Medieval Europe Was Peaceful, Diverse and Wasn't White

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Be prepared! As today we will read together from 5 different articles on Cracked which will debunk myths and tell us the reality about the Middle Ages, Medieval Europe and Knights! BRACE!
Links to the Articles
Article one
www.cracked.com/article_32310...
Article 2
www.cracked.com/article_29905...
Article 3
www.cracked.com/image-pictofa...
Article 4
www.cracked.com/article_35276...
Article 5
www.cracked.com/article_32372...
Link to my previous videos where I've discussed other articles similar to these, but about Ancient Rome and ancient Greece
• Ancient Greece Hated D...
• Ancient Greece Was HOR...
• Were The Ancient Roman...
Link to Polymathy 's video about the J in Latin
• Why you should write J...
#atlasvpn #bestvpn #middleages

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  • @kappa5809
    @kappa5809 Жыл бұрын

    As a medieval european farmer, I can confirm that nothing pissed me more than getting my land raided by Japanese and Korean vikings, while our Indian King and his Sri Lankan allies didn't do much to defend against them.

  • @tar-elenionmaranwe1275

    @tar-elenionmaranwe1275

    Жыл бұрын

    I see that you decided to not mention how the Zulus and Aztecs rode to your rescue. I wonder why...

  • @joserubenuriberusca1248

    @joserubenuriberusca1248

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh so you play age II everything will be fine just be careful of the cobra car

  • @FlagAnthem

    @FlagAnthem

    Жыл бұрын

    Mongolian raids

  • @KeithR2002

    @KeithR2002

    Жыл бұрын

    Average eu 4 game

  • @dan_mer

    @dan_mer

    Жыл бұрын

    No, you got it all wrong. The narrative they are trying to push is that all groups were mixed. So, there were no Japanese Vikings, all Vikings were mixed, one Viking was a black tranny, the other was a disabled Japanese woman, the third one was a Pakistani gay wizard, the attackers were mixed, the victims were mixed, everyone was mixed, there were Muslims living in Vatican, there were no ethnically homogeneous societies. That is what they are pushing.

  • @anarchclown
    @anarchclown Жыл бұрын

    In Stockholm (the relatively diverse capital of Sweden) seeing a black person was an uncommon occurence still in the eighties when I grew up and people from southern Europe were considered somewhat exotic for being so dark. If people seriously believe that medieval times were more diverse than the eighties they clearly never heard of an airplane and should probably be considered mental children.

  • @dlevi67

    @dlevi67

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem is that many US citizens have a strong conviction that the rest of the world is like the place they grew up in.

  • @Diogenes_43

    @Diogenes_43

    Жыл бұрын

    They can’t survive up there without getting rickets from the lack of vitamin D. Modern supplements in food overcome this problem, but they’d get sick without it.

  • @anarchclown

    @anarchclown

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Diogenes_43 Uhm. No. There were definitely black people up here. Just not many of them.

  • @rincontibio7664

    @rincontibio7664

    Жыл бұрын

    @@anarchclown indeed, is the same in Northern South America, blondies where an uncommon sight, but they did exist

  • @bacicinvatteneaca

    @bacicinvatteneaca

    Жыл бұрын

    These articles are mindless clickbait, but they're recycling talking points that started as something that made sense, ie: there always was SOME travel, SOME contact, SOME migration, SOME import and export, SOME cultural influences from further away than one would expect. And there's people who deny that.

  • @thegoondockswarcouncil9543
    @thegoondockswarcouncil954311 ай бұрын

    The LoTR cast was *very* diverse-the fellowship alone had hobbits, dwarves, high elves, silvan elves, men, and Maiar. That’s a lot of races. And if you consider the cast outside of the fellowship, you had even more races: trolls, orcs, sentient giant spiders, sentient giant eagles, etc. seems pretty diverse to me…

  • @alexporter7379

    @alexporter7379

    11 ай бұрын

    Never seen it put better. Who needs dark skinned elves (dark elves?) when you got fucking dwarves and hobbits going for the pipe-weed.

  • @sirrathersplendid4825

    @sirrathersplendid4825

    10 ай бұрын

    If Rings of Power had based major side plots in the southlands with an entirely black cast no one would have batted an eyelid. Indeed it might have added to the respected Tolkien lore. But of course that was too difficult for the clowns that wrote the drivel that was RoP.

  • @tileux

    @tileux

    10 ай бұрын

    And sentient trees.

  • @tileux

    @tileux

    10 ай бұрын

    Same for The Witcher. Ironically, the discrimination against ‘monsters’, elves, and dwarves in the books (which was a major theme of the games as well) got completely neutered in the tv series by having african, asian, and white dwarves, elves and people all living in colour-blind harmony and not explaining where all of them could possibly have come from. The tv series writers appear to be completely oblivious to the fact that discrimination and, yes, racism, were core background themes of the story. Its kind of hard to take discrimination against black and white elves seriously when youve got black and white people united in that discrimination without any explanation.

  • @hackerx7329

    @hackerx7329

    10 ай бұрын

    One of the many things about RoP that really gets me is that out of all the races they made a dwarf black. They live most of their lives underground. If your reasoning for forcing the inclusion of black characters in a fantasy world is because "it should reflect our world" (Why? It is fantasy.) then explain how a race that spends their whole lives with little to no exposure to sunlight ended up with somebody who had dark skin pigmentation instead of pale white like all the creatures we keep finding in the deep sea where no sunlight reaches or the creatures that live their whole lives inside caves. You could have chose almost any other race from the writings of Tolkien but you manage to pick the one where is makes zero sense on their own for them to have dark skin. The only way you could have explained it was to have that character be a descendant of a dwarf and another race with dark skin. You could have even had it make some sort of sense as a political arranged marriage as part of some sort of treaty or alliance. But no, you just did something that made fans mad and then called them racists.

  • @fioredeutchmark
    @fioredeutchmark Жыл бұрын

    I didn’t see a black person in the flesh until I was 17 years old and there were maybe 2 kids in my entire school who weren’t white. These kinds of articles are always so funny to me.

  • @HenryLoenwind

    @HenryLoenwind

    11 ай бұрын

    I saw some from afar when I was younger. American soldiers stationed around here.

  • @Celisar1

    @Celisar1

    11 ай бұрын

    Same here, saw the first black person in my life at 16, a black US soldier stationed in Germany. Before that nothing, nada, rien, niente.

  • @BeautyJulik

    @BeautyJulik

    10 ай бұрын

    My mom didn't see a black person irl until her mid 40s

  • @hughjaenus2235

    @hughjaenus2235

    10 ай бұрын

    In my country it's like 99% white people so most of us are kinda in shock when we see other races, it's to the point where racism here is common especially for the older generation, i myself make racist jokes, but so do the very few blacks here and immigrants.

  • @Slender_Man_186

    @Slender_Man_186

    10 ай бұрын

    Roughly the same here and I’m only 20 living in West Virginia, there were maybe 5 black kids in a high school of roughly 1000 students. It was basically the same for my mom when she was young in Revere Massachusetts, there was one black family and that was it.

  • @Franz_Redmane
    @Franz_Redmane Жыл бұрын

    Medieval Europe WAS a very diverse land full of many different cultures, it's just that those people were still 99% white. It's interesting how it's only considered diversity if the differing people have different skin colors. You'd be called a racist if you said that Chinese, Japanese, and Koreans are all the same, but for some reason it's perfectly fine to say that Danes, Geats, and Frisians are all the same.

  • @sianais

    @sianais

    Жыл бұрын

    That's what I'm saying. Ironically, they do the same crap to black people when they pull one random black person to represent us all. I have just as much in common with a random white American/Brit as I do a black one. So how does sticking one random black lady as a Viking act as representation for me or any other black person? She's not from my village or my country. Why do they do this crap? How did Europeans embracing their own history end up being equated to being r@cist, and how did tokenism 2.0 become an act worthy of praise? Why is everything today stupid?

  • @SeasideDetective2

    @SeasideDetective2

    Жыл бұрын

    In addition, a surprising large number of "native" Europeans have had swarthy skin for thousands of years, due to ancient migrations from the Middle East and North Africa. People with olive complexions were found not just in Iberia and Italy, but in much of France and even in Wales and Ireland. Even the Vikings would have seen a few brown-eyed, slightly olive people in their travels throughout northern Europe.

  • @oduinn7948

    @oduinn7948

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SeasideDetective2 Nah, they had African Queens, don't lie. -Yes, I'm being flippant-

  • @user-gp5yz5yz4x

    @user-gp5yz5yz4x

    Жыл бұрын

    It wasn't 100% white. There were a lot of people from central Asia who'd settle multiple areas of eastern europe, and Spain was occupied by Arabs (who'd I'd contend are white anyways but I digress)

  • @bristoled93

    @bristoled93

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SeasideDetective2 Thats still white.

  • @Don-Coyote-De-Transylvania
    @Don-Coyote-De-Transylvania Жыл бұрын

    "Medieval Europe Was Peaceful, Diverse and Wasn't White" And penguins play symphony in the Arctic Ocean.

  • @peterpike

    @peterpike

    Жыл бұрын

    Penguins play music. And Canadian seals go clubbing......

  • @BasementPepperoni

    @BasementPepperoni

    Жыл бұрын

    @@peterpike Baby Seals walk into clubs all the time ffs!

  • @karenburrows9184

    @karenburrows9184

    Жыл бұрын

    Silly. Everyone knows penguins play symphonies in the desert. Sheesh.

  • @garesonc9672

    @garesonc9672

    Жыл бұрын

    You meant highlight the absurdity of their thinking with another nonsensical notion but in their world, penguins(or at least humans identifying as such) could play a symphony in the Arctic Ocean. See? They have you check-mated.

  • @Don-Coyote-De-Transylvania

    @Don-Coyote-De-Transylvania

    Жыл бұрын

    @@karenburrows9184 They do, but only on Tuesday.

  • @KilianMuster
    @KilianMuster11 ай бұрын

    I agree, the middle ages (中世時代) are never used to refer to any historical time in Japan. European middle ages cover the following Japanese historical periods: Kofun, Asuka, Nara, Heian, Kamakura and Muromachi ­- none of them is named "middle ages". So at least from a Japanese standpoint, "middle ages" are always in Europe, just like Muromachi period will never be used for European history.

  • @CoolManCoolMan123

    @CoolManCoolMan123

    10 ай бұрын

    That's education system using different terms. We in India have middle ages and medieval period interchangeably to describe our history. Also, Japanese medieval time periods have way better names than the bland middle ages.

  • @doltBmB

    @doltBmB

    10 ай бұрын

    middle ages is a ridiculously broad term that covers almost 1000 years so it doesn't really mean much except that the dominant social structure is feudalism

  • @Blox117

    @Blox117

    9 ай бұрын

    better than living in the dark ages (now)

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    9 ай бұрын

    Basically few centuries prior to Sengoku Jidai, can be considered as equivalent of Medieval. Rest is semantic.

  • @brucetucker4847

    @brucetucker4847

    8 ай бұрын

    @@doltBmB And depending on how you define "feudalism," for many times and places not even that.

  • @kaloyan2778
    @kaloyan277810 ай бұрын

    As a knight whom slayeth two dragons and thrice rescued a Japanese, Indian and Aztec princess from captivity across Europe, I dare say this article has blemished my honor!

  • @mikepalmer2219

    @mikepalmer2219

    9 ай бұрын

    Lol. This made me laugh for real. Lol.

  • @JuanGonzalez-cl4md

    @JuanGonzalez-cl4md

    2 ай бұрын

    Fucking legend dude.

  • @miguelsuarez-solis5027
    @miguelsuarez-solis5027 Жыл бұрын

    Ever notice that Europe was the only place that was super diverse to these people?

  • @massimilianomencacci2510

    @massimilianomencacci2510

    Жыл бұрын

    Now they have begun to attack Asia as well. With the astonishing repetition of black samurai, of dark leaders in China... luckily the Chinese and the Japanese put up a lot of resistance. They invent black kingdoms and civilizations in America before the arrival of the Europeans...and I would like to know how these fabulous black civilizations got there, since according to Arab travelers they hardly had pirogues at the time.

  • @TitB1199

    @TitB1199

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@massimilianomencacci2510Dey done built tha Great Wall of China maine.

  • @esmeraldagreen1992

    @esmeraldagreen1992

    Жыл бұрын

    I grew up in Southern Europe, in my hometown in the 70s there was only one mixed race family, the husband was an engineer who went to Africa for work and married an African lady.

  • @DavidValdezBigWaveDave

    @DavidValdezBigWaveDave

    Жыл бұрын

    @@esmeraldagreen1992 Italy?

  • @user-qg4vt9mz3j

    @user-qg4vt9mz3j

    Жыл бұрын

    ever heard of jews

  • @mlggodzilla1567
    @mlggodzilla1567 Жыл бұрын

    We went from "medieval times were incredibly dark, anti science, and especially bigoted times we should all forget" to "medieval Europe was a melting pot of diversity and race", I wonder what big media corporation will decide to choose because its starting to be confusing 🤔🤔🤔

  • @cp1cupcake

    @cp1cupcake

    Жыл бұрын

    I want to know what none of those diverse races never got on a boat to go over to the Americas. After all, if groups came because they were persecuted for worshiping Jesus differently, then why wouldn't they have had the same issues for Muslims, who, at the very least, don't believe Jesus is a deity at all.

