Exploring Medieval Birmingham 1300
This 'virtual' tour is based on our model interactive of medieval Birmingham, now on display in the exhibition 'Birmingham: its people, its history' at Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery. Discover Birmingham's medieval past by taking a tour through the heart of the 14th century town.
Пікірлер: 179
I know this is totally irrelevant but I'm running a low-magic-small-village type of D&D campaign and this video was full of inspiration. The model even looks like D&D terrain and minis. So cool.
Still looking better than Birmingham, Alabama does in the present.
This was fascinating to watch. I'd love to go back and walk around to see what it was like
@maxdecphoenix
6 жыл бұрын
are there not reenactment villages in england?
@gmvn19
6 жыл бұрын
Mania28 I'll like to go with you.
@hbbhdd7291
5 жыл бұрын
@Plamen Petrov always a chance to get politicial, right?
@ianinkster2261
4 жыл бұрын
@@maxdecphoenix Yes but they're about 3 blocks, not whole cities.
@tooyoungtobeold8756
3 жыл бұрын
@@hbbhdd7291 Everything is political when you think about it.
Very finely realized model, coupled with information of interest explaining the village in the period.
Birmingham was a tiny village until the Industrial Revolution - in contrast Coventry was one of the largest cities in Britain, but a large amount of the medieval town was destroyed in WW2...
@richardwatts6391
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the 11.6 billion in the bank.WATTS
@Lizzhm
Жыл бұрын
Same thing happened to the beautiful german medieval towns but luckily the Germans decided to rebuild the buildings 100% historical accurate
@sarahlouise7163
11 ай бұрын
@@Lizzhm so, legoland, basically
@Lizzhm
11 ай бұрын
@@sarahlouise7163 does legoland even have buildings I don't remember
Absolutely wonderful ... the detail is amazing, the content fascinating, and narration spot on. Loved it.
@Dcuniverse60
3 ай бұрын
wow amazing 724 years ago today
Amazing model. You feel a sense of real life. Finesse of detail. Inspires and contains the imagination.
Interesting. They should do this for all major towns, in all time eras.
i love how detailed it is, it shows that you are really dedicated! at first i thought it was animated until you view went close up
this was wonderful! I love how detailed every bit is!
A very interesting documentary thanks. I love learning about local history.
Thanks great job you did there I really enjoyed the history of Birmingham
I need life in medieval village
@kelvinho2475
3 жыл бұрын
Play Kingdom Come Deliverance
@tedsavage3850
4 ай бұрын
Of you're still there a game called Medieval Dynasty it's on Xbox and PC for sure might be on PlayStation? Let's you build your own village and eventually a city.
@Dcuniverse60
3 ай бұрын
Wow this is 724 old today
@thetooginator153
Ай бұрын
I bet life was better for the average person back in Birmingham in 1300. I’m sure it was very quiet and safe. Obviously, people generally didn’t live as long, but there was more leisure and everyone knew everyone else, so nobody was lonely. Once in a LONG while, some war came along, but most villages just surrendered and went on with their lives under new management. Travelling entertainers visits were probably the most exciting thing to happen, and you would get news from other places that way (and from visiting merchants). I doubt people got bored because there was always something that could use some work, and new houses and buildings were always under construction. And very little was done in a hurry. Major cathedrals took centuries to build, so, no one was stressing about being “behind schedule”.
@alexfilma16
Ай бұрын
Until you need an operation or a tooth pulled…
Lovely model and video. Well done to everyone involved.
great video. be nice to overlay that image over todays picture of the same area
This is brilliant thank you, the detailed model and nicely paced commentary will make this great for my year 7 students! I have made these questions for them to answer(Just encase another teacher decides to use this!): 1. Where was the heart of a medieval town? Marketplace 2. What did tanners use animal skins to make? Leather 3. What else could this material be used to make? Jugs and Drinking Vessels 4. When was the Medieval Market established? 1166 5. What was a form of entertainment? Stilt walker 6. What was the most important place? St.Martin’s Church 7. Why were more roads and houses being constructed? To attract even more people 8. What was the other important industry? Pottery making 9. What type of house did the rich merchant Roger le Moul have? Courtyard house 10. What was the bullring? A livestock market 11. How can you tell William de Birmingham was a wealthy man? He has a moat around his manor house. 12. What were only very important houses made of? Stone
@robertgisthebest
9 жыл бұрын
Peter Andrew So this is aimed at 11-12 year old kids?
@peteLOFC
9 жыл бұрын
robertgisthebest yep, this worked well at both my Grammar School and with top set at my Comp placement
So Cute! 😍
Really interesting, would be good to do this with every town and city!
