History of Poland: The Deluge III 1660-1667

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Eastory

Eastory

4 роки тому

By 1660 the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth had a monumental task ahead of itself. Two things would have a profound influence on its future - the Reconquest of its Eastern territories and the Reform of its political system.
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КОМЕНТАРІ: 704
@stepanpytlik4021
@stepanpytlik4021 3 роки тому
The lesson of this story is: Never give the nobles too much power
@icook1723
@icook1723 3 роки тому
In the War of the Roses, the term was overmighty.
@fuckgoogle2554
@fuckgoogle2554 3 роки тому
Not just this story. La Fronde could have deprived France of one of its best kings as well, for example.
@kamilszadkowski8864
@kamilszadkowski8864 3 роки тому
+ Štěpán Pytlík Only seemingly. If you actually delve deep into this situation it will become apparent that often the actions of the nobility were in some manner justified. Sometimes they were outright idiotic true, but many of them often were caused by a lack of trust in the monarch. Unfortunately, members of the Vasa dynasty could only blame themselves for destroying the king's authority.
@sillypuppy5940
@sillypuppy5940 3 роки тому
Richard Neville might as well have called himself king.
@justaworthlessman5945
@justaworthlessman5945 3 роки тому
Lesson of this story is: the easiest way to defeat Poland is to give them power in their country
@notinscale2839
@notinscale2839 3 роки тому
In other monarchies, the King is often being scrambled by others, wishing to get the role one day. John Casimir walked away from the King. Twice.
@overtsaturn
@overtsaturn 3 роки тому
Says a lot about what kind of country Commonwealth was. Even the king was like: Fuck it, i'm out.
@dyingember8661
@dyingember8661 3 роки тому
And keep in mind that Sweden king didn't bother to take the throne when the nobles of Commonwealth hand it to him
@mihjq
@mihjq 3 роки тому
@@dyingember8661 When?
@comdo831
@comdo831 3 роки тому
Twice? He left only once, to enjoy the retirement. Wouldn't you feel at least a little fatigued if you had experienced so much excitement in your life?
@TheValkosuklaa
@TheValkosuklaa 3 роки тому
Wouldn't you be bothered if you managed to save the whole shitshow for it to only go again to complete shitshow
@koseku3
@koseku3 3 роки тому
Fun fact: There is a polish village in Istanbul which is inhabited by children of polish refugees who came from Poland to ottoman empire at 1830. İt is called "Polonezköy"
@cengizsogutlu
@cengizsogutlu 3 роки тому
There was even a Polish regiment of volunteers who fight for ottomans in wars of 19th century
@mrherbal
@mrherbal 3 роки тому
@@cengizsogutlu isnt there a town named after a german king, that just settled in turkey? i guess you have a ton of those citys
@cengizsogutlu
@cengizsogutlu 3 роки тому
@@mrherbal yes but this one is unike not only named it has Polish inhabitants. You can search on UKposts adampol or polish village in istanbul its interesting video's
@justaworthlessman5945
@justaworthlessman5945 3 роки тому
It was because Ottoman Empire never recognized partition of PLC but he was talking about wars with Ottomans from 17th century not about refugees from November uprising
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
@subscribe to my empty channel or Why would it be that bad?
@konstantinriumin2657
@konstantinriumin2657 3 роки тому
Cossacks be like: ah, such a nice day! Nice day to revolt, of course!
@neverluckym8728
@neverluckym8728 3 роки тому
Stolen from the French.
@WorshipinIdols
@WorshipinIdols 3 роки тому
LOL! The show did make it look like that but 2 points. • the show is not about the Zhaparozni host. • let’s remember, the Cossacks (These specific Cossacks) were petty themselves, and were by now means looking at the big picture. The Ukrainian people today are well aware that their own pettiness and Russian intrigue damned them to 350 years of slave like servitude.
@lachlanknell743
@lachlanknell743 3 роки тому
Sounds like eu4 rebels!
@crqf2010ruler
@crqf2010ruler 3 роки тому
Prætorian Guards of Rome: Welcome to the club :)
@APXuBAHgAJI
@APXuBAHgAJI 3 роки тому
@@WorshipinIdols OMG 350\25 = 14 generations of slaves. Could this affect genetics and culture?
@NimbleBard48
@NimbleBard48 3 роки тому
3:47 You know the nobility went too far if they demanded free Wi-Fi and Netflix :D
@icook1723
@icook1723 3 роки тому
But you have to keep the free wifi
@Frozenmenss1
@Frozenmenss1 3 роки тому
But you Elect Lord Vaider to be the King. That counts for something right? Spoiler Alert:he is an Ottoman Spy !!
@gametmane1093
@gametmane1093 3 роки тому
Free Netflix is just too much lol l
@szczeur2077
@szczeur2077 3 роки тому
Maybe polish-russian war 1919-1921 animated ?
