Deadliest Siege of WWII: Leningrad | Animated History
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Sources:
Clapperton, James. “The Siege of Leningrad as Sacred Narrative: Conversations with Survivors.” Oral History 35, no. 1 (2007): 49-60. www.jstor.org/stable/40179922.
Glantz, David M. The Battle for Leningrad: 1941-1944. University Press of Kansas, 2004.
Glantz, David M. The Siege of Leningrad, 1941-1944: 900 Days of Terror. London: Cassell Military Paperbacks, 2004.
House, Jonathan M., and David M. Glantz. When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler. University Press of Kansas, 2015.
Jones, Michael. Leningrad: State of Siege. Basic Books, 2008.
McTaggart, Pat. “Wehrmacht Operation to Take Leningrad Aborted.” Warfare History Network, October 7, 2017. warfarehistorynetwork.com/art....
Werth, Alexander. Russia at War: 1941-1945. New York, NY: Avon Books, 1966.
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@atomskate4882
Жыл бұрын
i like fax machines
@atomskate4882
Жыл бұрын
do you like fax machines griffin
@OnettSock
Жыл бұрын
make an onlyfans instead.
@darkknightbatman8269
Жыл бұрын
Do evolution of the navy battle ship
@ChewyNuggetZ
Жыл бұрын
I want to see more Cold War stuff
The story is both extremely horrifying but also incredibly heroic.
@Arutima
Жыл бұрын
The protected cruiser Aurora was in the port at the beginning of the siege. The soviets took her guns and used them as anti tank guns. She was sunk in the harbor, but they still used her as an AA battery. None of her crew survived the siege.
@myhonorwasloyalty
Жыл бұрын
Kowards
@frigginjerk
Жыл бұрын
I think that phrase sums up the Soviet Union during WW2 better than anything I've ever seen.
@herptek
Жыл бұрын
There was nothing heroic about the Russians, people should stop listening to their propaganda. The red army was on average a brutal bunch and the real believers in communism in their rear echelon units were cowardly war criminals. The NKVD units were professional terrorists.
@herptek
Жыл бұрын
@@jonber9411 How about the brutal anti-fascist carnage by the red army on Berlin?
My family was at Leningrad during the siege actually. I've heard a ton of horror stories from it. One of them was that my grandgrandmother worked at a factory in Leningrad during the siege. She had two kids, a son and a daughter that were left at home every day while she had to travel across the city to the factory. Well, one day while she was working, the sister and the brother started fighting at home over something. She was about 16 and he was maybe 10 or 12. Well, since you only got 1 ration of bread per day, it meant they were constantly hungry and tired. During the fight, she stole her brothers bread ration and ate it. Since both were already so weak after over 1 year of the siege, he died from starvation. My grandgrandmother eventually came back the next day from work, and broke down seeing his corpse. That's the story my grandmother told me. She was born a few years after the war though, and was spared from it. Her parents though were scarred for life.
@epictetusepictetus5033
Жыл бұрын
Mark Solonin conducted research and came to conclusion that starvation in Leningrad was produced intentionally by the Soviet Power. The goal was to extract valuables in exchange for food using so called Black Market as an intermediary.
@archibald9260
Жыл бұрын
@@epictetusepictetus5033 Mark Solonin is a pseudo-historian who, moreover, does not have a historical education. and all his statements are criticized among historians as, moreover, having no evidence
@epictetusepictetus5033
Жыл бұрын
@@archibald9260 Is historical education received during Soviet Union time a real sertificate of the quality ?
@partysdewer1296
Жыл бұрын
My grandmas cousin was a fighter pilot on the leningrad front, downed 3 soviet fighters and then got shot down by a 4th fighter, he survived but he was scarred for the reminder of his life
@archibald9260
Жыл бұрын
@@epictetusepictetus5033 any historical education would give him much more quality. he has nothing to do with history or journalism at all. and do not forget that his statements have no evidence and he is regularly criticized in scientific circles
My grandmother, born shortly after the war, often told me stories about her own mother (my great grandmother) and her siblings. One thing that i enver forget, is how one of my grandmothers brothers, who was a child during the siege would, even when he was more than 70 years old, not leave a single crumb behind on the plate. He would wet his finger, and tap the plate to pick up all crumbs. This happened even 50 years after the siege
@havocgr1976
Жыл бұрын
My father does that to this day, no relation to Lenigrad,its called post occupation syndrome.He was a kid when the nazis made 10% of our population starve to death.He is Greek.Even after the end of the war people still starved for a long time since everything of value was stolen by em, to this day Germany never paid war reparations to us (and I think also to Poland).
@nerdlingeeksly5192
Жыл бұрын
We are creatures of habit; stress, trauma, and survival reinforce these habits ten fold.
