Surviving the Middle Ages as a Child...

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  • Опубліковано 12 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 799

  • @adabsurdum5905
    @adabsurdum5905 Рік тому +698

    I can't ever hear any historical story without imagining how much pain everyone must have been in all the time.

    • @jerushamaxwell281
      @jerushamaxwell281 Рік тому +50

      Those humans with predatory and/or sadistic natures, have always hunted victims, no matter what the century.

    • @j.c.harrisassetmanagement7939
      @j.c.harrisassetmanagement7939 Рік тому +8

      Hard to believe it could have been worse than what we are experiencing right now. It’s actually crazy to even fathom that.

    • @staciii
      @staciii Рік тому +14

      ​Why would it be hard to believe?? Most of us have it way easier 😂

    • @Bundyphile
      @Bundyphile 11 місяців тому +35

      @j.c.harrisassetmanagement7939 You must be kidding?! We have pain relief these days, we have dentists, doctors, cures for diseases that used to be death sentences, not to mention better quality food, human rights and freedom. I’m a low wage earner but I was lucky to be born in a wealthy, full democratic nation with free health care and as a woman, I have more rights than my mother had when she was young, not to mention the generations of women before her. And I didn’t do anything to “deserve” this, I was just fortunate enough to be born in a better place and time, something many of us should be thankful for. There are still unfortunately so many people that lack all these rights, material things and necessities that we take for granted.

    • @jerushamaxwell281
      @jerushamaxwell281 11 місяців тому +10

      @@Bundyphile So true, Ms. B! I'm also hella grateful for my good fortune to enjoy full rights as a woman, and free health care within a prosperous democracy. Had I been born a decade earlier in the 40's, I would have been still held back by mandated discrimination. I give all credit and thanks to the women who fought so hard, to win us equal rights!

  • @berner
    @berner Рік тому +4049

    Man... I couldn't imagine what it must be like to be a child and already middle aged.

    • @itsthatnoigirl
      @itsthatnoigirl Рік тому +187

      lol! I always wondered why paintings of children always looked older from that period

    • @SnakeKoRn
      @SnakeKoRn Рік тому +35

      And even during the Middle Ages!

    • @cathylemay2215
      @cathylemay2215 Рік тому +12

      Did they even have that concept?

    • @Theresa-Lottodo
      @Theresa-Lottodo Рік тому +5

      I dunno, l've met a few kids that act like middle-aged biggots.😅

    • @robertsteinbach7325
      @robertsteinbach7325 Рік тому +73

      Journal of a Medieval Baby: The day I was born, I was hooked up to a plough and helped daddy plough the field for planting.

  • @infinitejest441
    @infinitejest441 Рік тому +1622

    Medieval artists even depicted children as miniature adults 😂

    • @feywerfolevado6286
      @feywerfolevado6286 Рік тому +35

      Isn’t that what children are, anyway? Hahah “miniature adults” - just not quite grown up yet.

    • @uponamidnightdreary
      @uponamidnightdreary Рік тому +88

      Have you seen those pictures and videos of kids from even the early 1900’s? They look super old. Legit little adults. Even dressed like it.
      Those kids mostly worked and it shows. They had under-eye bags and stress in their eyes, looked like the weight of the world was on their shoulders.
      (When they finally got to be young adults they went off to ww2. Terribly unlucky)

    • @lagopusvulpuz1571
      @lagopusvulpuz1571 Рік тому +32

      They neither understood child psychology or physiology.

    • @SpaceCase6669-myOf
      @SpaceCase6669-myOf Рік тому

      Oooo wait I know the reason for this!!! So basically (of course 🙄) it’s because of Jesus 😮‍💨 sooo they believed that he was born perfect, unchanged. Basically they were meant to make babies look powerful and wise. The reasoning is incredibly stupid to me obviously but I’m not a painter of ugly renaissance babies soo 🤷🏼‍♀️

    • @nothanksplease
      @nothanksplease Рік тому +4

      @@elinope4745 you know what the guy is saying why are you doing this

  • @ingGS
    @ingGS Рік тому +536

    I was born in the 80s. Physical punishment was still widespread and acceptable, so I can believe 1000 years ago it was even worse.

    • @nataliemoraes2033
      @nataliemoraes2033 Рік тому +33

      Yeah, discipline needs to come back.

    • @air1253
      @air1253 Рік тому +79

      @@nataliemoraes2033 no

    • @nataliemoraes2033
      @nataliemoraes2033 Рік тому +41

      @@air1253 that's why you see so many kids out of control and messed up. There's a difference btwn abuse and discipline.

    • @nai5949
      @nai5949 Рік тому +101

      ​@@nataliemoraes2033 There are other ways to raise kids without hitting them. That's just being lazy

    • @nataliemoraes2033
      @nataliemoraes2033 Рік тому +20

      @@nai5949 every kid i know that's not spanked are all screwed up and entitled or in jail

  • @goowampo
    @goowampo Рік тому +2386

    My parents describing how they went to school

    • @sampeeps3371
      @sampeeps3371 Рік тому +77

      I had to walk to school uphill... Both ways!

    • @YouTubeHeado
      @YouTubeHeado Рік тому +10

      That made laugh, mine too

    • @krisfinley6706
      @krisfinley6706 Рік тому +31

      ​@@sampeeps3371 I'm 46 now so I believe it's high time I started describing my life in the same way 😂

    • @sampeeps3371
      @sampeeps3371 Рік тому +33

      @@krisfinley6706 you've got ten years on me, and I'm already telling my niece, I had to live in a cupboard with 5 other families.

    • @krisfinley6706
      @krisfinley6706 Рік тому +8

      Related, has anyone seen the Four Yorkshire Men Monty Python sketch? Still hilarious and I want to incorporate some of it into my own embellishments 😁

  • @felonious_c
    @felonious_c Рік тому +727

    I've heard this exact same story 1000 times, only it started with: "When I was your age..." 🤔

    • @thomasdempsey721
      @thomasdempsey721 Рік тому +4

      😄

    • @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115
      @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115 Рік тому +31

      "...I walked 20000 miles uphill both ways to go to school, and I was the bestest student giving class to the teachers...." Something like that?

