рік тому +2

      blind or a fanatic for the barbaric saxons

    • @mohelemadembe2630
      @mohelemadembe2630 Рік тому

      Are you blind or a fanatic of the barbaric saxons

  • @DoonieMan1
    @DoonieMan1 Рік тому +3

    Nah why’d you do them like that in the thumbnail 💀

  • @GoRepairs
    @GoRepairs Рік тому +3

    "This video's sponsor is the Roman military-industrial complex" lol. It even has David Platt from Coronation Street as a king at the end.

  • @sun-ship
    @sun-ship Рік тому

    Your style in telling history is very clear and engaging.

  • @S0nyToprano
    @S0nyToprano Рік тому +11

    Let’s remember that Britain was never a profitable province for the empire to begin with. Yes, it has metals like tin but so did Hispania and that province required far less resources to secure. Britannia often required large amounts of military presence (I’ve read up to 4 legions compared to the 8 needed to secure the Rhine) to hold the province against seafaring raiders and Celtic tribes to the north like the Pictones. I would be very surprised if someone found a source where the province broke even let alone made a profit for the empire. Provinces like Italia and Aegyptus were far more lucrative and wealthy.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Рік тому

      Imagine if Rome stuck to the Mediterranean and didn't bother with Britain or Germania. The peak of the Roman Empire was when they stuck to the Mediterranean except for northern Gaul

    • @nsa6865
      @nsa6865 Рік тому +1

      the empire didnt favorably look on northern europe. They saw them more as a trophy to be taken and subjugated, cicero notes on it very well

  • @soulquesthealingmusic2307
    @soulquesthealingmusic2307 Рік тому +4

    You forgot the part about how, initially, the Angles and Saxons were 'invited' to settle eastern Britain on the condition that they would fight the invading Scots-Picts from the north. The Celts were unable to defend against the northern raids. Of course, more Anglo-Saxons came later and took over.

    • @Bronasaxon
      @Bronasaxon Рік тому +1

      That sounds familiar for SOME REASON…
      (Glares at unchecked immigration)

    • @alynwillams4297
      @alynwillams4297 3 місяці тому

      The Britons were fighting two fronts. The invading gaels in what is now the west of Wales and the Gaels and Picts pushing down from the west of Scotland and the highlands. Hence why they hired mercenaries to help them out which turned out to be a big mistake

    • @compatriot852
      @compatriot852 2 місяці тому

      Similar events happen during the Bronze Age when some rulers hired the sea peoples as mercenaries

  • @Warsawke
    @Warsawke Рік тому +4

    Hey, do you still remember me? Great video! The presentation is quite clear and animations are advanced.

  • @ianminto6315
    @ianminto6315 Рік тому +3

    Excellent video and narration. Subscribed for more 🙏

  •  17 днів тому +1

    The thumbnail is funny.
    That's how your local British really look like haha😊

  • @mordredoforkney6185
    @mordredoforkney6185 Рік тому +6

    200 AD: "I am Britannian, fair traveller. From where do you hail?"
    2000 AD: "Um Bri'ish, m8. Where's ya 'ouse at?"

    • @nsa6865
      @nsa6865 Рік тому +1

      most britons were not much of romans lol they still organized in clans and the romans had a VERY unfavorable view of them. Even with their citizenships granted by caracalla

    • @mordredoforkney6185
      @mordredoforkney6185 Рік тому

      @@nsa6865 You sir, are the kind of man I like. Or whatever tf you are lol Either way, details make my sword all the sharper.
      PS: The Punchline is that 'e's a Brummy and is planning a ye olde breaking and entering.

  • @misaelfraga8196
    @misaelfraga8196 Рік тому +6

    The Roman empire's many Civil wars drained Romano-British society of man power to fend for itself properly against the Saxon horde. At one point it was one of the most heavily fortified provinces.

  • @myradioon
    @myradioon Рік тому +12

    The first "London Bridge", built by the Romans out of wood over the Thames, stood derelict and unusable for years because the conquering hordes couldn't figure out how it was engineered and or how to repair it. The society was also so unstable that they never had time to figure it out. It's like the arm of The Statue of Liberty jutting out from the sand in The Planet of The Apes.

