Showing posts with label European. Show all posts
Showing posts with label European. Show all posts

Thursday, August 29, 2019

Historical Thursday - The Barbarian Empires of the Steppes

I've often touted The Great Courses as one of the most enjoyable ways for me to pass my time.  Sure, I've binged every season of Stranger Things as they dropped and I was cautiously optimistic as I awaited each season of Game of Thrones.  But when I am looking for something to engage me in a more cerebral manner, I frequently grab a lecture series on history.  I recall when this first became a habit with The Western Tradition delivered by Dr Eugen Weber, PhD, and produced by WGBH in 1989.  It feels a bit dated these days, to be sure, for numerous reasons, but thirty years later it's still a solid introductory college-level course transported from the lecture hall into anyone's home.  Over time, the availability of offerings through The Great Courses, on cassette tape and VHS, then on DVD, and now through their streaming service and on Amazon Prime, has proliferated tremendously, so they've  become the main source of my incidental learning-for-entertainment.  Make no mistake, you can study a myriad of subjects through them in a much more disciplined manner than I do, but for me it's mainly a source for casual coursework on history and sometimes other things such as literature or fine arts.  To each their own.


One of the reasons I so enjoy spending my leisure time absorbing knowledge this way is because it feeds my creative fires as I world-build for RPGs.  No one can create in a vacuum.  That's the fastest way to suffocate your creations.  One needs grist for the mill and folks to feed the resultant bread.  At the end of your process, a creator needs an audience, but at start, one needs fuel.  Many world-building RPG enthusiasts love reading fantasy or other fiction novels.  I've done a bit of that.  Some enjoy getting their inspiration from television, film, or the equivalent from online outlets.  Guilty as charged to some extent.  Those sources, however, tend to feel as if they funnel me toward someone else's vision of a story that's already been told, or simply a variation of it with the serial numbers filed off.  To really get my creative juices fired up with raw material that let's me scratch-build, or closer to it, I like examining historical content, sometimes broad and sometimes detailed, and I like it in video format.  History books are great but the convenience of recorded talking heads coupled with graphics and maps works for me.


Most recently, I've been intermittently immersed in The Barbarian Empires of the Steppes with Dr. Kenneth W. Harl from The Great Courses.  It's a thirty-six part lecture series, each just over a half hour.  I've enjoyed several other courses from this instructor, so I figured it would be a good fit for me.  I don't pay the per lecture or even per series fee but rather plunk down the $8 a month then immediately go into my subscription for Prime Video channels and cancel it right away which kills it at the end of the 30-day period rather than auto-renewing.  I tend to binge when time permits rather than parcel such things out on a schedule so I'll secure a subscription for a month here and there throughout the year rather than continuously.  Some folks like the convenience of just leaving those open but I'd hate to wake from a year-long coma, fall in love with my caregiver, but also be ninety-six bucks poorer.  I'm not sure why this scenario requires me to fall in love but call me a frugal romantic.


The description for The Barbarian Empires of the Steppes is as follows: "Attila the Hun and Genghis Khan loom large in the popular consciousness as two of history’s most fearsome warrior-leaders. Yet few people today are aware of their place in a succession of nomadic warriors who emerged from the Eurasian steppes to seize control of civilizations. Get startling new insights on how the world was shaped and discover cultures and empires you’ve likely never encountered."  The course spans a great swath of time and looks at the intersection of three continents and is fairly comprehensive.  What has been striking me as most interesting is how fluid the cultures and languages develop, wax, and wane.  The impact of the people who sprang from the Steppes is so much more powerful than I had ever imagined, and repeatedly so.  Various cultures in Asia, Europe, Northern Africa, and, of course, the Middle East have all been influenced, invaded, displaced, usurped, supplanted, conquered, integrated, and infiltrated by people from the Steppes who, in turn, have then come to one of the aforementioned fates.  It's amazingly dynamic.


The beginning of the series touches on some of the later highlights, Attila the Hun, Tamerlane, and Temüjin, AKA Genghis Khan, as well as Hulagu Khan, a grandson of Genghis Khan, who is mentioned in the opening salvo.  The latter besieged Bagdad in 1258 over the course of forty days and, after the eventual surrender, felt no mercy because of the delay to submission.  The following sack of the city was a massacre with great loss of life, destruction of architecture, and obliteration of many records.  The limits of historical data is a recurring theme throughout the series and Dr. Harl makes it clear when information and sources are disputed or sketchy.  After giving an overview, he quickly dives into the nuts and bolts: the domestication of the horse, the search for good pasture lands, the drive for trade goods (and slaves).  These things drove early cultures on the Steppes and mostly continued to be an underlying factor throughout time.  One might think that it could become rather one-note but the nuances are there as well.


