House Of The Rising Sun 1270 A.D (Cover in Old French 800-1400 A.D) Bardcore/Medieval style

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  • Опубліковано 27 сер 2024
  • 1270 A.D was a bad year to be in Tunisia, nobody won 😢
    Also, take me back to when the French used trilled R's 😂
    Original song by ‪@TheAnimalsOfficial‬ : • The Animals - House of...
    Apologies to all the French-speaking folk out there 😅 This was a really hard one and I know It's not perfect but please let me know what you think ❤❤❤
    Consider supporting the channel, I know what I do ain't much but its honest work ❤ : www.patreon.co...
    Wanna follow and support me?
    open.spotify.c...
    / the-miracle-aligner
    paypal.me/jakh...
    / the_miracle_aligner
    Eya guys XD finally on Patreon, please consider supporting the channel :) any and all help is greatly appreciated ❤
    www.patreon.co...
    Big thanks to Ser @Graywyck now pls go check out his channel XD
    / @graywyck
    As always, big thanks to @ABAlphaBeta for all the help with the translations and training,
    Please go check out his channel, its a treat for historical enthusiast XD
    / @abalphabeta
    Also while making this video, a friend of mine introduced me to a cover of the original song done by a French artist Johnny Hallyday called "Le Penitencier." Its a damn nice cover too, (THANKS EMMAAA) Here's the link: • Johnny Hallyday - The ...
    I have been procrastinating a lot after going on a break weeks ago but I'm back folks. Currently working on upgrading my hardware, I will be getting a better mic and also a camera as I want to start posting videos soon. Want nothing but the best for all you lovely folk. Thank you as always ya'll kind folk for all the love and support. Let's make Bardcore last a 1000 years yeah?
    Also, Here be the lyrics. Courtesy of AB
    Il y a une meson en Orleans
    Qui se sousnomme le Soleil levant
    Et ele fu la ruine de maint garsilleurs
    Dont fui aussi partant….
    Ma mere estoit une taillieuse
    Qui cousit mes braies de lin
    Mon pere lui estoit un joueur et
    D’Orleans un citadin
    E les seules choses qu'un joueur requiert
    Sont une male et une botte
    E le seul moment de repos pour lui
    Est saül au fond d’un pot
    O, mere, di le aus anfaz
    De ne pas feire com moi
    Pechiez tout au lonc de vos tristes vies
    La ou le Soleil feict loy
    Bien, j'ai un pié sur le pavement
    L'autre est sur le char
    Sui de retorn a Orleans
    Ou l’air-mesme est une bare
    #theanimals #medieval #bardcore

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @drymice500
    @drymice500 4 роки тому +20494

    When I asked my History of English professor about the possibility to reconstruct some even older languages (like Proto-Indo-European and Germanic) so far as to use them creatively, he ridiculed me in front of the class and said it was a stupid idea. I'm glad I'm not alone with this idea, after all. 😍😍😍

    • @azenxhlaalu6338
      @azenxhlaalu6338 4 роки тому +3014

      Wow how dare he. What kind of shallow academic disparages such intellectual creativity!
      Israel and Ireland are doing exactly what you describe...

    • @chasbodaniels1744
      @chasbodaniels1744 4 роки тому +855

      “The History of English Podcast” covers Proto-Indo-European and the Germanic languages and their shifting geography, politics and socio-economic evolution in great detail. Brilliantly produced and it’s been running since 2014 +/-. Remarkable work. Available free on their website, or on the usual other sources.

    • @jimmyprantalos6482
      @jimmyprantalos6482 4 роки тому +181

      He was right. We were not around to know what the languages sounded like now do we know the idioms of the time

    • @SightsNScapes
      @SightsNScapes 4 роки тому +353

      Yeah but isn’t Proto Indo-European languages 4,000/5,000+years old? If so we have very little capability of reconstructing any meaningful language from the time, especially without knowing the writing system it’s a dead language.
      We aren’t even particularly sure of how Latin sounded we have very good educated guesses but we truly don’t know, so to try and make a song out of a language being reconstructed that is several thousand years older than Roman Latin? Yes that’s an absolutely silly thing to think is possible.
      I apologize if some of my grammar is off I’m using talk and text on my phone

    • @dylantatarian2372
      @dylantatarian2372 4 роки тому +795

      That’s sounds like an awful teacher. Ridiculing a student for wanting do something productive and academic. It’s kind of like the opposite of what a teachers meant to do...

  • @jeremiahsmith916
    @jeremiahsmith916 4 роки тому +15736

    It pleases me to know that humanity’s collective first attempts to speak French sounded exactly like any individual person’s first attempts to speak French.

    • @ChronicNewb
      @ChronicNewb 3 роки тому +825

      This. This exactly.

    • @tkeleth2931
      @tkeleth2931 3 роки тому +1197

      French is best spoken after the second bottle hahaha

    • @lordilluminati5836
      @lordilluminati5836 3 роки тому +1311

      I know right? almost like this was the natural way of speaking and the language was unnesesarily and artificially made harder in an attempt by the royalty to stop the lower classes from becoming educated.

    • @ben8147
      @ben8147 3 роки тому +833

      @@lordilluminati5836 I wouldn't go that far, but it is true that the nobility were the ones that made most of the rules. Part of the reason English has so many odds and ends is that England had French nobility for a stretch.

    • @ArtilleryAffictionado1648
      @ArtilleryAffictionado1648 3 роки тому +271

      @@tkeleth2931 LMAO. Not untrue tho. Drinking boosts confidence just enough that you'll start speaking other languages and not care. That means you are exposing yourself (and others) to that language and actually learning a lot in the process. Which is fucked up, but awesome. I know 4 languages so yeah i'm not kidding. 2 bottles of wine is what? 4 glasses of Jack Daniels? On a medium tolerance that is the recipe for a woman in your bed and lots of fake friends to practice with. So, allez!!

  • @BramVanhooydonck
    @BramVanhooydonck 4 роки тому +5994

    Old French sounds like a Flemish student who doesn't want to learn French, but still wants a good grade.

    • @thibs2837
      @thibs2837 4 роки тому +203

      It's because they have an accent

    • @arnaudmenard5114
      @arnaudmenard5114 4 роки тому +377

      A strong accent. Really this doesn’t sound much like old french at all to me... It’s just modern french with some odd spelling! I’m a bit disappointed to tell the truth, a lot of words they chose are awkward, like pavement...which they “translated” as pavement... they could have used “pavé” or “parapel”.

    • @eleanorhelensarahdarcks8018
      @eleanorhelensarahdarcks8018 4 роки тому +17

      So true

    • @tenorlove
      @tenorlove 4 роки тому +159

      @@arnaudmenard5114 This sounds like Spanish speakers doing a recital in French 101.

    • @jensgabrielarbeitmunck1918
      @jensgabrielarbeitmunck1918 4 роки тому +237

      As a french speaker, I always say that french is basically getting a dutch guy to read latin

  • @gaborodriguez1346
    @gaborodriguez1346 3 роки тому +1868

    As a Spanish speaker, this is much easier to understand than Modern French.

    • @LTPottenger
      @LTPottenger 2 роки тому +123

      Modern French and English = take old French and English, then speak as lazy and fruity as possible.

    • @senatuspopulusqueromanum
      @senatuspopulusqueromanum Рік тому +46

      @@LTPottenger old english sounds like icelandic, tf u mean?

    • @randomyankee8923
      @randomyankee8923 Рік тому +40

      @@senatuspopulusqueromanum þe Olde English language had letters still used in Icelandic

    • @lightasmr6623
      @lightasmr6623 Рік тому +18

      @@senatuspopulusqueromanum By « Old English » he meant english from the 1200-1300s and after… at that time it was very close to French

    • @theshamanite
      @theshamanite Рік тому +2

      I'll say, apparently the word sauce is related to salsa. Both have entered English

  • @Anish-
    @Anish- 3 роки тому +2810

    Ah yes, the days when the french actually pronounced every letter
    This is the best version of french in my opinion.

    • @carthkaras6449
      @carthkaras6449 3 роки тому +226

      French speaker here, I think that it is less elegant. Knowing that there is a difference in the evolution of the written language and the spoken language and waiting that the French academy will do the same work as the spanish did to simplify the written language with the pronunciation of today.

    • @epingchris
      @epingchris 3 роки тому +152

      @@carthkaras6449 Knowing the French Academy, they will never do that...... ;)

    • @carthkaras6449
      @carthkaras6449 3 роки тому +80

      @@epingchris There is too much far left youtubers constantly attacking l'Académie Française but this institution is far less conservative than depicted

    • @epingchris
      @epingchris 3 роки тому +27

      @@carthkaras6449 True, there are probably a lot of exaggerations surrounding what it does and represents: I admit I too am sometimes guilty of taking lazy jabs at them. (I don't think I "hate" them though; at least I've come to understand a little more about their functions through time)

    • @labeilleautiste6318
      @labeilleautiste6318 2 роки тому +60

      Like if english actually pronounce letters

  • @The_Mister_E
    @The_Mister_E 4 роки тому +3648

    "...Wait. There's a NEW Orleans?!"

    • @corriedebeer799
      @corriedebeer799 4 роки тому +151

      apparently it borders new york on the one side and new amsterdam on the other side.

    • @Bohous156
      @Bohous156 4 роки тому +327

      Orleans was so popular they made Orleans 2

    • @moristar
      @moristar 4 роки тому +65

      @@corriedebeer799 And the New England is just across the channel.

