What Life Was Like In A 13th Century Castle | Secrets Of The Castle | Real Royalty

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  • Опубліковано 20 вер 2024
  • As their time at Guedelon Castle in France draws to an end, the team look at the castle's place in the wider medieval world.
    Thirteenth-century Europe was a busy, developing, connected place, where work, trade, pilgrimages and crusades gave people the opportunity to travel across the continent and beyond.
    From Elizabeth II to Cleopatra, Real Royalty peels back the curtain to give a glimpse into the lives of some of the most influential families in the world, with new full length documentaries posted every week covering the monarchies of today and all throughout history.
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    Content licensed from All3Media to Little Dot Studios.
    Any queries, please contact us at: owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com

КОМЕНТАРІ • 608

  • @mothylace
    @mothylace 3 роки тому +187

    These are the kind of documentaries that I crave. I've learned so much in a little less than an hour!

  • @karenfitzpatrick6256
    @karenfitzpatrick6256 3 роки тому +197

    In this "disposable" culture we have today, it's amazing to see how much imagination and experimentation it took for those in past generations to develop and perfect the art of their crafts to pass down to us.
    Ruth, Peter and Tom have such contagious enthusiasm in experiencing the amount of work and dedication these people had, how much they accomplished in their lives. I can't help but feel quite in awe of the ingenuity of such a hard working society working together to build something so grand. And I'm grateful to our hosts for bringing this history alive for us. Thanks for posting this program. Educational and enjoyable.

    • @wilsonwalker1181
      @wilsonwalker1181 3 роки тому +1

      Hello Karen Fitzpatrick. How are you doing?

    • @drgonzothe4th
      @drgonzothe4th 2 роки тому +4

      I think we're de -evolving.

    • @lilithbrantley4930
      @lilithbrantley4930 2 роки тому +2

      I just enjoy watching these three work together. I've watched all of thier documentaries. They work together well and I learn so much from them 😊

    • @CorntwallLipstickQueen
      @CorntwallLipstickQueen 2 роки тому

      oh please they would've used the shit we have had it been available.

  • @eithnemelee2997
    @eithnemelee2997 2 роки тому +16

    Ruth and her daughter getting excited when they figured out how to make the gold thread was so wholesome

  • @phyllisanngodfrey6137
    @phyllisanngodfrey6137 3 роки тому +116

    Amazed at how much valuable and informative content is available here for free to the viewer 🥰

    • @saraguinness652
      @saraguinness652 3 роки тому

      Bbbv
      Cho

    • @jelliott750
      @jelliott750 3 роки тому +1

      Your lost brother. Read the i ching or fast and find the reality that theyre hiding right in front of your face.

  • @jessicamurk2063
    @jessicamurk2063 3 роки тому +206

    Much respect for the people who live this life in order to teach us about the past. It's a hard lifestyle!

    • @jamesbishop5119
      @jamesbishop5119 3 роки тому +8

      Pretty sure they sleep in modern homes etc, this is just a project haha though that does not detract from the admiration one should have for them :).

    • @maryannswanson3832
      @maryannswanson3832 3 роки тому +1

      L.
      M.

    • @maryannswanson3832
      @maryannswanson3832 3 роки тому

      Ul so slide over here and give me a moment your moves are so raw II've got to let you know you're one my kind.

    • @unepetitemarmotte2918
      @unepetitemarmotte2918 3 роки тому +2

      @@jamesbishop5119 So I actually live near Guedelon and have been there a few times (it's a thing in France to get the children to visit the castle with their school) and I can confirm these people are allowed to go back to the XXIst century every night 😂. They have modern labour law, and there are more protections around the buildings than there was in medieval times (like fences around the eight meters tall towers they're working on and so on), etc. I'm pretty sure they aren't healed the medieval way either 😂

    • @SuperSweetflowers
      @SuperSweetflowers 3 роки тому

      @@jamesbishop5119 It doesn't matter where they sleep. But what matter is that they have no clue, just guesses, on how it was build.