    • @felonious_c
      @felonious_c Рік тому +21

      @@nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115 "and worked 2 full time jobs and raised my siblings... And still had straight A's.. "

    • @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115
      @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115 Рік тому +15

      @@felonious_c "My two jobs forced me to work barefoot on snow under the 5000°C sun rays. The Odontocætus were always messing with my pile of Uranium so I had to do overtime every single one of my 500 hours shifts! The youngs these days have it the easiest!"

    • @SunnyLovetts
      @SunnyLovetts Рік тому +4

      Except they lived like kings compared to the children back then, and those children didn’t have time to complain about life.

  • @bruhistantv9806
    @bruhistantv9806 Рік тому +491

    Ludicrously high infant mortality was the biggest issue, really. This lasted all the way to the late 19th century - someone wrote how upon reaching the age of 21,they were further away from death than when they were younger

  • @meganfulton3563
    @meganfulton3563 Рік тому +345

    The claim that parents didn’t love their children as much back then is shaky at best you have to understand that child development just wasn’t understood and also how brutal the adult world was even in the video beating is seen as a way to keep them safe from the plague. Many did this because they felt it was the best way to prepare their children. We have plenty of documentation of families being heart broken by the lost of their children. It’s important to remember that even though the culture was a lot different from today that these were still people with the capacity to feel empathy and love. It’s just that science and politics of the time are much of what’s left for us to study

    • @Stephanie-hr9mk
      @Stephanie-hr9mk Рік тому +23

      Was searching for a comment like this, thank you

    • @cw4608
      @cw4608 Рік тому +55

      I would imagine they cherished each child, but with the knowledge they could be dead of some mysterious malady in an instant. (Recall the bedtime prayer ..if I should die before I wake…. ). They likely kept their emotions guarded in constant preparation for the possibility their child could die.

    • @songforalandelsewhere
      @songforalandelsewhere Рік тому +48

      I love an intelligent comment. Most people eat up that people didn't have human emotions untill recently which is crazy.

    • @realleon2328
      @realleon2328 Рік тому +13

      I think for many centuries the beating of children was almost seen as a way to show care for them. Family systems in that time were very complex with the way death was so widespread and the number of children people would have.

    • @hannahbg1852
      @hannahbg1852 Рік тому +6

      Agreed 100%, they were human too!

  • @Zeldafan1ify
    @Zeldafan1ify Рік тому +1549

    *a child is born, and it begins to speak:*
    Newborn: doctor, pray tell, what time is it?
    Doctor: my dear babe, it is morning! Your mother has birthed a son!
    Newborn: no! i mean what time period is this??
    Mother: my baby boy, it is 1593
    Newborn: *cries hysterically*

  • @ernestweaver9720
    @ernestweaver9720 Рік тому +393

    My Mother enjoyed beating me black and blue everyday. Literally. She used certain implements too her liking. It wasn't until I reached the age of seven and I told her I would get bigger than her that it all came to an abrupt stop. My Dad was always out of town working. When he came home and found all the marks on me my Mother got the same. This however did not teach her but made her furious. I ran away from home at the age of twelve when my Dad divorced my Mother. I Never went back and now I am 62. I was married and never had any kids. This was my Mothers fault when at the age of five she beat me so bad I ended up in a hospital for four months. Why a parent would do something this awful to their own kids blows my mind.
    I have to add this.
    Don't get me wrong. My Mother fed and clothed me and taught me right from wrong. She also made sure I had decent grades in school. I love my Mother but also can't stand her. I never saw or talked to her again. She passed several year's ago and I did not know. Some of us just have mean Mother's I guess. If I would have had kids yes I probably would have paddled them if they were bad. But Not in any way, shape or form would I strike a child in anger or pleasure. Yes my ex, my girlfriends and my late fiance 'If she were still alive.' would attest to that.

    • @sproutsrevil6508
      @sproutsrevil6508 Рік тому +73

      I’m so sorry for young you. 🥹. I hope uou found happiness after such an appalling start

    • @terriwetz6077
      @terriwetz6077 Рік тому +72

      Can't help but wonder why no one stepped in and took you away from her, or better yet, put her in jail after that horrible beating at age 5! I'm your age and know things were a lot different back then but truly horrific shit was usually dealt with.

    • @natalieeis9284
      @natalieeis9284 Рік тому +23

      I am sorry this happened to you and I am hoping you found lots of happiness despite all that.

    • @ernestweaver9720
      @ernestweaver9720 Рік тому +29

      @@terriwetz6077 When you said your age you answered your question. It was the sixties and being Catholic it was okay for a Mother to discipline their child and everything was kept hush hush. I was just one of many unfortunate kids that had a mean Mother. But please don't get me wrong. She fed and clothed me
      Taught me right from wrong and made sure I had decent grades in school. Yes I love my Mother but hate her too. She passed away several year's ago and never knew about it.

    • @lukec.872
      @lukec.872 Рік тому +11

      @@ernestweaver9720 How did you make it in the world at age 12? And did you ever get anything good out of catholicism later?

  • @christinestreeter8566
    @christinestreeter8566 Рік тому +334

    It seems like childhood really wasn’t much of a thing until recently…like 1900s. You had kids and they worked your land or went to a factory as the technology advanced. Most third world countries operate that way as well. If you go to school it’s normally only a few years, if your lucky enough to get educated at all.

    • @HK-gm8pe
      @HK-gm8pe Рік тому +20

      yep...my grandparents who lived in soviet union have told me how they worked full days as children , I was always horrifyed when I heard stories about their childhood :D I am 26 and I can say that I was spoiled as f growing up

    • @TuesdayDulin
      @TuesdayDulin Рік тому +8

      I'm so sorry the woman meant to nurture you was so abusive. Children are precious and not everyone knows how to be a capable mom. You deserved better. It's stories like yours that drive me to be the best mom possible. For the kids who didn't have that.

