Added: 4 years ago
From: ilbersagliere
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  • My school choir is doing this song so hard!!

  • @TheNibbler09 you think singing it is hard, the orchestra (especially the brass) is paraplegic by the end!!

  • This was my old old school song.

    Still sends a shiver down my spine with the glory of the English Words

    'Not unto us oh LORD the glory'

  • Anyone else here think the French Herald Pursuivant is hot? My Mom and I both do, and we NEVER like the same guys.

  • Also I really love the first scene of the unknown soldier. He sung the song with so much humility and gratitude to God. This victory against the French is like experiencing a divine healing from fourth stage cancer.

    I tell you, God is real, he is willing to give you victories in your life, if you can humble yourselves to his guidance and he will bring you to a place where you will rejoice with songs of thanksgiving.

    Blessings!

  • This song is based from the bible in Psalm 115:1.

    "Not to us, O LORD, not to us but to your name be the glory, because of your love and faithfulness."

    A scripture of humility and adoration to God, for his everlasting love and mercies towards us.

  • I can hear it thousand times!!!

  • Just found out the one of my ancestors was a Yeoman from Montgomery who's Captain was Henry V!!..must learn the words when i visit Agincourt next year.

  • not shown in this movie: Henry V dies of dysentery!

  • Trivia - The man who starts the singing is Patrick Doyle, who composed the music for the film.

  • Very powerful.

    Made me so emotional.

    WE ARE DOING THIS FOR OUR SCHOOL CHOIR.

    IF I GET ONE LIKE FOR THIS COMMENT,

    I WILL POST THIS ON MY ACCOUNT.

    MY NAME IS 98johnmactavish

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  • hola. como estan.

    les comento soy decendiente de Gido de Lusignan y de Constantino XI .

    queridos hermanos juere defender a Dios y la iglesia.

    pero fui armado caballero, por mi abuelo . pero no por la santa madre iglesia. hoy pido que se me asepte como tal . y quiero ser armado como caballero por la fe . tomando los votos de castidad les dejo mi correo dilesa2@hotmail.com

    espero por la gracia de Dios algun dia recuperar los santos lugares o protegerlos del islam

  • Used to be my schools Anthem 50 + years ago.

    Once a year it was sung in Latin.

    Rest of the year in english

    'Not unto us oh Lord

    The Praise and Glory be of any deed or Word ..."

    If memory serves..?

  • That kid on the back of Henry V is 14 year old Christian Bale.

  • Not to us Lord, but to your name give glory.

  • my latin's a bit rusty but i believe a rough translation is not to us Lord but to you we give glory

  • @dookeland8 Not to us, O Lord, Not to us, But to thy name give glory.

  • @blokdeblok close enough after 4 yrs of not speaking

  • Honestly, the movie should have ended after this scene. Everything after just felt... unnecessary.

  • We love singing this during mission!

  • i need this in ingles

  • @MegaUkisslover

    Non nobis Domine, non nobis, sed nomine tuo da gloryam

    Not to us Lord ( God ), not to us, only thy name give glory

  • MILITIA TEMPLII , ,ANTIQUUS ORDO TEMPLII SUPER TERRAM

  • Militia est vita hominis super terram, et sicut dies mercenarii dies eius.

  • This was my old shool song and it always evokes strong memories (albeit a different tune).

    The Welsh bowmen had the most powerful weapon of the time - pity that they didn't have a leader with the strength to recognise this and to lead the Welsh back to their independance! Bernard Juby - an Englishman descended from a Norman Knight.

  • we have to sing this in marching band!!!!! :)

  • @tayloriscute2 yesss taylor we do haha itz KAley:D

  • SIGILLUM MILITUM CHRISTI

  • 11 people held their manhoods cheap

  • Not to us, Lord, but to Your name give glory.

  • I am true Templar always was and always be !

  • french don't eat cats xD i don't khow where you have seen it

  • Should I hold my manhood cheap for I was not there?

  • @Amatugold YES

    Nor were you at any other BATTLE.

    Yes very cheap!

  • HOW I WISH I WAS THERE!!!!