  • @joanieschoenfeld4525
    @joanieschoenfeld4525 3 роки тому +115

    This was so interesting. The segment about making dye, who first figured that all out? So clever and innovative! Mad respect for all of them.

    • @lookupyourredemptiondrawsn8799
      @lookupyourredemptiondrawsn8799 3 роки тому +7

      It was the fallen angels and nephilim who first brought knowledge ie: masonary astrology, herbalism, animal husbandry, science, laws etc etc.to mankind,

    • @dawnpalmby5100
      @dawnpalmby5100 3 роки тому +21

      Dying fabric and linen has been around for millennia, Egypt had a very particular turquoise that we have not figured out how it was made, purple is the hardest to achieve.

    • @crystalheart9
      @crystalheart9 3 роки тому +6

      @@dawnpalmby5100 I guess that's why it was a favorite of royalty.

    • @smurfylee
      @smurfylee 2 роки тому

      @@lookupyourredemptiondrawsn8799 yes that is true

    • @annbush1826
      @annbush1826 2 роки тому +1

      As a craft interpreter in an American 19th century village, I learned what plants made the dyes used.
      Boiled onion skins= yellpw
      cochineal= red
      indigo= deep blue
      walnut bark• brown

  • @tamaragonzalez2227
    @tamaragonzalez2227 3 роки тому +64

    Wow I learned so much just from this video. How wonderful people are willing to do this to teach us as well as their self how it was done in the past. Thank you for this education..

  • @simchabasavrahamavenu8282
    @simchabasavrahamavenu8282 3 роки тому +60

    I was taught the two stitches shown herein by my older (15) when I was five during my pettipoint embroidery lessons. These stitches require a "good eye," steady hand & commitment to detail. I have taught these stitches to crossstitchers in less than 5 mins. Pat in Philly

  • @JohnDoe-ol3yz
    @JohnDoe-ol3yz 3 роки тому +751

    What's amazing is that, as advanced as we think we are today, 99% of people today couldn't accomplish what these people did with hand tools almost 1000 years ago.

    • @goldenboyi1989
      @goldenboyi1989 3 роки тому +19

      but why should we? we have moved on and advanced and technology has made things more efficient.You are the sort of people who still prefer riding a horse instead of a 4WD SUV with 50 horsepower and V8 Engine like mine

    • @Greatnews4me2
      @Greatnews4me2 3 роки тому

      👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻😂😂😂

    • @nikolm2009
      @nikolm2009 3 роки тому +1

      @Miki Berge 0

    • @matthewelton7393
      @matthewelton7393 3 роки тому +44

      @@goldenboyi1989 Weird flex but OK.

    • @TD-vb6il
      @TD-vb6il 3 роки тому +24

      Now I can have a pizza delivered by a robot car. How is that for advancement?! lol. But yea, hard work your whole life to be sure you have shelter and food. That theme hasn't really changed much.

  • @jdlech
    @jdlech 3 роки тому +473

    I came here to learn all the positions and jobs performed inside a fully garrisoned medieval castle. Instead, I learned how to build one.

    • @victoreon416
      @victoreon416 3 роки тому +10

      Right

    • @Survivor-mf1nm
      @Survivor-mf1nm 3 роки тому +11

      Not at all what I expected either

    • @kcarver0614
      @kcarver0614 3 роки тому +8

      Same! Interesting but not what I came for. I stopped watching it, but saved for later.

    • @Rhaenarys
      @Rhaenarys 3 роки тому +6

      Yup. This is supposed to be titled somewhere along the lines of how a castle was constructed or something like that. Whoever uploaded it purposely made a click bait title to seem like a new video from them in another castle.

    • @Rhaenarys
      @Rhaenarys 3 роки тому

      I pretty much stopped it when I figured out which video it actually is. I've seen it already a cpl times. Its good and all, but not what i was expecting.

  • @AkChiVibes
    @AkChiVibes 3 роки тому +21

    I love how mother & daughter are doing this together as real friends.
    Heartwarming.

