Are American Runestones Real? Fake Viking News from the USA!

2024 ж. 18 Мам.
26 968 Рет қаралды

If you're from Minnesota you might support the mighty Vikings in the Superbowl (for your many NFL sins), but are any of the so-called Viking Runestones of the United States actually real? What's the story behind the Kensington Runestone, arguably America's most famous Swedish medieval hoax?
Are there really medieval runes in the USA? Did Vikings and medieval explorers carve stones as they were trading and fighting with indigenous peoples in Oklahoma, Minnesota and Maine?
Watch my nonsense and find out ;)
Find me elsewhere:
Patreon: / jimmyjohnson
Ko-fi: ko-fi.com/thewelshviking
www.welshviking.com
Insta: @littlewelshviking
Twitter: @jimmysid6h
Letters, parcels, packages?
The Welsh Viking,
PO Box 821,
YORK,
YO1 0PY
Business and collaboration (sorry, I won't read anything else): thewelshviking1 at gmail dot com

Пікірлер
  • As an American, this is my surprised face. Note its lack of surprise.

    @Evaleastaristev@Evaleastaristev2 жыл бұрын
  • "Stop that, Hjörleifur, the skrælings will hear us!" "You know I always chisel when I'm nervous! How do I do a Þ again?"

    @tinnagigja3723@tinnagigja37232 жыл бұрын
    • SOMEONE GIVE ME SOME LIMESTONE OR IM GOING TO HAVE A PANIC ATTACK

      @j_fenrir@j_fenrir2 жыл бұрын
    • @@j_fenrir😂

      @angelcollina@angelcollina3 ай бұрын
  • "We lost 10 men and are being pursued through this wild land by an unknown evil. Must make haste to our ships in the inland sea or surely perish. Suddenly realizing that stopping to carve this stone is only the latest in a long series of bad life decisions. We need to take a good long look at--continued on back of stone."

    @timmadison5410@timmadison54102 жыл бұрын
    • Rofl

      @catzkeet4860@catzkeet48602 жыл бұрын
    • Ends with "aaarrrrggh" of course.

      @richmcgee434@richmcgee4342 жыл бұрын
    • It trails off in a scrabbled line

      @j_fenrir@j_fenrir2 жыл бұрын
    • @@richmcgee434 "Aaarrrrggghhh"?

      @eldorados_lost_searcher@eldorados_lost_searcher2 жыл бұрын
    • A bit like, "This was the last text message he ever sent me before he wandered off the cliff because he was busy staring at his phone."

      @nickaschenbecker9882@nickaschenbecker98822 жыл бұрын
  • We NEED a fake runestone that translates to "Subscribe to The Welsh Viking". It could even be a badge or sticker for merch. I am legitimately upset that I don't have the talent to create one, or the funds to commission it! 😂

    @wolfbeam3915@wolfbeam39152 жыл бұрын
    • Love that

      @Bildgesmythe@Bildgesmythe2 жыл бұрын
    • Great idea!

      @sekhmara8590@sekhmara85902 жыл бұрын
    • I'm in!

      @lucie4185@lucie41852 жыл бұрын
    • That would be really fun.

      @Faefire@Faefire2 жыл бұрын
    • Great Idea!!

      @Aswaguespack@Aswaguespack2 жыл бұрын
  • Oh no. As a Nordic who studied art history in the States, I ended up making a rune stone for one of my classes, and absolutely carelessly disregarded it somewhere in Northern Virginia years ago. If anyone finds it... - I take no responsibility! 😂

    @elleplaudite@elleplaudite2 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, I made a small-ish rune stone once. It said something witty like "Søren is cool". I believe it's somewhere in the garden of my childhood home.

      @CopenhagenDreaming@CopenhagenDreaming2 жыл бұрын
    • I've done similar in southwest PA but usually in a wholly fictional alphabet like Elvish or Theban so as to make the joke more obvious (and funny) to those in the know. Too many people insisting Vinland was New Jersey.

      @nickaschenbecker9882@nickaschenbecker98822 жыл бұрын
    • @@nickaschenbecker9882 You have given me a wonderful idea.

      @alannatherson7721@alannatherson77212 жыл бұрын
    • I fully intend to find your rune stone

      @anthonyhayes1267@anthonyhayes12672 жыл бұрын
    • @@alannatherson7721 Yours will say "welcome to Vinland, New Jersey"

      @lindsay6518@lindsay6518 Жыл бұрын
  • Jimmy: “I hate everything.” Me: “can confirm this man is a PhD student”

    @andgordo558@andgordo5582 жыл бұрын
  • Jimmy has given us a mission…. We must not disappoint

    @jacobgrisham268@jacobgrisham2682 жыл бұрын
    • A runestone thar has modern lyrics on it with interlacing that's imaging Prince's guitar and a drumkit! Make learning runes fun! *grin*

      @margaretkaraba8161@margaretkaraba81612 жыл бұрын
    • There's a artist on yt over on frog leap studios he does metal covers of all kinds of music. He's from Norway, I wonder if he would know how to do this. I bet he would. His name's Leo.

      @msoneill358@msoneill3582 жыл бұрын
    • @@margaretkaraba8161 "Anyway, here's Wonderwall..."

      @Alex-Sews@Alex-Sews2 жыл бұрын
    • @@margaretkaraba8161 Never gonna give you up?

      @AnnAnonyme@AnnAnonyme2 жыл бұрын
    • Build me a runestone worthy of Isengard!

