This video is also available in podcast form, you can find it on all good podcasting platforms, including: open.spotify.com/episode/3fD5uJ1oVauhjVQOBLXbtz podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-flying-dutchman/id1514656609?i=1000652401697
There is another german adaptation of the story, besides the famous opera composed by Richard Wagner. I assume you have never heard of it, as I cannot find an english counterpart of this story in the Wikipedia. A german tale collector named Wilhelm Hauff took the story of the Flying Durchman and inserted it into his romantic novel 'Die Karawane' (the caravan) as 'Die Geschichjte vom Geisterschiff (the story of the ghost ship), turning it into an oriental (as the Europeans imagined it) tale. The premise is that the members of a travelling company are taking turns in telling stories, and one of them reports that he once was on a ship that encountered the 'ghost ship' in a horrible storm, which made his own sink. He and a companion get saved by the same ghost ship as it returns and passes by so close that they can get hold of it and climb aboard. The sight they encounter is ghastly, all the crew has slain each other, and the captain is leaned against the tallest mast and fastened to it with a large nail driven through his forehead. The two survivors try to move the dead men around, but are unable to do so, as if the latter were statues or frozen in time. When the evening comes, they are set asleep, and barely note the commotion around them. The companion is worried about the events, and so they decide to remain awake and fight the need of sleep by reciting religious verses. It turns out, the crew re-enacts the last hours of their lives every night, with a mutiny breaking out, and everyone getting killed in its course. Also, the ship is bound to return to its location where the events had happened, using its sails for the voyage. The two survivors want to reach land, so they set sail on daytime, and bind verses to the sails to keep them closed over night. This works, they reach India, and ask for a wise man to help them and the crew. The fallen sailors are taken from the ship by sawing off the planks they are lying on, and as soon as they are on land, they decay to dust. The last one that remains is the captain who cannot be removed from the mast. The wise man takes some soil from the land, says a prayer and sprinkles it on the captain. The sailor awakens and tells his story how fifty years ago he had been the leader of a infamous group of pirates which collected all kinds of wealth. One day they captured a dervish, and as he didn't yield riches, threw him into the sea. The holy man cursed them for this deed that they should neither live nor be dead until they reach land. From then on they were forced to repeat what they had done each day without being able to change it, and even trying to send the ship against a cliff would not work. He thanks the sailor who had brought his ship to a coast and leaves all his riches to his saviour, then he dies and turns to ash like his crewmates.
Dude... you just blew my mind and took me waaaaay back in time, bringing up Castaways Of The Flying Dutchman by Brian Jacques.. Wow, it's funny how so many youngsters grew up reading the Redwall series of books but I never really hear people talking about them. There was also a Redwall Cartoon that aired on PBS, our public broadcasting station, that i quite enjoyed watching as well. Jacques was such a talented author, rest in peace to that absolute legend.
Recently got diagnosed with a hiatal hernia. Really makes things difficult, especially when it comes to work. All the sympathy in the world to you 🙏 i hope you continue to feel healthy, and take all the time you need
Just in time for me for bed. Have been listening to this show every day for weeks while I do my skincare and unwind. End up watching each video 5-6 times to cover everything hahaha
The Mad March Hares that served The Badger Lords of that massive mountain fortress were some of my favorite characters. The river/sea otters, like from the book Taggerung, were up there for me, too
I keep being amazed at the breadth of vocabulary and depth of sentence structures of writers from the 16th, 17th, 18th century. Compared to modern novelists, it's almost as if you were reading the works of another species that only rudimentarily uses their language. To be sure, there are genius writers even now, but back then, even culturally inconsequential, now forgotten, writers, whose main line of work would be shipwright or doctor or surveyor, on the side, could be a verbal creative genius.
You’re a real one for giving Brian Jacques the shout out, RIP. I was enthralled by the Redwall series as a child and it was one of the series that actually inspired me to keep reading and exploring the world of literature. It was something I found helped me escape for a bit a bad environment I was growing up in. Respect to you and your channel sir.
