The Year Without a Summer (1816 to 1824)
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Sources:
Eric Hobsbawm, "The Age of Revolution, 1789-1848" | tinyurl.com/mr34svtb
Richard J. Evans, "The Pursuit of Power: Europe 1815-1914" | tinyurl.com/59xc4jup
Paul Hayes, "The Nineteenth Century: 1814-1880" | tinyurl.com/255dunz9
Monro Price, "The Perilous Crown: France Between Revolutions, 1814-1848" | tinyurl.com/yrk5d6nm
Wolfram Siemann, "Metternich: Strategist and Visionary" | tinyurl.com/c793byzu
A. Wess Mitchell, "The Grand Strategy of the Habsburg Empire" | tinyurl.com/mrysh8se
Adam Zamoyski, "Rites of Peace: The Fall of Napoleon and the Congress of Vienna" | tinyurl.com/mxfpusr
Paul W. Schroeder, "The Transformation of European Politics, 1763-1848" | tinyurl.com/z5b9pf7w
Robert K. Massie, "Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and the Coming of the Great War" | tinyurl.com/4fw8va89
Lucy Veale & Georgina H. Endfield, "Situating 1816, the ‘Year without Summer’, in the UK”, in The Geographical Journal 182, no. 4 (2016): 318-30 | www.jstor.org/stable/44132378
John D. Post, “A Study in Meterological and Trade Cycle History: The Economic Crisis Following the Napoleonic Wars,” in The Journal of Economic History 34, no. 2 (1974): 315-49 | www.jstor.org/stable/2116985
Henry Stommel and Elizabeth Stommel, "The Year without a Summer," Scientific American Vol. 240, No. 6 (June 1979), pp. 176-187 | www.jstor.org/stable/24965226
Music:
"But Enough About Me, Bill Paxton," by Chris Zabriskie
"Divider," by Chris Zabriskie
"Infados," by Kevin MacLeod
"Hallon," by Christian Bjoerklund
Пікірлер: 2 500
I’m so jealous of the people who will see these videos in 5 odd years when they don’t have to wait agonizingly for the next
@harveytomos4959
Ай бұрын
Me watching the Caesar episodes rn
@Lucas-po6mn
Ай бұрын
already jealous of people discovering this channel now, been here for 6 years
@crewrangergaming9582
Ай бұрын
bro .. get a better pastime hobby.
@CGoody564
Ай бұрын
@@crewrangergaming9582 to assume he's doing nothing while waiting says a lot more about you than it does him
@crewrangergaming9582
Ай бұрын
@@CGoody564 deep
This is what happens to the earth when it changes seasons without checking with tribune Aquila.
@paprus5972
Ай бұрын
PFFFT AHAHAHAH
@louisastuto2878
Ай бұрын
Omg 😂😂😂😂
@ivanbliminsevideolocker9958
Ай бұрын
Mint.
@kentuckysugarbear9644
Ай бұрын
I swear this never gets old!!
@zoetje9817
Ай бұрын
This channel’s subscribers are one joke away from founding the Pantheon of Aquila, and I’m all for it lol.
When you mentioned about Castlereigh ending his own life I had to pause and read more into that. I knew nothing about him beyond what I'd learned in your excellent Congress of Vienna videos, and was surprised to learn that despite being one of the key figures behind the century of relative peace between 1815 and 1914, he was a deeply unpopular figure in his own lifetime. I think the best part was reading the epitaph that Lord Byron wrote for him, it's brutal. Posterity will ne'er survey A nobler grave than this: Here lie the bones of Castlereagh: Stop, traveller, and piss.
@luispanaderoguardeno3306
Ай бұрын
Oh... Byron asking using his grave as public WC. He was the Margaret Thatcher of his century.
@jerrygu5316
Ай бұрын
@@luispanaderoguardeno3306 Come visit in 10 years. I will take you on a pissing tour. Debuya, Cheney, Rumsfield, Wolfowitz... and for kicks DJT.
@hollylucianta6711
Ай бұрын
Castlereagh was suffering from extremely poor mental health in the last few years of his life and possibly developed psychotic depression, not helped by the death of his father and the constant media harassment. He began losing his ability to speak coherently in Parliament, developed paranoid delusions about his servants, and told his friends he was being blackmailed for performing homosexual acts. The Duke of Wellington basically had to drag him into a room and tell him bluntly that he was too mentally unwell to continue in his job and sent him back to his wife in the country, where he took his life shortly afterwards.
@a_little_flame589
19 күн бұрын
@@hollylucianta6711that’s tragic honestly
“ power doesn’t corrupt it reveals” that right there was a powerful moment, for me. It’s in contrast to what I’ve always believed, but it makes sense. this is why I love this channel and you.
