This is one of my favorite channels to learn about the medieval period, because you seem to focus far less on the debatable "facts" that most people spew, and focus more on the human aspect. Because of this channel I can connect on a human level to the people of that time. That's far better than simply hearing a statistic about the plague.
When Prince John (then King) was travelling through the land, a whole town was afraid of him coming there. If he came through that place, then it would be declared a royal road, and would be taxed more heavily. So everyone in the town... pretended to be insane. John decided to avoid the place, and they avoided the tax!
@@daveh3997 While those are funny stories, I don't see how any of them are things that the king's messengers would see while riding through town and understand exactly how mad they were. And of course, I have to wonder if people then were really that gullible?
@@cindchan "On the night of their betrothal, the wife shall open to the man as the furrow to the plow, and he shall work into her, in and again til she bring him to his full." Woah, good Bible.
Here during high middle ages in Sweden they made an law so bishops and lords couldn't eat up an person whole storage cause of the abuse of the law of giving hospitality.
@@ModernKnight Were Knights able to court a future wife, or was the marriage arranged? What responsibilities of a Knight's wife in public and privately. How much money did a knight make? Were did the Knights and his wife and children live and etc. I would like see a videos on these subject, thank You!! These are interesting and educational. A knight would bath the night before the knighthood and had to prey for certain mount of hours. Did you see the Film the " Last Knights, Last Duel??"
Hallo! Although this is unrelated to the topic of your comment, God loves you, and He died for you as Jesus Christ! Please turn entirely to Him while you still can, because time is running out, but don’t be afraid! Have a good day!
I remember reading somewhere that Elizabeth I wouldn't send troops after rebellious nobles, she would simply visit them and in the course of her visit, effectively bankrupt them. Thus ensuring they had no funds for plotting and schemes. If I can find a link, I will add it.
Yes, I've read the same. Progresses as a political tool were started by her father, I seem to recall, and would last until the host could bear it no more. Terrific stuff!
@Blanc Neige Better to know i have 4 kids that are. 2 nieces, 2 nephews and plenty more on the way. This is going to get fixed. I do not want my sons to be slaves.
@@jonnyenough1531 You know, as a Jew I always feel really hurt when I read things like this - why are all my Jewish friends not letting me in on the schemes? Is there not enough children's blood in my Matzot? Am I not spreading enough disease!?! I'm really trying you know! It's just makes me feel like the entire Synagogue is off having fun without me.
How did that work out for the Queen tho? Wasn't she afraid that one of those rebellious lords might imprison her, and demand money for her release? Or just kill her because you know, they are rebellious? Can someone explain this plothole?
This man, the presenter, has a certain medieval allure and charisma about him. His presence, even his body movements are very convincingly knightly and medieval.
Well, he actually does the things they did, no wonder he is authentically believable. Btw, he's not only the presenter, he and his brother produce the series. They co own a hugely successful gaming company, so are wealthy af.
The people of Gotham, yes Gotham, near Nottingham acted mad to prevent King John passing through their village, would would have meant that they would have to shoulder more of the costs for maintaining the road. King John was warned of their madness and took a different route to his hunting lodge at King's Clipstone, in the heart of Sherwod Forest. Fun fact: Nottinghamshire was part of the lands that Prince John held as tennant in chief whilst King Richard was on the throne and this is why he is one of the chief villeins of the Robin Hood stories.
I just want to add my 2c and say your channel is amazing I love learning about these periods of times and your videos are entertaining from start to finish, You seem like an awesome person And I wish the best for you
You Tube is full of rubbish having thousands of views, so I'm saddened that this beautifully filmed, excellent and informative content isn't more popular.
No, he’s not. He’s a officer of the order, not the top one. Only the top GBE is defined as a knight. That’s why that rank is the only rank allowed to use Sir or Dame. He’s an officer in the peerage.
@@dontask6863 ... no. Either a GBE or a KBE/DBE is a knight/dame. There's MBE, OBE, CBE, KBE/DBE and then GBE. There's a limit on the number of GBE and KBE/DBE who can be living so they are much rarer. But being called "sir" doesn't mean someone is of higher "status" (whatever that means) -- a knight bachelor ranks below all of these and is called "sir."
