Apologies for the terrible wind at points of this video - I have cleaned it on the audio as best as I could without losing my narrative, but it still remains strong because there was a storm brewing!
I got married in Priory Park last October and am lucky enough to live in one of Chichester’s Georgian townhouses with Victorian fireplaces and everything. Chichester is a great place to live or visit. Goodwood, Theatre, Festival of Speed, Roman ruins, Anglo Saxon and Georgian architecture, Chichester Harbour, Roman palace, Priory Park and of course the grand Cathedral.
Thanks, interesting video, would have liked your tour to carry on further! I grew up near Chichester and remember playing on the castle mound in the late '70s / early '80s. There was a lot more to the mound back then with paths working their way around and up the mound. It's been severely cleared in recent times and lost physical size.
It was a right of passage for every Chichester child to get lost in side the forest of twisted hedges that surrounded that mound. It’s a also a shame that it lost its stone mount. It was like a secret garden up there.
@@scienceandreligionden5903 Feels so funny to see people talking about this! I grew up in Chi in the late 90s/early 2000s and remember getting in some trouble with my mum for getting lost amongst the hedges there.
Very informative and entertaining video Matt! Good job and no worries regarding the wind noise. I hope Hurricane Ophelia doesn’t give y’all much trouble.
Great video very informative, I live in the US and will probably never get too see these things in real life because here we live to work and taking vacations is few thank you
Damn you Matt, you are making the list of places to visit in England so long that one would have to move there for a while to be able to see it all! XD Also I love these history videos!
If you are ever in Italy, Lucca ,in Tuscany has Medieval walls all around the city and a Roman era amphitheater that was turned into residences. Worth a visit if you travel there. 8th century churches also.
There's a small town in Bavaria which also still has its walls in their entirety. The road goes right through the walls, so you actually drive into it by car and then again through the walls when you are leaving, there is no other entrance than the two main gates, at least not large enough to fit a car. Unfortunately I don't remember the name and I haven't been able find it by googling either.
i love these vids. as an american who has always loved ancient/medieval history its nice to see these places as i dont really have access to anything like it here.
Chichester is a nice town, used to live close to it. Loved the fact that that the park is a Cricket field, totally English! Like your general history stuff, Matt, please, please, do something 19th century with the excellent BritishMuzzleLoaders channel that I know you like, as I have seen your comments and he told me he follows you.
In England, a town could only call itself a city if it had a cathedral, and from what I've seen in Britain, I'd say that any inhabited locality can only call itself a town if it has at least one cricket ground... :p
I enjoy the "Matt Easton tours historical sites in England" series, because as an American touristI'm unlikely to ever visit anything outside the city of Westminster.
Cool video. How tall is that wall on the outer side, about 20 feet high? Also curious as to why doesn't the city of Chichester re-excavate the ditch, pile it into a historically accurate sized mound, add a palisade, and keep? It's a historical landmark, make it recognizable as one. Can't be that expensive, can it? Use convict labor if you have to.
Tall walls with embankments are easy to build, no cranes needed. Build the wall up 5 feet then build the embankment up 5 feet so you have a nice gentle slope to carry the materials up. Gets harder as you go but it gets the job done.
I'll come to know it's not just a park with a playground.... Good job I was paying attention to the rest of the video! haha I've never had the pleasure of visiting Chichester, but I have spent some time in Canterbury, which still has an impressive mediaeval wall in situ. Are you aware of whether Canterbury's wall is a Norman re-working of a Roman wall, as with Chichester, or just a Norman construction? Canterbury might be worthy of another such video, if you've never been. (when I visited, I wasn't as interested in historical emplacements as now). Also, thanks for all of your effort and time spent making your videos, I do rather appreciate a great deal of them despite my random ribald or borderline offensive comments. (I'm higher functioning, but on rare occasions can be a little abrasive when somewhat discombobulated) Keep up the great work!
another fun fact, there were no wheelbarrows in Europe when the wall was built, so workers would have been moving stones by hand even more than we might imagine.
Very cool slice of history, thanks for doing this! As a side note much of my extended family lives in Chichester, Pennsylvania here in the US which no doubt takes its name from that town. However here it's pronounced "Chy-chester" as far back as I know.