I really enjoy these. My cat recognizes the music at the beginning of each episode and knows it's getting close to bed time. I use them to help me settle down at night. I put them on to sleep to. Before anyone accuses me of being rude by sleeping to them, i hsve 2 thoughts for you. The first is that i deal with terrible, terrible nightmares. Charles and crofty have very soothing voices and the information in each episode is fascinating. If i wake up from a flashback in nightmare form, the information is intersting enough to draw me out of my terror while their voices are soothing enough to lull me back to sleep. It's gotten to the point that just hearing their voices is enough to soothe me. The second is a bit more succinct: the chanel gets the watch-time whether or not i'm sleeping to them. It's a win-win. I get restful sleep while charles and crofty get adcents! (Adcents? Adsense? Not sure of spelling).
I sympathize with your sleep problems. Ya know, this may seem silly, but I have a quick and easy suggestion for you that I know for a fact will almost certainly work. It certainly won't hurt to try, even if you feel a bit silly, even if you don't believe, just go on and try the experiment. You have a guardian angel, and they will help you sleep peacefully if you ask them to and if it is not contrary to God's will for some reason. So just before you lay down, ask your guardian angel. You don't have to speak and can just pray to them in your head if you want. Just be polite and respectful, because they are massively powerful, more grand and dignified beings than we are, and we should be awed by them and grateful. Here's the catch. You're making a bargain. This will only work - you will be able to sleep well and heal from PTSD - if you are willing to accept what its working, by acknowledging and embracing God. He doesn't cheapen Himself doing favors for people who aren't going to believe in Him, be grateful, and live accordingly. You know how I know? Because I had a genuine poltergeist terrorizing me at night for a year. Other people experienced it and were traumatized, I needed Church help to get rid of it, and it still took a year. I was an atheist for decades and believed in nothing whatsoever supernatural, right up until I was being tormented in my bedroom every night, and yeah, I did develop a certain degree of PTSD, although I'm over it, except that I'm still a tad more alert than I would be otherwise. The worst was the demon attack sleep paralysis dreams. Now, my guardian angel couldn't end the poltergeist because I understood that it had a useful purpose, that God was allowing it for a reason, so I never asked my angel to end things. BUT she did do the coolest thing ever for me - she took away most of my fear by actually giving me a dream where I got to see the demons the way she did, as silly little cartoon characters who think they're so tough but are just paper tigers, and I got to laugh at them and feel superior. My exorcist is Fr. John Szada, who is semi-famous on UA-cam. Just Google him & you will come up with interviews and lectures. I mention him to lend my story some credibility. I'm really hoping that you'll think about what I said and just give it a try and see what happens. Normally I wouldn't spend so much time trying to help a random stranger on the internet, but there's just something about you that makes me feel really bad and hope for the best for you. Good luck, and God bless. Cheers! PS: Oh, and if you do try this and it works, don't forget to develop a relationship with your guardian angel! They appreciate being acknowledged. I feel so bad for most of them. They are family who love us, who are by our sides at every moment, and they go unacknowledged and treated as if they don't exist. That must be so sad and painful.
Good name, btw, Elizabeth - it's very elegant and feminine, so I notice that a lot of people really appreciate it these days. I chose that as my middle name for the sacrament of Confirmation. I'm actually planning to enter the convent and become a nun in the next year, and I plan on taking a variant of Elizabeth as my religious Sister name, too, Bethany. Cheers, again.
Thankyou. I was named for my great grandmother. My confirmation name was Cecilia, one of the patron saints of music. I wound up leaving catholicism about 15 years later though I do miss mass. I sometimes think about going to mass even though I am not Christian anymore simply because it's so beautiful. I also thought about becoming a nun when I was younger but decided not to when my beliefs changed.
"Oh Senta, you've broken your vow! I cannot believe it - just how Could you flout Daland's wish? Go and swim with the fish! I'm a Dutchman if I'll wed you now!" Richard Vanderwecken is a character, in character as a space captain, in Julian May's novel _The Many-Coloured Land_
Wow I read The Castaways of the Flying Dutchman when I was 12 too!! Brian Jacques is amazing I loved everything he wrote and I used to memorize passages from the Redwall books and perform them dramatically for my parents 😂 but yeah looking back it was surprisingly violent!
I’m so sorry about your hiatal hernia I have a hernia in my esophagus and I’m getting more studies done cause I’ve been suffering a lot these last 2 years, these hernias are a pain in our behinds….. hope you are feeling much better, I enjoy your show very much, thanks for your work!!!!!👍❤️
I bought in a secondhand bookshop in Windsor that was closing down in the 1960's 3 vintage books one of which was "The True Legend of the Flying Dutchman" translated from the German by ...................in it the author states "Now Van der Dekker upon seeing his lovely wife being bound to the Stake for the crime of Heresy he being unable to rescue her prayed to God to intervene and save her and when the fire was lit consuming his Bride he Van der Dekker cursed God for ignoring his plea's thus the Legend was begun this i recollect took place in GOA India in the later 17th C.This book disappeared over 40yrs ago now but there was no published date but i remember it was published in Cheapside,London.