    • @oscarosullivan4513
      @oscarosullivan4513 Рік тому +4

      Well first off if you left the instruction manual with vernacular translations then you might have a hope

    • @Exgrmbl
      @Exgrmbl Рік тому

      They came there by boats, so i doubt they ever gave a f*ck about that bridge.

    • @myradioon
      @myradioon Рік тому +3

      @@Exgrmbl That bridge was the key to thje conquest of England and Wales by the Romans. They knew it's importance. It was not United /Conquered by any one entity (Picts. Saxons, Normans) in the same way for hundreds of years because that bridge sat there. The Romans came by boat too btw and had the best Navy in the World.

  • @euanmilne5302
    @euanmilne5302 Рік тому +4

    there are various examples of where roman Britain has been literally built over, such as the York minister cathedral, where ruins of roman barracks were found underneath the cathedral, and not far off are the remains of the viking city of Jorvik, its a strange parallel, the lost civilisation of pre-anglo saxon Britain, is lost to an extent not entirely known, the pre-roman native Britons, even more so

  • @ivanf.482
    @ivanf.482 Рік тому +63

    As an Italian, I wish we had another latin brother. Yeah ok, they do have some romance vocabulary I know. But it's not the same thing

    • @nephets69.
      @nephets69. Рік тому +27

      29% of English words are of Latin Origin, another 29% is from French (of which would mainly be of Latin Origin, having around 150 Gaulish loans from French in English) and 6% is Greek. The legacy of Latin lives on in the Britons, just not as intended.

    • @ivanf.482
      @ivanf.482 Рік тому +16

      @Gabriela No

    • @Phantom-xp2co
      @Phantom-xp2co Рік тому +7

      Nah pal, we are doing just fine without the crippling debt and the lazyness

    • @ivanf.482
      @ivanf.482 Рік тому +29

      @@Phantom-xp2co Lazyness? When we came to America people were amazed seeing how much Italians could work
      That's because in our countrty workers' rights were literally non existent
      There's a reason if we had the most important non-ruling communist party in the world
      Also, Italian city states were incredibly wealthy and powerful, even inventing modern banks.
      It's various wars which caused some decline

    • @Jediben001
      @Jediben001 Рік тому +11

      Welsh actually has a surprising amount of Latin influence, though of course it isn’t a Latin language

  • @niros9667
    @niros9667 Рік тому +1

    That was fascinating and so well put together, thanks.

  • @overdriveoutershaxson1837
    @overdriveoutershaxson1837 Рік тому +2

    Britian was more civilised back when the Roman’s enforced dental hygiene.

  • @JohnDaubSuperfan369
    @JohnDaubSuperfan369 Рік тому +12

    Once I had to travel for work through Belfast and Liverpool on my way to London, it became apparent very quickly that the brits still haven't recovered from this particular apocalypse.

  • @Warmaker01
    @Warmaker01 Рік тому +5

    Truly, life at the height of Roman imperial control of Britain compared to what followed fits the term, "Dark Age."

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому

      No it doesnt, the dark age economic collapse began in the 3rd century, continued through 700ad, and was caused by judeo-christian tax farming and genocide

    • @smokeyhoodoo
      @smokeyhoodoo Рік тому

      You can look at what life like was for jews, and describe a collapse, but youre describing ascenssion for gentiles

    • @uphillwalrus5164
      @uphillwalrus5164 Рік тому +1

      Cry

    • @lightfootpathfinder8218
      @lightfootpathfinder8218 Рік тому +5

      Their is a few inaccuracies in this video for one the Angles,Saxons and jutes didn't live in "Shacks" if you go to historical site you will see that they had castles and great halls for drinking and feasting. The thing is they made almost everything out of wood so they didn't last like the buildings built in stone. On the map He also put Eboracum where modern day Newcastle is when in fact Eboracum is modern day York ....these cities are not close lol

  • @00martoneniris86
    @00martoneniris86 Рік тому +5

    Yes you are back my friend

  • @TywysogCraig
    @TywysogCraig 5 місяців тому +2

    The history of Britain didn’t start with the romans. It’s been erased and rewritten by the victors. Much to share on this topic.
    Y gwir yn erbyn y byd

  • @johnburns9634
    @johnburns9634 Рік тому +1

    Great Video! lots of work and research went into this!