      @TheWelshViking@TheWelshViking2 жыл бұрын
  • My favourite modern runestone makes no effort to hide what date it's from, because it depicts a knight taking down a camera drone by hurling a spear at it.

    @Like4Hurricane2@Like4Hurricane22 жыл бұрын
    • Love that one so much!

      @TheWelshViking@TheWelshViking2 жыл бұрын
  • I want to make one with an accurate date. Something like, "this stone was carved in 2022 common era and if you thought it was an authentic medieval carving in Kansas then you've been fooled."

    @sarahndipity9649@sarahndipity96492 жыл бұрын
    • Lmao! Go for it! That sounds awesome

      @eazy8579@eazy8579 Жыл бұрын
  • "the translator was a presenter of an american tv show-" [every scholar of ancient american cultures shrieks in fear and pain]

    @stellaandginger@stellaandginger2 жыл бұрын
    • The way he zoomed in on the dreaded capital H (which is yellow as to warn what kind of journalism they do on the Hitler & Aliens channel) was priceless.

      @nickaschenbecker9882@nickaschenbecker98822 жыл бұрын
  • Love how this pretty much turned into "the Do's and Don'ts of runestone forgery"😂 And thanks again for taking this time when you are so busy with all your other stuff. You're always one of the highlights of my week. (I wish I had money so I could become a patreon or something)

    @DanielledeVreede@DanielledeVreede2 жыл бұрын
    • A kind word and knowing that my videos are enjoyable for you is 100% more than enough, so thank you! :)

      @TheWelshViking@TheWelshViking2 жыл бұрын
  • "use the right alphabet is forgery 101" sounds like it's learned by experience was teenage jimmy trying to make a fake id and like 'oh no! i've written it in linear a' :S

    @MonkeyWhoWouldBeKing@MonkeyWhoWouldBeKing2 жыл бұрын
    • I mean there has been documents that has been proven forgeries as they used fonts in Microsoft Word, that wasn't invented at the time the document was supposed to have been written.

      @magnusbergqvist2123@magnusbergqvist21232 жыл бұрын
  • I love the idea of Jimmy teaching us Historical Forgery 101: How to not look like a right noob with your fake artifacts :D

    @laulutar@laulutar2 жыл бұрын
    • That seems to be the main takeaway from a lot of archaeology debunking videos, lol.

      @dergeilteufel@dergeilteufel Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for keeping in your technical goofs. It goes to show the process and for those of us who have the patience bonus laughs.

    @ZeroAnalogy@ZeroAnalogy2 жыл бұрын
    • The goofs are very endearing, I really enjoy them.

      @sekhmara8590@sekhmara85902 жыл бұрын
  • Sure, I grant you it's a fake runestone, but tell me you wouldn't watch a movie named, "Valley of the Gnomes!" I might just have to make it because I'm bummed it doesn't exist.

    @uatu3021@uatu30212 жыл бұрын
    • Yes!

      @Bildgesmythe@Bildgesmythe2 жыл бұрын
    • Would that be a variation of the valley of the dolls? And add in some horses?

      @lenabreijer1311@lenabreijer13112 жыл бұрын
    • make it part of the Gnomeo and Juliet extended universe

      @rach_laze@rach_laze2 жыл бұрын
    • There appear to be at least two places in the US called the Valley of the Gnomes, one in Utah, one in Seattle, Washington. Perhaps a location shoot is in order? :)

      @richmcgee434@richmcgee4342 жыл бұрын
    • @@rach_lazeits the GnomCU

      @j_fenrir@j_fenrir2 жыл бұрын
  • "Put a dragon on it" is always good advice. Anyway I hadn't heard of any of these and it's wild

    @linr8260@linr82602 жыл бұрын
  • I found it hilarious, a guy "on the run from natives", producing a hammer and a chisel and bashing into a rock while hiding.... really? I love this channel and thanks for tackling this.

    @birnamagnusdottir5189@birnamagnusdottir51892 жыл бұрын
    • This reminded me of this bit from "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" There! Look! What does it say? What language is that? Brother Maynard, you're our scholar. It is Aramaic! Of course. Joseph of Arimathea! -Of course. -What does it say? It reads, "Here may be found... "...the last words of Joseph of Arimathea: "'He who is valiant and pure of spirit... "'...may find the Holy Grail... "'...in the Castle of Aaargh."' What? "The Castle of Aaargh." What is that? He must have died while carving it. -Come on! -That's what it says. Look, if he was dying, he wouldn't bother to carve "Aaargh." -He'd just say it. -That's what's carved in the rock. -Perhaps he was dictating it. -Shut up! -Does it say anything else? -No! Just "Aaargh."

      @euansmith3699@euansmith36992 жыл бұрын
    • They apparently have a carved stone from that lost colony in Virginia, carved by a woman after she survived a massacre and while in hiding she carved, badly, this whole perfectly grammatically correct long paragraph. All to say what I just wrote with of course no real details or directions. Sure...

      @lenabreijer1311@lenabreijer13112 жыл бұрын
    • @@lenabreijer1311 I'm just saying, the translation may not be directly " in hiding" or " running" they could be being harassed and slowly killed off and they know they won't win so they keep moving camp trying to make their way out

      @jhtsurvival@jhtsurvival2 жыл бұрын
    • @@jhtsurvival lol people who are slowly harassed and moving around are not hauling a big rock just in case they lose. People who are treated that way just keep hoping and moving even if they have to do it on a leaky boat across the Mediterranean. They don't haul a rock around to keep a diary of their problems. Also chissling a rock makes lots of odd noise. Your hunter is not going to go "oh listen there goes that woodpecker hitting rocks again, what a stupid bird!"