  • @_XR40_

    @_XR40_

    Жыл бұрын

    I like the fact that those are presented as being opposed when, in truth, the diversity merchants are themselves "...incredibly dark, anti science, and especially bigoted...".

  • @mlggodzilla1567

    @mlggodzilla1567

    Жыл бұрын

    @@_XR40_ oy vey did you say merchants?

  • @_XR40_

    @_XR40_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mlggodzilla1567 Shhh

  • @backintimealwyn5736

    @backintimealwyn5736

    Жыл бұрын

    It is actually " medieval times were a wonderful time thanks to diversity, later, black people invented the locomotive and antibiotics".

  • @czdot
    @czdot11 ай бұрын

    I remember Daniel Vávra talking about his Kingdom Come game which takes place in 1403 in Bohemia, which now is the Czech Republic. The number of people giving so much crap for not including diverse characters as astoundingly stupid.

  • @aerialpunk
    @aerialpunk11 ай бұрын

    I thought the same thing when you read about how the Middle Ages wasn't just in Europe. I was like, well *yeah,* the Middle Ages is literally a term used to refer to a period in *European* history, so... Yes, yes the Middle Ages *were* just in Europe, lol

  • @SuddenReal

    @SuddenReal

    10 ай бұрын

    Europe at that time, was the world. Just like Japan was the world during the same period, or Africa, or South American empires... Or, you now, how the US believe they are the world nowadays.

  • @baigandinel7956

    @baigandinel7956

    9 ай бұрын

    That's like saying the Middle Kingdom was not just Chinese.

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    9 ай бұрын

    @@SuddenReal Well... if you ignore North Africa, Middle East and Central Asia. Which for reminder real historians don't ignore.

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    9 ай бұрын

    @@baigandinel7956 Middle Kingdom is basically just Chinese Classic Era.

  • @SuddenReal

    @SuddenReal

    9 ай бұрын

    @@TheRezro And yet, all the things that happened in the Middle Ages in Europe had little effect to what transpired in Central Asia at the same time period, nor did either regions care since they weren't part of their world. You know, like you said in your other comment how "Middle Kingdom is basically just Chinese Classic Era". That was all that was relevant to them during that era because they were the world at that time. But since you're talking about real historians, you're acting like different time periods in history don't have specialists. I"m not saying those specialist don't know anything about other countries during their era of expertise, just that they have an in-depth knowledge of the things relevant to their expertise, all the rest is just basic knowledge (for instance, someone who knows all about the vikings will not know the Chinese dynasties in depth, because why would they? The vikings only made it to the middle east). And let's be honest, the people who are being called out in this video aren't real historians.

  • @chrisgund88
    @chrisgund88 Жыл бұрын

    The whole "middle ages were diverse" thing feels like Holldywood creating the baseline to call people wrong (and white supremacist) when people think that their movies with mandatory race quotas lack immersion xD

  • @edackley8595

    @edackley8595

    Жыл бұрын

    It's all about social engineering. Total political agenda. Until people realize this, the clown show will simply continue. Talking to young people today is becoming very hard to do. Ignorance and dumbing down is very widespread.

  • @dangerousdiscourse

    @dangerousdiscourse

    Жыл бұрын

    Its about erasing our history

  • @yarpenzigrin1893

    @yarpenzigrin1893

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not Hollywood, it's neo-marxists creating the baseline. This is a neo-marxist ideology but you're correct, their end goal is to call people white supremacist.

  • @robr.5044

    @robr.5044

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s exactly what they are doing

  • @steverempel8584

    @steverempel8584

    Жыл бұрын

    This 100% makes sense!

  • @andraip
    @andraip Жыл бұрын

    Mediaval Europe was culturally super diverse. For example in medieval Italy alone you had Sicilians, Venetians, Lombards, Neapolitans... it was truly a cultural melting pot.

  • @daandevos122

    @daandevos122

    Жыл бұрын

    Many of them still exist, though you'd probably need to go to the countryside, where less people move to, to find them. though it is fair, through all the different conquests, many new languages were spread about vast swathes of land, instead of staying in a tiny region, as with many other regions of the world. Meaning it was likely less diverse than let's say Africa, which has thousands upon thousands of etnicities, whilst Europe could only muster a couple hundreds. After all, of the major regions, Europe has the least endangered languages, yet it's endangered languages have on average way more speakers compared to other reginons. Because the languages are less given through to the next generation. Despite Breton having a lot more speakers than some vague language spoken in 3 villages in Guinea somewhere, it might be more endangered, because the youth doesn't learn it anymore(Because they learn French at school, and there's a social stigma against regional languages), and the elderly, who do speak it, are dying off. Compared to the few village, where everyone will still learn the language, meaning the language has a better shot at lasting into the future. I think multiple factors cause it, under which higher levels of education as well as increased migration. Both of which(ironically in the case of the latter), will leave Europe(And the world, we get the same everywhere, instead of differences) a lot less diverse than it has been for centuries. I'd also say the same about food variety, I like European food, but so many people just don't eat it anymore, instead going for rice and other stuff. Sorry, I went on a rant, we'll see how the future goes, for now, I just hope I'll be able to preserve the customs of the past.

  • @andraip

    @andraip

    Жыл бұрын

    @@daandevos122 Europe also had dialects only spoken in a couple villages, just that they went all went extinct already without anyone taking note. For example the small and isolated Portuguese archipelago of the Azores has over 100 different dialects. They are so different from standard Portuguese that someone from the mainland won't understand shit. Even for people living there, go to a different island or even just to the other side of your island and you won't be able to communicate. Nowadays of course everyone learns standard Portuguese in school, but the elderly which back then didn't use to go to school still speak their dialect exclusively.

  • @hayleylongster4698

    @hayleylongster4698

    Жыл бұрын

    Culturally diverse Racially homogenous

  • @andraip

    @andraip

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hayleylongster4698 The entire human population is racially homogenous, there are neither Neanderthals nor Denisovans around any more. The concept of dividing the human race into multiple races based on the amount of melanin in the skin is a fairly modern invention, but yes there were no settlements of Han or Bantu in medieval Italy. Hair, eye and skin colour were different across different Italian cultures and people would be able to see whether someone was a local or not or which region they are from.

  • @ManCheat2

    @ManCheat2

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andraip your not gonna be able to get a transplant from someone whos another race....

  • @mcampbe41
    @mcampbe4111 ай бұрын

    Early firearms were not adopted as they were more effective than cross bows & longbows but due to the dufus factor. You could take someone off a farm & train them to use a matchlock very quickly; it took a lifetime to train an archer. Lining up troops with an arquebus was cheap and fast and armour was also expensive.

  • @alexporter7379

    @alexporter7379

    11 ай бұрын

    Well that and the pike and shot method proved deadly to everyone. Pikes handled what would later be done by the bayonet, while the shot handled the job of the archer. You can do that in a single formation. Combined with what you said, you can devastate most middle to late medieval armies. Throw a cavalry charge in to handle the routers, and you have an unquestionable victory.

  • @TheTeremaster

    @TheTeremaster

    10 ай бұрын

    Most likely why armour fell by the wayside too. Why spend so much money on armour when you can save that and use it for an extra few hundred (or thousand) peasants with just guns? Took you near 15 years to train a knight, probably 5 for a man-at-arms, took a week to show some barely literate farmer how the bang stick worked, the value of that musketeer was far less so why protect them as much?

  • @Kamamura2

    @Kamamura2

    3 ай бұрын

    @@TheTeremaster Manpower is not infinite either, and if your peasantry gets killed in a war, famine follows.

  • @AnaLucia-wy2ii
    @AnaLucia-wy2ii10 ай бұрын

    I believe Tolkien was writing folk legends for England in particular. I hope I’m not perpetuating another myth in the comment section, but I’ve heard several times that Tolkien lamented the fact that England lacked the rich folk tale history that the rest of Europe had so that was his inspiration behind Lord of the Rings. So Middle Earth is basically England or perhaps all of the British Isles.

  • @konferansjer
    @konferansjer Жыл бұрын

    The worst myth about that time is that people were stupid back then. They were not. They were about as smart as we are now. They simply had very different grounds to base their thoughts on. They were starting with very different assumptions, but after that, their logic and reasoning were as flawless (or as flawed) as ours.

  • @DaPeasant

    @DaPeasant

    Жыл бұрын

    They were "stupid" in the sense of not many people outside of the nobles and royals knew how to read and write. Not to mention the common knowledge we all share thanks to widespread education. For example you get an open wound, 99% of people know you need to clean the wound with something more than leeches and a prayer. But yeah they didn't have different brains to modern Europeans. They were just missing an education headed by science, good healthcare system, good nutrition, clean water, human rights, and democracy.

  • @ThatNorwegianGuy-

    @ThatNorwegianGuy-

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DaPeasant Your modern average citizen are far dumber than what they were thousands of years ago

  • @aguilarraliuga1777

    @aguilarraliuga1777

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DaPeasant human rights are a farce, such thinking leads to nothing but trouble. After all: the only right man has is the free will, everything else is defended by tongue and sword.

  • @stalhandske9649

    @stalhandske9649

    Жыл бұрын

    Most correct. I would also like to add that people back then (and much later, too) had large experience and inherited knowledge of things we moderns often do not consider. By this I mean e.g. various signs in nature that told proper times to sow or harvest, telling from the shape & place of growth of a tree whether its timber is good for tools or building material (and for which part of house), which herbs & how prepared are help for rheumatism and so on. Since the vocations weren't as specialized as they are today and the knowledge wasn't readily available in printed/electrical & mostly free form, as we do, most of these had to be possessed in memory - at least of someone in the village! On top of all that, a number of oral legends, family histories, saints' lives, riddles and popular songs would be memorized; we are cultural animals, after all. My hunch is, actually, that their memory capacity (by necessity) far exceeded ours.

  • @abcdefghij337

    @abcdefghij337

    Жыл бұрын

    I love that the standard for education was whether one could read and write in Latin. Like, with their standards, most of us are illiterate, too.

  • @DarthChrisB
    @DarthChrisB Жыл бұрын

    Europe outside of cities is still very white today. 500 years ago you certainly would never see a black/Indian/Chinese/Arabian person unless you were a merchant. I also hate how they say "diverse" but really mean "different skin color". Europe was the most diverse place on Earth, yet everyone was white.

  • @k.umquat8604

    @k.umquat8604

    Жыл бұрын

    "Diverse" has become an euphemism for non-white.

  • @mcdick1621

    @mcdick1621

    Жыл бұрын

    i live in germany and was once buying fish from a local farmer in my village and me and a buddy were briefly talking with the farmer (who at that time was well above 80) about his childhood/teens and he said when the brits and american soldiers marched trough our village it was the very first time in his life he has seen a black person. before that only in some books about different nations around the world but not once with his own eyes. even southern europeans were seen as exotic while they basically lived right around the corner.

  • @PeachDragon_

    @PeachDragon_

    Жыл бұрын

    Europe has the most natural diversity in the world and it's not even close, there's 20+ ethnicities in Europe. You won't find anything in common between a Sardinian and a Scandinavian, but these ignorant people only know like 3 ethnicities and want those specifically, african americans, mexicans, Koreans and white American, there's nothing else to these people because they don't actually have a clue what they're talking about

  • @elseggs6504

    @elseggs6504

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@mcdick1621 In my experience southern and eastern europeans still get treated like theyre aliens even though now they walk on eggshells when it comes to Ukranians.

  • @raics101

    @raics101

    Жыл бұрын

    That's true, here in eastern Europe, you still tend to notice a black man because there aren't many around even in larger cities. If one visited a remote village he'd probably be asked for a selfie. Before the migrant crisis started you wouldn't see many middle eastern people either. The Chinese established a notable presence only after they started opening their stores by late 90s, but other far-eastern people are on the level of statistical error.

  • @TheCMGiordano
    @TheCMGiordano9 ай бұрын

    Having just discovered your channel via KZread's recommendation algorithm today, I obviously was not familiar with your content, so when I saw this video's title I sighed and rolled my eyes and thought, "Here we go again," thinking this would be another one of the Cracked-type information dumps you reference, only to find out that you would be calling such content into question. THANK YOU. It's so freakin' refreshing to find content creators who aren't afraid to be honest about what history actually entails: The good AND the bad. In this day and age, it seems like so many people want to gloss over the horrors and atrocities of the past because they're uncomfortable to talk about instead of actually learning the lessons they can teach us.

  • @FrankHarwald
    @FrankHarwald10 ай бұрын

    13:30 A coincidence about The Witcher: it's obviously heavily based on the novels by Sapkowski but many don't seem to realize that Sapkowski who based his novels on the already existing folklore, legends & tales around Poland, Pomerania & adjacent regions are overlapping with the regions that the Brothers Grimm were traveling around to record their Fairy Tales from in the 19th century. Because of this I'm not astounded that there are regularly overlapping themes, details & background info between the Witcher novels, games & Grimms' Fairy Tales (even if they are clearly written in a highly idealized fashion & for a younger audience) & to a certain degree this even holds true for those Grimms' Fairy Tales adaptations that Disney made.

