1350 : Pas de Police, Que des Bandits – Survivre sur les Routes de la Mort
1350. No police. No justice. Just the road—and all that lurked there. In France ravaged by the Black Death, travel wasn't freedom. It was a gamble with your life. Armed bands roamed the countryside. Forests swallowed unwary travelers. And between two lord's estates, you were protected by no one. This video recreates the daily lives of history's invisible figures—the peasants, artisans, and pilgrims who crossed the roads of death in the 14th century. Not the kings. Not the battles. Them. 🕯️ On the program: → Why traveling alone in 1350 could cost you your life → The mercenaries and the great companies: who were these men really? → Survival strategies no one has ever told you about → What the medieval road says about us today 📜 Before the 2000s, this is the story of those whom official history has forgotten—told with the sensory richness and empathy they deserve. Subscribe so you don't miss any journeys into the past. 👇

1385: No Glasses, Only Blur – Losing Your Sight in the Middle Ages

10 aliments bon marché que les paysans médiévaux mangeaient pour survivre

1437 : Pas de Pesticides, Que des Rats – Vivre avec les Fléaux du Moyen Âge

Pourquoi Vous Ne Survivriez Pas à un Hiver Dans une Maison Paysanne Française en 1709

How Medieval Travelers Survived Weeks on the Road — No Shelter, No Maps, No...

1250 : Pas de Pitié, Que l'Exil – Le Cauchemar de la Lèpre au Moyen Âge

1410: No Childhood, Only Work – Growing Up in a Medieval Village

1410: No Heating, Just Survival – Living Through a Medieval Winter

Pourquoi Vous Ne Survivriez Pas à une Journée dans les Cuisines de Versailles en 1682

1408: No Dentists, Only Blacksmiths – The Agony of Teeth in the Middle Ages

1318: No Syrup, Only Leeches – Treating a Fever in the Middle Ages

1345 : Pas de Poubelles, Que des Rues Pourries – L'Odeur Insoutenable du Moyen Âge

1392: No Orphanages, Only the Streets – Abandoned Children in the Middle Ages

The unspeakable torments that the women had to endure at the hands of the gladiators after a fight

1365: No Aspirin, Only Agony – Working While Sick in the Middle Ages

1372: No Fridge, Just Maggots – Eating Meat in the Middle Ages

How people travelled in Germany in the year 1600

What Did Roman Soldiers Eat Every Day?

Why You Wouldn't Survive the Food of a French Tavern from the 1100s