      @lenabreijer1311@lenabreijer13112 жыл бұрын
  • The fighting Swedes with the horns scratched off was just the topper to this video. Lol!! Thanks Jimmy!

    @wendynordstrom3487@wendynordstrom34872 жыл бұрын
  • *hugs from Texas* I love seeing pseudo archeology taken down while I work on my RenFest Captain America Costume!

    @JasTheMadTexan@JasTheMadTexan2 жыл бұрын
    • RenFest Cap? That sounds pretty cool!

      @sekhmara8590@sekhmara85902 жыл бұрын
    • Ooooh nice! Did you think about 1616 cap as well?

      @mzgreenjeansapproves@mzgreenjeansapproves2 жыл бұрын
    • @@mzgreenjeansapproves honestly it’s kinda of a mishmash of what I can find/make as I can afford to. The crown jewel is my 75th anniversary replica shield which I wear on a custom harness. I’m working on duding up some shoulder gambison that I ordered the wrong color on the cheap

      @JasTheMadTexan@JasTheMadTexan2 жыл бұрын
    • @@JasTheMadTexan that sounds lovely! I adore creativity!

      @mzgreenjeansapproves@mzgreenjeansapproves2 жыл бұрын
  • As an Icelandic American with sizable knowledge of runes and old norse language living in the Midwestern US: 1. I am deeply sorry for these "runestones" 2. I have a sudden urge to make a trans rights runestone in accurate 12th century Icelandic.

    @darwinjones2059@darwinjones20592 жыл бұрын
    • :D okay, you made my day. Pls do this btw haha

      @GreenLarsen@GreenLarsen2 жыл бұрын
    • You would be able to make that "subscribe to the Welsh Viking" runestone that someone suggested? It would be perfect merch❤ (but no pressure ofc). Though I get that the trans rights one would be first priority.

      @DanielledeVreede@DanielledeVreede2 жыл бұрын
    • Do it!

      @spinecho609@spinecho6092 жыл бұрын
    • Do it!

      @Ave_Echidna@Ave_Echidna2 жыл бұрын
    • Do ir

      @eazy8579@eazy85792 жыл бұрын
  • This video awakened the memory that I'd just forgotten of itty bitty Faye obsessed with dragons using the runes I'd learned from the dragonology book to "translate" the fake Oklahoma runestone. I'm not surprised it's fake nowadays, but it is a really cute story at least edit: okay, I grew up not far from the Mustang mountains, and how have I NOT heard about the Mustang runestone??? I was definitely still in the depths of weird dragon history kid when it was found.

    @FayeSterling@FayeSterling2 жыл бұрын
    • Hahahaha I had the same book XD

      @bonelace111@bonelace1112 жыл бұрын
    • @@bonelace111 that book is a rite of passage for every weird dragon kid

      @FayeSterling@FayeSterling2 жыл бұрын
  • Fake news from the USA, no really, I'm deeply adn throughly shocked./s In all seriousness I'm really happy that you are tackling what are essentially historical conspiracy theories and more importantly HOW you do so - with the tact and subtlety that history necessitates to prevent rampant ideologised dogmatism. I say this mostly as a reaction to your whole catalogue of videos, not just this one in particular, though yes including this.

    @nicholasdalli6303@nicholasdalli63032 жыл бұрын
  • way ahead of you. my local SCA group has a runestone in the cellar and it looks pretty nice (I doubt we'll ever move it out to a hill somewhere, the thing is Heavy even as small as it is)

    @AgentPedestrian@AgentPedestrian2 жыл бұрын
  • There's a lovely modern runestone in a park in the middle of Tokyo that I think was given to the city in honor of a joint Japanese/Swedish expedition to the antarctic. It took me by surprise and I had to get pictures of it. Definitely the oddest thing I saw while I was there.

    @finch3140@finch31402 жыл бұрын
  • Brilliant intro again. Love my history, even fake history, with a bit of a laugh. Here, in Detroit, Michigan, there have always been stories of Vikings on the Great Lakes. Along with an actual settlement, that unfortunately (surprise surprise) disappeared under the water, never to be seen again. Very convenient! 😆 We do have some nice, and real, petroglyphs made by indiginous people, though. Definitely worth seeing. Thanks for the vid!

    @sekhmara8590@sekhmara85902 жыл бұрын
    • Also live in Michigan lol

      @whoahanant@whoahanant2 жыл бұрын
    • Also live in Michigan, those petroglyphs are cool as hell

      @eazy8579@eazy85792 жыл бұрын
    • @@eazy8579 They really are cool!

      @sekhmara8590@sekhmara85902 жыл бұрын
    • @@whoahanant Greetings fellow Michigander! Small world, eh?

      @sekhmara8590@sekhmara85902 жыл бұрын
    • Lol, it's a wonder they find room, due to all the Egyptians, Minoans, and Phoenicians that some people over there believe had outposts and copper mines in the Great Lakes. 🤦😂

      @melrichardson7709@melrichardson77092 жыл бұрын
  • The Welsh Viking, defending truth, justice, and archeology! Immigrant Scandinavian/hippie grafitti.

    @elizabethmcglothlin5406@elizabethmcglothlin54062 жыл бұрын
  • I’m from Minnesota, and figured it was fake. I just wished it wasn’t. Incidentally, the Triceratops in our Science Museum is named Fafnir.