@PolishHussar04
@PolishHussar04 3 роки тому
Happy Josef Piłsudski noises
@stephenwraysford6788
@stephenwraysford6788 3 роки тому
Well, at that time in the history of the RSFSR, it was very battered by the World War | and the Civil War.
@giorgijioshvili9713
@giorgijioshvili9713 3 роки тому
@@stephenwraysford6788 screw USSR
@stephenwraysford6788
@stephenwraysford6788 3 роки тому
@@giorgijioshvili9713 The USSR appeared in 1922
@giorgijioshvili9713
@giorgijioshvili9713 3 роки тому
@@stephenwraysford6788 so
@Parakas15
@Parakas15 3 роки тому
This is all horribly depressing. Imagine what could have happened if John Casimir had won the battle of Matwy and been able to implement his reforms. Maybe the Commonwealth wouldn't be a depressing footnote of history and a lesson in why disfunctional political systems are not a good idea.
@Jaromir25
@Jaromir25 3 роки тому
Poland's entire history is full of lost chances and depressing moments.
@chattw6885
@chattw6885 3 роки тому
The Commonwealth was gonna fail either way, the country had way to many cultural frictions to function and large diversity of ethnicitis that got overshadowed by polish policy makers.
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
@@chattw6885 Then again, we have United Kingdom surviving until this day, and I would say that the Scots ressemble the Lithuanians the most. Hell, Scottish dynasty took power in England, just like Lithuanian did in Poland. By the Partition's time, most of Lithuanian nobles were Polish speaking, with the urban class in the process of Polonization. Had Commonwealth existed today, Lithuanians, by now mostly Polish speaking, would be as bitter towards the Poles as Scots are towards the English. Maybe it was too late by this point to reform the country, but given the right circumstances, who knows?
@grinchforest948
@grinchforest948 3 роки тому
Ha, imagine what could have happened if Władysław of Varna didn't listen to the Pope's messenger and broke Peace of Szeged.
@konstantinplotnikov966
@konstantinplotnikov966 3 роки тому
And now he would be known as John the Terrible
@michelangeloceccardi3871
@michelangeloceccardi3871 3 роки тому
"the ladder...the larer...the lat- the last thing he...whatever" Take my like good man!
@Galland780
@Galland780 3 роки тому
Ah yes, the famous polish noble, "Darth Vader"
@kamilszadkowski8864
@kamilszadkowski8864 3 роки тому
Darth Vaderowski*
@KangarooCheese55
@KangarooCheese55 3 роки тому
Kamil Szadkowski yes
@aleksandersokal5279
@aleksandersokal5279 3 роки тому
@@kamilszadkowski8864 *Pan Vaderowski, Herbu Darth z krzyżykiem
@user-xq5og9lt8p
@user-xq5og9lt8p 3 роки тому
@@aleksandersokal5279 Innokentiy Niebochodzieski 😂😂😂
@wielblad1344
@wielblad1344 3 роки тому
to nie polska szlachta a litewska i ruska przyczyniła się do upadku Rzeczypospolitej przypomnę wielonarodowej....
@churchilstakes1233
@churchilstakes1233 3 роки тому
I learnt more about The Deluge from a video in English, presented by an Estonian guy with a whacky accent than I did through 10 years of public education in Poland
@lmaozedong2259
@lmaozedong2259 3 роки тому
Hahaha :( too real
@germanfan6481
@germanfan6481 3 роки тому
Fortnite bad minecraft good School a fad for the trash
@Voltar78
@Voltar78 3 роки тому
Exactly!
@kamilszadkowski8864
@kamilszadkowski8864 3 роки тому
You were a terrible student then lol
@mihjq
@mihjq 3 роки тому
@@kamilszadkowski8864 Łożesz. Ty poważnie w szkole więcej się na ten temat nauczyłeś? To ciekawa szkoła była... albo konfabulujesz.
@maciejkamil
@maciejkamil 3 роки тому
I'm glad that someone decided to talk about this event, which is nearly forgotten in the West.
@PolishBehemoth
@PolishBehemoth 3 роки тому
@@PersimmonHurmo 100% False.
@DELTA38g
@DELTA38g 3 роки тому
@@PersimmonHurmo Sounds like you have quite a few history books to catch up on...
@alex_zetsu
@alex_zetsu 3 роки тому
Well, John Casimir Vasa conducted a harassing campaign to buy time, which is relatively "boring" compared to pitched battles. And normally I agree, Eastory managed to fascinate me on the Deluge, but not John's (correct) tactics to regaining the country even though I realize he was making the best out of the cards he was dealt. Most conflicts that don't involve pitched battles are largely forgotten. The American Revolution might be well remembered in America. In Western Europe, the middle and later phase of it is largely remembered as "Saratoga, Gibraltar, Fort Bute, Fort Charlotte, Yorktown, oh and America won." Because what happened after Saratoga was largely boring aside from a few large scale engagements. If John Casimir faced off the Cossacks in a large pitched battle after Sweden encouraged them to help them, the Deluge might well be remembered out of the Commonwealth. Outside Poland we might remember it as the day its Army died and it poofed out of existance. Or we might remember it as a glorious Commonwealth victory that gave John Casimir a reprise but he realized he needed to win again, again, and again while one loss spells complete defeat so then he went to a harassment campaign like he did in real life, so history would paly out similarly but with a bit less looting since the Commonwealth would get a breather.