  • @purpleanex
    @purpleanex Жыл бұрын

    I live in rural Suffolk, UK. Up to 20 years ago it was almost impossible to find someone who wasn't white British here. Thirty five years ago when I was at secondary school, there was one Indian girl and one mixed race boy. I didnt see, meet a black person until I was 19 years old. This was 30 years ago, there's no chance they would have been here 800 years ago.

  • @markshrimpton3138

    @markshrimpton3138

    Жыл бұрын

    I was a student in Norwich in the late 1970s and went out with a black girl who’d been adopted as a baby by a lovely Norfolk couple. She was, in my 3 years there, the only non white person I encountered.

  • @cleoldbagtraallsorts3380

    @cleoldbagtraallsorts3380

    Жыл бұрын

    I went to school in Suffolk and had a similar experience, at my entire school, out of hundreds of children, there were 2 Asian boys, 1 black boy, 1 black girl and 2 mixed race girls. Where I currently live in Suffolk, there are only 2 black people locally and a handful of East Asian, South Asian and Turkish people who run the takeaways and restaurants. I'm 50 years old and have always lived in East Anglia. I was called all sorts of names including being tarred as a racist by a Korean person online because I wouldn't agree that Anne Boleyn was black!

  • @leedobson

    @leedobson

    Жыл бұрын

    My experience growing up in Washington in the North East in the 80's was exactly the same, a couple of Indians at school and zero black kids, the DNA of people there is completely white European

  • @backintimealwyn5736

    @backintimealwyn5736

    Жыл бұрын

    yes , they are lying and trying to rewrite history. they want our kids to think it's always been this way, so they don't get a sense of the fact that these lands belonged to their people. they know what they are doing, it's called propaganda .

  • @Goforfink

    @Goforfink

    Жыл бұрын

    I saw a black person at mcdonalds a few months ago... first time I had seen one in my life. I am 37.

  • @brent6771
    @brent6771 Жыл бұрын

    the thing that annoys me the most is they don't have to include diversity into medieval Europe. Other places have rich histories that I really enjoy learning about and watching movies. Japan, China, India, Africa, Native Americans, all have unique interesting histories. We do not need to lump them in with European stories, they have their own. Tell those stories

  • @elizabethanthony3916

    @elizabethanthony3916

    Жыл бұрын

    👍👏👏👏👏

  • @Kaermorhan

    @Kaermorhan

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey there Ireland remember remember Ch Chulian well now he is a Senegalese women and Diarmuid is trans.

  • @KeluMocy

    @KeluMocy

    Жыл бұрын

    The point is to undermine European identity.

  • @theclown3967

    @theclown3967

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Kaermorhan Lol.

  • @alienfish8521

    @alienfish8521

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not about telling stories, it's about erasing European history and undermining the identity of Europeans. Would have thought this was pretty obvious to anyone by now.

  • @emillutzkanov1348
    @emillutzkanov134811 ай бұрын

    I recently discovered your channel, and I am fascinated by it. You answer questions I've been having in my head for 20+ years. Nice! :)

  • @OmegaZ21
    @OmegaZ219 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the great content this is only your second video I've watched but the arrow showing your viewers where you are reading from is one of the best things I've seen and not many or any other creators do that its better than highlighting alone and says here is where we are follow along. This is better than some people will just throw a paragraph up and you have to pause to find your place.

  • @samvimes9510
    @samvimes9510 Жыл бұрын

    Used to be that if history made people uncomfortable, we'd try to learn from it. Now if history makes people uncomfortable, we just rewrite it.

  • @th3mous380

    @th3mous380

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep. It's very dangerous Ministry of Truth style deception.

  • @WilliamGarrow

    @WilliamGarrow

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@hah-vj7hc Who is they? Most of this crap comes from Europeans themselves. Nobody if sound mind thinks you had millions of black people in the past living in Europe.

  • @PolythenePam0451

    @PolythenePam0451

    Жыл бұрын

    lol? this has always happened

  • @akatsukicloak

    @akatsukicloak

    Жыл бұрын

    The victors are indeed rewriting the history for people of European descent.. I wonder who might those people be...

  • @hehexd5317

    @hehexd5317

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@akatsukicloak oy vey, cool it with the antisemitic remarks

  • @BeAniEbOii1
    @BeAniEbOii1 Жыл бұрын

    One thing that drives me mad is the idea that “white = non diverse” like all europeans share the same culture/experience etc.. even in one country in Europe (Spain) youve got like 10 different points of origin, a guy from Galicia and a guy from Gibraltar have totally different genetic lineages, food, traditions etc, heck even languages.. seems to me the “whitewashing” is happening from more than one source :/

  • @richardmangelmann4975

    @richardmangelmann4975

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah that’s true and technically globally Europeans are even a minority. So they’re refusing to acknowledge a lot of very small cultures that absolutely don’t identify with each other

  • @SeasideDetective2

    @SeasideDetective2

    Жыл бұрын

    It's true that medieval Europe was quite homogeneous, but that was more in terms of religion than it was race or ethnicity. Jews and Muslims did exist in some places at some times, but they were inevitably either banished or forced to convert. And, west of the eastern Balkans, all the Christians in Christendom were without exception - well, except for the unfortunate heretics, of course - Roman Catholic. To put it bluntly, religious freedom just didn't exist. Even Joan of Arc and Teresa of Avila, both good Catholics, were harassed for having unconventional religious visions.

  • @EdgyDabs47

    @EdgyDabs47

    Жыл бұрын

    It's an American thing. They view one skin colour as a monolith. You're either "white" "brown" or "black"

  • @FinestFantasyVI

    @FinestFantasyVI

    Жыл бұрын

    @@EdgyDabs47 Yea, americans only see white, brown, black, asian or hispanic/latin. And all slavs are evil to americans. Not only do I have to deal with this blackwashing bullshit like Netflix did with Cleopatra and the history rewriting of Woman King. But I also have to deal with my people(i guess) always being terrorists or evildoers. Because my country(Croatia) is sandwiched between the more popular countries like Italy and Greece and even Hungary. We dont get anything other then being slav which means bad.

  • @Leathal

    @Leathal

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s true. Please feel free to call us “Amerimutts” or “burgers” or “A Nation of Shabbos Goys” in response

  • @mohamedmaiza3866
    @mohamedmaiza386611 ай бұрын

    Depends on how you define diversity. I myself find groups of peoples like the Magyar, Lombards, the Gauls, etc etc to be quite diverse. Even if they might not have looked different.

  • @aceroy9195

    @aceroy9195

    10 ай бұрын

    I had done research and its kind of crazy to learn that the majority of European DNA comes from white steppe people

  • @warcriminalgaming2359

    @warcriminalgaming2359

    9 ай бұрын

    Leftists have twisted “diversity” to ignore ethnicity and just focus on appearance, which if you think about it is inherently racist

  • @secretname2670

    @secretname2670

    8 ай бұрын

    In todays age, man's looks are judged as much as always, only with different results. To the people who make those articles, if they even consciously think, it doesn't matter who you are as long as you look similar to another person with similar looks. They do not see and they tell normal, common folk that they are the all-seeing. What a pile of efervescent fecal matter has internet discourse become.

  • @wieldylattice3015
    @wieldylattice301510 ай бұрын

    6:16 the image of two knights swinging big guns at each others heads is absolutely fantastic thank you for including this

  • @kdolo1887
    @kdolo1887 Жыл бұрын

    I wonder if these people would ever suggest that the Middle East, North Africa, the Incan Empire, Mali, Benin, China or any of the other awesome places they love to prop up were diverse as well.

  • @wambokodavid7109

    @wambokodavid7109

    Жыл бұрын

    Calm down....if a fool can file u up like this u end up becoming like them in the long run.

  • @stewpitt8388

    @stewpitt8388

    Жыл бұрын

    @K Dolo Yes,they would. "Diverse" just means "not White". All of those places were 100% diverse. 100% diverse means 0% White. Notice how no one ever says the NBA has a lack of diversity. It's 90% black. As soon as something or some place becomes over 85% any color except for White,they will never say that it lacks diversity again.

  • @FlagAnthem

    @FlagAnthem

    Жыл бұрын

    Well they were not the kind you have in mind thougg

  • @Rynewulf

    @Rynewulf

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wambokodavid7109 pretty much, people love funding the rage bait and never seem to understand that the goal was to get them angry, so they read the articles and make videos about them and give them free money and advertising

  • @blacktigerpaw1

    @blacktigerpaw1

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Rynewulf There's a concerted effort to rewrite Medieval Europe as reflecting modern demographics. There was a push to rename the Anglo Saxon society because "Anglo-Saxon" is white supremacist.

  • @genzi78514
    @genzi78514 Жыл бұрын

    As an immigrant myself who came to Europe in the 2000s...well, I was the only foreigner in my grade. In a 400-500;students school, I think that foreigners made around 10 or less. It's amazing how they pretend to "normalize" what it's not normal, and erase people's experiences.

  • @PeachDragon_

    @PeachDragon_

    Жыл бұрын

    I am very ok with europe welcoming foreigners, my problem arises when white Americans who've never set a foot in Europe outside of a vacation to italy start trying to change our history and erase our culture

  • @e.mailissimo2146

    @e.mailissimo2146

    Жыл бұрын

    Holy shit where did you move to? There are quite a few places here in germany where the biological-german kids are the minority!

  • @chuckruckus3648

    @chuckruckus3648

    Жыл бұрын

    Where I am now went from an 80/20 to 20/80 in 10 years I suspect it will be 5/95 by 2030 History repeats

  • @manub.3847

    @manub.3847

    Жыл бұрын

    Your experience reminds me of Yared Dibaba (actor and NDR moderator), the good man speaks excellent Plattdütsch ;).

  • @AH13371

    @AH13371

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@e.mailissimo2146 same in sweden, malmö has fewer swedes than migrants. Not sure why swedish people people hate themselves enough to create that

  • @justinshannon5206
    @justinshannon52064 ай бұрын

    Just subbed metatron and I love the channel dude it’s my new favorite

  • @Sascha1887
    @Sascha18879 ай бұрын

    Love your channel and your authentic style!! Greatings from beautiful Croatia to beautiful Greece✌🏼

  • @majimasmajimemes1156
    @majimasmajimemes1156 Жыл бұрын

    Never underestimate the American eagerness to turn the demographics of every historical period into modern day California.

  • @patternenjoyer2022

    @patternenjoyer2022

    Жыл бұрын

    the Jewish eagerness

  • @SeasideDetective2

    @SeasideDetective2

    Жыл бұрын

    California isn't even that diverse, really. Aside from Los Angeles and San Francisco, pretty much every city and town in the 2020s is more or less evenly split between "Anglos" (German, English, and Irish, mostly) and Hispanic mestizos (almost exclusively Mexican). In certain areas there will be some token Filipinos or Middle Easterners, plus a Black community here and there - but there's no guarantee you'll see them.

  • @jamesbuchanan3145

    @jamesbuchanan3145

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh believe me, it isn't "American" eagerness. It's more just the club of people who wear small hats. ✡️

  • @kigucloudjester4467

    @kigucloudjester4467

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SeasideDetective2 I live in California and I’ve noticed that as well! I’m in Central San Joaquin valley California and the only time I see Asians are in the San Francisco Bay Area or in lie Angeles Asians are virtually extinct everywhere else in California

  • @thomaslamb8635

    @thomaslamb8635

    Жыл бұрын

    Leftist commie eagerness, more like. Especially when you learn where the term “racist” came from.

  • @hengineer
    @hengineer Жыл бұрын

    "Racial slavery didn't exist yet" Ottoman Turks have left the chat. Barbary Pirates have left the chat.

  • @th232r6

    @th232r6

    Жыл бұрын

    Africa was enslaved by Africans.

  • @akatsukicloak

    @akatsukicloak

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hah-vj7hc Or Zanj, like the Zanj rebellion.

  • @Maciekk_

    @Maciekk_

    Жыл бұрын

    Pretty much most of countries have left the chat

  • @egesahin2498

    @egesahin2498

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@hah-vj7hc it means south. For black people in Turkosh there is the arabic rooted word "Zenci" which is Zanj + -i (-i means "from"). So it technically means southener.

  • @liquidsnake6879

    @liquidsnake6879

    Жыл бұрын

    What is "racial slavery"? it was just slavery, the fact that many came from Africa was a circumstance of their pre-existing culture and ways, same reason the Islamic slave trade was overwhelmingly african as well, Subsaharan Africa had a long history of slavery before any European reached it, all the way back to Mansa Musa at least lol the slaves were freely sold often times to the Europeans

  • @Trinket_Master
    @Trinket_Master11 ай бұрын

    My grandmother (we are Irish) told me that its cool I am used to living in a diverse country because when she was younger her entire friend group was literally blown away by seeing a black man move into the neighbourhood. She was 15 when she saw her first black person.... Ever

  • @globalpropertyinvestment

    @globalpropertyinvestment

    10 ай бұрын

    I'm Irish too and saw my first black person when I was around 12 years old. It just wasn't common at all in the 80's.

