Welcome to my History Class! Here you can learn about interesting events, wars, revolutions, inventions, great leaders, ancient peoples, and many more.
I'm a history enthusiast for many years, and I decided to start this channel to arouse interest in studying history, in a pleasant and easy to understand way.
On this channel I narrate historical events, while using appropriate maps, images, and animation to help viewers to better understand how everything went.
I am not a native English speaker, but I try to compensate for any mistakes in expression through my passion for history and respect for historical truth.
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May God rest in peace your soul Stefan ! Be blessed! 🙏☦️
“Beylik” not emirate
His voice is shit
He was never called Barbarossa , maybe in the fantasy of Europeans , it is misleading , when he saved algeria from hispanic Vatican Invaders he became the Nickname Baba oruc by the locals , Baba Oruc not "barbarossa " he was not a Readbeard neither was his mother Greek christian , this is nonsense . Janissaries were not kidnapped european christian children , this is nonsense , The Alevites were the Janissaries , the Real Muslim traditional culture of the "Ottomans" before europeans turned everything into satanism and freemasonry .
Great Berber amazigh civilisation
Arabs invade Africans in North Africa! And Spain, stop stealing history
Portuguese occupied Goa from the Adilshah of Bijapur, the Bhonsles of Sawantwadi and the Nayakas of Sonda. "India liberated an Indian Goa that was occupied by the Europeans"✅
Alexander never conquered India. At the time, India was the Nanda Empire, Alexander never reached it, he just defeated an isolated kingdom.
Sund is very nice 😂🎉🎉
Gjon (Ivan, Jovan) Kastriot married Vojsava, Serbian princess from Polog and had nine children with her: four sons and five daughters. The sons' names were 1. Staniša 2. Repoš 3. Kostadin 4. George, Djordje, -(Skanderbeg) The daughters' names were: 1. Jelena 2. Mara 3. Angelina 4. Vlajka 5. Mamica = 100% serbian names..... Djordje is a Serbian given name, a Serbian variant, derived from Greek Γεώργιος (Geōrgios); "George" in English. Skenderbeg’s sisters Valica and Jela mean ‘little wave’ and ‘dear’ in Serbian. Branilo and Stanisa are both Serbian names meaning ‘defender’ and ‘the one who stands,’ respectively. It is remarkable that Pagan Serbian names persisted in the Kastriota family into the fourth generation. Skenderbeg brother Stanisa named his own son Branilo. Such inter-generational use of Pagan Serbian names suggests a preservation of a Serb identity. Much in the same way that religious Jews give their children distinctly Hebrew names like Herschel, Shmooley, Menachem, Yehuda and so forth so that they never forget their ancestry and identity. The reader should also note: the names being pointed out in the genealogy are Pagan Serbian names that could never have been diffused into Albanian culture through Christianity because the Serbs practiced Orthodox Christianity, which could never have diffused to Albanian Catholics. Also, Albanian Orthodoxy was always under Byzantine-Greek jurisdiction and concentrated in the south of Albania, furthest away from any potential and unlikely Serbian/Christian cultural diffusion. Skenderbeg's brother Repoš was died as a monk in Serbian orthodox monastery Hilandar on July 25, 1431 and he was buried there. __________ In Hilandar stays written : "Prestavi se Repoš, rab božji 1437" George Kastriot Skanderbeg married Andronika Arianiti Sister of Andronika name Anglelina, married Stefan Brankovic, and later become a Saint in Serbian Orthodox Church - ''Anglelina prepodobna mati'' Stefan Brankovic is despot (ruler) of the Serbian Despotate between 1458 and 1459, member of the serbian Branković dynasty. Gjon Kastrioti II, THE ONLY Scanderbeg's son, married Irene Brankovic, daughter of Lazar Brankovic, despot(ruler) of Serbia Skanderbeg's sister Mamica married Serbian lord of Zeta Stefan Crnojevic, and other sister Vlajka married Serbian lord Stefan Balšic Skenderbeg is the great grandson of Branilo, the Serb duke of Kastoria. etc etc. The only book about Skenderbeg written by an Albanian before the World War I was written by Catholic Albanian