Imagine calling the people who lived in the area migrates
@gwae487 сағат бұрын
had a CLUB FOOT.
@MatthewIncognito-le1hd8 сағат бұрын
Best duo in history. These two are in top form
@Perizada9 сағат бұрын
Being forced to serve as a valet could have been another form of punishment. Somebody of high status being forced to work as a servant just adds to the prisoners humiliation
@justinwilson419817 сағат бұрын
Talking shite
@coulie2718 сағат бұрын
Four episodes to go ?? 😅😅
@chrismd0018 сағат бұрын
Colonized by the British Protestants after wicked Henry
@donaldskinner-reid899820 сағат бұрын
In Scotland, adulthood behind at 16.
@palamabron248121 сағат бұрын
I had an ancestor who was scalped along with his two sons, one of whom survived. They were caught tending a secret farm on what was supposed to be the Creeks' side of the river. The one who survived played dead (or probably fainted) until everything was clear and then swam back across the river to get help. He said he only remained conscious because the water would sting the wound every time his head would go under. He lived the rest of his life with a scarred head and took to wearing hats to cover it up. I don't think he ever had any children, but I'm descended from his sister who was safe at home. This would have been around 1818.
@realBrianCars23 сағат бұрын
Im just here for the American accents that Tom tries to pull off.
@ko0974Күн бұрын
Absorbed migrants mainly Irish ,eh no the Irish were always there, the Scottish and English planters were used to eradicate native Irish ..seriously
@eirikbelisarius1100Күн бұрын
When Justinian invaded Italy it seemed like a smart move. The victory in North Africa was easy and total. He probably had an understanding with the Ostrogothic queen Amalasuntha who had becomed a kind of prisoner of the ostrogothic nobility who took control of her son in a very destructive way. The pope in Rome also supported him. He had reasons to believe that the invasion of Italy would be another stunning and cheap victory. He had bad luck in Italy, and then came the plague.
@lesleyjones5817Күн бұрын
Loved this 😅
@mikeswilp6001Күн бұрын
DEMONIC IS THE POWER CHANNELING THE NAZIs' !
@zopizopi5054Күн бұрын
This interviewer is a bit stupid!!!!! 10 year old boy us abused, and your stupid question is, "Was it against his will" !!!! Who Re you?????
@KORTOKtheSTRONGКүн бұрын
mad lad
@KORTOKtheSTRONGКүн бұрын
rekt
@KORTOKtheSTRONGКүн бұрын
neat
@MarkLeBayКүн бұрын
53:10 In Detroit, there was also the sudden collapse of the automotive-industry manufacturing. There were a lot of disgruntled people in and around Detroit, and it was very satisfying for those people to vent their unhappiness against the falsetto voices of the B-Gees … while at the same time embracing Led Zepplin.
@Lorenzodimichele-iy3svКүн бұрын
Nope - baboon is a monkey
@neenaj365Күн бұрын
It is Sunak😅
@stephengray1344Күн бұрын
I'm disappointed that Tom didn't mention into how the Biblical description of the Ark is clearly based on the ritual furniture of 19th Dynasty Egypt. Did his research not turn up "The Ark of the Covenant in its Egyptian context" as source material?
@theshrubbererКүн бұрын
thank god there was a reference to Stanley Baldwin. I never heard of him until The Rest is History and now I am sad whenever he is not mentioned in an episode 😂
@geoffreydron1496Күн бұрын
An interesting comparison would be Little Big Horn and Isandlwana. Eurpopean/American arrogance vis a vis 'savages', incl., splitting command, last stand of Sioux/Zulus.
@eadeshogue6702Күн бұрын
Wonderful commentary!
@badxxxmonkey5541Күн бұрын
Italy, France, Austria and England were better cultured.
@morden2792 күн бұрын
"Trump has championed Confederate causes" Source: I made it up
@neenaj3652 күн бұрын
Consistently high quality content. Many thanks.
@chrisjones67362 күн бұрын
I think you have nailed the lie that the tribes on the plains were age old residents. No, the plains inhabitants were in flux. The Native Americans were very savage! But, of course, the settlers and soldiers were pretty much the same, with arguably less excuse. Not sure the plains tribes were that involved in the extinction of bison although native Americans were involved. The main contribution to the problem was a preference for killing cows because they made better robes. Robes had a good market in the East, and paid for lots of nice American stuff, like firearms.
@mop3302 күн бұрын
they willingly and gladly joined with germany that's how.
@janetsanders53562 күн бұрын
Was disappointed considering the title how little was said about Patton (An Interesting character even aside from military abilities. Olympic contestant in modern pentathlon, belief in reincarnation and having previously been officer in Napoleonic and Roman battles) I had heard that Wellington on being asked about best officer said the duke of Marlborough.
@PeloquinDavid2 күн бұрын
I've long thought there was no more archetypically English a revolt than the American Revolution...