  • @fobinc

    @fobinc

    10 ай бұрын

    My first teacher when I came to the US was a nice Black lady and she spoke Spanish and English. Naturally I assumed she spoke Mandarin also to ease me into learning English, boy was I wrong.

  • @denniskrenz2080

    @denniskrenz2080

    7 ай бұрын

    My grandmother was 20. But is that REALLY a surprise? She was 20 when WW2 ended and US forces occupied the city she was transfered to, before returning home into a town, that was liberated by the 9th US army a few weeks earlier. And this 9th Army has to stop first in disbelief here, because they found a large town and a titanic factory (Still the biggest car factory in the world) right in front of them, where their maps only showed forests and farms. She grew up far away from the big cities, large markets and cultural life - and during the course of the war came to Salzburg. From her perspective, even a Frenchman was unknown and special, despite the fact, that 120 years earlier, Napoleons army travelled often through the place and her ancestors likely had to live with them. Imagine taking a nameless figure from one of your favorite books, and then write their story. That is what good historians actually have to do. The kings and queens are just the decor on top of the real history in a place.

  • @thecrusaderhistorian9820
    @thecrusaderhistorian982010 ай бұрын

    Great video and info!

  • @orenmontgomery8250
    @orenmontgomery8250 Жыл бұрын

    This article's logic "the Edo period didn't only happen in Japan."

  • @crazyjoeshorts5256

    @crazyjoeshorts5256

    Жыл бұрын

    Its weird how they can't comprehend concurrent time phases. Like how both hard rock music and disco existed at the same time during the seventies; one would be hard pressed to conflate the two. they took the equivalent of Kiss doing one or two disco songs and assumed that their entire discography was that, or that every band from the era did it. ACDC, DIO, Black Sabbath and the other metal/hard rock guys were typical of the way things were done. Also an interesting look at the 1950's and 60's, the decades where rock and roll were born, most people( in America anyway) listened to country, folk, bluegrass and what was considered 'American standard' like Jazz or the crooners of the era. It would be inaccurate to say that EVERYONE listened to the new style.

  • @cveki007

    @cveki007

    Жыл бұрын

    "The Edo period happened in Lesotho and Nigeria, too."

  • @donwild50
    @donwild50 Жыл бұрын

    I love the Europe = White = Racist meme. The writer who brought up the Japanese history of the same time period should check out what happened to anyone who went to or arrived at Japan either deliberately or accidentally. For the most part, with a caveat about the Portuguese who were allowed to trade on a tiny island in the port of Nagasaki and a short period where the Jesuit Order was allowed very restricted entrance, if you were shipwrecked anywhere else in Japan...you got killed. Xenophobia is a human trait...and it is not exclusive to Caucasians. But I'm sure someone will tick my name with the title "racist" for even pointing that out. History happened all over the globe. People of differing cultures, races or religions might arrive anywhere and get welcomed...or murdered, enslaved, beheaded or even eaten. That's just fact. Read the texts...not just the European but also Islamic, Chinese, Japanese, Hindu, Mongol or anywhere else. History happens everywhere, with all the good and the bad pretty much evenly distributed.

  • @666Kaca

    @666Kaca

    Жыл бұрын

    Portuguese were allowed to trade almost anywhere during oda nobunagas period, later they were replaced by the dutch. A ton of koreans served as samurai retainers. There were even 4 westerners who were awarded the samurai class, 1 english guy, 1 dutch guy, 1 portuguese guy and 1 african guy. So what exactly happened to people who went to japan in your head?

  • @JohnSmith-ty2he

    @JohnSmith-ty2he

    Жыл бұрын

    @@666Kaca Only 4? That's hardly diverse enough for a modern movie. Needs to be at least 25% of the cast.

  • @koffiegast

    @koffiegast

    Жыл бұрын

    @@666Kaca >200 years of isolation >4 guys got samurai class >totally counteracts your story about killed on sight, bro Except that the Japanese wrote a lot of the stuff down since ages. You were literally not allowed into the country. Even the Dutch/Portuguese were only allowed on a special island, with very rare cases were they allowed into the country where they were not to interact with anyone as they got carried all the way.

  • @cp1cupcake

    @cp1cupcake

    Жыл бұрын

    @@666Kaca Metattron did a video about the black guy who "became" a samurai and tl:dr there is no evidence he was anything more than an exotic bodyguard.

  • @666Kaca

    @666Kaca

    Жыл бұрын

    @@koffiegast how many japanese were knighted in 16th century europe again?

  • @Socraticstatic44
    @Socraticstatic4411 ай бұрын

    Just found this channel and wicked yes! Love all the knowledge flowing from this platform. Thank you for putting out the information. The rest is up to the human. 😊

  • @Nanakanisurra
    @Nanakanisurra11 ай бұрын

    How are you Brother Metatron? I had a look at your "Noble Ones" ring, and it looks fabulous. I may save up to get one as soon as I can. Keep up your excellent historical work. I've been an armchair archeologist since I was a little noble one, and I love videos about all history, especially the more ancient, the more I like it.

  • @andersschmich8600
    @andersschmich8600 Жыл бұрын

    Ironically, Northern Europe would not have attracted people from all around the globe because it was not a major economic center. It's kind of funny, these types of articles somehow want to say the past was great, but it was also bad, and they can't quite make up their minds on what to land on.

  • @clefsan

    @clefsan

    Жыл бұрын

    If you say Northern Europe wasn't a major economic center, I suppose that may to some degree depend on your definition of what qualifies for the term. My "counter argument" would be: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trade_during_the_Viking_Age

  • @RichardRenes

    @RichardRenes

    Жыл бұрын

    *cough*Hanzeatic league*cough* The total trade among towns of the Hanzeatic league equalled the trade in the mediterranean. OK, it wasn't as flashy as it didn't involve spices, silks and other luxury items, but the amount of wool, wheat, wood and animal pelts traded was enormous. Except this didn't involve muslims or Africans so.... your stranger would be Estonian or Danish in Bergen or Stockholm or Kampen instead of Turkish or North African.

  • @maozedong8370

    @maozedong8370

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LTNetjak Wrong, people had pleasant lives for hundreds of thousands of years before the industrial revolution. Here people go again applying their own modern experience to people of the past. Are you saying people were bored before then or that the industrial revolution just made everything "better"? Made things more convenient perhaps, but people were doing just fine long before then and had their way of doing things. Saying people had sh*t lives before the industrial revolution is like a black guy in Norway who becomes president saying he is sick of white imperialism in his country. It is a ridiculous statement to make.

  • @Inucroft

    @Inucroft

    Жыл бұрын

    My dude, there is a Black person's remains found at the Coppergate dig of York. Dating to the Viking Age (Early Medieval)

  • @kaizokujimbei143

    @kaizokujimbei143

    Жыл бұрын

    Breaking the Law of Non-Contradiction is a prerequisite towards becoming a communist.

  • @Apollo1989V
    @Apollo1989V Жыл бұрын

    If Rings of Power wanted “diversity”, they should have had some segments in Harad and Far Harad, which would be Africa to the main story’s Europe. They could explore the interactions with Númenorians, both good and bad, as well as Sauron spreading lies and malice among them.

  • @staC-wh6ik

    @staC-wh6ik

    Жыл бұрын

    You know, it actually sound cooler. They could have explored Harad and Rhun, which are almost never explored in Tolkien writings. It could have been a nice way to show the interactions of Numenor and the people they first befriended and then, after Sauron's influence on Numenor, enslaved.

  • @jaredthehawk3870

    @jaredthehawk3870

    Жыл бұрын

    I would have killed for an entire series set in Harad and see all the different tribes and peoples competing against each other. Show how Sauron's influence affects them all as some rally to his cause, but some resist desiring to be the masters of their own fate. Would have been excellent. it could have been way more game of thronesy than what we got.

  • @Alex-dh2cx

    @Alex-dh2cx

    Жыл бұрын

    I believe even Tolkien mentioned one source of conflict between the Easterlings and Númenor as the colonization of a portion of land they claimed. The seeds of the stories were planted by Tolkien, they just ignored it to push their own nonsense

  • @shockwavecg

    @shockwavecg

    Жыл бұрын

    But then they would have actually had to go in-depth into Tolkien's work and that's hard. They don't like to do actual research. It would have been incredible to see what actual, hard-core Tolkien fans would have come up with given a budget and a good director.

  • @MrChickennugget360

    @MrChickennugget360

    Жыл бұрын

    Rings of Power is the biggest shit show in modern TV history.

  • @anthonysaunders345
    @anthonysaunders34510 ай бұрын

    3:03 I love the red arrow over the extraneous word. The best writing is clear and concise. This means that its meaning is unequivocal, and using as few words as possible without affecting clarity. I'm writing a book about art, design and architecture, and when I go back and read what I wrote, I'm often surprised by how many words and sentences I can delete without losing meaning. Metatron, you're little comment there got you a "subscribe" from me.

  • @jeanninerossouw5921
    @jeanninerossouw592111 ай бұрын

    In the middle ages, Algerian and Barbary pirates from Africa were raiding European coast to get white European slaves. There is a good reason why Europeans mounted a offensive and fought back, starting with the reconquesta

  • @elogic7368
    @elogic7368 Жыл бұрын

    As an aztec warrior from 1300 who was Count of Aquitaine in France and larried a Korean princess of the Holy African Roman Empire, I can confirm this continent wasn't that much diverse

  • @TheVideoLounge

    @TheVideoLounge

    11 ай бұрын

    I wondered when Count St Germain would turn up on these pages to put right some inaccuracies, nice to have you back sir.

  • @incorrba

    @incorrba

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your eyewitness account

  • @IDontLikePplPlayinOnMyPhone

    @IDontLikePplPlayinOnMyPhone

    11 ай бұрын

    Much obliged to you and your Holy African Empire. I hope to visit one day when I’m on my to Motown by way of Valeria.

  • @pinkiepie6880

    @pinkiepie6880

    10 ай бұрын

    As a direct relative of Eleanor of Aquitaine, I concur! 😂 P.S. She wasn't called the Grandmother of Europe for nothing lol my Mum is really into genealogy and through extensive research and DNA testing her paternal side goes back to many French nobility.

  • @Prince_Sheogorath

    @Prince_Sheogorath

    9 ай бұрын

    Acquitaine was a major pushover - completely gynocentric and developed chivalric code which taught men to be subservient losers. Look up Peter Wright's blog, Gynocentrism for the full explanation. Feminism is repackaged chivalry. Feminists refuse to acknowledge gynocentrism, and insist that all bad things stem from men. This attitude was consciously created by aristocracy in medieval times, but these spirits have manifested long before and in other parts of the world.

  • @evgenykudinov918
    @evgenykudinov91810 ай бұрын

    “I may need help” got me dead! So glad a ran into your channel - awesome content and sense of humor😁

  • @aroncull
    @aroncull11 ай бұрын

    Excellent as usual sir!

  • @Dragonmoon98
    @Dragonmoon98 Жыл бұрын

    If anything, I'd say that claiming that old timey Europe was as diverse as the modern US is a special kind of offensive to the descendants of slaves. It's the historiographical equivalence of plugging your ears and going "lalalala didn't exist lalalala"

  • @gameragodzilla

    @gameragodzilla

    Жыл бұрын

    Hell, even modern US isn’t as diverse as people think. I remember that poll people did where the people polled vastly overestimated the percentage of the population certain minority groups were. For example, I’m Asian. We make up 6% of the total US population. The poll estimated we were 29%, so a nearly 500% overestimation. lmao

  • @bobSeigar

    @bobSeigar

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@gameragodzilla There's a whole conspiracy about a group of people because of that fact. Low pop %, with high representation

  • @Ju5-I-S0m36UY

    @Ju5-I-S0m36UY

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bobSeigar I mean not exactly a conspiracy, just look when foreigners are questioned about demographics in the US (mostly from television ads and movies).

  • @staC-wh6ik

    @staC-wh6ik

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bobSeigar Jews have a high representation in American movies because they used to be pioneers in the American film industry, when WASP high society largely scorned it. Although this representation is generally limited to the heritage of actors and directors rather than elements of Jewish culture and history in movies (except for Christmas/Hannukah commedies and Holocaust movies).

  • @wisdomleader85

    @wisdomleader85

    Жыл бұрын

    Diversity, relative peace....the contemporary society is considered "modern" because of these concepts. What these "historical articles" are doing is basically denying all the social progresses we've made in the last five centuries.

  • @rickmacdonald6355
    @rickmacdonald6355 Жыл бұрын

    I was born in Glasgow, Scotland and my parents dragged my ass to South Africa when I was 9 (1985). That was when I saw my first black person in real life. I had seen a few Pakistanis and some Chinese but that was it. Glasgow is the largest city in Scotland and one of the largest in the UK. The diverse thing has only really been a recent thing and anybody that thinks differently really needs to read some history

  • @TitB1199

    @TitB1199

    Жыл бұрын

    London was very much White until the 80's. Muh 'windrush' and some south Asian immigration prior to that was docile compared to what happened 1980 onwards.