priest Marin Barleci ..even M. Barleci an Albanian designates Skenderbeg a a Serb and not an Albanian at all. He was definitely a Serb on both sides of his family. I mean, look at his coat of arms: it’s the exact same as the sigil of the Serbian Imperial House, with the color of the eagle reversed. It’s not just a Christian symbol, but an Orthodox Christian symbol (it was a Byzantine adaptation of the Roman eagle, with the two heads symbolizing the union of Church and State under the Emperor). Russia’s Imperial Eagle is also derived from Byzantium, and also black. Skenderbeg’s identity was completely hijacked..It hasn’t been enough to just murder and expel the Serbs; the point was to steal their history, culture and identity as well. medievalist, said the following, in his review of Athanase Gegaj's work which claimed that Skanderbeg was purely Albanian: "...Skanderbeg's mother had a Slav name, and the epithet 'Tripalda' given to her is a corruption of the tribal name 'Triballi', which the pedantic Byzantine historians applied to the Serbs. Moreover, if he had no connexion with Serbia, why should he have given two villages to Chilindar ... the famous Serbian monastery on Mount Athos, immemorially connected with Serbian kings, medieval and modern?". In Bulgarian historiography, historian-medievalist Vasil Zlatarski (1866-1935), mentioned her as the daughter of a Serbian nobleman. Historian Strashimir Dimitrov (1892-1960) said that she was a daughter of a local Bulgarian lord (boyar) from Macedonia. Fan S. Noli, an Albanian-American writer, in his biography of Skanderbeg (1947), adopted the view that Vojsava came from the Muzaka family. British writer and Balkans expert Harry Hodgkinson (1913-1994) considered her a member of the Muzaka family as well. Oliver Schmitt rejected this view and stated that Hodgkinson had done no archival research. Boban Petrovski, a Macedonian historian and author of Voisava Tribalda (2006), the only work about Voisava and her possible genealogies, concluded that Voisava was of undoubtedly Slavic origin, most likely Serb, as she was the daughter of a lord of the "Triballians" (Serbs) in Polog, that had ruled before the Ottoman conquest. He had several theses on the ultimate identity of Voisava's father: "If the Branković family indeed governed Polog in the last decade of the 14th century, it arises the chance that Voisava was a daughter of Grgur Branković or even Vuk Branković." Oliver Schmitt, a professor of South-East European history at Vienna University, in his biography Skanderbeg: Der neue Alexander auf dem Balkan (2009) supported that she was a Serbian noblewoman of the Branković family and sister to Mara Branković. Robert Elsie (born 1950), an Albanologist, mentioned her as "a Slavic woman ... related to the noble Serbian Brankovići family". Medievalist Tadeusz Wasilewski notes that Voisava is not listed as a member of the Brankovic dynasty family tree. Boško Bojović, a medievalist with a research focus on the relations of the Kastrioti family to Mount Athos (Hilandar) considers her a member of the Muzaka family.
Tyrants and enemies really have a wrongful thing to underestimate Egypt, considering it has lectured Israel, Libya, Sudan, UK and even world terrorist groups at wars. The strongest nation of Africa 🇪🇬
Were guests for 5 years 💀💀💀💀💀😂😂😂😂😂💀😂💀😂💀😂💀
The usual reason why these PEOPLE continue to fight each other since the beginning of civilization ( since man started to walk upright). They always wanted what their neighbors had.
The real history
What about the mirrors Louis XIV of France had made bringing experts from Murano? Where the French invented a way to roll and make flat mirrors? This was before the German Liebig in 1835. Nothing against the German, just that found this detail before seeing your more extensive and much appreciated thorough history of glass. I’m missing this part here. I’m not sure now how mirrors were actually invented, it seems the King of France had them first in the XVII c. Or maybe Liebig just made them easy to mass produce then?
Thank you for starting from the beginning. 😁
I am about to upload a short of a bronze coin a Tetrachalkon featuring Mithridates VI. Check it out, if you are into ancient and mediaeval coinage ...