  • @Porfgirl
    @Porfgirl 3 роки тому +50

    Absolutely love this episode. A great glimpse at the past. Really brings a new appreciation to how people lived and how we live now. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

  • @homemprovmentguy
    @homemprovmentguy 2 роки тому +8

    Castles are mindblowingly amazing to visit in person. The imagination they provoke makes my brain smile from lobe to lobe. If you ever have the chance to visit one in person, the memories will lest your lifetime!

  • @arethagrassi6420
    @arethagrassi6420 3 роки тому +50

    I am looking at this program and being thankful that I wasn't around during this time. I have so much respect for the ppl that made everything possible back then. I don't think I would have survived a week.

    • @VocalEdgeTV
      @VocalEdgeTV 3 роки тому +5

      You would have been just fine. Haha hope you are feeling blessed and loved.

    • @lostamericanhistory2536
      @lostamericanhistory2536 3 роки тому +4

      Oh come on, this would have been an amazing time to live. Sure hard work but its also rewarding. I think its amazing.

    • @arethagrassi6420
      @arethagrassi6420 3 роки тому +3

      @@lostamericanhistory2536 I am a tailor, trust me making clothes all by hand ( no sewing machine) ain't that much amazing.

    • @davidrustylouis6818
      @davidrustylouis6818 3 роки тому +4

      @@lostamericanhistory2536 also the near constant issue of infection would have been normal to them but still really unpleasant. Especially the virus, so many (the plague- "the Black Death" or as they referred to it - The Great Mortality). That stuff is horrifying & there's been nothing like it since the "Spanish Flu" that I'm aware of since that time (1348+).
      Not to be to grim.....☺

    • @lostamericanhistory2536
      @lostamericanhistory2536 3 роки тому +9

      @@davidrustylouis6818 that is true, medical would be one thing that would be hard to give up. The things that killed so easily is nothing to us now. A lot of their ways seemed so primitive to us but my family has been trying to get back to that (growing 100% own food, self sufficient) for years now. We really underestimate how much they knew just to survive. It takes years to get good at gardening, know when its going to frost, what to grow and how to grow it. These people had it down pat. What I've found, the further my family gets from mainstream way of life, the closer and happy we are though.

  • @Survivor-mf1nm
    @Survivor-mf1nm 3 роки тому +159

    You should rename this as "How to build a castle"

    • @krdiaz8026
      @krdiaz8026 3 роки тому +6

      I thought this, but then realized that nobody's gonna watch that. Whoever's behind this channel knows how to attract a UA-cam audience.

    • @musgrave6886
      @musgrave6886 3 роки тому +1

      @@krdiaz8026 brilliant!...

  • @AuntBecky1
    @AuntBecky1 3 роки тому +61

    I think I love Ruth's daughter almost as much I love Ruth.

  • @HJKelley47
    @HJKelley47 2 роки тому +14

    There were 5 episodes in this series 'Secrets of the Castle' with Ruth Goodman, Peter Ginn and
    Tom Pinfold (2014)--Narrator Paul McGann (8th Dr. Who & Holby City). Excellent historical
    documentary:
    1. Why Build a Castle
    2. Defending the Castle (Drew the highest UK viewers of the series-11/24/2014)
    3. Inside the Castle
    4. The Castle's Community of Skills
    5. Beyond the Castle Walls

  • @gloriamudaliarhutchinson1218
    @gloriamudaliarhutchinson1218 3 роки тому +23

    Very moving. Brought me to tears.

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 3 роки тому +1

      Yes i think the main host guy is so simple, straightforward and friendly he was the mortar to this documentary bringing it all together.

  • @susanschmitt115
    @susanschmitt115 3 роки тому +24

    I adored this marvelous series. I’ve always been fascinated with castles and medieval life particularly weapons. How in the world they managed to contrive so much with so little only shows their ingeniousness. They dealt with inadequate food, shelter and pretty much non-existent health care. It’s little wonder life expectancy was only to mid-30’s. Excellent series I highly recommend it. Thank you so much for sharing!

    • @wilsonwalker1181
      @wilsonwalker1181 3 роки тому

      Hello Susan Schmitt. How are you doing?