Chester still has most of its walls you can still walk around the entire city via the walls which is neat by like one bridge if am correct since they are doing work on it.
I'm don't know much about these things, but the wooden fort in the drawing looks like it might hold 20 or 30 men in a desperate situation - quite small relative to the size of the surrounding stone walls.
Was it a European swallow or an African swallow? Also, the land rover was Roman or Norman? ... jokes aside a very nice video and the sound quality is just fine!
For those unimpressed by the wall remnant, it's important to remember that it's just the filler core of the wall; the facing stones and ramparts have long since been cannibalized.
Have you gone to Battle Abbey this weekend for the Battle of Hastings reenactment? I couldn't make it this year, and I would love to see your perspective on it.
I wonder if the wall might have seemed even higher when it was in active use. Do you have any land survey information for the area outside the wall? It's possible it was much lower back then.
This is the kind of thing you miss out on growing up in a country like Australia. We have so little tangible history, despite sixty-five thousand years of human occupation. The only "old" fortifications are 20th century coastal defenses left over from the world wars. If I went to England or Europe I probably wouldn't even notice this kind of thing because all our earthworks are for flood mitigation or noise control.
10:23 2nd "viking age"*, the collapse of the bronze age had lots of reports on "the sea people" that resembles the descriptions on the viking raids (this was over 1000 before the vikings), so 300 something would have being the second by your analogy
Shad approves this video, I'm sure =D I never saw this video, and I'm subscribed for couple of years, and I think I went through all the video and watched every one I found interesting... And I learned that 'chester' means 'castrum' =)
How important or large was Chichester during the middle ages? But don't you need a bishop for a cathedral? BTW, as far as I know, castra was always used in plural.
Great videos. It would be nice if you ever visit some places in northern Germany like Lübeck and make some videos like this there. Lübeck lost the biggest parts of his walls, as far I know, after Napoleon take over the city, so he can left the city without let back many man to hold the city in fear as he is gone he has to conquer it twice if he come back. (Sorry for my bad English. ;D)
Since you're doing Roman things at the moment, I thought you might also do a video on this find, since it also puts you in Lindybeige's area: www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/north-east-news/part-hadrians-wall-been-found-13705748 However, I didn't realize it's five hours from London to Newcastle - that's about the same time to drive from Portland to Medford (Oregon, USA). No wonder you two don't collaborate on videos more often! 😄
i thought the migration period didn't start until after the romans abandoned england. I was under the impression that it was the britons who invited the saxons over from mainland europe to aid in the fight against the celts/iron age scotts. and that after the fact the saxons then turned on the britons taking england and its wealth for themselves, driving the native brits to the area of great britain now reffered to as wales where they would then become known later as the welsh.
I see. It just looks so smooth, so I thought there were never crenellations on it. But it does make sense that it was patched up later and they just didn't add them again.
Apologies for the terrible wind at points of this video - I have cleaned it on the audio as best as I could without losing my narrative, but it still remains strong because there was a storm brewing!
This windy place video has nothing on some of the wind-tunnel excursions on the Lindybeige channel.
You're well intelligible.
winter is coming
scholagladiatoria have they excavated any artifacts from there if so where are they?
Not a problem. You did a little Marty Stauffer with the squirrels. The wind is excusable.
+Tyler_ Lalonde- They would be curated at the Novium Museum in the centre of Chichester.
I got married in Priory Park last October and am lucky enough to live in one of Chichester’s Georgian townhouses with Victorian fireplaces and everything. Chichester is a great place to live or visit. Goodwood, Theatre, Festival of Speed, Roman ruins, Anglo Saxon and Georgian architecture, Chichester Harbour, Roman palace, Priory Park and of course the grand Cathedral.
I've not a drop of English blood but England is my cultural motherland. I love English history and really appreciate your videos.
"It is not just a park, It..."
That's quite the abrupt ending you've got there.
There's a very good reason for that... the memory card got full! This was literally the smoothest end I could construct in editing LOL
+scholagladiatoria what came after that statement?
We will never know...
Its a Cricket ground.
"Brevity is the soul o..."
Does anyone else know what Time Team is? I want to see a revival of that show, with Matt and Dr. Capwell. Someone call the BBC.
That would be nice :)
Matt should get his own BBC series - just saying.