@davrosdarlek7058
@davrosdarlek7058 3 роки тому
@@PersimmonHurmo the beginning of the creation of Germany, PLC not being able to supress Russian growth and future dominance and the wars that led to the decline of Sweden (Great Northern war was incoming). Poland not being independent again till 1990 is exactly what makes it relevant.
@brunolima7402
@brunolima7402 2 роки тому
It is forgotten cuz we had our own problems/conflicts at that time.. as its expected, our history books teach what is most important to us.
@arti8719
@arti8719 3 роки тому
Fun fact: first Polish newspaper "Merkuriusz Polski Ordynaryjny" was created in 1661 and it's role was to increase the nobility's support for king's reforms.
@bdubbs
@bdubbs 3 роки тому
Hell yeah, good way to start the day.
@evvec1490
@evvec1490 3 роки тому
Hell Yeah good way to end the day
@aurelienb5598
@aurelienb5598 3 роки тому
It's 3pm...
@TerrierMartello
@TerrierMartello 3 роки тому
It's 4PM here
@ShadowAkatora
@ShadowAkatora 3 роки тому
5:19 - Now where have I heard this story before..
@Zulikas69
@Zulikas69 3 роки тому
like few times after this story happen?
@666bambucia
@666bambucia 3 роки тому
It worked in 1610 tho
@lamhkak47
@lamhkak47 3 роки тому
Love the use of EU4 mana icons in 4:14
@WillStrong7
@WillStrong7 3 роки тому
EU4 gang
@petemagnuson7357
@petemagnuson7357 3 роки тому
Best thing I've seen all week.
@halnywiatr
@halnywiatr 3 роки тому
Funny because it's true.
@Mainstrange
@Mainstrange 3 роки тому
I like how he added a bunch of stuff in the end to make it last long enough to the 10 minute mark. But all an all, This is one of the Highest quality history channels i have ever seen. Among the channels like Extracredits, and Oversimplified. It's Easy to understand, fun, Exciting, And It has their own style in making these kind of videos. This is Absolutely amazing. And I hope you continue making stuff like this.
@majkel1684
@majkel1684 3 роки тому
I recommend you check out Epic History TV and their Napoleon series, its amazing ;)
@hafeezuddin1367
@hafeezuddin1367 3 роки тому
@@majkel1684 yeah dude their channel is the best, their vids should be on tv imo
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
I don't know. While many of those channels have fun content, they have many innacuracies (including this one). Media influences popular knowledge considerably, and many of false myths originated from some of those videos. So while it's great way to get a rough idea about the topic, I would advise to research it further on your own.
@razetheraven7240
@razetheraven7240 3 роки тому
Also, if you're interested in ancient history like Rome, Greece, philosophy, etc., Historia Civilis is also worth checking out.
@Saeronor
@Saeronor 3 роки тому
@etty77 Oh, come on. Here you are, watching a video about Deluge... ...and suddenly you are a royalist!
@jakubj.8196
@jakubj.8196 3 роки тому
Thank you from Poland for share our beautiful history. Will you continue the series about Poland after partitions? You could make a video about January and November uprisings.
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
Nothing beautiful about the Deluge, though. :P
@davrosdarlek7058
@davrosdarlek7058 3 роки тому
@@Vitalis94 wdym? Sweden opened it's first beautiful libraries and museums right after the deluge! I'm not sure where they got all that art from though🤔
@cengizsogutlu
@cengizsogutlu 3 роки тому
The Ottoman Empire, was the only major country in the world which did not recognize the Partitions of Poland. In the 19th century many Polish veterans of the November Uprising, January Uprising and Crimean War arrived in Turkey.
@cengizsogutlu
@cengizsogutlu 3 роки тому
@Krzysztof Bartczak we are not enemy we love poland ♥
@anderskorsback4104
@anderskorsback4104 2 роки тому
While not such a major power, Persia refused to recognize the partition too. Going back to old amity from the time when Poland and Persia would be frequent allies against the Ottoman Empire.
@Sevastous
@Sevastous Рік тому
But just like the weak status of the commonwealth. Ottomans were too weak and helpless to do anything to Major Powers of Europe and Russia. Well they didnt recognize the partition because Russians and Ottomans hate each other.And ottoman powers were only good enough for small politicial opponents.
@StekTM1
@StekTM1 3 місяці тому
@@anderskorsback4104 Ottomans and Persians didn't recognize it because they were both enemies of Russia
@aaronmoots2797
@aaronmoots2797 3 роки тому
I commented on your last video to tell you that I loved your pacing of information, but I’d like to reiterate that I LOVE your videos. Your pacing is great, your visuals are AMAZING, and I watch all of your videos religiously to teach me history. Thanks for all your work!