    • @wendymoran6759
      @wendymoran6759 3 роки тому +2

      Yea, there is something fishy about that particular piece of narrative. We are expected to believe that these master stonecutters traveled from country to country bc their marking were followed. It takes a long time to become a máster, also each castle, also traveling to other countries between castles ... kind of hard to all that before 30.

    • @michaelaw555
      @michaelaw555 3 роки тому +5

      @@wendymoran6759 This is the common misconception with Medieval life expectancy. When calculating life expectancy you look at a number of deaths and the ages at which those people died. Add them all up, then divide by the number of deaths examined to retrieve an average. The problem with this formula is that infant mortality was very, very high during the medieval period. The number of infant deaths drags the life expectancy down, when in reality if you lived passed infancy, living to your 50s or 60s was not at all uncommon!

    • @salyluz6535
      @salyluz6535 Рік тому

      @@michaelaw555: past. Good points though! 👍🏽

  • @jpsc1009
    @jpsc1009 3 роки тому +5

    This was one of the most amazing free video I have ever watched on the internet.
    Many thanks from Brasil

  • @linjubar
    @linjubar 3 роки тому +5

    You don’t realize how labor intensive it was to make anything back in those days. It really does give one a new found appreciation for the people of the past.

  • @MrEvilsurpent
    @MrEvilsurpent 3 роки тому +34

    Amazing how similar the masonry technique is to modern day masonry. I worked as a mason for 10 years most of our stone is pre shaped but we still have to do all the things they show to finish and mate the stone because nothings perfect from factory and modern plans.

    • @XohjaiSbarkeater
      @XohjaiSbarkeater 2 роки тому

      Are you saying it's impossible for a modern mason to be outdone by factory manufacturing of stone? Quality items that would be smithed form the same time are being mass produced. I mean you're basically saying they could comunicate just as well if you were a master then and now. It's just wrong. We've vastly increased processing and understanding of minerals and architecture since then.

  • @jkilmon
    @jkilmon 3 роки тому +5

    For the first time in 60 years as an historian I am getting a glimpse through my computer at master craftsmen at work in the 13th century. I almost expected to hear Middle English. Ladies and Gents, you're awesome.

  • @gailhandschuh1138
    @gailhandschuh1138 3 роки тому +18

    Ruth is fascinated by all of the very early home methods and the messier the better to her.

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 3 роки тому

      yes i shivered when she started using hands, i thought that's a british reflex that you would not find in continental europe.

  • @simplyme8593
    @simplyme8593 2 роки тому +14

    I could always imagine the hard and delicate work that these magnificent buildings required but when I actually see how all the work was done, I feel a much bigger appreciation and awe! 😍

  • @isabeauxscar
    @isabeauxscar 26 днів тому

    Ruth is an absolute National Treasure. What an inspiration of a human. Thank you!

  • @CaptainKwame1773
    @CaptainKwame1773 3 роки тому +14

    How amazing is this experience! Wow! And Ruth, we love to see you and the way you explain things in such intricate ways.

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 3 роки тому +5

    How beautiful that stonework is, what amazing craftsmanship. I hope young people keep training in it.

  • @tomtinkersrezlife278
    @tomtinkersrezlife278 3 роки тому +22

    Already watched this on timeline world history and its a great series 👏 ill watch it again 👍 😀

  • @AnastaciaInCleveland
    @AnastaciaInCleveland 3 роки тому +27

    This was so interesting! Thanks for posting this video! ~ Anastacia in Cleveland

  • @judemelroses9920
    @judemelroses9920 3 роки тому +16

    Absolutely like a visionary outlook. Thank you for posting historical content.✨

  • @gwendolynfish2102
    @gwendolynfish2102 3 роки тому +16

    This series is so fascinating. These three people have done other ones, they are worth searching out!

  • @woodsofwindsor5116
    @woodsofwindsor5116 3 роки тому +21

    Thank you for teaching us about our roots and keeping our history! How quickly we forget in this modern age! -United States:)

    • @SophisticatedDogCat
      @SophisticatedDogCat 3 роки тому +1

      What’d you expect? You have lowly educated 22 year olds becoming teachers these days, owned by teachers’ unions. It’s ridiculous.