@JP-xd6fm
Ай бұрын
The corrupts in power were corrupts before power, of course it makes a lot of sense!. A bad person (corrupted) can't show off when is not in power, is only in power whe reveals to everyone the true nature of himself I don't know why power corrupt people is so wide accepted though
@zrazor143
Ай бұрын
@@JP-xd6fm Exactly I’m guilty of saying power corrupts almost daily but I never sat down to examine what those words meant. It was refreshing to hear and your comment is justice refreshing
@CharlieBam
Ай бұрын
Yup and corrupt people seek power, good people usually feel unworthy. So you end up more and more corrupt over time until revolution or collapse
@rdrrr
Ай бұрын
@@JP-xd6fm Corruption within power structures is accepted because everyone _expects_ powerful people to be corrupt. We don't expect better, so we aren't surprised when powerful people abuse their power and don't demand better - "Who cares if we get rid of this guy? The next guy will be just as corrupt anyway." People have become more and more cynical about politics over the last 20 years, which is understandable but the problem is if we don't expect better we won't _get_ better. Political systems are a reflection of the people that live under them.
@JP-xd6fm
Ай бұрын
@@rdrrr I agree, for example I'm from south europe, corruption is whithin the day to day of the people here, and I had the chance to live in Denmark, one of the countries with less corruption and you can clearly see the difference in the streets, for instance, in the gas stations they dont have chained the pump for putting air on the tires, in my country they have to put a chain to a bloody pen.... It's all about civism and trust.
>year without a summer >8 years
@paulsbunions8441
Ай бұрын
Caesar wasn't around to fix the calendar
@NeoDMC
Ай бұрын
@@paulsbunions8441 Oh what's that? Winter accidentally lasted for 8 years? Looks like I'm eligible for Consulship again :3
@anon2034
Ай бұрын
@@NeoDMC LOL
@PlayerSlotAvailable
Ай бұрын
Halfway through the video I am starting to wonder what the hell this has to do with theyear without a summer.
@hirocheeto7795
Ай бұрын
@@PlayerSlotAvailable I would imagine it's about the ramifications and effects of the year without a summer. If you want an explanation for what exactly it was, he says it in the first few minutes.
Canning being fantastic was a nice plot twist
@Trancymind
Ай бұрын
Now that is a cunning move I tells ya.
@martinconway8174
Ай бұрын
Not really the way these things tend to go is it?
@secretname4190
Ай бұрын
I don't get it. How was he ever considered such a conservative?
@UFODave69
Ай бұрын
@@secretname4190Everyone has their own unique, particular opinions and views. Also ultimately, some of his moves still represented common conservative ideals at the time. For example, his support of the monroe doctrine protected british colonial interests and helped cement Britain as THE international power.
@BadSkeelz
Ай бұрын
When I saw this comment a few minutes in to the video I thought you would be referring to canned foods rofl
my brain is slowly getting fried by short videos over the years but when i see a video of yours it could last 24 hours and i wouldn't even notice, great job man
Rough two weeks at work and in personal life, and im tired of all the nonsense and sensationalism in the news, tv, media, and even KZread. A history video, pure and simple without any uncessary fluff is what I needed. Thanks!
@AniTube-ds8uz
Ай бұрын
I feel the exact same way bro ❤
@sluggardcomic4445
Ай бұрын
Then stop watching the news
@caP1taL1sm
25 күн бұрын
He got pretty political with his "Work" video. Very Marxist, which is fine, but definitely biased. He completely ignored any economic data that shows the productivity of workers and GDP/capita rising, as well as technological innovation that made working in a nice comfy office with lots of coffee and padded seats WAYYYYYYYYY more luxurious than toiling in a field breaking your back and getting skin cancer from constant sun exposure and lack of sunscreen
@Megamaduo
17 күн бұрын
Yeah nothing to distract yourself from the news like a video on great powers fighting proxy wars
@anoriolkoyt
14 күн бұрын
@@Megamaduo But its historical now, it no longer has an impact on our lives and a cause of worry. It now serves as topics for academic discussions (and one would hope as lessons for modern politicians).
Frankenstein was written during this time. The volcano Mt. Tambora in Indonesia erupted in April 1815. It was the biggest eruption we've known in recorded history. It caused tremendous climate changes across the world which resulted in a lot of lost lives and other catastrophes. It enveloped much of the world in dark clouded skies. Hence 1816 was known as "the year without a summer". This was the same year when Mary Shelley, her husband Percy Bysshe Shelley, and others went to visit their mutual friend Lord Byron in Geneva, Switzerland in the summer of 1816. Since the skies were perpetually overcast, and the friends were mostly indoors in any case, Lord Byron challenged everyone to write the scariest story. Hence Frankenstein was born (along with other works including arguably the first vampire story, a precursor and an inspiration for Dracula). Edit: Several people brought up the good point that there are older vampire stories. So, in all good will, perhaps I can amend "arguably the first vampire story" instead to say something else like "arguably the first popular modern vampire story in English literature". Hopefully that's a little bit better at least, even if still imperfect.