@poisonousbadge126
Жыл бұрын
Rhodesian?
@w1ndStrik3
Жыл бұрын
@@poisonousbadge126 i wish
@poisonousbadge126
Жыл бұрын
@@w1ndStrik3 Oh im half thats why i ask xD
As a classical musician, I love how you mention shostakovich's 7th symphony. The piece was a climax of the musical repertoire
@wongjonathan7407
Жыл бұрын
leningrad is my favourite symphony by shostakovich! so glad its mentioned here
@thestarwarsmusiccomposer3491
Жыл бұрын
@@wongjonathan7407 The symphony is a masterpiece, He was able to tell the story Of the siege in the notes
@helenaconstantine
Жыл бұрын
After the intro, how did he dare not to play the piece in the video?
@thestarwarsmusiccomposer3491
Жыл бұрын
@@helenaconstantine ikr😃 play the Invasion theme or something
Fun facts: - The Soviet PPS-43 SMG was designed and made during the siege. - Soviets had to fortify the icy “Road of Life” against attacks from land and air, using fortifications made from ice and snow. Many trucks sank during their run as a result of attacks or ice collapse.
@BadBomb555
Жыл бұрын
It was actually PPS-42 SMG that was made and used during the siege. PPS-43 came after the siege was over and was made in Moscow.
@cannonball666
Жыл бұрын
@@BadBomb555 You are correct, sir. They were actually made in Leningrad. What the hell do the French know about Soviet weapons.
@Jerry-tg7zx
Жыл бұрын
Nothing, other than staining them with their blood thanks to a certain Napoleon bonaparte
@elkapusto2414
Жыл бұрын
Yeah.. so much fun with these facts🙄
@user-nr5tp2jo3u
11 ай бұрын
We have liberal historicans who sympathise to the West and they often tell that german soldiers have been gentlemen and allowed soviet trains with food to come through german positions in order to feed civilians. Such a bullcrap.
I admire the Soviet fighting spirit, both civilian and army. No other country had to make a bigger sacrifise in world war 2, the statistics of death are almost unbelievable
@LastBrigadier
11 ай бұрын
Germans made a sacrifice too.
@thijs6264
11 ай бұрын
@@LastBrigadier every nation did
@LastBrigadier
11 ай бұрын
@@thijs6264 No, only the sacrifices of those on the right side of History are recognized. the Soviets died for Bolshevism, the Germans died to save/rid the world from Communism, and in this regard they were successful, they had completely crippled the Soviet war economy from ever waging any more aggressive wars, it literally took the Soviets 40 years to stomach getting into another war, which they lost against a few desert goat herders anyway.
@andreimcallister1365
10 ай бұрын
That’s cause Stalin made them fight. It wasn’t because of honor.
@thijs6264
10 ай бұрын
@@andreimcallister1365 nah i totally disagree. Maybe for some but most were given a reason to fight. You maybe dont like Russia now but you can never take away what they sacrificed and accomplished in WW2, not only for the country's they liberated but for the whole of Europe and Asia
i suggest anyone who ever wanted to know how costly and tragic the Siege of Leningrad to the people in that city especially the kids , to read the diary of Tanya Savicheva, she is a kid who record the story of her families during the Siege, it was harrowing and incredibly sad, she recorded all the death and dissapearance of her family members from her Grandfather to her mother until eventually, only she left, i'm literally felt crushed after reading it, the suffering a little girl must faced
@epictetusepictetus5033
Жыл бұрын
Mark Solonin conducted research and came to conclusion that starvation in Leningrad was produced intentionally by the Soviet Power. The goal was to extract valuables in exchange for food using so called Black Market as an intermediary.
@archibald9260
Жыл бұрын
@@epictetusepictetus5033 Mark Solonin is a pseudo-historian who, moreover, does not have a historical education. and all his statements are criticized among historians as, moreover, having no evidence
@epictetusepictetus5033
Жыл бұрын
@@archibald9260 Mark Solonin presented a couple of very interesting documents from soviet archies . Do you rememeber what kind of documents ? Given that documents are real the question about Solonin's qualification as a historian is the secondary one.
@archibald9260
Жыл бұрын
@@epictetusepictetus5033 what kind of documents are these that no one except mark solonin has seen
@victorking1267
Жыл бұрын
@@archibald9260 There are hundred of thousands of documents even in open soviet archieves and it requires efforts and time to analyze them. Also can you please name some credible historians ?
Loving how good 2022 has been for history tubers. Mark Felton, Armchair Historian, Mr. Mitchell History and plenty more! Armchair Historian has to be the goat though
@SIeepyBull
Жыл бұрын
agreed
@Qadir-24
Жыл бұрын
The Operations room as well
@fightingcock6920
Жыл бұрын
I love it too each history channel brings something different
@ollyx2
Жыл бұрын
Only because you tube censored heaps of videos in the last few years so now we have to rely on approved voices. I miss the 2006-2012/2014 internet and youtube before the massive wave of censoring memoryholing.
