The Rise of the Spanish Empire from the Conquest of Granada to the Tercio 1480-1530

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SandRhoman History

SandRhoman History

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On October 14, 1469, all of Europe looked to Spain. There, a wedding of enormous political significance took place, a wedding that was to influence not only the future of Europe, but that of the entire world. Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon exchanged their vows in Valladolid, which was the first step towards a united Spain. After asserting Isabella's claim to the Castilian throne in the War of the Castilian Succession and Ferdinand succeeding his father as King of Aragon in 1479, the two ruled their kingdoms as a dynastic union. ANM This was the beginning of Spain's rise to a world power. What was missing was an army to conquer the world which was the next item on Isabella’s and Ferdinand’s to do list.
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Bibliography:
Barton, S.; Portass, R., Beyond the Reconquista: new directions in the history of Medieval Iberia (711-1085): in honour of Simon Barton, Leiden 2020.
Freller, T., Granada, Königreich zwischen Orient und Okzident, Ostfildern 2009.
Thomas, Hugh, Rivers of Gold: The Rise of the Spanish Empire 1490-1522, New York 2004.
Mcalister, Lyle N., SocialStructure and Social Change in New Spain, in: The Hispanic American Historical Review, Aug., 1963, Vol. 43, No. 3 (Aug., 1963), pp. 349-370.
Perez, J., Ferdinand und Isabella, trans. by Antoinette Gittinger, München 1989, pp 211.
Pohl, John, Armies of Castille and Aragon 1370-1516, Oxford/New York 2015, pp 35.
Quatrefages, R., Etat et Armee en Espagne au debut des temps modernes, in: Mélanges de la Casa de Velázquez, vol. 17, 1981. pp. 85-103.
Quatrefages, R., La spécificité militaire espagnole, in : Pouvoirs et société dans l’Espagne moderne, pp 39-53.
Reading list:
Warfare:
Duffy, C., Siege Warfare: The Fortress in the Early Modern World 1494-1660, Vol. 1, 1979. amzn.to/32dvvwM
Devries, K., Douglas, R., Medieval Military Technology, 1992, amzn.to/3IazYoC.
Rogers, C.J., The military revolution debate. Readings on the military transformation of early modern Europe, 1995. amzn.to/3geVDMM
Rogers, C.J., Soldiers' Lives through History - The Middle Ages, 2006. amzn.to/3j2kQvG
Parker, C., The Cambridge History of Warfare, 2005. amzn.to/32ggn1L
Van Nimwegen, O., The Dutch Army and the Military Revolutions, 1588-1688, 2010. amzn.to/2E3Fc95
Fiction related to the Early modern period:
Alexandre Dumas,The Three Musketeers amzn.to/2CJVAuu
Alexandre Dumas, 20 Years After amzn.to/32g82Lv
Alexandre Dumas, The Vicomte de Bragelonne amzn.to/2EnIOCB
Markus Heitz, The Dark Lands amzn.to/3ntZgEu
Military Si-Fi recommendations:
Bernard Cornwell, Sharpe (Series of 22 books on the Napoleonic Wars), amzn.to/3RZyty0
Dan Abnett, The Founding: A Gaunt's Ghosts Omnibus (Gaunt’s Ghosts) amzn.to/3vdGxkZ
Dan Abnett, The Lost: A Gaunt's Ghosts Omnibus (Gaunt’s Ghosts) amzn.to/3osvFvA
Dan Abnett, The Saint A Gaunt's Ghosts Omnibus (Gaunt’s Ghosts) amzn.to/3orikUk
Glen Cook, Chronicles of the Black Company (Chronicles of the Black Company Series Book 1) amzn.to/3PVgyGV
Historiography:
Neville Morley, Writing Ancient History 1999. amzn.to/3NCyoNl
Albeit focused on ancient history, it's a brilliant book for anybody who is interested in what history actually is. Is it a story? How does it work in practise? Can writing history be objective? Is it "scientific"? What makes it a proper discipline at university?

КОМЕНТАРІ: 637
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Рік тому
If you want to support our two-man project, please like the video and comment down below in what ways we could improve our videos. Also, check out World Anvil here: www.worldanvil.com and use code SANDRHOMAN for 40% off. Lastly, check out our video on the French army that complements this one and gives a lot of needed context: ukposts.info/have/v-deo/hpR8dmyHnZ2UpHU.html
@stanisawzokiewski3308
@stanisawzokiewski3308 Рік тому
the swords and armors you shown under Isabella and Ferdinand are a bit too 16th century.
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei Рік тому
I would be your patron but that would be patronizing.
@brokenbridge6316
@brokenbridge6316 Рік тому
You made a nicely informative video. I enjoyed it.
@srinjoyroychoudhury7034
@srinjoyroychoudhury7034 Рік тому
Please do a series on the Ottoman, Polish-Lithuanian and Russian armies. I'm really interested on how Eastern Militaries Developed over the centuries
@ramsaysnow9196
@ramsaysnow9196 Рік тому
Can u make a video describing the english or french armys in time of reinnesanse?
@brycemiller5744
@brycemiller5744 Рік тому
Its crazy to think that the "Reconquista" is a period of 700 years and the USA is less than half that yet we are taught so little of this. Love the way this channel highlights the period of transition from medieval to early modern
@erniegutierrez2288
@erniegutierrez2288 Рік тому
Spanish history is often overlooked. Western historians dont seem to appreciate the impact of the Battle of Covadonga(before Tours), or the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, The Military Orders involved like the Templars, Calatrava & Knights of Santiago, Spain is also home to two of the oldest universities in Europe at Salamanca & Santiago de
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
Actually most of the Reconquista happened in little more than a century, between 1085 and 1212.
@fabiandimaspratama
@fabiandimaspratama Рік тому
@@erniegutierrez2288 We do know about the El Cid, liberation of Seville, and Battle of Lepanto though
@grtwhtbnr
@grtwhtbnr Рік тому
@@tatumergo3931 history started July 4, 1776.... everything before that was a mistake! - Ron Swanson Also every time I hear "I was born in ___ before moving to the USA." They are usually younger than 10 when they mover here. Calm down buddy, you've probably already lost your accent
@grtwhtbnr
@grtwhtbnr Рік тому
You learn about Pelagius or Pelayo of Asturias?
@nikkimakropoulos
@nikkimakropoulos Рік тому
There was a time when the British feared Spain and the Spanish Armada more than any other nation including their arch nemesis France, that alone should be enough for the respect that Spain deserves as a historical global superpower. And if im not mistaken "The Empire on which the sun never sets" was originally a Spanish Empire motto that was later stolen by the British. I've always had so much respect for Spain for their contribution to the founding of America among countless other things
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
Even in the Napoleonic Wars, the bulk of the imperial navy was the Spanish Armada. It was much larger than the British one but was by then much less efficient and thus they lost at Trafalgar and never recovered. What remained of it, quite outdated, was destroyed by the USA in the Spanish-American War, known as Cuba War or Cuba Disaster in Spain, in 1898. Today's Spanish Armada is around 2/3 the British Navy anyhow, a sizable and modern (but non-nuclear) force.
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Рік тому
The Spanish started the age of colonisation, destroyed Native cities, brought in hundreds of thousands of African slaves, implemented a racial caste system and genocided a whole continent of people. They (the European colonising countries of France, Spain, England, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Netherlands and Portugal) were all absolutely horrendous, but what makes Spain especially bad is that they started it. Portugal only started colonising properly after Spain started it, they were basically pirates in the Indian Ocean.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
@@jasonhaven7170 - The Spanish/Castilian Rosy Legend emphasizes that they conquered (and not destroyed) native cities, what a waste of colonial infrastructure! And that the law strictly forbade them from dealing in the slave trade in Africa, a role that was reserved for the Portuguese, although it was later form anyone else, mainly the British. That conquered nations were treated as subjects of the King or Queen (i.e. as close to "citizens" as monarchic ideology allowed, barring maybe granting them nobility status, which actually happened with some native nobility, mind you) and that Jesuit missions were communist utopias under the Pope (but the evil slaver Portuguese destroyed them, see the Holywood movie on the matter). They would also say that what you call a race/caste system is confusing the meaning of the word caste (casta in Iberorromance) which means ancestry or stock and was purely a scientific endeavor of studying Human diversity. That African slavery was adopted only to save Native Americans from it (and thus the Empire from losing valuable subjects), read about De Las Casas for more details, and that Columbus was rightly punished for his attrocities, as arguably were others. Holy crusader order ruled under the courts called audiencias and the governors called virreyes and capitanes generales. Two sides... you know.
