Think about it this way: All of us are the children of people who were the sole survivors of deadly wars, famines, and plagues. You come from a long line of ancestors who repeatedly beat the odds- which means you can, too. Remember that.
@@orbitalchild Lucky bloodlines, then - regardless, we all inherited survival skills that we don't even know we have. Luck certainly appears to have been a major part of our survival, but memory exists in the blood-line, as instinctual responses, as well. We are all the products of successful survival skills...and luck.🙂
For 90% of this video I was like "yeah, all pretty standard," but right at the end I realised I had never thought about how gross living in a castle would be even compared to a village or farm. These are the crucial insights that were missing from my kids history books!
It really depends on a lot of factors though, but in particular when in the Middle Ages, and how wealthy the Lord was. Castles could vary from little more than a single motte and bailey barely furnished, to something very close to a fairytale castle. One thing regardless of period that would be hard for us modern people would be sleeping. In most cases, you'd be expected to share a bed, usually with multiple people. Even a Lord might sleep in his big bed with his Lady, all his kids, and their closest Knights and retainers all in the same chamber. Yes, even while doing THAT activity!
Me too. I keep imaging the the streets, markets and the castles in this time since I got to know about this type of life. I am Indian and I compare the European cities at this time to Indian cities. I don't know why they obsess me
Another reason they drank beer was because a lot of water was not clean enough to drink. Purple was reserved for royalty because it took hundreds of sea snails, to harvest the dye, it was labour intensive work and they only came from the city of Tyre, in modern day Lebanon. That is why, it was called 'Tyrian or Royal Purple'. Purple was associated with nobility & higher up clergy too. The background music is headache inducing. Even when turned down it is very painful to hear. Your voice is better on its 'own. From Ireland, the 15th of April 2022. 🇮🇪❤️
Videos like this one help me with book research. One of the novels I'm writing is a historical scifi and I wanna make sure I have ALLLL my facts right! lol :)
Here’s a surprise: vanilla was known in the medieval days. Also in ancient Egyptian and Roman times! It grew in tropical India and tropical, interior Africa. There were vanilla flavored wines. Thanks for saying that beers of yesteryear were lower in alcoholic content. They varied between two and five percent. Wines also had lesser alcoholic content. You left out weak ale/beer. This had zero or next to it percentage alcohol. Ale had no hops, the staple of Britain and Europe. Until hops were added later for a longer “shelf life”. Hops were usually roasted and used in portages and stews. During the hot summer months when the crops were gathered, one couldn’t drink beer with alcohol, lest they collapse and sometimes die. So, all you can drink weak ale/small beer was had. This was also known as “table” ale or beer. Another thing: beer back then had tetracycline in it, introduced by all those free yeasts in the air. So, it was pretty good for you. Beer/ale did not have to be “soupy”. It could be strained through cheesecloth or linen to produce a finer, lighter brew. There was purple dye, not of murex origin. Various shades of purple, too. True murex purple stank like fish. The smell couldn’t be removed. (So, there’s an example of suffering for fashion.) Without the sulphur that’s added today (hence the astringent taste and finish), wine then was sweet. Average life expectancy included a 60% death rate for children. Cheers!
Some people are still saying that life would be easier than it is now - me, I did a bunch of reading this morning and I watched this video, and what I'm retaining stronger than anything is that I'd have to drink beer the consistency of porridge in place of water, DEPEND on it for some of my daily nutritional needs, and that even the highest of classes with the "nicest" materials for beds had beds full of lice and bed bugs. Yeah, no thanks. I'm pretty peasant-y by today's standards and I feel pretty certain that I am still better off than someone waking up covered in itchy bed bug bites 😂
I’m not ashamed these people were my ancient ancestors and i’m proud that I came from people that were so resilient in such a dangerous and absolutely scary world
@@_Super_Hans_ Your right actually I shouldn’t be ashamed I love that old type of festival culture. I see they had a lot of barbarism and that’s what I feel sort of ashamed of but they pioneered incredible things like medicine and prosthetics. I suppose it was just the brutality of the times people were still fighting to survive
Good video...well done. Medieval fuedal farming was very backwards and localized. Bad weather events in gowning seasons like heat waves, drought, cold, hailstorms, hard rain as well as pests and blights etc. would often cause food shortages, famine and hardship. The high renaissance and the industrial revolution brought about scientific mechanized farming methods as well as food transport. Food could be brought in from more prosperous regions in bad years. In today's world the Middle ages are often glorified, romanticized, and idealized. Absolutely nothing could be farther from the truth. They were times of severe hardship and oppression.