Was trying to use this to take a nap but got too excited after getting reminded about Castaways of the Flying Dutchman and Redwall… really hope all those books are still at my mama house so I can give a reread
Ooooh yes, just what I needed to help me rest up after being injured in a savage squirrel attack 😅 a soothing new Mythillogical video! Also, sorry to hear about your HH, my mum has that and it's really not fun, glad you're feeling better ❤ please take things easy and look after your good self 🙂
I’ve been jonesing for a mythillogical. Love your vamping with crofty, but I will accept your solo ventures, too. (Still waiting on a 4 hr double episode with you both!)
My first exposure to this legend as an American boy was from the 1980s heavy metal band Dio, who recorded a song called "The Last in Line" about it. It isn't immediately apparent that the Flying Dutchman is the topic of the song, but once you've heard the tale it's quite obvious.
You've always made phenomenal content Don't even following you the past year or two, fairly recently overall. Take good care of yourself, you Folks have made phenomenal content and have a great record behind you on this plenty of sources your own thoughts of interpret interpretations, and your attempts to continually include as many different angles and potential avenues when things could have been to really help people out see what's going on. Apologies if I rambling, but I wanted you to know that you very good or making a big impact on a lot of people with the work that you do for this. Take good care of yourself and keep it up o7
As someone with also a hernia of a similar kind, I feel for you Charles. I hope you can live the rest of your life without a flare up. However unlikely it will be.
I learned a lot from this video. I grew up in Cape Town and of course the story is very well known over there. I just assumed that it originated in the 17th century when the VOC was using Cape Town as a resupply station, but it looks like it's much more recent. After watching your video, I did a bit of digging to see if I could find Dutch or Afrikaans sources that point to and older origin, but I came up empty. It's pretty disappointing. FWIW, here is the version of the story that I learned as a kid: Captain Vanderdecken's ship was moored in Table Bay to resupply on the way to India, but when they were about to set sail, there was a vicious storm out of nowhere (which is not an uncommon occurrence in those parts). Bystanders and his crew were all saying that he would be crazy to set sail in that weather, but he insisted. Then someone pointed out that they shouldn't be setting sail because it was Easter, but still he could not be swayed. So God punished him for his hubris and now he and his crew are doomed to sail the sea for all eternity as a warning to others.
1:20 I have the same thing but i think it's called a hiatal hernia, or maybe yours is different. But i got it a couple of years ago, and what helped me was acid reducing medicine. But the months when i didn't know what was going on, and i didnt have the medicine, that was hell.
Occam's razor . They're seeing ghost ships and attributing features to them that aren't actually there or somebody else did later in different renditions. Look at how many ships have been abandoned with crew just certain it's going to go under any minute and then they're still seeing sailing around 10 years later. Quite a few reports of such things off the California coast in the Washington coast and the Oregon coast . Now if it's that prevalent there I have to imagine it happens in other places. No ghosts required
I also have a Hiatal Hernia and its rough! Mine was really bad and actually landed me in the hospital. I've had two corrective surgeries for it which helped. I have a links band holding it in place, still bothers me sometimes but not nearly as much. Hopefully it has settled down for you! I'm assuming you are close to my age (early 30's) and I know it really impacted my social life.
Glad to hear im not the only one who’s childhood was greatly influenced by the Redwall series, then when looking back on the books realized they were actually incredibly violent. How did my strict religious parents let me read these but not watch Spongebob!
Charles, my electronic life support system (aka my iPad) tells me there is a copy of A L Strout’s “Bibliography” in the National Library of Oz. I’ll try to get there tomorrow. Cheers!
