WW1 From Russia's Perspective | Animated History

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024
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    Sources:
    Engelstein, Laura. Russia in flames: War, revolution, Civil War, 1914-1921. Oxford University Press, 2019.
    Figes, Orlando. A people’s tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924. London: The Bodley Head, 2017.
    Gilbert, Martin. The first World War: A complete history. New York: Rosetta Books, 2014.
    Keegan, John. The first World War. London: The Bodley Head, 2014.
    Pokrovsky, Mikhail Nikolaevich. Brief history of Russia. Orono University Prints, 1968.
    Watson, Alexander. Ring of Steel: Germany and Austria-Hungary at war, 1914-1918. London: Penguin Books, 2015.
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КОМЕНТАРІ •

  • @TheArmchairHistorian
    @TheArmchairHistorian  Рік тому +328

    Thank you to Opus Clip for sponsoring this video! Support our channel today by clicking on our link, start transforming your videos into short form content in moments with Opus Clip, and get a 50% discount on an annual plan: www.opus.pro/?
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    • @mufidaltsaqib4483
      @mufidaltsaqib4483 Рік тому +3

      ​@@thatoneguywhouploads😦

    • @UsudUsud-ly9qr
      @UsudUsud-ly9qr Рік тому

      Can you make video about Ukraine's population with children going down to extinction😂😂 glory to Russia ukraine is either Russian or nothing

    • @jackspleen79
      @jackspleen79 Рік тому +5

      Griffin, I'm signed up for AH TV and am wondering if there is an app yet so as to put on my homescreen?

    • @death-istic9586
      @death-istic9586 Рік тому +3

      Hi.

    • @jackspleen79
      @jackspleen79 Рік тому +1

      @@death-istic9586 Hello

  • @coletakkish4389
    @coletakkish4389 Рік тому +2388

    Making this video’s length exactly 19:17 is the kind of attention to detail that makes this channel great

    • @Espen.Johannesen
      @Espen.Johannesen Рік тому +84

      at 13:36 there is a modern map on the wall? With Czeckkia and Slowakia split and Königsberg/Kaliningrad as an enclave ?

    • @sr7129
      @sr7129 Рік тому +319

      Damn mine is 19:16

    • @NebulaHasADigBick
      @NebulaHasADigBick Рік тому

      1916!@@sr7129

    • @easternoilcrisis
      @easternoilcrisis Рік тому +46

      ​@@Espen.Johannesentsar nick the time traveller

    • @Black-Sun_Kaiser
      @Black-Sun_Kaiser Рік тому +49

      19:16 for me also

  • @chromenewt
    @chromenewt Рік тому +1493

    One thing about the Attack of the Dead Men that really wasn't emphasised is the mixture of chlorine gas and other agents that caused flesh to literally liquefy. The dead men in question weren't just supposed to be dead, they literally looked like putrifying corpses and their refusal to die was inconceivable. As a side note, only one of the dead men managed to survive. I forget the name but he became an artist and poet of some renown.

    • @fenicz6306
      @fenicz6306 Рік тому +213

      Владислав Максимилианович Стржеминский
      Vladislav Maximilianovich Strzheminsky

    • @SlapShotTakes
      @SlapShotTakes Рік тому +81

      @@fenicz6306 Thanks/Спасибо, добрый сэр

    • @audeyrpgm3434
      @audeyrpgm3434 Рік тому +18

      @@SlapShotTakesseeing that always makes me think of cheese - sorry, couldn’t resist the comment sir

    • @hebakewolf
      @hebakewolf Рік тому +60

      And That is when the dead men are marching back again,
      Osoiec then and again

    • @giacomomoschiano2761
      @giacomomoschiano2761 Рік тому +22

      @@hebakewolf attack of the dead, hundred men

  • @poisonousbadge126
    @poisonousbadge126 Рік тому +2853

    Russian history of ww1 is rarely talked about in the world, also it hurts seeing all the nations that were in it that are largely forgotten, thanks armchair historian!

    • @rtasvadam1776
      @rtasvadam1776 Рік тому +253

      It seems as WW1 as a whole is overshadowed by the sequel

    • @poisonousbadge126
      @poisonousbadge126 Рік тому +71

      @@rtasvadam1776 HAHA, im glad the russians(spoiler, soviets) improved then.

    • @nbewarwe
      @nbewarwe Рік тому +33

      What do you mean? Every history class I've attended since middle school talked about Russia joining the war and falling into revolution as a result.
      It may not sound like much, but it's the same amount of detail given to the Lusitania and America joining the war.

    • @poisonousbadge126
      @poisonousbadge126 Рік тому +18

      @@nbewarwe Not where im from, it depends on your nation.

    • @nbewarwe
      @nbewarwe Рік тому +25

      @@poisonousbadge126 Where are you from then? Here in the southern US, we all learn about WW1, Russia's one of the main nations we're required to remember for tests, and we all learn they left because of the Revolution by at least middle school.
      It may not sound like much, but keep in mind ww1 is only given a week of coverage to make time for the rest of history.