@Skibidibi
@Skibidibi 3 роки тому
All the Deluge mini series is great. Very well put together content and nicely presented. I am in awe. Polish enthusiast of history :)
@tobago3679
@tobago3679 3 роки тому
Thank you for this video and for covering this topic. Keep up the good work and have a great day!
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
There was this great quote from the Deluge Movie: "If we, the Radziwills [a major noble dynasty] had lived in a civilized country, where the son inherits after his father dies, we would've stood with the king, content with the highest of offices. But here, in a land where the nobles elect their king? Who can assure us, that some day, out of nowhere, they might decide to put Mr. John Johnsson from Nowheresville on the throne?"
@comdo831
@comdo831 3 роки тому
Nothing like some dumb kid taking over the top position in the country from his dad. I believe today that's called nepotism.
@jaacoblosov7327
@jaacoblosov7327 3 роки тому
@@comdo831 still better idea to put dumb kid on throne and give real rule to advisors than let your enemies rule your country like it was with Commonwealth in XVIII century. Polish early democratic system lost cruelly with three despotic, autocratic countries whitch had "dumb, nepotic" rule system. So... yeah.
@comdo831
@comdo831 3 роки тому
@@jaacoblosov7327 The French may disagree with you on this one. The Polish May constitution of 1791, with contributions from the king of Poland, was no work of fools. Compared to this achievement, the monarchs of the neighbouring countries were nothing but a bunch of dumb kids that had nothing to offer to anybody.
@666bambucia
@666bambucia 3 роки тому
@@comdo831 The Constitution of 1791 had returned hereditary Monarchy so...
@comdo831
@comdo831 3 роки тому
@@666bambucia The constitution introduced many things. It introduced separation of powers into legislative, executive, and the judicial. At that time this was ultra modern. The king was to be the executive. True, they decided on hereditary monarchy, but at the same time the legislative national assembly acquired the power to hold a vote of no confidence in the executive, effectively forcing the king to resign his position if the vote is passed. Constitutions were a novelty in 1791. People behind the Polish one were expecting further evolution in the future that would add some additional polish to it with changes and amendments.
@chriscmocall
@chriscmocall 3 роки тому
I have a bad habit of watching the Eastory episodes of Topics I'm acquainted with and stumbled across the Deluge series by chance. I was pleasantly surprised and this part of Polish History is indeed fascinating! Great documentary Eastory!
@Martin-tp9lf
@Martin-tp9lf 3 роки тому
Fun fact: in Sweden we still use the expression "Polsk Riksdag" (Polish Parliament) when talking about a chaotic meeting where nothing is achieved. The expression arose during this period.
@triskop1047
@triskop1047 3 роки тому
Yo I just want to be honest real quick, you're probably my favorite history channel on this terribly broken site. I just wanted to articulate that I love how you can add humor into your videos without neglecting education (and the Eu4/Civ 6 references don't hurt). Huge thanks to you all the way from Mexico my friend!!!
@urtwietii
@urtwietii 3 роки тому
Wow this was incredible!!!! Thank you so much!!!
@tcrain9
@tcrain9 3 роки тому
The visual gags were hilarious. Love some comedy sprinkled in with the history
@sami_ozsoy
@sami_ozsoy 3 роки тому
Thank you for this great video series!
@sploofd6902
@sploofd6902 3 роки тому
Love these videos. Keep up the great work
@waidmannd
@waidmannd 3 роки тому
Thanks for the information. Awesome skills with clever details
@ibrahimaydemir6656
@ibrahimaydemir6656 3 роки тому
Commonwealth: saves austria's ass from the ottomans Austria: lemme partition you as a thank
@Muhammed552
@Muhammed552 3 роки тому
*insert meme* Ottomans: you got what you fucking deserve
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
It's a century later. The geopolitical situation changed completely. Hell, American nukes were aimed at Poland just 40 years ago, today, American troops are stationed there.
@dardo1201
@dardo1201 3 роки тому
Unfortunately, the political climate during those ages meant that friendly history between nations didn't mean much down the line.
@jaacoblosov7327
@jaacoblosov7327 3 роки тому
Coz Poles don't want to understand that Countries and Nations got only intrests, and no sentiments. Morality, good and right are worthless. But not for Poles. They still belive that if you die to protect the weaker, world will be stunned with gratitude and carry you in his arms. And the truth is that he'll wait for you to bleed out after the fight and finish you off. Thats how it worked, works and will always work.
@jankubiak324
@jankubiak324 3 роки тому
@@jaacoblosov7327 Sad but true.
@alepin8994
@alepin8994 3 роки тому
haha "eastern campaign under 6 months" actually laughed
@saslykasLT
@saslykasLT 3 роки тому
More like "Where I have seen this idea before?"
