Views : 2,908,546
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Nov 20, 2021 ^^
Rating : 4.946 (810/59,459 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T20:14:20.037962Z
See in json
Top Comments of this video!! :3
Imagine being a vikingr in those times. You get sent away by the person in charge of your land because " Ew, you're an unruly idiot. " The land you get sent to is literally your dream land full of gold, silks, riches beyond your imagining and all the food you never thought you'd experience and the Emperor that runs it goes " Wow, I need people just like you! Here, you're going to be in charge of naval defenses. You're in charge of mercenary work and you get to loot everything you and your boys can carry when we sack a city, then I'll let my standard military go in. You? You're my royal guard. Every time there's a new Emperor, you get to go into their lavish golden room, dismantle it and carry out all of it and you're also paid a wage that essentially makes you immediately just as rich as any noble in my cities. Welcome to the Byzantine Empire. " - They probably prayed to the Norse gods each night and thanked each and every one of them.
1.2K |
It must have been amazing to have been a Norse adventurer and seeing Constantinople for the first time.
You’ve only heard about some mythical city that is pure paradise with everything you’d ever want in life, so you take a risk and make the journey there to find out the stories where true.
Straight out of a fantasy novel and I love it. Kinda wish there was a historical fiction show or movie about a simple Norse man going through trials and tribulations to reach the city perhaps after falling on bad times.
2.4K |
In 1404 axe bearing British warriors in the military were mentioned by the Byzantine Emperor and in the 1300s there are many references to Varangians serving as guardsmen. Whilst they were no longer a large battlefield force in the 1400s they still remained as Palace guards and a regiment of the guard (mentioned in the kantakouzenos) We can assume to some degree that there were Varangians present in 1453.
329 |
Harald Hardrada raided from Sicily to Mesopotamia, became increasingly famous, and according to his saga, empress Zoe wanted to marry him. However, upon his refusal she ordered him to be jailed on false accusations of misuse of imperial property.
Harald then gathered his loyal men and sailed down the Golden Horn, but the giant chain closing the channel was raised - and no ship had ever managed to cross it. Harald then ordered his men to pick up their belongings and go to the back of the ship. With all the weight on its stern, the galley tilted, the bow lifting upwards, and it managed to cross over the chains. Essentially performing the equivalent of a wheeling.
981 |
When the Greeks first saw them within the city walls, they called them barbarians, drunks, unruly and lacking culture. But in time, they proved to be very loyal to the Emperor. These Vikings would return to Scandinavia with wild stories of riches and Greek culture. So many Vikings were taking off for Greece that some rulers tried implementing laws to strip them of property if they took off rather than stay at home with their community to tend the land and defend it.
83 |
"The Greece runestones (Swedish: Greklandsstenarna) are about 30 runestones containing information related to voyages made by Norsemen to the Byzantine Empire. They were made during the Viking Age until about 1100 and were engraved in the Old Norse language with Scandinavian runes." "On these runestones the word Grikkland ("GREECE") appears in three inscriptions,[1] the word Grikk(j)ar ("GREEKS") appears in 25 inscriptions,[2] two stones refer to men as grikkfari ("traveller to Greece")[3] and one stone refers to Grikkhafnir ("Greek harbours").[4] ."
wiki/Greece_runestones
75 |
Around thirty runestones that contain information regarding the voyages that were made by Norsemen to the byzantine empire managed to survive and were found in Sweden. Most of those runestones are in memory of members of the Varangian Guard who never returned home. Such as these:
"Folkmarr had this stone raised in memory of Folkbjörn, his son. He also met his end among the Greeks. May God help his spirit and soul."[62]
"... had this stone erected in memory of ... ... He fell in Greece. May God help (his) soul."[65]
"Tófa and Hemingr had this stone erected in memory of Gunnarr, their son, and ... He died abroad among the Greeks. May God and God's mother help his soul."[67]
"Guðrún raised the stone in memory of Heðinn; (he) was Sveinn's nephew. He was in Greece, divided (up) gold. May Christ help Christians' spirits."[122]
"Vésteinn, Agmundr (and) Guðvér, they raised the stone in memory of Báulfr, their father, a Þegn of strength. He was with the Greeks; then died with them(?) / at ⟨þum⟩."[125]
"These landmarks are made in memory of Inga's sons. She came to inherit from them, but these brothers—Gerðarr and his brothers—came to inherit from her. They died in Greece."
"Þorsteinn let make the landmark after Sveinn, his father, and Þórir, his brother. They were out to Greece. And after Ingiþóra, his mother. Œpir carved."
Kárr had this stone raised in memory of Haursi(?), his father; and Kabbi(?)/Kampi(?)/Kappi(?)/Gapi(?) in memory of his kinsman-by-marriage. (He) travelled competently; earned wealth abroad in Greece for his heir."[80]
"Ingimundr and Þórðr (and) Jarl and Vígbjôrn(?) had the stone raised in memory of Ingifastr, their father, a captain who travelled abroad to Greece, Ióni's(?) son; and in memory of Ígulbjôrn. And Œpir carved."[84]
"Steinhildr had this stone erected in memory of Viðbjôrn, her husband, a traveller to Greece. May God and God's mother help his soul. Ásmundr Kári' son marked."[92]
§Q "Ljótr the captain erected this stone in memory of his sons. He who perished abroad was called Áki. (He) steered a cargo-ship; he came to Greece. Hefnir died at home ... ... cut the runes ..."[99]
"Fastvé had the stone raised in memory of Gerðarr and Ótryggr, her sons. The other (= the latter) died in Greece."[104]
688 |
It is completely wild just how much the viking/norse/norman expansion changed the course of history, and it is also pretty damn wild that we know very little about them. They just seem to emerge from the north, having loads of kids, building forts and fighting little berserkers, and then just merge into the nations they often defined to the point you never would have guessed they were there.
54 |
I love history. Of all the stories/topics in history, one of my absolute favorites is the Varangian Guard. It's cool that someone was smart enough to recognize their skills and utilize them and work with them instead of basically committing suicide by fighting them lol. Also, I admire their loyalty - every time I hear about the Varangians, I hear about their loyalty. It just makes me like the Varangians and Vikings even more. It's interesting how both the emperor and the Varangians had what the other needed - the emperor needed loyal, skilled, violent, intimidating fighters and the Varangians needed violence, adventure, loot, reputation, women and wine, etc. It's like a historic match made in Valhalla.
148 |
@Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
2 years ago
Fun fact: Some Saxon veterans who survived the battle of Hastings ended up joining the Varangian Guard.
3.3K |