  • @shreyaagarwal7682
    @shreyaagarwal7682 3 роки тому +4

    Kudos to the team of Royal Realty for showing us everything in so much detail and much respect for their first hand experience practice of everything. This brought a smile on my face 😁

  • @keithgabbard4816
    @keithgabbard4816 3 роки тому +17

    What an interesting program . Havent found something this interesting on youtube in quite some time .

  • @esotericexplorersmartinez493
    @esotericexplorersmartinez493 3 роки тому +32

    I love these series soooo much I wish they could do more!

  • @williamjhunter5714
    @williamjhunter5714 3 роки тому +11

    Hunterston Castle in Scotland is 13th Century, 1263, in excellent condition.

  • @badrabbit9964
    @badrabbit9964 3 роки тому +3

    Love watching these three work together.

  • @alicezmugg217
    @alicezmugg217 2 роки тому +1

    every documentary with ruth goodman is the best !

  • @naly202
    @naly202 3 роки тому +3

    Ruth Goodman is so wonderful. All her documentaries bring the past to life, with dignity and appreciation.

  • @uweschroeder
    @uweschroeder Рік тому +2

    You get that kind of satisfaction from pretty much anything you create by hand over a long period of time. A lot of the lessons learned are still learned today when you do an apprenticeship for pretty much any craft. It always teaches technique and patience. I'm thankful I learned metal working from the ground up and while I never went into that field of work, I still benefit from what I learned some 40 years ago. When most people go like "uhh, I'll just buy a new one" I go "how can I fix this" - and more often than not there's a way to do it.

  • @debbied7803
    @debbied7803 3 роки тому +12

    Amazing, Amazing,Amazing... I want to Thank you so much for this video.
    They were more worldly people then, than they are now.
    This is just an incredible journey your on, I hope there's more. ❤️

  • @fauramusic
    @fauramusic 2 роки тому +3

    This is so amazing! Much respect to everyone doing this!

  • @angel31356
    @angel31356 3 роки тому +4

    My grandmother and grandfather used to run a cotton loom dye business. I remember my mother telling me how colourful our balcony would be from all the dyed loom

  • @audreyann1975
    @audreyann1975 2 роки тому +2

    This is absolutely amazing! The people were very committed and disciplined. The blue dye was simply fascinating! The garments would be very expensive of course.

  • @offwiththefairiesforever2373
    @offwiththefairiesforever2373 3 роки тому +5

    OUR ANCESTORS WERE AMAZING

  • @TigerBudgie
    @TigerBudgie 3 роки тому +3

    I’m deeply impressed by amazing buildings all over the world, always with a thought to their craftsmen. By this series I’m from now on even more in woooow by the skills by our forefathers. This was so eye opening - the teamwork - the knowledge and learning from nature’s material - listening to the stones, I loved when that was said ❤️ Thank you to all of you, - from Denmark…

  • @kafalotofeao462
    @kafalotofeao462 3 роки тому +81

    Imagine if someone from the future found these ruins and thought "ahhh, authentic historic ruins from eons ago" when in fact it was an experiment in very recent history...

    • @kadyk4185
      @kadyk4185 3 роки тому +14

      Or in the future they believed we, in 2000s, lived in castles like this.

    • @earlsandyevens
      @earlsandyevens 3 роки тому +4

      Leave a Plack or corner stone!

    • @Janellabelle
      @Janellabelle 3 роки тому +4

      Lol they better test the age of the wood, like how we do now.

    • @jefferyindorf699
      @jefferyindorf699 3 роки тому +9

      Archeologists in the 31st century would be wondering what happened in that part of France that it reverted to a feudal system. 🤔

    • @kimmieh8419
      @kimmieh8419 3 роки тому +2

      @@jefferyindorf699 Right?! Lol

  • @Txjane52011
    @Txjane52011 3 роки тому +4

    Love these programs. It makes me grateful for what whe have now.