@Gentleman...Driver
Ай бұрын
Byron, such an interesting character of his own.
@Trancymind
Ай бұрын
There was another big volcano eruption that happened in 1808 that helped paved the 1810's decade as one of the coldest decades in human recorded history.
@whs1pmjazz
Ай бұрын
Krakatoa?
@notusneo
Ай бұрын
@@whs1pmjazzno krakatoa is in 1883
@benfawefwaeffwaefawfdekk2080
Ай бұрын
Which was the vampire story? Carmilla?
Holy shit he’s continuing a not Caesar series, this is astounding
@TaliyahP
2 ай бұрын
I feel like the Caesar series is largely over. Once Antony was defeated, Augustus had a relatively uneventful rest of his life
@mahatmaniggandhi2898
2 ай бұрын
@TaliyahP i kinda hope he can cover the era of marius and sulla up to where he started that series which i believe was 63 BC
@barissaaydinn
2 ай бұрын
@@TaliyahP I think at least an episode talking about how Augustus consolidated his eventual power and turned himself into a practically monarch, legally, well, merely the first citizen is necessary
@thiago292
Ай бұрын
@@barissaaydinnunfortunately I don't think he will do it, he hates Augustus
@TaliyahP
Ай бұрын
@@barissaaydinn I would love to see that
You make genuinely some of the best videos on all of KZread at the beginning of my senior year I literally watched your whole channel in a month. I've never done that with a channel. Thanks so much for the quality history videos.
I'm really looking forward to seeing more of this dawn of the Congress of Europe series, as well as Alexander's Campaigns. You've always been my favorite history youtuber, thanks for staying consistently great all these years.
Beyond stoked to know that 19th century europe is gonna be the next big series for this channel. I CANNOT wait for the inevitable video on 1848.
@timothystamm3200
Ай бұрын
I kind of want him to back date his Rome series to the end of the Gracchi and point to places like Extra History to learn more and same for this, but to the tensions that created the Seven years war.
@abdalhadifitouri131
Ай бұрын
I have a feeling it ends with WWI
@doodleBurgers
Ай бұрын
@abdalhadifitouri131 no way, you can't just end with ww1 when there's so much right after
@jimlthor
Ай бұрын
@doodleBurgers if you haven't listened to it, check out Dan Carlin's "Blueprint for Armageddon" It's so good
@forall7967
Ай бұрын
world war ONE? are you implying there will be second?@@abdalhadifitouri131
Wow, 1816 to 1824 is the longest year I've ever heard of.
@adavis3464
Ай бұрын
All the extra coldness made time slow down.
@Trancymind
Ай бұрын
New countries were formed and slavery was becoming abolished in these countries. Hats off to the hispanic people as being the first major ethnic group in the world trying and getting slavery banned in modern times. El Salvador abolished slavery in 1825 becoming only the 3rd country in the Americas to banned slavery after Haiti and Chile.
@victor.guilherme1995
Ай бұрын
@@Trancymind I wanted to commemorate that with you, but I'm Brazilian (we fucked up)
@tbone6032
Ай бұрын
Longer than the year 46 BC
@MomirViggwilv
Ай бұрын
You could almost say it's the longest year in history
Thank you so much my heart jumped when I searched to see if you’d uploaded recently
You just don't miss with each video. Always looking forward to the next!
Nowhere else could you find content like this before , never on TV or documentaries . Great episode as always
@destruct0503
Ай бұрын
hey there mr. average infantryman
@The_ZeroLine
Ай бұрын
It is great content, but there are other people making content like this on YT and other independent platforms. - _this message was approved by Tribune Aquila_
@-divinetragedy
Ай бұрын
@@The_ZeroLineno other historical youtuber takes such a contextually analytical approach to their topics - they simply describe what happened at face value. this channel rly does a good job of supplementing those topics with context, quotes, and in-depth looks at the people involved and the events influenced by the topic and those events that it was shaped by.
@-divinetragedy
Ай бұрын
@@The_ZeroLineif you can give me another example i would really love to find another channel that comes close to this, but i haven't found any yet for all my wanting.
@Nolaris3
Ай бұрын
@@-divinetragedy@-divinetragedy I think it's a Tribune Aquila joke?
"Everybody was wrong about Canning." Boy did I hear that differently at first.