@ManchesterIsRed
Жыл бұрын
TIKhistory and World War 2
Fun Fact: After the siege of Leningrad was broken, truckloads of cats were unloaded into the city to eradicate the rodent infestation, and get rid of the possibility of a disease outbreak
@DMlTREl
Жыл бұрын
@Nadya Bulgakova I remember one story where cat saved his owners from starvation by bringing them rats
@fryhyh
7 ай бұрын
@@DMlTRElif im starving im still not eating rats
@xFlared
2 ай бұрын
@@fryhyh If you starve long enough, you'd be surprised at what you'd be willing to eat.
@apone2820
Ай бұрын
@@fryhyh Your body would make you to.
@kloziq
Ай бұрын
@@fryhyhnot how that works bru😭 u gone eat them rats like a 5 star Michelin meal
Love how the video is exactly 19:42 long
@carltonpenaloza1395
Жыл бұрын
I noticed that also! I wasn’t sure when the operation began because I forgot that part, I knew it was either 1941 or 42. It was 41, so he should have cut off a second 😂
@just_another_person6421
Жыл бұрын
@@carltonpenaloza1395 I also notice alot of times if you upload a video, KZread will automatically add a second to a video. which is kind of weird.
Hello from Moscow! We have a few acquaintances, who's grandparents lived through the siege. These people are extremely concervative with food, not leaving a single crumb after eating, and having special attitude to bread. It is really stunning how they managed to live in such desparate conditions.
@raketny_hvost
Жыл бұрын
Сразу в голове стрельнул момент из рассказа "Арбузный переулок". Это самое "...[они] дрогнут и ждут, и дрогнут и ждут..."
@AC_Blanco
Жыл бұрын
Make your Tzar leave Ukraine
@user-vq6td2rb7x
Жыл бұрын
+
@jensblennow6037
Жыл бұрын
Why has your country invaded another country?
@user-vq6td2rb7x
Жыл бұрын
@@jensblennow6037 because NATO kept expanding to the east and organized an unlawful coup in Ukraine, so in Russian-speaking country with close ties with Russia radical nationalists (Pravii Sector) and pro-western puppets (Poroshenko (owner of confectionary) and Zelensky (actor with no political experience) came to power.
The bravery of the citizens in leningrad is just incredible instead of running away they choose to defend their country not only that but they also helped out building trenches and barriers, truly amazing
@stackertheeod7566
Жыл бұрын
Well they were also barred from leaving on Stalin's orders and forced to remain in the city as the Germans lay siege to it, so it's not like they had much of a choice in the matter
@nathanplays5514
Жыл бұрын
I don’t think they had much of a choice, papa Stalin would have been angry
@fightingcock6920
Жыл бұрын
I don’t think they had much of a choice pal
@tankle
Жыл бұрын
The people who lived in Leningrad are really very brave, but during the war there were many evacuations of civilians.
@mbmanra
Жыл бұрын
“Chose”
Interesting fact, Vladimir Putins older brother died in the siege of Leningrad and his mother nearly past away as well. His father was wounded from one of the counter attacks and when he was in the hospital, they prevented his wife from seeing him when they found out he was giving up his rations for her.
@hyunsungjung4941
Жыл бұрын
God dammit why did it have to be his brothers and not him...
@justinkim7756
Жыл бұрын
@@hyunsungjung4941 putin was born after ww2 or was a kid lol
@hyunsungjung4941
Жыл бұрын
@@justinkim7756 Really? Huh, didn't know my bad...
@justinkim7756
Жыл бұрын
@@hyunsungjung4941 no need to apologize putin real life is funnier tbh he was a sheltered boy his entire childhood and only married to advance his position in the kgb (unmarried men were not allowed to be posted outside the ussr)
@serenitynow1364
Жыл бұрын
@@hyunsungjung4941 wow you seem like a well adjusted human being 🙄
Although the citizens didn't have much of a choice they were still brave all around, digging trenches, building barriers and overall just defending their country, truly incredible
@alaric_
Жыл бұрын
But, like you said it, they really didn't have any other choice. Quite similar to every single person in Soviet Union, they were in for the ride and there was no getting out of it.
@trev6664
Жыл бұрын
@@alaric_ When the enemy you are facing is trying to eradicate your ethnicity and your culture, the brutal reality is fight or die.
@frigginjerk
Жыл бұрын
If a fascist army was closing in on my city, I hope that I'd be out there digging a trench. But honestly, I don't know. Odds are just as good that I'd haul ass out to some other secluded place.