In One Piece, the Flying Dutchman is the center of a legend where the Dutchman's captain, named Van der Decken, went mad and drowned his crew and himself. This is only partially true, however, because one of the antagonists for the Fishman Island Arc is a descendant of Van der Decken and a local fishwoman. The mistake is somewhat understandable though because in order to reach Fishman Island, a ship needs to be submerged and sink to the bottom of the ocean (after being coated with a giant bubble that protects the crew). Van der Decken's descendant - also called Van der Decken - is a pirate captain who raids sunken vessels for treasure. He continues to 'sail' the Flying Dutchman at the bottom of the sea by having a sea dwelling giant tow the ship by the anchor chain. Van der Decken has a magic ability that allows him to hit a target no matter how far away it is as long as he's touched it with his hand, and uses this ability to torment the mermaid princess, constantly throwing weapons, threatening letters, and finally other pirates at the princess to convince her to marry him. He sides with a group of anti-human fishmen who use super steroids to take over the country, mostly just to try and get to the princess. Oh, and he constantly ends sentences with the phrase 'I suppose'.
I’m an ocean-sailing skipper meself (obligatory yarrrr), I captain me own boat & for others, & all I can (potentially) add is, ya do see some weird shit out there twixt sea & sky. While I wouldn’t be pleased to spot the Dutchman meself (yar) I’d not be shocked.
As a couple of guys who love mythology more than anything… Your lives would be anything but “ruined” for having watched One Piece. The author of that series will be sitting at the right-hand of Tolkien at the end of times.
I don't think parents screened the Redwall books in general. I remember the last ones he wrote before he died seemed to be a bit more grotesque with the violence (a decapitated head being taken as proof of victory particularly stuck with younger me) But I guess talking animals lowers their guard 😆. I didn't mind though, pre-teen me thought they were great!
Hah, I was wondering if One Piece would get a reference but I still wasn't quite expecting it It does kinda overtake your life if you get into it ngl, but it does have a lot of mythology and folktale references and retellings in it
This video is also available in podcast form, you can find it on all good podcasting platforms, including:
open.spotify.com/episode/3fD5uJ1oVauhjVQOBLXbtz
podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-flying-dutchman/id1514656609?i=1000652401697
finally, a video covering Spongebob lore
Exactly
You're telling me a Dutch man flew this boat?
A flying one is quite rare..... The dutch are notoriously land lubbers.....
Gekoloniseerd !!!!
You're telling me a boat man flre this Dutch?
No, THE Dutch man flew this boat
@@foggyday9432 John P Dutch
There is another german adaptation of the story, besides the famous opera composed by Richard Wagner. I assume you have never heard of it, as I cannot find an english counterpart of this story in the Wikipedia.
A german tale collector named Wilhelm Hauff took the story of the Flying Durchman and inserted it into his romantic novel 'Die Karawane' (the caravan) as 'Die Geschichjte vom Geisterschiff (the story of the ghost ship), turning it into an oriental (as the Europeans imagined it) tale. The premise is that the members of a travelling company are taking turns in telling stories, and one of them reports that he once was on a ship that encountered the 'ghost ship' in a horrible storm, which made his own sink. He and a companion get saved by the same ghost ship as it returns and passes by so close that they can get hold of it and climb aboard.
The sight they encounter is ghastly, all the crew has slain each other, and the captain is leaned against the tallest mast and fastened to it with a large nail driven through his forehead. The two survivors try to move the dead men around, but are unable to do so, as if the latter were statues or frozen in time. When the evening comes, they are set asleep, and barely note the commotion around them. The companion is worried about the events, and so they decide to remain awake and fight the need of sleep by reciting religious verses.
It turns out, the crew re-enacts the last hours of their lives every night, with a mutiny breaking out, and everyone getting killed in its course. Also, the ship is bound to return to its location where the events had happened, using its sails for the voyage. The two survivors want to reach land, so they set sail on daytime, and bind verses to the sails to keep them closed over night. This works, they reach India, and ask for a wise man to help them and the crew. The fallen sailors are taken from the ship by sawing off the planks they are lying on, and as soon as they are on land, they decay to dust.
The last one that remains is the captain who cannot be removed from the mast. The wise man takes some soil from the land, says a prayer and sprinkles it on the captain. The sailor awakens and tells his story how fifty years ago he had been the leader of a infamous group of pirates which collected all kinds of wealth. One day they captured a dervish, and as he didn't yield riches, threw him into the sea. The holy man cursed them for this deed that they should neither live nor be dead until they reach land. From then on they were forced to repeat what they had done each day without being able to change it, and even trying to send the ship against a cliff would not work. He thanks the sailor who had brought his ship to a coast and leaves all his riches to his saviour, then he dies and turns to ash like his crewmates.
