Mani Patrick Leigh Fermor SBS

Пікірлер: 26

  • @kaythomas5884
    @kaythomas588416 күн бұрын

    Wonderful to see this, he is a hero in so many ways!❤

  • @tucosalamanca5648
    @tucosalamanca56487 ай бұрын

    After visiting all over Mani, I know how he feels!!! I also have fallen in love with it!! OMG How Beautiful Mani is!!! I wish to move to Stoupa ...

  • @j.o.1516
    @j.o.15163 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much for sharing this. I was searching for anything about Patrick Leigh Fermor, and found something with Melvin Bragg as well. I remember the South Bank Show from TV when I was child. Those were the days, when TV was a serious media.

  • @bobtommi2430
    @bobtommi2430 Жыл бұрын

    This is a marvellous find; so wonderful to hear Paddy and Melvin in the same programme. Such charm. Thankyou

  • @johnharney6548
    @johnharney65482 ай бұрын

    I met Paddy once in 1991 when he was promoting Letters from the Andes book. There is nobody like him now.

  • @johnallen8860

    @johnallen8860

    Ай бұрын

    How very lucky you are to have met him! 😊

  • @flowerfairy1950
    @flowerfairy195027 күн бұрын

    Wonderful 🧡

  • @danfangdango
    @danfangdango10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for uploading - It's made my day.

  • @rayyoung7944
    @rayyoung7944 Жыл бұрын

    Really happy to have found this fantastic documentary on PMLF. I thought I’d seen all his stuff on here, this is about the best imo. I visited his house- viewed from the perimeter- on the Mani 5 years ago, it’s in a beautiful spot close to the village 🇬🇷❤

  • @rayyoung7944

    @rayyoung7944

    Жыл бұрын

    Ps thanks v much for uploading 👍👏

  • @rebeccalythgoe1620
    @rebeccalythgoe16202 ай бұрын

    Thanks for posting.

  • @johnallen8860
    @johnallen8860 Жыл бұрын

    Sublime documentary, love it!

  • @andrewnorris2
    @andrewnorris24 ай бұрын

    This was wonderful and captures a time that will never return. I don't mean a sense of that period but that there is no sense of adventure or discovery of travel as it was back then. The internet and net travellers have exposed the whole planet, why bother travel these days when wherever you go you simply meet your own kind. There is a homogenisation that has made previously interesting places almost a carbon copy of the place you just left.

  • @DaveDave65
    @DaveDave65 Жыл бұрын

    What a wonderful show. Recommended by a friend so will certainly delve into his books. Thanks for posting

  • @pendleburyable
    @pendleburyable3 ай бұрын

    Classic.

  • @pendleburyable
    @pendleburyable Жыл бұрын

    Great,cheers for posting,

  • @MartinBlack
    @MartinBlack Жыл бұрын

    thanks for sharing Tom!

  • @robertmacgregor2788
    @robertmacgregor2788 Жыл бұрын

    At last! Well done Tom!

  • @marilynleslie472
    @marilynleslie4729 ай бұрын

    Wonderful

  • @johnallen8860
    @johnallen8860 Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful!

  • @lucianopavarotti2843
    @lucianopavarotti28432 ай бұрын

    Not sure why the director kept superimposing music from Wagner's Siegfried -- set in the dank, mouldy forests of German mythology -- on the Mani land and seascapes.

  • @ryaneyre5948
    @ryaneyre5948 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Tom for uploading this. I recognize the music beginning around 2:15 but cannot identify it. Anybody know?

  • @SeanGSharp

    @SeanGSharp

    Жыл бұрын

    It's "Forest Murmurs" from Act II of Richard Wagner's "Siegfried."

  • @davidrenton
    @davidrenton Жыл бұрын

    24:08 just rewatched "ill met by moonlight" and i wondered what happened to the driver, i guess he either way he was done for, had he been let go , I'll suspect the would have been executed for losing a General. When i 1st watch the movie years ago, i thought nice story, obviously made up only to find it wasn't

  • @ColinJanes-km3sx

    @ColinJanes-km3sx

    11 ай бұрын

    During the capture of General Kreipe, the driver, Sergeant Albert Fenske, was coshed and was almost unconscious when the kidnappers left the scene. The plan had been for two guerrillas to take the driver on foot and meet up with the kidnappers on Mt Ida, but the guerrillas arrived alone. They explained that the driver had not been able to keep up with them and they had had no choice but to kill him. The body was buried in a lonely spot under a pile of rocks. Soon afterwards one of the guerrillas was killed by the Germans and some time later the other guerrilla was killed in the civil war, so nobody knew exactly where the body had been buried. About 55 years after the kidnapping the driver's remains were discovered by chance. A few years after the war a delegation from Germany arrived in Crete to organise the recovery of the bones of German soldiers who had been killed by the guerrillas in the mountains during the occupation. The villagers welcomed the delegates and gave them every assistance in locating the bodies and these were taken to the German military cemetery at Maleme, which is probably where the remains of Sergeant Fenske are now.

  • @billba
    @billba Жыл бұрын

    Dimitrios Bond 00Hepto