    • @kimwhatmatters4085
      @kimwhatmatters4085 Рік тому +3

      Working is education if it’s what you want to do you only need school for a few yrs to become literate and accounting which is what most ppl need. We need to have job training and less prerequisites for jobs. The whole point of a job was supposed to be the employer took on all the risk that’s why that got a higher percentage of profit. You’re not paid as much as a owner but your guaranteed your pay and it’s steady. Now the employee takes on a ton of risk you must come to the job with 10s or 100s of thousands of dollars in training that you paid for yourself that took 4 yrs or more with experience in said trade. Where’s the employers risk they don’t even need to know the trade now why hire you to literally do everything you learn nothing from the job the employer reaps all the benefits even tho with your training along side your coworkers non of you actually need your employer. It’s too imbalanced now before jobs were opportunities to learn and rank up maybe become and owner now most employers don’t even wanna make you an official worker you’re contracted so damn now it’s really dumb you’re not getting the bigger percentage of the money because the last incentive to be a worker is guaranteed steady pay and that’s been ripped away. That’s why most businesses now have a high threshold to start it up either: expensive licenses, equipment cost a lot, real estate cost,facilitating costs, industry already been monopolized so at every level you’re blocked ect ect. Basically entertainment is they online field you can raise up class levels from either: pro sports, music, acting, art(drawing/painting/sculpting, book writer, screen play, makeup/special effects), influencer (insta,TikTok,YT, whatever else comes out). scamming not really entertainment but you gotta be entertaining to scam via e-mail 2 NFTs. Capitalism “representative” democracy suck at this late stage they’re okay structures but obviously after 100s of yrs the elite figure a way to rig these systems like any other except they play sick mind games and say we decide who’s in charge and we have a chance at wealth so we don’t start a coup or riot because we don’t realize we’re not free or being F over we’ve been groomed to blame ourselves. Ppl liter don’t wanna tax the rich because they might become rich and don’t want half there money going to the government 😂. We’re taught to admire the rich because we pretend riches here are gotten out of merit. Making it fair and equal we all have the sane 24hrs blah blah

    • @tell-me-a-story-
      @tell-me-a-story- Рік тому +5

      That’s not true. I’ve read stories from the BC era where the concept of children as apposed to adults is very well developed.
      In tribal societies, children often are a separate rank from other people, a different name from their adult self, a different outfit, and more basic duties.
      Adolescents often undergo ceremonies where they entered adulthood.

    • @LeolaGlamour
      @LeolaGlamour Рік тому

      Try 1950s

  • @xennnyu8664
    @xennnyu8664 Рік тому +106

    my grandpa on my moms side used to be very traditional. Were asian and he wanted his firstborn to be a boy. My mother turned out to be a girl and my grandpa beat my grandmother for that on a daily to the point she had almost died. My mother wasn’t safe either, she was abused by both her parents and has severe trauma to where she can’t remember a huge chunk of her childhood. My mother swore she would never hit her kids and she did exactly that except she only had an addiction of smoking and drinking which only lead to verbal abuse. I actually feel so bad for kids in medieval time. Their brains were still developing yet they were considered as adults, and the fact that people at the time had little to no affection to their kids? I’m so glad in the recent century’s we have grown to have more empathy and sympathy

    • @coolkitty2075
      @coolkitty2075 Рік тому +6

      My mother 'had an accident' when she was 2 and nearly died.
      She was poorly most of her life - nice

    • @Enjemnsnens
      @Enjemnsnens Рік тому +2

      U are breaking cycles little by little

    • @xennnyu8664
      @xennnyu8664 Рік тому

      stop when i wrote that comment idekw i wrote my moms whole backstory LMAO. I think maybe its because if it was bad recently imagine how bad it was before@@coolkitty2075

    • @jaymike3302
      @jaymike3302 10 місяців тому +1

      I'm sure some people had affection for kids in Medieval times.

    • @TanishaMajumdar
      @TanishaMajumdar 9 місяців тому +4

      Verbal abuse is as bad as beating.. Destroyed any self confidence I could have earned in childhood made me think verbal abuse and use of swear words were normal which led me to get into a toxic relationship with a man who didn't know how to communicate and even debate in a polite way... Always verbally abused me until I earned some of my self respect and left for good...

  • @ABerCul
    @ABerCul Рік тому +58

    Also every child was a mouth to feed & when your already barely surviving becoming pregnant wasn't a happy time. Most were terrified of pregnancy due to so many mothers dying during pregnancy, childbirth, or after birth infections. Not to mention birthing dead babies was looked at as YOU wanted the baby dead.

  • @joseybryant7577
    @joseybryant7577 Рік тому +75

    That thumbnail baby has been through it.

  • @gregmonks
    @gregmonks Рік тому +162

    My granddad, born in 1892, always said, "You're either a kid living at home or an adult living on your own. He had been working in a stone quarry since the age of 7.

    • @kaptainkaos1202
      @kaptainkaos1202 Рік тому +13

      I agree! I left home at 15 in 1978. I lived on the streets for a year. Even though I was on the streets I took odd jobs in order to eat. Got a decent job at 16 with fake ID. Saved until I could rent a room from a girl’s family I had met. When I turned 17 I returned home so my parents could sign for me to join the US Navy. I look at kids nowadays and there’s no way most could pull off what I did. I volunteer extensively in my community with the homeless. I know what it’s like to be so hungry I fought a possum for a bag of day old donuts the store threw away.

    • @gregmonks
      @gregmonks Рік тому +5

      @@kaptainkaos1202 I left home in '72. Punched a friend of my stepmother's in the face for calling me a deadbeat and referring to my wages from a labour job as a handout. I was getting $1.24 an hour, 12-hour days, paid for 8 because they didn't pay overtime where I was working. The bitch had been given my bed, even though I was paying rent for the privilege of living at home. I took the hint, left home, lived on the streets for a week, landed a job, got a room to rent, never spoke to my parents again. Same as my great-granddad, who had been dumped the same way in Dublin, Ireland, a century before. He never spoke to his parents again either.