@trustytrest
Ай бұрын
😭
@SamAronow
Ай бұрын
_Everybody Loves Canning_ Mondays at 8 on CBS
@CanuckGod
Ай бұрын
Singapore:
@santigamerprogamer6493
Ай бұрын
what
@DiamondKingStudios
Ай бұрын
@@SamAronowUp next: Tune in to _Everyone Hates Metternich_ on CBS
Amazing video, I love your ability to explain things in some detail while keeping it to the point. Fantastic simple visual representations.
Definitely my favorite non-Caesar series on the channel. So glad you're continuing it!
I am, admittedly, American, and I've just come to point out that while the Monroe Doctrine is considered a pivotal moment in American history, Caning's influence is NEVER discussed as part of it. I assume the "future video" mention at 8:15 is the Revolution of 1832. If that is the case, I am ALL IN to see it! Bravo on everything. Bravo.
@damagicgiraffe5412
Ай бұрын
I think that it’s a little misrepresented to fit the themes of this episode. While a diplomatic coup for Britian, it wasn’t as if the US was duped into creating the Monroe Doctrine. It’s largely outside of the purview of the video, but the Monroe Doctrine was extremely useful to the US once they gained the ability to enforce it and exploit it post-Civil War.
@etienneporras7252
Ай бұрын
@@damagicgiraffe5412 I agree the Munroe Doctrine had major effects for the entire western hemisphere movie forward, but it was never pointed out (at least to me) how much it helped Britain.
@charliehertz4847
Ай бұрын
I feel like he explains it perfectly in this video why Monroe was so great for America. With the Spanish colonial countries just being born this was the time to strike, but America lacked the strength to enforce this doctrine. Instead the British supported it in its infancy, backing America’s promise while the US reaped all the political benefits which simply couldn’t be given to a colonial power such as Britain. I’m sure Britain got a lot out of it, but the norms this doctrine created would benefit American foreign policy for centuries
@PABadger13
Ай бұрын
The funny thing to me was realizing how both canning and adams probably walked away from this thinking they'd put one over their counterpart. I'm also starting to wonder if this is where the "special relationship" started.
@Xerxes2005
Ай бұрын
You mean the July Revolution in 1830?
18:11 That constitution wasn't impose by Napoleon, but rather by a liberal assembly in Cadiz with the objective of restoring the Spanish king under a more liberal regime. After the defeat of Napoleon, Ferdinand VII returned to Spain but rejected the constitution just as the video says.
@shinsenshogun900
Ай бұрын
Indeed, it never sounded right that the Spanish would rejoice of Spanish Bonapartist reforms. Truly this episode of Spanish history forever scars the empire and nation together, for a very long long time
@Dustz92
Ай бұрын
And when he fakingly accepted it, it was because there was a mutiny, of the army that was supposed to go recover Argentina. Also, that mutiny succeeding and Ferdinand saying that he would accept all those liberal things is what led to the de actual independence of Mexico and central America, as up until then the rebels there had been kept under control but the elites were very conservative and joined them.
@Iason29
Ай бұрын
I didn't know much about 19th century spanish history, always found it confusing. But I was disappointed to hear that Ferdinand VII was so absolutist, I had no idea. It's a shame since he was Spain's future hope for a better future when the Spanish fought so hard against the French in his name and instead after the war is over Ferdinand seems to end up the exact path as Carlos III and wants to destroy himself. Also a big shame for Spanish people and their pride getting such bad kings two times in a row.
@luispanaderoguardeno3306
Ай бұрын
@@Iason29 For that reason Fernando VII was called "El deseado" (), and later was really hated by spaniars
@alonsoviton8278
Ай бұрын
@@Iason29 If Ferdinand hadn't been an ""absolutist"", the war against Napeleon would have been meaningless. In the eyes of the people it would have been +5 years of war and destruction only to change the name of the ruler but accepting all the principles it had brought, looking at traditicional anthems and songs of the time show the general rejection of liberalism, not just in Spain, also in Italy for example. Moreover, after Ferdinand death a civil war started in Spain called 1º Carlist War between the daughter of Ferdinand which ally with the liberals, and the other side constituited of lower aristocracy(the high aristocracy sided with the liberals on the mayority...) and the peasants . The war was won by the liberals because Britain sided with them. P.D: The side that lost the war were called "carlist" and they exist till this day and represent the traditionalist ideas. They are a very vast and complex movement
every time your last video finishes, I starve for more. Incredible work as always, you are a gem, truly.