  • @dibarenthlei9049
    @dibarenthlei9049 3 роки тому +19

    This is just amazing..

  • @pahanjayasooriya2513
    @pahanjayasooriya2513 3 роки тому +3

    Very interesting and very informative, the amount of labour went into a creation in the medieval aga was overwhelming, I will never again look at a historical monument the same way again, I will always be thinking about the workers and their marvellous work.

  • @m.theresacarozza8173
    @m.theresacarozza8173 3 роки тому +3

    This is what you call real woodworking, sculptural, beautiful stone work with arches and tremendous Mason work with heart and soul put into it. God bless you all. What a tremendous job you all did. That's painstaking but worth it. God truly in the past and even now as you work hard at it has gifted all of you and c those in past ancient to medieval times with talents, knowledge and skills to do all this.

  • @bradd188
    @bradd188 3 роки тому +6

    I love this narrator!

  • @dawnpalmby5100
    @dawnpalmby5100 3 роки тому +8

    My mom's side are McNamara's builders of castle's and monasteries, from research I've done theres still a few standing... if we ever get out of our current predicament I'd love to visit them!

  • @annfeeney1662
    @annfeeney1662 2 роки тому +2

    What a terrific experiment . It’s no wonder these castles lasted hundreds of years !

  • @DevahSofiaLucus
    @DevahSofiaLucus 2 роки тому +1

    I loved the mother, and daughter working together.

  • @gregoryambres1897
    @gregoryambres1897 3 роки тому +3

    Never in your LIFE have you seen the expression "from SCRATCH" illustrated so graphically and literally 🤣💪🏆

    • @XohjaiSbarkeater
      @XohjaiSbarkeater 2 роки тому

      Except for when I saw this comment and clawed my intestines out of where my now severed testicles once lie dormant.

  • @wenchology
    @wenchology Рік тому +2

    History is AMAZING I am so grateful for this content ❤❤❤❤

  • @cherylcallahan5402
    @cherylcallahan5402 3 роки тому +7

    REAL ROYALTY 13th century appreciate your videos Listening from Mass USA TYVM ♥️

  • @strongigorot5136
    @strongigorot5136 3 роки тому +2

    Wow! no word to express my feeling of appreciation is great , with all their hard work , genius art and ways in doing such wonderful nature design by hand .

  • @sirgerar2006
    @sirgerar2006 Місяць тому

    Makes one appreciate the everyday comforts we now have 😊

  • @Rumorady
    @Rumorady 3 роки тому +3

    I love seeing stuff like this with all respect to those who have worked so hard at this.

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 3 роки тому

      I believe the medieval stone masons, architect and fine stone carvers are actually decades into that job, they're not pretending anymore, its their lives to be medieval artisans in the 21st century.

  • @jamesrobiscoe1174
    @jamesrobiscoe1174 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much for your guide through the labor and skill the medieval builders developed as they built their stone edifices. The buildings had my admiration before, and now I've gained admiration, intense admiration, for the builders.

  • @lizzy9975
    @lizzy9975 3 роки тому +32

    Maybe our modern day developers could take note! Apartment construction springs to mind. Because some of the work is pretty shoddy.

  • @MsJamilaaa
    @MsJamilaaa 2 роки тому +1

    The best part about this project is seeing Brits & French working together ❤

  • @kristinmoreno9203
    @kristinmoreno9203 3 роки тому +1

    EXCELLENT DOCUMENTARY!⭐⭐⭐⭐💖💙💖🇱🇷

  • @MysticSoulGoddess85
    @MysticSoulGoddess85 3 роки тому +5

    This was a beautifully done documentary 🥰

  • @barbarahurren3167
    @barbarahurren3167 3 роки тому +4

    Thankyou so very much for this insight of history and in general how we arrived at recieving materials for daily living nessesities to manage our needs.

  • @alejandrotapia4749
    @alejandrotapia4749 3 роки тому +11

    Well ordinary people couldn't travel better but yes actually is quite probably traveled more isn't it? Fascinating!!