    • @diggs1989
      @diggs1989 Рік тому +3

      My grandfather was a Caribbean man born in 1919. His father died of the flu when he was 7 & his mom was gone by the time he was 16. He often told me about the time he spent on multiple islands. He said once his parents were gone he had to travel to where the work was.

    • @littlelady9801
      @littlelady9801 Рік тому +1

      If you don't mind me asking, how old are you?

    • @sleepyjo9340
      @sleepyjo9340 3 місяці тому

      ​@@kaptainkaos1202narcissism

  • @egyptcat4301
    @egyptcat4301 Рік тому +76

    With all the disease and early death of the Middle Ages, isn't it amazing that any of us are here to read about it?

    • @sbostic08
      @sbostic08 Рік тому +20

      Not everyone came from Europe....

    • @gdredd9587
      @gdredd9587 Рік тому

      Lol what an ignorant comment

    • @fumky4768
      @fumky4768 Рік тому +4

      Not really, 1. We don’t all hail from Europe believe it or not and 2. Humans are like roaches we’re extremely tenacious

    • @kelleygreengrass
      @kelleygreengrass Рік тому +6

      ​@@sbostic08you act like diseases didn't happen in other continents 😂😂😂😂

    • @sbostic08
      @sbostic08 11 місяців тому

      @@kelleygreengrass Clearly my comment went over your head. You can't help stupid 🙄

  • @tiffanyi5645
    @tiffanyi5645 Рік тому +63

    This just made give a tight hug to my 7 year old daughter and 1 year old baby son ❤️❤️

  • @MD-zm6sn
    @MD-zm6sn Рік тому +95

    This universe is just a pain generator man. The greatest cruelty is how blissful existence could be if these concepts of pain and fear weren't capable of being so overwhelmingly powerful. The bad just outweighs the good so much. Oh wow I'm really impressed with the graphics in this.

    • @AbcAbc-oy2le
      @AbcAbc-oy2le Рік тому

      So true

    • @chickenlover657
      @chickenlover657 Рік тому +2

      Meh, you just choose to see the worst side of things.

    • @MD-zm6sn
      @MD-zm6sn Рік тому +13

      @@chickenlover657 You're definitely not seeing exactly what it is that I'm saying.

    • @chickenlover657
      @chickenlover657 Рік тому

      @@MD-zm6sn You only think that because I'm opposing your opinion. But hey, if you believe I misunderstood - explain it better to me.

    • @MD-zm6sn
      @MD-zm6sn Рік тому +4

      @Jamés Banios Oh aren't you the little contrarian.

  • @wayner396
    @wayner396 Рік тому +105

    This was fascinating if not a little horrifying. As somebody who's always been interested in the middle ages I've often wondered about this. Thank you for your great videos

  • @patshore4359
    @patshore4359 Рік тому +46

    I would love to hear about nurseries in the middle ages. Especially the upper class. Thank you

    • @gregmonks
      @gregmonks Рік тому +8

      Nurseries were more a phenomenon of the 19th century with the rise of the Middle Class.

    • @coolkitty2075
      @coolkitty2075 Рік тому

      I think people had nannies in their own homes back then 😊

  • @TheLordofsummerisle
    @TheLordofsummerisle Рік тому +316

    Great video! But I think you ought to have addressed how children's lives varied depending on their parents' economic status. I would say the children of nobles and royals probably had an upbringing closer to what we consider "childhood" in the modern world. They had toys, tutors, and (in the case of royal heirs) were considered precious by the adults around them.

    • @SofaKingShit
      @SofaKingShit Рік тому +7

      Probably less hassle for a nurse to drop a modern baby on it's head these days. Probably simply end up in alcohol counseling instead of being flayed alive.

    • @remilenoir1271
      @remilenoir1271 Рік тому +38

      Children were considered precious in every strata of society.
      As a peasant or artisan your offspring meant aid and succession for the time you couldn't work anymore.

    • @amh9494
      @amh9494 Рік тому +7

      This goes for just about everything from diet to access to entertainment though. The general population for the most part live better than medieval nobility.

    • @elinat2414
      @elinat2414 Рік тому +10

      True, but the period of childhood also ended much earlier. Boys often went on campaign with their fathers in their early teens, and noble girls were married at a young age.

    • @Atlashands26
      @Atlashands26 Рік тому +2

      Noble children might have been taught by a priest, or they would just learn things like archery for boys and being a good wife for girls.

  • @tell-me-a-story-
    @tell-me-a-story- Рік тому +49

    Childhood was defiantly a concept in ancient times. Children were often seen as being closer to the spirits, such a angels, saints, and vampires. Children still had to work, but they were definitely treated differently from adults.

  • @kaptainkaos1202
    @kaptainkaos1202 Рік тому +56

    The D for Discipline strikes a chord with me. I have 2 grown children. My spouse and I never once struck, slapped or beat our children. That was HARD! It’s so much easier to slap a child’s hand than come up with something to punish and teach the child. Like I said my children are now adults. They are successful, great parents themselves now and are just good people. Couldn’t be prouder of either.

    • @almondkissed3794
      @almondkissed3794 Рік тому +2

      You don’t know every side of your children . Yeah they are great people in front of you

    • @rifIedoII
      @rifIedoII Рік тому +5

      @@almondkissed3794you’re perpetuating a stereotype right now lol

    • @GeorgeSukFuk
      @GeorgeSukFuk Рік тому

      I got hit a lot as a kid because I acted like a cunt. Lessons learned

    • @Vorticough
      @Vorticough Рік тому +1

      if you would ever hurt your own child instead of actually be a parent and teach them not to do what they are doing you shouldn't be a parent
      it does more psychological harm than good

    • @kaptainkaos1202
      @kaptainkaos1202 Рік тому +1

      @@Vorticough huh?