I didn’t order a yappuccino
Been mystified with the Dutchman ever since he dropped squidward into that warhammer 40k chaos dimension 😂 ☠️
Dude... you just blew my mind and took me waaaaay back in time, bringing up Castaways Of The Flying Dutchman by Brian Jacques.. Wow, it's funny how so many youngsters grew up reading the Redwall series of books but I never really hear people talking about them. There was also a Redwall Cartoon that aired on PBS, our public broadcasting station, that i quite enjoyed watching as well. Jacques was such a talented author, rest in peace to that absolute legend.
Brian Jaques, Terry Pratchett, and CS Lewis WERE fantasy for me growing up.
Recently got diagnosed with a hiatal hernia. Really makes things difficult, especially when it comes to work. All the sympathy in the world to you 🙏 i hope you continue to feel healthy, and take all the time you need
Just in time for me for bed. Have been listening to this show every day for weeks while I do my skincare and unwind. End up watching each video 5-6 times to cover everything hahaha
I am that is. My sword shall wield for me.
Redwall was absolutely excellent
I'm so glad to see it get recognition!
The Mad March Hares that served The Badger Lords of that massive mountain fortress were some of my favorite characters. The river/sea otters, like from the book Taggerung, were up there for me, too
@@TheDukeOfDallas Taggerung was one of my absolute favorites. That and Triss, and Mattimeo... So good
Sorry to hear about your hiatal hernia. I finally got mine repaired after 20 years. I understand your suffering. Feel better
I cannot tell you how much I love when this channel posts.
Happy to be here. Thanks for all the content.
I keep being amazed at the breadth of vocabulary and depth of sentence structures of writers from the 16th, 17th, 18th century. Compared to modern novelists, it's almost as if you were reading the works of another species that only rudimentarily uses their language. To be sure, there are genius writers even now, but back then, even culturally inconsequential, now forgotten, writers, whose main line of work would be shipwright or doctor or surveyor, on the side, could be a verbal creative genius.
It really makes me beleive we are devolving
REDWALL MENTIONED!!!
You’re a real one for giving Brian Jacques the shout out, RIP. I was enthralled by the Redwall series as a child and it was one of the series that actually inspired me to keep reading and exploring the world of literature. It was something I found helped me escape for a bit a bad environment I was growing up in. Respect to you and your channel sir.
Just glad we have planes now
Halo
@@julesonrecord halo! 🫂
Fancy seeing you here! 😊
Fancy seeing you here 😊
@@eefy11 🫡
I really enjoy these. My cat recognizes the music at the beginning of each episode and knows it's getting close to bed time.
I use them to help me settle down at night. I put them on to sleep to. Before anyone accuses me of being rude by sleeping to them, i hsve 2 thoughts for you. The first is that i deal with terrible, terrible nightmares. Charles and crofty have very soothing voices and the information in each episode is fascinating. If i wake up from a flashback in nightmare form, the information is intersting enough to draw me out of my terror while their voices are soothing enough to lull me back to sleep. It's gotten to the point that just hearing their voices is enough to soothe me.
The second is a bit more succinct: the chanel gets the watch-time whether or not i'm sleeping to them.
It's a win-win. I get restful sleep while charles and crofty get adcents!
(Adcents? Adsense? Not sure of spelling).
I sympathize with your sleep problems. Ya know, this may seem silly, but I have a quick and easy suggestion for you that I know for a fact will almost certainly work. It certainly won't hurt to try, even if you feel a bit silly, even if you don't believe, just go on and try the experiment. You have a guardian angel, and they will help you sleep peacefully if you ask them to and if it is not contrary to God's will for some reason. So just before you lay down, ask your guardian angel. You don't have to speak and can just pray to them in your head if you want. Just be polite and respectful, because they are massively powerful, more grand and dignified beings than we are, and we should be awed by them and grateful. Here's the catch. You're making a bargain. This will only work - you will be able to sleep well and heal from PTSD - if you are willing to accept what its working, by acknowledging and embracing God. He doesn't cheapen Himself doing favors for people who aren't going to believe in Him, be grateful, and live accordingly.