    Alas, I was not.......and failed to Slay my fair quota of SNAILS,,,,,,,French Dogs, they eat cats for fucks sake. What is wrong with them???!!!

    Ridiculous.

  • The boy being carried by Henry is Christian Bale

  • @Tuc082 OMG! IT IS!

  • western countries had armoured knights, powerfule foot sodliers and excellent siege equipment, we had the sea, and longbowmen

  • Beautiful prayer

  • Such a powerful and beatiful prayer and song. Wish they did this more often nowadays

  • This was the best part of the film by a mile. A very great song . I grew up thinking that it was Branagh's genius idea to include it, but it was actually mentioned in Shakespeare's play!

    A beautiful scene that always makes me cry.

  • @FriedEggsandChips We don't know what the melody was for the Non nobis of Henry's time. This version was written especially for the film by the composer of the music for the film, Patrick Doyle. BTW, the first soldier who starts singing here is Patrick Doyle. I still think it was Branagh's genius to conceive this scene of leaving the battlefield at Agincourt, which isn't in the play. I wonder whose idea it was to have a version of Non nobis composed for the film.

  • @FriedEggsandChips: La mejor parte es el "Band of Brothers". Después de ganar una batalla en lugar de disfrutar el triunfo, cantan a coro. No es creíble y además, malsano. Uno debe reconocer sus capacidades, no todo es obra de Dios, uno también pone su esfuerzo...

  • @metooiamawesom canere non difficilis est, sed cantus optimus est

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  • I keep trying to re-like this but it'll only let me do it once :(

  • This film is henry V

  • 8 French noblemen watched this video

  • I sang this, briefly, with the local SCA Madrigali singers years ago, and it still gets stuck in my head from time to time. Just a very, very good song.

  • @MachaMongRuad A good song with a good message

  • Non nobis domine, non nobis domine, sed nomine, sed nomine tuo da gloriam

    not to us O LORD not to us, but to YOUR name be the glory

    psalm 115:1

    EVEN THOUGH THE BATTLE HAS BEEN LOST, STILL I WILL PRAISE THE LORD ALMIGHTY

  • @andiemckeighan

    Except the English actually won Agincourt, dude.

  • @FranzKafkaRockOpera

    doesn't matter, we still should praise him when things r lost

    and think about how many men they lost! wives lost their husbands, children lost fathers, mothers lost sons, sisters lost brothers.

  • What a powerful video.

    But to be honest I envy all the dead christian soldiers in the past centuries.

    Knowing they went to heaven, to our almighty lord and savior, in his arms they found and find rest and peace.

    They did not fear death so we shall fear it not in face of muslim or other heathen terror, for WE ARE THE CHOSEN ONES, who are in alliance with the lord himself.

    We shall transcend this world until we reach the KINGDOM OF HEAVEN.

    Do I get an AMEN brothers and sisters?

  • amazing song, amazing movie, amazing play....need I say more?

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  • i have to sing it for a choir too.

  • I have to sing this for choir and us 5/6 girls are the ones who start the song, im really nervous!

  • @wristguards i have to sing it too but in our choir it's the bass boys who start singing the song, 

  • Other western european countries were protected by armor-clad knights that exploited the peasantry for them to have the resources to fight.

    England was protected by simple men armed with longbows. Respect

  • @TehFridgeizEmptyz The Hundred Years War had nothing to do with protecting England. It was nothing more than the French/Norman rulers of England trying to hold on to their feudal lands in France. The "noble" English proletariat went into battle with their longbows because it paid better than the life of misery and abject poverty they faced as serfs at home. There was nothing noble about the wholesale slaughter of thousands for the greed of the ruling classes of Europe.

  • @Kaalec oh sure, you can say that now, 600 years after the fact, but these men, these men who died on these battle fields, they truly held that in their hearts that they where fighting in the name of and by the graces of GOD ALMIGHTY!

    Even if the kings, rulers and otherwise where indeed using these men for their own puroposes, these men are no different from the modern soldiers in todays armies, they all fight and die for what they believe is a just cause, and they do so of their own will.