  • @user-ze8yy8jg1f

    @user-ze8yy8jg1f

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TitB1199 same here in Ireland my parents are from the countryside and when they used to go to the city they always said they hoped to finally see a black person. And this was the 70s early 80s

  • @wolverine343534

    @wolverine343534

    Жыл бұрын

    I live just outside Glasgow. Born in 70’s, and I agree, there were very few non-white folk while growing up. In fact, if I remember correctly, there was only 1 Asian guy in my high school at the time. I think it was when I got into my 20’s that I crossed paths with a black person. Mainly the people of colour stuck to the big cities, so there was less chance of seeing them in my town. I think it was only once I hit my 30’s that more diversity was appearing. Sorry, I hate saying it like that, every individual is different no matter their colour. I am just saying that when I was growing up, it was mostly white folk in my town. These days, you can see the diversity in the cities. It just isn’t as obvious in the towns and villages. However, this has only grown over the last 20 yrs I would say. So, when I comes to historical movies, I don’t understand why people want to change facts about how it was, just to be diverse. Historical Japanese films, made in Japan, have all Asian people. They don’t include White or Black people unless it was actually part of history, not just to be diverse.

  • @keltyk

    @keltyk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wolverine343534 The cities in Scotland are quickly changing. The towns are changing too, and even villages, just a whisker, so far. How can I put it, in the local newspapers of Scotland, the rapists are working in teams now. There are usually no descriptions of the desperately sought offenders, but if they catch any, they are "Scottish", but their names aren't

  • @mchonkler7225

    @mchonkler7225

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TitB1199 Same in the US until 1965 and then again in the 80s under Reagan. As much as boomers love him, he put the final nail in the immigration and border enforcement coffin. Funny how it's only countries with Western govts that need diversity.

  • @morkusmorkus6040
    @morkusmorkus6040 Жыл бұрын

    Ned Kelly, the most well known bushranger outlaw in Australia, is famous for making and using armour specifically to protect from gunfire. And that shit was the late 1800's!

  • @keyboardstalker4784
    @keyboardstalker47849 ай бұрын

    14:20 it’s because for them, the discussion about diversity and representation isn’t about telling stories that otherwise might go unheard. It’s about making everything safe and familiar for comfortably middle class coastal liberals. That’s why whenever they make a “diverse” story, it always just looks like it might take place in San Francisco whether or not makes sense in the context of the universe. Someone who actually cares about diversity in storytelling might have the main character travel to strange lands and create conflict in the story with their clashing cultural values, which could be resolved through finding common ground and mutual understanding. Instead, modern authors just have all their fantasy races show up everywhere in equal number, and they all share the exact same cultural values because the writers are from California.

  • @darthplagueis13
    @darthplagueis13 Жыл бұрын

    The funny thing is, depending on the specific area, medieval europe could very much be a diverse place. Just not in the sense that those articles mean. What a lot of people seem to miss, and I'd blame that on the fact that many of these writers are american and it's still very common to define people by outdated racial categories in the US, is: "White" is not a culture. "White" also isn't an ethnicity. I mean, imagine you're in 13th century Rome. With Rome being a major trade center and also being home to the vatican city and important sites of pilgrimage, you might see all kinds of people. People of italian, german, greek, slavic, french, hispanic and scandinavian, british or hungarian origin. Those people, even though they would all be considered "white" would speak different languages, have different habits, have arrived for different reasons, be interested in different wares, wear different styles of clothing and even look a bit different. And sure, odds are, you'd also find a few people from a more remote background as traders, diplomats or slaves, some northern african sailors, some arabic scholars and traders, and maybe once in a blue moon even someone from further away places like sub-saharan Africa or India, but the notion that those few select foreigners should be the standard of medieval european diversity and that all the "whites" are basically just part of a homogenous group is just completely misguided.

  • @kaizokujimbei143

    @kaizokujimbei143

    Жыл бұрын

    Leftists only care about skin color and sexual orientation.

  • @SirLongarm

    @SirLongarm

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly. Europe had a lot to do with Europe but with Nobody Else for a Long time.

  • @grrman

    @grrman

    Жыл бұрын

    But that obviously doesn't count, since they all look white! Jokes aside, you don't seriously believe that people who actively talk about muh evil whuiteness care about facts?

  • @notsocrates9529

    @notsocrates9529

    Жыл бұрын

    tl;dr diverse in cultures

  • @arandomgreekfrombactria6302

    @arandomgreekfrombactria6302

    Жыл бұрын

    This comment is highly underrated ^^

  • @blackmichael75
    @blackmichael75 Жыл бұрын

    Cracked next week: "You're picturing Yuan Dynasty China wrong! You're picturing it as being overwhelmingly full of Chinese people, but that's wrong, because Marco Polo was there, and a handful of other foreigners, which made it very diverse, and a melting pot."

  • @totallynotsarcastic7392

    @totallynotsarcastic7392

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh heavens, no, they'd never dare say that: they only ever promote diversity for Europe.

  • @supremecaffeine2633

    @supremecaffeine2633

    Жыл бұрын

    Sorry, but "diversity" only goes one way.

  • @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl

    @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl

    Жыл бұрын

    Well tang dynasty that had that reputation

  • @magister343

    @magister343

    Жыл бұрын

    To be fair, there is actually evidence that ancient Asia had a lot more ethic groups with "Caucasian" phenotypes, although most were really more like the Ainu than like most Europeans. There was one group of Slavs that migrated to western China and adopted Tibetan style Buddhism.

  • @brianmiller5444

    @brianmiller5444

    Жыл бұрын

    There actually ARE a lot of different ethnic and language groups beyond Han Chinese. Although the Han dominate demographically, and the modern CCP is certainly playing up Han nationalism and ethnocentrism as a way to unify the country. Heck, Mandarin Chinese was a court language imposed by Mongol imperialists later in Chinese history.

  • @patrickbuckley7259
    @patrickbuckley7259 Жыл бұрын

    What always bothers me with these people is that they never stop to ask, why people in America & Europe would focus on making media focused on Europian History. It's almost like we are making media, about our own history or something...

  • @raginasiangaming910
    @raginasiangaming91010 ай бұрын

    I'll weigh in on armor as a hobby-historian and modern-day soldier (10 years in the Army, almost 10 years as a high-risk contractor). Armor and weaponry go through a seemingly never-ended cycle. My understanding is that armor didn't fade so much because of gun powder, but more so due to economics. As firearms became more sophisticated, more sophisticated (and expensive) armor was needed to stop shots. At the same time, armies were becoming larger and more professionalized, so not only was armor more expensive, you'd need more of it. My feeling is that most nations just didn't to foot this cost (although some units, often elite cavalry, still received armor). We see this in modern times. As a modern warfighter, I put my armor on before going out to the 'battlefield'. Many western nations with highly professionalized armies place a high emphasis on equipping their ground troops with quality body armor. On the other hand, more impoverished armies, or those that don't place a high value on the lives of their soldiers, issue low quality armor or none at all. Also, I would be almost certain that medieval armor was highly effective at stopping attacks and protecting the user. As someone who has spent almost 20 years in warfighting, I wouldn't wear that extra heavy, heat-trapping gear unless I know it works. Warfighters don't change that much over the centuries, so I am willing to bet that no medieval knight would have gone through the time-consuming ritual of donning armor and suffered its weight and heat unless he was pretty damn sure the stuff worked. Grunts aren't the brightest folks in the world, but we know damn sure what equipment will keep our vital organs inside our bodies with a minimal amount of perforation.

  • @SanoyNimbus
    @SanoyNimbus Жыл бұрын

    Interesting that the photo used as an example of lack if diversity is the photo of the fellowship where elves, dwarves, hobbits, humans and even one Maya were present. That is diversity.

  • @silmaril8989

    @silmaril8989

    Жыл бұрын

    They can't see diversity beyond skin colour! (And biological sex) It's extremely superficial

  • @FlagAnthem

    @FlagAnthem

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@silmaril8989 American "progressives" are still rooted in Jim Crow cathegories.

  • @kecukraftwork1988

    @kecukraftwork1988

    Жыл бұрын

    The hilarity is even stronger when you consider that Gimli & Legolas are not just *an* example, but are rather the *ideal* examples of diversity in motion: two individuals from wildly different and conflicting walks of life, who are gradually willing to accept and appreciate their differences in order to accomplish a unifying goal and ultimately get along.

  • @antoinelachapelle3405

    @antoinelachapelle3405

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@kecukraftwork1988 yup. Gimli and Legolas' friendship literally brings together 2 people who used to be thousands of years old rivals

  • @andresanguianozuniga6798

    @andresanguianozuniga6798

    Жыл бұрын

    By that logic Wakanda is not diverse... Oh wait, to them diversity just means not white.

  • @TrinityShoji
    @TrinityShoji Жыл бұрын

    Yes, because my Japanese ancestors in the Heian period had SUCH a problem with constant incursions of Germanic knights with Zwiehanders and had constant trade wars with viking traders.

  • @Leathal

    @Leathal

    Жыл бұрын

    I’d watch that anime

  • @petegarnett7731

    @petegarnett7731

    11 ай бұрын

    Totally unfair; thats why the Japanese became insular no doubt. (accurate use of insular--living on islands.)

  • @Imman1s

    @Imman1s

    11 ай бұрын

    @@petegarnett7731 Well, there was an instance of rampaging drunken sailors creating chaos and slaying ronins left and right resulting in rapiers been banned... so yes, they had good damn reasons to become insular. Just measly 300-400 years off the mark, but what are a few centuries among friends?

  • @JJJBunney001

    @JJJBunney001

    11 ай бұрын

    Hey that's just the plot of For Honor

  • @petegarnett7731

    @petegarnett7731

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Imman1s That's the re-imagined version. My grandma told me.

  • @colebengston3963
    @colebengston396311 ай бұрын

    Ha! My world history was also the varsity football coach. He was also a retired Marine and though he doesn’t know, he had a really big impact on my life. I got in trouble in his class one day for something or another and instead of just putting me in detention, he made me play him in chess. I didn’t win but i made it to a stalemate and so he shortened my detention to one hour vice two. Thank you for bringing back the memory and keep up the great videos!

  • @wolfleclair1399
    @wolfleclair139911 ай бұрын

    Love how the makers of articles like this don't seem to realize that history is overwhelmingly against their claims, it's nice when they get a tidbit right but it doesn't ever outweigh the fantastically ignorant outlooks required to make or believe the majority of it. Thank you Metatron for sticking up for history, it might not have been pretty and inclusive everywhere but it was real. Been watching your videos for about a week, subscribing now. =^_^=

  • @basswars7060
    @basswars7060 Жыл бұрын

    If you go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art they have an extensive collection of armor. Several of the displays have chest plates that have a curious dent. These chest plates had been shot. This was done, to prove to the buyer, that the armor was indeed, bulletproof.

  • @todo9633

    @todo9633

    Жыл бұрын

    To be fair, you could easily just put a bit less black powder in your arquebus and weaken the shot for marketing purposes. Not to say that there weren't certain pieces of armor that could resist specific firearms in that period, but we shouldn't take stuff like that for granted, snake oil and shady business have been a thing forever.

  • @From-North-Jersey

    @From-North-Jersey

    Жыл бұрын

    The bullet proof armor chest plates from the end of the armor cycle worn by the conquistadors were much much much thicker and heavier than the armor worn before to defend against melee weapons. Once rifling was invented chest plates became too heavy to carry let along wear and were abandoned in favor of the ability to move quickly to avoid being hit.

  • @percussion44

    @percussion44

    Жыл бұрын

    @@todo9633 This armor was proofed for the kings own, you think people were faking tests for the kings armor? Do you see that ending well?

  • @runningcommentary2125

    @runningcommentary2125

    Жыл бұрын

    A lot of the time they just hit it with a chisel and told the buyer they’d shot it.

  • @kikixchannel

    @kikixchannel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@todo9633 Black powder is WEAK. And their bullets were just (at best) just small spheres, which aren't exactly all that good at penetration. At worst, they were supposed to be spheres, but were poorly shaped and lost even more power while flying through the air. Armor is also made to deflect more than block. You absolutely cannot do anything at all with medieval-age firearm to a heavy-armor knight from long range, unless you are very lucky. But if you need a dozen shots (aka. a dozen people shooting) to have just one bullet penetrate the armor and deal SOME damage (usually not lethal, since a lot of force would be gone for penetration), then the armor is still extremely useful. Plate armor stopped being that useful when firearms evolved into using piercing bullets (instead of spherical) with more potent powder (in place of black powder). And especially when they could be reloaded quickly, or at least, mass-made at a reasonable cost. That was centuries after firearms entered the medieval Europe. CENTURIES. If you think that black powder isn't weak, then let me ask you this. Why can you LEGALLY have a black powder gun, bullets meant for it AND black powder to load it with and shoot from in European countries, but you CANNOT have firearms that use more modern bullets and/or gunpowder? Yeah. That's because black powder is not as powerful as the movies make it to be. It is still lethal to an unarmored person of course. But it is not as dangerous when you have any sort of solid protection.

  • @schwarzerritter5724
    @schwarzerritter5724 Жыл бұрын

    If you want a modern example of how long different weapons can coexist: Anti-air cannons have been considered obsolete for a long time until it turned out they are quite effective against drones.