  • @nathanseper8738
    @nathanseper8738 Рік тому +402

    I love you show the often ignored sides of the significant events of history. When people talk about World War I, they almost always focus on the trenches of the Western Front, when the Eastern Front was a massive theater involving some of the major powers of Europe.

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 Рік тому +41

      And forget about the Libyan Front, the submarine war, the Salonika Front and the Austrian and Bulgarian advance into Serbia, Montenegro, and Albania, the Japanese conquest of the German colonies in the Pacific and China, the Mesopotamian Front, the Caucusus Front, the Entente occupation of Iran that killed two million people, basically all of Africa in general, the contributions of Thailand and Portugal on the Entente side, the Italian Front, the naval race between the Ottonans and Austo-Hungarians vs the Italians, French, and the Royal Navy, and then consider the war to be over in 1918 with near absolute disregard for the war left after excluding maybe Mussolini's march on Rome and the Beer Hall Putsch.

    • @nathanseper8738
      @nathanseper8738 Рік тому +3

      @@robertjarman3703 Yep, those are important too!

    • @cheesecheese6459
      @cheesecheese6459 Рік тому +2

      I think france and gallipoli

    • @LarryDaLobstah
      @LarryDaLobstah 6 місяців тому

      That’s probably because you live in the West of course all you’re gonna hear about is the Western front since it’s more pertinent to you. These events aren’t ignored in eastern countries

    • @shelbynamels7948
      @shelbynamels7948 5 місяців тому

      Because it's only the Brits who made and are still making movies about their successes in both wars. None of the Central Powers nations or the Soviet Union has much interest in dredging up this part of their histories.

  • @luyandzabavukiledlamini4693
    @luyandzabavukiledlamini4693 Рік тому +673

    Love how you view past wars from all perspectives giving us insight into the mindset on both sides in what they were thinking and what their people were feeling

    • @dontspeaktoelectrohead1491
      @dontspeaktoelectrohead1491 Рік тому +2

      Not always, his video on the Spanish Civil War was completely biased in favor of the Republicans. He complained about the execution of captured enemy combatants during a Civil War as "warcrimes" but completely ignored everything the Republicans did, only giving it a small footnote that explains nothing.

    • @user-pf3kv4bv5s
      @user-pf3kv4bv5s Рік тому +5

      Well actually it's still from the American perspective, but just a little more objective

    • @CoyoteH
      @CoyoteH Рік тому +1

      Just be glad that the Goodguys always won... xD

    • @APersonOnYouTubeX
      @APersonOnYouTubeX Рік тому +2

      @@CoyoteHgood guys always win
      History is always grey
      After all, the victors decide the future of our morals and therefore, what is right and wrong

    • @saccorhytus
      @saccorhytus Рік тому

      @@APersonOnUA-camXworld isn’t as grey as you think

  • @Montyfat
    @Montyfat Рік тому +559

    Now I really want a Russian civil war video because it’s so interesting

    • @scottanno8861
      @scottanno8861 Рік тому +70

      Especially the Czech legion stuck on the transiberian railroad fighting their way to the coast

    • @kajo509
      @kajo509 Рік тому +38

      @@scottanno8861 Czehoslovak legion

    • @Carpediem357
      @Carpediem357 Рік тому +13

      Considering many of the Etente allies fought against the Bolshivek Red Army I wanna hear what all exactly caused them to fight

    • @footisman2059
      @footisman2059 Рік тому

      @@Carpediem357Anti-communism and the fact that they stopped the war, while the whites were likely to help fight central powers.

    • @fedyx1544
      @fedyx1544 Рік тому +48

      ​@@Carpediem357 the same reason that everybody in Europe declared war on France after the French Revolution, they did not want the revolution to spread.

  • @Daniel-rh7kh
    @Daniel-rh7kh Рік тому +134

    The Brusilov Offensive isn't even mentioned at all, it is always about Verdun and the 100 days offensive, a shame Russia's participation in WW1 is largely forgotten.

    • @condelevante4
      @condelevante4 Рік тому +8

      It is presented here at 13:12

    • @haotatyan
      @haotatyan Рік тому +24

      ​@@condelevante4i think he meant in general not in the video

    • @condelevante4
      @condelevante4 Рік тому +9

      @@haotatyan Oh well then I agree. The offensive was very close to knocking AH out of the war in 1916 and had the other generals cooperated they may well have succeeded. Had that happened Germanys position is untenable. History changes.

    • @vesy19791979
      @vesy19791979 Рік тому +1

      What are you talking about? It will take another 5 years and the West will not remember who made the most significant contribution to the victory over fascism!