  • @drivenbyrage5710
    @drivenbyrage5710 Рік тому +8

    Back then they had children who had to grow up too soon. Now we have adults who never grew up.

  • @OstblockLatina
    @OstblockLatina Рік тому +6

    8:00 I don't remember the exact date now, but at some point in Medieval Europe infanticide of the new-borns was allowed by the law, as long as the baby didn't recive any earthly food. There were instances when one of the other parent or other person wanted to save the baby, which they expected could fall victim of infanticide, would put some honey or goat milk or anything else (apparently in the case that the biological mother wouldn't or couldn't feed the baby directly after delivery) in the baby's mouth, causing the child to obtain protection of the law and warding off any attempts of child murder.

  • @kadenstimpson3167
    @kadenstimpson3167 Рік тому +38

    thumbnail bro is hanging on for dear life 💀💀

  • @galloe8933
    @galloe8933 Рік тому +23

    Today, on a very special episode of Sesame Street, we learn the alphabet. Yay!
    A is for apple, yummy and good.
    B is for ball, what a fun toy!
    C is for child murder.
    D is for dog, what a great pet!
    E is for… Wait, can we go back to C for a second?

  • @FindTheFun
    @FindTheFun Рік тому +51

    I saw this title and thumbnail and started HOWLING with laughter. This is gonna be just the most insanely dark shit, isn't it?

  • @southsiren
    @southsiren Рік тому +22

    Corporal punishment was still legal in SCHOOLS in 2001...in alabama.
    The gym teacher usually came to the classroom to do it in front of everybody. He was like the executioner. He was proud of his paddle, he bragged the holes in the wood made it swing faster.

    • @finsta4979
      @finsta4979 Рік тому +2

      i graduated high school in 2019 and they still paddled people up till middle school

    • @southsiren
      @southsiren Рік тому +6

      @@finsta4979 oh my good god! Where were you in school? 2019!

    • @phuck8627
      @phuck8627 11 місяців тому

      um...look up the current laws, it hasn't stopped and it's still legal in a lot of states

  • @rickyspanish5316
    @rickyspanish5316 Рік тому +74

    child murder not considered homicide until the late medival century bruh

    • @nightshadesylv
      @nightshadesylv Рік тому +18

      I mean I kinda don't blame them, they had no birth control and to them with no knowledge of sids or shaken baby syndrome they probably thought kids died randomly anyway

    • @gregmonks
      @gregmonks Рік тому +23

      Child killing was common because famine was common. Many parents killed their own children rather than watch them starve to death.

  • @karenchildressbentley6775
    @karenchildressbentley6775 Рік тому +12

    My favorite channel. More videos on just living and everyday life

  • @gregmonks
    @gregmonks Рік тому +14

    Even in the 19th century, with child labour childhood was often a horror that one survived. Assuming they survived.

  • @MrDainemudda
    @MrDainemudda Рік тому +13

    There is a story about El Cid, the knight who basically spearhead the reconquista against the Muslims in Spain. During his medival feasts his daughters used to crush the party and pull their father's beard. He of course shouted displeased in a mighty voice that made everybody's blood freeze and shiver in fear. His daughters just giggled and ran their way... Pretty much the same when I shout at my daughter during barbecues or parties across the room when I catch her doing mischief - everybody drops his shit only for her to do the exact same thing only slower and smiling at me waiting for another reaction on my part. Not much seemed to have changed. On the other hand you have Rembrandt who sometimes knew approximately how many sons he had - the number of daughters was of no concern for him...

  • @gavhenrad
    @gavhenrad Рік тому +98

    Poor kids..its surprising humans survived at all through that period 😆

    • @diegoaespitia
      @diegoaespitia Рік тому +19

      i mean.. not really. u just had more kids

    • @ranjapi693
      @ranjapi693 Рік тому +10

      Well..thats because they had lots of kids while they were able to. Some might make it and survive.

    • @athelstan927
      @athelstan927 Рік тому +2

      What's funny about it? Smh

    • @gavhenrad
      @gavhenrad Рік тому

      ​@@athelstan927too soon?

  • @jonathanstoutenburg8634
    @jonathanstoutenburg8634 Рік тому +7

    I have learnt so much about the entire period saving all your lessons/stories.

  • @ShaddowSallow
    @ShaddowSallow 10 місяців тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @LloydEWatson1983
    @LloydEWatson1983 Рік тому +60

    I can't imagine being a kid without Thundercats and Fiendish Feet yoghurts.

    • @LadyCoyKoi
      @LadyCoyKoi Рік тому +13

      or without Flintstones push-pops. That was my go to treat in the 1980s and 90s.

  • @fangsandfolklore8795
    @fangsandfolklore8795 Рік тому +10

    The concept of childhood in the Middle Ages did indeed exist, but it was just much, much shorter than today.

  • @scoopydaniels8908
    @scoopydaniels8908 Рік тому +16

    I think childhood is a much more modern construct.. Like early 1900's. Before then leisure time was only available to the upper class.

  • @netto6681
    @netto6681 Рік тому +16

    My dad frequently succumbed to ague and frenzy when I spilt stuff on the carpet.

  • @cw4608
    @cw4608 Рік тому +2

    I am always impressed by the variety and suitability of images you use in your videos. Well done.

  • @DarkElfDiva
    @DarkElfDiva Рік тому +38

    "A medieval childhood was a completely different experience than it is today."
    I dunno, the beatings sound pretty much identical to what I experienced as a child, right down to the lash cuts and fractured skull.

    • @derekgrier1040
      @derekgrier1040 Рік тому

      That’s it?

    • @kameliyaoppal
      @kameliyaoppal Рік тому +6

      Agreed. It’s still happening all over the world, ig it’s just not as common as it was back then.

    • @uatcgfhdhu
      @uatcgfhdhu Рік тому

      You could say you're vintage.

  • @amh9494
    @amh9494 Рік тому +14

    Corporal punishment was also administered to adults though.