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Рік тому
@@LuisAldamiz There's no two sides. Countries like Cuba and Colombia have large Black populations and most have some Black ancestry because of centuries of importing African slaves. Whether it's to "save the Natives" or whatever, it was still horrendous. And they didn't "scientifcally" study human diversity. Race is a social construct and race and racism as we know it was invented by the Spanish.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
@@jasonhaven7170 - I'm just saying that there are two visions: the black legend, which emphasizes the crimes, and the rosy legend, which emphasizes the humanitarianism, especially when comparing with the other four West European colonial powers: Portugal, Britain, France and the Netherlands, who certainly invested much more intensely in slavery, both in Africa (which Castile forbade to its subjects for centuries) and in America, where you can easily draw comparisons between a random French or British colony such as Haiti or Jamaica and the blackest Castilian colony: Dominican Republic, where everybody is mixed and in fact even developed a mulatto vs black, Dominican vs Haitian, variant racism of their own. The argument of the rosy legend is not so much "Spain did everything right" but "compared with all other West Europeans in their colonial-slaveist facet... Spain did many things better or less badly... so why they focus so much on Spain, when they should be focusing on their own evil? Anti-Spanish prejudice". In any case of course: Spain did lots of things horribly wrong. They still occupy the Basque Country and Catalonia, they sold West Sahara to Morocco because Uncle Sam demanded it, they were one of the last colonial powers to abolish slavery (in Cuba at the very least) and the treatment of indigenous peoples was often bad or even criminally horrible (very especially the tenure of Columbus in the Caribbean region, which was a brutal genocide without any positive side whatsoever). But then you compare to what the USA, or other American independent countries, did and they were almost angels in comparison. For example Spain never invaded the Mapuches but recognized their sovereignty, they were invaded by Chile after independence and the conflict still rages to this very day. Remember that the "whitening of America" happened only after independence, in the 19th and early 20th centurye, previously all across the double continent native and admixed populations were much more numerous and that is still apparent where there was no so much European immigration, from Mexico to Bolivia. Sure: Castile/Spain committed many crimes but those crimes pale in comparison of those of all other Western European powers and later also independent American nations often enough. The black legend cannot be in good faith only about Spain but about Old Europe and New Europe (creole Americas) as a whole.
@waltonsmith7210
@waltonsmith7210 Рік тому
When I was a kid, I was naturally interested in Spain and its history and culture because a third of the placenames in the US are Spanish. They colonized huge swathes of modern US soil. I thought that was neat.
@fortusvictus8297
@fortusvictus8297 Рік тому
The 'Camino Real' along the west coast was an amazing investment and feat of colonization all on its own. Had Spain managed to retain control over the region into the 19th century it is unlikely the USA would have provoked the war which led to the acquisition of California at the exact same date that gold was publicly discovered.
@raidensergi2378
@raidensergi2378 Рік тому
@@tatumergo3931 the truth about Spain, as an Spaniard, is the government. While France was in the start of Revolution due to the influence of Voltaire or Montesquieu, Spain had ilustrated ministers introduced by Spanish French bourbons to rebuilt the outdated kingdom left by Austria Family. Main French intelectuals of French Revolution had a real envy. However, Charles IV, in the late XVIII. Century substitutes them to the intervention in French Revolution to save French Royal family in spite of rejecting all the advises of his ministers. All the Reforms were stopped and Manuel Godoy was elected to lead kings command joining with the adventure in Revolution in France and against Napoleon. The war against French Napoleon was a tremendous mistake that Make Spain an occupied and slave country by French armies, the Spain Royal Navy destroyed by Nelson in Trafalgar and later the independence of american colonies. All the effort achieved in XVIII.century destroyed by the decision of one King. The Reforms of the ilustrated ministers. -Reduce of church influence and the Inquisition. -Shipbuilding. -Industry, the main Royal Manufacturers, the textile industry was in top3 of the world. - Free market, including to expand the commerce with Américas, from 1 commercial ports to 8. -Education Reforms. And Even more. One of the main reforma that was stopped, was to introduce the liberal reform to reduce the power of King and be more parlamentary. Separation of the three powers. The British Style of parlamentary monarchy was the principal idea. Later, Ferdinand VII, son Charles IV, in spite of all spaniard thaught that he Will Accept the first Spanish Constitution he rejected. Even he made a violent repression to force the absolutism provocking a great angry of Spanish people and the rebelion in American Colonies. And the end, he provocked a republican feeling in Spanish people. In 1820, thanks to Riego General that he decided not to intervene in American Colonies. All spanish fleet, fulled of tens of thousand of soldiers made a rebellion against the King and was forced to sign the Constitution. But like always, France came for aid to the King and the absolutism was reestablish, the 100.000 sons of Sant Louis intervene in Spain. At the end, that XIX.century become the Age of Spanish revolutions.
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Рік тому
Neat? To genocide a continent?
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Рік тому
@@fortusvictus8297 The USA literally destroyed Spain and took half their colonies in the 1800s. Mexico was already independent and had California
@raidensergi2378
@raidensergi2378 Рік тому
@@jasonhaven7170 Simply USA took advantange of the bad situation of Spain. The Spanish American War was called in Spain, the disaster of 98. Not only affected to Colonies also in the mainland. The catalans economic interests in Cuba, the slavery, pressured Spanish Government to not sell Cuba to the USA. After the defeat, the catalans said, the guilty is Madrid and the catalan nationalism movement born. The same happened in basque country with the born of basque nationalism. Thats why, USA not only defeat Spain in a Battle, It sunk It morally.
@nvelsen1975
@nvelsen1975 Рік тому
Funny trivia: Because of these crime fighting 'brotherhoods' and having been part of Spain, one of the nicknames for the Dutch police even today, is the 'hermandad'.
@Wasserkaktus
@Wasserkaktus Рік тому
More funny trivia: The inhabitants of Antwerp to this day refer to themselves as "Sinjoren", and it's pretty obvious why.
@Sealdeam
@Sealdeam Рік тому
I know it is mostly technicality, but is it considered that the Netherlands and Belgium were part of Spain? Even though their kings ruled those parts due their titles which they inherited from the Burgundy side of the family and not from the spanish side?
@nvelsen1975
@nvelsen1975 Рік тому
@@Sealdeam Those were simply not a thing at the time. The Dutch kingship was created well after the Eighty Years War and the Belgian kingship from fighting the Dutch. Willem Van Oranje carried the titles prince of Orange and count of Orange-Nassau, so he was not a king. That can still be seen in the Dutch national anthem, which tells the story of how Willem is a good guy, who's obedient to the Spanish king and does everything right (this is not untrue actually, he was loyal to Spain and rose to be captain-general and even refused a position because he thought he was too young), but over time the extreme tyranny of that king forces him against his will to rebel because as a christian he can't do anything but that. Which is important, because in the views of the time (catholic ones mostly), kings were appointed by god, overthrowing a king was sacrilege unless you had a big justification. You could have people turn on you if you violated the rank system of nobility by making yourself an illegitimate king. The Dutch national anthem is basically a justification of why Spain had to be overthrown. For the same reason the Spanish murder of the counts of Egmond and Horne was a huge deal, much bigger than thousands of commoners being murdered. Nobles were above other people, they were entitled to a trial and even treason ussually ended in a fine or banishment, you couldn't just go around killing nobles.
@Sealdeam
@Sealdeam Рік тому
@@nvelsen1975 I know the Low Countries were not a kingdom until much later, the Habsburgs ruled those territories as Counts of Flanders (and other non-kingly titles they got mostly from their Valois-Burgundy ancestors) my question was more about if the Low Countries were then considered as part of a kingdom in a nominal sense, the Count of Flanders had at that moment an overlord even if that overlord was himself or if was a title that was completely detached from any kingdom or empire both in practice and in paper?.