I always remember, in the Once and Future King, the long descriptions of work on the farm in Sir Ector's household. T. H. White saw the knight as a landholder, and therefore primarily a farmer, who spent the bulk of his time managing what was essentially a plantation. He was much more of a farm manager than farm worker, coordinating the efforts of his vassals, who each had a specialized job in his household.
@@wufongtanwufong5579 that's pretty incorrect peasants ranged from freeholders to serfs. What's common is that they usually had agreements with their lord that was legally enforceable, and a knight who abused his power risked the ire of his lord who might use this as an excuse to centralise his power.
One of the great and simple joys I have in life is providing my horse with a clean stable. It’s almost meditative to make it right. And seeing him so happy to return to it after. Glad to see your horse so well cared for.
Barbara Danley why did you feel the need to add that? I am aware he has more than one horse and a mule. Read the comment again. You missed large pieces of information including the person possessive.
Barbara Danley because that wasn’t what you said. You ‘corrected’ my post to the plural and pointed out how many the lucky man cares for. At no point did you say anything positive. If you don’t want people to be defensive don’t undermine what people have posted. Now kindly go away. It’s far too early in the morning for the likes of you.
Sir, you did not mention that, most of all a knight was a landlord. When he was not on the campaign he went out and about his land and looked after the farms. Among many other reasons why Poland did not finish Teutonic Knights in Prussia when we have had a perfect opportunity for it, after the battle of Grunwald 15.7.1410, was that the knights pressed on the King to disband the army because they wanted to come back to their domains and supervise the incoming harvest.
It sounds like the Knight was the medieval equivalent to today's middle manager. Deal with petty issues all day, your superiors expect you to drop everything to worship the ground they walk on as soon as they show up, and when they leave, you now have a gigantic mess to clean up and even more work that you're expected to do. But hey, at least you get a horse out of it.
Thank you for providing so much information which one would never learn in a history class. These tidbits you share really makes a difference in understanding the life and times of a bygone era.
Are you crazy? That channel is all about oak island, mermaids and ancient aliens. The production quality is leaps and bounds ahead of that shithole nowadays.
The village of Gotham (actually not far from where Jason himself grew up) has a similar legend that the inhabitants feigned madness (mental illness was commonly believed to be contagious) to stop the construction of a highway through the village. The reason New York is called Gotham (albeit pronounced differently) is because a New York columnist read the story & thought it resembled what the New York mentality would do if faced with such a situation.
Dear Sir, thank you for the content. I especially appreciate these shorter videos. They seem to be more condensed and efficient for me. Sort of like reading an academic article instead of a book.
Such underrated channel though I hope this channel would grow as big as the other documentary & historical channel & hopefully grab some sponsors for this lad & his team to pay off all the hard work & effort they put into making their unique content.
Brilliant channel. I can see the hard work put into it. It really shows Well done keep up the good work. Hoofing channel and quit relaxing at the same time 👍
So the king would 'mange a la carte' everywhere he went...... maybe the name magna carta was an attempt to fool king john into signing it, thinking he was signing the list of courses at dinner :p
No, “Magna Carta” is “the Great Charter”. If you need more evidence that this is the intended translation: it’s also known as the Charter of Liberties.
Reminds me of season 1 of GoT (or the book) when it was a great concern that the king and his men were arriving in Winterfell. And the final season where that problem is brought up when it comes to Danaerys and her armies and dragons, but then swiftly forgotten about never to be addressed or bothered with again.
Could you tell what are your main sources for those details about law and jurisdiction in the Middle Ages? There is a lot of misinformation about that spread around, and it's a topic I have a lot of interest in, being a lawyer in modern times. Thank you in advance
Make an under-the-table agreement with another knight to mutually loan a small portion of each of your staffs. Then, when the king comes, leave & ride to the other knight's castle. Continue with your staff to a point so far away from home as for it to be unreasonable to travel to that point with an entourage on foot in the time since you were given notice of the king's visit. There, create evidence of your presence. Your household can then say "he's gone yonder" & you have an alibi to "prove" that you didn't flee because you heard the king was coming.
Managing their estates, I would guess? I think educating boys, pages, squires and servants would be significant, then dogs, falcons and horses. Even a modest knight I would guess would have a squire / page - wife - children and probably a housekeeper and a household steward for when he is away.
Watching this has made me realise how right TaleWorlds got feasts in Mount & Blade: Warband. You gotta make sure you have loads of food and drink in your household before hosting a feast, else everyone will get the shits at you.