Beautifully modelled!
Very nice work, thanks for making it available.
Fascinating
Very nicely done. Thank you.
Amazing detailed model, really enjoyed this with my grandchildren as their mother’s side is from Brum.
This was fantastic
This is amazing. I love the tiny model, and this is one of the only things my teacher sent me that I actually enjoyed!
@bashkillszombies
2 жыл бұрын
You should watch Sargon of Akkad on here, or The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters, they do a lot of stuff about British current events.
It's mad how little things have changed...literally it hasn't changed
@peterwilliamallen1063
2 жыл бұрын
So then you haven't visited Birmingham then or are you blind.
Thank you very much for this video!
Any chance we could get the name(s) of the artist(s) who built this amazing model? I'm a model maker myself, but only a hobbyist. I'd be curious to look into the bio of the individual(s) who made this.
@BirminghamMAG
6 жыл бұрын
It was Eastwood Cook www.eastwoodcook.com/
@tonyoliver2167
2 жыл бұрын
I'm late here but would love to see a reconstruction of wharram percy
Lovely Diorama and really nice history lesson, thank you
I've never been to Birmingham (or England for that matter) but I love the way it is pointed out how the medieval elements are connected to modern day Birmingham.
@JohnSmith-dc7tr
Жыл бұрын
Birmingham is actually a part of Pakistan and Somalia now.
@ryanslack2666
Ай бұрын
@@JohnSmith-dc7trShut up.
Very good video. Thank you.
Really interesting. Fantastic model
great looking model!
@Dcuniverse60
3 ай бұрын
This is 724 years ago today
Great history. As someone from Kent whose never been to Birmingham I've been researching west Midlands history and love it.
Very informative. Thank you.
This is awesome. Well done.
This inspired me to build Birmingham in my City building game; TheoTown 🏰 The good part is that is a small village, so I'll not waste to much time to decorate this Village 🏘
Great and informative video, thanks!
Wonderful
A beautiful inspiration for my next minecraft build..
Amazing ! Those models look like Mr Caravaggi 3D ones ! :D Good work ! and a pleasure to watch^^
Muy interesante el vídeo, gracias por compartir esta obra. Saludos desde Santiago de Chile.
woww!!
note corn back then was not the modern day corn, it was refered as wheat, barley, oats or rye.
@Tag-Traeumer
3 жыл бұрын
Yes. The name corn depends on the area. The most commonly grown grain was mostly called corn.
I wonder where they got the figures for this amazing piece. I've made my own depiction (although fictional) of a medieval village. I based the general characteristics of it on this. But wondering also what scale this is made in; perhaps 1:72. I also wonder how they made the houses.
Dude,this is cool 🙂🙂🙂
I grew up here, but a few years after 1300.
It was a village called 'Bramlingham' in it's origin....
@georgedeathe4683
4 жыл бұрын
Bermingham me thinks
@JamesTilsley1
3 жыл бұрын
Beorma img ham beorma’s people’s home.
@peterwilliamallen1063
3 жыл бұрын
No it was Called Bermingham, pronounced "Berm - ing - ham" after the medieval De Bermingham family. It has never been called " Bramlingham " so don't know where you got from, I suggest you do a bit of research first from a Brummie.
@peterwilliamallen1063
3 жыл бұрын
@@JamesTilsley1 That was its Anglo Saxon name.
Cool
I am so making this in minecraft lol
Love the diorama! Would they leave so much free space at the center? Would there be grass or trees? I guess that it all would be trampled by people and animals.
Wow.
@BirminghamMAG where is this model located now and is it still viewable by the public?
One question, as this is Birmingham ca. 1300, it was mentioned that people brought their corn to the town's mill, but corn was not introduced to the world until the XVI century. What was being brought to be ground into flour? Thanks
@ralphtallis3445
4 жыл бұрын
The word 'corn' is an old english/germanic word for a crop of wheat, barley or oats(AKA cereal crops). The corn you are referring to is called maize in UK and Corn in USA. So saying 'people brought their corn to the town's mill' is correct. Hope that explains it, if you want to double check just search for the etymology of the word corn. BTW it would have been barley and wheat, wheat being for the richer consumers off the period with poorer families existing on barley.
@kawamach
4 жыл бұрын
@@ralphtallis3445 Thank you so much for your reply, I appreciate the explanation. It is interesting to learn the different meanings of a word depending on the geography. Referring to your explanation, the etymology of corn indicates: "the chief cereal crop of a district". Gracias!
Does anyone know any medieval city/town recreations like this? Specifically english or German but any other countries would be lovely too
wow
10 years ago.
magic
am i the only one who thought of beetle juice yeah... okay im old
@markhemming318
4 жыл бұрын
I'm afraid so.