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 4 роки тому +16

      @@corriedebeer799 Those are the same place.
      However, the New World, from what I have been told, very much resembles the old. There is, for example, a New Jersy, and an entire New England. And sometimes there is simply redundancy. For example, there is a higher and lower California, and both an old and a new Mexico, oddly located right next to each other.

    • @moristar
      @moristar 4 роки тому +39

      Don't forget Nova Scotia

  • @drtrekwars
    @drtrekwars 4 роки тому +3440

    People in 2019: I can't WAIT for next year! I want sharp suits, jazz and swing music, and Peaky Blinders to return for the 20's!
    2020: Best I can do is 1120 🤷‍♂️Enjoy Bardcore and a new plague

    • @Mr-__-Sy
      @Mr-__-Sy 4 роки тому +172

      Man you're right, 2020 is just black death with internet

    • @SukacitaYeremia
      @SukacitaYeremia 4 роки тому +60

      Yeah, isn't it weird? Right when a pandemic arises, a genre arises in popularity that represents music from around the same era as the previous great pandemic (Spanish Flu aside, although I could argue that it's the era from which electroswing and the sorts took inspiration from).

    • @deadacc2816
      @deadacc2816 4 роки тому +6

      god this is true and i hate it

    • @-haclong2366
      @-haclong2366 4 роки тому +12

      @The Knight Spain didn't exist in 1120.

    • @kvproductions2581
      @kvproductions2581 4 роки тому +4

      @@-haclong2366 .... whut. I'm not a history expert but... i'm pretty sure it did man

  • @celestinopulcoto8702
    @celestinopulcoto8702 3 роки тому +290

    Fun fact : there is a neighbourhood called "Le Soleil Levant" in Orléans ;)

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ 3 роки тому +5

      Probably a Royal office/place? Isnt it?

    • @ussinussinongawd516
      @ussinussinongawd516 3 роки тому +4

      @@pierren___ they said neighborhood

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ 3 роки тому +1

      @@ussinussinongawd516 hmm yeah but the name must be link To something

    • @GuiSmith
      @GuiSmith 3 роки тому +18

      If I'm not mistaken, that's where the song got its name. I'd hazard a guess it's pretty close to Bourbon Street's infamous bars and historically crammed casinos, hence everything else in the song.

    • @coffic
      @coffic 6 місяців тому +4

      Very fair attempt 😁 though I have to say it's more 16th c. French than Old French ("she sewed my linen breeches/ qui cousit mes braies de lin" would be closer to "cui lié brayes lignées de moi coussút" and that's interpretative on the conjugation)

  • @nath0ues1
    @nath0ues1 2 роки тому +754

    I'm French and even if we don't speak like that anymore, i really think old french has something extremely charming and i'm proud of my mother tongue and what it was in the past !

    • @EnglandRemoval
      @EnglandRemoval 11 місяців тому +25

      I think its actually a bit better than modern french, I could never speak the current language because of how you essentially have to absorb certain letters through your sinus and also not pronounce 80% of the letters near the end of the word, like C' et and C' est sound identical but one has an extra "fake" letter

    • @vonwthaud289
      @vonwthaud289 9 місяців тому +10

      @@EnglandRemoval The difference between those two words are the fact that one is a verb and the other is a coordinating conjunction. There is however a slight change in the pronunciation that can be heard, even though nowadays few really pronounce both of these words differently: "et" will be pronounced like "é", whereas "est" on the other hand will sound like "è".

    • @LedurGtag
      @LedurGtag 9 місяців тому +5

      @@vonwthaud289WoW toi tu connais

    • @vonwthaud289
      @vonwthaud289 9 місяців тому +10

      @@LedurGtag écoute c'est comme ça qu'à l'école on me l'a appris, après c'est vrai que quand on parle français tous les jours on prend pour acquis cette distinction et on ne fait plus l'effort de le faire

    • @LedurGtag
      @LedurGtag 9 місяців тому +1

      @@vonwthaud289 oui je me rappelle. Juste que je n’utilise pas vraiment dans la vie donc pour moi ça a sombré dans l’oubli. Je ne sais pas sa fait combien de temps que tu as été à l’école mais je crois c’est toujours ça hein

  • @Oblivion776
    @Oblivion776 4 роки тому +9115

    Old French: pronounces word final consonants
    Modern French: wait that's illegal

    • @richardcuenca420
      @richardcuenca420 4 роки тому +648

      Modern french: we don't do that here

    • @FoxTrotteur
      @FoxTrotteur 4 роки тому +481

      I sang once "Belle qui tiens ma vie" with my choir (all french). The choir conductor had a lot of knowledges about middle and old "françois".
      When we began to sing it, he said : "You have to sing it like you just began to learn french. Make no nasal sound at all and pronounce all the letters (with some exceptions of course)."
      For us it was a torture! That was goddam difficult not to swallow consonants.
      Even today, I can read anglo-norman, and middle french texts without any translation (even old french is not that hard with a time to adapt) but i wouldn't be able to pronounce a single sentence! 😅

    • @blackheartb7316
      @blackheartb7316 4 роки тому +49

      C'est tout à fait cela 😂

    • @Cha0tiqu3
      @Cha0tiqu3 4 роки тому +151

      But joke aside, what happened in the intervening x hundred years to leave the writing very similar but completely kill the pronunciation?

    • @FoxTrotteur
      @FoxTrotteur 4 роки тому +298

      @@Cha0tiqu3 I am not a linguist but i think a lot of different things can explain that :
      1- There is a clear biais. We compare the official standard French at the time with our unofficial language, when i sing for instance "The secret" from Fauré I use the today's official pronunciation and it sounds like "Je veux que le matin l'ignor-e...". But if I said that irl, it would rather sound like "J'veux qu'le matin l'ignor'..."
      2- The writing evolves really slower than the saying. Take as an exemple late ancient Egypt (before the Ptolemies). The pharaohs and priest still used ancient egyptian with hieroglyphs as a writing system whereas the people already spoke proto-demotic and then demotic. Very few understood what was written.
      2b - We have a very strict "French Academy" that controled the spelling all over the world slowing the evolution. But they have no control over how the people speak
      3- French is today well more spoke than before with a great diversity of people all over the world that interact. All of them have different prononciations and influence the others. In the 15th century, pretty much every French speaker were in France.
      4- The change in pronunciation is noticeable but not that bad. I mean, in 500 year of time the change from late vulgar gallo roman to old french (thank you franks ^^) is much more important than the one in modern french. It's like the change in the Australian pronunciation.
      5- It's a general tendency in all of Europe to soften the pronunciation. English and Scandinavian languages do already that (Danish are well known for that). German follows the the same path as French but 50 years later with the dropping of the ends of the words ("en" becomes "-n") and the loss of rolled "r"s.
      6- France (always has been but) was really for the last three centuries a place of immigration. Words were imported from Polish, Italian, Arabic in numerous variances, Antillean Creoles, Kabyle... and from local languages via the Argot (parallel language composed originally of Picards, Champenois, and Lorrains dialects). All of these word have a specific (often modified) pronunciation that doesn't follow the French standards.
      I hope it wasn't too long and that I was quite complete in my explanations. With all of that, it's even surprising that French did just evolved that much.

  • @mrfish1178
    @mrfish1178 4 роки тому +10835

    Next song: Pompeii in ancient Latin

    • @mnorth1351
      @mnorth1351 4 роки тому +205

      That would not be very hard (comparatively - since lots of people know Latin) - I don't think Latin has changed very much since is stared being written down. And to the extent that it has, "old" Latin would be more like before year 0 AD - And that does not quite seem medieval. Ironically, medieval Latin would be "new Latin" technically. That would be ecclesiastical Latin, rather than Classical Latin. But even then, ai think the only differences are pronunciation and a little bit of different vocabulary being favored (but the old vocab still being known and in use, for old texts) - it is really not comparable to the difference between modern English and Old English.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 4 роки тому +137

      House of the Burning Lava

    • @valentinmitterbauer4196
      @valentinmitterbauer4196 4 роки тому +148

      @@mnorth1351 There are some difference between "Caesars" latin and "medieval" latin, so to speak. For example, Caesar's name is pronounced "zee-zar" in modern english, in "modern" latin it's "tze-zar" (with e like in "red"), in classical latin he would be pronounced "ka-e-zar", almost like the german word "Kaiser" (meaning emperor). Same with Cicero being pronounced as Kikero instead of Tzitzero and so on. From my experience though english speakers have more trouble with latin pronounciation by default than, for example, italians or germans.

    • @jabrrwocky
      @jabrrwocky 4 роки тому +20

      Yes please would love a bardcore Latin cover

    • @AgmaSchwa
      @AgmaSchwa 4 роки тому +10

      oh that would be beautiful

  • @amybourriaque87
    @amybourriaque87 2 роки тому +231

    This is so close to Cajun French.. This makes me so happy and its beautiful.

    • @jean-claudetergal5271
      @jean-claudetergal5271 5 місяців тому +9

      it's also close to current French, so I understand it well (I'm a French speaker, but not French). But I don't know if the pronunciation is as obvious and close to current French.
      But it is also well known that Cajun is an ancient French language inherited from the colonists who came from France.

    • @sheolghies2197
      @sheolghies2197 5 місяців тому +10

      @@jean-claudetergal5271 As a Frenchman and as some comments have pointed out, we feel the difference especially in the fact that the silent letters at the end of the word are pronounced where today everything is silent. So it's close enough to be generally understood but different enough to be able to perceive the difference.

    • @flyingsquirrell6953
      @flyingsquirrell6953 4 місяці тому +3

      @@sheolghies2197 As an American learning French - Je suis d’accord.
      Ngl this sounds so much worse than modern French. Like modern French is soothing and this just sounds like Latinized English.