    @elizabethsloan3192@elizabethsloan31922 жыл бұрын
  • I'm a Minnesotan of (mostly) Scandinavian decent. The Kensington stone was revealed as a fake many years ago. I'm not sad about that. Thanks for the enlightening video.

    @greenjeanbrown@greenjeanbrown2 жыл бұрын
    • As a Minnesotan I wish the runestones and tales of Vikings coming to Minnesota where true but I gotta come to terms with reality that they aren’t and the other Minnesota Vikings won’t win the super bowl

      @rubinortiz2311@rubinortiz23112 жыл бұрын
    • I recently took a road trip to all the Menards in west central Minnesota - the shiplap we were using in our attic was discontinued mid-project - and Alexandria MN was one of the stops. While I was there I thought I’d check out the Kennington Runestone museum. It was a truly charming museum with a one room school house out back and a 4-H museum in the barn along side a replica Viking ship. Everything you could want from a small town museum. I was however very skeptical of the runestone itself. Nice to hear the real history.

      @mikaylaeager7942@mikaylaeager79422 жыл бұрын
  • I actually knew a professor who did stuff involving old Norse and German… I remember reading some of his articles, and one of them was on the “Kansas City rune stone” and basically long story short his article was like: Yeah, this is from the 19th century…. Because it had a date that literally said 1840 or something along those lines.

    @alexandersarchives9615@alexandersarchives96152 жыл бұрын
  • Viking reenacted at Heavener two weeks ago :) Lovely mountain and park. Nice place to camp and play. Don't deny the validity of the stone within hearing of any of the locals!

    @reidweber9560@reidweber95602 жыл бұрын
  • Brb, gotta make a fake runestone.

    @johannageisel5390@johannageisel53902 жыл бұрын
  • "Do it, DO IT! and if it nets you money, give me a cut" GO, JIMMY, GO! Here's hoping life gets easier for you and yours, soonest.

    @azteclady@azteclady2 жыл бұрын
  • As someone from Minnesota I was wondering when the Kensington Runestone would come up. (I didn't read the video description until after I'd watched the video.) My mother even brought me when I was younger to see the runestone on a trip. It was a very small museum filled with real artifacts surrounding the runestone (because it's obviously real 😉). I will not support the Vikings NFL team because the logo has a horned helmet. (In all seriousness, my dad is an avid supporter of the vikings and I just don't understand the appeal of any version of sportball.) Thanks for the video. It was fun to watch.

    @emilia.s@emilia.s2 жыл бұрын
  • The beginning of this video reminds me of my zoom class when there's always one person that forgets to unmute and the tutor keeps telling them to unmute. Also now I feel like a challenge has been issued to make a really believable fake rune stone.

    @shawnagoddard4999@shawnagoddard49992 жыл бұрын
  • Speaking of Vikings in North America (the real ones, this time), have you seen the article from _Nature_ (dated 20 Oct., 2021) that proposes a new *specific* date for the L’Anse aux Meadows settlement site? The KZhead Channel SciShow mentioned it as the second item in their most recent "News" video, and they link to the _Nature_ article in their video description (The first item in that video is news about the genetics of the domesticated horse, so a cute picture of a foal is in the thumbnail).

    @CapriUni@CapriUni2 жыл бұрын
  • Snort. That Minnesota stone is a joke around here. The Minnesota Vikings are as well. Maybe they would play better if they were the Minnesota Swedes.. Yes, I am a Minnesota resident. Didn't know about the other stones. Makes me chuckle every times I see the blonde dude in the Victorian helmet. Oh well, as my Dad says, life gets teejious, don't it. Thank you for another lovely video. Was stoked to see you on a costume collab recently. Take care.

    @tetchedistress@tetchedistress2 жыл бұрын
    • It's even funnier when you realize that across the pond where Jimmy lives, swedes are rutabagas.

      @sonipitts@sonipitts2 жыл бұрын
    • @@sonipitts that is so awesome 👌

      @tetchedistress@tetchedistress2 жыл бұрын
    • The “Minnesota Viking” mascot with the Horned Helmet is very un-Viking like. That is just a bad copy of an old Costume Concept from a German Wagnerian Ring Cycle Opera in the late 1880’s and has nothing to do with Vikings.

      @Aswaguespack@Aswaguespack2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Aswaguespack Exactly

      @tetchedistress@tetchedistress2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Aswaguespack So yeah. A rutabaga in an opera costume. 🤣

      @sonipitts@sonipitts2 жыл бұрын
  • If it rests your mind at all, speaking as a Minnesotan, almost everyone knows the Kensington runestone is a fake. However, it's housed in a small town with absolutely no other claim to fame, so they continue wasting tax dollars making it part of a low-rent roadside attraction. The small minority who still insist it's real tend to be of the... ehem... Folkish variety.

    @TheNeonParadox@TheNeonParadox2 жыл бұрын
    • Folkish or Völkisch?

      @johannageisel5390@johannageisel53902 жыл бұрын
    • @@johannageisel5390 it kind of means the same thing on this side. Guys with shaven heads and old tattoos from 75 years ago.

      @lenabreijer1311@lenabreijer13112 жыл бұрын
    • @@lenabreijer1311 Ah, ok. I think I mixed it up with "folksy", which is different. I didn't quite know what "folkish" meant.