  • @purplespeckledappleeater8738

    @purplespeckledappleeater8738

    Жыл бұрын

    They are still popping up on ships and tanks. Autocannons are very popular around the world right now that also can act as AA cannons. There is a video on KZread of Russia slapping some naval AA guns onto APC's just because they had some lying around so why not. kzread.info/dash/bejne/qGuCpdFyhJiahZs.html&ab_channel=RedEffect

  • @osric1730

    @osric1730

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't know where you got that idea. The Gephard that was supplied to Ukraine was in German service until 2010. WW2 era 40mm Bofors were phased out of AC130s in 2009. The Chinese have the PGZ95 25mm quad cannon that only came into service in 1995 and still is. The Russian ZU 23 is still in service in no less than 70 countries. The world is awash with anti aircraft guns that are direct descendants of guns like the 20mm Oerlikon from the 1920s. The ability to lob a great deal of moderate caliber relatively cheap explosive ammo around the place has never gone out of fashion.

  • @nunyabidness3429

    @nunyabidness3429

    Жыл бұрын

    a net gun can down a drone more effectively and less expensively

  • @cympimpin20

    @cympimpin20

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nunyabidness3429 Not necessarily. Depends on the kind of drone. Your run of the mill consumer drone being used by terrorists or irregulars, nets can probably handle that. Some of the more high flying and faster military drones, not much of a chance. Plus developing effective net guns costs more R&D money. Basic AAA guns are something we already have. Plus net guns are single shot and take a while to reload. An automatic AAA machine gun doesn't have to worry about missing with one shot nearly as much. Net guns are really only a smart choice if you care about capturing the drone for intel purposes. If you're just trying to destroy it, pulling some old 60s/70s AAA guns out of storage and using ammo stockpiles we already have is way cheaper and more effective.

  • @realdragon

    @realdragon

    Жыл бұрын

    When you say anti air cannon I can't help myself but imagine medieval cannon aimed very high

  • @BakuGone
    @BakuGone11 ай бұрын

    I'm not sure if you know this, but you are the most important person on KZread right now. You're one of the only people I see actively fighting against the rewriting of history, and doing so with incredible accuracy. Truly doing God's work, thank you.

  • @MKahn84
    @MKahn84 Жыл бұрын

    Fun video! Thank you!

  • @yukipaw1702
    @yukipaw1702 Жыл бұрын

    The only diverse thing about medieval Europe was how many ways you could die before you reach 40

  • @Morfeusm

    @Morfeusm

    Жыл бұрын

    This is I hope seriously just a joke right?!

  • @nathanperoandrei3841

    @nathanperoandrei3841

    Жыл бұрын

    BAHAAHAH GOOD ONE! Have an a pint of ye old ale 🍻🍺

  • @cttommy73
    @cttommy73 Жыл бұрын

    If there are people who believe that medieval period was "diverse" and "peaceful" or "great", I got a castle to sell them in England.

  • @jakobspoorendonk5497

    @jakobspoorendonk5497

    11 ай бұрын

    trying to get out of another border conflict are ya Whitebeard?

  • @fobinc

    @fobinc

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@jakobspoorendonk5497how dare you assume the color of his beard!?

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    9 ай бұрын

    Medieval times were diverse, but that doesn't mean that people were tolerant. Skin color become relevant only in modern times. Viking didn't really care if his slave is white or from Asia.

  • @enomisitnoc3653
    @enomisitnoc3653 Жыл бұрын

    I love those video’s xD they’re fricking amazing

  • @SXR123_YT
    @SXR123_YT Жыл бұрын

    I think the term "Knight" is one of those words that have been used to such a degree that a lot of people have completely forgotten what it originally meant. As you say, it means someone has been given a title. But to everyone else, it's probably something used almost synonymously with the word "hero". So the reason whoever wrote that article made the comparison that they did is probably because, as you've pointed out, they did little to no research and have made a baseless assumption.

  • @HenryLoenwind

    @HenryLoenwind

    11 ай бұрын

    And if you dig deep enough, you find that the word meant "head servant" at some point...although I don't think we're talking about that period in history here. ;)

  • @TheTeremaster

    @TheTeremaster

    10 ай бұрын

    It's a parody now, just like every japanese soldier with a sword was labelled "samurai".

  • @Arcessitor

    @Arcessitor

    10 ай бұрын

    The word it comes from, "Knecht," still means squire or servant in Dutch.

  • @alexissjc409
    @alexissjc409 Жыл бұрын

    I think this proves Steven Hawking and the paralell/multiverse theorem correct as these people must be living in another universe.

  • @Pika-Chu64

    @Pika-Chu64

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol

  • @nayrtnartsipacify

    @nayrtnartsipacify

    Жыл бұрын

    they have woke radical leftist revisionism disease

  • @ShawnKavanagh

    @ShawnKavanagh

    Жыл бұрын

    I was ripped from a better one and brought here. Could you help me find my way back?

  • @mattd5240

    @mattd5240

    Жыл бұрын

    I want to go back to my original universe, this one sucks ass, the people are all lunatics.

  • @YelFlux

    @YelFlux

    Жыл бұрын

    Haahahaha

  • @Jaris84R
    @Jaris84R Жыл бұрын

    Disney may just take this title seriously.

  • @unitron2005

    @unitron2005

    Жыл бұрын

    May? They are one of the major ones who made it up and are championing it!

  • @kirc3375

    @kirc3375

    Жыл бұрын

    And what's the problem with that? I don't think Disney movies are supposed to be realistic

  • @marcogenovesi8570

    @marcogenovesi8570

    Жыл бұрын

    they have been basically screaming it as true for the last while

  • @carlosgomezzzzzzz

    @carlosgomezzzzzzz

    Жыл бұрын

    They already take it seriously

  • @vinz4066

    @vinz4066

    Жыл бұрын

    Dont give them any ideas

  • @viniciussardenberg706
    @viniciussardenberg706 Жыл бұрын

    Another point about the continuity of armor when balistic artilery became standard in warfare as that while yes, getting hit square in the chest by a cannon was pretty much a death sentence a helmet and quirass would still protect you from the shrapnel damage of the shot if it didn't hit you and considering that Right now in Ucraine around 80% of the casualties(KIAs and WIAs) are caused by shrapnel of artillery the use of armor was very much a benefit even against artillery.

  • @imyarek
    @imyarek11 ай бұрын

    Firearms did penetrate plate armour and not only at point blank. I believe there is a video by ModernHistoryTV where they shot a metal cuirass from an arquebus and it failed to stop a shot even from a distance. It's just that the very early types of firearms were less effective in general: they were cumbersome, had very long reload times, etc. But somewhere around the late 15th century they became good enough to be used en masse and that's when the plate armour started to slowly go away and we moved to the pike and shot period. It didn't happen overnight simply because gunpowder and firearms were still expensive and generals also needed time to understand how to change their tactics and formations in order to include the firearms in the most effective way. Soldiers were still wearing metal armour, sure, but by the end of the 16th century it mostly consisted of a cuirass and a helmet which were used to give some basic protection from pikes and other melee weapons and from shrapnel, of course. 6:47 It was. Personal armour wasn't used by infantry for almost three hundred years starting from the late 17th century and till the end of the 20th. It was limited only to heavy cavalry which wasn't ruling the battlefield like it did in the medieval times, and again, it was used for protection against shrapnel and bayonets, not straight shots from a musket.

  • @DSPZulu

    @DSPZulu

    4 күн бұрын

    .. breastplates persisted for hundreds of years into the period of firearms (Spanish Conquistadors wore heavy, thick breastplates) because it would still protect you. It may not stop the bullet entirely, but it will probably save your life.

  • @ardwick8096
    @ardwick8096 Жыл бұрын

    700 years after the invention of firearms, we're STILL using metal plate to protect the upper body. It didn't go away, it changed. (And right after I wrote this out, you mentioned the same exact point in the video lol)

  • @filmandfirearms

    @filmandfirearms

    Жыл бұрын

    Not only that, we also use ceramic today. I'm an armed guard and my company provided plate is ceramic composite

  • @superfamilyallosauridae6505

    @superfamilyallosauridae6505

    Жыл бұрын

    metal plate as armor against small arms in the last 100 years hasn't really ever been a particularly good idea. kevlar and ceramic, since the 60s, have always been better options. helmets though... yes, metal helmets were crazy widespread forever.

  • @Cdre_Satori

    @Cdre_Satori

    Жыл бұрын

    We still use crossbows and those could also penetrate armor at the right conditions. It's not like a knight had nothing to worry about. Firearms were just another thing they could use. Heck if you want real social equaliser of knights and peasants in middle-ages the Hussite "cep" the thing used for beating the grain and cracking knights.

  • @enalb5085

    @enalb5085

    Жыл бұрын

    if you use metal plate for body armor you're still going to die when the bullet explodes and the hot metal shreds through your neck and arms

  • @purplespeckledappleeater8738

    @purplespeckledappleeater8738

    Жыл бұрын

    Technology in armour couldn't keep up with large caliber muskets that punched right though armour technology of the time. They still used armour and bows in the 1600's and early 1700's but shed armour in the mid 1700's. It was very recently when metallurgy and plastics technology allowed personal protection against some small arms. Metal helmets came back with mass artillery use due to head wounds from falling debris. Metal helmets in the 1800's were often more ceremonial than for protection but many armies were still using swords until the Second World War. Melee weapons are still common from knives to machetes to varieties of axes depending on the region of the world.

  • @optimussledgehammer9678
    @optimussledgehammer9678 Жыл бұрын

    “The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.” ― George Orwell, 1984

  • @thereaction18

    @thereaction18

    Жыл бұрын

    They even convince people that the metric system is better than US Customary or Imperial units. Give them an inch and they take a mile.

  • @-jank-willson

    @-jank-willson

    Жыл бұрын

    ah, a classic

  • @a_c35

    @a_c35

    Жыл бұрын

    if only Orwell knew he was writting the handbook for the leftists of today, I wonder if he would have not published it

  • @LaughWhileItsStillLegal

    @LaughWhileItsStillLegal

    Жыл бұрын

    ...and now that we have rise of deepfake and AI technology, refusing to believe what you see and hear may turn out to be an useful advice.

  • @andrewyorke3352
    @andrewyorke3352 Жыл бұрын

    Love this vid top man 👍🇬🇧

  • @devindelgrego4500
    @devindelgrego4500 Жыл бұрын

    Firearms weren’t the sole reason why heavy plate armor became unpopular, but it was a good big one and lead to pretty much every other reason… Ex: Economic reason, it became a lot cheaper to buy/make a firearm and train people to use them than it was to train a knight, buy/make armor and weapons, buy/breed war horses. Firearms changed everything…

  • @michaelsorensen7567

    @michaelsorensen7567

    11 ай бұрын

    Sure, they changed everything, but there were hundreds of years of overlap, and while things changed over time it wasn't like "omg, gunpowder, best throw out our plate armor" like the articles reviewed implied.

  • @Useaname

    @Useaname

    10 ай бұрын

    It took several hundred years. Gunpowder appeared in the west in the 13th century. Armour was still being worn 400 years later in the English civil war.

  • @GH-cp9wc
    @GH-cp9wc Жыл бұрын

    In case you haven't noticed, History revision is in complete vogue now, for a variety of reasons.

  • @magicbuns4868

    @magicbuns4868

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup, problem with history, it tends to not fit well with nasty political dogmas.

  • @dawnfire82

    @dawnfire82

    Жыл бұрын

    Been going since the 70s.

  • @spyderman4206

    @spyderman4206

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dawnfire82 Historical revisionism is old as humanity. Every kingdom and empirer tried to paint itself as the greatest country ever and their historians exaggerated accounts of battles and distant lands. More rigurous standards were set in the last centuries and even then there still existed strong revisionism among societies. Think of Romanticism for example, and all the Viking stereotypes that Wagner's compostions inspired in the collective imaginary of 19th and 20th century.

  • @grimmwolf9690

    @grimmwolf9690

    Жыл бұрын

    Please stop calling it revisionism, revisions are done when new evidence of fact are found that increases our understanding of what actually happend. This crap is the straight up falsification of history.

  • @ThatNorwegianGuy-

    @ThatNorwegianGuy-

    Жыл бұрын

    Those reasons are neo-marxists ideologues attempting to undermine and erase everything that is considered "euro-centric"

  • @RwandaBob
    @RwandaBob Жыл бұрын

    i’m not exactly a medieval historian, but i wouldn’t be surprised if almost all europeans north of the alps would have thought it extremely alien to have seen someone much darker than a typical spaniard or sicilian in their entire lifetime during the medieval period

  • @crankynu

    @crankynu

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, vikings and arabs were a thing. But again, that was like year 800-something.

  • @greyman8335

    @greyman8335

    Жыл бұрын

    @@crankynu What thing?