    • @Orsu-B
      @Orsu-B 4 місяці тому

      ​@@flyingsquirrell6953 les paroles sont comme en français d'aujourd'hui avec quelques petites différences sur l'orthographe des mots.
      Le seul problème pour moi qui est français est l'accent qui rend difficile la compréhension de la chanson

    • @flyingsquirrell6953
      @flyingsquirrell6953 4 місяці тому

      @@Orsu-B Agreed

  • @user-vt2ze8rm8t
    @user-vt2ze8rm8t Рік тому +113

    Year 1269. A young 21 years old bard, Pierre, was trying to compose song. He worked at it for more than 3 years, but all attempts was failure. But one day, Pierre decided to wake up early and go for the walk to saw the sunrise. He went to his favorite hill, overlooking the whole of Orleans. Pierre sat there, and soon he saw a big yellow ball rising from the horison. Suddenly, the inspiration strikes him, like lightning. The words of the song formed themselves into a rhyme in his brain, as if Pierre had learned them for many years in a row. 2 months after, after melody of the song was done, Pierre grab his guitar and walked down the streets of Orleans, singing his song. Citizens of Orleans liked Pierre's song very much, and it became popular quickly. It was spreading across the cities and villages of France.Even Louis IX found out about this song, but he was indifferent to it. As time went and Pierre died, people began to forget about the song, and it was forgotten for many years.
    In 1964, group of archeologists conducted excavations near Orleans to find some artifacts, but they find only one piece of paper and few coins. After they careful clean that paper, it turned out that it was a sheet with notes. One of the archeologist called his musician friend, and he played this song on guitar, according to sheet. They like the melody,so they record it and sent the song to the radio. This melody was played on several radio stations, and it so happened that Alan Price, the keyboardist of The Animals, listened to it. He was quite interested at the unusual melody of the song, so he tell it to the rest of the band, and soon, they released their famous song, ''House of the Rising Sun''.It was listened for many people all around the world.
    56 years later, another archeologists group conducted excavations about 20 km north-west from Orleans, at place, where 8 centuries ago, was trade road. They find several chests with jewelry, letters, and weapons. But all of them was in very bad condition. Except letters from deepest chest.These letters were brought to the Orleans Museum. At it, turned out, that one of the letters was different from others. It's look like a lyrics of something, not usual letter. Text of it was in old French. After 32 days of hard translate, as letter was almost impossible to read sometimes, turned out, that it was a song named ''House in Orleans'' lyrics. This song was incredibly similar to the ''House of the Rising Sun''. Someone did an AI voice simulation, that shows, how the song would sound, if it was sang, and posted the song on UA-cam. We don't know his name, but because him, we now can listen to this almost 800 years old masterpiece.

    • @engdark1
      @engdark1 Рік тому +18

      I don't want to break your narrative but orleans is in a really flat land, there is no hill from where you can see the whole city

    • @xrogaan
      @xrogaan Рік тому +19

      @@engdark1 Do you really believe somebody would do that? Go on the internet and tell lies?

    • @sourdrop
      @sourdrop Місяць тому

      @@engdark1 no it's true I was the hill

    • @michelguevara151
      @michelguevara151 11 днів тому

      quidére, pas "guitare".

  • @ABAlphaBeta
    @ABAlphaBeta 4 роки тому +4587

    When you try and impress a French milkmaid

    • @the_miracle_aligner
      @the_miracle_aligner  4 роки тому +311

      Works every time? 😂😂😂

    • @teegamew766
      @teegamew766 4 роки тому +147

      @@the_miracle_aligner got milk

    • @timred14
      @timred14 4 роки тому +174

      Everybody knows the best French maidens are a baker's daughter

    • @teegamew766
      @teegamew766 4 роки тому +99

      @@timred14 she bakedth mine sword good.

    • @5s5t5e5v5e5n
      @5s5t5e5v5e5n 4 роки тому +37

      Je trouve la traduction assez compréhensible même s'il y a quelques mots que j'ai pas trop compris. C'est incroyable que l'on a pu traduire la chanson. 🌝

  • @loofahsswanson559
    @loofahsswanson559 4 роки тому +6346

    “Where the air itself is an obstacle” is the best description of summer in New Orleans I’ve ever heard

    • @RampinUp46
      @RampinUp46 3 роки тому +332

      I think I'm going to start using this instead of my description of "walking through soup".

    • @LiftYagami
      @LiftYagami 3 роки тому +52

      @@RampinUp46 walking through homeless shit piss and beer soup

    • @gordfortin2782
      @gordfortin2782 3 роки тому +94

      But is he talking about new Orleans, USA or orleans in France?

    • @volksmann
      @volksmann 3 роки тому +205

      @@gordfortin2782 Original song is referring the US I think, but the medieval one refers to the French one

    • @dtman2445
      @dtman2445 3 роки тому +6

      Agreed

  • @johnhall7522
    @johnhall7522 2 роки тому +39

    1:14 Idk why but this exact moment is the absolute peak of the song, I hear him say "D'Orleans" and my soul leaves my body

  • @cerberaodollam
    @cerberaodollam 2 роки тому +43

    This makes me want to hug my dad. He's in this 70s and this is one of his favorite songs.

    • @cerberaodollam
      @cerberaodollam Рік тому +9

      upddate, he's gone

    • @azzucks
      @azzucks Рік тому +8

      ​@@cerberaodollamhey man, hope youre doing ok

  • @onecertainesquire486
    @onecertainesquire486 4 роки тому +2680

    When you, an Englishman, arrive at the University of Paris, only to be put in the German Quarter...

    • @MrJMB122
      @MrJMB122 4 роки тому +16

      That great joke

    • @chingizzhylkybayev8575
      @chingizzhylkybayev8575 4 роки тому +6

      What is that reference?

    • @onecertainesquire486
      @onecertainesquire486 4 роки тому +238

      Chingiz Zhylkybayev eh, it can be interpreted in many ways. It could be a joke about how most English Scholars could speak perfect French, but still get thrown in the German Quarter, how the French couldn’t distinguish between different Germanic peoples etc etc

    • @JBGARINGAN
      @JBGARINGAN 4 роки тому +79

      Strange considering the French are descended from Germanic tribe Franks. But then they became Christians and had their language latinized, but the other Germans had only their lords and clergy speak Latin and the peasantry still spoke German though they too were Christians.
      Perhaps this is related to some modern French people having a sort of arrogance/ego about people speaking French poorly? It is quite fascinating because they laugh at those who speak French poorly but would not resort to speaking English because it is an ugly language to them. Only to then speak English when they've heard enough butchery of French and speak English poorly themselves. Of course this is not all French people, only few. Most of the time when you attempt to speak someone else's language they will feel appreciative that you tried.
      "If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head. If you talk to him in his own language, that goes to his heart." -Nelson Mandela

    • @Pedrosa2541
      @Pedrosa2541 4 роки тому +52

      ​@@JBGARINGAN When Julius Caesar did his conquest of Galia in 60 B.C, he genocied the gauls living there and later replaced them with latin settlers, so in 300 to 400 A.D, the time where the Franks arrived in mass in to today France most of the population would speak latin. Even if the Franks were a germanic people at heart, they were only a tiny elite surrounded by a sea of latin speakers peasants (vulgar) and by assisted by a latin (high) speaking clergy. We call french because of it was the name of their political elite, but the base of the language actually came from that vulgar latin spoken by the masses.

  • @user-on5mo4kx7q
    @user-on5mo4kx7q 6 місяців тому +20

    Chapeau bas pour la version en vieux français , vraiment touché en tant que Français (nous c' est la version de Johnny qu 'on connait ) travail impressionnant que vous avez fait

    • @v.j.3029
      @v.j.3029 2 місяці тому

      Ça sonne un peu comme du Ch’ti, tu trouves pas?

  • @J0W3xArtist
    @J0W3xArtist Рік тому +19

    I speak Quebec French.
    My (adoptive) father used to play this song when I was little child. And I would sing along few years ago. Hearing it in old french made me so happy ! Thank you :)

  • @anonchop5814
    @anonchop5814 4 роки тому +4935

    Next song: Toto - Africa but ancient Egyptian

    • @TarkTheConlanger
      @TarkTheConlanger 4 роки тому +459

      *Proto-Niger-Congo language

    • @TarkTheConlanger
      @TarkTheConlanger 4 роки тому +265

      or Proto Afro Asiatic

    • @bonetonelord
      @bonetonelord 4 роки тому +380

      Proto-Bantu would be more appropriate. The song mentions Kilimanjaro and the Serengeti, both of which are in Tanzania, so the ancestor language of Swahili, Tanzania's most widely spoken language, would be the best to use for a cover of Africa. Granted, Proto-Bantu dates to around 2,000-3,000 years before the medieval period, but so does ancient Egyptian (if you're using Old Kingdom or pre-dynastic Egyptian, it's more like 4,000).

    • @madcatlover7554
      @madcatlover7554 4 роки тому +9

      Anon Chop that would be difficult

    • @dualkitsune3813
      @dualkitsune3813 4 роки тому +46

      Sure....just as soon as we figure out how ancient egyptian sounded...

  • @tazking93
    @tazking93 4 роки тому +2180

    I love the touch that the city being talked about is Orleans not New Orleans... That made my day

    • @althealligator1467
      @althealligator1467 4 роки тому +23

      I mean yeah but that's why it's in Old French

    • @thedj67
      @thedj67 4 роки тому +94

      @@althealligator1467 Orléans is a french city. New Orleans was named after it and still called "Nouvelle Orléans" in french.

