A very interesting and educational documentary. Diolch, Stwff Da !
@Schwarzkald : They should make a modern version of Shakespeare,
call it Shake-ye-bacon
There are more parallels between Beowulf and the Arthurian stories or Mabinogion as they should be called, there's Bran the Blessed who's severed head kept on talking and was eventually also buried in a sacred place. In Brans case, as he was a British king he was buried under what is now the Tower of London. Bran means crow or raven.
Beowulf was a Goth of southern Sweden, not an Anglo-Saxon, like always the Anglos like to co-opt other peoples history and try to make it their own. The only reason English is able to be spoken is because 64% is base on Latin and 36% base on Germanic and the grammar, otherwise English will be unbearable to the ears and hard to be spoken, thanks to Francis Bacon, whom created an alter ego called William Shakespear in order to fix the English language. Their goes your foolish pride.
Thanks for posting this. As a retiree, I can afford basic cable service only. In order to get more shows like this I would have to pay a ridiculously high subscription fee for a "package" of specialty channels, only one or two of which I would ever watch. Thanks again. Chris
I must say though that like baracine it's a bit odd to hear the narrator say that the English language is much more rich than any other. I think the narrator is getting a bit carried away with romantic nationalism.
This myth about the unique richness of the English language, is one that I have come across several times. Speaking both languages, I don't think theres much to it.
F.ex. in Danish we have two words for love, in English only one.
Wonderful posts, thank you for all of them,,,,
PoetryETrain 1 month ago
A very interesting and educational documentary. Diolch, Stwff Da !
@Schwarzkald : They should make a modern version of Shakespeare,
call it Shake-ye-bacon
There are more parallels between Beowulf and the Arthurian stories or Mabinogion as they should be called, there's Bran the Blessed who's severed head kept on talking and was eventually also buried in a sacred place. In Brans case, as he was a British king he was buried under what is now the Tower of London. Bran means crow or raven.
kingsonone 11 months ago
Beowulf was a Goth of southern Sweden, not an Anglo-Saxon, like always the Anglos like to co-opt other peoples history and try to make it their own. The only reason English is able to be spoken is because 64% is base on Latin and 36% base on Germanic and the grammar, otherwise English will be unbearable to the ears and hard to be spoken, thanks to Francis Bacon, whom created an alter ego called William Shakespear in order to fix the English language. Their goes your foolish pride.
Schwarzkald 1 year ago
Great documentary, thanks very much!
solomonkain 1 year ago
thanks for the film
tioedong 2 years ago
before writing there must have been a time when people passed stories by word of mouth,and these stories passed from century to century.
26blanco 2 years ago
Thanks for posting this. As a retiree, I can afford basic cable service only. In order to get more shows like this I would have to pay a ridiculously high subscription fee for a "package" of specialty channels, only one or two of which I would ever watch. Thanks again. Chris
nitfiend 2 years ago
excellent documentary thankyou very much for posting
twango70 2 years ago
Superb documentary, enjoyed very much.
I must say though that like baracine it's a bit odd to hear the narrator say that the English language is much more rich than any other. I think the narrator is getting a bit carried away with romantic nationalism.
This myth about the unique richness of the English language, is one that I have come across several times. Speaking both languages, I don't think theres much to it.
F.ex. in Danish we have two words for love, in English only one.
NielsEbbesen 2 years ago
@NielsEbbesen laug h n ate? to beat or not to beat a hungry heart?? eat or be heathen ;-)
remindbender 1 year ago
Really interesting docu, thanks for posting! (will be watching again)
Olster81 2 years ago
Sutton hoe can mean:
In swedish "Sjutton hö(gar)"
It means seventeen hills.
Underbarmusik 2 years ago 3
awesome!
Olster81 2 years ago
Excelent - thank you.
ElvenDane 3 years ago 7
" (The English language) whose continuing evolution provides a subtlety, vocabulary and richness far beyond that of any other..."
- Il vaut mieux entendre ça que d'être sourd, comme on dit.
baracine 3 years ago
Excellent documentary, thanks for the upload.
KaiserKarnage 4 years ago 5