@nvelsen1975
@nvelsen1975 Рік тому
@@Sealdeam Depended per region really. The counts of Holland were known for their independant-mindededness that started way back in the 10th century. Under them the commoners were fairly free and not taxed that much. Floris V was nicknamed 'the God of the common man' While the bishops of Utrecht were set up even during the Frankish empire as integrators of imperial power. They did things like raze the entire village of Eemnes and force all the people to relocate to move them further away from the Gooi region and any silly notions of not being serfs and property. While as catholic bishops they were the enemy entering the Eighty Years War. My knowledge of that is good since I am an Erfgooier, one of the inheritors of (since 1972 defunct) land rights bestowed by the counts of Holland in 1404, bordering Utrecht and subject to several significant feudal wars. Through this it's certain one or more of my ancestors has fought either the Frisians or Utrechters on behalf of Holland. Gelre (Karel van Egmond for example) considered itself its own power had just spent the Gueldrian Wars trolling the Burgundy/Habsburgs. Plus further south there was the Great Privilege that limited Habsburg power. I would say 'nominal sense unless demonstrated differently'. But that question can only be fully answered with a lot of studying individual fiefdoms, regions and cities.
@XxLIVRAxX
@XxLIVRAxX Рік тому
Of all great western powers Spain is often the most overlooked and vilified, its darkest aspects are exagerated while its contributions to the western and global history ignored or minimized, the opposite is true of Britain or The Netherlands. In the case of Portugal, its history is quite frankly neglegted despite being the maritime power that inagurated the age of western global dominance. YT historians like Sand Rhoman shed a light to this and other missunderstood subjects of our shared history providing great service to us all.
@seanfox6884
@seanfox6884 Рік тому
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Legend_(Spain)
@chrissmith3587
@chrissmith3587 Рік тому
Britain is frequently vilified, politicians blame Britain for their country’s poverty as they steal its wealth Though Spain influence is certainly overlooked within the English speaking world
@nikkimakropoulos
@nikkimakropoulos Рік тому
There was a time when the British feared Spain and the Spanish Armada more than any other nation including their arch nemesis France, that alone should be enough for the respect that Spain deserves as a historical global superpower. And if im not mistaken "The Empire on which the sun never sets" was originally a Spanish Empire motto that was later stolen by the British. I've always had so much respect for Spain for their contribution to the founding of America among countless other things
@DudeWatIsThis
@DudeWatIsThis Рік тому
@@nikkimakropoulos You are right about the motto-stealing. It infuriates me. I personally edited the Wikipedia article back in the day, and initiated the discussion until it was changed.
@Tuning3434
@Tuning3434 Рік тому
Sand Rhoman got my attention because of his emphesis on early modern armies. With all the emphesis on Napoleonic armies, or late medi-evil fights, there is a criminal lack of attention for the 300 ~ 400 years that changed warface and tactics forever.
@mjs24
@mjs24 Рік тому
The quality of this channel is insane, keep up the great work!
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Рік тому
thanks!
@andreascovano7742
@andreascovano7742 Рік тому
I love the spanish of this period. Probably the toughest and most unjustly hated armies of the period
@MPRStig
@MPRStig Рік тому
Hated by all the armies that lost to them, that means a lot of hatred :)
@zetectic7968
@zetectic7968 Рік тому
The importance of Ferdinand & Isabella in turning Spain into a world power cannot be underestimated. Thanks for the informative & detailed video.
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Рік тому
Yes, from that point, the Spanish started the age of colonisation, destroyed Native cities, brought in hundreds of thousands of African slaves, implemented a racial caste system and genocided a whole continent of people. They (the European colonising countries of France, Spain, England, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Netherlands and Portugal) were all absolutely horrendous, but what makes Spain especially bad is that they started it. Portugal only started colonising properly after Spain started it, they were basically pirates in the Indian Ocean.
@Genchmen
@Genchmen Рік тому
@@jasonhaven7170 also spaniards brought thausand tons of gold to the continental europe, causing a huge inflation and economic disaster in globe.
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Рік тому
@@Genchmen That is true, but not as bad as genocide, colonisation, racism and trans-atlantic slave trade
@albertmont3411
@albertmont3411 Рік тому
@@jasonhaven7170 hshshshshshs cope
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Рік тому
@@albertmont3411 There is no cope, I just don't see the Spanish colonisers as good or netural, but evil
@destroyer0685
@destroyer0685 Рік тому
An added foot note. Napoleon studied the campaigns of El Gran Capitan. That being said, the French desecrated his tomb when they invaded Spain during the Napoleonic Wars. The French did not like this guy. El Gran Capitain maximized both natural and man made obstacles to slow the attack and fix them in place to be shot to pieces by fire arms. This is the key to victory at Cerignola. At Castle Forte, he used the inherent mobility of the Spanish Army to out flank the French thus causing a general route. The classic master piece is Pavia in 1525 where Charles V destroyed the French Army and captured the French King Francis.
@barbiquearea
@barbiquearea Рік тому
Reminds me of how the Romans hated Hannibal for his campaigns in Italy yet future generations of Roman commanders (such as Caesar) studied his tactics intensively.
@Sealdeam
@Sealdeam Рік тому
They stole his skull and destroyed the trophies that marked his victories, such a petty thing to do.
@DudeWatIsThis
@DudeWatIsThis Рік тому
@@Sealdeam Well, most of them have their _own_ skulls lying around some mountain in the Spanish countryside, so I guess the matter got evened-out pretty quickly.
@brianmccarthy5557
@brianmccarthy5557 Рік тому
El Gran Capitan also trained, or his military system did, the incredible conquistadores of the early 16th Century Americas.
@monicabellu9566
@monicabellu9566 Рік тому
Seeing how many defeats they suffer thanks to him it's not wonder, as @barbiquearea said, it's sort of like Hannibal and Rome, but what they did to his tomb was disgusting, thay would have also destroy other things, like La Alhambra, for example if not stopped.
@simaozinho37
@simaozinho37 Рік тому
This is a video about Spain but this lights my heart as a Portuguese! Because the Iberian Peninsula is often overlooked, specially Portugal, but who cares about us right? We just held Rome for +200 years (Rome´s vietnam), while Gaul(France) was conquered in basically 10 years but yet you study more about them than Iberia. We had probably the longest non-stop conflict in history the Reconquista basically 800 years, basically the only crusade that actually was sucessful permanently but let´s speak about all the other failed crusades into the Holy Land. We were Napoleon´s Vietnam, bet let´s just speak about Russia or Prussia And of course we started the age of discovery and conquered most of the world together, but let´s speak about just England and French Expansion. This comment is not an attack on other countries history of course, I am using examples how often this history land is overlooked compared to other countries, much love!
@smal750
@smal750 18 днів тому
the efforts put against gaul were infinitely higher than backwater iberia lol and the gauls were in civil war now compare that to the pathetic defence you put against the arabs who conquered you in days and tried to do the same with france just to get slapped back to arabic spain tails between their legs
@stanisawzokiewski3308
@stanisawzokiewski3308 Рік тому
People so often confuse conquistadors and tercio's, even historians do. So its great to see a video about that period of spanish army evolution
@Dayvit78
@Dayvit78 Рік тому
What? Historians?
@stanisawzokiewski3308
@stanisawzokiewski3308 Рік тому
@@Dayvit78 defently the ones who made my high school textbooks
@raidensergi2378
@raidensergi2378 Рік тому
The conquistadors were the few nobles and leaders that decided to conquer aztec and inqa empires that were not lucky in spain. They needed earn the reputation by invading American continent. The tercios were the proffesional and élite units used by Spain in Europe to combat protestants and muslims.