@herptek
Жыл бұрын
Were they also "just defending their country" in the Baltic countries, Eastern Poland and Finland? Were they just "defending their country" in all of the eastern block countries after the war? Reality is a little different than the dream version where comrade Stalin was this poor little victim of German fascist aggression.
@trev6664
Жыл бұрын
@@herptek What is the point you are getting at?
I saw that it was mentioned, but Shostakovich's 7th Symphony "Leningrad" tells the story of the city and the siege. With the knowledge of the context in which it was composed, that its composer was in the city while it was surrounded, it might just be one of the most gut-wrenching pieces ever written. You can feel the suffering, resiliency, relief, and ultimate triumph in every note. If you don't have time to listen to the whole thing, just listen to the last five minutes, the liberation. It's probably one of the most emotional moments in the history of classical music.
I cant imagine what being a civilian in leningrad must have been like, the misery is beyond description
@_easyconcept
Жыл бұрын
And according to some sources, the defenders/citizens had to resort to cannibalism because of lack of food...
@unpapelcascaron7463
Жыл бұрын
@@_easyconcept decisive tang victory
@epictetusepictetus5033
Жыл бұрын
Mark Solonin conducted research and came to conclusion that starvation in Leningrad was produced intentionally by the Soviet Power. The goal was to extract valuables in exchange for food using so called Black Market as an intermediary.
@victorkorol1933
Жыл бұрын
@@_easyconcept Actually, Red Army troops were supplied reasonably well. The city inhabitants were starved to death.
@somerandomdavid6775
Жыл бұрын
@@epictetusepictetus5033 The workers and army men did get a little more in their rations, but "intentionally by the soviet" is just anti-soviet propaganda. Afterall no one would keep the city running if everyone died out, and there's no point trying so hard to save these people while letting them die of hunger.
The resilience of the human spirit when faced with certain death is utterly inspiring.
As a kid of about 8-10 years old I had read a book called "Boris", about the siege of Leningrad. From Boris's point of view. Another kid of my age then. It's made a huge impression on me.
my great-grandfather's family (including my grandmother, who is still alive) moved to the Urals during the war, because the entire industry was evacuated there, and my great-grandfather was a good specialist. My grandmother told me how a train with evacuated residents of Leningrad came to them. A weak woman got out of the train wagon and after walking a few meters fell onto the rails, not even reaching the platform, when residents and soldiers ran up to her, it turned out that the woman was already dead
@OliveClover5855
10 күн бұрын
That’s so sad, imagine making it all the way there just for it to be for no reason
I used to live in Saint Petersburg for 5 years. I noticed that a lot of native citizens (especially elder ones) never throw away food if you still can eat it. This is especially true for bread. They told me that this is how they were raised by their parents and grandparents who survived the siege and for whom even the smallest piece of bread was a treasure. Really tells you how traumatized people were having gone through this
The trolleys did actually quit running for a couple months Dec '41 - Feb '42. Great job on the video as usual.
I discovered this battle thanks to Brian Moyahans book "Leningrad: Siege and Symphony" that narrated the process on which Shostakovichh wrote his seventh symphony and the performance of it in a freezing theatre. I recommend both the book and the symphony, both are works of art by themselves!
Probably one of the hardest times to go through in human history.
@jonber9411
Жыл бұрын
The launch of Jeff Bezos space phallus, was also grueling to bear.
@More_Row
Жыл бұрын
You would think huh.
@fryhyh
7 ай бұрын
Civilians in Stalingrad too.
@crazydinosaur8945
16 күн бұрын
@@jonber9411 yea, just in a different way
You're absolutely cranking these out at the moment, keep up the good work.
This a great remaster to one of my favorite older videos I've been here on armchair history from the beginning. And for certain this is my favorite channel on KZread
Got into listening Shostakovich's music for about 2 months already and went into this video hoping you'd feature his 7th symphony somewhere in it, but I thank you even more for having started the video with an introduction talking about it right off the bat!
one of the many definitions of a hero, someone still fighting for what he believes even if he’s starving, sleepy and injured he still fights
@herptek
Жыл бұрын
Like all Russia's enemies ever.
@Waltbrub
Жыл бұрын
@@herptek you mean the USSR right...? You arent a Nazi... RIGHT?
@herptek
Жыл бұрын
@@Waltbrub So what then? If you are going to try to "denazify" us you will be shot dead. Come across the border weapon in hand and you will suffer, otherwise you can only complain about us. People like you don't understand, it really seems, that no one is exactly scared of you after your performance in Ukraine.
Such an amazing quality of content and detail and is well formed for this topic! Leningrad was such a hard hit city during ww2 and I loved how you showed it
I remember when I followed this channel with 2000 subs now it’s where it’s at it’s insane. Good job man
I remember reading about Leningrad kids eating up the new leaves in the entire park out of hunger, it's just heartbreaking to read even just a few lines of words. Heroic city, heroic people, great respect from China.