    • @michaelwarenycia7588
      @michaelwarenycia7588 Рік тому +5

      Not forgotten here (in Ukraine). My great grandfather was an officer in the Austro-Hungarian army. He was captured and sent to Siberia when the Russians occupied our town (in Galicia) and gave us a taste of the brutal rule which they'd come back to impose again a generation later. His village held a funeral for him, because it was inconceivable that one could survive such conditions, but, somehow, he made it back and showed up several months later. His son, my grandfather, fought the Russians in the next war.Brusilov was no hero. He also switched to the Bolshevik side after 1917 and used his persuasive influence to convince many experienced czarist officers to join in for the Polish -Soviet war. This was a good idea (from the Russian perspective), and, thanks to their relative success, although my family's home remained free, the Russians were able to capture the city where I currently live and inflict the Holodomor on it a decade later. Very convenient for them, as they gained much land and nice apartments in this beautiful place. Now, I'm here as the Russians are back to their old playbook. Yes, I'm a bit emotional about it, but you would be too if they were sending missiles at you and murdering your neighbors.

  • @flyyhighhr
    @flyyhighhr Рік тому +108

    Man that domino scene at the beginning sent a chill down my spine, once it starts there's no stopping it, absolutely terrifying

    • @JonMartinYXD
      @JonMartinYXD Рік тому +1

      There was enough time and opportunities to stop it. What was missing was someone of sufficient stature to say "hold on, let's all just turn down the rhetoric, roll back any mobilizations, and talk plainly about what our intentions are".

    • @game_boyd1644
      @game_boyd1644 Рік тому +4

      @@JonMartinYXD Even if it didn't happen then, it would have still happened at some other point later down the line. There were just too many material, political, social and economic contradictions.

    • @JonMartinYXD
      @JonMartinYXD Рік тому

      @@game_boyd1644 True. Without some large scale changes - eg. ending the naval arms race, abolishing monarchies, decolonization, etc. - matches would continue to get lit and eventually one of them would start the fire.

  • @dystopianfuture1165
    @dystopianfuture1165 Рік тому +25

    I love how the video length is 19:17.

  • @james2be916
    @james2be916 Рік тому +552

    These perspectives really help me see the scope of the war. Glad to finally see the Russian perspective on this one!

  • @Eldar-sy2vw5hm9x
    @Eldar-sy2vw5hm9x Рік тому +41

    I will add that Alexey Brusilov's tactics have not been forgotten. It was used in the future by the Soviet army in offensive operations of 1944-1945.

  • @terrabranford7485
    @terrabranford7485 Рік тому +160

    I've been dying to learn more about "All Quiet on the Eastern Front". I wonder how different Germans and Russians fighting each other were, and how similiar aspects of trench warfare remained the same.

    • @Rokaize
      @Rokaize Рік тому +30

      Well the average soldier on the ground on each side is going to have a lot in common probably. They are facing very similar conditions and stressors. And feel the same emotions when their friends are wounded or killed and the same fear of dying and not seeing their families again. And are generally lower/blue collar/working class men.
      The eastern front of ww1 didn’t have hardly any of what we’d call trench warfare. It was a very fast paced conflict with a lot of rapid movement. Not a whole lot of sitting around in trenches for months on end. So that would be a drastic difference in experiences

    • @josephstalin9357
      @josephstalin9357 Рік тому +10

      It's called And quite flows the Don

    • @Eldar-sy2vw5hm9x
      @Eldar-sy2vw5hm9x Рік тому +10

      Советую почитать "Тихий Дон " - роман-эпопею Михаила Шолохова, лауреата Нобелевской премии по литературе.
      Там описаны жизнь и события донского казака Григория Мелехова (главного героя) : мирное время, Первая Мировая война, Гражданская война, Послевоенная жизнь .

    • @michaelwarenycia7588
      @michaelwarenycia7588 Рік тому +3

      It wasn't just the Germans vs the Russians. I'm Ukrainian. My great grandfather was on the eastern front in the Austro-Hungarian army. At least in our part of the country, we saw ourselves as very different from the Russians although we got along with with the Germans. One of my cousins still has a zippo-style cigarette lighter a German officer gave him as a gift. They treated us very well. By contrast, the Russians were brutish savages who looted, raped and tried to ban our language and identity (even though they were busy fighting a war). For me, Ernst Junger's perspective is much more accurate than All Quiet on the Western front. I've read both. It's a different perspective when you're defending your home and family versus being an aimless, urban aesthete as Remarque seems to have been, who doesn't care about his country or people and just wants to enjoy the high life in the capital, and who was conscripted (contrary to the book, he wasn't an eager volunteer hoodwinked by propaganda) into a war which he felt (with some good justification) was for nothing but bankers and politician's pride. So, I'm not saying it's wrong for the western front but here was different. And is different today. I don't know what German soldiers thought but for us it was an existential struggle for survival. Neither my great grandfather (based on what relatives tell me; I never met him) nor my grandfather, who fought against the Russians in the next war, ever expressed the kind of sentiments like oh, all war is stupid, or oh, we were all just helpless pawns and those guys on the other side were no different from us, or, oh, I wish I'd never fought. They hated the enemy in the opposite trenches to the end of their days. With very good reason, as we see today.

    • @kalebthehistorian5928
      @kalebthehistorian5928 5 місяців тому

      ​@@michaelwarenycia7588 yes, I'm sure you do. But don't worry, the Russians know how much you hate them, and want nothing to do with you. So keep Galicia as it is: The last vestige of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the birthplace of Ukrainian nationalism.

