Tom Rowsell: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Nopic}} '''Tom Rowsell''' is a British historian, YouTuber, film-maker, and former journalist. Rowsell operates Survive the Jive, a YouTube channel focused on pre-Christian religions, particularly Germanic paganism, but which also explores wider historical subjects such as Archaeogenetics and Indo-European studies. Prior to becoming a YouTuber, Rowsell wrote as a journalist for publications including iD magazine and ''Dazed'' magazine.<ref name="DAZED">''Dazed''....")
 
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{{Nopic}}
[[File:tomroswell.png|thumb|Tom Roswell, historian.]]
 
'''Tom Rowsell''' is a British historian, YouTuber, film-maker, and former journalist. Rowsell operates Survive the Jive, a YouTube channel focused on pre-Christian religions, particularly Germanic paganism, but which also explores wider historical subjects such as Archaeogenetics and Indo-European studies.
'''Tom Rowsell''' is a British historian, YouTuber, film-maker, and former journalist. Rowsell operates Survive the Jive, a YouTube channel focused on pre-Christian religions, particularly Germanic paganism, but which also explores wider historical subjects such as Archaeogenetics and Indo-European studies.



Revision as of 11:00, 17 October 2022

Tom Roswell, historian.

Tom Rowsell is a British historian, YouTuber, film-maker, and former journalist. Rowsell operates Survive the Jive, a YouTube channel focused on pre-Christian religions, particularly Germanic paganism, but which also explores wider historical subjects such as Archaeogenetics and Indo-European studies.

Prior to becoming a YouTuber, Rowsell wrote as a journalist for publications including iD magazine and Dazed magazine.[1] In 2014, Rowsell directed From Ruins to Runes, an independent documentary about Anglo-Saxon paganism. The Folklore Society describes the documentary as focused on "Anglo-Saxon haunted barrows and pagan shrines to the dead; seeks evidence for roots of a" pagan past by consultations with neo-pagans and Viking re-enactors, and finds healing gods and ancient cultures in old chronicles"[2] Far-left newspaper Morning Star commented in their review, "The documentary features a sword display by Fighters Against Racism, an anti-racist martial arts group, but as Rowsell emphasises historical heritage belongs to neither the right or left. It’s more important than that."[3]

In 2020 the Danish broadsheet newspaper Weekendavisen described Rowsell as a "British journalist and historian" in an article detailing his role in the dispute between historian Sturla Ellingvåg and the scientist Eske Willerslev regarding a paper they co-authored on the subject of genetics of the Viking age.[4]

References

  1. Dazed. Undated. Contributor: Tom Rowsell. Online. Last accessed November 15, 2020.
  2. The Folklore Society 2014.
  3. 2015 Morning Star
  4. Weekendavisen online. 2020 "Vikingestrid"