You know how I know? Because I had a genuine poltergeist terrorizing me at night for a year. Other people experienced it and were traumatized, I needed Church help to get rid of it, and it still took a year. I was an atheist for decades and believed in nothing whatsoever supernatural, right up until I was being tormented in my bedroom every night, and yeah, I did develop a certain degree of PTSD, although I'm over it, except that I'm still a tad more alert than I would be otherwise. The worst was the demon attack sleep paralysis dreams. Now, my guardian angel couldn't end the poltergeist because I understood that it had a useful purpose, that God was allowing it for a reason, so I never asked my angel to end things. BUT she did do the coolest thing ever for me - she took away most of my fear by actually giving me a dream where I got to see the demons the way she did, as silly little cartoon characters who think they're so tough but are just paper tigers, and I got to laugh at them and feel superior.
My exorcist is Fr. John Szada, who is semi-famous on UA-cam. Just Google him & you will come up with interviews and lectures. I mention him to lend my story some credibility. I'm really hoping that you'll think about what I said and just give it a try and see what happens. Normally I wouldn't spend so much time trying to help a random stranger on the internet, but there's just something about you that makes me feel really bad and hope for the best for you. Good luck, and God bless. Cheers!
PS: Oh, and if you do try this and it works, don't forget to develop a relationship with your guardian angel! They appreciate being acknowledged. I feel so bad for most of them. They are family who love us, who are by our sides at every moment, and they go unacknowledged and treated as if they don't exist. That must be so sad and painful.
Good name, btw, Elizabeth - it's very elegant and feminine, so I notice that a lot of people really appreciate it these days. I chose that as my middle name for the sacrament of Confirmation. I'm actually planning to enter the convent and become a nun in the next year, and I plan on taking a variant of Elizabeth as my religious Sister name, too, Bethany. Cheers, again.
Thankyou. I was named for my great grandmother.
My confirmation name was Cecilia, one of the patron saints of music. I wound up leaving catholicism about 15 years later though I do miss mass. I sometimes think about going to mass even though I am not Christian anymore simply because it's so beautiful. I also thought about becoming a nun when I was younger but decided not to when my beliefs changed.
Wishing you and Crofty all the best! We appreciate you both so much. Another excellent episode, thank you!
"Oh Senta, you've broken your vow!
I cannot believe it - just how
Could you flout Daland's wish?
Go and swim with the fish!
I'm a Dutchman if I'll wed you now!"
Richard Vanderwecken is a character, in character as a space captain, in Julian May's novel _The Many-Coloured Land_
Wow I read The Castaways of the Flying Dutchman when I was 12 too!! Brian Jacques is amazing I loved everything he wrote and I used to memorize passages from the Redwall books and perform them dramatically for my parents 😂 but yeah looking back it was surprisingly violent!
This is amazing thank you perfect timing
I’m so sorry about your hiatal hernia I have a hernia in my esophagus and I’m getting more studies done cause I’ve been suffering a lot these last 2 years, these hernias are a pain in our behinds….. hope you are feeling much better, I enjoy your show very much, thanks for your work!!!!!👍❤️
I suffered for years with a hernia plus GERD.
@@davashorb6116 that GERD is more common than ppl think , hope you’re feeling better 👍😻
@@johannahidalgo7738 Thanks, you too!
you can probably read from my username that i love this legend
I bought in a secondhand bookshop in Windsor that was closing down in the 1960's 3 vintage books one of which was "The True Legend of the Flying Dutchman" translated from the German by ...................in it the author states "Now Van der Dekker upon seeing his lovely wife being bound to the Stake for the crime of Heresy he being unable to rescue her prayed to God to intervene and save her and when the fire was lit consuming his Bride he Van der Dekker cursed God for ignoring his plea's thus the Legend was begun this i recollect took place in GOA India in the later 17th C.This book disappeared over 40yrs ago now but there was no published date but i remember it was published in Cheapside,London.
sorry about your health troubles, but im glad to hear youve been feeling better! another great episode, this is easily one of my favorite podcasts 💙
Very cool, glad you’ve recovered
I pray for your continued health. I’ve missed the well thought out and presented materials.
Was trying to use this to take a nap but got too excited after getting reminded about Castaways of the Flying Dutchman and Redwall… really hope all those books are still at my mama house so I can give a reread
Here to leave a like because I saw this in my notifications. Will watch later!