  • @gonanroshadao2189
    @gonanroshadao2189 Рік тому +156

    Imagine leaving a world war just to get into a civil war

    • @mitrogulf4073
      @mitrogulf4073 Рік тому +12

      Well, if we look at the sequence completely, then one of the reasons why the civil war began was also because the Soviets seized the government (which already outraged many because not everyone voted for them) and came to “peace” by signing a derogatory peace with which those who fought at that time did not agree moment the regiments, who, although they were tired, were simply dumbfounded by what the new government went to for the sake of peace, it rather sounded in their heads like this

    • @Eldar-sy2vw5hm9x
      @Eldar-sy2vw5hm9x Рік тому +4

      ​@@mitrogulf4073 всё было куда сложнее. Если упрощать и брать в пример армию, то офицеры подписанию мира недовольны, а солдаты были очень рады .

    • @LAFC.
      @LAFC. 11 місяців тому

      It was inevitable as soon the Czar and Russian autocracy were removed from power.

    • @Azog150
      @Azog150 9 місяців тому +4

      Countries/kingdoms/empires descending into civil war after losing major wars is a fairly common theme throughout history.

    • @REGIMENT157
      @REGIMENT157 9 місяців тому +2

      China

  • @TheIrishvolunteer
    @TheIrishvolunteer Рік тому +94

    The animation in your videos has gotten incredibly good! Can't wait to see its future progression!

  • @andreymines3145
    @andreymines3145 Рік тому +8

    I watched a lot of historical chanels and i can say this is really good chanel in production. It's interesting to watch and to listen to

  • @karl_franz_prince_and_emperor
    @karl_franz_prince_and_emperor Рік тому +9

    I think this is where the armchair historian shines. Not with the nth video on Dday, but with the smaller, lesser known aspects of history.

  • @TimeDust408
    @TimeDust408 Рік тому +37

    17:14 Desertion and disobedience started after February revolution and before the Kerensky Offensive, when the Petrograd Soviet declared an infamous «Order No. 1». This order was issued only for the Petrograd garrison, but then all soldiers, including those on the fronts, learned about it. And because of that the collapse of army started. Kerensky offensive was a failure because of the low morale and disobedience. This failure finished the army entirely.

  • @beetlebg3759
    @beetlebg3759 Рік тому +71

    One of the best history channels out there hands down

  • @ALaughingWolf2188
    @ALaughingWolf2188 Рік тому +56

    It’s really awesome seeing you go back to World War One! Griffin! I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, I think it would be really cool if you did a video on the Brusilov Offenaive, it’s an important offensive in the war that isn’t really covered much on UA-cam, and it would be interesting seeing you cover it with your style and narration

  • @historyking9984
    @historyking9984 Рік тому +21

    That’s great . I always believed that the eastern front in World War One is heavily ignored due to the lack of trench warfare compared to the western front. A huge half of the war that I didn’t know as much about .

  • @nyanzan9568
    @nyanzan9568 Рік тому +17

    The quality of animations has really seen an improvement. Keep up the good work!

  • @Silver0143
    @Silver0143 Рік тому +13

    7:17 City name is not Barsumi. It's Batumi.

  • @rustr01
    @rustr01 Рік тому +24

    Great video as always! The format "War from the perspective of a certain country" is very interesting! It is especially gratifying to see Russia's point of view.

  • @josephsmith2259
    @josephsmith2259 Рік тому +23

    I really loved some of the little historical details. Forgotten Weapons approved, there are 1895 Winchester rifles. These lever actions were sold to Russia.

  • @JDDC-tq7qm
    @JDDC-tq7qm Рік тому +13

    One thing Armchair forgot to mention was the Russian Expeditionary Force fighting in the Western front in WW1 thousands of Russians went to France from 1916 until the war ended in 1918 Russia contribution in the Western front doesn't get talk about it's sad

  • @paleoph6168
    @paleoph6168 Рік тому +32

    I find it ironic that @10:08 a German soldier is armed with a Ottoman Mauser 1893 (as evidenced by the magazine cutoff at the side), then @10:12 a Russian soldier is armed with a Gewehr 98 (it has a Lange-Visier rear sight), something the German should be armed with.
    14:40
    Winchester Model 1895/1915
    17:35
    I like the animation here.

    • @FIVEBASKET
      @FIVEBASKET Рік тому +3

      The Winchester is historically accurate but I assume you already know from how you typed the correct name

    • @ariqabia5036
      @ariqabia5036 Рік тому

      It's really weird, but Simple History is more inaccurate

    • @slavic_viking9638
      @slavic_viking9638 Рік тому +4

      The Russian probably did a little thing called "using weapons captured by the enemy because they are better" and the German would be "using weapons sent by allies as support"

    • @Tom-2142
      @Tom-2142 7 місяців тому +1

      @@slavic_viking9638the Germans weren’t short of weapons and needing Ottoman help, it was the other way around, German civilian and military industrial might dwarfed the tiny specks that the ottomans had, the Ottoman Mauser was, as the name implies, a German rifle.