@olivercromwell432
@olivercromwell432 Рік тому
many conquistadores were fighting in the tercios in europe like pedro de valdivia who tried to use the tactics against the nativs in present day south of chile and was defeated miserably by stone age tribes
@lucachanclagonzalez8087
@lucachanclagonzalez8087 Рік тому
@@olivercromwell432 anglocuck coping as always 😂
@jpor7259
@jpor7259 Рік тому
Ferdinand and Isabella were the most phenomenal rulers of their generation. Look at their contemporaries-Henry VII of England, Maximilian I of HRE, Charles VIII and Louis XII of France. They faded into absolute oblivion. No French, English, or German commemorates them. Meanwhile Ferdinand and Isabella became singular icons of Spanish nationalism. Not a single history book in the world will fail to mention their decision to send Columbus. They inherited kingdoms torn apart by civil war for decades, but suddenly they were challenging almighty France and the Ottomans while planning to dominate the world. We aren’t talking about a Spain that had the privilege of generations of capable rulers, this is a Spain that had just one generation of rulers-a king and a queen-to fix their broken kingdoms. Not only did they fix it, oh no, they hurled it into imperial status-*THE* global imperial status. The status that would take Britain three centuries of good rule to claim. Spain did it all within just the lifetime of Ferdinand and Isabella. And when you realize the scale of their diligence, as in look at the map and see the vastness of Spain, and understand that they had travelled to *every town and city* that in a single year they could march two thousand kilometers. Look up “Itinerario de los Reyes Catolicos.” It’s insane. *They literally hiked back and forth across Spain for thirty years.*
@TheSrSunday
@TheSrSunday 11 місяців тому
Great comment!
@joeerickson516
@joeerickson516 10 місяців тому
"King,👑 Henry tudor the eighth wanted a divorce,⚮ from the spanish,🇪🇸 catholic Princess,👸 Catalina de Aragon, daughter of King, 👑 Ferdinand of Aragon and his wife Queen,👑 Isabella of Castile, resulting the religious reformation of the year fifteen hundred twenty-one."
@smal750
@smal750 18 днів тому
"Almighty france" france wasnt even at half of its current size and was still leagues above spain without the hre to carry them and france was absolutely devastated after the hundred years war and the plague stop glazing
@emilioglz.carrillodealborn9175
@emilioglz.carrillodealborn9175 Рік тому
As a Spanish and as a follower that finds your Channel the best in YT thank you gracias one thousand times for this video,so looking forward to watch it
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei Рік тому
@Tu regere imperio fluctus, Hispane, memento ¿Cuál rey? Es una demoniocracia. Del que hablas es un títere y una máscara sin el poder de un rey verdadero. Es semejante al rey Burger King. LOL
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei Рік тому
@Tu regere imperio fluctus, Hispane, memento La Sinagoga de Satanás mandó a su perro Napupuleón a derribar a los reyes poderosos de Europa, y por ende, del mundo. Los Protocolos de los Sabios de Sion explica la historia mejor que cualquier fuente popular superficial Disneyista. El Islam los judíos la inventaron para contrarrestar el poder de Europa cuya religión inventaron también creando una versión fraudulente del Cristianismo. Jesús dijo que la mayoría va al infierno. Esto implica que no hay ni una ciudad cristiana, o iría la mayoría al cielo. Entonces no hay reino cristiano. Todos los reinos católicos son, según la implicación de las palabras de Jesús, no pudieron haber sido cristianos. Imposible. Jesús contra el mundo. Tú sigues la Roma terrenal en vez del Jerusalén celestial.
@OviD11111
@OviD11111 Рік тому
there it is again, that mysterious Portugal, that chunk of Iberia that at one point pops into existence and then is always just "there". I'd like a video that illustrates the shared history of Portugal and Spain
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei Рік тому
@Tu regere imperio fluctus, Hispane, memento Heretics, not Christsians. No Christian would contradict Jesus' message that wide is the path to destruction, and many go that way, which is the Catholic message: "We are such a wide path, that we are UNIVERSAL AKA CATHOLIC!"
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei Рік тому
@Tu regere imperio fluctus, Hispane, memento Jesus said he did not come to abolish the Law, but to fulfill it. The Law includes not making images to bow to them as unto gods. Catholics don't care about God's Law which was never abolished. Certain parts no longer apply because they were for ancient Israel to foreshadow the Messiah, such as sacrificing lambs. But some things remain God's will, such as not depicting Jesus, lest someone worship the man-made image instead of the true Jesus. Catholics always put their man-made traditions above God's word. Jesus hated the Pharisees for doing the same.
@barruntador6477
@barruntador6477 Рік тому
@@scintillam_dei Look an heretic trying to whipe out centuries of history and evolution of the Church. So the lutherans from Germany and Sweden never spilled a drop of blood? How many people did Calvin made burn at the stake? Miguel Servet in memoriam.
@Wasserkaktus
@Wasserkaktus Рік тому
The only reason Portugal didn't join Castile/Aragon at this time is because they didn't have the monarchs to marry and thus bring Portugal closer to the other Iberian Kingdoms.
@rotciv1492
@rotciv1492 Рік тому
Fun fact: the Portuguese were the first Western power to find an alternative route to India and the spice/silk market by circunnavegating Africa. But then they clashed with the Egiptian Mamluk Sultanate, who also had their own trade network in the Indic Ocean and were the ones who almost monopolized that trade. So they clashed, clash that the Portuguese won. Then they proceeded to block the commerce route that crossed the Red Sea and was vital for the Mamluks, and that drove their State to bankrupcy. Then, a fe years after that, their weakness was exploited and they were conquered by the Ottomans.
@conradnelson5283
@conradnelson5283 Рік тому
I now have a much better appreciation of the rise of Spain. I always thought they bought power with Inca gold. I now appreciate that like most of history there was much more to it than that. Thank you for your comprehensive information.
@Wasserkaktus
@Wasserkaktus Рік тому
No. The New World colonies were in fact a huge deficit for Spain for a long while before they became profitable. It would in fact be a few centuries before they would have developed to the point of becoming largely profitable, and by then, Spain had to deal with the other Europeans meddling there as well.
@caniconcananas7687
@caniconcananas7687 Рік тому
But, how did you think the Spanish got all that gold, silver and other expensive materials from the Incas or the Aztecs? They did it only after defeating the American armies and its empires. Just look at a map of the whole planet and compare the tiny size of the current Spanish State with the size of South America, Central America and the territories in North America that now form Mexico and the states conquered by the US to Mexico, identified easily for their Spanish names: New Mexico, Nevada, Texas, Colorado and California. (This last one is not really Spanish, but an invented name in a Spanish adventures novel written in the 16th century). All that territory was inhabited by several hundred million people when Columbus arrived thinking to be at India. 🤭 How did just a few thousands Spanish men, not all with military experience, subdued so many people? First, by sheer force. Read about the end of the Incan Empire to see the best example of it. And then, by the diseases the Europeans (Spanish, Portuguese, French, Dutch, English and others) took to America. Historians estimate that at the start of the 16th century the central plateau of Mexico was inhabited by some 20 million persons with no defence against the European diseases that killed most of them. The population did not reach again those numbers until the 20th century, half a millenium!
@Desco51
@Desco51 Рік тому
@@caniconcananas7687 The spanish method was to ally with the Other natives and indigenous to destroy their slaverists enemies like the aztecs or the incas.
@caniconcananas7687
@caniconcananas7687 Рік тому
@@Desco51 That was what Cortés did against the Aztecs. But Pizarro and his Spanish troops were alone against all the Incan Empire, with no allies. What he did was to cut the head of the prey, kidnapping the Inca, the emperor.
@Desco51
@Desco51 Рік тому
@@caniconcananas7687 The cañaris, the huaylas, the limas and the Chacran nations don't think the same.
@lpcanilla92
@lpcanilla92 Рік тому
Nice to see a video that makes justice to the Spanish. Current history discourse is dominated by an Anglo-Saxon view, minimizing Spain's achievements and the many years they dominated the world from the Filipines to Italy, exaggerating the history of the Inquisition, and negating most of its many contributions to the modern world in warfare, legal philosophy, and sheer cultural influence.
@riograndedosulball248
@riograndedosulball248 Рік тому
Deep are the roots of the Black Legend
@coryfice1881
@coryfice1881 Рік тому
@@riograndedosulball248 Deep are the roots of the White Legend.
@ryanvouche254
@ryanvouche254 Рік тому
What language did you write that comment in... English or Anglo Saxon what language was this presented in English/Anglo Saxon..... probably why history discourse is dominated by English/Anglo Saxon world view lol
@lpcanilla92
@lpcanilla92 Рік тому
@@ryanvouche254 Entender el porqué del discurso no justifica el discurso.
@riograndedosulball248
@riograndedosulball248 Рік тому
@@ryanvouche254 it's dominated by the Anglo language because this stupid, ugly language, is easy enough for a lot of people to learn under the Pax Americana. The Lingua franca once was Latin, Portuguese, Spanish or French, depending of the era. Hell, it was French even when Britain was the world power, because even their intellectuals couldn't stand English lol.