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
In 17 century Poland had some 100-200 km of Russian land between their border and Moscow. A carefuly design campaign with great emphasis on sieges and supplies could make it work, really.
@sillypuppy5940
@sillypuppy5940 3 роки тому
It'll be over by Christmas - um, which Christmas?
@TheManofthecross
@TheManofthecross 3 роки тому
if only he went with the siege out there forts approach and force the moscovites to attack him then to ignore the lot out right would had worked out better.
@davrosdarlek7058
@davrosdarlek7058 3 роки тому
@@Vitalis94 that's the problem, on the open field we were dominant but we weren't suited for long sieges. A make-over that benefited siege warfare could cost us open field battles in the future against Ottomans and Tatars.
@michaelsanchez7848
@michaelsanchez7848 3 роки тому
your content is incredible! keep it up :-)
@zencefil2848
@zencefil2848 3 роки тому
I was so depressed today, thank you giving me first smile on my face today :)
@Sezwer
@Sezwer 3 роки тому
We truly should have elected Lord Vader for King. Imagine siege of Vienna broken by winged hussars charging to the Imperial March.
@user-xq5og9lt8p
@user-xq5og9lt8p 3 роки тому
"I find your lack of Catholic faith...disturbing"
@theunknownpersonism
@theunknownpersonism 3 роки тому
Bad idea, the Ottomans had lots of sand
@jaacoblosov7327
@jaacoblosov7327 3 роки тому
Vader would not lost soldiers for Habsburgs, coz of silly faith. He would ally with Osmans and take half of Ostereich for himself lol
@TheLocalLt
@TheLocalLt 3 роки тому
Ja'acob Losov Vader was a bitch for the emperor in Star Wars so why not this timeline?
@izukawa8575
@izukawa8575 3 роки тому
H-wing fighters! Pew pew pew!
@julkkis666
@julkkis666 3 роки тому
super good quality, i loved this footnote in a footnote :^) more please :)
@maxh3926
@maxh3926 2 роки тому
Very informative videos! Learned a lot thank you
@roryjharan
@roryjharan 3 роки тому
Amazing Documentary! Entertaining and very Informative..Bravo!
@damianjez4336
@damianjez4336 2 роки тому
Your simplistic imagery is just amazing. Keep it up. "border post transport" LOL
@FaramirsRangers
@FaramirsRangers 3 роки тому
great video as always!
@michaelf7093
@michaelf7093 3 роки тому
Excellent narration. Your accent lends a lot of authenticity.
@Dalvatorn1
@Dalvatorn1 3 роки тому
Great material. We are waiting for more.
@brunolima7402
@brunolima7402 2 роки тому
Your mix of memes/educational history is what teachers should use to grab kids attention at schools . Found your channel and the Deluge was the first series i watched and i'm gonna watch a lot more. Thanks for the videos.
@ribbonrides886
@ribbonrides886 3 роки тому
it's like you're getting funnier by every video :D nice work!
@Aeyekay0
@Aeyekay0 3 роки тому
Lol “a footnote of a footnote” Well done video, always good to learn about Polish history
@newsheed11
@newsheed11 3 роки тому
I love your work so much :)
@Gundus1000
@Gundus1000 3 роки тому
Hey, you are cool. Very talented. This could be a major television series.
@BigMackWitSauce
@BigMackWitSauce 3 роки тому
King Casimir: It's ok commonwealth, I have a plan! Casimir has left the game
@ComradeHellas
@ComradeHellas 3 роки тому
I was waiting for that
@Roevrakarn
@Roevrakarn 3 роки тому
Great videos!!
@chrisnorman1183
@chrisnorman1183 3 роки тому
@stasiowski4919
@stasiowski4919 3 роки тому
I'm from Poland and I learnt far more than from school. Thanks :)
@HolyShitNew
@HolyShitNew 3 роки тому
thank you i love your videostyle
@jaimejaime2930
@jaimejaime2930 3 роки тому
Great video 👍
@germanfan6481
@germanfan6481 3 роки тому
Bruh, this is cool, patreon was worth it.
@Eastory
@Eastory 3 роки тому
Thanks! Hope it won't disappoint in the future!
@kamilszadkowski8864
@kamilszadkowski8864 3 роки тому
The way you portrayed the actions of John Casimir and the nobility is a bit off. It has to be mentioned that while election vivente rege was a good idea the way it was pushed by John Casimir or more notably by Queen Marie Louise (very unpopular figure) basically shattered any chances of successful reform. Especially by pushing Conde as the candidate by Marie in a very shady manner.
@Artur_M.
@Artur_M. 3 роки тому
Yep, I couldn't say it better myself. It's understandable though that there's going to be some oversimplifications in a video like this. It's really a shame that none of the Vasas on the Polish throne was a particularly good politician (arguably none of the elected kings, besides Bathory).
