ngl, i was rooting the entire time for argentina, sad that it had all these problems that later affected it, even now im hoping for the best for argentina. Also cool history, saludos desde México
Muchas veces nos separa el ego y las pelotudeces como los estereotipos y el futbol! Tu comentario me alegro y espero que siempre recordemos que somos todos parientes. Te mando un abrazo y un saludo cálido desde Argentina.
Son tan racistas, jajaja. ¿A quién le interesa eso? Somos todos latinos, y ciertamente nadie será mejor acogido en Europa que acá porque para ellos somos todos iguales.
@@olafharoldsonnii4713 un 97% de los argentinos tiene al menos un antepasado europeo, sólo un 30% tiene un antepasado indígena. Un 85% son predominantemente blancos. Saludos
@@1lyxbollyvykn714 No fue el mejor ni de cerca, todos los presidentes de hace 100 años antes fueron mucho mejor que el gobierno corrupto de Menem, es como si yo te dijera casi sin saber del tema que Fujimori fue el mejor presidente de Perú solo porque lo habrá dicho algún referente liberal.
I was born in Argentina, but my family are Koreans. I never fully learned Argentine history since we moved to the US when I was 13. Thanks for the abridged history of my home country
As an argentinian I gotta say it's extremely hard, especially with Perón, to keep yourself on the gray line, and I'm surprised of how well you handled it here.
This was pretty cool. My wife came to the US from Argentina in her late 20s and we have gone back numerous times to stay with her family and see different parts of the country. Their hospitality is wonderful.
I have two small issues with the video, the first one is that the flag of the Buenos Aires province (shown at 9:38) was created in the 1990's by a high school student. The other is that this gives the appearance that the mapuches were the only native peoples in these parts, and they weren't.
I noticed the mapuche spot too. The original peoples of the Patagonia and Southern Pampas were the tehuelche or aonek'enk cultures. Even the word "tehuelche" is actually a term that the mapuches used to refer to the aonek'enk in their own language after they migrated to Eastern Patagonia and subjugated this people not long before the Independence Wars started.
Buenos Aires is called like that in honor of María del Buen Ayre, the Spanish name for Madonna di Bonaria, which is a title of the Virgin Mary that was venerated by Italian and Spanish sailors
Excelet video. One little observation: in pre argentinian period the Patagonia was not inhabitated by mapuches. There was a combination of different original inhabitants that where: theuleches, Theusen, pehuenches, Querandies (in Buenos Aires provonce) and some more. Mapuches are Chilean and they come to invade some times to stole livestock and women but they didn't established in Patagonia. The "conquista del desierto" was not against mapuches. Was against a diverse amount of tribes. Some of them even joins the argentinian confederation and supplied soldiers.
I would've have liked it if you included how Hawaii was the first nation to recognize Argentinian independence and how Filipinos under French-Argentine Hypolite Bouchard even assisted in the war of independence.
@@renesarabia6442 Actually the Sun on the Argentina's Flag is The Inti Sun from the Incas, i dont remember if it is explained on the vidéo, i guess yes but the Inca culture is still very strong on the Northwest part of the country from the Dna, to the gastronomy, vocabulary in our Spanish accent, The Quechua language and some ruins in a number of provinces...
@ligma nutz you do know that the M36 Stahlhelm isn’t bulletproof right? (Depending on time of Joining the SS he could have a M1916 Stahlhelm which also isn’t bulletproof) And yes, I know this is a joke comment.
I noticed immediately when you started talking that your voice sounded different. The new mic works great! Your voice sounds much crisper than before! Thank you for your hard work to put out those videos. They are as superb as ever!
I am not Argentine, but its history really is fascinating along with the US and Mexico. Btw, the US also smuggled a lot of Nazis, it was known as project paper clip. The only reason the Argentine ones are infamous, is because the government didn’t have the same success as the US in developing tech.
@@tomasaldinio2295 Well he did accomplish a cult following that’s a sad reality lol. But I meant that if his intentions were to exploit the Nazi minds for a super power Argentina, he failed miserably.
It would have been cool if, besides mentioning Argentina's links to Germany in ww2, you also mentioned the other side to its neutrality was their important business providing their beef exports to Britain, and the fact that Argentina sent over 4000 volunteers to fight along the British, especially in the Royal Air Force in UK and Canada! There's even a documentary about a 103 year old surviving veteran filmed this year. It wasn't all so biased in favor of Germany. Believe it or not, Britain had long been considered a friend nation in terms of diplomacy and economic investments and influence, as well as the thriving angloargentine community (the Malvinas/Falklands issue persisted, but it didn't gain diplomatic prominence until Perón's regime and onwards). I love the art on these videos. Rosas looks so spot on and cute 😂 it was a very nice video overall!
It's an undeniable fact Argentina was close to Germany and Italy due to their cultural heritage hailing from immigration. However, Britain was their main economic ally and also a nation they were close with. While the population was divided between the Allies and the Axis, the government was decidedly in favor of not joining either side of the conflict militarily.