    • @althealligator1467
      @althealligator1467 4 роки тому +21

      @@thedj67 rEaLlY? i DiDn'T kNoW! i'M fRrEnCh AnD i DiDn'T eVeN kNoW tHaT! lIkE mY rEpLy WaSn'T bAsED oN tHe fAcT tHaT i AlrEaDy kNeW tHaT iNfoRmAtIoN aT AlL!

    • @thedj67
      @thedj67 4 роки тому +77

      @@althealligator1467 l'idiot du village

    • @tamerelapute5256
      @tamerelapute5256 4 роки тому +13

      @@althealligator1467 malaise supprime

  • @nolanrichoux3538
    @nolanrichoux3538 2 роки тому +125

    To everyone wondering why it sounds so much like english, look at the time period. This french is the actual language we shared with the english, after the Norman conquest. English evolved from existing Anglo-Saxons dialects and this peculiar French, which sounds weird to my very own french ears. And even though I can understand it pretty well, I must say that I think it's also thanks to the fact that I learned english, and went to quebec. Quebecois ressembles very slightly this language, in that compared to metropolitan french, it is "old". But only 18th century old... so imagine the differences with this form of french, lol

    • @patrickwillybottom9897
      @patrickwillybottom9897 2 роки тому +3

      It sounds nothing like English. What do you mean lol

    • @patrickwillybottom9897
      @patrickwillybottom9897 2 роки тому +1

      It’s not the french that spread to England that was the Norman dialect of Middle French which is completely different

    • @nolanrichoux3538
      @nolanrichoux3538 2 роки тому +11

      @@patrickwillybottom9897 . . . Norman dialect was quite litteraly french. They had been french for more than 250 years, at this point. There was no "Norman language", only a norman accent. What are you on about ? Do you despise having french links that much ?

    • @patrickwillybottom9897
      @patrickwillybottom9897 2 роки тому

      @@nolanrichoux3538 I didn’t deny they were french I don’t know if you can read properly or not I said they spoke Middle French and a Norman dialect of it too which is quite different from Parisian old french isn’t it. And what do you mean “having french links”? Just because my mother tongue borrowed words from Anglo Norman doesn’t mean I’m french mate.

    • @patrickwillybottom9897
      @patrickwillybottom9897 2 роки тому

      @@nolanrichoux3538 You clearly have no idea how quoting works as you claim
      I said “Norman language” which appears nowhere in my comment

  • @Zer035_eee
    @Zer035_eee 2 роки тому +34

    As a bilingual from Canada I can understand most if not all the lyrics, most of the words are almost all the same, it truly is a masterpiece…

  • @benedictekibler4563
    @benedictekibler4563 4 роки тому +4571

    I am French, and this pronunciation reminds me of Cajun or Quebec way of talking, which makes sense because they have kept some ways that we have forgotten in France. Congratulation for this cover. I find it beautiful ! I love it ! thany you so much !

    • @syntheticteapot
      @syntheticteapot 4 роки тому +189

      Yeah my grandmother speaks cajun French and this sounds just like it.

    • @Archpope
      @Archpope 4 роки тому +163

      When trying to study French in high school, I struggled with all the silent letters. It looks like there was a time when they were pronounced.

    • @StabbySabby
      @StabbySabby 4 роки тому +139

      Archpope don't worry, it's alright, as a quebec french speaker myself i completely understand that this language is an utter fucking mess

    • @nonamesansnom35
      @nonamesansnom35 4 роки тому +76

      sound more like acadian french tbh i've got familly in beauce and it's kinda sound like this lmao

    • @anthonylong9067
      @anthonylong9067 4 роки тому +45

      I think the cajun language is spoken commonly in the state of Louisiana. Would make sense as it used to be colonized by france

  • @communismwithgiggles2515
    @communismwithgiggles2515 4 роки тому +3226

    Modern French people: "How can you sing this? There are consonants!"

    • @corriedebeer799
      @corriedebeer799 4 роки тому +120

      wee wee

    • @i_teleported_bread7404
      @i_teleported_bread7404 3 роки тому +119

      Plosives? *Not in my house!*

    • @link_biscuit7786
      @link_biscuit7786 3 роки тому +66

      I'm pretty certain this music video was made by an anglo-saxon man. There is no way on earth, knowing what we know about prononciation of latin, Frankish and Old French that this is an accurate reconstitution. Old French was closer to actual Italian or Spanish.

    • @Taeerom
      @Taeerom 3 роки тому +58

      @@link_biscuit7786 Italian is a much later adoption of vulgar latin than what this song is trying to recreate. Why would it sound like Italian?

    • @link_biscuit7786
      @link_biscuit7786 3 роки тому +27

      @Taeerom italian, Spanish and French, the roman language, stem from vulgar latin; italian being the closest for obvious reason. During the middle age vulgar latin was the common language in all three of these actual countries. The differences between them that we hear today is due to the interaction of the pre-roman invasions languages spoke by the people and tribe which were later part of the roman empire. Ancient French is derived from the Langues d'oïl, the languages spoken un northern France during the late middle ages, appearing from the interaction of the Frankish dialects, spoken by the Franks, with latin.

  • @dmitrys.2932
    @dmitrys.2932 3 роки тому +160

    Old French sounds so epic. True language of Knights

    • @Thefrenchishere
      @Thefrenchishere Рік тому +12

      Deus vult ! ✝⚜

    • @carloolivari1072
      @carloolivari1072 10 місяців тому +27

      I speak French to men, Italian to women, Spanish to God, and German to my horse.
      - Charles V, Holy Roman Emporer

    • @sabrasabranise3335
      @sabrasabranise3335 10 місяців тому +15

      @@carloolivari1072 It's not correct. this one is : "I speak English to my accountants, French to my ambassadors, Italian to my mistress, Latin to my God, and German to my horse"

    • @carloolivari1072
      @carloolivari1072 10 місяців тому

      @@sabrasabranise3335 ok, fair enough, mais pour quoi?

    • @sabrasabranise3335
      @sabrasabranise3335 10 місяців тому +8

      @@carloolivari1072 I speak spanish to god seemed really weird. How come he will speak spanish to god ? So I checked if he really said that, and not. It's Latin, not Spanish. Which make more sense.

  • @classiclife7204
    @classiclife7204 3 роки тому +69

    I swear, with the added pronunciation of all the letters left off today, Old French might be easier for me to learn than current French

    • @_Executor_
      @_Executor_ 3 роки тому +14

      As a native Spanish speaker I totally agree with you

    • @aviator2117
      @aviator2117 2 роки тому +5

      @@_Executor_ have fun with case systems then 🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @tompatterson1548
      @tompatterson1548 2 роки тому +2

      @@aviator2117 I like case! Maybe I should learn it!

    • @dieblaueflamme4387
      @dieblaueflamme4387 10 місяців тому

      ​@@aviator2117le cas sujet and le cas re'gime.
      It was not that much.

    • @ns2859
      @ns2859 8 місяців тому +2

      @@_Executor_ Yes, if you speak Spanish, it would be easier to pronounce than modern French for sure.

  • @eliemervelez3583
    @eliemervelez3583 3 роки тому +865

    as a spanish speaker, old french is what i thought french would read like

    • @beter21137
      @beter21137 Рік тому +24

      Yo tambien

    • @ikarusxv
      @ikarusxv Рік тому +12

      Pronouncing all letters, like in Spanish lol

    • @darthtleilaxu4021
      @darthtleilaxu4021 8 місяців тому

      @@ikarusxv Ils ne prononçaient pas toutes les lettres en anciens français. C'est pour cette raison que nombre d'entre elles furent supprimées.

  • @dualkitsune3813
    @dualkitsune3813 4 роки тому +323

    "Where the air itself is an obstacle." Well damn, this man has Definitely been in Orleans.

  • @unrulycrow6299
    @unrulycrow6299 3 роки тому +20

    French from France and amateur of languages in their older forms, I must say I am really impressed by your pronunciation!
    Now time to get trilled -r back in fashion.

    • @michelguevara151
      @michelguevara151 11 днів тому

      ça se faites toujours près d'italie, et un peu ici au languedoc

  • @CesarGarcia-nd5xz
    @CesarGarcia-nd5xz 3 роки тому +115

    When you write a song to impress your crush lady Joan of Arc.

    • @CGEcastingagency
      @CGEcastingagency 3 роки тому +4

      Joan of arc was born in the 1300s

    • @dad6451
      @dad6451 3 роки тому +9

      @@CGEcastingagency close enough

    • @inconnu4961
      @inconnu4961 2 роки тому +7

      @@CGEcastingagency AND she was still a young girl! never lived to become a woman.

    • @midorithefestivegardevoir6727
      @midorithefestivegardevoir6727 5 місяців тому +3

      @@inconnu4961 Let's sing for her lost soul executed by the Brits, then.

  • @alpenschatz
    @alpenschatz 4 роки тому +431

    To think I'd live in a time where I'd get to hear extinct forms of languages from nearly a millennia ago being sung along to a catchy tune. Great work!

    • @dragonmaster613
      @dragonmaster613 4 роки тому +2

      What a time to exist!

    • @hereLiesThisTroper
      @hereLiesThisTroper 4 роки тому +3

      Try searching the oldest Greek song here in YT and click on the video by Hank Greene. He sang it at the tune of a 90s boyband. It was amazing.

    • @pabloarroyo6091
      @pabloarroyo6091 4 роки тому +1

      @@hereLiesThisTroper va

  • @ori8107
    @ori8107 4 роки тому +923

    damn, time hasnt been generous to the teletubbies sun baby

    • @warriormaiden9829
      @warriormaiden9829 4 роки тому +15

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @coldmossonarock7743
      @coldmossonarock7743 4 роки тому +27

      He now rises over an empire to wich he is the sun-emperor.