  • @TheMMO50 You want to explain to me how the Roman Catholics of England killing the Roman Catholics of France had anything to do with GOD AL-FUCKING-MIGHTY. They were pawns, dupes, considered scarcely above the value of a pig. Read a little more about feudalism.

  • @Kaalec I am not condoning war, I am simply stating the opinion that these men and many others FELT(note the emphisis) and dont you dare use THAT word and God in the same sentance.War is very subject to opinion, and no one wants war(unless they are extremists of some sort), but it often is seen as the only feesable solution by those in power. And by the way, I have studied feudalism,and all that goes with it. ALL countrys and societys have commited horrible acts against each other at some point

  • I also wish to point out, I do not enjoy conflict, but I understand that these men, whether they are(or were) right or wrong in their killing of each other, they all still felt torn apart inside, as no person in their right mind can ever forget those that they have killed.my brother in law is in the army, he has fought 3 times in iraq, and he did so while still upholding his beliefs.He might not have the beliefs do, but i respect him for standing up for those beliefs, as I do with all soldiers

  • @TheMMO50 I have nothing against the soldiers. I detest politicians and generals who condemn men to die for no good reason. The reasons given to invade Iraq were invented by President Bush and his cronies. Your brother-in-law was duped. By the way, the plural of country and society are, respectively, countries and societies. And since I live in a free society I will use whatever combination of words I like, and don't you DARE try to tell me otherwise. So FUCK god.

  • @Kaalec oh for heavens sake. can we both agree that war is horrible and leave it at that? you have your opinion, I have mine, and my brother in law can keep his opinion, for what is the weight of an opinion compared to the issues of the world on a whole?

    Truce?

  • @TehFridgeizEmptyz ........"protected" :-D

  • @TehFridgeizEmptyz

    England was protected by the sea...

  • @TehFridgeizEmptyz it was tactic, before that also england had his heavy infantry and cavalry. The invention of longbow changed the method of warfare. sorry for my bad english.

  • @TehFridgeizEmptyz very fear you had to us spanish that you pray that we go on ships,because if we go with an army in the ground,you shit your pants,heretic english

  • @TehFridgeizEmptyz You know this battle was fought in France right?

  • WTF!! my blood boils!!! Templiar For Ever!!

  • Excelsior!  Five stars.

  • Non nobis Domine, Domine Non nobis Domine Sed nomini, Sed nomini Tu o da gloriam. AMEN

  • There should be a law that all warfare must be conducted man-to-man with hand weapons, no firearms, no artillery, no air support, no bombs, no missiles. We would choose more wisely those things that merit killing and dying.

  • I love the movie and the play, but as a historian i can't agree with the heroic way the english have been presented to us. After all, it was they who invaded France, pillaged, murdered and raped an entire region, after which, filled with loot, they cowardly tried to escape the french, who were defending their country at that moment. Only after they were cornered did the english fight and for what cause - to simply keep their loot and lives, nothing else.

  • long live england

  • The film is a materpiece.

  • they don't make films like this anymore

  • Shakespeare Rules. Thank You Mr Branaugh for presenting this to us. Your artistic interpretation deserves the upmost respect.

  • Every time i watch this movie I weep.

  • A sublime piece of filmmaking. Shakespeare is the inspration but the scene is pure Branagh. I like the way he gives all the characters a bit of face time during the long tracking shot and the way the one French fellow just refuses to look him in the eye. My fav little detail...the way that the guy in charge of King Henry's horse (:50) just sort of follows behind the King all the way to the end.

  • nooooo they killed Batman!!!

    Seriously this song is beautiful

  • DULCE ET DECORUM EST PRO PATRIA MORI

    "It is sweet and fitting to die for one's country."

    Deus vult "God wills it"

  • The glorious time when England was the island of the saints.

    Honor to the Catholic England and his great King Henry V!!!

  • hey what's the name of this movie?? Tell me please!!!

  • The English victory of agincourt is indisputable. We can set them Formigny, Castillon and many other victories still.

    But why the English people have to appropriate everything?! Non Nobis Domine: singing(song) of the Knight Templars which is a justified order, I call back(remind) it, by the French !!!!!!!!