Rumblefin if it was on BBC America, I would want it.
Yes!
Why bother watching tv, its shit
Thanks! The excursions and adventures are fun.
I read the title as "Roman and Medieval Fornication". Needless to say, was pretty disappointed.
Thanks, interesting video, would have liked your tour to carry on further! I grew up near Chichester and remember playing on the castle mound in the late '70s / early '80s. There was a lot more to the mound back then with paths working their way around and up the mound. It's been severely cleared in recent times and lost physical size.
I remember the old mound with winding path and the bench at the top , it's a real shame it's gone
It was a right of passage for every Chichester child to get lost in side the forest of twisted hedges that surrounded that mound. It’s a also a shame that it lost its stone mount. It was like a secret garden up there.
@@scienceandreligionden5903 Feels so funny to see people talking about this! I grew up in Chi in the late 90s/early 2000s and remember getting in some trouble with my mum for getting lost amongst the hedges there.
Video quality is tops Matt.
Yes, just a shame that he went from a 50fps camera to a 60fps camera. Europeans ought not to yield to petty North American standards...
I take all the frames I can get.
How is having more frames a less interesting option?
My home city, I walk those walls everyday:)
Me too!
I greatly enjoy these videos Matt. You're showing me areas I will probably never see in my life and I appreciate it.
Matt you need a camera stick, we two are in very passionate embrace on my large curved 4k monitor.
XD
TheBingbang69 enjoy it bro
New experiences and all that, but I'm still a little uncertain it's me.
Well put
Enjoy your sense of humour immensely with your impressive knowledge and appréciation of histoy. Great video. Un grand merci!
You should come to Northumberland we have more castles and fortified buildings than any other county
These kinds of visuals really help put medieval settlements into a little more context. Thank you!
Very informative and entertaining video Matt! Good job and no worries regarding the wind noise. I hope Hurricane Ophelia doesn’t give y’all much trouble.
Been subbed for years, never knew this video existed, and then all of a sudden it was recommended and I couldn't be happier
Great video very informative, I live in the US and will probably never get too see these things in real life because here we live to work and taking vacations is few thank you
Can you use chaos to scale the walls? I've heard it makes a good laddah.
No
That's a good wall.
*chaosh
Damn you Matt, you are making the list of places to visit in England so long that one would have to move there for a while to be able to see it all! XD
Also I love these history videos!
Great video, I think these are a nice addition to your usual content.
Thank you mate for your contribution to the history of chichester. I have learnt a bit more about this beautiful area.
I live in Chichester it's a very beautiful small city, one of my favourite places
Cool, I find myself there every couple of months at least, for various reasons.
I like videos like this. It can be easy to miss all the old structures where you live, and these videos make me keep an eye out for them.
We may never find out why this is not just a park with a playground.
And the blame for that is solely on Mr Easton.
Lmao
Gotta love how off the mark recommended videos are shortly after the upload.
I was recommended one about pregnancy XD
There were a very long city wall in my home town back in 60s. And most of it was tear down to give way for condos and shopping malls.
Excellent video! More of these please.
If you are ever in Italy, Lucca ,in Tuscany has Medieval walls all around the city and a Roman era amphitheater that was turned into residences. Worth a visit if you travel there. 8th century churches also.
There's a small town in Bavaria which also still has its walls in their entirety. The road goes right through the walls, so you actually drive into it by car and then again through the walls when you are leaving, there is no other entrance than the two main gates, at least not large enough to fit a car. Unfortunately I don't remember the name and I haven't been able find it by googling either.
i love these vids. as an american who has always loved ancient/medieval history its nice to see these places as i dont really have access to anything like it here.
Great video, Matt--I really like these a lot, please do more.
I guarantee a lot of kids have pretended it's a castle without knowing though. They are intuitive like that.
I really love these castle/fortification videos you're doing!
Really loving these videos. Over here in Canada, I only really have a single city with fortifications that I can go see.
Thanks Matt, very enjoyable video.
Best cliffhanger I've seen in a while, haha. Such a beautiful place
Nice, love Chichester, one of my favourite places in the country.
Didn't know those walls where that old.