    • @MsMary957
      @MsMary957 4 роки тому +15

      Orange face, crazy hair, reminds me of someone.

    • @ori8107
      @ori8107 4 роки тому +5

      @@MsMary957 hhmm... yeah it does sound familiar

    • @leonardoflorentin
      @leonardoflorentin 4 роки тому

      I've seen that sun face (the one in this picture) more time than I can count, it's a god, an illuminati god most probably.

  • @benbboyer
    @benbboyer 4 місяці тому +4

    As a french, I find it easier to understand by listening then by reading the lyrics, Wich surprised me. It sounds a bit like modern french with a strong country side accent, there parts of France that have an accent that I find harder to understand than that.

  • @BigScreamingBaby
    @BigScreamingBaby 7 місяців тому +4

    I like that you made this version about Orleans not New Orleans really makes it feel evem more like a medieval song.

  • @redbeard9136
    @redbeard9136 4 роки тому +2406

    The language itselft is surprisingly close to current French, with a bit of words we don't use anymore but are still technically viable, unlike in Vikings where I couldn't understand half the shit Charlemagne was saying

    • @user-hz9hu4gh2z
      @user-hz9hu4gh2z 4 роки тому +162

      Isn't the laguage Charlemagne was speaking supposed to be Germanic, not Romance?

    • @redbeard9136
      @redbeard9136 4 роки тому +217

      @@user-hz9hu4gh2z he spoke Frankish, wich from my understanding lacks a massive amount of Anglo-Saxon bits the modern French has, but our language has some Germanic and Latin roots, as most of North-Western and Southern Europe languages

    • @user-hz9hu4gh2z
      @user-hz9hu4gh2z 4 роки тому +244

      @@redbeard9136 Frankish is fundamentally Germanic, having Germanic grammar and all. French is still Romance, as it has clearly Latin-derived grammar.

    • @PiousMoltar
      @PiousMoltar 4 роки тому +125

      Frankish was a Germanic language.
      I'm still baffled as to how France ended up speaking a Romance language. But that's what happened.

    • @redbeard9136
      @redbeard9136 4 роки тому +41

      @@PiousMoltar because Frankish was spoken in the Northern half of modern France

  • @danielorgan673
    @danielorgan673 4 роки тому +780

    It sounds like a less French version of French.

    • @pallasproserpina4118
      @pallasproserpina4118 4 роки тому +58

      I know this was just a joke, but that’s basically what old French was. It’s not wildly different from modern French except in the quirks of pronunciation and spelling that developed over time and make French so distinct from other Romance languages-it’s closer to the more simple pronunciation of Latin. That’s not to say my assessment is completely accurate-it’s not-or that the translation and pronunciation in this video is perfect-it, of course, isn’t, because old French is a hard language to get right in the modern day. But it’s funny how accurate your joke comment happened to be

    • @andryuu_2000
      @andryuu_2000 4 роки тому +15

      Old French should sound more like franc-provençal iirc, basically if an Italian was reading french for the first time.

    • @solarprogeny6736
      @solarprogeny6736 4 роки тому +16

      Well the pronunciation is completely off for most of it

    • @pallasproserpina4118
      @pallasproserpina4118 4 роки тому +8

      ishei Ehhh to an extent yes but in general it’s pretty accurate, considering we don’t know for a fact what old French even sounded like

    • @dunekilens1898
      @dunekilens1898 4 роки тому +11

      I mean there is in this song the most basics mistakes an english speaker can make like pronouncing s and t at the end of words, and the way "in" is pronounced is completely off too. Yes we don't have any evidence of how french sounded like at the time BUT if you want it to sound a little bit like french at some point in history you'd better pronounce it with sounds closer to modern french.

  • @zechtyler1674
    @zechtyler1674 Рік тому +5

    House of The Rising Sun has been sung in some form for generations, going back to old sea shanty’s type stuff. Who’s to say at one point it wasn’t sung (or something very similar) in old French. This is cool. I love the internet

  • @LehySnek
    @LehySnek 2 роки тому +34

    I'm Italian, I had to study French in middle school, I can handle Old French better than its modern counterpart.

    • @lecoureurdesbois86
      @lecoureurdesbois86 6 місяців тому +1

      I'd be curious to see how you understand Québec French versus France French.
      I'm not objcetive, but I always had the feeling we speak more in a "latin" way and in a more "bastardized" way that ressembles old French, as modern French was very influenced by the Académie française and from the 18th century changed it quite a bit

    • @squirlmy
      @squirlmy 5 місяців тому

      @@lecoureurdesbois86 you didn't say if you were Québécois or French, yourself! Who's "we"? I suspect the French Revolution also changed the language quite a bit in France, changes which probably did not carry over into Québec

    • @lecoureurdesbois86
      @lecoureurdesbois86 5 місяців тому

      @@squirlmy Yes that's also what I'm saying, I'm from Québec

  • @comack669
    @comack669 4 роки тому +618

    Wow French didn't change much. As a native English speaker, Old English I can barely follow, but with my rusty French, this is pretty straightforward.

    • @richbarnes2451
      @richbarnes2451 4 роки тому +162

      This time period would actually correspond to Middle English, is Chaucer. Which takes some getting used to but is still intelligible to modern English speakers. Old English would be a couple hundred years older than this time and basically a foreign language

    • @BlommaBaumbart
      @BlommaBaumbart 4 роки тому +120

      As Rich says, Old English is to English more like Republican Latin is to French. European languages actually developed at quite different speeds if you look at them. Slavic languages didn't go far in the last 500 years whereas for example Danish threw most of its grammar overboard and changed the majority of its sounds. Finnish basically didn't change at all since it was first recorded and English and Greek sort of collapsed in themselves after the Middle Ages, whereas smaller languages like Low German and Gaelic didn't change from about 1100 until about the 1850s when speakers started learning a 2nd language (High German and English respectively) and soon began to speak their region's original language with a foreign accent.

    • @MikhalisBramouell
      @MikhalisBramouell 4 роки тому +31

      @@BlommaBaumbart I don't know where you heard that about Greek, modern Greek is still basically Medieval Greek which only lost a noun declension and changed the Perfect and Pluperfect verb conjugations. We still read ancient Greek at least weekly in church.

    • @BlommaBaumbart
      @BlommaBaumbart 4 роки тому +9

      @@MikhalisBramouell I mixed up periods in a moment of confusion, my bad.

    • @MadManchou
      @MadManchou 4 роки тому +24

      @@richbarnes2451 actually that's more 18th century french with maybe a couple of older words thrown in. What is typically refered to as "old french" is from the late 10th to 14th centuries and is quite a bit more different from modern french (for one thing, cases (like in latin or german) were mostly still alive, although reduced to two ; conversely, word order was much less fixed)
      Old french is sort of intelligible for a french speaker, but actually more difficult than spanish or italian (although it might only be down to the ear being unacquainted with OF sounds)

  • @mauriciofuentes7638
    @mauriciofuentes7638 4 роки тому +1225

    Katy Perry's "Firework" but in an ancient Chinese dialect

    • @timothywilcox1539
      @timothywilcox1539 3 роки тому +37

      So Mandarin?
      Idk if Modern Mandarin is the same as it was several centuries ago, but maybe.

    • @ArsyaUtomo
      @ArsyaUtomo 3 роки тому +29

      @@timothywilcox1539 canton

    • @i_teleported_bread7404
      @i_teleported_bread7404 3 роки тому +25

      How about Yi?
      (Edit): Okay, so it's come to my attention that Yi is the name of the script (as well as the ethnicity of its native speakers), whereas the language itself is called Nuosu.

    • @justelliot4870
      @justelliot4870 3 роки тому +20

      @@i_teleported_bread7404 Hell, I wonder how difficult it would be to make a song in Whenzhounese. That could be interesting

    • @curtiswong7280
      @curtiswong7280 3 роки тому +20

      @@timothywilcox1539 Old or Middle Chinese seems to be what you're looking for; the former is lost to time, but the latter is much easier to track down and bears similarities with the southern Chinese dialect, Cantonese.

  • @SFalcone
    @SFalcone 2 роки тому +65

    Incroyable, une musique en vieux français sur ma ville, Orléans !🙂 Coucou d'Orléans et vive la France !

    • @presidentJameskpolk-rm8gl
      @presidentJameskpolk-rm8gl 2 роки тому +3

      New Orleans is better

    • @x-a-
      @x-a- Рік тому +9

      @@presidentJameskpolk-rm8gl isn't it riddled with crimes and stuff ?

    • @darthtleilaxu4021
      @darthtleilaxu4021 8 місяців тому

      @@presidentJameskpolk-rm8gl La cathédrale est plus jolie. Ceci dit la musique à la Nouvelle Orléans est excellente ainsi que la nourriture.

    • @presidentJameskpolk-rm8gl
      @presidentJameskpolk-rm8gl 8 місяців тому +1

      @@x-a- Orleans isn't much better

    • @tyrannosauruscock
      @tyrannosauruscock 4 місяці тому

      @@presidentJameskpolk-rm8glNuh uh

  • @littlemisskaykay22
    @littlemisskaykay22 Рік тому +32

    Huge Shout out the the guy who recorded this back in 1270 A.D.