  • @tencosiezastanawiap2992
    @tencosiezastanawiap2992 Рік тому +4

    Music is amazing. It gives me some sort of tension or immersion. Keep going Armchair Historian.

  • @alpha1eastaskforce227
    @alpha1eastaskforce227 Рік тому +24

    As for the Battle at Osoweic Fortress, not only were they coughing up blood but because of the mixture of chemicals used they were also coughing up bits of their own lungs. It's definitely something interested, how when they were all supposed to dead, some literally refused to die and went on the attack.

    • @nvelsen1975
      @nvelsen1975 Рік тому

      A fine example of Russian religious mythology about their supposed 'racial supremacy' that never happened in reality. (because biology doesn't care about any delusions of grandeur)

  • @treykeith652
    @treykeith652 Рік тому +16

    Finally, Something About WW1.. I'm Glad Y'all Are Doing These Again, I Needed To See This

  • @rl9legend770
    @rl9legend770 Рік тому +7

    As always the best history channel here. No bias, straight to the point, covering most important events and well spoken 👌

  • @vincent4587
    @vincent4587 Рік тому +3

    You guys and your videos are extremely high quality, you’ve really been shafted by UA-cam and it’s algorithm for a while.

  • @Deadpoolion
    @Deadpoolion Рік тому +13

    If the Russians had a backward army with poor weapons, then what should they call the French/British troops? The Russians fought on the borders of the country at the beginning of the war. The French fled to Paris deep into the country's interior. And later in 1916, the Russians would send the Expeditionary Force of the Russian Army in France and Greece of 400,000 people to save the Western Front.

    • @Mentol_
      @Mentol_ Рік тому

      Приоритет фронтов у Германии? Не, не слышал. А потери в брусиловской операции нужно смотреть по документам (нелипович), а не в Википедии.

    • @TobiMag
      @TobiMag 2 місяці тому

      Russian fanboy

    • @TobiMag
      @TobiMag 2 місяці тому

      The Russian military, even in the modern era, faces the same issues it always has historically. Terrible doctrine, even worse supply issues, and a lack of modern equipment due to just economic sanctions.

    • @TobiMag
      @TobiMag 2 місяці тому

      The Russian military is a second rate power, the only thing they have going for them that makes them a “superpower” is their nuclear arsenal. They would be nothing without their nukes. Pathetic.

  • @Vatniks_are_clowns
    @Vatniks_are_clowns Рік тому +4

    Thank you for the amazing uploads :)

  • @christopherevans2445
    @christopherevans2445 Рік тому +76

    It's a battle between the armchair historian and Kings and Generals as the best history channel on UA-cam by far.

    • @slavic_viking9638
      @slavic_viking9638 Рік тому +18

      Don't forget Epic history TV

    • @kulrul9180
      @kulrul9180 Рік тому +46

      Kings and generals got too much political and biased in current war

    • @slavsupreme5129
      @slavsupreme5129 Рік тому +9

      The Operations Room

    • @Neversa
      @Neversa Рік тому +19

      ​@@kulrul9180so you support russian fascists?

    • @kulrul9180
      @kulrul9180 Рік тому

      @@Neversa I don't like overdramatization of War. Russians don't create concentration camps, don't do mass sloughtering of civilians don't wage propaganda against Ukrainian people. It's like any other war in history bigger one wants resources of smaller

  • @brawlstarssponsorships
    @brawlstarssponsorships Рік тому +35

    Yes, thanks for uploading this. I feel as if this topic in WW1 isn't talked about enough, even though it's historically very important.

  • @chibuezennodim1438
    @chibuezennodim1438 Рік тому +6

    Prince Felix Yusupov was the man responsible for pulling the trigger on Rasputin. He didn't go that easily either. They did a number of things to finish him off.

  • @ThatKaprolFella
    @ThatKaprolFella Рік тому +24

    Awesome video keep up the good work! A suggestion I also have is to make "WW1 from the Bulgarian perspective". I think it would be quite interesting!

  • @michaelhejna7864
    @michaelhejna7864 Рік тому +1

    Have you ever considered joining the Mapping Community? I love the style of your "bird's eye view" with frontlines and units

  • @khalidalali186
    @khalidalali186 Рік тому +16

    @9:02 FunFact: Tsar Nicholas II consulted, or rather was praying to the Romanov Family Patron Saint Icon, when he felt he heard a voice, advising him to take command of the army. That’s basically how Nicky, as he was called by relatives, caused the end of his over 300-year family dynasty.

    • @bjehulk
      @bjehulk Рік тому

      It was the Devil deceiving him so that a path to Godless communism could be paved

  • @shiftlevi9871
    @shiftlevi9871 Рік тому +2

    i really appreciate the thumbnail, the soldier not wearing a helmet. such attention to detail, respect

  • @prestonvinyard8725
    @prestonvinyard8725 Рік тому +4

    You've been killing it lately!