Your videos are improving so much everytime you bring out a new one. I shed a tear while listening to the intro
The animation has gotten insane! Another excellent video
Dimitri Shostakovich is one of the most famous Russian composers of the 20th century and I listened to the Gadfly suite including "Romance" from the Gadfly you should listen to this beloved masterpiece and I know he was born in Leningrad.
My great-grandfather was sixteen when he joined the partizan forces, he was a boy from Leningrad and later became a capitan in the Red army, after the war ended. To all of the questions he replied that it was horrific and that he is thankful that he never witnessed any other war, he sadly passed away but it is important that we do remember the sacrifice of everyone who got involved in war.
Great job Griffing ,what a great video ,I love your content ! Keep it going!
incredible video sir- had me glued to the chair
My great-grandfather was one of those who died under the ice, supplying the city via "road of life". I am grateful to all oh those heroes. Thank you, Griffin, for remind me of what truly matters
I loved the old-school style of animations that felt like the ones you all used to use! I'm glad this battle was dug into more, it feels so overlooked all because it wasn't a big bang of a battle that could be used politically. Instead, it was slow and grueling battle of attrition.
Thank you for your great work this year and for hopefully more years to come!
I am extremely happy that this is being covered. Leningrad's survival is such a harrowing but awe-inspiring lesson from history. I, unfortunately, have never read the diary of the little girl. I have been lucky enough to find one of my favorite pieces of music. Shostakovich's Symphony does strike deep into my soul even though I am lucky to have never suffered an experience as these people or the composer.
@Fobur1919
Жыл бұрын
@Nadya Bulgakova I didn't know it was that small. I kind of wish there was more, but it pains me deeply thinking of what Tanya went through to even write those lines down. Thank you, Nadya.
As a resident of St. Petersburg, I am always extremely interested in how foreigners look at the Siege. Thank you very much for the video!
@sisyphusvasilias3943
Жыл бұрын
The Scientist of the Ministry of Agriculture (Leningrad Seed Vault) is the greatest story of Human Courage throughout all History (IMO) What they went through, their strength, sacrifice and determinations. And how their actions saved USSR from a post war Famine that may have killed as many people as the war did.
@davianoinglesias5030
Жыл бұрын
The WW2 stories of Stalingrad and Leningrad are not just history, they are a source of encouragement to whoever reads them. Perfect demonstrations that there is hope even when all seems lost, just fight no matter what
@nerwikmascot
Жыл бұрын
well, it's bad actually reading the comments. They don't underststand tremenfous suffering of mere civilian within Leningrad. Not even close, they joking, they reason about how "good" was that siege tactics. It's all statistics to them
@DizitSjet
Жыл бұрын
@@nerwikmascot What kind of reaction do you expect from them? Even I have never starved or been in an enemy encirclement. For me, this is also history and statistics.
@nerwikmascot
Жыл бұрын
@@DizitSjet came here right after Максим Кац video, and you just can tell the vibe of the top comments there is so... Solemnly tragic, people feel connected to the scale of tragedy,share their relatives stories, i wish here twould be more stories of russians about total misery of their unfortunate relatives of Leningrad, and then read the reaction... It would be cynical, that ground that western world have of never being in tremendous trouble, makes them easier to fighting in the comments, "don't care" is the power and they possess it
I’m not joking 2 weeks ago, I was trying to look for battle of Berlin videos and then the very next day, armchair historian uploaded one. Then last night at 1 am I was looking at Leningrad documentary and I was mainly looking for armchair and it finally came out today
@PPKwazz999
Жыл бұрын
I ain’t joking, for reals, my mind blown
@georgiopasca2720
Жыл бұрын
Yea it also happens with me, I usually wonder that it is all connected😁
I really love your videos bro, they are awesome and have such great quality! Keep with that good job :)
Thanks for postig this great video, it's so cool to see where my grandfather fought during the siege. 58. infantry division, 158. artillery regiment in the triangle Strelna -> Uritzk -> Krasnyj Gorod, before they were put into the evacuation corridor of the Kessel of Demjansk. He sadly wasn't talking a lot about this time, but it's understandable. So many photos in his albums of War with the title "Soldatenschicksal💀⚰".
This channel continues to amaze me with its production values and storytelling, while still maintaining the accuracy of the events it is portraying. It is important we continue to study these events to be aware of what atrocities human being's are capable of, otherwise we are doomed to repeat them.
Спасибо большое за то что даришь нам свой контент и рассказываешь про это историческое событие коснувшиеся мой город. Мы помним о нём, заботимся о ветеранах и надеемся что подобное не когда в мире не повторится. Привет из Санкт-Петербурга
@crabluva
Жыл бұрын
Never happen again in the world except when Russia does it to Mariupol or Aleppo.