  • @esmeraldagreen1992

    @esmeraldagreen1992

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@crankynu They were not a thing. You must have watched that movie with Antonio Banderas

  • @esmeraldagreen1992

    @esmeraldagreen1992

    Жыл бұрын

    In the middle ages anybody from the middle east was hated and with good reason. Europe withstood nearly 1600 years of unrelenting attacks from the Arabs, the Turks and North African warlords, slave riders, and pirates. In the late middle ages and early Renaissance, sailors who went to sea would take insurance policies against being captured by slavers. In Europe until the 16th century, there was only one religion Catholic, and if you weren't Catholic then you were a heretic and would usually end up dead. Until the 1950s people would spend their entire life in one community and marry within

  • @rodi8266

    @rodi8266

    Жыл бұрын

    @@crankynu vikings didnt abduct millions of berbers to sell them into slavery in london, visby or copenhagen lel

  • @thomaserpingham2798
    @thomaserpingham279811 ай бұрын

    Finally I understand why historical figures, the latest being Anne Boleyn, are being portrayed as non white and our European medieval culture, of soaring cathedrals, massive Spanish galleons, the knights in plate armour, plus our exquisite music and impressive castles are rarely credited to white European ingenuity and toil. It has to be jealousy but we've nothing to apologise for, our ancestors worked hard to leave a historical legacy that may be ridiculed but can never be erased.

  • @gaborrajnai6213

    @gaborrajnai6213

    10 ай бұрын

    I dont want to sadden you but heavy cavalry, pretty much similar to the European knights was first described by Alexander the Great, as a persian fighting force, then it was applied by the Partians against Roman forces, byzantines adapted it to the Cataphractoi troops and THEN you got the western european medieval knights. It wouldnt even be possible before Carolingian times, because western Europe didnt really know or use stirrups on their horses, and without that simple thing a knight is not battleworthy. If it would try to use its sword or joust in a cavalry charge, and not fixed properly to the horse, he would just fly off the horse at the impact with the enemy.

  • @ivanjednobiegowiec7656
    @ivanjednobiegowiec7656 Жыл бұрын

    Kudos for using drone shot of Ogrodzieniec Castle :D

  • @skjaldulfr
    @skjaldulfr Жыл бұрын

    The invention of firearms did not *immediately* end plate armor, but firearms ARE the reason full plate went away.

  • @vinz4066

    @vinz4066

    Жыл бұрын

    * modern Body Armour joyned the Chat *

  • @vitoravila9908

    @vitoravila9908

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vinz4066 « full plate »

  • @INSANESUICIDE

    @INSANESUICIDE

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@vitoravila9908 Have you seen early 2000s US body armor? Not far off tbh, which they quickly revised as it became to heavy and impeding.

  • @crazeelazee7524

    @crazeelazee7524

    Жыл бұрын

    * Ned Kelly has joined the chat *

  • @todo9633

    @todo9633

    Жыл бұрын

    @@INSANESUICIDE It really wasn't even close. The fact that both contained steel in their designs doesn't mean they're anything alike.

  • @sevenproxies4255
    @sevenproxies4255 Жыл бұрын

    Correct. Kevlar is not plate armour. But here's the thing: soldiers on modern battlefields don't use kevlar. Kevlar only reach NIJIII levels of protection. It's not enough for the kind of bullets a soldier is expected to face. You need a protection level of NIJIV at the very least. And you get that from steel or ceramic SAPI plates.

  • @schwarzerritter5724

    @schwarzerritter5724

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought those are combined with kevlar.

  • @gameragodzilla

    @gameragodzilla

    Жыл бұрын

    Technically it’s Level IIIA that Kevlar goes up to. Level III can protect against rifle rounds. Level IV protects even up to armor piercing .30-06, and is the highest tier of official body armor. Of course it’s also heavier and more expensive. To the other guy’s point: yes it is combined with Kevlar. Typical ceramic plates work by breaking up the bullet into smaller, slower pieces, and those pieces are then caught by the Kevlar underneath.

  • @enalb5085

    @enalb5085

    Жыл бұрын

    yea wearing steel will get you killed because the bullet shatters and doesn't get absorbed. It shatters all over your neck and arms and will kill you pretty quick. If I ever have to shoot at people I hope they have metal plates

  • @logicplague2077

    @logicplague2077

    Жыл бұрын

    @@schwarzerritter5724 They are, the only real difference is with plate or without. With = IV, without = III

  • @todo9633

    @todo9633

    Жыл бұрын

    Armor that contains plates is not necessarily plate armor. If we stretch definitions like that then literally any armor with flat pieces of metal in it would be plate armor.

  • @asturianaenmuros
    @asturianaenmuros Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Rafq, I already have Atlas VPN, I'm very happy with it.

  • @alexanderhanksx
    @alexanderhanksx10 ай бұрын

    Ah, my favorite way to learn. Thank you for making these videos so entertaining. I will throw out there that at 6:36 you missed an opportunity to point out that most plates in plate carriers are literally steel. Small gripe tho

  • @PeenSprouts
    @PeenSprouts Жыл бұрын

    I used to be a ghost writer and I can tell you with certainty that the reason all of those articles are similar, to the point of having the SAME EXACT point (albeit reworded) for each numbered entry in their lists, is because most writers will just search up the topic they've been hired to write on and then plagiarize - excuse me, REWORD - some other person's article. That's why you'll see tens if not hundreds of articles regurgitating the same, incorrect point and parading it as truth. Most writers don't care about the content of their work, they care about meeting their word count and getting paid. Great video as always, Metatron!

  • @elzoog

    @elzoog

    11 ай бұрын

    If you don't mind, there is a theory I want to test. Ask me to write something and I'll do it and send it to you.

  • @danielawesome36

    @danielawesome36

    11 ай бұрын

    @@elzoog I WANT PICTURES OF SPIDERMAN, PARKER! AND I WANT THAT MENACE REVEALED TO THE PUBLIC. I WANT AN ARTICLE SHOWING SPIDERMAN IS A MENACE! YOUR DEADLINE IS IN THREE DAYS!

  • @elzoog

    @elzoog

    11 ай бұрын

    @@danielawesome36 Fine, how do you want me to submit it? (the text might be too long to paste into a KZread comment)

  • @danielawesome36

    @danielawesome36

    11 ай бұрын

    @@elzoog Oh lol you're actually going to do it? Okay, I guess you can just make a new comment after it's been cut off

  • @elzoog

    @elzoog

    11 ай бұрын

    @@danielawesome36 You don't have a throw away e-mail I can send it to?

  • @lelandkinsella7380
    @lelandkinsella7380 Жыл бұрын

    "He who controls the past commands the future" -George Orwell

  • @massimilianomencacci2510

    @massimilianomencacci2510

    Жыл бұрын

    They're in a fucking hurry to finish the game before the whole building collapses on them. You have to fight them always and in any case.

  • @cheryldeboissiere1851

    @cheryldeboissiere1851

    Жыл бұрын

    I am tired of this remark. Orwell was using it to illustrate the thinking of Ingsoc, not because it’s a fact. He wrote elsewhere about people who were denied their actual history and provided with a false imperialist history. They rejected it as it denigrated them but since they lacked their own history, he said they became rootless with a tendency to wander. False histories do not work. People can hear the self-serving crap. They create their own identity and jam to their own music 🎶. They make up their own style and become something quite separate. Orwell saw this repeatedly in Burma (Myanmar). No one can subjugate people with fake history. It has to appeal to them in some way. Eg. White supremacists like their false history, everyone else laughs. People push Cleopatra VII was black, other people laugh knowing she was actually Greek. False history never sells. Nor can one control the entire media.

  • @lelandkinsella7380

    @lelandkinsella7380

    Жыл бұрын

    @Cheryl de Boissiere Unfortunately people do fall for False History.......there is a big effort to falsify European history for sure! I understand they probably want to help bury the romanticized history that white nationalists wanna give us but these woke propagandists are throwing it the other direction way too much. As for me, I only want to do one thing: Tell The Truth! I will not add or subtract from history.......it must be told as accurately as possible.

  • @CriminalizeObesity

    @CriminalizeObesity

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cheryldeboissiere1851 Semitic. Why are you kvetching over white supremacy? He quoted fucking 1984, that's milquetoast neo-con boomer shit.

  • @SeriouslyAwesome

    @SeriouslyAwesome

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cheryldeboissiere1851 How naïve. The last decade I've been surrounded by people and media gas lighting me about history I've experienced, been told, and read all of my life.

  • @gregkral4467
    @gregkral44678 ай бұрын

    your gambeson is absolutely beautiful. And thank you again for a wonderful lesson.

  • @arkaadias2526
    @arkaadias25268 ай бұрын

    Fun fact about LOTR: In the story there are the southern tribes/lands where they had people who rode olyphants, people who couldve been easily been portrayed in the Rings of Power and still staying true to Tolkien. While what they did do, was turn people from a race entirely described as having skin so white it even seemed to glow at times (imagine twilight vampires if you have to). Casting of the show was probably done in the cheapest way possible, later marketed as promoting diversity. To Amazon: Next time make a script that includes people from diverse origins so you dont have to forcefully butcher your original material.

  • @Fyrexsama
    @Fyrexsama Жыл бұрын

    I love how it's always and only Europe that that get's this treatment. Literally no other part of the world is this done to. If Europe was such a meltingpot then it stands to reason it would also have gone the other way.

  • @lada8744

    @lada8744

    Жыл бұрын

    Not necessarily if you think about. Everyone comes to white countries (Europe & America), but no one really really goes to India, Africa, etc. it’s pretty one sided of where people want to live.

  • @Fyrexsama

    @Fyrexsama

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lada8744 Maybe today, but we're talking caultures from 1000-3000 years ago. And where are all the black Ancient Chinese emperors? (we wuz ancient china and shit) Where the Asian Zulu's? Surely we need more representation for these old cultures like Korean Shaka Zulu. Throw some white zulu warrions in there, some native americans etc.

  • @Monkey-King

    @Monkey-King

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@lada8744 I'll give you Europe, but are we forgetting about the Natives and Hispanics that live and lived in America before the colonization of it's lands Edit: I meant Mexicanos, indigenous Latin Americans, with origins from indica, Mayan, Aztec, tribes...etc Not Hispanics my bad, Hispanics were said to have arrived after Europeans Settled in the Americas

  • @Monkey-King

    @Monkey-King

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@lada8744 ​ Also people have the tendency to immigrate to North America because people from foreign countries are advertised, "brain washed", and encouraged to do so because America, Canada are still pretty young countries that are constantly looking for workers, laborers, soldiers(1st generation that's born from immigrants), voters, etc... That... and it's much easier to immigrate to certain places in Europe, UK and South/ North America then it is to move to other countries like India, China, Israel, Japan, S.Korea, Saudi Arabia, etc Also infrastructure, economy has a lot to do with it also, America and most European countries are strong economically with little civil unrest, overpopulation and being war torn... well besides France, Ukraine and Russia that is...

  • @lada8744

    @lada8744

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Monkey-King Europeans came to settle and live with other Europeans, then non-Europeans wanted to come live with them after the Europeans crates civilization there. It’s still one sided.

  • @Tallorian
    @Tallorian Жыл бұрын

    I think those "writers" played too much Civilization VI, that's why they think that Medieval Era happened for everyone and was recognized as such around the globe. Although I did hear occasionally mentions of "medieval Japan", so there can be a deeper confusion. As for "european diversity", I keep remembering "the portrait of a black woman", dated somewhere late 18th century, in a provincial Dutch museum. That woman was painted very black-skinned indeed, but had remarkably and undoubtedly white european features. Which proves that EVEN at the dawn of industrial revolution, EVEN in a maritime colonial nation, EVEN those who were aware of black people's existence have most likely never seen one themselves. And they try to tell us that Europe was a "melting pot" in medieval times, before the age of discovery and before sailing around Africa?

  • @80krauser

    @80krauser

    Жыл бұрын

    Bold of you to assume these morons have the mental capacity for even a game of Civilization

  • @myview5840

    @myview5840

    Жыл бұрын

    One town during Napoleonic war in the UK hung a monkey believing it to be a French person who was a spy, even people living within 100 miles had no idea what a french man looked like.

  • @joedoe7041

    @joedoe7041

    Жыл бұрын

    @@myview5840 to be fair that town was pretty close to the mark😄

  • @wastrelperv

    @wastrelperv

    Жыл бұрын

    @@myview5840 Somehow I doubt this but I want it to be true, need to look it up myself. Probably a myth or a joke that has since been taken seriously.

  • @tonyromano6220

    @tonyromano6220

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joedoe7041 😂😂😂😂

  • @WilliamDavis-lf5bq
    @WilliamDavis-lf5bq5 ай бұрын

    I love history. Channels like yours or podcasts like Mike Duncan's "History of Rome" make me happy. I hate seeing the idiocy online. I sometimes get facts wrong in conversation because I mis-remember something. But if I'm writing it? I have time to check the facts. (This doesn't apply to comments sections, like this, which is more like a conversation... I'm not writing and re-writing and editing it, I'm conversing, and though i still strive to be as accurate as possible, I'm not perfect. In that case, let me know what I got wrong so I know the correct information.) Anyway, keep doing what you do.