I had a few points to mention, but I think you ended up mentioning them all. I will say it depended on how large the area he served, and how many knight's responsibilities overlapped. That probably caused many disputes, over jurisdiction when a crime was committed in a field halfway between two villages or a cities various precincts.
imagine the king casually waltzing into your castle and demanding all of your butter
While is almost harvesting season
I imagined. Made me laugh.
check out the norwegian butter crisis
"LESS TALKING! MORE FEASTING!"
- King Harlaus of The Kingdom of Swadia, 1257
*laughs in board shield
This is one of my favorite channels to learn about the medieval period, because you seem to focus far less on the debatable "facts" that most people spew, and focus more on the human aspect. Because of this channel I can connect on a human level to the people of that time. That's far better than simply hearing a statistic about the plague.
well said sir!
I know everyone says it, but this is seriously what History channel should be.
History Channel? you must be referring to the "Ancient Aliens" "Mermaids" and "Sasquatch" channel.
I know right! I'm tired of things that teach or inform nothing. Or the repeats of the Holocaust.
It did used to be like this when I was a kid
Television is dead.
@@zxb995511 Don't you mean The Pawn Stars and American Pickers Channel?
When Prince John (then King) was travelling through the land, a whole town was afraid of him coming there. If he came through that place, then it would be declared a royal road, and would be taxed more heavily. So everyone in the town... pretended to be insane. John decided to avoid the place, and they avoided the tax!
@@daveh3997 While those are funny stories, I don't see how any of them are things that the king's messengers would see while riding through town and understand exactly how mad they were. And of course, I have to wonder if people then were really that gullible?
@Holden Mcgroine Typewirter?
They fooled us!? Outrageous, im gathering men as we speak!
And there was much rejoicing. 🚩🚩🚩
"about stealing a pig, or ploughing the wrong... field."
Odd name for a woman, but okay. ;)
Good grief, I took those lines way to literal I see now!
@@cindchan "On the night of their betrothal, the wife shall open to the man as the furrow to the plow, and he shall work into her, in and again til she bring him to his full." Woah, good Bible.
@@willdavis3802 firefly, nice.
Ploughing the wrong field!
Here during high middle ages in Sweden they made an law so bishops and lords couldn't eat up an person whole storage cause of the abuse of the law of giving hospitality.
Good to know, thank you! We'll look into that, always good to learn more!
Anyone else hear the voice of Jenna Marbles dog while reading this???
@@cp-lk5ye what the fuck ...? Why?
@@ModernKnight Were Knights able to court a future wife, or was the marriage arranged? What responsibilities of a Knight's wife in public and privately. How much money did a knight make? Were did the Knights and his wife and children live and etc. I would like see a videos on these subject, thank You!! These are interesting and educational. A knight would bath the night before the knighthood and had to prey for certain mount of hours. Did you see the Film the " Last Knights, Last Duel??"
I really love these videos. The photography is beautiful. You have a such a warm and human approach to the topic. Keep going!
Kerry Hockey same feeling here
I couldn't agreed more.
Cinematography is the art of video
Photography is the art of still images
Hallo! Although this is unrelated to the topic of your comment, God loves you, and He died for you as Jesus Christ! Please turn entirely to Him while you still can, because time is running out, but don’t be afraid! Have a good day!
“God bless the king but may he never return” the Germans would say
hahaha excellent!
Yes Communists
@@DomhnallOSuileabhainPrin-tm1fw what???
Uhh... das Sprichwort kannte ich nicht. Oder steh ich auf dem Schlauch? Was hattest du da angesprochen?
@@adnanseithe3588 "Gott segne den König, aber möge er nie wieder kommen!" - das ist ein (recht zynisches) Sprichwort aus der Zeit Ottos des Großen
I remember reading somewhere that Elizabeth I wouldn't send troops after rebellious nobles, she would simply visit them and in the course of her visit, effectively bankrupt them. Thus ensuring they had no funds for plotting and schemes. If I can find a link, I will add it.
Yes, I've read the same. Progresses as a political tool were started by her father, I seem to recall, and would last until the host could bear it no more. Terrific stuff!
@Blanc Neige Better to know i have 4 kids that are. 2 nieces, 2 nephews and plenty more on the way. This is going to get fixed. I do not want my sons to be slaves.