Arabs are now trying to conquer Europe with the victim and replacement strategy. I'm sicilian and makes my blood boil when I think of this invaders
Old Goa was much better!
Tamazgha is a attested term used for the region. Exonyms were Africa & Libya, Maghreb is a French term
O maaaa gaaaaaaaaad
The rhythm, the tempo, the orchestra.. my oh my! It just has the special feeling of nostalgia
Those poor people went through hell all them years being taken advantage of and we had no business over there either y'all they wanted was Independence
Explains why I am so dark skinned and Italian calabrese
"I am now free to say what I think and do what I want to do [within the realms of a standard Western country's laws] without fear of oppression and wrongful arrest [or worse] from the authorities." - A mid-level soldier involved in the coup.
How did they know he committed suicide it was like thousand of years ago
Improve your pronounciation....!
Karamanid: ❌ Karamanoglu : ✅
Indoeuropeans ruled this places tousend of years before hunnic
Do you know any other RUSSIAN HISTORY KZread CHANNEL,beside this one? Please answer to me,becouse i have intresting things about slavic history,that i want to share.
You covered a lot of bases there. Well done.
50th Anniversary today! April 25, 2024
Today it makes 50 years!
i have the power of 900 likes
It's "invasion", not "conquest"
Historians aren't sure about the Nervii. Some say Caesar could not distinguish them from the Eburones and that he mixed them up. But I think Caesar was spot on. The natural border between the Nervii and the Eburones was the river Dijle. The Nervii were much braver than the backstabbing Eburones. When Caesar wrote about the bravery of the Belgians he referred mainly to the Nervii, and certainly not to the Eburones.
Good work
Thank you 🙂
Amazing
Long live to the cherifien Moroccan empire
France had a colony in Southeast Asia. Great Britain had multiple colonies throughout the world. Italy had a colony in Northeast Africa. It's interesting to see how the World once looked. It was very different.
The Ottoman map is wrong, all of Western Arabia, including Yemen, belongs to the Ottomans, and East Africa, under the name of Abyssinia, belongs to the Ottomans, up to the coast of Somalia, and the Sahara Desert should also be included in these borders.
These territories had only limited Ottoman presence, or were vassals for a short time.
@@HistoryClassMy brother, it does not matter whether it is a vassal state or not, the Abyssinian and Yemen states lasted for more than three centuries, the Hejaz state existed as a vassal state from 1517 to 1917. You only added the Uyvar province, which was a Slovakian territory that remained in the hands of the Ottomans for 25 years, to your map. You did not show the lands that were vassal or directly governed for centuries, so the map is wrong.
@@HistoryClassYou also had to show the Caucasus on the map, it doesn't matter how short or long it was, you had to show the widest borders.
Thanks for sharing; MyTrueAncestry was connecting my Dad and I to a Proto Villanovan Martinscurio sample from around 3000 years ago to a Yayoi Fujiwara Clan sample from Japan of all places, which was interesting 🔥🌧🌈
I just want to say, despite the first hiccup it was resolved very quickly, but as I said on the timeline clearly volcanic glass and it’s abundance with supersede humans use of glass created by lightning strikes. Overall, this is a well done video.
Well, I’m not even 20 seconds into this video and the very first thing is wrong. Lightning created glass glass is 100% not the first glass people familiar with as it is an anomaly, whereas volcanic glass 100% could be found in abundance and was used in primitive tool making, I’m gonna continue the video but not a great start
A magyarokat szokás szerint szövetségesnek hívták ide, aztán a szövetsèges hátba támadta. Így könnyű győzni drágáim. Aztán amikor a magyarok letettèk a fegyvert Ottó kívánságára, felkoncoltátok őket. Na ezek vagytok ti, szegèny ártatlan ès művelt Nyugatiak. A becstelensèg ès az alantasság szinonimái vagytok.
cool
Vietnamese were the only mainland Asian peoples not to be conquered by the Mongols. Speaks volumes.
❤
What made the ottomans fight against other Sunni Muslims?
Great! Thanks for posting.
well played Siam for manoeuvring between Chinese Empire, European Empires and local kingdoms to retain sovereignty.