These videos are seriously well made, not only from a visuals perspective, but also from a history and completeness standpoint. You go over all of the key points and even over some of the more minor unknown moments with amazing detail. Even giving us chances to think of what we would do in such circumstances. Thank you for making history so mesmerizing
Lured us in with the hardships of the year without summer and all we got was a great video about post napoleonic Europe
@timothystamm3200
Ай бұрын
Here's the thing arguably the little ice age is what caused the disenchantment and anger at the Ancién Regime that led to the French Revolution. The fact that the crises that produced the Revolution intensified after they thought they had a working settlement immediately threw a wrench in the works.
@gavinsmith9871
Ай бұрын
Charles X being a total knob didn't help things.@@timothystamm3200
@a_little_flame589
19 күн бұрын
@@timothystamm3200the little ice age is generally agreed to be 17th century
@timothystamm3200
19 күн бұрын
@a_little_flame589 Where in God's name did you hear that? There are those who argue that what got us out of it was the beginning of climate change due to industrialization. It didn't end until the 19th century. See Extra History for evidence that I'm not the only historian or climatologist, amateur, or otherwise, that thinks of the Era as lasting beyond then. Also, there are those who assert it began right before the plague. Your "definition" is not as widely adopted as you think.
@a_little_flame589
19 күн бұрын
@@timothystamm3200 fair I think I have no clue where I heard it probably just misunderstood it cause when I think of mini ice age I think of like Charles the 12 of Sweden
If Historia Civilis's next big project is covering the geopolitics of the Long 19th Century, I'm all for it. It's my favorite historical period, hands down.
@goofygoober7248
Ай бұрын
I hope he talks about the Greek revolution
@San_Vito
Ай бұрын
Count me in!
Thanks, this is such a great format, and you are a joy to listen to!
Each of your videos is truly its own masterpiece.
the yearly upload is here
@RubenRyb66
Ай бұрын
lol. Thats oversimplified's schedule at this point.
@joshuacarre06
Ай бұрын
Random fact if Historia Civils did one upload covering 8 years of history each each year starting from this video it would take 25 years to reach the year 2024
@kentuckysugarbear9644
Ай бұрын
Worth the wait!
@oldrabbit8290
Ай бұрын
but can it beat Lemino?@@RubenRyb66
@erkinalp
Ай бұрын
@@RubenRyb66now have to wait for captains workspace, which uploads on april 1
Literally, the first time I "join" to a channel. I REALLY wanna watch this video, BY FAR the best history channel on youtube. Best wishes from Argentina
@juanfervalencia
Ай бұрын
I agree
@GameyRaccoon
Ай бұрын
3 weeks ago???
@dr.pjuskebusk2501
Ай бұрын
Yup
@lithunoisan
Ай бұрын
🐄 🥩
@lithunoisan
Ай бұрын
@@GameyRaccoonThey’re a member so they get early access.
Always delightful and extremely informative coming from you. I am in love with your videos. Thank you for all the work you put in!
Another video by the only KZreadr managing to put a heck of emotion into squares. Good work as always, thank you!
You are without a doubt the best historian on KZread. Your knack for storytelling is exceptional.
@SimplyJustRed
Ай бұрын
Try Dan Davis. He's also pretty good.
@john_smith_john
Ай бұрын
good storytelling doesn't make the best historian.
@williamdittmann9281
Ай бұрын
Those two points seem unrelated...
@StumpfForFreedom
Ай бұрын
There's a lot of competition for that title, but this guy is great at big picture stuff.
@itspfaff
Ай бұрын
more like the most mainstream one, pretty far from the best…
Historia Civilis : Canning was a conservative *goes on to describe a liberal man who probably just wandered into the wrong party convention and is now too scared/in deep to leave*
@noanyabizniz4333
27 күн бұрын
Just like a Republican who doesn't realize their entire party is based on white supremacy.
@TheBespectacledN00b
23 күн бұрын
He was fairly conservative about Parliamentary reform IIRC which at least up until the 1832 Reform Act was one of the main dividing lines between the Whigs and the Tories. Not sure where he stood on other domestic issues like the Corn Laws and Catholic Emancipation off the top of my head.
@vincegalila7211
23 күн бұрын
I mean we're mostly just describing his foreign policy.
thanks for making calming content, it really helps reduce panic for me
so good, thank you for all this amazing content
You know the eruption of Laki was a major factor of the French revolution too, and I sometimes see people talk about it, but almost never from the Icelandic perspective, where the "Hardship of Fogs" killed 1 out of every 5 Icelanders and 75% of livestock through noxious gas and ash that blocked out the sun and poisoned livestock, along with accounts of people being trapped by lava flows and farmland lost under vast new lava fields. These things are especially close to us now as volcanic activity is near constant near the capital in the last couple of years and the town of Grindavík had to be evacuated in its entirety this year.