      @johannageisel5390@johannageisel53902 жыл бұрын
    • @@johannageisel5390 Yeah, same thing in this context. Folkish is used a lot these days due to the Asatru Folk Assembly, which is really just a modern day Volkisch group. They're referred to as either Folkish or neo-Volkisch. 🙂

      @TheNeonParadox@TheNeonParadox2 жыл бұрын
    • Would a small American town with little economic activity be tempted to develop a myth into a “legend” in order to tap into the Tourism Industry? I’m sure it’s been done quite a few times.

      @Aswaguespack@Aswaguespack2 жыл бұрын
  • I was so entranced by Editing Jimmy's comments and overlays that I had to rewatch the intro and pay attention to what Speaking Jimmy was saying. Also, please check me on the steps to Making a good Viking runestone forgery! Step 1: find geologically appropriate stone, pleased at how you're really gonna fool people now. Step 2: research actual runestones (as counseled by Jimmy). Step 3: practice the younger, more spry alphabet; graphic design; mustached Viking iconography. Step 4: show a number of different designs to friends, swearing them to secrecy over something they probably don't get. Step 5: toss out some designs for being too silly, others for being too academic and stodgy. Step 5.a. research whether Scandanavians understood 'stodgy' as a concept, or find cultural equivalent. Step 5.b: reconsider earlier designs ruled out for being too English stodgy and determine if they're actually too [Scandanavian equivalent]. Step 6: choose a final design you liked from the beginning that's a bit historical and cheeky at the same time, and consider using modern techniques to engrave. Step 7: rule out modern techniques (even though laser etching which would be SO COOL) and learn how to chisel using age appropriate tools. Years later... Step 8: start chiseling forgery in stone which has by now weathered a bit since you first bought it. Step 9: mess up, throw away, buy more stone (repeat as many times as needed) Step 10: finish a runestone that's halfway decent, beam with reluctant pride and bruised ego at this 'not gonna do another one' final forgery. Step 11: research a place to bury it. Step 12: realize this stone is too damn heavy (maybe you went too far with accuracy), decide to bury it where it sits in your backyard (how did it get there in the first place, you now wonder?!) Step 13: hide all of your tools, break up all previous bad copies with a sledgehammer, wipe your internet search history. Step 14: call the press! Step 15: ... profit, somehow, but as agreed, giving Jimmy a cut.

    @keephurn1159@keephurn11592 жыл бұрын
  • There's an ancient runestone in my city of Coeur d'alene Idaho. The stone is ancient but not the writing on it. I know this because I put it there, and when translated it says,"Cameron was here".

    @cameronalexander5195@cameronalexander51952 жыл бұрын
  • I wonder about the gibberish rune stones in the places where Scandinavian settlers were, not that I think they would be genuine, but did the Scandinavian settlers create them for some specific purpose? Did we stumble across someone's 200 year old practical jokes? I would love to be a fly on the wall when they were being carved

    @InThisEssayIWill...@InThisEssayIWill...2 жыл бұрын
    • I was thinking this, too. I’m envisioning either kids sneaking off with a book that had pictures of runes and making the carvings while pretending to be Vikings, or a group of men who got drunk one night and thought it’d be a fun thing to do and kept going back and adding more once they sobered up because it was winter and they were bored.

      @elisabethmontegna5412@elisabethmontegna54122 жыл бұрын
    • Largely it's the same reason kids in junior high insist they know witchcraft. They want to be interesting. But it might also be because they want it to seem like they have some greater claim to the land than the WASPs or the Native Americans the WASPs initially stole the land from. But that 2nd idea might be thinking too far into it. It would be nice if they WERE practical jokes or inside jokes made with no intent to deceive but people who "find" this crap are way too vehement about its pedigree.

      @nickaschenbecker9882@nickaschenbecker98822 жыл бұрын
    • I think it could be a great dad-hoax to mess with people

      @stellaluna6421@stellaluna642111 ай бұрын
  • I seriously adore the amount of chaotic energy and learning this video provides. 10/10 yay debunk bad info!

    @bast713@bast7132 жыл бұрын
  • I just love the way you try to make sense of all the silliness out there.

    @jackiejames4551@jackiejames45512 жыл бұрын
  • New life goal: make a fake runestone Jimmy respects.

    @Alex-Sews@Alex-Sews2 жыл бұрын
  • Also, poplar trees (a general term for aspens and cottonwoods, all of the *Populus* genus) have very short lifespans, by tree standards. For reference, while some species of maple or oak can reach 3-400 years in age, a poplar would be extraordinarily lucky to exceed 100. If the tree had been present in 1362, there is only a moderate chance of that tree surviving into the 15th century, and no chance whatsoever of that tree reaching the year 1500. Poplars often establish clonal colonies so that could account for some ambiguity, but... uh. Oof.

    @michaeldolan6781@michaeldolan67812 жыл бұрын
  • I love this kind of historical content!!! Just want you to know you are really appreciated and your work doesn’t go unnoticed! I am a re-enactor and I’ll be referring your channel to my guild mates!!

    @JoystickJockie@JoystickJockie2 жыл бұрын
  • Well now I really want to fake a runestone in my yard and kickstart the academic recognition of Viking-Taíno relations. "I am Snorri and I am carving this runestone under a palm tree while my wife Anacaona weaves next to me."

    @mparis130@mparis1302 жыл бұрын
  • You have very quickly become one of my favourite KZheadrs. I love History, and, as anybody who watched Indiana Jones, and reading old national geographics from a young age, I am interested in archeology, though I want to study History and Literatur

    @coenraadsnyman5229@coenraadsnyman52292 жыл бұрын
  • Fascinating stuff! Forgeries can be so interesting in their own right, thank you for this collection - and for the intro, comedy gold!