  • @NathanClingan
    @NathanClingan 4 роки тому +1014

    GREAT work! To those saying, "this doesn't sound French, it sounds like an American accent" -- rumor has it that this was sung by French Canadians, BUT, that's really irrelevant. Old and Middle French pronunciation was COMPLETELY different from modern parisian French pronunciation. Vowels were more differentiated, throated "r" was uncommon, and hard "r" was much more common. Words like "moi, toi, loi" were pronounced more like moï, toï, loï, as evidenced by the accents preserved in some of France's older colonies, like parts of Québec. Here's one great example:
    ua-cam.com/video/rp8tu8TgrXo/v-deo.html

    • @selas9238
      @selas9238 4 роки тому +22

      Well, you're right, but to me they still sound "english" because of the vowels :') you can almost hear their lips curl in pronouncing them, when old french being closer to latin it had more open vowels (listen to the difference between the "o"s in this song and the video you linked, or modern italian, for example)

    • @11Survivor
      @11Survivor 3 роки тому +47

      Funny thing is, depending on what part of France you're from, the accent changes too, like I'd be told I have a german accent if I went further west, because I live right on the border.

    • @ah.1190
      @ah.1190 3 роки тому +69

      People from France tend to be particularly conceited when it comes to the french language, so them discrediting the people behind a video like this was to be expected

    • @anaonthenet
      @anaonthenet 3 роки тому +8

      Only until the 13th century. It then turned into mwè, twè, rwè. What is p"reserved" in Québec is already a lot more evolved

    • @the_nautillus9176
      @the_nautillus9176 3 роки тому +3

      @@selas9238 You had me until that cringy emote.

  • @homeristro3472
    @homeristro3472 4 роки тому +1976

    I actually learn how to sing this, my D&D character is a bard and i sing this a lot to my party members, they absoloute love it
    Nice vid, music and lyrics!!

    • @the_miracle_aligner
      @the_miracle_aligner  4 роки тому +156

      LOL tyyy, too kind Sir Bard, Bardcore seeping into D&D sessions is one of the things which im really happy about :) May your adventures always be fruitful, friend. ❤

    • @chewbaccadog9840
      @chewbaccadog9840 4 роки тому +18

      @@the_miracle_aligner I mean it was kind of inevitable.

    • @JesusPensiones
      @JesusPensiones 4 роки тому +2

      What Is d&d?

    • @katierisley
      @katierisley 4 роки тому +27

      wait that’s dope that you’re legit a good bard. i just start singing wonderwall badly to annoy them

    • @landonsorenson9278
      @landonsorenson9278 4 роки тому +2

      xdd only a really good pen and paper!

  • @mistermclaur9205
    @mistermclaur9205 2 роки тому +16

    French here, not mad at all this is freaking amazing! I'm shocked how much words I can totally understand though it's a super old language!

  • @robertschwarz8042
    @robertschwarz8042 3 місяці тому +4

    i love insanely creative people like this

  • @mrfish1178
    @mrfish1178 4 роки тому +380

    Honestly I think you’re the best bard in the land. I think having proper historical lyrics with the music is great, you obviously put a lot of effort in

    • @MikhalisBramouell
      @MikhalisBramouell 4 роки тому +4

      His lute gives a +2 Speak Language bonus and +2 Int

    • @koft_nedted
      @koft_nedted 4 роки тому +4

      Facts. Most of Bardcore is low effort midi conversions of well known songs. This is quality

  • @carluy7351
    @carluy7351 4 роки тому +1296

    modern french: croissant
    old french: cRuoiSseNt

    • @Gabdube
      @Gabdube 4 роки тому +24

      Nah that's just due to the modern English accent.

    • @imlost19
      @imlost19 4 роки тому +20

      @@Gabdube interesting. Did you study old french as well?

    • @dr.solanum766
      @dr.solanum766 4 роки тому +28

      En vieux français le mot croissant (viennoiserie) n'existait pas 🤭

    • @MonsieurPhoton
      @MonsieurPhoton 4 роки тому +1

      this is not not modern modern French, however I have not complaints in this case.

    • @dr.solanum766
      @dr.solanum766 4 роки тому +2

      @@MonsieurPhoton si tu le dit mon gars

  • @routeman680
    @routeman680 4 місяці тому +5

    What a recommendation from YT! I didn't know I needed this, but it's great. The original Animals version is a favourite, and you have opened a new dimension. Merci.

  • @marc7817
    @marc7817 3 роки тому +39

    as a french native passionate about the old french the prononciation is quite good !

    • @chmarzec
      @chmarzec 8 місяців тому +1

      On dirait plutôt un accent anglais par moments…

    • @marc7817
      @marc7817 8 місяців тому

      @@chmarzec l'auteur étant anglais c'est pas étonnant

  • @TheGlassman14
    @TheGlassman14 3 роки тому +1191

    I hate when people ask what music im into because how the hell do I explain this?

    • @jimfritz9503
      @jimfritz9503 3 роки тому +24

      WORLD MUSIC .

    • @roboticol6280
      @roboticol6280 3 роки тому +31

      tell them that you listen to medieval msuic

    • @adl805
      @adl805 3 роки тому +58

      Tell them that you're based and refuse to elaborate

    • @Rhaenarys
      @Rhaenarys 3 роки тому +36

      Bardcore. Theres literally a genre for it lol. That's what I tell people if they ask. Though, I admittedly still feel weird telling people that lol.

    • @fawneoconnor6894
      @fawneoconnor6894 2 роки тому +18

      I usually say "from classical, to opera, to oldies, rock, metal, some rap and everything in between."

  • @vespasiancaesar9842
    @vespasiancaesar9842 4 роки тому +260

    That sun knows more about me than I do and it scares me.

    • @callerunknown
      @callerunknown 4 роки тому +2

      Lmao true

    • @O-5Council
      @O-5Council 4 роки тому +3

      This is true... And I don't like it.

    • @chrisalex82
      @chrisalex82 Місяць тому +1

      Fur somé reseon tze sun luked lik it vas muving bute it was juste the lighte lmfao

  • @lecoureurdesbois86
    @lecoureurdesbois86 6 місяців тому +7

    I'm a native French speaker from Québec, crazy to say without even looking at the lyrics I can understand at least 80% of it. Some sentences are exactly the same too!

  • @dayoldpepsi652
    @dayoldpepsi652 6 місяців тому +2

    This song has been brought from genre to genre over the years and recreated again and again from disco to pop and you have once again followed suit in an endlessly creative way. You should have pride in what you’ve created for it was a joy to listen too

  • @nebojsag.5871
    @nebojsag.5871 3 роки тому +6648

    Is it just me, or is old French just French, but where they actually pronounce the letters?

    • @paolo8339
      @paolo8339 3 роки тому +535

      well, at the time there was'nt really any orthography, so you could write the words pretty much the way you wanted, and the singer has quite an english accent, and so sometimes in the video there are letters that are pronounced because the modern spelling is used, but the letters could maybe not even be here in spellings of the time.

    • @martinaubin4169
      @martinaubin4169 3 роки тому +343

      As a French person, I can tell you that this is barely audible; I often had to read the English text to know what the hell was going on. « Di le aus enfaz ». What the sh!t?! « Dis le aux enfants ». Now that's more like it!
      Come to think of it, if nothing would've been written, it probably would've been easier to understand because it does sound similar even if they pronounce « in » as in « i-n » instead of... you know... « in »

    • @nebojsag.5871
      @nebojsag.5871 3 роки тому +46

      @@martinaubin4169 like the "im" in Rimbaud? As in nasally pronounce the I without really pronouncing the m? Yeah, I am a bit of a language nerd, I know.

    • @LarsOfTheMohicans
      @LarsOfTheMohicans 3 роки тому +261

      I actually prefer the sound of Old French, rather than the excessively nasal sound of "New" French with its useless consonants.

    • @souzouker
      @souzouker 3 роки тому +95

      it's french prounonced the way english is pronounced

  • @IblOOpQc
    @IblOOpQc 4 роки тому +1629

    As someone who lives in Québec where French hasn’t evolved since the 1600/1700s this sounds exactly like the informal French I would speak with my friends although with a slight English accent.

    • @the_miracle_aligner
      @the_miracle_aligner  4 роки тому +239

      I live in Montreal rn, lovin Quebec and its chill history ❤😁

    • @alexm.4876
      @alexm.4876 4 роки тому +211

      I wouldn't say our French didn't evolve since, in my opinion it would be more appropriate to say it evolved differently from European French. We kept some of the old way of talking, but a lot changed too, particulary since recently where French from France seems to be getting more influence. ici.radio-canada.ca/premiere/emissions/aujourd-hui-l-histoire/segments/entrevue/130123/francais-quebecois-nouvelle-france-soubresauts-historiques-bedard

    • @yukimoe
      @yukimoe 4 роки тому +92

      I live in Quebec too, I'd say it's more closer to the French spoken in Acadia (New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and the like).

    • @justsomeone1757
      @justsomeone1757 4 роки тому +40

      the_miracle_aligner chill history of indigenous assimilation and abuse? Not so chill

    • @kamikazes03
      @kamikazes03 4 роки тому +76

      I am a linguist and I can say that you are all full of it. This is a pseudo Old French text sung by an unilingual Anglo and you can't tell the difference. Sad!!!