  • @mikeevers9079
    @mikeevers9079 Рік тому +10

    I studied Medieval History at uni eons ago. At the time it was fairly interesting, but the method of delivery was mostly boring. This video really fires up the imagination and the probability of fact makes so much sense of . I'm in danger of rediscovering my love for the subject again. Great stuff.

  • @mp3music804
    @mp3music804 Рік тому +4

    I’m literally in pain while sitting in a chair in 2023 and I have all the comfort in the world with my air conditioner. I would not survive even standing there in those times.

  • @professionaltrollkilla5965
    @professionaltrollkilla5965 Рік тому +6

    What a time to have been alive

  • @HVS-gk7oo
    @HVS-gk7oo Рік тому +25

    Now we need a series of these with the rest of the alphabet

  • @acrowlovesme
    @acrowlovesme Рік тому

    Reminds me vividly of my childhood in my hometown. There was no separation from adults to children, well, actually there was just adults. Children were not considered

  • @nociasd7773
    @nociasd7773 Рік тому +2

    have a great week too mate

  • @noonefromnowhere9940
    @noonefromnowhere9940 Рік тому +3

    I need these videos.. but longer. LONGER!

  • @estermihailova
    @estermihailova 6 місяців тому +1

    What a nightmare and horror for the most innocent…. Child cruelty/abuse still common in todays world 😢

  • @robanybody4064
    @robanybody4064 Рік тому +3

    It's remarkable that any of us are alive today.

  • @Mediocre_JT
    @Mediocre_JT Рік тому +9

    Thank you to my old ancestors for keeping the bloodline going.

    • @PaganLad3121
      @PaganLad3121 Рік тому +2

      Yea true that but their rolling around in their Graves now

  • @KimberlyPatton-x1n
    @KimberlyPatton-x1n 29 днів тому

    This channel is so great! You deserve 1 million subs!❤❤❤

  • @dianawatton7570
    @dianawatton7570 Рік тому +5

    Not being allowed to be a child exists today. I have known parents who would not allow their children to talk “baby talk”, play childhood games etc. It was as if the parents could not wait to celebrate “the empty nest.”

    • @margaretr5701
      @margaretr5701 Місяць тому

      Yes, thats sad, along with the American opinion, that a child has to be out of the house, the minute they turn 18.

  • @poeticsilence047
    @poeticsilence047 Рік тому +1

    Been waiting for this one.

  • @saturn7947
    @saturn7947 10 місяців тому +2

    Even then i would have loved my child dearly and would've done anything for him/ her 😢

    • @millymilly7935
      @millymilly7935 7 місяців тому +2

      Right me too 😭 this makes me sad and I don’t know what were in peoples brains at that time..

    • @margaretr5701
      @margaretr5701 Місяць тому

      @@millymilly7935 I would imagine survival was on their mind, most of the time!

  • @MoonlitNoon
    @MoonlitNoon Рік тому +4

    My mother doesn't love me, or if she does it's not nearly as much as the other two children she has with my stepfather. I can't remember a single time of her hugging me, telling me she loved me, or that she was proud of me. I did hear how r*tarded and stupid I was. No common sense, she'd say. She'd lay into me for a good time and then leave me to myself. Nothing I did was good enough, and I was the "bad" kid for getting into an abusive relationship (guess who helped push me into it?) And for not following "3 simple rules". I was kicked out at 18. There was also no depression when I was young, so I went completely untreated and unnoticed because my stepfather didn't want any meds or therapy around our family. But when my sister started showing mental health signs? Let's get her all the treatment.
    I refuse to be a mother like she was, I will smother my kids with love and communication. I will never make them feel like they don't belong in the family. I don't even know if I want my kids around them. I guess it was just the hand I was dealt.

    • @americandevo
      @americandevo Рік тому +2

      You were chosen as the family scapegoat. Neglected, abused, gaslighted and discarded.
      I was treated the same in my family. I was not kicked out but I left home at 18. The abuse continued into adulthood. I attemped many times to talk to my family and get them to change the horrible way they treated me but of course THEY didn't need to change because according to them I was the one with the problem. When their abusive ways were extended to my children I went NO CONTACT.
      Please take my advice and protect your children from being hurt by your abusive family by going "black rock" or the lesser "Grey rock".
      I know you will be an excellent parent but one piece of advice: Don't be afraid to be firm with your children and don't let them "get away with it" when they are bad.
      The one problem I had as a parent was that I was to permissive. I was so used to just having to put up with it even I was wronged that I let my kids get away with a lot of stuff they did.
      Good luck and remember that you are not "bad" and you did nothing to deserve the abuse.

  • @joycebarricella3050
    @joycebarricella3050 Рік тому +1

    Childhood is a very magical time,. We want to.go back.

  • @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
    @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Рік тому +1

    00:55 March of Madness NOW WITH 1992 GRAPHICS!

  • @loghanditheimperialdiehard8876

    Back in my day, we had to cross the hot gates and pass the might of Xerxes army, best his immortals, run from Sauron, and narrowly escape a foe on par with every Dark Souls Boss ever just to make it to school. Also milk came in glass bottles and if you were Gay you couldn’t talk about it.

  • @gedrooney9305
    @gedrooney9305 Рік тому +3

    My father to this day claims he used to sleep in a drawer..1950’s Ireland was tough.

    • @Eoin_D
      @Eoin_D 3 місяці тому

      Same with my parents and the poverty in general.

  • @benjermany9750
    @benjermany9750 Рік тому +2

    2:22 to skip the advertisement…

  • @refereeLK
    @refereeLK Рік тому +2

    Childhood is a social concept developed after the Child Protection Act 1889 was passed. Before then, children mucked in once they were old enough and they were not protected or compulsory schooled like today

  • @geigertec5921
    @geigertec5921 Рік тому +13

    All our ancestors survived the middle ages, that is why we are alive right now, it wasn't that difficult especially if you were strong and fit. That's why so many people have the last name "Smith" because black smiths were extreemly physically fit and most likely to survive pandemics, everyone who has the last name Smith today is descendant from these strong individuals.

