Hearted Youtube comments on Forgotten Weapons (@ForgottenWeapons) channel.

  1. 99
  2. 99
  3. 98
  4. 97
  5. 96
  6. 96
  7. 95
  8. 93
  9. 93
  10. 92
  11. 92
  12. 92
  13. 90
  14. 89
  15. 89
  16. 89
  17. 89
  18. 89
  19. 88
  20. 88
  21. 87
  22. 87
  23. 86
  24. 86
  25. 85
  26. 85
  27. 84
  28. 84
  29. 83
  30. 82
  31. 82
  32. 81
  33. 81
  34. 81
  35. 80
  36. 80
  37. 80
  38. 80
  39. As a german Facharbeiter(trained worker) i must speak about a small mistake, unclear description Ian has made. The word Meister can mean a ,Champion' or a very talented craftsman, artist etc.. But in this case a Meister means a ,master craftsman' , a title which goes back to middle ages. Formerly a boy who wants to become a craftsman started his training at an age of 14 (my father was some weeks younger than 14 when he started in 1952) as a , Lehrling (today Auszubildender), today with 17 or 18 (the school system changed), after a training time of usually 3 to 3,5 years you are in Industry a Facharbeiter, in old style (non industrial) craftmanship/ Handwerk you are a Geselle, also a title which goes back to middle age. When you worked some years as a Facharbeiter or Geselle you can do a difficult and expensive training and you have to produce a Meisterstück/ mastrepiece. When everything is well a Facharbeiter becomes an Industriemeister, a Geselle becomes a Handwerksmeister. Whats the difference? A Handwerksmeister can open his own Werkstatt/ shop(??), hire some Gesellen, train new Lehrlinge as it has been for centuries, while an Industriemeister is ,only' the leader of a team of workers or a production room etc. in an industral factory, whatever products the factory produces. A Waffenmeister doesn't work in a armsfactory, thats an an armorer who has to repair and inspect the arms of soldiers, policemen etc. or this word is very rare used for a Fechtmeister/ maitre d'armes.
    78
  40. 78
  41. 77
  42. 77
  43. 77
  44. 76
  45. 76
  46. 76
  47. 75
  48. 75
  49. 75
  50. 74