@hazzmati
@hazzmati 3 роки тому
who cares
@PolishBehemoth
@PolishBehemoth 3 роки тому
So.... are either of you suggesting that the nobles were right? They obviously were not, as they were easily bribed and went against the goals and existence of their own state they represented. John Cassimir was proven right, not the other way around.
@TheKrzy65siek
@TheKrzy65siek 3 роки тому
@@PolishBehemoth You are right, John Casimir was right, but he played his role wrong. By tactical means he lost the opportunity to convince some more of the nobles, and lost all.
@weles2692
@weles2692 3 роки тому
@@PolishBehemoth But in this time John Casimir was that one, who was bribing nobles. The strike against him was launched by these who didn't care about money or French wives, but about tradition and Polish interests.
@chickentrappedsoul2984
@chickentrappedsoul2984 2 роки тому
Damn, thanks for teaching me this.
@sami_ozsoy
@sami_ozsoy 3 роки тому
There is an interesting story told about the diplomatic meetings with European powers in the capital of the 19th century Ottoman Empire. As a routine, in every meeting, there would be an ottoman official who asks if all the invited foreign envoys were there, and the said envoy would reply affirmatively, like, "Is the French ambassador here?" "Yes, he is". After all the countries were asked, the Turkish official asked if the envoy of Poland was there (Lehistan in Turkish). Nobody would answer until another Turkish official replied "He is on his way to the meeting". Then the meeting would begin, without the Polish envoy, who will never arrive as the country doesn't exist anymore. Ottomans are said to have never accepted the partition of Poland.
@rurkovmj
@rurkovmj 2 роки тому
oh man these videos are great the funny bits like lord vader are epic
@iandimka4049
@iandimka4049 3 роки тому
LOVE the Monarch Power (TM) reference!
@samuelhammond-laing3625
@samuelhammond-laing3625 3 роки тому
Love it!
@barwyslubuff4338
@barwyslubuff4338 3 роки тому
Great Job.
@toddbonin6926
@toddbonin6926 2 роки тому
This is great!!!
@andreascovano7742
@andreascovano7742 3 роки тому
This is actually sad.
@jakubj.8196
@jakubj.8196 3 роки тому
And after that we had 2 uprisings that failed, then when ww1 began we had a chance of liberation, our neighbors for the first time stated against each other, finally in 1918 we get our independence, after 123 years but we have to fight, soviet army wants to go to Germany that is weak at the time and then spread the communism around the Europe, Poland stops it in Warsow and takes some of their lands back. Finally we can have a good life in calm Poland. Our culture, science and interactions with other countries explode, we had so many achievements at the time. But 20 years was too little to stop the German army once again in 1939, when Britain and France declare war on Germany, we're so happy, the border with France has no soldier on it, everything fascists have was thrown to Poland, but after a moment of joy, we're told about our place once again, even if France and Britain declared war on Germany, they do nothing and seeing this, Soviet Union attacks. For another 6 long years we vanish from the maps, but we have never surrendered! Many Poles escaped, Polish 303 squadron has the more number of destroyed German's airship in battle of Britain, we fight in Italy and counqer Monte Casino, our friends that heve been sent to Gulag, after German attack on the Soviet Union are send to front once again, and reaches Berlin with Soviet army, many of our ships escape and continue the fight till the end of the war. So what do we get for all that effort? Nothing, even less, we have been sold to Soviet Union. All of our efforts are censored in Britain in US, like that we solved enigma code before Alan Turing, this fact was banned in Britain till 2000's. Poles are the only nation not invited on a massive parade in Britain after war. And for next 45 years we have to fight with communism in our own country. And for what? For being called fascists because of independence march? I'm sorry, which country wouldn't be happy to celebrate it's independence day after 123 years of partitions, 6 years of fighting for being on the map again and 45 years fighting with communism in their own country? Edit: btw Ottoman Empire never accepted partitions of Poland. Whenever World leaders met to negotiate something and someone asked "could we start already?", the ottoman's representative said, "No, we still wait for the representative of the Lechistan (Poland in Turhish)".
@toitoitoy
@toitoitoy 3 роки тому
Not so much, nobels thinking only about them selfs are a major threat for the country independence.
@Dycewyfe
@Dycewyfe 3 роки тому
Jakub J. You guys started the war with Germany do not play innocent. Hitler offered many alternatives to war, such as the Railway that would connect Danzig and Königsberg with mainland Germany, or simply to stop the prosecution and deportation of Germans inside of Danzig, and you refused. What do you expect to happen and you continue to humiliate the German people for 20 years?
@gr_egg
@gr_egg 3 роки тому
@@Dycewyfe he also ofered a similar deal to the czechs, and we all know what happened when they accepted "humiliate the german people" poland didnt have a chance to truly win with germany in 1918-20s because of the allies, the people were frustrated because the west was sticking its nose into foreign business (as always). it was literally a case of the Americans trying to make borders for europe, idiotic idea. there were ISOLATED incidents of german persecution but it was always on a civil level, there was no systematic murder, unlike when the germans occupied poland.