I'm enjoying The Barbarian Empires of the Steppes as I have many other series from The Great Courses.  Take a look through their catalog to see if there is enough of interest to you.  If you already have a Prime subscription, a meager eight bucks let's you sample much of what they offer and I've no doubt there's plenty enough to interest anyone.  Enjoy!

Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
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Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Worldbuilding Wednesday - Medieval High Jinx

Over on Atlas Obscura, they have a fun article titled, "Between Plagues, Medieval Peasants Enjoyed Bawdiness and Brawling."  Among the many activities, there was ice golf and, apparently, a lot of wrestling!  Read more here.


Worldbuilding Wednesday on GRYMVALD.com
The nuts and bolts of Worldbuilding
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Thursday, July 28, 2016

Historical Thursday - Jane Grey, Isabella, & Matilda

Three posts on historic women this week with the first being from historyextra.com titled "Lady Jane Grey: why do we want to believe the myth?"  Find out here.


Also, from historyextra.com, have a look at "Isabella of France: the rebel queen" here.


Finally, on medievalists.net, check out "How the death of a Queen led to 68,000 people being fed" here.


Sifting through History to
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Thursday, July 21, 2016

Historical Thursday - Henry VIII

Three from historyextra.com with the first being "Henry VIII is buried where?!"  Find out more here.


Also, they ask, "Who hijacked Henry VIII’s will?"  More info is found here.


Finally, learn "7 things you (probably) didn’t know about Henry VIII's flagship the Mary Rose" here.


Sifting through History to
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Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Worldbuilding Wednesday - Tunnels Revisited

I wrote a blog post a few weeks ago on "Ancient Tunnels" here but wanted to revisit tunnels again.  Over on quora.com, a curious person asked "What techniques were used to construct tunnels, during ancient and medieval times, to meet exactly at the same point midway?"  Find out here.


Also, on atlasobscura.com, they tell us "We Still Don't Know Why Medieval Europeans Built Their Mysterious 'Erdstall' Tunnels" here.


Finally, on dailymail.co.uk, they let us know "Tunnels of war: 200-year-old passages where French prisoners were held during the Napoleonic Wars go on sale for £19,000" here.


Worldbuilding Wednesday on GRYMVALD.com
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Tuesday, June 14, 2016

The Tuesday Sundries - Bog Finds

Over on smithsonianmag.com, they give us "A Brief History of Bog Butter" here.


Also, on pbs.org, they uncover "Bog Bodies of the Iron Age" here.


Finally, on wired.com, they explore the "Bogosphere: The Strangest Things Pulled Out of Peat Bogs" here.


The Tuesday Sundries on GRYMVALD.com
Essentially, a clearinghouse for topics on GRYMVALD.com
not covered elsewhere or wanting a particular focus.
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Monday, June 13, 2016

Mapping Monday - Unexplored Maps

By definition, if they are of the real world, most maps are of places that have been explored.  However, as maps were drawn over time, they often included what was known and what was unknown.  Naturally, some maps are made by outsiders for other outsiders and there might certainly be others on the inside for which such places are already known.  Over on malawicichlids.com, they ask "How do Old Maps Depict the Malawi Region?"  Have a look here.


Also, on brilliantmaps.com, they share a "Map of The Unexplored World From 1881" here.


Finally, on loc.gov, check out "Martin Waldseemüller’s 1507 world map" here.


Cartography and Mapping are the order of the day,
from setting maps to battlemaps, it's all good.
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Sunday, June 5, 2016

Setting & Society Sunday - Viking Myths, Time, & Damage

Over on languagesmythsfinds.ac.uk, there is all manner of stuff related to Vikings "Languages, Myths and Finds" here.


Also, on sciencenordic.com, find out "How Vikings killed time" here.


Finally, on medievalists.net, they ask "How much material damage did the Northmen actually do to ninth-century Europe?"  Learn more here.


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Thursday, May 26, 2016

Historical Thursday - Mary, Eleanor, & Osthryth

Over on historyextra.com, they wonder about "Mary, Queen of Scots: what happened to her ladies-in-waiting?"  Find out more here.


Also, on historicalnovelsociety.org, Elizabeth Chadwick muses "on Eleanor of Aquitaine, and how to push Henry II out of the limelight" here.


Finally, on medievalists.net, we learn of "Osthryth, Queen of the Mercians" here.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
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Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Worldbuilding Wednesday - Ancient Tunnels

Over on smithsonianmag.com, "A Secret Tunnel Found in Mexico May Finally Solve the Mysteries of Teotihuacán."  Find out more here.


