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Battle of Hastings 1066 Part II (England at war)

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Uploaded by on Aug 10, 2007

The fight William of Normandy and King Harold

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Travel & Events

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Uploader Comments (ChristopherYnot)

  • nice!

  • Thank you for that comment it appreciated.

Top Comments

  • Source for this?

    They didn't speak English - even Chaucerian English (later than 1066) is pretty challenging to read. They were Anglo-Saxons - very different from the English we now regard ourselves. Ironically, it was the Plantaganets who laid the foundations for the birth of the English state (Magna Carter etc) and its common law - and they were from FRENCH descendants!

  • No, that is not a source, that is just you repeating the same point again. Please tell me the source that shows the Saxons spoke or referred to their language as English? Either a book or an internet source is fine.

    As I say, Chaucer's language (some years later) was nothing like present English - so Anglo-Saxon "English" would have been incomprehensible.

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  • learning modern German being a English Speaking American was very easy. Looks like this battle brought over more than just chain mail, wine, and weapons.

    English is Eastern Germanic, hence why the british isles became "english" and then brought it to america. The Dutch are who is to blame. Raiders, Banking Guru's, Slave Traders, War Mongers, and the list goes on. These are a very material people who understood the position of materials in terms of war. They just followed Roman suit.

  • @219970 English is a eastern germanic language, so it is possible that it took over as a dominate language as the normans defeated the anglo saxons who mainly spoke celtic/gallic/ and other local tongues. Also there is a bit of latin going on here on these isles considering juilas cesaer

  • @219970 there are a few words you can recognise if you look up anglo-saxon translation or somthing. but i heard that england spoke tree languages (saxon-poor norman-rulers and latin-monks)until somone comprimised them all

    (sorry if this is a load of bull')

  • what about the saxon rebelions? there were a few

  • I have to disagre with the time William became King of England, he didnt become King untill Christmas Day 1066. He may have won that battle but he had far from won the war. First he marched his army through southern England, crossing the Thames at Wallingford then headed for Berkhamsted where he took final surrender from Archbishop Ealdred, the Bishops of Worcester and Hereford, Earls Eadwin and Morcar, and the chief men of London, who swore allegiance to him, and offered him the crown.

  • kwl lots of help man im doin an essay on how war has changed over the course of time and i have used this as a source so youre in my bibleogra[hy, well done :)

  • great video, I'm currently learning about this battle 1066, and it helped a lot, thank you very much

  • I am honestly just on this vid cause my mum asked me what i was doin on u tube

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