@theredees8439
@theredees8439 3 роки тому
@@Dycewyfe even if Poland made all of those consessions to the Germans, would that really stop the Germany from invading? Hitler wanted lebensraum, not being friends with the poles, and making the concessions would only delay their inevitable conquest for 1 year max, until the Germans where done with France, to actually have the Germans not invade Poland you would have to change who the Nazis where and what they stood for.
@dr.strangelove6118
@dr.strangelove6118 3 роки тому
I’ve been playing a lot of eu4 cause of the steam sale. So any videos in this period peak my interest.
@MrMrDropsy
@MrMrDropsy 3 роки тому
The final thoughts are sad but entirely on point.
@stevenwiezbicki8894
@stevenwiezbicki8894 3 роки тому
Fantastic series. Would be great of you did a video series on the migrations of ancient Israel into Europe, following the Assyrian and Babylonian Captivities.
@baaaanan180
@baaaanan180 2 роки тому
Great history lesson
@Avemea
@Avemea 3 роки тому
Love the reference to EU4 @ 4:15
@user-xq5og9lt8p
@user-xq5og9lt8p 3 роки тому
Yeah, in Russia we are only told something like "bla-bla-bla, we acquired Ukraine"
@radziwill7193
@radziwill7193 3 роки тому
At that time, Ukraine was a frontier with Tatars. This is not the case with the modern country.
@provader8018
@provader8018 3 роки тому
Может нужно внимательнее на моменте "бла-бла-бла" слушать?
@provader8018
@provader8018 3 роки тому
И вообще, в школе много о чём не говорят. Это не значит что это замалчивается.
@germanfan6481
@germanfan6481 3 роки тому
Bruh
@WorshipinIdols
@WorshipinIdols 3 роки тому
Слала богу! Нашли честного умного Русского человека! Меня тоже.
@1987MartinT
@1987MartinT 3 роки тому
Me to John Casimir: Johnny, Johnny, Johnny... When you're at war you have to focus on the enemy. You can push through your reforms and fight a potential civil war when the war you are already fighting is over. Otherwise the potential civil war with nobles opposed to your reforms will lead to you fighting on 2 fronts.
@moonlanding5117
@moonlanding5117 Рік тому
What a masterpiece
@1987MartinT
@1987MartinT 3 роки тому
Yeah, this is probably why most countries choose their next leader while the current leader is still in power. So they never end up in a situation where they have NO leader.
@HiragaSaito1998
@HiragaSaito1998 3 роки тому
Why so many people that animate the partitions of Poland gives Danzing to Prussia after the first partition? Prussia gained Danzing in year 1793 not 1772.
@kamilszadkowski8864
@kamilszadkowski8864 3 роки тому
@Fabian Kirchgessner No, it wasn't
@aleksandersokal5279
@aleksandersokal5279 3 роки тому
​@Fabian Kirchgessner Well you do not think if that is the case, it was a Polish city until 1793.
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
@@aleksandersokal5279 The populace wasn't Polish, though. :P
@kamilszadkowski8864
@kamilszadkowski8864 3 роки тому
@@Vitalis94 By what definition? At the time language, you spoke was not tied to your nationality. And Gdańsk at that time was loyal to the Crown.
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
@@kamilszadkowski8864 Of course, even the concept of nationality was different, if it had existed at all. But Danzigers were Low German speakers for centuries of Polish rule, that's all I said.
@user-xq5og9lt8p
@user-xq5og9lt8p 3 роки тому
Last time I was this early, polish troops had occupied Kremlin
@aleksandersokal5279
@aleksandersokal5279 3 роки тому
@@belsilverister No they were mostly Polish nobles, peasants, some Lithuanians, Ruthenians and German mercenaries. What are you even talking about?
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
@@belsilverister I think that applying modern nationalistic terms on 16th century people is a wrong idea.
@Pandzikizlasu80
@Pandzikizlasu80 3 роки тому
@@belsilverister Yes there ware ancestors of modern day Belarusians, not only Poles, but also Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Latvians, Germans (from Prussia) and few others nationalities of Commonwealth and subject territories.
@pouritenne8996
@pouritenne8996 3 роки тому
@@belsilverister да хоть татары, паш, воевали-то за польшу и по приказу польского короля
@APXuBAHgAJI
@APXuBAHgAJI 3 роки тому
@@pouritenne8996 татары воевали за награду, польский король Стефан Баторий сам был вассалом султана для примера.
@Kneorlan
@Kneorlan 3 роки тому
Did you release this video today, knowing that on one of polish television channels was airing The Deluge movie? :D Perfect timing, thank you for making these!
@kaihinton6623
@kaihinton6623 3 роки тому
I suggest covering the Asian WW2 theatre as that region was pretty interesting and included lots of fronts like china, Burma, and the pacific.