  • @davidtrishhope9841
    @davidtrishhope9841 3 роки тому +3

    That man,s voice is so good.

  • @shannon3944
    @shannon3944 3 роки тому +3

    Wow!! Wonderfully done, and I learned so much!! I wanted this to never end!👏👏👏❤💯
    Please share more of your work and adventures with this project.🙏💯

    • @wilsonwalker1181
      @wilsonwalker1181 3 роки тому

      Hello Shannon. How are you doing?

    • @XohjaiSbarkeater
      @XohjaiSbarkeater 2 роки тому

      @@wilsonwalker1181 you know damn well if she's not someone you know personally she's either really old or really young and you need to lay off. @Shannon we understand you without the emojis. You explained thoroughly your point without all that 💯💯💯💯💯😇🤮🤧🤒🤕😵

  • @phillipstroll7385
    @phillipstroll7385 3 роки тому +13

    Such an old series. Thanks for the re-upload. Do you have the entire series I wonder

  • @toniecat1028
    @toniecat1028 3 роки тому +2

    I love Ruth - nothing can stop her, including her age! But my favorite thing is Peter's dreamy eyes!! 😍

    • @dorianphilotheates3769
      @dorianphilotheates3769 3 роки тому +2

      Her age?! -The woman’s not yet sixty! Where I come from, that’s barely teething age...

    • @wilsonwalker1181
      @wilsonwalker1181 3 роки тому

      Hello Antoinette Marlow. How are you doing?

  • @oakdew
    @oakdew 3 роки тому +2

    Paul McGann is by far my favorite narrator.

  • @Blessed_by_Yeshua
    @Blessed_by_Yeshua 3 роки тому +7

    I love it. Thank you for your hard work. It was very interesting.
    I would like to see someone remake Gobekli Tepe with the tools that were available at that time period in which it was made. And some of the other mysterious sites that seem impossible to make.

  • @cherylcallahan5402
    @cherylcallahan5402 3 роки тому +4

    REAL ROYALTY appreciate your videos Listening from Mass USA TYVM ♥️

    • @cutebutsadisticable
      @cutebutsadisticable 3 роки тому

      Royalty you are not. Did a Google search just to be sure. Lol

  • @marjoriejohnston3038
    @marjoriejohnston3038 2 роки тому

    I've seen this before. A while ago, but found myself watching it again. Lovely.

  • @cherylcallahan5402
    @cherylcallahan5402 3 роки тому +13

    Real Royalty 1300 How to build a medieval castle appreciate your videos Listening from Mass USA TYVM ♥️ host

  • @ninarakic1771
    @ninarakic1771 3 роки тому

    Yes! Ruth, Peter and Tom are back!!

  • @FaithandFun-w6q
    @FaithandFun-w6q 3 роки тому +5

    Amazing!

  • @Janellabelle
    @Janellabelle 3 роки тому +7

    Lol I saw all those ads and just immediately scrolled straight to the end and restarted. Good lord. Can we get some video with those ads?!

    • @sm3296
      @sm3296 3 роки тому +3

      Every three minutes, that’s pretty excessive.

    • @kimmieh8419
      @kimmieh8419 3 роки тому

      It’s the reason I gave in and paid for no ads. It’s not that much a month and it really is a lot less irritating! I knew the ads were getting to me when I’d be watching something and just when something was about to happen, AD came on and I wanted to throw my phone! It gets REALLY old after a while.

    • @kelticsage
      @kelticsage 3 роки тому +2

      adblock

  • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
    @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 3 роки тому +2

    Gotta love that ambition exceeded what tools dictated to reach what they _believed_ ought to be possible. That's why I never doubt what ancients achieved even if we don't know the minutiae of how they did it.

  • @justinsmith847
    @justinsmith847 3 роки тому +2

    I would love to visit this castle !!!!

  • @gregoryambres1897
    @gregoryambres1897 3 роки тому +1

    They always have poor Pete do all the hard grunt-work. I suppose because he's so big and strong. And Ruth just loves getting her little hands into grit, dirty little gel 🤣

  • @maximilianlagerfeld2403
    @maximilianlagerfeld2403 Рік тому

    Truly incredible. Great job, amazing skills.