Moor St. also still exists. It is a railway station.
The Museum & Art Gallery are soon to be closed for 3 years while extensive refurbishment takes place.
Wonderful presentation. Corn wasn't available for grinding in 1300 as it is native to the Americas which wasn't discovered for another 200 years.
@rustyhowe3907
2 жыл бұрын
'Corn' in this case means cereal crops (wheat, barley, oats etc), it's UK English vs American English which considers 'corn' as what the British would call as 'maize'. Hope it helps.
1300 - A much closer way of living, where one probably knew most of the residents. Yet death and disease were always present, and the Black Death, reaching England in 1348, wasn't too far off.
Bad ass! What kind of fesses was used?
What would have been the population of this town as is in 1300?
@peterwilliamallen1063
3 жыл бұрын
May be 600 people, modern day Birmingham now has a population of 1.5 million making it the UK's second largest City after London.
@mialewis2023
Жыл бұрын
@@peterwilliamallen1063 And London in 1300's?
@Dcuniverse60
3 ай бұрын
@@mialewis2023wow this is 724 years ago today
Is it bad that I would really like to smell a model of the smells?
@donnash5813
7 жыл бұрын
I think I'd pass on the 'smell model.'
ohhhh birmingham england
Wonderful and you didn't have to pay any actors.
Where are the model trains 😁🚂🚃🚃
Thanks enjoyed it every minute of it proud to be a Muslim brummie
wow that was good but could have been a little longer and a little more detail but overall good job.
I think i heard someone say " Bring out your dead "
Hello my friend. Great work! I also have some dioramas on my channel.
Lovely model but where's St Andrews ?
@georgedeathe4683
4 жыл бұрын
In the shjthole where its now mucker UTFV
Birmingham 2018
@mialewis2023
Жыл бұрын
2022-2023
I want to play with these miniatures
Fascinating and I love the miniatures. They used urine and feces on leather, and later used it for water jugs? Ugh.
Wouldve assumed he said tanning beds
This is what the military does before carrying out an operation.
MGS was here
Skins were also use for books - how come you do not mention that? Europeans did not use paper for bookmaking as muslim guys did already since ca 790 AD and Chinese even earlier. Long held European resistance towards paper can be illustrated by the fact that in 1221 Holy Roman emperor Frederick II declared that any legal document issued on paper will automatically be invalid. (see Keith Houston, The Book, page 56)
Manor Lords brought me here
...By order of the Peaky Blinders...
respect from Rus. RI to the British knights, free beer for u in afterlife.
Peaky fooking blinders
@peterwilliamallen1063
2 жыл бұрын
No Such thing.
if you have to watch this for school l v
Ay up my mate, yom not a brummie!
@georgedeathe4683
4 жыл бұрын
yhour joshing ent yer
@peterwilliamallen1063
3 жыл бұрын
@@georgedeathe4683 I think you are talking Black country mate. From a Brummie
Sorry, I beg to differ: In Italy in the 1300s almost all buildings were made of stone!
Whoa! Back when indigenous people still existed in your country, that's pretty wild! I remember seeing some in the 80's and 90's when I was a kid travelling with my family! By the late 90's they were gone though. :(
@henghistbluetooth7882
2 жыл бұрын
Which indigenous? The Vikings, Celts, Romans, jutes, Saxons, normans, Dutch, Angles? You’ll have to be more specific
@mialewis2023
Жыл бұрын
@@henghistbluetooth7882 Celts/Britons
I wonder why the guy describing this doesn't have a Midlands accent?
@modernclips3868
7 жыл бұрын
are u 13....?
@johnstobart7047
7 жыл бұрын
Not all we Brummies speak with an accent.
@NickSBailey
7 жыл бұрын
People in the area hundreds of years ago probably didn't speak with a black country accent (what people normally think of as brummie but isn't) edit: did bit more research and those sing-song intonations might well be recognisable, even if most of the words were not.
@johnstobart7047
7 жыл бұрын
Many years ago a chap who was an authority on the Black Country, told me that the West Midlands accent was probably influenced by Danes who settled there in the Dark Ages. Apparently, towns ending in "all" were Danish settlements Pelsall, Walsall, Rushall, etc. As a piece of useless information, there is a Rushall in my adopted county of Norfolk where it is pronounced Rooshall (the oo as in kangaroo). As a Brummie, I noticed on my visits to the Black Country how the accent changed from town to town. People from Lye, Old Hill and Cradley Heath spoke with an accent unlike Brummie.