@marcmonge5193
@marcmonge5193 3 роки тому
It would b cool the spanish civl war front 1936-1939 plsssss
@mr.axolotl7727
@mr.axolotl7727 3 роки тому
I recommend the book "The Spanish Civil War" by Hugh Thomas. It goes into how it got to that point and goes into amazing detail about the planned coup and the war itself. Also it has nice photos and illustrations of the front lines
@CarlosGarcia-nl8jj
@CarlosGarcia-nl8jj 3 роки тому
The Spanish Civil war is boring as fuck both sides were weak but fascist a stronger and nothing else.
@wallebi1910
@wallebi1910 3 роки тому
Mr. Axolotl will take a look into that
@marcmonge5193
@marcmonge5193 3 роки тому
@@CarlosGarcia-nl8jj still being history and one of the most inoortant moments in the history of my country
@user-cd4bx6uq1y
@user-cd4bx6uq1y Рік тому
The Deluge became the biggest meme after this series so good job
@Paris-xv9sj
@Paris-xv9sj 3 роки тому
Yes Finally!!!
@thebirdmapper357
@thebirdmapper357 3 роки тому
12 dislikes by the bribed nobles
@TheManofthecross
@TheManofthecross 3 роки тому
it is up to as of this post 36 dislikes.
@kayralarladans9702
@kayralarladans9702 3 роки тому
Thanks
@cholt8040
@cholt8040 3 роки тому
My grandfather was a radio operator in the 23rd infantry regiment of the American army during the Korean War. I've always wanted to know more about where he was deployed to, do you ever intend to do more animated maps of cold war conflicts?
@CynickeZpravy
@CynickeZpravy 3 роки тому
Video completely skipped Jan III Sobieski
@rufusthedufus5458
@rufusthedufus5458 3 роки тому
12,000 views within 2 hours, congrats!
@jacquesmesrine3244
@jacquesmesrine3244 3 роки тому
Lol bringing up WW2 comeback by Soviets in background. Job well done! Didnt know much about the wars the Commonwealth had besides the ones against Mother Russia
@paulliu8502
@paulliu8502 3 роки тому
haha i like how Mr 唐健 had the biggest font size in the video
@peaou
@peaou 3 роки тому
thank you for these series, i was wondering how non-Lithuanians and non-Polish see those countries at the deluge times
@somekindofmagician7879
@somekindofmagician7879 3 роки тому
History of cossack uprisings is one of the most ironic stories for me: they fought to gain autonomy, they got their autonomy and then they fought to gain even greater autonomy and thanks to that they were subjugated to Russia...
@Askhat08
@Askhat08 3 роки тому
Look at what they do nowadays. They're like revolting and overthrowing every government they have.
@eniskaantasoren
@eniskaantasoren 3 роки тому
my cafee: eastory: drink it while enjoyin me
@yxysamurai
@yxysamurai 3 роки тому
Great Video! May I ask what software you use to create those maps? Thank you very much.
@SNOUPS4
@SNOUPS4 3 роки тому
3:28 & 5:01 & 6:11 I laughed IRL =D Snorted many times too! This was a very good video; your style is great, and always super interesting! Nice touch too, with the "POW numbers" little animation, reminding of the WW2 videos :)
@kubabrot5731
@kubabrot5731 3 роки тому
Greatings from Poland
@krocodockle2544
@krocodockle2544 3 роки тому
YESSSSSS!!! I'm 8 hours late to this!!!
@sevball9735
@sevball9735 3 роки тому
Nice.
@limitess9539
@limitess9539 Рік тому
Thanks Mount and Blade WFAS for interesting me in the deluge, and then finding this art trilogy
@teresanunes3019
@teresanunes3019 4 роки тому
Looks like i got Lucky looking at the playlist
@evvec1490
@evvec1490 3 роки тому
can someone flag comment above me? this is just madness
@evvec1490
@evvec1490 3 роки тому
can someone flag this @Dylan Farina , it just madness
@eliaswild4
@eliaswild4 3 роки тому
Nice
@grindelz
@grindelz 3 роки тому
Yesss finally
@K-H-28
@K-H-28 3 роки тому
One of the few things from my Russian history course- Catherine the Great used her power and (most likely empty) promises to leave the Commonwealth's king confused while partitioning Poland
@Vitalis94
@Vitalis94 3 роки тому
He was her lover, too.
@Pandzikizlasu80
@Pandzikizlasu80 3 роки тому
Most importantly she used her ... women attributes on him.
@aleks1219
@aleks1219 3 роки тому
Well, she didn't wanted to share poland in the first place. Catherine wanted to rule Poland by her russian ambassador. After burning russian stocks with grain for rus->turkish campaign on polish soil by polish nobles, she approved prussian plan for partitioning. And they burnt those stocks because...prussians convinced them to. They promised they military help in pol - rus war. It was more complicated then it looks like. Prussians wanted Gdańsk (Danzig) in the first partition but Catherine didn't gave it to them to not make them to strong. That's what bothers me in this video :P
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