  • @jimcrabtree8804
    @jimcrabtree8804 3 роки тому +9

    Well very cool idea for ppl to get together and do.a lot of talented ppl here...very awesome 😊

  • @MrsSlocombesPuddyCat
    @MrsSlocombesPuddyCat 3 роки тому +1

    What an extremely interesting doco.

  • @kl6902
    @kl6902 3 роки тому +1

    This was fantastic!

  • @heididepotter8136
    @heididepotter8136 2 роки тому

    OMG amasing fork!!!
    Respect !
    I love artisanal work.
    Way more solid and stable then new buildingd and/or new furniture too.

  • @heididepotter8136
    @heididepotter8136 2 роки тому

    Love this video.
    Loved to see what work it took to die clothes, to build...
    Grate content;
    Thank you

  • @ServraghGiorsal
    @ServraghGiorsal Місяць тому

    Ive seen these 3 folks before. What interesting lives they lead !!😊😊

  • @msnewbeautyempressliveinca2175
    @msnewbeautyempressliveinca2175 3 роки тому +9

    The Real Royal Family 🤴🏽👸🏽🌹

  • @ktkalicka
    @ktkalicka 2 роки тому +1

    If we could go back to that time even for a month, we would appreciate supermarkets, pillows, shoe and clothing stores with all colors and fabrics, spice shops and even our own bathroom. And the dentist.

  • @gretchenlhommedieu9246
    @gretchenlhommedieu9246 3 роки тому +1

    This has been fascinating and I enjoyed it. Now I want to learn more. Thank you for starting me on my endeavor to learn much more about life in the Middle Ages.

  • @queensandybrown2407
    @queensandybrown2407 3 роки тому +1

    while to see such hard work see these castles amazing just to think about history wow

  • @alinaciobotaru7030
    @alinaciobotaru7030 3 роки тому

    Congratulations for filming this. You did a great job!

  • @azmanomar7054
    @azmanomar7054 2 роки тому

    Watching this makes me appreciate architecture even more. And I don't even have even the slightest knowledge about architecture. Can't even tell the difference between stalagtite or stalagmite

  • @ellielynn8219
    @ellielynn8219 3 роки тому

    This is the best thing on the internet to date

  • @offwiththefairiesforever2373
    @offwiththefairiesforever2373 2 роки тому

    I just adore this and its financial backers and participants

  • @corazoncubano5372
    @corazoncubano5372 3 роки тому +25

    I always had the feeling that castles were chilly and damp.

    • @myerwerl
      @myerwerl 3 роки тому +8

      They certainly look like it.

    • @SR-iy4gg
      @SR-iy4gg 3 роки тому +9

      They might be now with things not fitting as snugly and being old. But, when they were new, everything would have fit well. I'm sure things were built with quality back then.

    • @kathleenmckenzie6261
      @kathleenmckenzie6261 3 роки тому +6

      @Corazon Cubano: They are and were. We visited castles while living in England. Quarters for women and children were usually on the third floor; public reception room on the ground level, next floor was for the lord of the castle. All were accessed by narrow winding and very uneven stone stairs. I wondered how pregnant women and women with babies managed those stairs without falling and suffering serious injury. The other thing I wondered was how they got the firewood up those stairs. The castles we visited had a single, ten-foot wide fireplace on each level, so I don't imagine they burned two or three foot logs.

    • @kathleenmckenzie6261
      @kathleenmckenzie6261 3 роки тому +5

      @@SR-iy4gg They were built to last, but there were no glass windows. At best, inhabitants hung tapestries on the walls. The latrines were open to the weather. Stone and brick becomes what is known as cold-soaked, that is, the stone is cold through and through and always gives off chilled air.

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 3 роки тому +2

      You don't have to look at only castle but any stone masonry building. In warm climates it's an advantage. You get a natural cold comfortable interior 10 degrees less than outside. In cold damp climates well, at least it breaks the wind and that is why they had fireplace in every major room.