@Blanc Neige Do what needs to be done, good luck
@@jonnyenough1531 You know, as a Jew I always feel really hurt when I read things like this - why are all my Jewish friends not letting me in on the schemes? Is there not enough children's blood in my Matzot? Am I not spreading enough disease!?! I'm really trying you know!
It's just makes me feel like the entire Synagogue is off having fun without me.
How did that work out for the Queen tho? Wasn't she afraid that one of those rebellious lords might imprison her, and demand money for her release? Or just kill her because you know, they are rebellious? Can someone explain this plothole?
I absolutely LOVE the content this guy creates. Real history, real facts, real dialogue, no drama.
thanks for your support.
This man, the presenter, has a certain medieval allure and charisma about him. His presence, even his body movements are very convincingly knightly and medieval.
maxavail as i guy with long hair, i have to say its his long hair.
Well, he actually does the things they did, no wonder he is authentically believable.
Btw, he's not only the presenter, he and his brother produce the series. They co own a hugely successful gaming company, so are wealthy af.
he truly does!
You in the field with the horses made me like you so much more. It showed you're real and a true equestrian
The people of Gotham, yes Gotham, near Nottingham acted mad to prevent King John passing through their village, would would have meant that they would have to shoulder more of the costs for maintaining the road. King John was warned of their madness and took a different route to his hunting lodge at King's Clipstone, in the heart of Sherwod Forest.
Fun fact: Nottinghamshire was part of the lands that Prince John held as tennant in chief whilst King Richard was on the throne and this is why he is one of the chief villeins of the Robin Hood stories.
Neil Dahlgaard-Sigsworth
It’s pronounced “goat-um” rather than “goth-am”, but Gotham is indeed a real place.
I don’t believe he would have been a villein but he was a villain.
There is a german saying: long live the king, may he never come back
Ein.Mensch ja
Ein.Mensch i thought u loved your Kaiser
@@BalletsBiggestFan There used to be more German kings than Kaisers. Not to say which ones were more popular company.
why am I now just finding out about this series!? I'm loving it so far, fantastic work!
*texts relatives* "Don't come over, I have the plague, we all have the plague in here"
😅
LOVED that Monty Python-esque 'so-we-ate-the-Minstrels' little portrayal there... :P
Cool story but needs more carona virus
How ironic
None of Yourbusiness it was 10months ago well b4 the carona virus was even leaked info out of China
I just want to add my 2c and say your channel is amazing I love learning about these periods of times and your videos are entertaining from start to finish, You seem like an awesome person And I wish the best for you
Thanks for watching
This is fantastic and needs more views! :)
Thanks samprastherabbit! We have plenty more to come, glad you've enjoyed it so far!
You Tube is full of rubbish having thousands of views, so I'm saddened that this beautifully filmed, excellent and informative content isn't more popular.
I find the omission of dragon slaying and princess rescuing to be quite disappointing.
That all falls under their time fighting, it'll be in a different video
This is why I've come to love History especially when there's more to learn from other people like this guy
I am so in love with Jason, he is so charismatic: a modern-day knight!
Yess! 🙌
wouldn't modern day knights be more akin to a soldier in the military?
I mean, he is LITERALLY a knight, lol.
No, he’s not. He’s a officer of the order, not the top one. Only the top GBE is defined as a knight. That’s why that rank is the only rank allowed to use Sir or Dame. He’s an officer in the peerage.
@@dontask6863 ... no. Either a GBE or a KBE/DBE is a knight/dame. There's MBE, OBE, CBE, KBE/DBE and then GBE. There's a limit on the number of GBE and KBE/DBE who can be living so they are much rarer. But being called "sir" doesn't mean someone is of higher "status" (whatever that means) -- a knight bachelor ranks below all of these and is called "sir."
I always remember, in the Once and Future King, the long descriptions of work on the farm in Sir Ector's household. T. H. White saw the knight as a landholder, and therefore primarily a farmer, who spent the bulk of his time managing what was essentially a plantation. He was much more of a farm manager than farm worker, coordinating the efforts of his vassals, who each had a specialized job in his household.
Peasants were just as much slaves as anyone on a cotton plantation in the U.S, pre civil war.
@ Yes they were. In fact slaves on U.S plantations were better off
@@wufongtanwufong5579 that's pretty incorrect peasants ranged from freeholders to serfs. What's common is that they usually had agreements with their lord that was legally enforceable, and a knight who abused his power risked the ire of his lord who might use this as an excuse to centralise his power.