    • @wes773105333
      @wes773105333 Рік тому +2

      I've always been told that my family's last name was Blacksmith and at some point they shortened it to Smith. Never really thought about blacksmiths being fit people and that being the reason the name Smith is common but I guess it makes sense.

    • @geigertec5921
      @geigertec5921 Рік тому +4

      @@wes773105333 Yes, and this is also why the last name Hatter is so comparatively rare despite the art of hat making being so widespread, it is because making hats was deadly due to the toxic fumes of Mercury vapor, so Hatters rarely lived long enough to reproduce thus nobody these days has that last name. The last names Fletcher (arrow maker), Cooper (barrel maker), and Miller (flour maker) are common now because these professions/names were not deadly and their children lived on to become our grand parents, parents, and eventually us.

  • @pacarter7169
    @pacarter7169 4 місяці тому

    The information I personally have encountered… children were not allowed to speak unless spoken to, but at an early age had chores or farm work to be done.
    And the only time they were recognized is if they had an acquired talent in music or art or in a wealthy home or royalty… meaning some form of education. Though there was a time for play or toys, but personally I have not seen a lot of pictures of this nature.

  • @AhhPeepzilla
    @AhhPeepzilla Рік тому

    Excellent as always

  • @liverslivers
    @liverslivers Рік тому

    fantastic as always

  • @chrissyrocco796
    @chrissyrocco796 Рік тому +1

    I remember being beaten,choked ,hair pulled out and verbally abused as well.

  • @Torque2100
    @Torque2100 Рік тому +1

    Great video but the music track is giving me Flashbacks. There's a note that sounds almost exactly like the "BIOS Error" beep a computer makes when a serious hardware fault is detected. I kept panicking looking for which one of my devices just Blue Screened.

  • @Proctor488
    @Proctor488 Рік тому

    Love the video just subscribed

  • @ModernPracticalStonemason
    @ModernPracticalStonemason Рік тому +5

    Mate your videos are top notch 👌🏼 I think it may be the first time I’ve heard my trade even mentioned (mason) on UA-cam. Have you read Pillars of The Earth by Ken Follett? I’d love it if you done more about trades and jobs etc I enjoyed the apprenticeship section.

  • @RosiePosey5150
    @RosiePosey5150 Рік тому +6

    You do a wonderful job narrating

    • @SunnyLovetts
      @SunnyLovetts Рік тому

      You do a wonderful job raising children :)

  • @katherinetomasello3661
    @katherinetomasello3661 Рік тому +14

    I remember learning about how shocked native Americans were when they saw European settlers hitting/beating thier children. Discipline actually means to teach, beatings are about power and control and basically brainwash a person into submission out of self preservation.

    • @yourgodemperorofeverything1354
      @yourgodemperorofeverything1354 Рік тому +3

      I assume you refer to north american natives, since mezoamericans had very severe phisical.punishments for their children, that would put europeans to shame.
      North american antives had completly diffrent type of societies, they were smallee communities and that way it was easier to ensure children behaved well, though I am quiet sure that it depended on tribe because I think there were some stories about how natives kept their children in line.
      Europeans, aztecs, inkas, chinese, all those groups that had huge civilizations with nonilities and heavy social hierarchy were completly diffrent case. All used phisical punishment as a way to tech and prepare their children for live, as it reflected how adult world was (punishments for crimes were often inflicted swiftly).

  • @giab1188
    @giab1188 Рік тому +12

    Starts at 2:24

  • @Philip-bk2dm
    @Philip-bk2dm Рік тому +18

    Chastity has a practical use in that it helps to avoid venereal infections and unwanted pregnancies even if wrapped in benighted religious superstition.

    • @lauriallantorni3761
      @lauriallantorni3761 Рік тому +12

      thankfully we have condoms for that now.

    • @kameliyaoppal
      @kameliyaoppal Рік тому +1

      @@lauriallantorni3761 im pretty sure things similar to condoms existed. I have read it somewhere but it was years ago

    • @JA-jx1hk
      @JA-jx1hk Рік тому

      Have fun with your wife that has a 20 plus body count that will divorce you in 10 years and take all your stuff. At least you don’t have to deal with religious superstitions!

    • @valerianmandrake
      @valerianmandrake Рік тому

      Makes little sense that the men weren't expected to be as chaste as the women though. Men can always impregnate a woman,wheras women can only get pregnant during about 5 days per month. But "Eve's sin" and all that...

    • @Philip-bk2dm
      @Philip-bk2dm Рік тому

      @@valerianmandrake Lets face it .We live in a brutal and sexist society. Our insanity is revealed by our religious beliefs and greed.

  • @colorman4490
    @colorman4490 Рік тому +10

    So basically like growing up on a farm.

  • @tanglewife
    @tanglewife Рік тому +1

    Good job nothing like any of this goes on anymore... 😢

  • @CharleyA73
    @CharleyA73 Рік тому +1

    Fascinating stuff! I love hearing about the Middle Ages, it’s such an alien society compared to today. Fyi “chaste” rhymes with waste, and “ague” rhymes with Hague

  • @KillRacingNotHorses
    @KillRacingNotHorses 27 днів тому

    Would love to see the face behind this brilliant voice! Perfect narration.

  • @genevieveforrest9594
    @genevieveforrest9594 2 місяці тому

    Speak for yourselves, in so many indigenous cultures around the world including mine, Australian Aboriginal, childhood was and still is a treasured time of life. How sad that the Europeans experience was so miserable. ❤

  • @foxtailedcritter
    @foxtailedcritter Рік тому +3

    I turn 29 this year and I grew up on corporal punishment (belts, thrashings, ect.) Can't even imagine what the kids in the middle ages got especially since kids being K illed had lessen sentence plus I can't image they had CPS back then.