@brianmccarthy5557
@brianmccarthy5557 Рік тому
Bizarrely my alma mater UCLA despite being in LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, an area discovered, colonized settled and converted by Spain with millions of at least partly Spanish descended inhabitants, doesn't currently have any Spanish history classes. A ton of Jewish history classes though. I took a modern Spanish history class on the Civil War era and got interested. Then I realized that my clan not only came from what is now Galicia to southern Ireland, but that the two areas had sustained cultural and economic contact for millenia. My people went to Spain to serve in the military, battle Islam and then work in the Royal Colonial bureaucracy all over the world. It was also a refuge for Irish Catholics and a place to study religion and train priests. We even have a branch of our clan still in Spain. More Spanish and Portugese history please. Thanks for not following the standard English lines on this.
@user-vl2mr8mr5u
@user-vl2mr8mr5u Рік тому
You're understanding of Spanish history is just wrong, during the Umayyad caliphate Cordoba was the biggest city in Europe in the medieval ages because of Islam and it's thirst for learning, do you really think this would have happened under christian rule.
@user-vl2mr8mr5u
@user-vl2mr8mr5u Рік тому
christians should have taken Spain back anyways because the caliphate fractured long ago and the Muslims that were there in 1492 cannot be compared to the Muslims who were there in Spain 711-750.
@user-vl2mr8mr5u
@user-vl2mr8mr5u Рік тому
Anyways I agree with your comment on Spanish history not being taught enough here
@zeus0710
@zeus0710 Рік тому
Funny I'm from Mexico all my family is for generations yet 80% of my DNA is Iberian which is Spanish Portuguese and Basque but I have Irish Welsh and North English. what you say makes sense since there was a intermixing of culture between Galicians and Basques with the Irish and Scotts. I kinda makes sense now as of why I have DNA from the Brittish Isles
@tudoproductions
@tudoproductions Рік тому
@@zeus0710 Being from the British isles isn't abnormal since Celts colonized Iberia. Almost everyone from iberia has Celt DNA.
@TheWhiskyDelta
@TheWhiskyDelta Рік тому
Fun note, the big inovation in the use of arquebus was not using them in place of bows, but instead using them in place of halberds. You'll note that pre coronelia force was pikes with a halberd core much like the swiss. But when arquebus became the primary ranged weapon, halberds were replaced with swords (and in smaller number). This is because the halberds role was to break armor and the spanish innovation was to recognize that the arquebus was better at it. The swordsmen were retained to serve only the defensive role halberds used to have. tldr; guns didn't replace bows, they replaced halberds.
@olegdolinskii5546
@olegdolinskii5546 Рік тому
Greetings from Ukraine! 🇺🇦🇪🇸 Spanish history is so rich and magnificent! It is a shame that because of the "black legend" Spain and its incredible achievements were shunned by the rest of Europe for so long. Spanish Tercios were a truly ingenious and formidable military formations, a true juggernaut that rolled over its enemies for many decades and brave Spanish warriors were true gods of war of their time! Let the Cross of Burgundy flag fly forever! Be proud, Spain! Greetings from Ukraine 🇺🇦🇪🇸!
@lefragrance777
@lefragrance777 6 місяців тому
¡Que viva la Reunificación de Puerto Rico con España! 🇵🇷❤️🇪🇸.
@gyozanomics
@gyozanomics 6 місяців тому
@@lefragrance777 haha yes please go back you really must
@aasemahsan
@aasemahsan Рік тому
2:04 Reforms under Ferdinand & Isabella leading to conquest of Granada (Hermandad ---> Santa Hermandad) 4:22 Military reforms after Reconquista 5:41 Changes in cavalry 9:47 Changes in Infantry 12:10 Tactical reforms 15:45 Spanish victory over the French in Naples
@davidwilson123able
@davidwilson123able 7 місяців тому
Most people don’t recognise the fact the creator of the tercios Gonzalo Fernandez de Córdoba is one of the greatest military leaders in history. Love and respected by his men and his enemies. De Córdoba is in the same bracket as Julius Caesar. Solo Es libre el hombre que no tiene miedo. El gran Capitan.
@rogelioalonzo2911
@rogelioalonzo2911 Рік тому
I love when you do Spanish videos, their time of hegemony is hugely under represented in history.
@relaxedsack1263
@relaxedsack1263 Рік тому
A lot of people only think of the tercio as a military formation. Its real power was its logistical and command formation. You could send a tercio on campaign and expect almost the same power tercio on the return.
@Impactmoon
@Impactmoon Рік тому
Also inspired by the Roman legions I assume
@OtterlyRabbid3232
@OtterlyRabbid3232 2 місяці тому
Macedonia I believe​@@Impactmoon
@pauloakwood9208
@pauloakwood9208 Рік тому
For many decades, the history we learned in the USA was essentially British history. There was little time dedicated to the Empires and cultures that rose outside of England. I refer of course to the Ottomans, the Italians, the Holy Roman Empire, the Swedish Empire, the Polish Lithuanian Empire or the Hapsburgs. Mention of France and Spain, were generally briefly covered but only as 'the enemy of Britain.' This is a shame, because it leaves a big hole in our understanding of history.
@batallasdeshorts4149
@batallasdeshorts4149 5 місяців тому
Not only is it not discussed, but it is deliberately lied about in the case of Spain.
@abelreyna8781
@abelreyna8781 3 місяці тому
@@batallasdeshorts4149 So much of what people in the Anglophone world believe is history, is nothing but English and Dutch 16th and 17th century propaganda.
@themosticonicscenesinmovie8737
@themosticonicscenesinmovie8737 Рік тому
History of Spain is always interesting:)
@sullivannix4509
@sullivannix4509 Рік тому
You’re probably my favorite channel right now. Please do more videos about Spanish history. I would love to learn the story of how Spain got its foothold in the Netherlands
@loicrodriguez2532
@loicrodriguez2532 Рік тому
Your can read this article about Spanish Netherlands en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Netherlands
@doyouevenpraise189
@doyouevenpraise189 Рік тому
Nice, I will love to see more Spanish Empire stuff. love the channel, continue the great work!
@modelthread2337
@modelthread2337 Рік тому
Spain is the best, even culturally they still have their influence to this day. Magellan' inspired me to paint 16th century Spanish Infantry Greetings from Las yslas Filipinas!
@juanmolinafernandez3983
@juanmolinafernandez3983 Рік тому
As a 15th century Spanish military reenactor, all great, except on saying that heavily armed men at arms were not common in Castille until end 15th century. That's not true. In most cases, every man at arms had two sets of equipment: one as jinete and another one as a "heavy knight". So, depend of the situation, they fought on one way or another.
@thememe986
@thememe986 Рік тому
More like every man with land, peasants wouldn't have had access to heavy armor very often .
@egillskallagrimson5879
@egillskallagrimson5879 Рік тому
Muy buen video, faltaba que alguien cubriera los hechos antes de la batalla de Cerignola y pusiera en contexto la evolución de la peninsula bajo los Reyes Católicos. Junto con Pike&Shot Channel este canal es de lo mejor acerca de historia del siglo de oro Español. Recuerdo que encontré vuestro canal cuando mi interés por las guerras italianas me hizo buscar contenido sobre ello. Y desde luego me quede al ver que tenías muchísimos videos sobre historia militar española. Es una pena por eso que como Español puedo afirmar que no hay canales de UKposts sobre la historia de España con el nivel de detalle de vuestros videos o con el énfasis en historia militar. Y me temo que se debe a que culturalmente los españoles no apreciamos nuestro pasado como pueblo y hay incluso una mala intención de nuestras instituciones por desprestigiarlo y hacer que no nos sintamos orgullosos de este y de los logros de nuestros antepasados. Gracias es todo un detalle que alguien extranjero si sea capaz de apreciarlo y hacerle justicia.
@lopcaarald5161
@lopcaarald5161 Рік тому
Si. Este video debería ser doblado al castellano
@tobias064
@tobias064 Рік тому
Yo diría que aquel desprestigio proviene en gran medida del hecho de que mucho del facherío actual, gente mala en resumen, idolatra aquella época mi estimado. No hay que perder eso de vista. Es lo que me pasa a mí, me encanta la historia y el hecho de que este canal no desprestigie y dé atención a España pero es casi garantizado que si una persona actual tiene de avatar la Cruz de Borgoña la tiene en el mismo sentido que si tuviera la bandera confederada estadounidense y es una pena.