I'm just gobsmacked by the production value of these episodes! Absolutely fantastic!
One of the great and simple joys I have in life is providing my horse with a clean stable. It’s almost meditative to make it right. And seeing him so happy to return to it after. Glad to see your horse so well cared for.
*Horses*, he has a lot, and a mule. He says he enjoys caring for them as well, does most of the work himself.
Barbara Danley why did you feel the need to add that? I am aware he has more than one horse and a mule. Read the comment again. You missed large pieces of information including the person possessive.
Barbara Danley he didn’t after all clean one stable in the video.
@@1stPrivateAccount, I added that because it is very impressive to me. Caring for one horse is a lot of work. Why are you so defensive?
Barbara Danley because that wasn’t what you said. You ‘corrected’ my post to the plural and pointed out how many the lucky man cares for. At no point did you say anything positive. If you don’t want people to be defensive don’t undermine what people have posted. Now kindly go away. It’s far too early in the morning for the likes of you.
The quality of the video, pictures, sound, music it all adds up. VERY WELL produced 😌
This is my favourite channel on youtube. So chill and interesting. RIP history channel.
Thanks for watching
Sir, you did not mention that, most of all a knight was a landlord. When he was not on the campaign he went out and about his land and looked after the farms. Among many other reasons why Poland did not finish Teutonic Knights in Prussia when we have had a perfect opportunity for it, after the battle of Grunwald 15.7.1410, was that the knights pressed on the King to disband the army because they wanted to come back to their domains and supervise the incoming harvest.
It sounds like the Knight was the medieval equivalent to today's middle manager. Deal with petty issues all day, your superiors expect you to drop everything to worship the ground they walk on as soon as they show up, and when they leave, you now have a gigantic mess to clean up and even more work that you're expected to do.
But hey, at least you get a horse out of it.
Still better than being a peasant
Thank you for providing so much information which one would never learn in a history class. These tidbits you share really makes a difference in understanding the life and times of a bygone era.
I just love your older videos.. which are new ones to me... Wish I would have found your channel when u were becoming popular
Glad you like them!
This channel is amazingly well done. The one thing I absolutely love about it is the music. Everything about this channel is top notch.
Yes, in Thai language (actually it is borrowed from Sanskrit), the translation of the term "Knight" is "Assawin" or in simple Thai term "horseman".
"Ritter" in German, meaning "rider".
I thoroughly enjoy your programs, thank you for uploading them,
thanks for watching
What a cool show you run!! Cheers!
I’m really enjoying this so far! A lot of facts that I’ve never heard of before and it’s very educational and well done.
This channel is amazing, how does it not have more views? History Channel level.
Are you crazy? That channel is all about oak island, mermaids and ancient aliens. The production quality is leaps and bounds ahead of that shithole nowadays.
The village of Gotham (actually not far from where Jason himself grew up) has a similar legend that the inhabitants feigned madness (mental illness was commonly believed to be contagious) to stop the construction of a highway through the village. The reason New York is called Gotham (albeit pronounced differently) is because a New York columnist read the story & thought it resembled what the New York mentality would do if faced with such a situation.
Fascinating stuff. These videos are gems!
Dear Sir, thank you for the content. I especially appreciate these shorter videos. They seem to be more condensed and efficient for me. Sort of like reading an academic article instead of a book.
Very nicely done. Thank you
Interesting I know there’s been five years but is it possible you can do a video about what it’s like to be a king
"Don't come visit we got the rona real bad over here."
- some lord in 1456 probably
We got the Covid-19, my Liege, you cannot come!
Thou shant beat the meat during rona
-Niggaward II 1452
I really love this, the topic is super interesting and the videography is beautiful and the presenter is very likable
Such underrated channel though I hope this channel would grow as big as the other documentary & historical channel & hopefully grab some sponsors for this lad & his team to pay off all the hard work & effort they put into making their unique content.
i could listen to his storys all day long. so relaxing
Those horses are still gorgeous, more horses please!
The music really gets me into it
This is amazing history they need to show this at schools instead of books amazing 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Brilliant channel. I can see the hard work put into it. It really shows Well done keep up the good work. Hoofing channel and quit relaxing at the same time 👍
What is the music playing in the background? It’s beautiful and I must possess it.
In the Morning Sun by Patrick Rundblad -
this is a wonderful series. Thank you so much for putting it together!