@robertferguson5332 күн бұрын
30 seconds in and I’ve already subscribed
@brucepeek39232 күн бұрын
Well first of all Custers 7th Cavalry wasn't wiped out at Little Bighorn.. 260 some Cavalrymen were killed at little bighorn but also Benteens command, and Renos troops, along with their supply train contained some 450 men who lived through the battle.. The Sioux won because they fought tactically with firearms that had purchased from trading posts and the Metis' canadian buffalo hide hunters who functioned as middle men to the Indians. best Bruce Peek
@calibvr2 күн бұрын
thanks this will help for my history exam
@paulh2622 күн бұрын
"Deep down I know it's a dog" made me proper belly laugh 🤣
@eshaibraheem42182 күн бұрын
There's a genocide going on at the moment in Palestine, with words similar to General Sherman's being repeated there and supported by the US government.
@joshseeley72 күн бұрын
Let’s go Team Custer!!
@eoingriffin35172 күн бұрын
So is Luther then the father of enlightenment, this Lutherian way of thinking much more individual and truth seeking. A shift in thinking about your own belief and how you preserve God
@youebutme2 күн бұрын
Johne Locke, Issac Newton, René Descartes big influencers of the Enlightenment but Voltaire is considered by most as the father of the Enlightenment. Could Luther be the father of enlightenment? Well, the Enlightenment was about human reasoning to explain how the world worked and how man could and should interplay in this world whereas Martin Luther still believed that Christ and faith in Christ as savior and God’s workings explained many things about life, nature, and beyond.
@ckknecht68832 күн бұрын
Red cloud descendants still live on pine ridge res north dskota . Tom do vkntact them Sure they would love to share stories about their great great grandfather. Red cloud
@HelenKempster3 күн бұрын
I keep thinking you're talking about US Republic and Trump of the golden sneakers😂😂
@kensachter28693 күн бұрын
You are right to point out the cheering crowd in Vienna.There were many in the city, no doubt, and perhaps the majority, that stayed fearfully at home. Outside in the countryside, where both my father and mother's families lived, the divide was sharp. In the hills and valleys of Karnten, for instnace, the German guns trained on the towns and villages ensured submission. My mother's teacher was driven away, never to be seen again. Her family lived in fear of informers. But the region was never fully subjugated. Locals who prospered by being Nazi members would be shot in the street, and though everyone knew the killers' identities none would say anything. All the while the partisans would come down from the hills on raids. But once the war was over the same Nazis who were in charge of the land registry etc were kept in place. And no restitution came for those who had suffered.
@andreivieira4143 күн бұрын
I haven't watched the rest of the show, but I'm afraid this excerpt downplays the significance of what Luther did and the important issues that the Reformation dealt with. Issues that are still relevant today.
@michaelkennedy33723 күн бұрын
They won't now because you've spoiled it.
@davidmoon17153 күн бұрын
Would love to hear Stephen Kotkin on your show as a guest speaker on Russia 17C to 20C period
@juanfervalencia3 күн бұрын
Fantastic
@farmersdotter73 күн бұрын
“Raw trumpian brillance”; maybe reptilian instinct would have been a better analogy. Luther probably learned some of the tricks of the trade from the very carnival barkers and indulgence botherers he condemned, just as trump learned and takes cues from televangelists.
@richcole1573 күн бұрын
Another great episode! I think your spirit animal would be the stoat. Mischievous, curious, and surprisingly deadly to other small animals.
@VoldeNuit331153 күн бұрын
Huang is linguistically equivalent to the germanic word, schwanstüker.
Пікірлер
Imagine calling the people who lived in the area migrates
had a CLUB FOOT.
Best duo in history. These two are in top form
Being forced to serve as a valet could have been another form of punishment. Somebody of high status being forced to work as a servant just adds to the prisoners humiliation
Talking shite
Four episodes to go ?? 😅😅
Colonized by the British Protestants after wicked Henry
In Scotland, adulthood behind at 16.
I had an ancestor who was scalped along with his two sons, one of whom survived. They were caught tending a secret farm on what was supposed to be the Creeks' side of the river. The one who survived played dead (or probably fainted) until everything was clear and then swam back across the river to get help. He said he only remained conscious because the water would sting the wound every time his head would go under. He lived the rest of his life with a scarred head and took to wearing hats to cover it up. I don't think he ever had any children, but I'm descended from his sister who was safe at home. This would have been around 1818.
Im just here for the American accents that Tom tries to pull off.
Absorbed migrants mainly Irish ,eh no the Irish were always there, the Scottish and English planters were used to eradicate native Irish ..seriously
When Justinian invaded Italy it seemed like a smart move. The victory in North Africa was easy and total. He probably had an understanding with the Ostrogothic queen Amalasuntha who had becomed a kind of prisoner of the ostrogothic nobility who took control of her son in a very destructive way. The pope in Rome also supported him. He had reasons to believe that the invasion of Italy would be another stunning and cheap victory. He had bad luck in Italy, and then came the plague.