  • @davidbenenato6372
    @davidbenenato6372 Жыл бұрын

    Metatron, I have commented on your show a few times. I really enjoy your show. I have mentioned before that my grandparents were from Catania, Sicily. I know that you have mentioned that you are Sicilian. My request, if you think that it’s a good idea? Can you do a show about Sicilian martial arts? “Paranza” I believe that there are 2 forms (knife and stick fighting)? Thank you Dave Benenato

  • @callumbiasnow4825
    @callumbiasnow4825 Жыл бұрын

    I really want the next medieval film set in Europe to have a predominantly Inca or Native American cast, you know, to add realism.

  • @lexiheart6558

    @lexiheart6558

    Жыл бұрын

    They'd be black. Yes. I said it. Woke assholes are trying to push that they were all black.

  • @hunivox

    @hunivox

    Жыл бұрын

    lmao

  • @tinamckay-iv3tf

    @tinamckay-iv3tf

    Жыл бұрын

    LOL yes we need more diversity and the natives have been left out in portraying the real Europe.

  • @TheVideoLounge

    @TheVideoLounge

    11 ай бұрын

    Personally I won't be happy until Australian Aborigines are the protagonists.

  • @tinamckay-iv3tf

    @tinamckay-iv3tf

    11 ай бұрын

    @@avae5343 But once the empire split in two and the eastern capital moved to Constantinople (what is now Istanbul, Turkey) in the fourth century C.E., Rome's diversity decreased. Trade routes sent people and goods to the new capital, and epidemics and invasions reduced Rome's population to about 100,000 people. Invading barbarians brought in more European ancestry. Rome gradually lost its strong genetic link to the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East. By medieval times, city residents again genetically resembled European populations.

  • @xtremeranger30
    @xtremeranger30 Жыл бұрын

    If any examples of "diversity" I can think of in the Middle Ages is maybe after the Norman conquest of Sicily was the religious diversity among Christians, Jews and Muslims since the Normans were fairly religiously tolerant.

  • @esti-od1mz

    @esti-od1mz

    Жыл бұрын

    Probably, unfortunately for the muslims it lasted for less than 200 years, then the christians took all over... Ottoman empire is a good contender too.

  • @Nick-hi9gx

    @Nick-hi9gx

    Жыл бұрын

    The Normans weren't at all religiously tolerant until they realized trying to enforce Catholicism on the recently-Byzantine Greek and Muslim subjects would result in endless revolt. Took a couple generations, just like it did in Norman Acre.

  • @esti-od1mz

    @esti-od1mz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Nick-hi9gx technically speaking, the norman nobility tried to exploit the muslim farmers who lived mostly in the countryside. The christian settlers wanted their lands, while the muslims wanted to reestablish their rule: that's why in the last act, king frederick II decided to expel all the muslims from Sicily.

  • @Nick-hi9gx

    @Nick-hi9gx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@esti-od1mz Yeah, the Normans were never nice overlords to anyone that wasn't Catholic. You saw the same with the Greek Christians around Bari and Tarento, exploiting the hell out of them to please their Catholic lords and subjects. But they DID allow Muslims in their realms until right near the end.

  • @xtremeranger30

    @xtremeranger30

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Nick-hi9gx It was a mixed bag: Orthodox Greeks, Jews and Muslims were marginalised and treated with a degree of hostility which could not be described through modern eyes as tolerant. But they were also allowed to live their own lives, and were treated far better by the Normans than in other kingdoms of medieval Europe. I should've worded it better with a bit more nuance from my original statement about religious toleration.

  • @nelsonkaiowa4347
    @nelsonkaiowa434710 ай бұрын

    What I found shocking was that the horses were actually quite small ponies. And of course, when one looks at tapestry and such, one could have known, but I guess mostly because of depictions in movies, I was always thinking the horses were bigger. I learned this fact (any many others) through watchting Time Team.

  • @Slender_Man_186

    @Slender_Man_186

    10 ай бұрын

    For some reason it’s always the Spanish Stallion that’s use.

  • @robertartiga7

    @robertartiga7

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes Andalusians are large and were bred for war,in fact they were trained to take part in the fight by kicking and biting their opponents.

  • @romaindanze1512
    @romaindanze151211 ай бұрын

    They should visit the museum of war in Paris, where they'll see many armours presenting impacts from bullets which absolutely didn't get through (and also one which received a canonball, but seems like it didn't go so well for the owner of this one).

  • @ya-boy-joshy
    @ya-boy-joshy Жыл бұрын

    As a black man that loves researching European/Western history; I notice that alot of people take the outlier examples and try to apply them across the board. What do I mean by this, well, let's take St. Maurice for example; St. Maurice was a Christian P.O,C. Roman legionairy that was martyr because he refused a direct order that conflicted with his beliefs as a Christian. Most people would take this one example of history and then try and conflate this story to say "Ah ha! St, Maurice is proof that Rome had multiple black Soldiers.." No, that's not true. Black people are a rarity in European Historian, especially in the Medieval period. Europe has a history of being predominately white, 99% White.. This whole idea that black people were apart of European history is crazy. Because they would've been mention. Early western Historians did document anomalies and we have paintings of few black people in Europe not because they were the standard, but because it was rare. And it's starting to drive me crazy because as soon as people find out that I'm black,they no longer believe I'm credible to teach history because i've been "brainwashed." the amount of times i've been told "im lying." or that "i'm brainwashed." because people see i'm black and automaically assume that i don't know european history because i'm trying to push a racial narrative is heartbreaking. i love history; but thanks to fucking leftist, I cant even have a basic historical debate or converstation without my knowledge being called into question because history is being rewritten by the leftist and they think i'm pushing a political agenda. sorry im ranting im just fucking frustrate that because a majority of leftist are trying to rewrite history im no longer taking seriously as history enthuaist as soon as people find out my skin color is black,

  • @bigguy7353

    @bigguy7353

    Жыл бұрын

    It's called thinking exceptions prove rules wrong. They don't.

  • @ElJosher

    @ElJosher

    Жыл бұрын

    Damn… that is quite sad. I would say they are quite racist towards you. Don’t let them bother you too much, keep on trucking. Cheers.

  • @kevinkelly5780

    @kevinkelly5780

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm white, and I get pissed off with the left showing African Americans that the African part of their heritage is unimportant so they need to be inserted into Europe. Wrong. Africa has as much interesting history and mythology as any other continent

  • @staC-wh6ik

    @staC-wh6ik

    Жыл бұрын

    Whoever told you that only big bad lefties are the ones "rewriting history" lied to you or is trying to recruit you. Revisionism has always happened and while there's a fair share of nutjobs on the far left who try to do that, it's generally a more common feature of chauvinist nationalists who need to make their national history seem more mythical than historical in order to boost their own egos.

  • @_00_36

    @_00_36

    Жыл бұрын

    A shame since anti-white narratives in history are usually pushed by white women and liberal Jews anyway.

  • @jessecunningham9924
    @jessecunningham9924 Жыл бұрын

    One of the biggest problems I see with these articles, as an amateur medieval scholar myself, is they always say, “In medieval times,” while picking an arbitrary country to cherry pick from (as an American, it’s usually something in Britain). I’m always like, “but where?!?” Medieval Europe alone had a wide variety in standards of living, laws, governmental structures, etc. Careless writers seem to like to cherry pick random facts from random periods of times and even random places. I often see them pick something that was true in England, then follow it with something that was true in France, in a different century! I always tell people this is like saying cell phones existed in the second millennium A.D. while technically true, it grossly misrepresents the truth, and someone using this “fact” could easily make the egregious mistake of thinking cell phones were used in the 1300’s in Ethiopia. Anyway, I appreciate this mythbusting. We medieval apologists still have so much work to do!

  • @damionkeeling3103

    @damionkeeling3103

    Жыл бұрын

    Medieval Europe is really Catholic Europe. Orthodox Europe was part of the Eastern Roman Empire so didn't have a "middle age" between the fall of Rome and the renaissance. In a touch of irony the Orthodox fall of Rome coincided with the West's renaissance.

  • @JohnSmith-ty2he

    @JohnSmith-ty2he

    Жыл бұрын

    An "American?" BUT WHERE? American only narrows it down to 2 continents, and a number of islands.

  • @jessecunningham9924

    @jessecunningham9924

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JohnSmith-ty2he hah! Well, I’m not sure where you’re from, but over here in the Americas, you would never say your were from the continent, only the country. So when I say American, I mean USA the country. Likewise, I would never say I was South American. Instead I would say I was Brazilian, Venezuelan, Chilean, etc.

  • @JohnSmith-ty2he

    @JohnSmith-ty2he

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jessecunningham9924 Depends on where you are from. Around here most people say "The States" or "The US." My point being though is most people don't exactly use precise language in more general usage. Saying you're from America isn't any better than saying someone from Russia is "Asian" from the perspective of a global audience.

  • @jessecunningham9924

    @jessecunningham9924

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JohnSmith-ty2he Sure. That’s a fair point. My main gripe was with people who say “this is how it was in the medieval age” implying that it was that way everywhere, when in fact a lot of things varied from country to country, and from region to region.

  • @patricialavery8270
    @patricialavery8270 Жыл бұрын

    I demolished alot of ROP people trying to revise what Tolkien actually wrote.I freaked one out by saying where are the Asian,and Hispanic Elves and Hobbits ,because I only saw Black and White ones.When I mentioned South Asians and Middle Easterners would actually match Tolkien's descriptions of some Easterlings and Haradrim the person simply started calling me names.

  • @stevenschnepp576

    @stevenschnepp576

    Жыл бұрын

    What else did you expect? It was never about what Tolkien wrote.

  • @LJJ22

    @LJJ22

    Жыл бұрын

    In the end I don't care much what skin colour they have if the actors are good, but it does make a lot more sense if in one group/city/region 99 % have the same skin colour in those movies like ROP, House of the Dragon, etc. So there would be plenty of room for all nationalities and skin tones, but if there are a story and a reason behin it, it makes more sense. Like: This person/family came sailing from far away some generations ago, or this tribe migrated to the west through deserts and settled...

  • @thefallenfaith1986

    @thefallenfaith1986

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LJJ22 So why doesnt hollywood put white characters in wakanda, then?

  • @moreau1755

    @moreau1755

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thefallenfaith1986 The irony is that there is a white Wakandan in the comics, T'Challa's adoptive brother Hunter.

  • @th232r6

    @th232r6

    Жыл бұрын

    It's all they got.

  • @geridionarus
    @geridionarus Жыл бұрын

    Love your Content on the Middle Earth Article at 12:49 the Autors Might have taken their Inspiration/point if any of Refference from a Documentary Called 1066 Battle For Middle Earth 1066: The Battle for Middle Earth is a two-part British television documentary series. In this blend of historical drama and original source material, Channel 4 re-imagines the story of this decisive year of the Norman conquest of England, not from the saddles of kings and conquerors, but through the eyes of ordinary people caught up in its events. The documentary was narrated by actor Sir Ian Holm. ( side note they actually Used other then English Anglo-Saxon, French(Norman) , Norse Language in the Documentary ) The 2 part Documentary/movie focuses on the Sussex village of Crowhurst, which Director Justin Hardy learned about from the Domesday Book, England's earliest surviving public record. Located between the coast and Hastings, the little village was, according to the book, "laid to waste" in 1066. In the series, it serves as the hometown for the fictional peasant soldiers Tofi, Leofric, and Ordgar, whose names are actual Anglo-Saxon names from the period. Viewers may assume that the programme's title refers to The Lord of the Rings books, but Hardy chose "Middle Earth" because Anglo-Saxons frequently used the term to describe their world. He notes that J. R. R. Tolkien, an Oxford professor of Anglo-Saxon, used it, along with other Anglo-Saxon words, for the same reasons. They Might have gotten that Confused with the Middle Earth we all Think about that or it was a AI with no contexting power .... Only a Maybe but could be. But that could Explain why Some get this confused if they Associate Middle Earth Meaning as the center of their World in a Old Anglo Saxon Chronicle English and Middle Earth the Grand Fantasy World that borrowed a few words I mean they Called the Normans Orcs if i recall. So Middle Earth and Orcs two Trigger words a AI would assosiate with LOTR more often then a Dusty Historic Tome.

  • @jimmundy-gr3gg
    @jimmundy-gr3gg Жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate this video! Unfortunately, or more to the point, fortunately, I grew up in a time that all information was at the library. And I spent an exorbitant amount of hours devouring that information. All of it! And I have seen many articles claiming to "debunk" a "myth" (the verbiage confuses me) and have noticed each discrepancy that you addressed. And as for the articles and information available through the internet, I know that the information is biased and proposes an agenda. I first came to the conclusion at the beginning of Covid. Many of the people that I spoke with daily equated the virus with the "plague". Because of my strange memory and the ability to make connections, I wanted to have evidence of what I had read MANY years before. What I was inundated with was not based on actual history, but the information of history through the lense of modern technology. I was infuriated! The science, the actual events, the outcome was the same but everything was based on modern thinking. And I arrived at this conclusion because every article presented in a browser search had been written in the previous three months. And I am talking about thousands (perhaps more) articles and explanations. The only problem with the entire experience was that I was being told that I am wrong (which I will gladly accept) because, although the science and information are the same, I do not apply modern theory to previous time periods. Frustrating to say the least.