    @caerrie@caerrie2 жыл бұрын
  • I recently discovered your channel via a video you did with Bernadette Banner, and I’m loving it! Thank you for sharing your knowledge!

    @ffotograffydd@ffotograffydd2 жыл бұрын
    • Same here. Seconded. I'd never have approached these topics otherwise (ETA: Okay, some of them maybe including this one since I did read about the Kensington runestone in a book "The Dead Ends of Archeology" - it's sadly a Czech book, otherwise I'd fully recommend it to fuel further Fake News videos). But somehow the combination of Welsh, history, and righteous historian rage is irresistible. :D

      @beth12svist@beth12svist2 жыл бұрын
  • Such an enjoyable watch, thanks Jimmy!

    @lauraclarke7197@lauraclarke71972 жыл бұрын
  • I watched a History Channel "documentary" back in like 2007 that claimed the Kengsington runestone was created by a band of Templars, who had fled to...Minnesota. Because, you see, Templars liked to use runes as a secret form of communication, especially when being persecuted by...people who were doing that. And, credit where credit's due, this was a creative way of getting around the "this doesn't make any sense as a Viking runestone" problem. It did this by introducing about 15 entirely new problems, but hey, whatever.

    @unreadaethel6878@unreadaethel6878 Жыл бұрын
  • Just became a patron. We love you Jimmy!

    @wendynordstrom3487@wendynordstrom34872 жыл бұрын
  • Editing Jimmy is a hoot! I was very disappointed to learn that the Mustang roonstone didn't say "Eat at Joe's". As for the Kensington one, wasn't it a thing in the Victorian era to create fakes to try to bamboozle their friends? Hey, Jimmy! Want a fake roonstone in the Seattle area? 😈

    @persiswynter6357@persiswynter63572 жыл бұрын
  • Catching up on your videos. Thank you for the fascinating company during my peasant jewelry job.

    @SolisScriptorivm@SolisScriptorivm2 жыл бұрын
  • Wonderful video, as always. Mostly popping into the comments to say, good luck with the PhD stuff. My own dissertation/defense is only a few years behind me and I still vividly remember the feeling of near constant panic. Hang in there!

    @experimentallytheoretical3116@experimentallytheoretical31162 жыл бұрын
  • Came for the topics - subscribed for Jimmy’s delightful personality!

    @JeanieD@JeanieD2 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for making me smile😝😍

    @elisabethm9655@elisabethm96552 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you - the postcards are really pretty - and I loved Editing Jimmy's narration - Plus look after yourself please - self care is important

    @januzzell8631@januzzell86312 жыл бұрын
  • As a Minnesotan I'm always glad for explanations of how the Kensington Runestone is proven fake. Jackson Crawford also presented a really good video on it. I grew up with the local mythology. It's a testament, I suppose, to both our desire for a tangible connection to our roots and our very human love of myth in general. Oh, and Scott Wolter is one of ours, too. He's entertaining. Bonus fact; there are way more people of German descent in Minnesota than all our Scandinavians combined. Wolter himself would be one unless he was named through some other means. Go far back enough in history and you'll find the point where it doesn't really matter anyway. You have to understand, Americans need to create our own myths. At least non-Native Americans. What ever we might have inherited from our ancestors has long, long been mixed, mingled, evolved, devolved and lost in vast blending of immigration and time. Sadly, with modern science, there's no more hope of establishing any sort of real mythology of our own. Paul Bunyan and Babe his blue ox... a whole boatload of myths about our own history... But... Öhman tried. We're doing the best we can over here!

    @mjinba07@mjinba072 жыл бұрын
  • There's one in NSW, Australia! It's in one of Tolkien's scripts

    @Wulfyric@Wulfyric2 жыл бұрын
  • Editing Jimmy sure sounds an awful lot like video Jimmy… God, they can’t surely be one and the same?! 😆

    @William_Seahill@William_Seahill2 жыл бұрын
  • Love your videos hope to see lots more :)

    @timlopes67@timlopes672 жыл бұрын
  • I watched you do a bit of archery in another video today. it had played on from the previous video. I wasn't really paying attention, then I heard your distinguishable voice. You are not bad at archery by the way.

    @msoneill358@msoneill3582 жыл бұрын
    • The Squirrels were laughing...

      @persiswynter6357@persiswynter63572 жыл бұрын
  • Love your work

    @NickTaylorGisborne@NickTaylorGisborne2 жыл бұрын
  • This was such an entertaining video. Glad I watched it.

    @greybeardcanadian1036@greybeardcanadian10363 ай бұрын
  • Very good breakdown. Informative.

    @dclomg5@dclomg516 күн бұрын
  • Invest in runestones today! They'll only go up in value!

    @johannageisel5390@johannageisel53902 жыл бұрын
  • Hahaha oh Jimmy best of luck with all your stuff! I love the asides and real Jimmy moments. This and enthusiastic refutation of nonsense are what I'm here for!

    @lizzyrbits1283@lizzyrbits12832 жыл бұрын
  • No rune stones where I'm from, but we have a statue of an enormous squirrel and someone wrote "butts" in sharpie on a picnic table, so still cultured I guess.