@barabancheggg
Жыл бұрын
@@crabluva 2 years long siege?
@crabluva
Жыл бұрын
@@barabancheggg Leningrad had a pre-war population 10x that of Mariupol's. The war has only been going one year but cities like Aadvika and Bahkmut have been under siege for almost a year and Russia will siege them for two years++ if they need to. Now Russia sends kamikazee drones into Kiev like how the Nazis used V2s on London. RU air force also bombed a theater in Mariupol full of civilians just like how the Luftwaffe did to Russian cities. Also more civilians died in Mariupol during its capture by the Russians than when it was captured by the Nazis... Please don't respond by "whatabouting" Iraq or Afghanistan it doesn't justify the siege of Mariupol and the Nazi style murder of the Avozstal defenders.
@dentercognitarna7602
Жыл бұрын
@@crabluva you so fkng brainwashed, man...
@dann5480
9 ай бұрын
@@crabluvakeep coping, hitlerite.
I studied abroad in St. Petersburg in the summer of 2019, lived with a host family who's grandmother lived through the Seige. I also got to visit the memorials of all those lost during the Seige. To see the conditions and hear about the tenacity the Soviet people had was insane. Every night my host mother and I would drink tea and chat about our lives in different parts of the world. Fun experience it was
I love love love love looooooove that you included Shostakovich. it made my whole day even though it was a minor detail in the video
its so weird that i watched your older version of this video literally just yesterday and now this is out
I was just watching battle of the bulge videos lately and I have to say it's good to too see Armchair historian covering the siege of Lenin grad
My grandfather, Walter, made it through the 41-42 winter before being evacuated at the start of navigation season. He refused to tell me a single word about that time until his very last days and was angry if he heard any German. Only thing I knew is that his blind mother didn't allow him to be evacuated somewhere in the autumn of 41, and that the ship full of children at which he was supposed to be was sunk by the Germans. Eventually, they returned to Leningrad. He started a family and in 1966 moved to where I live now, 15-minute stroll away from Piskaryovskoye memorial cemetery.
It's such a sad story. Straight of a horror movie. And what makes it even scarier is that it actually happened.
i was born and raised in st. petersburg, and the idea of not leaving a single crumb of food was drilled into me from the start, and it actually helps me now, i feel i'm way more efficient with my food than i otherwise would be
Like many people in the comments, I have also had family go through the siege. My grandmother has told me many stories about the limited number of food going round and family members giving each other their last rations of bread so that the other can survive. Truly heartbreaking
Your videos have been nothing but impressive and always caught me in awe with the smooth animation. It would be great if there a is a video from you guys talking about the Malayan campaign, for me I find it a very underrated topic despite the great resources of the Malay Peninsula being the main reason why Japan did Pearl Harbour, in order to cripple the US pacific fleet so it is easier to blunder the Southeast Asia. I also read documentaries about how the IJA general overseeing the Malayan campaign spoke about how the IJA was severely lacking and he knew in the long run the commonwealth forces will prevail, so he threatened the British general, Percival that the IJA will level Singapore to the ground in order to scare Percival to surrender which work. I would love to learn more from you guys, learning history has never been much fun and easier ever since i came across this channel.
Thank you for your content bro. Greetings from Chile
This must a be a video remake of Griffin's older videos on Leningrad which not going to lie the animation in this video is very remarkably well crafted. Round of applause 👏 🙌 to the animators in Griffin's team.
I absolutely love your channel :)
Wow absolutely amazing work!
thank you for covering this, its by fair my the most interesting part of the war for me. Its also sadly been largely overshadowed by berlin and Stalingrad. let us never forget the Heros of Leningrad.
What made me truly disturbed and angered when I read about the Leningrad Siege as a student was the fact people resorted to cannibalism in order to survive. May the poor souls who perished during the siege rest in peace and may all sins be forgiven to those that had to resort to all methods to survive
@Raphael4722
Жыл бұрын
Cannibalism was present at many of the longer sieges throughout history. This wasn't abnormal.
@nothingforyouhere418
Жыл бұрын
Starvation studies have been done on volunteers. Fit men had to lose over 1/3 weight; was quakers or amish. They all said they felt the urge to eat anything, and that they would have if they knew they couldnt quit the study whenever they wanted. You dont understand what not eating for 30 days or living on starvation rations feels like unless youve lived it. Life, in its core, is fucked up.
@jimbobjimjim6500
Жыл бұрын
There were some cases of cannibalism during our famine in Ireland....Hunger can drive people insane.....