@@KristinkaAranova The people who had it comfortable in the medieval times were the nobility and the clergy. For the majority of population, they were times of hardship and oppression. In modern times the middle ages have been glorified by fairy tales, romance novels, and movies. Nothing is farther from the truth. In antiquity, even in the grandest empires, most people were poor and by today's standards.
@@goyonman9655 In the Medieval times people were oppressed by the church, the ruling class, the class/lineage system, and they were bound by the laws of tradition. When they came to the new world the shackles were loose.
@@martinschulz9381 to be "bound by tradition" is a contradiction in terms a tradition is by definition what you do and feel to be right to do without needing legislation the modern world by comparison is the domain of all law and no tradition. Which makes it by definition more oppressive concerning the church, they were defended by the church against the oppression of secular powers
Literacy was actually very high in the middle ages amongst the present class. It's just that they read and wrote old English not Latin or French. English was the present language, and written formed were very common in way of laws and notices posted in the town squares and church porches. Many poems and short stories where written down as well as ledgers, and letters. But there were no books because books where so expensive and only available to the nobility who spoke Latin and French.
Literacy was quite high? That's absolutely untrue. If you're a peasant, your life is centered entirely around things that require no literacy. (Even among the elite, not everyone could read and write because some simply didn't have reason to have to learn.) Books would have been prohibitively expensive, anyway, pre-printing press. The clergy were the ones who had to be literate - why would they teach random serfs and subsistence farmers? Things only really began to change after Gutenberg.
Medieval football was not really soccer. Medieval football is the ancestor of American football, Rugby and Soccer. Soccer is a 19th century development.
@@AviViljoen - medieval football was nothing like what gets called 'soccer', which is a 19th century development with rules based on a non-handling game. Medieval football was basically a riot with few rules. Handling was allowed, the object just being to get an object or 'ball' from one location to another, e.g. a struggle between two villages with dozens of men playing on each side.
Not to mention plagues, no doctors, witch hunts, wars, etc. No one expects the Inquisition! Break out the comfy chair and the fluffy pillow! What do you mean it's only a rabbit? Break out the Holy hand grenades!
Well...since my heritage is still doing the same thing they did in the middle ages, i would say yes. And my proven abilities of the armed forces continue in my blood.
I would much rather have live back then : I hate technology, and love simple things ; and the short lifespan would suit me ; who wants to linger on for decades in pain ?
The average life expectancy was definitely not 30+ if someone manages to live past 10 years old. It's closer to 55 - 60. Content quality on RU-vid is really declining when even channels specializing in facts are factually wrong. Then again, it's FREE content on RU-vid so I shouldn't be complaining.. lol.
It's a common fallacy, centred around "average life span". With such a high number of infants not making it even beyond 5 years old it is skewed way too low. Average is not always the best way to measure something. As you say, anyone surviving until around 20 could reasonably expect a 50-60 year life span, not unreasonable, if slightly low, even by today's standards. Tiresome that this continues to crop up when it is so easy to debunk.
see this verse please Revelation 14:12 (1599 Geneva Bible) 12 [a]Here is the patience of Saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.
poor people drank beer still in the twenties and thirties in England while the wealthy drank tea. Thats the 1930's! My grandad told me that.He was born in 1911 in Liverpool.
I guess we can thank Hollywood for always portraying the Middle Ages as dark and gloomy, when the Renaissance was arguably more intolerant and backward lol
@@justacrusader3199 I clicked on this video because I thought it was always dark. I'm curious how in the hell we go from there...to here. How we now respect women (contrary to the popular belief being pushed that men don't ) and didn't back then. Or I should say..how I am lucky to be alive as a woman today compared...how that happens.
Unfortunately, this reminds me far too much of a workplace training video for me to continue watching past the first two minutes. I love the subject matter, but not the format. Sorry.
You wouldn't survive today without free American food stamps and free healthcare provided by AMERICAN TAX PAYERS!!! You are a flea on the ass of this country!
Meat still comes from farms. Cattle farms, poultry farms? Still, I don't know why some people are making that statement. Yeah, food comes from farms but most of us aren't responsible for harvesting it, processing it, and putting it on the dinner table. Most people don't even RESIDE near a farm, let alone have access to one. And being able to live off of only what you grow and harvest is almost completely obsolete for modern civilization, farmers make freakin bank