@egillskallagrimson5879
@egillskallagrimson5879 Рік тому
@@tobias064 el prejuicio de pensar q alguien utilice la Cruz de Borgoña como avatar y asociarlo a la pelicula actual del panorama politico es parte de este problema. Es seguir proyectando el sesgo del paradigma contemporáneo sobre le historia. Ni hay q flipar en tratar de reproducir las sociedades y valores q hemos dejado atrás ni hay q juzgar dichas sociedades y sus valores acorde al dogma de ideologías modernas. Hay q buscar un equilibrio entre apreciar los logros y éxitos del pasado con suficiente honestidad y autocrítica como para ver las cagadas. Y así con suerte darse cuenta hoy de q se tiene q hacer mejor y donde se esta metiendo la pata.
@tobias064
@tobias064 Рік тому
@@egillskallagrimson5879 No dije que usar X símbolo automáticamente indica X cosa. Dije "es casi garantizado", no es lo mismo. Te vas a la bandera confederada y ahí te quiero ver sosteniendo lo mismo y tirando esa de que "no hay que juzgar con los valores de ahora" pero dale dejate de joder no seamos ingenuos gastándonos más en garantizar el beneficio de la duda para fachos "No, lo que pasa que falange viene del latin falantum que significa margarita no lo jUzGEs" antes que tomar por las astas el problema actual de las desigualdades sociales que es monumental y que muy bien lo podés apreciar en determinadas comunidades. Ej, porque hay que ejemplificar: es más probable que encuentre determinados elementos en comunidades de juegos medievales que en foros de juegos random casuales etc. Y obviamente hay una apreciación socialógica para eso que no es casualidad.
@olivercromwell432
@olivercromwell432 Рік тому
No es que no lo aprecien si lo aprecian en forma extraordinariamente desmesurada en algunos casos el asunto es que carecen del IQ necesario para hacer buenos trabajos de animacion y dejar de lado su chauvinismo para atraer la atencion y naturalmente que aprendan ingles que es el idioma de la divulgacion del conocimiento mundial
@ArtilleryAffictionado1648
@ArtilleryAffictionado1648 Рік тому
Proud to support this awesome channel. I quite enjoy the focus on the 'blank spots' of mainstream history. ¡Viva españa!
@rocketshipevan
@rocketshipevan Рік тому
Such an interesting time period. Would love to see more concerning Spain.
@vgrg7841
@vgrg7841 Рік тому
Spain is very interesting. I love Spain.
@julio5prado
@julio5prado Рік тому
Excellent summary, very well researched and very good selection of historical sources. A great work as usual. Your Spanish accent is as bad as my Dutch but that makes it more fun to hear
@5thMilitia
@5thMilitia Рік тому
He is Swiss
@julio5prado
@julio5prado Рік тому
@@5thMilitia Thanks! He sounds Dutch and he has published so much and so good about the Netherlands that I was 100% sure we was from Utrecht or near by 😂😂😂
@ronaldreaganwasthedevil7443
@ronaldreaganwasthedevil7443 Рік тому
The spanish empire was the true successor of roman spirit literally an empire based on inclusion in turning who ever wanted to into a castillian it was not perfect but was great empire that is normally understimated and forgoten
@salazarway
@salazarway Рік тому
There's a small correction. In Ibéria the full heavy armour of a helmet, cuirass, grebas (for the lower part of the leg), gauntlets, backrest (for the shoulders), arms, legs and scarf for the feet, with around 30kg, where used since the XIII century. Making the Iberian Kingdoms one of the most military developed locals on hearth. Obviously useless against the powerfull light cavalry used by the Muslim Kimgdoms. So, new tactiques where necessery. Cheers from Portugal, specially to the Spanish brothers. Vamos.
@napoleonibonaparte7198
@napoleonibonaparte7198 Рік тому
Ferdinand and Isabella make a great duo.
@Einhauser
@Einhauser Рік тому
Astonishing, I had no idea Ferdinand and Isabella were so impactful. Even with a history degree I only knew them for Columbus
@joaolouro1085
@joaolouro1085 Рік тому
Would love for your to make a video about Portugal.
@atomicsquid3345
@atomicsquid3345 Рік тому
Now this is an interesting topic ! Thank you for your hard work
@giuverga
@giuverga Рік тому
Nice video as always. It would be interesting a video about the rising of the Hapsburgs within the Holy Roman Empire starting from Rudolph the first
@paddy9738
@paddy9738 Рік тому
We love the Spanish Empire
@paddy9738
@paddy9738 Рік тому
@Wiegraf Understandable as no one loves you, may God have mercy on your wretched soul 🙏
@kingstarscream3807
@kingstarscream3807 Рік тому
I love to hate the Spanish Empire. Best villain in world history.
@paddy9738
@paddy9738 Рік тому
@@kingstarscream3807 Absolute Heresy
@crimson1453
@crimson1453 Рік тому
@Wiegraf why not
@donmanue3274
@donmanue3274 Рік тому
@Tu regere imperio fluctus, Hispane, memento Dude he was joking. We are depicted as the bad guys in "pop-culture history" so much (yes, dominated by the anglosaxon narrative, yes) that we are top quality enemies to hate. Have some sense of humour. I totally understand that this heretic heathens, barbaric pirates who don't know olive oil and sun hate us. Look at this language. No sign of latin, don't bother looking... See? Beasts! I hate them too!
@odd-ysseusdoesstuff6347
@odd-ysseusdoesstuff6347 Рік тому
He’s back! And I just missed it by 2 hours TwT I’ve been looking forward to this!
@MrSteveK1138
@MrSteveK1138 Рік тому
Always happy to see your videos
@IsaacRaiCastillo
@IsaacRaiCastillo Рік тому
Since you released that other video of the Spanish Tercios a long time ago, I was waiting for you to do something of its origins. The story of how the Catholic Monarchs planned the genesis of what would become a great empire is impressive; Very rarely has something with such repercussions been seen in history. By the way, despite the adoption of the Swiss model in the Infantry, the Spanish army did not completely abandon its way of fighting legacy after years of facing the mobile armies of the Muslims (something that is also reflected in its ability to combine multiple types of weapons in formation), this tactical flexibility would be essential for the operation that was later given to the Coronelias in the first instance and then to the Companies of the Spanish Tercios (the companies were the true combat unit, the "Tercios" were only their logistical and administrative grouping, this is usually omitted, subtracting the flexibility they possessed). In addition, the Castilian and Aragonese armies were perhaps the ones that had the most veteran soldiers in Europe at that time, because they had spent entire centuries of continuous wars against each other and against the Moors, so it is incorrect to say that it was outdated compared to the French, since as shown in the Granada War and the Battle of Cerignola, the Spanish were much more adapted to gunpowder weapons than the French and used it long before Queen Isabella of Castile (in the only thing that the French surpassed them, was in cavalry organization, as samples). Something that is shown in how easily they adapted and then surpassed the Swiss model. An important correction that must be made is that the Kingdoms of Castile and Aragon were already powerful before their union, so the marriage of the kings only strengthened and maximized their power, not starting it as you say at the beginning. An example of this is in the importance that Castile had at the end of the Hundred Years' War with its fleet (where both the French and the English fought to gain their support, intervening in the Castilian civil war of that time ) and that Aragon was a Mediterranean power, which controlled territories that reached the Italian peninsula, from the thirteenth or fourteenth century.
@reivajbkr
@reivajbkr Рік тому
Your videos are always a delight to watch
@dentyler5287
@dentyler5287 Рік тому
Love it man keep it up king!
@franciskelly7326
@franciskelly7326 Рік тому
Excellent as always.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
The Reconquista was concentrated between 1085 and 1212, i.e. between the conquest of Toledo and the final defeat of the Almohads at Navas de Tolosa. Afterwards borders were stable and previous to 1085 they had been also stable for centuries. Pronunciation tips: "h" is silent in Spanish (hence "hermandad" is read /ermandad/) and qu- is read as mere /k/ ("reconquista" = /rekonkista/).