  • @asurivenkatakrishnan
    @asurivenkatakrishnan 10 місяців тому +1

    Just love how the length of the video is 19:17 (1917 - WW1)

  • @henryprice844
    @henryprice844 Рік тому +8

    This video being 19.17 minutes long is just perfect

  • @MiguelMorales85
    @MiguelMorales85 Рік тому +1

    The animations are brutally good. Very educational video

  • @giorivera1363
    @giorivera1363 6 місяців тому +10

    Funny how the time stamp for this video is the year Russia surrendered

  • @Crimsonarts2323
    @Crimsonarts2323 5 місяців тому

    I’m so glad there are more videos on ww1 popping up in the past few years, I find it be one of the most interesting conflicts and I don’t think it’s talked about enough

  • @christianmumpower5502
    @christianmumpower5502 Рік тому +12

    As an aspiring historian of the Great War-my specific focus is the Eastern Front as well as the Balkan Front-content in my niche is unfortunately difficult to find, but this video was a fantastic exception!!! Thank you for reaffirming my love for this period in history!

    • @ljubicica7102
      @ljubicica7102 Рік тому +1

      Content for all fronts besides the Western Front seems to be comparatively sparse (in English-language works, anyway). I’ve encountered similar difficulties with the Italian Front as well. I’m always glad to see content for the lesser-discussed areas of the war!

  • @schfiftyfive9680
    @schfiftyfive9680 Рік тому

    I love how you have an RPK 74 leaning against the mantle. It's perfect.

  • @conserva-chan2735
    @conserva-chan2735 Рік тому +3

    A vid on the Soviet-Afghan war would be so awesome

  • @beta27
    @beta27 Рік тому +1

    Please, if it's not difficult for you, release a video of Kronstadt 1921

  • @Vaux_1916
    @Vaux_1916 Рік тому +4

    I love these WW1 Perspective, wish you can do more WW1 content😁

  • @maximepirard6171
    @maximepirard6171 Рік тому +2

    The part about Brest-Litowsk could have been way more elaborate. Those negotiations where harsh and the Bolsheviks refusing to sign concessions with the Entente eventually led to the Soviet-Union losing even more land.

  • @daniellachance6101
    @daniellachance6101 Рік тому +4

    Would love to see more WW1 content! Keep up the great work!

  • @creepersmate
    @creepersmate Рік тому +2

    That domino animation was beautiful

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Рік тому +14

    Ironic how WW1 was called "the war to end all wars" only for WW2 to happen

    • @thea6573
      @thea6573 Рік тому

      Well they think this war make so much destruction and suffering huge casualty no one really want others war they wrong.

    • @greg_mca
      @greg_mca Рік тому +1

      The peace treaty hadn't even been signed before fighting escalated again in Russia, the baltics, Finland, Romania, Ireland, Hungary, Poland, Turkey, the Caucasus, and even in Germany with its constant uprisings and attempted revolutions. I doubt anyone believed for a second that the wars would end, especially when most of them started the instant the previous one stopped

    • @skyprior3866
      @skyprior3866 6 місяців тому

      ​@@thea6573given the allied strategy diplomatically towards Germany, yeah they hooked they wouldn't have to go to war again

    • @thea6573
      @thea6573 6 місяців тому

      @@skyprior3866 agreed

  • @curby4823
    @curby4823 Рік тому

    the quality in this video is insane especially with the sound design

  • @kylemelinkovich8675
    @kylemelinkovich8675 Рік тому +4

    Love the video but missed some key points about the peace between Germany and Russia. Germany asked for a TON of land in trade for peace. Russia said no. Germany went on a major offensive and took TONS of land in just weeks. Lennon was forced to take an even WORSE deal.

  • @robertbruce1887
    @robertbruce1887 Рік тому +2

    Really enjoyed this condensed but highly interesting , informative, well narrated documentary.

  • @harryholden795
    @harryholden795 Рік тому +6

    loving this new focus of videos on topics other than ww2, and the level of detail and excellent animations. top notch.

  • @hiphip4808
    @hiphip4808 Рік тому +2

    I really enjoy that you included the Russian Lever Actions, pretty neat "easter egg"

  • @SpookyBC09
    @SpookyBC09 Рік тому +3

    Love how the time of the end of this video is the same year the Russian army signed a ceasefire with the German Empire

  • @veritassyfer1185
    @veritassyfer1185 Рік тому +2

    WWI is not covered as much as it should be. I enjoyed this. The events from WWI are what lead to WWII. So many do not acknowledge that.

    • @mnemonicpie
      @mnemonicpie Рік тому

      Forcing Germany to sign an empty check was a bad idea

  • @Jarod-te2bi
    @Jarod-te2bi Рік тому +5

    Thank you Griffen I’ve been asking for a Great War Russian perspective video but never thought it would happen 😂❤🎉

  • @aurathedraak7909
    @aurathedraak7909 Рік тому +2

    I can imagine how much of a headache this was.