@sereysothe.a
Ай бұрын
there's like 5 people in iceland
@steventhompson399
Ай бұрын
Yes laki was a significant eruption, not an explosive plinian eruption like tambora but a massive effusion eruption, far larger than what Iceland has seen recently. You're right the gases released devastated Iceland and harmed agriculture on the continent. I've heard historians blame the French revolution on both the debt from supporting America and the food problems from lakis eruption
@goldjoinery
Ай бұрын
@@sereysothe.aWhat an inane comment to make.
@sereysothe.a
Ай бұрын
@@goldjoinery name 5 icelandic people right now without googling
@timmccarthy9917
Ай бұрын
@@sereysothe.a RIP Ingurd Sigurdsdottir, the 1 who died in the fogs
"Hold all of this in your head, because it will become important in a future video" This is pretty much how I roll with your channel so 😊
@Iason29
Ай бұрын
When I heard him say that I was like, damn I have such bad memory, no way I'm gonna hold a thought for 6 months.
@DiamondKingStudios
Ай бұрын
Similar energy to Justin on the WTYP podcast responding to comments from the other hosts with “We’ll get to that.”
So happy to see you with another post. Love this stuff!
The joy of a new Historia Civilis video is matched only by the despair of it being over, and the countdown beginning again.
the closing music hits every time, what a banger. phenomenal video as always, i always learn a lot from your channel
@Adamdidit
Ай бұрын
Absolutely agree. It's a highlight to every great video he makes.
@lanstar83
Ай бұрын
do do do do do do do do.... BADADOOO!
I am now a Canning fanboy, thank you historia civilis
@maarekstele2998
Ай бұрын
This is Cicero all over again he got us again
@JamieElli
Ай бұрын
And before this all I knew was that he was the shortest serving PM (until recently).
@abdullahaanawaleh
Ай бұрын
@@JamieElliUntil Liz Truss 😂😂😂
Amazing video as always! Props to you and your team!!
I love that he’s posting his first video in forever right after the ides of March
@Mcfunface
Ай бұрын
Beware
@coolthefool1
Ай бұрын
@@Mcfunfacethe
@bananaman1439
Ай бұрын
@@coolthefool1 ides
@2bstarman
Ай бұрын
@@coolthefool1 ides
@danielcarrapa3632
Ай бұрын
@@2bstarmanof
Hello to all the channel members who got to see this a while ago! Time for us plebians to join
@HaydenLau.
Ай бұрын
Are you at least a tribune of the plebs?
@samwisegamgee8318
Ай бұрын
imagine paying to see something you can just wait a few months for at most. i guess if you have a youtube addiction you're just a sucker
@LordJuan4
Ай бұрын
I see it as a way to support channels that you particularly like, but I totally get not paying it, hence why I'm seeing this video today lol@@samwisegamgee8318
@ColonelSandersLite
Ай бұрын
@@HaydenLau.He has my support. And not just because I was bribed to say that.
@togekiss09
Ай бұрын
@@samwisegamgee8318some could also do it to monetarily support the guy who makes the videos.
Just stumbled across this channel today and after binging a little I gotta say: I really like the flow and the editing/animations of these videos!! Great job!!
I just got here, thank you for making such an excellent video! I've subscribed and eagerly look forward to both future content and watching all the rest.
Seeing a historia civilis release gets me more hyped than any tv or movie trailer
Yo. He might actually start a series that works it’s way toward WW1.
@YoungNFresh4You
Ай бұрын
Also wanted to use these: - Octavian - Marc Antony - Caesar/Agrippa - Brutus/Cleopatra
@maarekstele2998
Ай бұрын
We can hope
@gavinsmith9871
Ай бұрын
It kinda seems like this is exactly what he's doing. Which is great because this is my favorite time period.
Love this. I watched your congress of Vienna video and immediately subscribed. I read Vienna 1814 as well. Thank you for the great intro :)
I'm a history teacher in Brazil, and I'm having some doubts and problems with my profession. Your videos inspire me to keep going and overcome the challeges. Thank you Very much
I really hope we get an Augustus episode. I'm very curious about how the republic transitioned into the empire legally.
@thomaswalsh4552
Ай бұрын
Very, very slowly lol
@Casmaniac
Ай бұрын
Plot twist: it didn't lol. The fiction of a working republic was held on for decades, centuries even
@TemoKuntchulia
Ай бұрын
@@Casmaniac yeah, even during the Byzantine age the Roman state was often referred to as "the Republic"
@Blazo_Djurovic
Ай бұрын
@@TemoKuntchulia And to give them props, it was kinda res publica if we define publica as people of Constantinople, because unless your name was Justinian you absolutely did NOT want to do anything that would piss off the people of Constantinople.