Ooooh yes, just what I needed to help me rest up after being injured in a savage squirrel attack 😅 a soothing new Mythillogical video! Also, sorry to hear about your HH, my mum has that and it's really not fun, glad you're feeling better ❤ please take things easy and look after your good self 🙂
squirrel attack? do go on
Wow! I remember Redwall! I haven't thought about those books for years. They were among my favorites too.
My first Histocrat vid, I freakin love it!
Incredible! This content is setting the bar high for quality and excellence.
Pseudo Barrington, s mention sounded as if it were an already known phenomenon
I’ve been jonesing for a mythillogical. Love your vamping with crofty, but I will accept your solo ventures, too.
(Still waiting on a 4 hr double episode with you both!)
nice job dude!
2:46 video begins here.
My first exposure to this legend as an American boy was from the 1980s heavy metal band Dio, who recorded a song called "The Last in Line" about it. It isn't immediately apparent that the Flying Dutchman is the topic of the song, but once you've heard the tale it's quite obvious.
Cheers, I really enjoyed this episode.
You guys are getting me through finals week!
I’m so damn happy to see this episode!! Love your podcast, best wishe# for your health issues!!
You've always made phenomenal content Don't even following you the past year or two, fairly recently overall. Take good care of yourself, you Folks have made phenomenal content and have a great record behind you on this plenty of sources your own thoughts of interpret interpretations, and your attempts to continually include as many different angles and potential avenues when things could have been to really help people out see what's going on. Apologies if I rambling, but I wanted you to know that you very good or making a big impact on a lot of people with the work that you do for this. Take good care of yourself and keep it up
o7
Interesting video thanks.
More episodes like this please.
31:50 Vanderdecken translates to "of the decks", so yeah
Yay! Back up!
Subtitles would be great addition for all these videos
The CC button on screen turns on the native UA-cam captions and is fairly accurate
Love the Redwall shout out!
As someone with also a hernia of a similar kind, I feel for you Charles. I hope you can live the rest of your life without a flare up. However unlikely it will be.
I learned a lot from this video.
I grew up in Cape Town and of course the story is very well known over there. I just assumed that it originated in the 17th century when the VOC was using Cape Town as a resupply station, but it looks like it's much more recent.
After watching your video, I did a bit of digging to see if I could find Dutch or Afrikaans sources that point to and older origin, but I came up empty.
It's pretty disappointing.
FWIW, here is the version of the story that I learned as a kid: Captain Vanderdecken's ship was moored in Table Bay to resupply on the way to India, but when they were about to set sail, there was a vicious storm out of nowhere (which is not an uncommon occurrence in those parts). Bystanders and his crew were all saying that he would be crazy to set sail in that weather, but he insisted. Then someone pointed out that they shouldn't be setting sail because it was Easter, but still he could not be swayed.
So God punished him for his hubris and now he and his crew are doomed to sail the sea for all eternity as a warning to others.
nice video
ayyy he said one of my favorite phrases as history major "Wow! That's a word"
I love your channel so much
1:20 I have the same thing but i think it's called a hiatal hernia, or maybe yours is different. But i got it a couple of years ago, and what helped me was acid reducing medicine. But the months when i didn't know what was going on, and i didnt have the medicine, that was hell.
Hey buddy, I'm sorry you've been having health issues. I hope you feel better. Thanks for the video
Thank you
According to 17th century archives of Cape 'Die Goeie Hoop' the real name of the cursed ship might have been 'De Vergulde Vlaming'.
40:10 this is like the film "The Ghost and Mrs Muir" (1947)
Captain McEvansmith sounds like a comedic relief character from the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise.
Thank you.
As someone who has a hiatus hernia, I understand the pain.
Well done on the podcast here though, another good choice.
Occam's razor . They're seeing ghost ships and attributing features to them that aren't actually there or somebody else did later in different renditions. Look at how many ships have been abandoned with crew just certain it's going to go under any minute and then they're still seeing sailing around 10 years later. Quite a few reports of such things off the California coast in the Washington coast and the Oregon coast . Now if it's that prevalent there I have to imagine it happens in other places. No ghosts required
I also have a Hiatal Hernia and its rough! Mine was really bad and actually landed me in the hospital. I've had two corrective surgeries for it which helped. I have a links band holding it in place, still bothers me sometimes but not nearly as much. Hopefully it has settled down for you! I'm assuming you are close to my age (early 30's) and I know it really impacted my social life.
