Auda Diederich:Fem!Germania Audition

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Uploaded by on Jul 16, 2011

Pfft...I have no idea what that accent is. Sorry.
The name means something along the lines of, "Prosperous ruler'. Or 'Prosperous skeleton key', but that doesn't make much sense. At all.
I can't remember if I gave the three reasons, so, in character reasons.
1, somebody needs to control Rome, or at least attempt to. 2, as the rest of my family appears to be in it, it is only fitting that I also be included. 3, I was rather powerful in my day, and deserve my say.
Out of character, well, 1, I know my history, though in truth, ancient germanic history isn't exactly my best area of knowledge. 2, I'm dedicated and ready to attempt to make it work. 3, I am willing to research.

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Uploader Comments (fRaNcEnGlAnD)

  • Wow, you're so pretty! :D

  • @TheDarkLuchia Thanks.

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This video is a response to Nyotalia World Conference Auditions [Closed!]
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  • @AwesomeBirdSama Will do! To the research chamber!

  • @fRaNcEnGlAnD:

    but in case of Germania, I think you can take Old-English as a better base for your accent and inspiration than having a look at the modern German culture and language.

  • @fRaNcEnGlAnD:

    cool. :)

    We shouldn't trust staticstics too much uin my opinion, because the inididual person is still something different, than a average.

    i for example live in northern germany, but big parts of my family came from what's now polish and this is not a exception, oer the half of the people in my generation have somewhere a person from these regions amoung their ancestry and we shouldn't forget, international ports and trading and in case of England also the Colonisation.

  • I'm half welsh, half english, and my last name is dutch, so....

  • @AwesomeBirdSama No, I was saying that's where my confusion came from. No offense taken.

  • @fRaNcEnGlAnD:

    I don't say that there wasn't a scandinavian group in Colchester, but chronological the Anglosaxons were there (after the celts) before the Normans came.

    Also genetically the English are still closer to the Dutch and the people in the former low-saxonian areas of settlement, than they are to the Welsh. the little Island-people seem to be a bit stubborn. ;)

    I don't mean that offensive, the Low-saxonians are also closer to the English than to people from former celtic regions. ^^"

  • @AwesomeBirdSama I know there was a group from scandinavia in Colchester. XD Colchester's the oldest recorded town in the UK, and the castle has bits of Roman, Celtic, Norman, Anglosaxon, and pretty much everybody who ruled england at some point's architecture and stuff. I've been there millions of times.

  • @fRaNcEnGlAnD

    Romanized Normans also settled in the today's Normandie...you know... France.

    William the conquerer and Richard Lionheart came from there. So you can see there in fact influenced the people in Great Britain.

    But the enthnicity Anglosaxons is still not Norman but a conglomeration of various northern central european ethnicities, like Angles, Saxons, Frisians and Jutes and, according to some linguists, Low Franconians.

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