    @mcwjes@mcwjes2 жыл бұрын
  • The info Jimmy is sharing brings me joy. I am from 🇿🇦, we don't even have roonstones. I just enjoy watching this. 😁 OH! We only have the Blombos Ochre stone which is pretty cool. (Blombos translated: Flower bush/shrub)

    @lelaniadam@lelaniadam2 жыл бұрын
  • Love your Viking jewelry episode and this one is pretty shredder Aswell All Praise brother ⚔️🙏🏻🤘🏻❤️

    @trilljamesvevo7850@trilljamesvevo78502 жыл бұрын
  • The 'Terrible Swedes' is the common nickname for the athletic teams of Bethany College in Lindsborg, Kansas. They use stylised Viking as their emblem, but no horns on his helmet, unlike the Minnesota Vikings. Lindsborg is a heavily Swedish community, but I don't know of any runestones found in the area. LOL!

    @jovanweismiller7114@jovanweismiller71142 жыл бұрын
  • I hadn't heard of these, that was really neat! Do I spy the bottom edge of one of the wee little deer drawings I sent at the top of the frame??

    @vincentbriggs1780@vincentbriggs17802 жыл бұрын
  • I recently took a road trip to all the Menards in west central Minnesota - the shiplap we were using in our attic was discontinued mid-project - and Alexandria MN was one of the stops. While I was there I thought I’d check out the Kennington Runestone museum. It was a utterly charming little museum with a one room school house out back and a 4-H museum in the barn along side a replica Viking ship. Everything you could want from a small town museum. I was however very skeptical of the runestone itself. It’s nice to hear the real history.

    @mikaylaeager7942@mikaylaeager79422 жыл бұрын
  • I just discovered your channel today; I love it -- Very good, knowledgeable content. Thanks for that! I live in balmy Minnesota and a couple years ago a friend and I took a bit of a road trip to see the Kensington Fraud Stone -- It was awesome. It's in a little museum in Alexandria and it's actually quite nice and the people running the museum were very nice as well. I think people want to believe it's real (I did 40 years ago) but we all know it's fake. I once carved runes onto a bit of sandstone I found by Lake Superior... I wonder what happened to it. :) Thanks again!

    @patthielen7551@patthielen75512 жыл бұрын
  • I borrowed tools from a history teacher and made a rune stone for a family friend. It's still in their flower-border 😅

    @helenahsson1697@helenahsson16972 жыл бұрын
  • "I Narvi carved them" should have been a bit of a hint.

    @nblmqst1167@nblmqst11672 жыл бұрын
  • Well played, sir! I'm in Arizona, you covered our roon stone... Lol

    @tishie42@tishie422 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for all of the crime tips! Just kidding, great video, very funny how many of these things are out there. I actually have a question that you might be able to do a video about. What is the idea behind the anount of saliva in some of the Norse mythology I've read about. Like the Kvasir story. But I think I've seen more references on people spitting in a big cauldron but I just can't remember where... Is that an original thing? Or a modern invention?

    @snazzypazzy@snazzypazzy2 жыл бұрын
    • The Mead of Kevin? Great stuff! (What, doesn't anyone read Riordan?)

      @persiswynter6357@persiswynter63572 жыл бұрын
  • I really want to make a runestone now that says 'þú ert fáviti' just to see someone find it and actually act like the idiot I just told them they are (couldn't be bothered to make it more old Icelandic with this migraine but why should I 😄)

    @julianamagg3177@julianamagg31772 жыл бұрын
  • Love it. I grew up in Oklahoma, didn't know about the Heavener Runestones until about 10 years ago. I still haven't visited. I wonder, considering the other stone you mentioned, with bad spellings of Gnomedal or Glomdal, if there wasn't some kind of Norse revival/reclamation movement in the 20s or so calling themselves something to that effect.

    @dergeilteufel@dergeilteufel Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for the tips and ideas about how to make a viking rune stone. I plan to create a viking-ish rune carbord (not stone) as home decore.

    @lynxlynx6685@lynxlynx66852 жыл бұрын
  • It's a miracle that there aren't more forger who trained as archaeologists or historians ;) You know how it should be done. Is it some kind of work ethos that you just can't bring yourself to forge some nice historical document? Or are you just so good that you are not found out ;) (Just kidding, don't take it too serious)

    @nemoignorat2443@nemoignorat24432 жыл бұрын
    • Just pure sloth!

      @TheWelshViking@TheWelshViking2 жыл бұрын
    • Personally, I actually had the urge to throw my 16th century Lithuanian coin into the excavation ditches during the field week to bamboozle everyone, since why exactly would there be a 16th century Lithuanian coin at a medieval site in Ireland? Unfortunately, greed and pesky ethics got in the way.

      @pavelstaravoitau7106@pavelstaravoitau71062 жыл бұрын
    • Maybe there are skilled archaeological fraudsters, and, they are so good, that we just don't know. 🤔

      @euansmith3699@euansmith36992 жыл бұрын
    • I know of someone who has claimed to create a reasonable fake item as a bet with his local vicar to see if it was identified as fake. Apparently it passed but the vicar owned up later.

      @lucie4185@lucie41852 жыл бұрын
  • Okay, I keep wondering and then forgetting to ask... I feel like I know your intro/outro song from somewhere but I cannot put my finger on it. What's it called? Also, great video! Reminds me of a runestone being found in my German hometown a couple of years ago. Turned out it was carved in the 90s. As a memory to something, also... they used weird, wrong runes (papers claimed gothic runes but that is bollocks) to carve a quote by some Native American chief in there for... no particular reason.