  • What name of this movie? Sorry for my good english:)

  • @Jarzykk Henry V

  • Ah - that's the words - here's the pronunciation: Non nobis, non nobis, Domine, sed nomine tuo da gloriam. This translates to: Not to us, not to us, oh Lord, but through (or by means of ) your name give the glory. I know, cares except Latin scholars? They wanted "nomini" pronounced so it would rhyme with Domine - so they took little license.

  • Thanks, Kenneth. William would be proud of you.

  • Great piece of song to sing after a battle with beginning rain to fall... yeah we did it this summer.. I'm of no confession at all, but it really gave me the pure creeps and the feeling that everything has a sense maybe even in itself...

  • I still cry every time I watch this scene.

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  • I love how this starts with a humble soldier singing Non Nobis Domine, works itself into an army of chorale voices, all while Kenneth Brannaugh carries Christian Bale's "Dead" Body through the death-strewn Battlefield of the battle of Agincourt.

  • this is latin isnt it? my choir and i are singing it, i have the solo part :) i love this song if it is the same one i havnt loaded it yet hahaha :)

  • @crumpits1 Do your best! It's a gorgeous song-- I wish MY choir would sing it...

  • @glitteryYtiger thanks! i have done the concert and i did it great and it was a beautiful performance!!! im going to put it on youtube, send you a link

  • @glitteryYtiger i have uploaded our choir performance, go to my channel !

  • Donde hay amor, hay visión (Ubi amor, ibi oculus) San Bernardo

  • Beautiful

  • awesome... remember the old Catholic school days singing this every week...

    hated it then but Oh how I miss it now...

  • @FlozelltheHotell  I love it

  • I sang this song in choir it is a beautiful song

  • Absolutely beautiful and a perfect use of the music to accentuate a scene. What a contrast between the unspeakably horrendous images and the gorgeous, soaring music. Like showcasing the very best man is capable of alongside the very worst.

  • GREAT!!!

  • latin

    

  • NON NOBIS DOMINE DESDE MEXICO HERMANOS

  • @victorultramaraton  LOL! Mexico, huh? LMAO!!!!!

  • Is that Tim Roth singing at the start?

  • @Baledwyr No, it's Patrick Doyle, who wrote the musical score for this film.

  • it is in Latin actually. Non nobis is a religious song that was written to praise humility.

    Non nobis, non nobis Domine. Sed Nomini Tuo Da Gloriam.

    Not to us, not to us, o Lord, but to Your Name give glory.

  • "Not to us, not to us, o Lord, but to your name give glory."

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  • "Nicht uns, o Herr, nicht uns, sondern Deinem Namen sei Ehre."

  • it is latin

  • In the SCA, this is one of the signature songs of the Kingdom of Calontir---the Kingdom I live in. This moment is a Crowning Moment of Awesome and Crowning Music of Awesome, all in one.

  • @eoppen This is the finest scene in any film EVER. When I first watched the film on video, after the film had finished, I ran the tape back to watch this scene again. It's absolutely brilliant. By the way, I live in the Kingdom of Caid, Barony of Calafia, and occasionally go to events there.

  • Britain never had again so noble a king. Cromwell's statue should ground into powder and the dust cast into the Thames, and England should be one with Rome again.

  • @xp34789 It's on its way, my brother. The debacle of the Church of England, having abandoned most of the magisterium inherited from the Catholic Church, is now inevitable. The massive return of the Anglo-Catholic is a good warning of such.

    But it is also a challenging time, and only unity with the Vicar of Christ seems the way, to face the end. The Eastern churches are understanding so, and the British Nation is called as well. For us to Sin "non nobis domine" as one people under God.

  • @xp34789 You actually have a statue of Cromwell in England? Why??? There mustn't have been a worse leader for your people in the history of your nation!

  • @xp34789 don't forget henry the 8th and liz 1.

  • @xp34789 One person's opinion. In a recent pole in the UK, Oliver Cromwell was voted one of the top ten outstanding leaders. And since his statue has stood in my hometown for almost a century, I suspect that this opinion has been popular for some time.