@Valiant_R
Жыл бұрын
Но стоит отметить, что в том же самом тяжёлом 1942 году всего актов каннибализма было около пары тысяч. Много, однако учитывая, что население осажденного Ленинграда насчитывало около 1,5-2млн человек, то можно сказать, что большинство смогло сохранить человеческий облик даже в таких ужасных условиях.
One of the interesting facts I would like to drop is that massive efforts were undertaken to alleviate the hunger. One unexpected example is when the chemical scientists of one of the local universities managed to come up with a process of extracting and purifying edible food matter from the clumped up masses of burned foodstuffs that were found in the warehouses mentioned at 4:45 .
Excellent quality video, outstanding
High quality work per usual
One of my favorite stories from leningrad was when Sudayev had won the new submachinegun trials to make a simpler gun than the ppsh41 (that being the pps42), he snuck his way into Leningrad with prints and some of his guns to set up production in the city. He had no contact with the other factories producing the guns in Moscow and when he eventually left he'd find the other factories had made a ton of changes to the gun, further simplifying them, giving us the pps43. Ian from forgotten weapons has a cool vid going over one of the pps42s
My great grandfather who had served in WW1 served there, sustaining a serious injury when a grenade hit him all over with shrapnel, multiple pieces logged into his head but they could not remove them so he ended up paralyzed later on in his life.
Bro you are very educational I learned many things from you. Thx!!
Griffin, your intros are getting better and better!
I love it that your completing Eastern Front WW2 important events especially the Siege of Leningrad. Hope the Jassy-Kishinev Offensive will be foretold in here next.
@herptek
Жыл бұрын
This channel covers the Russian version of events, which is often very biased. We are used to considering their narratives as propagandistic and out of touch with reality.
@The_Snark
Жыл бұрын
@@herptek The famine in Leningrad was arranged by stalin. There was no blockade. Look at the map. If desired, food could be delivered.
@eluc_s2510
Жыл бұрын
@@The_Snark lmao
@The_Snark
Жыл бұрын
@@eluc_s2510 The above is not my arrogant opinion. That is result of an investigation by historians.
@eluc_s2510
Жыл бұрын
@@The_Snark Sure. Which historians exactly?
I recommend watching the Soviet Storm documentary, they do a really good episode on Leningrad (and a bunch of other topics too)
@DavidJones-oc3up
Жыл бұрын
I have it on DVD, and it’s really well done.
@davianoinglesias5030
Жыл бұрын
Watched it too😅I never thought I would watch it beyond one episode, shock on me, I watched all of it and enjoyed it thoroughly
The choice of music in this video is amazing, really fits with the battles.
Love your videos, especially those covering ww2. I was wondering if you could make some videos about ww1 from perspective of the kingdom of Serbia?
Love animation of Historic events.
Shostakovich's seventh symphony is something to listen to, especially when you have the context for it, but that also applies to all of Shostakovich's work. To me the best composer that ever existed, try his second cello concerto, trumpet & piano concerto (choose a version where it's not "just" a piano concerto), or seventh string quartet.
I think this is the best animated video I’ve seen you post.
Interesting fact: Hitler was so convinced that Leningrad would fall that he planned to hold celebrations in hotel Astoria. One of the most expensive and luxurious hotel still standing today in Saint Petersburg.
@eridjonavdulaj2386
Жыл бұрын
Hitler did many mistakes . This îs why germany Lost WW2
@eridjonavdulaj2386
Жыл бұрын
@@Ghost-vi8qm true
@eridjonavdulaj2386
Жыл бұрын
@@Ghost-vi8qm in 1941-42 Hitler did the biggest mistakes in the war . He declared war on America attacked USSR in the summer and did Not supplied His soldiers with winter clothes
@Discussors
Жыл бұрын
@@eridjonavdulaj2386 not like the USA even did much against the germans
@eridjonavdulaj2386
Жыл бұрын
@@Discussors imagine. it took the whole world to defeat germans 😯
When the war started, my grandmother was only 10 years old. Her father, my great-grandfather, went to the front, never returning from there. Together with my great-grandmother and brother, they survived the siege and the war. At night, my grandmother put out incendiary bombs on the roofs, every day in the cold she herself went for bread. War is terrible, it's sad to see how people are dying in war right now .. Never forget, never again🙏
@salimattal2864
Жыл бұрын
You are from Russia ?
12:45 Tallinn seems to be multiplying.
@oasis1282
Жыл бұрын
Cool
Astounding work!
That's a really good work !
I didn't know the people of St. Petersburg had to endure such a prolonged siege during WW2. I'm surprised the Nazis kept up the siege so vehemently for so long too. Thank you for another very informative episode. Merry Christmas out there everybody. ✝️🎄
@alaric_
Жыл бұрын
It was known "LENINgrad" at the time so it's the very same as with the STALINgrad: big boys play with the lives of ordinary people for their own pleasure. What i mean by that is that losing either namesake-city city would have been devastatingly embarrasing for Stalin. Winning either city would have been a huge morale win for Hitler. Aside with those two things, losing the cities would have meant little overall for the war as neither city was a production center during the war (they were before it) so Soviet Union did what did best despite those two cities.