@BelleRoose
Ай бұрын
@@TemoKuntchulia When napoleon took over he saw himself as a Ceasar like figure but he syled it "the republic" :p
I've been checking this channel weekly after binging every episode and I am so happy this came out
Your outro is the best on KZread, great video as always
I’ve been watching this channel for years. The wait is always worth it. Thank you for the quality content you’ve provided all this time!
Welcome Back Historia Civilis! I’m excited for the continuation of the Concert of Europe Series!
been watching you for years now love your work
I’ve been using the internet since the 1990’s and this is literally the only channel I’ve ever considered giving my money to. Amazing work.
Amazing and thank you for making this!
Well there goes my plans for bed. Thanks Historia Civillis. Now I wont get a good nights rest! I blame this all on you! Making me entertained and prime to learn, how dare you good sir.
@newname4941
2 ай бұрын
It's 4AM for me, so I think I'll save the video for tomorrow haha
@Shank5ter
Ай бұрын
Wait how did you comment a month ago when the video JUST aired?
@adavis3464
Ай бұрын
@Shank5ter patreon supporters get early access.
@newname4941
Ай бұрын
@@adavis3464 and so do KZread members
These video's are such an informative delight no matter what topic is being discussed. I feel like it's nerdy Christmas when ever one appears and I love it!
i absolutely love your congress of vienna videos, so psyched for this one!!
Other than some innaccuracies regarding spanish politics of the time, and the events in America (and GB actions regarding the events in the American continent) I could tell this was a very well made minidocumentary, as per usual! Really excited to see more videos on the tumultous 19th century! For those wondering wich errors I spotted in the video, here is a list: During the Napoleonic Invasion of Spain, the kings (yes, there were 2, I don't feel like explaining that mess) were "held hostage"(not really) in France and replaced by Jose Bonaparte I who stablished a "Statute of Rigths" (wich was similar to a constitution, but not quite) but that was not the constitution that Fernando VII abolished, it was in fact the Constitution of 1812 affectionly known as "the Pepa" that was redacted by the besieged Spanish Cortes in Cadiz during the war (the Cortes claimed to act "in the name of the kidnapped king Fernando VII"). In 1921 there was a *violent* *military* *uprising* that suceded in forcing the king to accept "the Pepa" and rule according to its principles. The adoption of the Constitution WAS NOT peaceful as the video implies. After the French led expedition of "The 100.000 Sons of Saint Luis" the french were able to somewhat pressure the king into curbing some of his most reactionary postures but not enough to make possible a compromise that could bring back peace to the country, wich alienated both the liberals and the reactionaries. The Emancipation Wars in the spanish american territories had already started during the Napoleonic Wars and were not at all settled by the end of the war in europe; and GB was not in any way neutral in these struggles, as they often intervened in favor of the often liberal indepence movements;, with not only diplomatic, but also military (is not hard to find references to the "British Legions" that fougth along with the armies of the founding fathers of the Hispanoamerican nations), logistical and financial support as well as instigating the uprisings and giving refuge to the leaders of the independance movements when they were forced into exile temporally after a major defeat. So not very neutral or peaceful at all. So the reasoning of GB's actions was guided not by the "threath" that France could pose but because they were already supporting the liberals/indepence movements of the civil war, therefore opposing every move that could strengthen the kings power to restablish control in America.
I love, love, love your videos. Your narration honestly is probably the best narration of any historian documentary maker. And your video style, while simplistic aesthetically, really, really, really works. I'd go to theatres to watch these, no joke. Please dont let our praise and love for you and your work stress you out. I'm not sure if youve experienced burnout or anything like that eith making these videos (or any other struggles) do what you need to for your own mental health and enjoyment of life needs, but I also want to express how much I truly appreciate your videos and how much they've helped me out when I've dealth with burnout or feeling disconnects of my own ❤
i really hope you keep doing these one-offs! your the best history channel on youtube imo, just unmatched in quality. Kinda like The Operations Room or Montemayor do war battles, but with history. perfect pacing, wording/language use, beautifully concise without losing detail, and just the overall flow. So great & always consistent. cant wait for the next video !
@goldenfiberwheat238
Ай бұрын
Best history channel is time ghost
@asbjo
Ай бұрын
This is basically a continuation of the Congress of Vienna videos. Not really a one off, not really a series either
@eddynewcastle663
Ай бұрын
@@asbjo it's definitely a new serie
@monmonsterk
Ай бұрын
@@asbjoit's 19th century series. Peace 1814 video was the first episode.
I love your videos - you tell interesting stories with all the details that make it a great telling
Love this channel, glad to see another new video!
Do a Collab with Old Britannica. He may be busy with his series on the History of Austria from the 18th century to the present, but he deals a lot on 19th century European Geopolitics.