@kensheldon6077
7 жыл бұрын
Not true. Midlands accents are/were influenced by our Anglo-Saxon roots. The Midlands continued to be a Saxon stronghold after the Norman invasion and the Germanic roots of the Saxon language, Old English, are still very much in evidence, particularly in the Birmingham and Black Country dialects.
Covid 1166
Would they have had corn in 1300? I thought corn came from the new world with potatoes?
pov ut here from class
@successehis
3 жыл бұрын
Yes
@sunitapandey7846
3 жыл бұрын
Nope I’m interested in these things
@ginevrarennet9981
3 жыл бұрын
@@sunitapandey7846 thts a wee bit sad but ok u do u ig
And now Britons are a minority in Birmingham with a the replacement population that of South Asia and the Middle East.
@peterwilliamallen1063
3 жыл бұрын
Sorry mate Britons are the majority in Birmingham Uk, Birmingham Uk has a population of 1.5 million people of which only 10% or less are of south Asian or middle east origin, from a Brummie.
@henghistbluetooth7882
2 жыл бұрын
The latest census places the percentage of birmingham at. 17.5% of.a population of 1.1 million as south Asian. And once they have a British passport they are British. So I don’t understand your point.
@thespamdance311
2 жыл бұрын
Why is it that people who use the word ‘truth’ in their profile names are always liars?
@EV-wp1fj
2 жыл бұрын
Blah blah blah. There are many boring people on the planet, but the most boring of all are racists who drone on about the same shit day in day out.
@mialewis2023
Жыл бұрын
Yeah... same with London.
Corn wasn't introduced to Europe until the 15th century after contact with the Americas so the mill most certainly wasn't used for corn circa 1300 rather more likely barley and wheat and a possible myriad of other Eurasian origin grains but certainly not corn.
@TheGahta
8 жыл бұрын
+Corey Green Ofc he doesnt mean corn as in maize, corn is also used as a term to mean cereals i general... The tendency of people to jump on a term to mean somethign they can then rectify instead of doing a quick google search to make sure the term isnt used with another meaning is always amazing.
@cesariushervelazco8
8 жыл бұрын
British English vs American English.
@NickSBailey
7 жыл бұрын
Corn in the UK as in wheat, we call the sort you were thinking of sweetcorn.
@maxdecphoenix
6 жыл бұрын
Words are funny. Why we call things what we call them has always interested me. A similar instance occured with 'Oranges' as relates the fruit and color, as well. Prior to intensive trade with East India, the common word for 'orange' in Europe was geoluread, which is a concatenation of the words 'yellow (geolu [je-lu]) + red (read [red])'. 'Orange' is actually a bastardization of a sanskrit word used in the Himalayan regions , where the fruit is believed to have first been cultivated: naranga. Basically as the trade routes opened and the market distances the fruits were traded increased, the word begins to be introduced into other languages. Farsi during the Persian and later ottoman empires, then into Europe, then into England. naranga > naranj > arancia > pom d'orange > orange. The oldest documented use of using 'orange' as a synonym of geoluread in english is in the 1510s. However, it was over that century that the term would spread to completely displace it. As the northern european climate is inhospitable to heat and humidity loving oranges, Northern Europeans desperate to get these fruits in a stable supply began experimenting with artificial habitat. By the middle of the 1500s the Italians who were practiced in fruit cultivation and the use of growing fruits against a vertical earthen structures to extend the season (what later became known as espalier) began experimenting with enclosing the citrus trees behind panes of glass. And as this system showed promise, it was continually developed into stand alone glass buildings called arancias (orangeries). These were the first green-houses in europe, and they were built almost exclusivly for the cultivation of oranges. And this is when the term exploded through Europe, and why it is mainly ubiquitous in almost all european cultures. As the italian ideas and results propagated outward on the construction of arancias, the name stuck but was transliterated into most european languages. By the 1650's, orange had completely displaced geoluread in English, however the term 'orangeries' to refer to green-houses fell out of favor as their use in general horticulture increased.
@MrRicardoddq
6 жыл бұрын
great info, man. I love this kind of knowledge. . . I am from Brazil. . . People in my country hate knowledge. . . That why my country deserves this situation
It's all cattle and sheep.
Not much different to nowadays
bbbbbbboooooorrrrringggg
@peterwilliamallen1063
3 жыл бұрын
So are you mate, it is showing the History of Birmingham, want to lighten your day up, go and make some chapatis.
The anglos used to live like cattle.
Nicely done but Im confused and disappointed to see not one black or brown figure in town. How can this be?? Did I miss it? Please don't whitewash history. England was always diverse!
@jimpickens4067
Жыл бұрын
😂