  • @FlyingGoober10
    @FlyingGoober10 Рік тому +3

    It is truly a shame that the infographic show gets so much more attention than this channel

  • @UsudUsud-ly9qr
    @UsudUsud-ly9qr Рік тому +2

    Watched whole video - truly epic! And cool to see finally Brusilov offensive at 13:20

  • @Comandercheez112
    @Comandercheez112 Рік тому +20

    Can you please do the ottomans perspective please

  • @myhandle7
    @myhandle7 5 місяців тому +1

    this guy should get more support for real

  • @crsmith6226
    @crsmith6226 Рік тому +19

    “Within four months they were running low on ammunition and material”
    The more things change the more things stay the same.

    • @johanbjorkman1914
      @johanbjorkman1914 Рік тому +5

      Tf are you talking about?

    • @OperatorMax1993
      @OperatorMax1993 Рік тому +3

      ​@@johanbjorkman1914history repeating itself with the Ukraine war

    • @placeholder4988
      @placeholder4988 Рік тому +20

      @@OperatorMax1993 Gotta love how the media is reporting that missiles are about to run out since a year or so but they keep firing them

    • @crsmith6226
      @crsmith6226 Рік тому +3

      @@placeholder4988 they’re not “about to run out” as Russia is constantly making more. What they are doing is running consistently low and their production can not keep up with demand.

    • @kalebthehistorian5928
      @kalebthehistorian5928 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, and Ukraine is about to run out of men some time next year unless Poland intervenes.

  • @igornewman9534
    @igornewman9534 Рік тому +1

    Love the attack of the dead man thumbnail

  • @Graf_Ka-Ka
    @Graf_Ka-Ka Рік тому +7

    I highly recommend reading " Essay on the World War" by A. Kersnowsky. Unfortunately, as a historian, I cannot praise this video highly; it throws facts at you, but without proper explanation they hang in the air. Several important factors are not mentioned (e.g., why the Russian Army entered the war without completing mobilization; the sad 1st Battle of Masuria is mentioned, but it is not said that the entire East Prussian operation was a strategic defeat for the Germans; lack of names of generals - Alekseev, Pleve, Denikin, Ruzsky, and so on). Thus, there is an impression that the Russian Army was a cripple in the Entente (although it was the Russian Army with its self-sacrifice saved the French and British from defeat, as mentioned by Foch).
    П. C. In addition to the "dead men's attack" there are many examples of both mass and individual heroism of Russian soldiers

  • @josephwright5140
    @josephwright5140 Рік тому +1

    Please please please do a video on the hardly ever talked about defense of fort vaux within the Verdun campaign in WW1. That specific chapter, is in my opinion one of the single most horrific moments within the collective human experience

  • @laytonrobinson-x
    @laytonrobinson-x Рік тому +3

    HECK YEAH BOYS ANOTHER WW1 EPISODE

  • @beowulf22
    @beowulf22 Рік тому +1

    thumbnail made the joakim in me happy

  • @trevorphilips3724
    @trevorphilips3724 Рік тому +16

    Great WW1 video, thank you. We need more WW1 videos, because WW1 is very forgotten.

    • @nikita1578
      @nikita1578 Рік тому +1

      She has not been forgotten in Russia. In fact, this is the very moment when the non-monolithic nature of society is most visible. Everyone looks differently. From monarchists to Stalinists, different parts of the political spectrum. My great-grandfather fought for Nicholas, but when the war ended he did not go to fight with the “whites” (monarchists). He did not go to fight for the Reds (Soviet). He did not go to fight for the black guard (anarchists).
      "I don't care, I don't care, I'm tired of fighting,
      I don’t know anything, my house is on the edge.
      My house is small, the stove is small,
      But not the official one, but our own legal one.
      You are Erema, I am Foma, you give me your word, I am those two,
      And I’ll stuff your piece of paper with makhorka.
      You are the people and I am the people, and my darling is waiting for me at home,
      I’ll come and agitate her.
      Glory to you, Lord, I shot enough,
      For my sweetie, I’ll leave some strength.
      I don't care, I don't care, I'm tired of fighting,
      We were soldiers, and now we’re going home. "(old song, translated into English as best I could, selected analogues for outdated words, which, however, are still used)

    • @trevorphilips3724
      @trevorphilips3724 Рік тому +1

      @@nikita1578 bro tell me just one documentary in russian language to see ww1 eastern front?

    • @nikita1578
      @nikita1578 Рік тому +1

      @@trevorphilips3724
      "A bullet whizzed by and hit me in the chest.
      I escaped in the steppe on a dashing horse
      But the commissar got me with his saber
      I swayed and fell off my horse
      Hey, oh my black horse!
      Hey, it's a steel sawn-off shotgun!
      Hey, thick fog!
      Hey, oh yes, Father Ataman, yes Father Ataman!" (song Чиж & Co, the text was written in the 70s, song in 90s)

  • @Turkpatriotantalia
    @Turkpatriotantalia Рік тому +2

    Please please please do more ww1 content ITS the best series you do!