@rocobalboa1826
@rocobalboa1826 Рік тому
En Castellano ,también
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
@@rocobalboa1826 - Same thing. Unless I'm talking to a historical-linguistic qualified audience, who knows what Castile is and that Spain did not exist politically before the 19th century, I don't make such distinction in English. Lo hago en castellano por contra: no existe el idioma "español".
@rocobalboa1826
@rocobalboa1826 Рік тому
@@LuisAldamiz estoy de acuerdo . España tiene diversos idiomas
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
@@rocobalboa1826 - No creo que estemos de acuerdo: yo creo que España no existe, que históricamente sólo significaba Iberia (península y Balears) pero que ahora, desde Napoleón, se ha convertido en sinónimo de Gran Castilla, estado opresor.
@rocobalboa1826
@rocobalboa1826 Рік тому
@@LuisAldamiz cada un pensá as trapalladas que quere
@exabruptus1
@exabruptus1 Рік тому
So good work, greetings from Córdoba.
@wardaddyindustries4348
@wardaddyindustries4348 Рік тому
Great video and Art work. @6:50 the tree 8n the back ground kinda makes the knights shield look like a tomato. Lol gave me a chuckle on a rough&tough day.
@eugeniocallegaro6618
@eugeniocallegaro6618 Рік тому
Always great quality
@garbancitolentejas486
@garbancitolentejas486 Рік тому
Really very good Video...thank you.
@pervnav14
@pervnav14 Рік тому
Hi SandRhoman! Can you consider covering an episode on the Burgundian Army? Thank you so much!
@srinjoyroychoudhury7034
@srinjoyroychoudhury7034 Рік тому
Amazing keep going.
@INWMI
@INWMI Рік тому
is pretty common here in Spain that our story is plagued by defeatism and shame. we learn this in schools, i think is shameful because this country had and still have brilliant people.
@Tray-sq2zr
@Tray-sq2zr Рік тому
Clown
@RandomVidsforthought
@RandomVidsforthought Рік тому
​@@Tray-sq2zr What a stupid reply
@kristiawanindriyanto5765
@kristiawanindriyanto5765 Рік тому
Out of curiosity, how were the organization of Spanish army in the New World during this period? As the geographic location and the opposing armies were vastly different from the battlefield in Europe
@cseijifja
@cseijifja Рік тому
they rellied entirely on their local american lord allies , largely using american militia of natives for everything, america was relatively peacefull and depopulated so armied where rare.
@julio5prado
@julio5prado Рік тому
They were not yet there. Many of the soldiers that fought in Italy in the first tercios were later involved in the conquest of Mexico and Peru. Pizarro was one of them.
@blecao
@blecao Рік тому
the expeditions relied heavilly on native allies and swordsmen the number of horsemen and arquebusiers is dwarfed by the number employed on europe
@julio5prado
@julio5prado Рік тому
@@cseijifja Mexico was not peaceful at all and Peru was in the middle of a civil war when the Spain arrived there. Pizarro arrived with less than 200 men and got the support of the defeated side of the civil war to launch his campaign. In Mexico the Spanish led a revolt against the Mexicas who were a cruel and tyrannical culture. They sacrificed tens of thousands of enemies every years and then ate them. They were truly hated by the peoples they dominated. Cortes attacked Mexico with 500 Spaniards and around 150.000 allies, mainly from Tlaxcala who decided to put an end to that cruel empire. The big depopulation came after the arrival of the Spanish with a number of epidemics that dramatically decimated the local population.
@cseijifja
@cseijifja Рік тому
@@julio5prado that is what i mean by the spanish winign by largely setting coalition of allied lords, for example, in manco icnas rebellion, at the cusp of the total defeat and anihilation of the spanish at lima, contarhuancho , the cacique of huaylas( a very important vassal of the incas) sent an enormous army to lift the siegue and beat back the rebel incas. Nothing the spanish did was as important as securing the alliance of the native lords, stronger , better and more numerous incursions than pizarro adn cortez happened, they got massacrated by jungle hobos because thats what happened if you didnt do diplomacy first.
@ThePeacemaker848
@ThePeacemaker848 Рік тому
Great Channel. Your English is good. Your accent adds some flavour to the video too.
@uflux
@uflux Рік тому
Awesome episode 👍
@hazzard8785
@hazzard8785 11 місяців тому
In the Netherlands, 'Hermandad' is to this day slang for the police. Dating back to the time the Netherlands were under Spanish rule.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 Рік тому
As an EU4 player I must say, I approve of you making a video about the spanish army of just that period.
@ignacio1171
@ignacio1171 Рік тому
Why would he need your approval...?
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 Рік тому
@@ignacio1171 Hn?
@ivanstrydom8417
@ivanstrydom8417 Рік тому
Superb video. Could you please make a video on late medieval Sweden and their army? Late medieval Nordic armies please.
@leonardodavidjimenezfernan1824
@leonardodavidjimenezfernan1824 8 місяців тому
The Swiss only used pikes and halberds in closed squares. Gonzalo de Cordoba did not copy Swiss system, he created something totally new. The combination of "rodeleros", pikeman and crossbowmen. These crossbows were progressively replaced by firearms, which in turn was making the shield ineffective.
@KrlKngMrtssn
@KrlKngMrtssn Рік тому
Excellent and I believe quite accurate. Bravo 👏
@hellentomazin6488
@hellentomazin6488 Рік тому
Hey! great video as always! One thing I do not yet understand: what was the rodeleros purpose inside the early pike tactics? thanks
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei Рік тому
To humiliate samurais and weeaboos. See my video: "A conquistador refutes the 'Metatron' on Samurais VS Spaniards."
@b.h.abbott-motley2427
@b.h.abbott-motley2427 Рік тому
Pietro Monte (possibly Spanish but living in Milan) wrote about combining pikers & heavily armored troops with large shields as a way to defeat the common Swiss/German order of the late 15th century. Similarly, Niccolò Machiavelli recommended targetiers as a way to defeat pikers, citing Spanish success at the Battle of Ravenna 1512 as an example. Diego de Salazar, who drew heavily from Machiavelli, advocated targetiers (rodeleros) as well, & assigned them darts/javelins to throw. Various 16th-century military writers agreed that targetiers could be extremely effective against pikers, as pikes can't be used up close & then becomes soldiers with swords against soldiers with swords & shields. However, targetiers had trouble resisting heavy cavalry according to these same writers. So, like halberdiers, targetiers were specialized troops for fighting in the press of battle. They also could be especially useful for assaulting fortifications & scouting, as the shield offered additional protection against missile weapons. In the later 16th century, Spanish armies mainly used rodelas for officers & for assaulting fortifications, scouting, & the like. Some of these later rodelas were proof against the arquebus & rather heavy. Shields continued to see military service well into the 17th century; the Dutch under Maurice of Nassau/Orange promoted them for a spell. The Tercios de Flandes blog post on rodeleros is great if you read Spanish.
@hellentomazin6488
@hellentomazin6488 Рік тому
@@b.h.abbott-motley2427 Great explanation!! now I invite you to read this out loud if you speak Brazilian Portuguese: "As rodelas dos espanhois protegiam os soldados das picas do suiços" I swear it wasn't my intention to turn this into a joke... but I just can't stop laughing right now.
@AstrumEspanol
@AstrumEspanol Рік тому
They were sent outside the pike formation for close quarter combat when needed
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
@@scintillam_dei - I'd watch... if your channel was not full of anti-science junk.
@tudoproductions
@tudoproductions Рік тому
Kind of sad you dont have any video about Portugal, would love to see a video about the battle of cochin. Love the style of art and animations you use on these videos.
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Рік тому
hey, thanks for the comment. we will cover Portugal at some point, for sure.
@richardglady3009
@richardglady3009 Рік тому
Thank you. Great story, yet so little known. Those darn Conquistadors get all the coverage.
@juwebles4352
@juwebles4352 Рік тому
I'd love to see a video on medieval naval warfare, it seems an often forgotten aspect of medieval war likely because of the rarity of actual naval engagements but what were the tactics in the naval battles that did happen?
@arishokqunari1290
@arishokqunari1290 Рік тому
When the golden Age of Europe began
@jasonhaven7170
@jasonhaven7170 Рік тому
The age of colonisation?