  • @perrytheplate
    @perrytheplate Рік тому

    I read the title as: “Surviving the ages as a middle child.” And clicked because it seemed so oddly specific, I can’t believe I have 20/20 vision

  • @coreysayre1376
    @coreysayre1376 Рік тому +1

    Someone please tell me what that background music is @~2:21

  • @Frosty_tha_Snowman
    @Frosty_tha_Snowman Рік тому +6

    Difficulty: *Impossible.*

  • @serahloeffelroberts9901
    @serahloeffelroberts9901 Рік тому +5

    The guild apprenticeship system is still used in Germany today. My friend served a 7 year apprenticeship to learn to manage a kennel including care, feeding and grooming dogs, selecting dogs for breeding and special care of dogs in labor and caring for puppies, and training dogs in tracking, obedience and protection. I don't believe there is any equivalent training system in the USA.

    • @lavinder11
      @lavinder11 Рік тому +1

      There is, depending on the industry. It's called job shadowing and varies in length.

    • @tomp6685
      @tomp6685 Рік тому +1

      I'm a plumbing apprentice. I have to shadow a journeyman plumber for four years and clock in 8000 on the job hours until I can work on my own. But apprenticeships aren't as common in the US as they used to be.

  • @gja1605
    @gja1605 Рік тому +34

    Interesting video. One thing: the word “chaste” is not pronounced “Cha-st” it is pronounced “chay-st”

    • @flintsky7706
      @flintsky7706 Рік тому +5

      Not in American English

    • @dreamdiction
      @dreamdiction Рік тому

      @@flintsky7706 American English pronounces "chaste" the same way as English English.
      ua-cam.com/video/agK7eMaK7Q8/v-deo.html

    • @diogeneslantern18
      @diogeneslantern18 Рік тому +1

      @@flintsky7706 you lot have bastardised our language enough already.

    • @SaltTectonics
      @SaltTectonics Рік тому +6

      ​@@diogeneslantern18 English was basterdised long before it came to america. Its a hodge-podge of like 5 different languages

    • @vickiephelps5169
      @vickiephelps5169 Рік тому

      Or chased. 😉

  • @Gorehoundula
    @Gorehoundula Рік тому +12

    I literally cannot believe the lack of value placed on children's lives. Not only is protection of young a basic instinct all over nature, where the survival of offspring is often unlikely, but wouldn't the rarity of surviving children make the ones that survived so far infinitely MORE valuable? Can someone explain this?

    • @chickenlover657
      @chickenlover657 Рік тому

      Are you 12?

    • @Gorehoundula
      @Gorehoundula Рік тому +1

      @@chickenlover657 The hell kind of question is that?

    • @Lilpumpkin505
      @Lilpumpkin505 Рік тому +3

      Ive been thinking about it, and I feel it may be partly due to religion. But also large society structure. I noticed the larger the society/ group the less care they have for the people that form that group. I feel it's because when there are too many people you can't possibly form a bond with every individual. Thus empathy lessens and.
      I don't remember what I was typing I fell asleep last night while doing so and never sent it so you can get a glimpse of what I was typing

    • @chickenlover657
      @chickenlover657 Рік тому

      @@Gorehoundula What kind of question is yours?

    • @Gorehoundula
      @Gorehoundula Рік тому +4

      @@chickenlover657 A question of why people would be so cold toward their own children's lives. Didn't realize that was so simple and trivial. Why don't you explain it to me like I'm twelve, teacher?

  • @nevafails6185
    @nevafails6185 Рік тому

    The title made me think this video would be a little different from what it ended up being but good video. Informative

  • @anonymousunkgames
    @anonymousunkgames Рік тому

    A book that will well describe the life in medieval life, specific the middle ages in England in 1300. I highly recommend the book A world without End. It well describes when the bubonic plague started around 1347 too.

  • @theskeptic2010
    @theskeptic2010 10 місяців тому

    Childhood as we know it today didn't exist until the Victorian Era in England in the 1800s. Things like Christmas presents under the Christmas tree, Easter egg hunts, kids birthday parties, etc. None of that existed in the medieval period (500 AD to 1500 AD).

  • @jaysahndehruloooh
    @jaysahndehruloooh Рік тому +1

    love that they couldn’t inherit anything until 21 but 3 of every 5 kids would die on top of the avg age of death being 50

  • @mistyeyes9311
    @mistyeyes9311 Рік тому +10

    "Surviving as a middle aged child "

  • @nothanksplease
    @nothanksplease Рік тому +2

    really weird because the Bible even says that abusive people go to hell basically like you can't be abusive especially to children

  • @Tellevams
    @Tellevams Рік тому

    Idk why but i liked watching these when meds kick in and fall asleep

  • @marvigli993
    @marvigli993 5 місяців тому

    I'm a boomer & i remember not being read a book but being told stories. Mostly coming from greek mythology or old ppl weird experiences, ghosts.

  • @inquizition9672
    @inquizition9672 Рік тому

    Today teen: Life is hard. I got detention today AND my parents took away my phone for the rest of the day!
    Then teen: When I was a wee lass/lad I had 10 brothers and 10 sisters. By my coming of age I WAS THE ONLY ONE LEFT AND BOTH MY PARENTS WERE DEAD

  • @lk4543
    @lk4543 11 місяців тому +1

    When God asked me what i wanted to do when i came to Earth, i said I'd love to be a medieval artist. Unfortunately God had not replaced his hearing aid batteries at the time. I am now suffering terrible joint pain whilst sitting in my peasant hut. I still love God, and please everyone replace your hearing aid batteries when needed.
    (Edited for grammar. The word kind not the one who knits Christmas jumpers.)

  • @dianawatton7570
    @dianawatton7570 Рік тому +1

    Yeah, “as soon as you turn 16 get a job; as soon as you turn 18 find another place to live or start paying us rent, etc.” That was life in the 1950s!

  • @nicolekennedy1851
    @nicolekennedy1851 Рік тому +1

    Hey great video as always I love your content. I just have a bit of a question at one point you mentioned something being written during the reign of Edward V. I mean... can we really consider Edward V to have had a reign? I just figured since Richard put an end to his coronation it wasn't widely considered that he had an actual reign? 🤔