    @ElisabethOrchard@ElisabethOrchard2 жыл бұрын
  • hey Jimmy, can you do a video (at some point) on linen making? I am very interested in doing it "ye old fashioned way" and have had a hard time find how it was done back before machinery.

    @syddlinden8966@syddlinden89662 жыл бұрын
    • Check out the Sally Pointer KZhead videos.

      @lenabreijer1311@lenabreijer13112 жыл бұрын
    • Crowing Hen has an excellent video on the whole process called 'Flax to Linen'.

      @helenw6594@helenw65942 жыл бұрын
    • thank you both so much! i will check those out.

      @syddlinden8966@syddlinden89662 жыл бұрын
  • Over here in Connecticut there is the Gungywamp site, some people say it's a Viking place. no runestones, maybe I'll make one and stick it under a quartz rock

    @SirFrederick@SirFrederick2 жыл бұрын
  • I am SO GLAD you spent the effort to make this & explain all the linguistic reasons these runes don’t check out! It seems most Minnesotans & Arizonans accept their runes aren’t real but, alas, I’ve met too many Okies who are incorrigibly wedded to the notion the runes here are Very True and Real. There is a small state college in Poteau who’s mascot is the Vikings…I’d wondered where that came from (there aren’t many Nordic folk here), but just now connected the dots together! I’ve heard a number of people around here suggest that the Heavner runes were made by French explorers (usually lost, also usually LaSalle)…the French definitely left their mark on our maps & place names, but colonial-era French using “Viking” Runes is so silly I’m unsure wether to laugh or cry. *NB: there is essentially no correct way to pronounce or spell anything in Oklahoma (starting with “Oklahoma” itself, but I digress); however, most folks ignore the ‘a’ in Heavner and pronounce Poteau ‘Poe-toe.’ Ignoring the letter ‘a’ is something of a tradition here, eg: “Kiaminchi Mountains” is “Kie-meen-chee Mown-tins.”

    @Mockingbird_Taloa@Mockingbird_Taloa2 жыл бұрын
  • *Video recommendation Idea* : Viking flint & steel and the other ways that fire starting was done in the early, mid and late mediaeval period.

    @AnOldYoungPerson@AnOldYoungPerson2 жыл бұрын
  • I was hoping you would cover the Leif Eriksson rune stone on Norman's Land Island, Massachusetts.

    @permiebird937@permiebird9372 жыл бұрын
  • Jimmy, would u someday make a video about runes through the years?

    @Maniafilia@Maniafilia2 жыл бұрын
  • Im descendant of the Anishinaabe tribe in Quebec Canada and alot of French settlers who came here were from Normandy and married Native women or got adopted into tribes and a lot of Norse myths and folklore has been absorbed into Algonquin legends and stories in the 1600s. That's how long people held on to pagan traditions.

    @gabfortin1976@gabfortin19762 жыл бұрын
  • Do you have any research on Bindrunes and did the Vikings ever use them? Not talking about the Icelandic variations that cropped up in Medieval Iceland but were they used during the viking age for writing?

    @ngliscsaxon6128@ngliscsaxon6128 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for correcting your pronounciation! ☺💙

    @holdyerblobsaloft@holdyerblobsaloft2 жыл бұрын
  • Naming them the Fighting 'Rutabagas' works for me...

    @poisonsumc7426@poisonsumc74262 жыл бұрын
  • “Use the right alphabet is forgery 101!” …Jimmy I need this on a shirt!!!!! I will leave the ruins to the rest of you. It’s October 25 and grandson will need his costume wearable for Friday morning the 29!!

    @robintheparttimesewer6798@robintheparttimesewer67982 жыл бұрын
  • Absolutely wild; I used to live in Maine in a town called Bremen, just a couple miles northeast of Phippsburg; not sure how I’d never heard of the Spirit Pond Runestones since they were basically in my back yard. Hell, we used to go to the beach that was within a 30 minute walk from the Spirit Pond

    @eazy8579@eazy85792 жыл бұрын
  • I thought you'd have mentioned the (non-fake) runestone in Edinburgh. I think it looked a lot better next to the castle rather in a flowerbed surrounded by tower blocks.

    @Graham_Rule@Graham_Rule2 жыл бұрын
  • there was a Swedish school class that tried making a fake rune stone and posting it on a trading site (think Swedish eBay) to see how hard it would be to create a fake news story and it worked

    @Victor-hb9mj@Victor-hb9mj2 жыл бұрын
  • I want to start off by saying, I think you’re awesome! Thank you for so much information! And you aware extremely interesting in terms of presenting information. I live in Minnesota. Have my whole life. Minnesota wasn’t starting to get settled until 1818 or so. It wasn’t radiated as a state until 1853 ish. To say that we have had Scandinavian people in these parts for hundreds of years is sort of a stretch… sort of… I mean. I guess it’s 203. Technically more than 1 hundred is hundreds… anyway. I’m no where near the expert on literally anything that you are, I was not asked for my input. And therefore! I shall shut my hole now. 😁 I do think you’re awesome tho. I may never comment again but I will probably watch all your videos. Thank you, because you are giving tons of awesome information I’m enjoying a lot. Even tho I’m not even the tiniest bit Scandinavian. Or Norse background blood of any kind… thank you!

    @meganjennifer8630@meganjennifer86302 жыл бұрын
  • I would love a runestone in my garden. Also, Jimmy did you get the Mari Llwyd I sent you?

    @Isilsartari76@Isilsartari762 жыл бұрын
KZhead