WHY ARE THESE SO GOOOOOOOOD!!! We need a weekly dose of these videos
You're absolutely one of the best channels on KZread imo
Thanks for another great video! Can’t wait to see the next one!
A little correction: Ferdinand VII didn't abolish the "Napoleon impose constitution". He abolish "La Pepa", it was constitution of our own making.
Still hands down my FAVORITE person on KZread with nearly 5k hours just on mobile, love everything as usual! You deserve all the spoils of success after a near decade of working on KZread! It’s been a pleasure watching so far and can’t wait each and every time the bell icon rings and it says I have a new HC video to download and watch! Cheers to all my fellow history buffs as well! What an awesome community to be a part of!
@russianbear0027
Ай бұрын
Yeah its been nice watching the channel grow and HC's craft develop. The recent branching out has been interesting
This is my first exposure to your channel. First 3 mins and i am hooked. Excellent
I'm currently following quite a few history channels but this one really stands out!
Another banger, this man does not miss.
yet another banger. thanks for all the hard work, friend!
"Power doesn't corrupt, it reveals." - Robert Caro. Thank you for this great quote.
I knew for quite a long time 19th century is my biggest gap in history knowledge, so this series comes at the right time. Excellent stuff!
Resting after getting back from a night in the hospital. Your uploads are an instant mood brightener, thank you
@blockmasterscott
Ай бұрын
I hope you’re ok! 👍💪
The quality of these videos is astounding, i can't imagine the amount of work that goes into making one of your videos, you truly are a professional.
Another incredible video, thank you!
Thanks man, I love your videos.
Excellent stuff as always
Just became a member today! Love your content and I love this video.
I LOVE this channel. Great work!
I've been hoping for this ever since the Congress of Vienna videos, and it definitely didn't disappoint. It's such a fascinating period of history that my education completely skipped over. Can't wait for the next one, too.
I feel like The US involvement in the Monroe Doctrine is being slightly undervalued. It wasn't an accident that the Monroe Doctrine exclusively blocked future European colonialism in the Americas, whilst at the same time leaving the door open for 1. The US to exert colonial influence over the Americas, and 2. Allowing existing European colonies in the Americas (mostly British at this point). It basically locked the door behind the Americans and British, allowing America to exploit future opportunities and Britain to maintain current operations. So it wasn't exactly a free coup for the British, as they had to allow America to use the Monroe Doctrine in their own favor.
@DiamondKingStudios
Ай бұрын
I feel that the effects for us Americans took a while to materialize, though, and that period of time is outside the video’s range.
@DiamondKingStudios
Ай бұрын
But yeah “lol those Americans” like I’m any similar to my countrymen of that sort
@leonardwei3914
Ай бұрын
Agreed, it seems he narrates it in a manner that the British pulled a fast one on the United States. Canning wanted the U.S. to issue a joint declaration with Britain since both nations had similar concerns (and objectives) regarding colonization. President James Monroe, former presidents James Madison and Thomas Jefferson were all receptive to the idea, but SecState John Quincy Adams was against a joint declaration, so Monroe ended up unilaterally issued the Monroe Doctrine. Of course in reality the U.S. was in no position to uphold the doctrine, thus relying mostly on British naval power for enforcement, but post Civil War would change that.
@alanpennie8013
Ай бұрын
@@DiamondKingStudios Yes. We shouldn't infer that Canning tricked USA even if that's what Canning said. It was more a coincidence of interests. DC liked the new republics and The Brits wanted meddling continentals confined to their own continent.
@DiamondKingStudios
Ай бұрын
@@alanpennie8013 they got tired of our ships in the Mediterranean stopping piracy from North Africa (odd bit of early history no one here ever brings up). Still have to deal with Connecticut whalers though lol
I absolutely adore every video this guy makes
Love your videos--can't wait for the next :]
A tiny detail, the constitution King Fernando the seventh tried to abolish was not established by Napoleon, but by the Spanish Courts in Cadiz in 1812, amidst the French occupation and King Joseph the First ruling
No way I was going to wait a month, as soon as I saw the community post I had to get a membership so I could see the new video!!!
@chrisg4305
2 ай бұрын
Did the same thing lol
So hype, honestly man one of the best history KZread channels by far. I never even mind the longer gaps between vids because I know greek fire is on its way
@adavis3464
Ай бұрын
Yup. He puts a lot into these videos, it's quite understandable that they take a long time to make. And he has a life to live outside of this as well. I enjoy them so much when they do come though!
Love your content. I recommend this page to anyone who is still thinking.
Absolutely awesome video, as always
Glad to see a return to form after stumbling with the last video
I'm so glad to see you back, I worried the work video may have been a bow out, and i missed your videos
thank you! luv these vids
This is an awesome video, can't wait for the next one