Loved this 😅
DEMONIC IS THE POWER CHANNELING THE NAZIs' !
This interviewer is a bit stupid!!!!! 10 year old boy us abused, and your stupid question is, "Was it against his will" !!!! Who Re you?????
mad lad
rekt
neat
53:10 In Detroit, there was also the sudden collapse of the automotive-industry manufacturing. There were a lot of disgruntled people in and around Detroit, and it was very satisfying for those people to vent their unhappiness against the falsetto voices of the B-Gees … while at the same time embracing Led Zepplin.
Nope - baboon is a monkey
It is Sunak😅
I'm disappointed that Tom didn't mention into how the Biblical description of the Ark is clearly based on the ritual furniture of 19th Dynasty Egypt. Did his research not turn up "The Ark of the Covenant in its Egyptian context" as source material?
thank god there was a reference to Stanley Baldwin. I never heard of him until The Rest is History and now I am sad whenever he is not mentioned in an episode 😂
An interesting comparison would be Little Big Horn and Isandlwana. Eurpopean/American arrogance vis a vis 'savages', incl., splitting command, last stand of Sioux/Zulus.
Wonderful commentary!
Italy, France, Austria and England were better cultured.
"Trump has championed Confederate causes" Source: I made it up
Consistently high quality content. Many thanks.
I think you have nailed the lie that the tribes on the plains were age old residents. No, the plains inhabitants were in flux. The Native Americans were very savage! But, of course, the settlers and soldiers were pretty much the same, with arguably less excuse. Not sure the plains tribes were that involved in the extinction of bison although native Americans were involved. The main contribution to the problem was a preference for killing cows because they made better robes. Robes had a good market in the East, and paid for lots of nice American stuff, like firearms.
they willingly and gladly joined with germany that's how.
Was disappointed considering the title how little was said about Patton (An Interesting character even aside from military abilities. Olympic contestant in modern pentathlon, belief in reincarnation and having previously been officer in Napoleonic and Roman battles) I had heard that Wellington on being asked about best officer said the duke of Marlborough.
I've long thought there was no more archetypically English a revolt than the American Revolution...
30 seconds in and I’ve already subscribed
Well first of all Custers 7th Cavalry wasn't wiped out at Little Bighorn.. 260 some Cavalrymen were killed at little bighorn but also Benteens command, and Renos troops, along with their supply train contained some 450 men who lived through the battle.. The Sioux won because they fought tactically with firearms that had purchased from trading posts and the Metis' canadian buffalo hide hunters who functioned as middle men to the Indians. best Bruce Peek
thanks this will help for my history exam
"Deep down I know it's a dog" made me proper belly laugh 🤣
There's a genocide going on at the moment in Palestine, with words similar to General Sherman's being repeated there and supported by the US government.
Let’s go Team Custer!!
So is Luther then the father of enlightenment, this Lutherian way of thinking much more individual and truth seeking. A shift in thinking about your own belief and how you preserve God
Johne Locke, Issac Newton, René Descartes big influencers of the Enlightenment but Voltaire is considered by most as the father of the Enlightenment. Could Luther be the father of enlightenment? Well, the Enlightenment was about human reasoning to explain how the world worked and how man could and should interplay in this world whereas Martin Luther still believed that Christ and faith in Christ as savior and God’s workings explained many things about life, nature, and beyond.
Red cloud descendants still live on pine ridge res north dskota . Tom do vkntact them Sure they would love to share stories about their great great grandfather. Red cloud
I keep thinking you're talking about US Republic and Trump of the golden sneakers😂😂
You are right to point out the cheering crowd in Vienna.There were many in the city, no doubt, and perhaps the majority, that stayed fearfully at home. Outside in the countryside, where both my father and mother's families lived, the divide was sharp. In the hills and valleys of Karnten, for instnace, the German guns trained on the towns and villages ensured submission. My mother's teacher was driven away, never to be seen again. Her family lived in fear of informers. But the region was never fully subjugated. Locals who prospered by being Nazi members would be shot in the street, and though everyone knew the killers' identities none would say anything. All the while the partisans would come down from the hills on raids. But once the war was over the same Nazis who were in charge of the land registry etc were kept in place. And no restitution came for those who had suffered.
I haven't watched the rest of the show, but I'm afraid this excerpt downplays the significance of what Luther did and the important issues that the Reformation dealt with. Issues that are still relevant today.
They won't now because you've spoiled it.
Would love to hear Stephen Kotkin on your show as a guest speaker on Russia 17C to 20C period
Fantastic
“Raw trumpian brillance”; maybe reptilian instinct would have been a better analogy. Luther probably learned some of the tricks of the trade from the very carnival barkers and indulgence botherers he condemned, just as trump learned and takes cues from televangelists.
Another great episode! I think your spirit animal would be the stoat. Mischievous, curious, and surprisingly deadly to other small animals.
Huang is linguistically equivalent to the germanic word, schwanstüker.