  • @princecalcium
    @princecalcium 4 місяці тому +2

    taking french class and loving the fact that I can understand this without subtitles! really goes to show how much cognates help

  • @unhin2971
    @unhin2971 2 роки тому +12

    Being french, this feels more like Renaissance French than medieval French. French had 2 languages until the late medieval era (appart from the remaining celts and basques). Those 2 languages were Oc and Oïl. Oïl is the closest to renaissance French which could be spoken today still as it has a majority of same words, just as it is here. Love the Bardcore tho ! :)

  • @jessicawardlaw1821
    @jessicawardlaw1821 4 роки тому +2242

    Next: zeppelin's Immigrant Song in Norse language

    • @jeniseerikson5109
      @jeniseerikson5109 4 роки тому +60

      honestly this should be done

    • @ericko5232
      @ericko5232 4 роки тому +13

      OMG Yes, please do it!!!
      I beg you

    • @WendingWind
      @WendingWind 4 роки тому +11

      We don't know enough about spoken old Norse to accurately portray it, unfortunately.

    • @yiftacheliav1099
      @yiftacheliav1099 4 роки тому +6

      Ja! Jeg trenger det!

    • @Gandalf-The-Green
      @Gandalf-The-Green 4 роки тому +19

      @@WendingWind I think we should ask Dr. Crawford of Colorado University, he can do it.

  • @BoneistJ
    @BoneistJ 4 роки тому +435

    Sweet Jesus, it's a crime of the highest order that I can only like this once.

  • @hieronymus1432
    @hieronymus1432 Рік тому +7

    i love that old french is basically just acadian french

  • @balrogthane
    @balrogthane Рік тому +4

    It even rhymes! Magnificent!

  • @averyconnor8467
    @averyconnor8467 4 роки тому +233

    Soundtrack to the HBO series about Joan of Arc

  • @avatar9520202
    @avatar9520202 3 роки тому +1344

    As a foreigner, learning french, am I the only one finding old french easier to understand than "modern" french ?

    • @hollowhoagie6441
      @hollowhoagie6441 3 роки тому +187

      Modern French speakers merge their sounds so something like Je suis can become J'ui or Je veux could become J'eux. They also have a habit of dropping the eh sound from words.

    • @matheo8651
      @matheo8651 3 роки тому +120

      If you're an English speaker yeah
      Because as a French It sound to me so strange, It sound like an English speaker trying to speak French but he don't know a single word of French

    • @davidandremelchorzavala2100
      @davidandremelchorzavala2100 3 роки тому +58

      The song still has an English accent

    • @paul_position50
      @paul_position50 3 роки тому +71

      @@davidandremelchorzavala2100 it seems to be an English accent but french dialects have this kind of accent. (I'm a native french)

    • @davidandremelchorzavala2100
      @davidandremelchorzavala2100 3 роки тому +2

      @@paul_position50 I’m curious, where?

  • @thefallen2811
    @thefallen2811 3 роки тому +25

    As a catalan speaker, I understand old French better than modern french

  • @redacted8525
    @redacted8525 Рік тому +5

    It’s so funny how the old French sounds so similar to the Cajun French that’s dying out in Louisiana.

  • @ProvingDemons
    @ProvingDemons 4 роки тому +848

    This will sound strange but I felt this song. About a year ago I travelled to Paris and snuck into the forbidden Paris catacombs for a documentary i was shooting. To let the cataphiles, those who live in the catacombs, know that we were peaceful we had to blast music as we trekked for hours in the claustrophobic tunnels. The first song we played was house of the rising sun, deep in the flooded tunnels from the 1400s. This just hit me in the good place memories for miles

    • @romaindemarais
      @romaindemarais 4 роки тому +58

      no one lives in the "Cata". Some people spend a lot of time there, sometimes 2 to 3 days but let's not make up things.
      Police walks through the many galleries and gives tickets... no one stays more than a few hours in one place.
      My brother has been a cataphile for 30+ years and goes there with no maps and i have been going there many times myself in all the different networks.

    • @fcalvaresi
      @fcalvaresi 4 роки тому +59

      Nobody lives in the Catacombs, and that’s fortunate. The cataphiles are just enthusiasts who like to spend their time there.

    • @user-gj4zg4tj3w
      @user-gj4zg4tj3w 4 роки тому +3

      can you link me the documentary?

    • @delilah3556
      @delilah3556 4 роки тому +3

      @@romaindemarais Saluut!! Est-ce-que ton frère acceptera eventuellement d'aider quelques étudiants ? Nous sommes sept cinéastes qui habitent sur Paris et on cheche à filmer un docu court dans les catacombes, mais on a du mal à trouver un bon guide. Mon insta est @lilah.mm si ça lui intéresse.

    • @rbacosta6226
      @rbacosta6226 4 роки тому +6

      r/ThatHappened

  • @BrotherInfernus
    @BrotherInfernus 4 роки тому +285

    As a medieval historian who studied a lot of documents written in medieval french...I must say it's very good!

    • @I6074
      @I6074 4 роки тому +1

      What is the meaning of "garsilleurs"? I

    • @PatrickBaele
      @PatrickBaele 4 роки тому

      Danny Lake-Giguère mais enfin,faut pas trop rigoler....

    • @raphaelfillos6120
      @raphaelfillos6120 4 роки тому +14

      The pronounciation is very off, but the lyrics are really accurate.

    • @bebetyechandler32
      @bebetyechandler32 4 роки тому

      @@raphaelfillos6120 i was wondering about that 😂 i wasn't sure whether "ancient french" just had different pronounciation

    • @raphaelfillos6120
      @raphaelfillos6120 4 роки тому +3

      @@bebetyechandler32 I'm native french, the singer isn't a native or fluent speaker for sure.

  • @SpanishDio
    @SpanishDio 10 місяців тому +7

    Hotel California from the Eagles in Old Spanish!

  • @tannerjay
    @tannerjay Рік тому +4

    This video made me totally interested in the old foundations and language roots and now I'm obsessed with learning it. These old languages sound so cool

  • @bethoconnell6123
    @bethoconnell6123 3 роки тому +743

    Weirdly, as an English speaker with only schoolgirl french, I find the lyrics of this easier to understand than the medieval-english Pumped Up Kicks ones

    • @hollowhoagie6441
      @hollowhoagie6441 3 роки тому +12

      *you've intrigued me*

    • @TheMops14
      @TheMops14 3 роки тому +69

      Wow, this is weird because the same thing is happening to me, except :
      I'm a French native speaker,
      And I find medieval English "Pumped-Up Kicks" easier to understand than this.

    • @catholicdad
      @catholicdad 3 роки тому +22

      @Beth & TheMops:
      Clearly, we've reached the nexus of the Universe

    • @dorkmax7073
      @dorkmax7073 3 роки тому +32

      English has changed a LOT more in the past thousand years than French has. There really isn't any set speed at which a language changes. The semitic languages for example (Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic) have changed very little in the last 4000 years. But English has undergone a lot of change because of political and cultural change. You are speaking the Modern Standard American offshoot of English. At the time of the split in the 1700s, English of England had only barely entered its Modern phase, and undergone the Great Vowel Shift. 500 years before that, English was taking latin and french influence. 400 years before THAT, and it was playing second fiddle to the Norse languages!

    • @Rhaenarys
      @Rhaenarys 3 роки тому +8

      I learned French in school, and actually found both to be equally easy to understand lol. But in old English, if you listen carefully, at least for me, you can literally hear the modern English equivalent for many of the common words,.

  • @mtjakubec
    @mtjakubec 4 роки тому +99

    I thank thee m'lord, for this magnificent tune by Les Animaux.

  • @undead_boi
    @undead_boi 2 роки тому +5

    I am absolutely obsessed with this, its on a youtube playlist and a spotify playlist of mine, i would LOVE to hear more bardcore covers in Old French, it appeals to me a bit more than some of the other languages you've done (though obviously they're all rocking)

  • @ghstjpn
    @ghstjpn 2 роки тому +12

    Слушал это в первый раз 7 месяцев назад, сейчас ютуб мне снова это порекомендовал, всё еще прекрасное исполнение

    • @tompatterson1548
      @tompatterson1548 2 роки тому

      Slušal eto v pervâj paz 7 mesjacev nazad sejcas jutub mne snova eto popekomendoval vsjo ešte prekrasnoe yspolnenye?

  • @maxkopfraumpoops
    @maxkopfraumpoops 4 роки тому +786

    The fact that Bardcore is a thing now makes me love the internet so much. THIS kinda stuff is what UA-cam was made for and not big ass channels catering to normies.

    • @wolfyngrey1313
      @wolfyngrey1313 4 роки тому +9

      You are absolutely correct!!! Only place really to find specific interest content.

    • @corriedebeer799
      @corriedebeer799 4 роки тому +7

      yep, philosophers call it the open marketplace of ideas. Aint it just the best.

    • @PiousMoltar
      @PiousMoltar 4 роки тому

      Well, where's the "core" though? "Core" refers to hardcore punk. Then you get things like metalcore which is a combination of hardcore punk and metal. There's no hardcore punk in this whatsoever so calling it "bardcore" makes no sense.

    • @Tuftee
      @Tuftee 4 роки тому +9

      @@PiousMoltar rhymes with hardcore. That's it. Catchy and familiar. Like most genre terminology.

    • @jorgebarnardo9259
      @jorgebarnardo9259 4 роки тому +3

      @@PiousMoltar turd

  • @rodrigopalmerin
    @rodrigopalmerin 3 роки тому +308

    Dude these darker melodic songs are your thing your voice is so expressive

  • @ZephLodwick
    @ZephLodwick 2 роки тому +6

    Sounds more like Catalan or Spanish than modern French. For example, instead of saying _il y avait_ for _there was_ , they said, _fuit_ , which is more similar to the Spanish _fue_ .

  • @nicolaspereira-rolland9611
    @nicolaspereira-rolland9611 3 роки тому +6

    Hello, as a french and as an historian student, I must say i loved your video. Thank you.