Also, nice video quality.
an excellent presentation. thanks
Chichester is a nice town, used to live close to it. Loved the fact that that the park is a Cricket field, totally English! Like your general history stuff, Matt, please, please, do something 19th century with the excellent BritishMuzzleLoaders channel that I know you like, as I have seen your comments and he told me he follows you.
In England, a town could only call itself a city if it had a cathedral, and from what I've seen in Britain, I'd say that any inhabited locality can only call itself a town if it has at least one cricket ground... :p
It's nice to see my hometown get some attention, whenever people ask where I was born/from I tell them they may not know it, and alas they don't
Its crazy that medieval asphalt has help up so well.
I enjoy the "Matt Easton tours historical sites in England" series, because as an American touristI'm unlikely to ever visit anything outside the city of Westminster.
now THIS, is a video quality I could get used to. Is it the same camera you used for the rusty sword vid and the other one from that 1100-1300 ruins ?
Cool video. How tall is that wall on the outer side, about 20 feet high?
Also curious as to why doesn't the city of Chichester re-excavate the ditch, pile it into a historically accurate sized mound, add a palisade, and keep? It's a historical landmark, make it recognizable as one. Can't be that expensive, can it? Use convict labor if you have to.
one of your best videos thanks!;-)
Tall walls with embankments are easy to build, no cranes needed. Build the wall up 5 feet then build the embankment up 5 feet so you have a nice gentle slope to carry the materials up. Gets harder as you go but it gets the job done.
Are you planning to come to Portchester Castle, "the best preserved Roman fort north of the Alps"? It's pretty nice.
I go to Portchester a few times every year :-) It's one of my favourite fortifications for several reasons. So the answer is certainly yes.
Please,, more Seax videos, please,,,
I'll come to know it's not just a park with a playground....
Good job I was paying attention to the rest of the video!
haha
I've never had the pleasure of visiting Chichester, but I have spent some time in Canterbury, which still has an impressive mediaeval wall in situ.
Are you aware of whether Canterbury's wall is a Norman re-working of a Roman wall, as with Chichester, or just a Norman construction?
Canterbury might be worthy of another such video, if you've never been.
(when I visited, I wasn't as interested in historical emplacements as now).
Also, thanks for all of your effort and time spent making your videos, I do rather appreciate a great deal of them despite my random ribald or borderline offensive comments.
(I'm higher functioning, but on rare occasions can be a little abrasive when somewhat discombobulated)
Keep up the great work!
another fun fact, there were no wheelbarrows in Europe when the wall was built, so workers would have been moving stones by hand even more than we might imagine.
Doesn't mean there weren't 2 and 4 wheeled carts available.
DynamicWorlds thats right, just strange to think of the wheelbarrow as an oriental import 500 after the Romans :)
I dig this new style of video!
I'm enjoying these videos! Will you be doing Guildford 'castle'? :P
Very cool slice of history, thanks for doing this! As a side note much of my extended family lives in Chichester, Pennsylvania here in the US which no doubt takes its name from that town. However here it's pronounced "Chy-chester" as far back as I know.
Ok, everything with a chest is Roman
"Madam, you seem particularly Roman this evening."
"That's the most roman women I've ever seen!"
The Manchester came from "breast fort"
Aldor but not you, unless flat-chested counts...
edi get ready to be exploded
Tonbridge castle has a very well preserved motte if you are ever in the area.
Love it, hope to see more of these kind of videos :)
Chester still has most of its walls you can still walk around the entire city via the walls which is neat by like one bridge if am correct since they are doing work on it.
Thank you for your work.
That was very interesting! Thank you so much!
I'm don't know much about these things, but the wooden fort in the drawing looks like it might hold 20 or 30 men in a desperate situation - quite small relative to the size of the surrounding stone walls.
Was it a European swallow or an African swallow? Also, the land rover was Roman or Norman? ... jokes aside a very nice video and the sound quality is just fine!
Hope you could visit Colchester .
Wonderful!
Now, where does Groo come in?
For those unimpressed by the wall remnant, it's important to remember that it's just the filler core of the wall; the facing stones and ramparts have long since been cannibalized.
Have you gone to Battle Abbey this weekend for the Battle of Hastings reenactment? I couldn't make it this year, and I would love to see your perspective on it.
the best video from outside that uve ever made
I wonder if the wall might have seemed even higher when it was in active use. Do you have any land survey information for the area outside the wall? It's possible it was much lower back then.