Also, on spiegel.de, discover "Rome's Tremendous Tunnel: The Ancient World's Longest Underground Aqueduct" here.


Finally, on ancient-origins.net, "Extensive Ancient Underground Networks [have been] Discovered Throughout Europe."  Learn more at here.


Worldbuilding Wednesday on GRYMVALD.com
The nuts and bolts of Worldbuilding
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Monday, April 18, 2016

Mapping Monday - Early Tribes in Britain

Over on bbc.co.uk, they have a simple map and summary of the "Native Tribes of Britain" here.


Also, on historyfiles.co.uk, check out this more extensive "Map of Europe's Tribes" at "Maximum Size" here.


Finally, on heritagedaily.com, have a look at the "Iron Age Tribes of Southern Britain" using their "Interactive Map" here.


Cartography and Mapping are the order of the day,
from setting maps to battlemaps, it's all good.
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Sunday, April 3, 2016

Setting & Society Sunday - Picts, Scots, & Norse

Bit of a hodgepodge this week though much of it might be considered as collectively adjacent in some ways.  First, here one on the Picts that didn't make it into the post last week from etc.ancient.eu titled "The Puzzling Ancient Picts of Scotland" here.


Also, on newsner.com, a bit of click bait but with enough good photos, I felt it should be shared.  It is annoyingly titled "In 1850, A Farmer Found A Secret Door In The Sand. What He Saw On The Other Side? Fascinating!"  Be fascinated or otherwise here.


Finally, on cbc.ca, the recent news that YET ANOTHER "Potential Viking site found in Newfoundland" and I don't believe it is an April Fools joke because I think the first reports of it came in at the end of March though I'll retract it if I am wrong.  Read more here.


Looking closer at Setting and Society
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Monday, March 21, 2016

Mapping Monday - Strahd & Transylvania

With the release if the Fifth Edition Ravensloft supplement, The Curse of Strahd, cartographer Mike Schley has done what's he's been doing since 5E began and released high-resolution version of his WotC maps for sale on his own website here.


But what if we wanted to utilize what they've created without using the common setting?  Perhaps we even want to re-file off the serial numbers and turn this right around into an Eastern European setting.  Well, to assist with that, over on contur.ro, you can find a Transylvania map with all of the towns and counties one would find here.


Finally, on bergbook.com, the "Antique Maps of Johann Baptist Homann" includes a wonderful map of Transylvania can be had here.


Cartography and Mapping are the order of the day,
from setting maps to battlemaps, it's all good.
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Sunday, March 20, 2016

Setting & Society Sunday - Language Evolution & Spread

Over on thevintagenews.com, they ask "How far back in time could you go and still recognise English language?"   See their answer here.


Also, on babbel.com, they give us "139 Old Norse Words That Invaded The English Language" here.


Finally, on techinsider.io, chcek out an "Animated map shows how the world's first written languages spread" here.


Looking closer at Setting and Society
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Thursday, March 17, 2016

Historical Thursday - Ides of March & More

Around this time of year, for obvious reasons, folks trot out the "Beware the Ides of March" memes and most folks know enough about it to associate it with the assassination of Julius Caesar on the Roman Senate floor in the year 44 BC, by modern reckoning.  However, according to historyextra.com, there's more to the death of Caesar than we generally know, and they tell us so here.


Also, on smithsonianmag.com, they explain "What You Don’t Know About Ancient Rome Could Fill a Book. Mary Beard Wrote That Book" here.


In fact, the folks at smithsonianmag.com even gave us the "Top Ten Reasons to Beware the Ides of March" here.


Sifting through History to
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Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Worldbuilding Wednesday - Castles & Crusades

Three this week from the Medievalists.net with the first showing the "Top 10 Medieval Castles in Germany" here.


Also, check out the "Top 10 Medieval Castles in Wales" here.


Finally, they give us "The Crusades: A Very Brief History, 1095-1500" here.


Worldbuilding Wednesday on GRYMVALD.com
The nuts and bolts of Worldbuilding
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Thursday, February 11, 2016

Historical Thursday - Rise & Fall

Three from the archives of the medievalists.net website with the first being "The Huns and the End of the Roman Empire in Western Europe" here.


Also, they tell us about "The rise of the Carolingians or the decline of the Merovingians?"  Find out more here.


Finally, we learn of "The Rise and Fall of the Second Largest Empire in History" here.


Sifting through History to
enhance our tabletop RPGing.
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