  • @Graywyck
    @Graywyck 4 роки тому +483

    Wonderful

    • @the_miracle_aligner
      @the_miracle_aligner  4 роки тому +30

      All thanks to you and AB, you mad lads. Looking forward to more collabs with you kind SIr ❤

    • @sireuchre
      @sireuchre 4 роки тому +3

      @@the_miracle_aligner We're all looking forward to more collabs like this. Amazing, awesome stuff.

    • @jonathans1759
      @jonathans1759 4 роки тому

      Bis

  • @pascholatti
    @pascholatti 4 роки тому +150

    "take me back to when the French used trilled R's" that would be a dream come true

    • @tachy1801
      @tachy1801 3 роки тому +22

      In some regions of France (the south-west mostly), 'r' are pronounced like that by people with local accents. Go in some rural area and talk to old people, and your wish should be fullfilled.

    • @tonyl4571
      @tonyl4571 3 роки тому +8

      We have this in certain regions in Quebec.

    • @hamzapetridis206
      @hamzapetridis206 3 роки тому +8

      All old persons in my village roll the R’s lol

    • @hamzapetridis206
      @hamzapetridis206 3 роки тому +8

      And even in the 1970’s 1980’s post WW2 Tv French people would roll the R’a

  • @antonifortis1084
    @antonifortis1084 3 роки тому +4

    Sang this to my crush from France, she loved it! got a date this Friday;)

  • @gingko19
    @gingko19 Рік тому +6

    Je cherchais différentes covers de cette chanson. Je ne m'attendais pas à ça. Étonnant, mais plaisant à entendre.

  • @Aquason
    @Aquason 4 роки тому +798

    To francophones who are bugged by the pronunciation of word-final consonants:
    >As a result of the pre-French loss of most final vowels, all consonants could potentially appear word-finally except for /tʃ/ and /dʒ/ (which were always followed by at least a schwa, stemming from either a final /a/ or a prop vowel). In Old French, however, all underlying voiced stops and fricatives were pronounced voiceless when word-final. This was clearly reflected in Old French spelling, e.g. the adjectives froit "cold" (feminine froide), vif "lively" (feminine vive), larc "large" (feminine large), and similarly in verbs, e.g. je doif "I must" vs. ils doivent "they must", je lef "I may wash" vs. ils levent "they (may) wash". Most of these alternations have since disappeared (due partly to morphological reshaping and partly to respelling once most final consonants were lost, as described below), but the adjectival alternation vif vs. vive (and similarly for other adjectives in -f) is still present.
    >Starting in the Middle French period, most final consonants were gradually lost. This proceeded in stages:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_French#Changes_to_final_consonants
    This is intended to sound like Old French, when word-final consonants were still pronounced.

    • @BirdOfCreation
      @BirdOfCreation 4 роки тому +7

      I thought consonants were added at the end of words by scribes, since they were paid by the letter. Like it was the case for many doubled consonants in French.
      Thanks for the piece of info

    • @tangsolaris9533
      @tangsolaris9533 4 роки тому +10

      Underrated comment

    • @FassinTaak
      @FassinTaak 4 роки тому +2

      Oh, quoted from Wikipedia, must be 100% ultra undoubtedly legit

    • @BirdOfCreation
      @BirdOfCreation 4 роки тому +98

      @@FassinTaak you're cynical but you didn't even bother checking Wikipedia's sources. They're written at the bottom. It's mostly history and linguistics books.

    • @delphinedelphinedelphine
      @delphinedelphinedelphine 4 роки тому +2

      Do you think the vowels are pronounced as they were once were as well (is the "u" sharp enough?)?

  • @Adonys
    @Adonys 4 роки тому +135

    The best part about it is that it's still mostly understandable French

    • @Adonys
      @Adonys 4 роки тому +4

      (i'm French so I can check)

    • @maximeduchalet4662
      @maximeduchalet4662 4 роки тому +1

      kinda mostly, this guy speak some fricked up french, if i met someone speaking like that i would assume they're portugese or canadian?

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 4 роки тому

      French has changed less since that time than English has, that's for sure.

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 4 роки тому +1

      @@maximeduchalet4662 French sounded a lot different then than it does now.

    • @maximeduchalet4662
      @maximeduchalet4662 4 роки тому +1

      it sure did but he does have an accent on top of that

  • @Tom78777
    @Tom78777 2 роки тому +8

    You're a fucking genius man! A FUCKING GENIUS!

  • @MrMegamike2k
    @MrMegamike2k 2 роки тому +10

    This would've been a hit back in the day!

  • @nero7469
    @nero7469 4 роки тому +706

    Old French basically sounds like Italian men trying to speak/sing in French

    • @dafushpu
      @dafushpu 4 роки тому +54

      @Mara L That's exactly what I was thinking. I grew up in southern Louisiana and this sounds like Cajun French more than anything.

    • @azuregriffin1116
      @azuregriffin1116 4 роки тому +34

      @Mara L Cajun is closer to old French while Parisian continued to morph. Acadian French preserved some of the oldest features, including to trilled R here.

    • @chestnutplanter
      @chestnutplanter 4 роки тому +31

      Rusty my family is Québécois and this doesn't sound like Quebec French to me, it sounds more like French mixed with Italian or Spanish - which would make sense for old French since they all come mostly from Latin - but I can see Cajun possibly.

    • @antoineturgeon1437
      @antoineturgeon1437 4 роки тому +18

      I simply think the man who made this doesnt speak french

    • @9Johnny8
      @9Johnny8 4 роки тому +13

      I was just thinking: It's like a Dutch person reading French lines without knowing the French pronunciation, so he just pronounces each letter. Especially the ones which are silent in modern French.

  • @iamtheiconoclast3
    @iamtheiconoclast3 4 роки тому +457

    This is amazing. I've never heard Old French before; it feels like the missing link between modern French and modern Catalan or Portuguese. Also love how you replaced New Orleans with Orleans. :)

    • @buddermonger2000
      @buddermonger2000 2 роки тому +23

      Same tbh. It sounds almost understandable for me who knows Spanish.

    • @BassHarderonline
      @BassHarderonline Рік тому

      Nope french is more like italian

    • @Zaher74
      @Zaher74 Рік тому

      ​@@BassHarderonlineobviously, french is a latin language and Italian is pretty much modern latin. But spanish is also a latin language and so is Portuguese,but I don't know if catalan is latin although since it's pretty much a Spanish dialect, it probably is

    • @Belussy
      @Belussy Рік тому +4

      @@Zaher74it’s a language separated from Spanish, and it has the same Latin root as Romance languages

    • @ibnbattuta7031
      @ibnbattuta7031 11 місяців тому +8

      Catalã is first off, not a spanish dialect, it's a totally different language from a different sub-group of the western romance languages, It's closer hereditarily to occitan or french then it is to spanish.@@Zaher74

  • @FcoAngelPD
    @FcoAngelPD 3 роки тому +12

    Much love to my frenchy brothers and sisters from Andalusia ❤️

  • @The_Archivist_84
    @The_Archivist_84 2 роки тому +7

    We have totally re-discovered the first ever version of this song

  • @chigeh
    @chigeh 4 роки тому +106

    I had listened to this song five times before realizing that they dropped "new" out of "new Orleans"

  • @Bacopa68
    @Bacopa68 4 роки тому +75

    Sounds like a Cajun song. We still have a bit of Cajun music on the radio once a week around here in Texas.

  • @beanacomputer
    @beanacomputer 3 роки тому +8

    This cover straight-up inspired me to relearn French. So that's a thing I'm starting lol

  • @Jaycee.79
    @Jaycee.79 Рік тому +6

    C'est un véritable chef-d'œuvre ! 😯🏆🎶

  • @Mike-mc3ty
    @Mike-mc3ty 4 роки тому +12

    As a history major, thank you from the bottom of my heart for making these. The Anglo Saxon pumped up kicks has basically become our department anthem

    • @the_miracle_aligner
      @the_miracle_aligner  4 роки тому +2

      Oh shit hahaha ❤❤❤ Ya'll are too kind. Don't worry got more old english covers coming too XD

  • @Phlebas
    @Phlebas 4 роки тому +117

    I am impressed by the sheer nerdiness of this.
    Also, I was kind of surprised that I could understand Old French without too much difficulty despite being an English speaker. Medieval English, on the other hand, might as well be another language to me. I don't know if this is because French hasn't changed as much or if my brain is just in "second language mode" and I'm just understanding every third word and filling in the blanks without realizing it.
    Edit: Probably helps that I'm familiar with the original song.

    • @user-rn6cb5tc6r
      @user-rn6cb5tc6r 4 роки тому +10

      And older versions of English are much more German, while modern English borrows a crap ton of French and Latin. This has more cognates to pull from.

    • @hayalci
      @hayalci 4 роки тому +4

      it's the subtitles

    • @fevriertheo1414
      @fevriertheo1414 4 роки тому +2

      As a french native speaker, modern english is a walk in the park, Medieval english on the other hand...

    • @Yougaljuboja
      @Yougaljuboja 4 роки тому +2

      Well, lucky you, because I'm french and I could barely decypher anything ;-)
      It doesn't sounds like old french, it only sounds like a non-french english speaker trying to read a french text.

    • @fevriertheo1414
      @fevriertheo1414 4 роки тому

      @@Yougaljuboja Except for the pronunciation of the double Ls it seems to be correct from what I could find on the subject

  • @johncullen8100
    @johncullen8100 6 місяців тому +2

    What an amazing achievement! Wonderful!

  • @GutoKowalski70
    @GutoKowalski70 3 роки тому +8

    Old French sounded beautiful and closer to the other romance languages!