@9anticule
@9anticule Рік тому
Good job, good video
@JulesXu
@JulesXu Рік тому
Great video,
@claudiopereira5163
@claudiopereira5163 Рік тому
I wish you could make videos about south america battles and armies, there are some cool stories waiting to be exploited
@theromanorder
@theromanorder 4 місяці тому
2:10 goals 2:40 hermandad (small garrsons of local troops later a central version was made, the first central military police to maintain order and was used in war along side some conscripts) 4:16 logistics(built roads, more manufacturing and comunication structure) Due to Spanish army being used to fight the lighter Muslims they were able to be skermishers and fight in any environment but not stand against the heavy french forces and swiss pikemen 8:40 new cavalry unit of mostly light but some heavy 10:10 amount of armoment each population class was required to bring, rich were heavy troops, midle class were medium troops or could be crossbow/gunmen and poorer units were light skermishers made of mostly poor conscrips and volonters 12:20 swisa formastion and history of some conflicts at this point the hermandad central was dispdes but small local units still ecsisted 14:10 new military units (basically like the swiss with french cavillry and special spanish sword men and round shelds) then lots of history
@vgrg7841
@vgrg7841 Рік тому
Spain is very interesting.
@The88Cheat
@The88Cheat Рік тому
Having been in a deep dive of GoT lore, it's interesting to see World Anvil because people used to do by hand everything this system allows one to do.
@mohammedsaysrashid3587
@mohammedsaysrashid3587 Рік тому
a wonderful introducing
@roballister5269
@roballister5269 Рік тому
10/10 loved it. could u do one on the administration and diplomacy taken by the spanish to undermine the aztec empire? and/or peru? thx!
@dansmachine9360
@dansmachine9360 Рік тому
very nice!
@darthjarjarjar
@darthjarjarjar 10 місяців тому
Hey, ha sido un buen vídeo, solo una cosa, ¿No fue disuelta la Santa Hermandad en 1834? Un saludo
@alexnavarro6941
@alexnavarro6941 Рік тому
Very thorough video, very complete. I like it, I learned a lot. Although it's a little bit fun to hear "jiñete" instead of "jinete" 😋, good try, but very good pronunciation of the J sound and many other words. It can be translated as "horseman" as well, the term implies "riding a horse", since a "riding party" would have a very different meaning (pillage). Jinetes weren't pillagers, but as the video tell, horsemen, that is light and skirmish cavalry.
@nomanor7987
@nomanor7987 Рік тому
Habsburg Spain VS Ottoman Empire … epic!!
@veso5863
@veso5863 Рік тому
Only top quality on this channel
@miracleyang3048
@miracleyang3048 8 місяців тому
The word Jintes (spaniy light cavalry) is believed to be drived from the name of the prominent Berber tribe Zenata
@lopezlirio4004
@lopezlirio4004 Рік тому
Gracias por dar visibilidad a una gran nación como es España
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei Рік тому
Es, no. Era. La España de ahora es una mierda liberal, casi totalmente lo contrario a la España gloriosa del pasado.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
No es una nación.
@lopcaarald5161
@lopcaarald5161 Рік тому
@@LuisAldamiz ¡Ja!
@donmanue3274
@donmanue3274 Рік тому
@@LuisAldamiz Entonces yo soy de nacionalidad andaluza o malagueña o sevillana? No es una nación en tu mente retorcida, muchacho.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Рік тому
@@donmanue3274 - Eso lo tendréis que decidir colectivamente los y las andaluzas. Yo apoyo el derecho de autoderminación de Andalucía, pero si queréis seguir siendo CASTELLANOS (que no "españoles") por derecho de conquista y tal... pues vuestro problema. Simplemente no vayáis salpicando para afuera vuestra sumisión colonial romana con el "a por ellos!" terrorista-imperialista. Dicho esto, objetivamente Andalucía ganaría con la independencia: sin duda tu país estaba mucho mejor no sólo con el emirato/califato de Córdoba, sino también con la antigua Tartessos antes de que los fenicios la destruyeran para establecer su monopolio colonial y los romanos dieran el toque de gracia y consolidaran el latifundismo colonial. Esto último es algo de lo que necesitáis salir sí o sí: si no estáis condenados a ser como Sicilia: a no levantar cabeza jamás. No es una cuestión ya de nacionalidades y autogobierno, sino de democracia económica, de devolver la tierra y el poder al pueblo, a tu pueblo.
@andrelanyak2131
@andrelanyak2131 Рік тому
10:18 i see Hungary coat of arms there
@SandRhomanHistory
@SandRhomanHistory Рік тому
haha, damn. Yeah, we used this background elsewhere and apparently, we did not see that when reviewing the video. It was intended to be there!
@andrelanyak2131
@andrelanyak2131 Рік тому
Wow a reply, really love your video btw. Keep up the good workk. We are human so mistake happen soo its ok, dont be discouraged by small mistake.
@Skanderbeg911
@Skanderbeg911 Рік тому
Please a video of the battle of Lepanto, the siege of malta and the siege of siege of castelnouvo
@donmanue3274
@donmanue3274 Рік тому
As a proud spanish I thank you for this video. We are always overlooked by the anglosaxon world and our many deeds, victories and conquests are almost forgotten even by ourselves. ¡Viva España! ¡Y el que quiera servirla, honrado muera! Y el que traidor, la abandone, no tenga quién le perdone, ni en tierra santa cobijo, ni una cruz en sus despojos. Ni las manos de un buen hijo para cerrarle los ojos.
@zeus0710
@zeus0710 Рік тому
Viva la madre patria🇪🇦 y la Hispanidad desde México 🇲🇽
@donmanue3274
@donmanue3274 Рік тому
@@zeus0710 Cuando veo a un mejicano llamar madre patria a España me emociono hermano. Fuerza y honor.
@zeus0710
@zeus0710 Рік тому
@@donmanue3274 Gracias Hermano a mi me llena de orgullo saber que sangre ibérica corre por mis venas saludos
@bigcoliber4864
@bigcoliber4864 Рік тому
What about video on BAttle of Beresteczko?, it was one of the biggest battle of XVII century, and showed usage of both western and eatern styled of fighting
@MBP1918
@MBP1918 Рік тому
interesting video
@velascofernandez1999
@velascofernandez1999 Рік тому
heeeey im from Valladolid greetings from here
@hititmanify
@hititmanify Рік тому
Sandrhomaaaaaaan
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 Рік тому
Also with what where you sick while recording cos the audio is noticably different.
@zulfikar1644
@zulfikar1644 Рік тому
Please make the video about Jannisaries or Sipahi Lancers in Ottoman army)
@joeerickson516
@joeerickson516 Рік тому
"We hereby claim this island 🏝 of the new world 🗺 and all of its riches, 🪙 in the name their royal 👑 majesty, 🤴King Ferdinand the 2nd, of Aragon, and 👸 Queen Isabella the 1st of Castile, of Granada, Spain." 🇪🇸
@jorgezazza1158
@jorgezazza1158 Рік тому
The empire where the sun never sets. That alone gives you a complete idea of ​​the power of Spain at its height. I doubt that such a power has been built only with the defeats that have been publicized so much by English propaganda (his great opponent). Of course the latter ended up winning in the long run.
@PrinceKael14
@PrinceKael14 Рік тому
If it's spelled with an H then why is it being pronounced "Herman" instead of "erman", since normally the H is silent in Spanish and the J takes its sound
@merocaine
@merocaine Рік тому
One of the original power couples eh
@JohnSmith-ye3me
@JohnSmith-ye3me Рік тому
Herr SandRhoman can you recommend any movies from the period you mainly do videos about? Doesn't have to be English speaking either. Cheers
@kingstarscream3807
@kingstarscream3807 Рік тому
Alatriste starring Viggo Mortenson. It's about a Spanish soldier in during the Tercio times.
@5thMilitia
@5thMilitia Рік тому
Michiel de Ruyter - Admiral about the Anglo-Dutch naval wars
@5thMilitia
@5thMilitia Рік тому
@@tatumergo3931 True, but still close enough ;).
@5thMilitia
@5thMilitia Рік тому
@@tatumergo3931 the film starts 6 years after the end of the 80 years war tho
@shivanshna7618
@shivanshna7618 Рік тому
These guy's are defination of "Power Couple".
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