  • @ostora_ms
    @ostora_ms Рік тому +5

    Hey armchair historian can you make ww1 from ottoman perspective

  • @alfredpeasant5980
    @alfredpeasant5980 Рік тому

    19 mins 17 seconds, thats subtle. I like it

  • @SovietBerkut
    @SovietBerkut Рік тому +6

    Can you please make a video about Russian Civil War? It is complicated, yet interesting period of Russian and Eastern Europe history. Thanks

  • @jesusbauer8861
    @jesusbauer8861 Рік тому

    I love how Griffin properly pronounced slavic cities like Lodz... nice attention to detail!

  • @StunTydy
    @StunTydy Рік тому +4

    the fact that the video is 19:17 minutes long

  • @locky828
    @locky828 9 місяців тому

    Fantastic video! Are you planning on doing a WW1 from the British Perspective?

  • @Voucher765
    @Voucher765 Рік тому +3

    For better or worse this actually did set the stage for what would come years later.

  • @ConnorGriffith-w6c
    @ConnorGriffith-w6c Рік тому +2

    I'm currently taking a History of Russia 1855 - the present. We just finished the 1905 revolution and are about to start WW1. So this video's timing is perfect.

  • @ryanrichards1673
    @ryanrichards1673 Рік тому +3

    Love your content oh wise armchair historian. I have a big request. I teach 8th grade U.S. History and would love an animated video on Bunker Hill or the whole American Revolution. No big time movie or live action series has ever done Bunker Hill, so video clips are hard to come by that are decent for my kids. Was hoping you could deliver on this and make a cool visual for all students.

  • @ChristineCAlb1
    @ChristineCAlb1 Рік тому

    Another great video. I have never heard of the “attack of the dead men” before.

  • @eklezia2829
    @eklezia2829 Рік тому +7

    I really like these WW1 perspective videos, hope there will be more of them coming in the future.

  • @stonedtowel
    @stonedtowel Рік тому +1

    The fact their hasn’t been a screen adaptation (that I know of) portraying the “attack of the dead men” is a huge loss by the film/writing industry.

  • @Bruh-rh5zf
    @Bruh-rh5zf Рік тому +13

    If only Brusilov Offensive achieved its goals.

    • @keaganscott9808
      @keaganscott9808 Рік тому +11

      It was one of the most successful offensives of the war, at least up until then, broke static warfare on the eastern front and nearly knocked AH out of the fight. Tsar Nicholas significantly limited it, but I don’t think it’s fair to say it failed. It diverted attention to the east away from verdun, helped cause German army leader Falkenhayn to lose his job and led to Romania entering the war, even if that was a double edged sword.
      It is hard to imagine brusilovs offensive as being that much more successful, especially since any joint offensives would fall to generals like Evert who had pretty bad records. The Russians poured in a few million men into a fairly narrow front with poor logistics. And they also suffered more than a million casualties. The brusilov offensive may have given Russia the boost to stay in the war a bit longer, but there wasn’t much way of winning it short of another million casualties on both sides and somehow keeping momentum going across the Vistula and carpathians.

    • @doctor2704
      @doctor2704 Рік тому

      But it achieved most of them

  • @mattism.7594
    @mattism.7594 Рік тому +1

    Now when i see the start please make a video about the baltic fleet, it would be to funny

  • @parsananmon
    @parsananmon Рік тому +4

    Ottoman perspective also would be awesome if u guys made it

  • @alansmithee8831
    @alansmithee8831 Рік тому +1

    Hello Griffin. I always remember AJP Taylor's idea that the dependence on horse transport and lack of fodder for horses crippled the Russian war effort. This logistical "defeat" does not easily translate to a cartoon that is as exciting for an audience, but AJP was entertaining as a story teller. I recommend "How Wars Begin" TV series to anyone who has not seen it. I mentioned it at work, years back, only for a colleague that sat next to me to explain he had been bullied into playing chess by AJP when he went to visit someone at a university and was waiting for them.

  • @FrogSquadYT
    @FrogSquadYT Рік тому +3

    Wow you make so great videos keep up the great work!

  • @Patrick_919
    @Patrick_919 Рік тому +1

    Could you please add a date of the event being described at the bottom? That would be a helpful detail.

  • @guilhermefreitas425
    @guilhermefreitas425 Рік тому +6

    Great to see new content, WW1 stories are always the best🫡

  • @Jarod-te2bi
    @Jarod-te2bi Рік тому +5

    14:55 I love the detail of military Winchester rifles, Russia did get Winchester 1895s in their armies.

  • @6rat80
    @6rat80 Рік тому +6

    Even if the video being 19:17 minutes long isn't serendipity its still amazing

    • @leonpaelinck
      @leonpaelinck Рік тому

      Lol the Russians fought until 1917

  • @SRGTbaron112
    @SRGTbaron112 Рік тому

    That Thumbnail Image gave me chills and will be my new profile picture

  • @bigjoeofthe707
    @bigjoeofthe707 9 місяців тому +3

    10:10 AND THAT’S WHEN THE DEAD MEN ARE MARCHING AGAIN!