  • @xp34789 lolwut

  • @xp34789 Oliver Cromwell seized a kingdom that was falling into corruption by politicians. Just like Aurellias Caesar, he saved the kingdom from its politicians that common people let just take over for their own benefit. It wasn't a burden he took lightly, but he did the right thing for the good of the country. The result is history.

  • @Soryalis mmh... i wouldn' t be so sure about it... i mean, he destroyed the independence of both scotland and eire, behaved as a dictator and slaughtered many thousand people by direct orders. and... well... no english people protested when cromwell was postume-executed, and everybody seemed to hate him... so, has he really been a good man?

  • @xp34789

    Henry V was a thug....but so were they all. unless one views history through the rose tinted goggles of an imagined nostalgia.

  • This is one of my all time favorite scenes. Its so somber, but the swelling music almost gives you a sense of hope. Je l'aime.

  • i remember this song when i was in grade school we sang it in the a competition..childrens choir

  • "Not onto us O Lord, not onto us O Lord, but to Your name, but to Your name may all the glory be"

  • A hefty price indeed on account of tennis balls.

  • @SecondRook Operor non Dengrate meus populus vel meus fides.

  • @Skytroop We are glad the Dauphin is so pleasant with us; His present and your pains we thank you for. When we have match'd our rackets to these balls, we will in France, by God's grace, play a set shall strike his father's crown into the hazard. Tell him he hath made a match with such a wrangler that all the courts of France will be disturb'd with chaces And we understand him well, how he comes o'er us with our wilder days, not measuring what use we made of them.

  • @SecondRook :-)

  • I LOVE this song!!! It is AWESOME!!!!

  • Would that one day we would say, "Long live the King," once more.

  • lindo.choro por emoção, sempreeeeeeeeeeee.

  • I can sing this

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  • sublime

  • Henry V ist einer der besten filme die ich kenne und das lied echt der Hammer

  • NON NOBIS DOMINE! NON HO TRADITO!

  • compare this to present-day 'music'!!!!  Nothing can compare! Priceless, timeless!

  • This music was composed by Patrick Doyle specifically for the film Henry V by Kenneth Branagh. So, its only 21 years old. Not too far away from 'present-day' music.

  • beautiful

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  • 2:26 "So, about those tennis balls..."

    Btw, most probably know, but that's christian bale he's carrying.

  • Simply the finest scene ever in a film.

  • I love this movie. The words are inspiring. Not onto us o Lord, not on to us o Lord, But to your name, but to your name may all the golry be.

  • Non nobis, non nobis, Domine Sed nomini tuo da gloriam...

  • wow, what a wonderful scene! from a magnificent film

  • Lord i praise you for your eternal Glory.

    Non nobis Domine!

  • Glorious spine tingling stuff, the raw emotion and grief...after fighting like lions they discover the French had gone behind the lines and slaughtered all the boys...that kiss brings tears to my eyes.

  • @myboycaneat50eggs This entire scene is the finest thing I've ever seen in a film. It brings tears to my eyes every time I see it. The staging (especially the king carrying the boy's body off the field) is positively brilliant.

  • The name of the movie is....?

  • Henry V by Keneth Brannagh

  • I won't say "There are not words." Clearly, there are, or Branagh wouldn't have been inspired. Thanks to him and thanks t you for posting.

  • Christian Bales ass!

  • Note the French Herald being dragged offscreen at around 2:50...

  • stop Eurabia!

  • Non nobis, non nobis, Domine

    Sed nomini tuo da gloriam.

    Not to us, not to us, o Lord,

    But to your name give glory.

  • "Non nobis, non nobis, Domine, sed nomini

    tuo da gloriam"

  • I love that at the climax of this beautiful song, the king, with tenderness, puts down the boy's dead body. He has carried the boy across the battle field. The same boy, who, not knowing he was speaking to the king, said that the king must be a fine man to ask other men to give their lives for him. The King was at that moment  disguised as a common soldier out walking among the campfires. And at the very climactic moment the king kisses the boy who died in his service. Directorial genius!

  • Davey Gam Esquire.ï»