Great video!
im really enjoying this channel , greetings from egypt.
Your horses are so beautiful and well taken care of. 😊
Best channel on UA-cam
The story about telling the king not to visit because you have the plague hits differently in the time of COVID-19
Great video ! it was very intresting
production quality and content is better then a lot of the others like skellege
This makes me want to play a medieval strategy game
I am so in love with these series
These are wonderful.. I have been enjoying them!!! Your horses are amazingly beautiful!!!
Really great job on these videos.
I like this format of video compared against some of the newer material
the fabio glamour shots are pretty good
This is a very good and an amazingly underrated channel. Adding a comment to bring to top.
You are a Knight. The Knight of History and Information. And I appreciate you.
Thanks.
I like to see a good natured, non cynical approach to medieval history for a change.
So the king would 'mange a la carte' everywhere he went...... maybe the name magna carta was an attempt to fool king john into signing it, thinking he was signing the list of courses at dinner :p
No, “Magna Carta” is “the Great Charter”. If you need more evidence that this is the intended translation: it’s also known as the Charter of Liberties.
It was a joke, dude. a word joke.
It's good to be the King, sucks to be his knights when he comes around!
Perfect, amazing and excellent channel, subbed
Interesting info and great videos. Also noticed that Master Nick is in charge with the sounds :)
Great video 👍🏻
A true legend!
Reminds me of season 1 of GoT (or the book) when it was a great concern that the king and his men were arriving in Winterfell. And the final season where that problem is brought up when it comes to Danaerys and her armies and dragons, but then swiftly forgotten about never to be addressed or bothered with again.
The background music is wonderful.
Amazing info and content! ♥️
Glad you think so, thanks.
Modern History TV No problem, I’m writing a fantasy epic and your videos really help me understand the history of this sort of era! 😃
WOW KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK MUCH LOVE FROM NEW ZEALAND ;)
Superb
A knight feels like a typical suburban middle class head of household, troubled by taxes, many worries and burdens 😂
i really love your videos
Between their quests they sequin vests and impersonate Clark Gable.
I'm glad I looked up these lyrics...I never quite heard the "sequin" line right.
Amazing Channel!!
Could you tell what are your main sources for those details about law and jurisdiction in the Middle Ages? There is a lot of misinformation about that spread around, and it's a topic I have a lot of interest in, being a lawyer in modern times.
Thank you in advance
You may want to use another contact method, given when this was written and lack of reply. Twittera and email are both public.
I guess its just his own accumulated knowledge from being so into medieval history for his entire life.
@@daveking5466 Depends on what kind of lawyer he is no?
Love it especially the stuff about the food.
Make an under-the-table agreement with another knight to mutually loan a small portion of each of your staffs. Then, when the king comes, leave & ride to the other knight's castle. Continue with your staff to a point so far away from home as for it to be unreasonable to travel to that point with an entourage on foot in the time since you were given notice of the king's visit. There, create evidence of your presence. Your household can then say "he's gone yonder" & you have an alibi to "prove" that you didn't flee because you heard the king was coming.
Super interesting!
Love the music. :)
Thank you.
You're welcome!
Managing their estates, I would guess? I think educating boys, pages, squires and servants would be significant, then dogs, falcons and horses. Even a modest knight I would guess would have a squire / page - wife - children and probably a housekeeper and a household steward for when he is away.
May I know the name of the fabulous music that sounds in the background? Thanks for the video!
Watching this has made me realise how right TaleWorlds got feasts in Mount & Blade: Warband. You gotta make sure you have loads of food and drink in your household before hosting a feast, else everyone will get the shits at you.
How inspiring
In Spanish Knight and Horse are quite literally the same haha being Caballero the word for Knight, and Caballo being Horse.
I had a few points to mention, but I think you ended up mentioning them all. I will say it depended on how large the area he served, and how many knight's responsibilities overlapped. That probably caused many disputes, over jurisdiction when a crime was committed in a field halfway between two villages or a cities various precincts.
World's Most Interesting man!
Good day ,Sir. Can you tell me what music is playing in the background?Sounds wonderfull and i want to learn it on guitar.
Nice.
I do like the idea of the feudal system, kind of makes sense
So they acted basically as sort of sherrif and/or local mayor. Thats actually pretty interesting.
When they aren't fighting they're getting ready to fight.