  • @spaceseed3463
    @spaceseed3463 Рік тому +13

    Great video! I thoroughly enjoyed it and it was very educational. On a sidenote, I feel that the game assassin’s creed Valhalla makes a great re-creation of how the ruins of Roman Britain may have looked a couple of hundred years after the downfall of Roman Britain.🧐

  • @largeone923
    @largeone923 Рік тому +8

    Love how the thumbnail shows one of the Ancient Britons and then the next image is just some modern guy in Gloucestershire.

    • @largeone923
      @largeone923 Рік тому

      @@Deepak_Dhakad The British are incapable of producing women.

  • @juanmikel7507
    @juanmikel7507 Рік тому +13

    Sometimes I wonder how much more advanced, scientifically and culturally, we would be if the Roman Empire never fell

    • @19ate4
      @19ate4 Рік тому

      Roman Empire fell from extreme decadence and their own Superiority complex
      Nero, after his wife died married his slave boy and had him castrated on the same day. Even having his now trans wife wear the royal cloths
      Funny how you see the Roman Empire as being “ civilization” to the world yet see European colonies as a white superiority racist
      They never took over Germany, Ireland, or Scotland and lost Britain soon afterwards

    • @beaconeersofthesevenmaps3467
      @beaconeersofthesevenmaps3467 Рік тому +1

      Not sure: the damage to progress was done by religion

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis Рік тому +1

      Dont forget the majority of the populace were slaves or freedmen NOT the aristocrats . Rome was a cruel beast and it was slavery that made her wealthy

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Рік тому +3

      The idea that „religion“ would have been some sort of avoidable disaster hindering man’s progress to greater happiness is absolutely untrue. It’s an often repeated myth. Neither was the medieval period generally as horrible as it’s made out to be by Romaboos. The (academically accepted) truth is that Rome wasn’t as progressive as many believe, in part due to slavery having the economy stagnate, which Christianity did change for the better. The end of the medieval period saw Europe start a colonial age where they conquered almost the entire world - how much more advanced do you want them to have become? Like it or not, the whole premise „what if Rone had never fallen“ is not only ignorant of historical happenings, it’s based on the fundamentally flawed idea that history „could have gone differently“ if not for some miraculous save of Rome - despite the fact that its fall depended on a myriad of factors, all in and of themselves dependent on other things. We‘d need to live on an entirely different planet for Rome not to have fallen, it wasn’t preventable. The whole idea shows poor insight into the mechanics of Romes „fall“ and is, not least because of the fact that this „fall“ is hard to define in the first place, completely redundant, harmful to people‘s understanding of history, and in many cases expressive of an unhappiness with the world‘s developments afterwards, which is stupid, because we cannot change something that happened 1500 years ago, much less accurately assess its consequences.

    • @dalton6108
      @dalton6108 Рік тому

      I don’t think we would have a industrial explosion. It would be for convenience instead of rapid capitalist innovation.

  • @kalvaxus
    @kalvaxus 11 місяців тому +1

    It's wild to think you'd stumble upon Roman architecture and then only consider it as construction material..

    • @kevcaratacus9428
      @kevcaratacus9428 8 місяців тому

      Yup! If the church had not brought the land and used the brick & anything else useful to build their brand new church
      The city of Verulamium would still be there intact today , as long as regular maintenance continued of course .
      Anyone walking around the cathedral today, or the two smaller saxon churches close by , will see they are built mostly from Roman brick.

  • @followyourideas
    @followyourideas Рік тому +2

    The editing is so cool. The narration and music is superb too.

  • @canerbaykara2639
    @canerbaykara2639 Рік тому +4

    You are so unbiased in this video it's unreal (!)