@evryatis9231
Жыл бұрын
@@alaric_ morale being one of the single biggest factor in battle all other things equal, so for a war..
@konstantinkelekhsaev302
Жыл бұрын
@@alaric_ Wtf you talking about both those cities were industral centers producing weapons and ammo throughout the war
@runbarryrun2717
Жыл бұрын
Looks like we got the "american expert" here
@gamingthisera6339
Жыл бұрын
@user-cx8by8nn6y Hitler was an anti Zionist before it was cool😎
Bro that intro gave me chills
Really well done. Keep up the good work. Can you do a siege of Petersburg during the American civil war? Thanks for the amazing content!
I love your content so much. This is my favorite channel.
I can't even imagine the level of bravery the citizens of Leningrad showed and how awful thier suffering was.
I read in an old book that the sacrifices of the citizens of Leningrad could easily compare to the sacrifices the citizens of Stalingrad made during this war.
Very good animations! A lot of action, 💥
Good intro! gave me chills.
A full-length Soviet-Afghan War video would be super awesome
@CocainePirate
Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@herptek
Жыл бұрын
I have a sense that this channel would produce an extremely pro-soviet story about it, too.
@conserva-chan2735
Жыл бұрын
@@herptek yeah, dude literally said the USSR's barrier troops were for "morale" and that Soviet tactics dependent on high troop casualties were a "myth of Nazi propaganda". His USSR bias is annoying as hell. Also, people totally forget that the USSR committed an atrocity comparable to the Cambodian Genocide or Holocaust in Poland in Afghanistan.
@herptek
Жыл бұрын
@@conserva-chan2735 Some people just have been taught that version of history from early age where the Soviet Union is the unambiguous good guy in history, whose crimes don't count somehow as much of everyone elses.
@conserva-chan2735
Жыл бұрын
@@herptek literally all Cold War history from American public schools is "America was evil in Cold War because Vietnam and Operaton Condor". Literally nothing on what the Soviets did, just "America bad". So by process of elimination, you get a ton of USSR simps in the U.S relative to anywhere in the world outside of Russia itself. Hell, outside of the Iron Curtain, Operation Condor, and the Vietnam War most Americans don't know anything about the Cold War compared to Asians, Africans, and Europeans.
One small correction: at 12:45 the main city of the territory of former country of Latvia was named the same as the Estonia's main city 'Tallinn', despite the fact that the main city of the Latvian territory was named as 'Riga'.
This was great , thanks
Another amazing ANIMATION
Videos like this make you realised that the soviets saved us from fascism, and we owe that to them.
@WyattPriceTV
Жыл бұрын
Who is “we”? I’m American. I owe them nothing.
@ttpbroadcastingcompany.4460
Жыл бұрын
@@WyattPriceTV As much as it may pain me to say such, if it weren't for the Soviets, we wouldn't be Americans. They were the main force to pushing back the NAZIs. That's not to discredit our efforts, but the Soviets did not stop pushing until the Germans were thoroughly destroyed.
@WyattPriceTV
Жыл бұрын
@@ttpbroadcastingcompany.4460 There was absolutely no chance of Germany being able to invade the United States.
@ttpbroadcastingcompany.4460
Жыл бұрын
@@WyattPriceTV That's the thing though. With the Soviets out of the way, Hitler would have a lot more men to throw at the US and UK. The Soviets were the main reason we won, as Hitler had to divide his manpower against two different fronts. Even if he couldn't invade America, he could still likely conquer Europe and then compete with the US economically.
@WyattPriceTV
Жыл бұрын
@@ttpbroadcastingcompany.4460 I doubt that very much. The German navy wouldn’t have been powerful enough to defeat the Royal Navy even if they had managed to reach their production quota in 1948. The US certainly wasn’t in danger. The economic competitiveness would probably not be any worse than what we have now against the EU and China.
I have been waiting for Leningrad, good lord I love this channel
Very interesting thanks for the Video
My grandfather was in that siege while he was 14 years old, and then he was lucky to be evacuated by the road of life. He remembered this episode of war until the last day of his life. He was never scared of anything after that.
I enjoy watching every your video, but separately want to say Thank you so much for an objective look at history of my country. Without traditional western russophobia and stereotypes.
"Deadliest siege of WW2" One of (if not) the deadliest siege in history!
0:01 If you're wondering who is speaking on the speakers During the siege. It was karl eliasberg, The Philharmonia's Conductor which conducted the Premiere of said symphony