Glad to hear im not the only one who’s childhood was greatly influenced by the Redwall series, then when looking back on the books realized they were actually incredibly violent. How did my strict religious parents let me read these but not watch Spongebob!
Charles, my electronic life support system (aka my iPad) tells me there is a copy of A L Strout’s “Bibliography” in the National Library of Oz. I’ll try to get there tomorrow.
Cheers!
In One Piece, the Flying Dutchman is the center of a legend where the Dutchman's captain, named Van der Decken, went mad and drowned his crew and himself. This is only partially true, however, because one of the antagonists for the Fishman Island Arc is a descendant of Van der Decken and a local fishwoman. The mistake is somewhat understandable though because in order to reach Fishman Island, a ship needs to be submerged and sink to the bottom of the ocean (after being coated with a giant bubble that protects the crew).
Van der Decken's descendant - also called Van der Decken - is a pirate captain who raids sunken vessels for treasure. He continues to 'sail' the Flying Dutchman at the bottom of the sea by having a sea dwelling giant tow the ship by the anchor chain.
Van der Decken has a magic ability that allows him to hit a target no matter how far away it is as long as he's touched it with his hand, and uses this ability to torment the mermaid princess, constantly throwing weapons, threatening letters, and finally other pirates at the princess to convince her to marry him. He sides with a group of anti-human fishmen who use super steroids to take over the country, mostly just to try and get to the princess.
Oh, and he constantly ends sentences with the phrase 'I suppose'.
Awoooo! Bahahaha! Ledle ledle ledle le!
"Curse you, McKevinSmith!"
37:52 i think the devil might have been on to something
I wonder if I see anything about the Flying Dutchman when I'm going to Amsterdam and Rotterdam this year 😊👍
Maybe the Flying Dutchman is what got the Mary Celeste.
Yey!
1:04:20 unfortunately? It was a good thing. Supper never should have let it’s colonies break away
Hey is there any possibility to the werewolf episode ever since you've mentioned it iv needed it in my life
nice boat
This is a pretty "matter of fact" video for a cursed, murderous, devil-driven, ghost ship. A.k.a. Carnival Cruise Lines.
One piece mentioned on my favorite UA-cam channel. Not something I expected but I will take it
I'll never forgive Oda for introducing another of his worst weenuses and making them the blood heir of the fucking Flying Dutchman
Get on with it!!!
My introduction to this legeng was having Wagner forced in my ears from a young age. I wish we had anime and SpongeBob back then.
The Venus figure may have been used to enhance ritual focus 🚀
Badger Lords rule, stoats & weasels drool.
Oh geese I loved redwall I'll have to check out that other jaques series
I’m an ocean-sailing skipper meself (obligatory yarrrr), I captain me own boat & for others, & all I can (potentially) add is, ya do see some weird shit out there twixt sea & sky. While I wouldn’t be pleased to spot the Dutchman meself (yar) I’d not be shocked.
I really hope one day you guys will cover unicorns 😩
Proper name of the skipper of the Dutchman is, of course, Pieter van Halen/Peter Haelen.
As a couple of guys who love mythology more than anything… Your lives would be anything but “ruined” for having watched One Piece.
The author of that series will be sitting at the right-hand of Tolkien at the end of times.
Bring our Crofty back! 😢
It was sailed by skinny hein himself
I don't think parents screened the Redwall books in general. I remember the last ones he wrote before he died seemed to be a bit more grotesque with the violence (a decapitated head being taken as proof of victory particularly stuck with younger me)
But I guess talking animals lowers their guard 😆. I didn't mind though, pre-teen me thought they were great!
damn near spat my drink when you mentioned spongebob even though i knew it might come
27:28 so comment is too scifi?
Hah, I was wondering if One Piece would get a reference but I still wasn't quite expecting it
It does kinda overtake your life if you get into it ngl, but it does have a lot of mythology and folktale references and retellings in it
Inserting SpongeBob flying Dutchman quotes😂
I appreciate the Spangborp reference and coverage in this video.
ay me ladie, I do me fancy a topic like thee. Algorithm
26:10 "The Tenacity of Natural Affections" is the name of my shoegaze-emocore-deathgrind band
I can't imagine anyone else but James Mason playing the Dutchman.
If you had to choose between Spongebob & alllll the money I have in my pocket, which would you take?
Eagle-eyed listener
I would like to see a video from you about Dante's inferno and hell in general, just a suggestion :) great channel