This is the kind of thing you miss out on growing up in a country like Australia. We have so little tangible history, despite sixty-five thousand years of human occupation. The only "old" fortifications are 20th century coastal defenses left over from the world wars. If I went to England or Europe I probably wouldn't even notice this kind of thing because all our earthworks are for flood mitigation or noise control.
Was that an original medieval land rover?
HD cam, very nice. I never realised you had so much grey hair!
How are you travelling about? Sometimes I feel like I need to drive out from London more often.
I drive around a lot in my little car. I love driving.
It looks like a great place for a LARP game or a reenacting show. What do you think, Matt?
3:00 , do you carry the umbrella/ stick just for possible bartitsu opportunities?
To what extent would the outer surrounding trees have been cleared away so that approaching badguys would be seen and/or for other reasons?
When I first read the title I read Chichester with a long I.
scholagladiatoria, ever been north and visited York? If so what do you think of it?
4:54 Except when the king is the bandit.
Thanks Matt have you visited the ruins of the Roman Villa at Fishbourne just outside of "Chi "as us Cisestrians call it" ?
I have! And by bizarre coincidence I was again in Chichester earlier today.
I Look forward to more videos Matt ,thank you ...
The most important thing about Chitchester is learning how to spell it if you dont want to get bottled by locals
Not Shit-Chester, I think?
*shit-shester
Queue the Time Team theme!
For more detail on Roman Chichester: www.academia.edu/18161327/Chronological_trail_Roman_Chichester_on_display_The_Novium_Museum_
10:23 2nd "viking age"*, the collapse of the bronze age had lots of reports on "the sea people" that resembles the descriptions on the viking raids (this was over 1000 before the vikings), so 300 something would have being the second by your analogy
Good example of fortified city would be the city of Dubrovnik in Croatia.
Pablo Bronstein
Except for the Mud Gate part.
It could fall in hours.
Very interesting video
What's up with the guys in the depiction putting rocks in front of a seemingly old wall?
Shad approves this video, I'm sure =D
I never saw this video, and I'm subscribed for couple of years, and I think I went through all the video and watched every one I found interesting...
And I learned that 'chester' means 'castrum' =)
How important or large was Chichester during the middle ages?
But don't you need a bishop for a cathedral?
BTW, as far as I know, castra was always used in plural.
Ah the Roman Tire swing, seen across the world.
Anybody else's stomach flip a little when he held the camera over the wall?
Great videos. It would be nice if you ever visit some places in northern Germany like Lübeck and make some videos like this there. Lübeck lost the biggest parts of his walls, as far I know, after Napoleon take over the city, so he can left the city without let back many man to hold the city in fear as he is gone he has to conquer it twice if he come back. (Sorry for my bad English. ;D)
Gods damnit Matt, here I thought you were the bloody god of storms. Get it together, m8!
I love the parts where Matt puts in a cut to interrupt himself, haha.
What guarantee is there that your pavement height is current to the time scale say 1098 onwards?
8:15 is the camera at your head's height? or are you just holding it forward (shoulder's height)?
Since you're doing Roman things at the moment, I thought you might also do a video on this find, since it also puts you in Lindybeige's area: www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/north-east-news/part-hadrians-wall-been-found-13705748
However, I didn't realize it's five hours from London to Newcastle - that's about the same time to drive from Portland to Medford (Oregon, USA). No wonder you two don't collaborate on videos more often! 😄
... and Silchester eagle in Reading Museum
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silchester_eagle
Copy of Bayuex Tapestry as well.
How can you tell how big and wide a mount used to be?
i thought the migration period didn't start until after the romans abandoned england. I was under the impression that it was the britons who invited the saxons over from mainland europe to aid in the fight against the celts/iron age scotts. and that after the fact the saxons then turned on the britons taking england and its wealth for themselves, driving the native brits to the area of great britain now reffered to as wales where they would then become known later as the welsh.
Why are there no crenellations on the wall? I would think if they put that much effort in putting up the wall, they add those too.
The wall is not in its original condition. It has obviously crumbled with age and been continuously fixed up/modified.
I see. It just looks so smooth, so I thought there were never crenellations on it. But it does make sense that it was patched up later and they just didn't add them again.