Those Argentinian volunteers who went to fight in the WW2 on the UK side while born in Argentina their parents or grandparents were British, but the Argentinian government had a stronger affinity towards the axis, only reason they stayed "neutral" was because commerce with UK was the main source of money for the country.
There was a strong division within the Armed Forces themselves and it has to do more with the foundation of said branches. The argentine army took its model from the Prussians and the navy from the British, so there was always an undercurrent there, where the Army would always be more favorable to the German military model while the Navy were more friendly with British naval notions. It's obviously not that cut and dry but there was that undercurrent. My grandma used to tell me that during the war Naval officers would voice their support for the allies via Churchill's Victory sign and get into scuffles with army officers.
I know Latin America is huge but if it's not too much to ask may you please make one on Nicaragua 🇳🇮 my small country. Thank you for your videos, love History!
Great video , you made our history easy a good looking to watch, and some small details are great ! Thanks. Greetings from Rio Negro , Patagonia Argentina!!
Im from Argentina and I love this video, although some facts are dubious in claims, are more romantic and poetic than realistic, this is not a critique at all, (just showing other nuances of history). LIke the Inti sun for example, not so romantic, the founders that choose the Sun was mostly cause they wanted to have leverage from the native population against the spaniards, mostly on the North were the spaniards foothold of the peruvian viceroyalty was the strongest, and where the native "incan" population lived. Second the 1680 settlement is COMICALLY big and developed compare to buenos aires by that time, that was not more than 5 blocks. Also the Mapuche and the "porteños", (people from buenos aires) didn't get into contact at all. The skirmish and warring relations they had was with other tribes of the pampas, and not the mapuches that are a fairly modern tribe of the Andes. (Remember between buenos aires and the andes there are 1000km) . (comments)
Also you frame the Concordancia as Naziphile, but they were in fact more capitalistic in the british sense more than the american one. And they were in fact couped by the naziphile wing of the army for them being too close to the allies. Peron and etc
@@M86KIA I know that, since I'm a Freemason myself... but still is not that direct, yes there's a lot of Masonic symbolism but it's not that directly stupidly put or secret or conspiranoic.
4:11 I cannot believe you actually took the time to set up the ships right. This is a caravela redonda, 4 masts, two square sails at the front and two latin sails (triangular) at the back. Crazy
Hey man, amazing work, just wanted to point out that in 5:12 you explain the origin for name Buenos Aires is because of the "good winds" that brought the saliors safely to these lands. Actually, the city was named Trinidad at the time and the port was named Buenos Aires, but this is to honor an "image" of the Virgin Mary called Santa María de los Buenos Aires.
Bro, I love your videos. I'm from Salta. Here was one of the biggest trade centers before Potosí, mostly mules that the silver miners needed. And it was suach a important and strong commerce that in our declaration of independence it has the sign of the representatives from Mizque, Charcas and Chichas; but no from actual Uruguay (because BsAs didn't want them)
Very Good!!! Well explained video about Argentina's history. Just a small contribution; the Federal League didn't refuse to attend the Congress, they were forbiden to do so because the oligarchy of Buenos Aires already knew about their idea of a Confederation and will mess their Centralist plan. Then, about the rest, just fantastic! Congratulations!
Despite the whole harboring Nazis thing, I would say that after Italy and Spain, England is the European country that had more influence in modeling Argentina's shape. Pre Perón leaders were big admirers of England, and the whole cattle industry, the railroads networks and plenty of Buenos Aires landmark architecture is greatly inspired by the UK. I honestly don't see much German influence here except for a couple of German founded towns.
Even greater than England, Portugal and France has more influence. Most of the old buenos aires building were constructed with French style, that was why buenos aires was called "the Paris of South america". Portugal move to Brazil in some point, so much of out vocabulary nowadays comes from some Portuguese words. England has a great impact in introducing football and the railway, but nowadays, the rail way is pretty much abandoned thanks to the sindicalist
German influence is all over my province of Misiones (north east Argentina) where aproximately 30 % of people are German descendants, me included, and practically 4 of 10 people I know have at least one grandparent of German surname. Some of my friends have 3 out of 4 grandparent with Germanic origins (others include Polish, Ukranian and in minor numbers Russian, Finns and Northern Europeans). There are less Italian descendants here than in Buenos Aires, for instance, but there are a lot of Spanish descendants too, and castizos there are too, yes, only than less than in oter provinces.
As an Argentine, it's quite a good video. Of course it's mostly superficial and, specially on 20th century history, it could have included a bit more info. But hey it's quite complete and solid. Perhaps going a bit deeper about the figures of Rosas and Perón and the "anti-inperialism" that they stand for could have been good aditions as the imperialism vs anti-inperialism dispute is one of the defining features of Argentina's history.
WOW! Amazing video man, i really didn't know that a french guy pretended to form a kingdom of all of Patagonia, LOL. There is a lot of things in this video that they don't teach us here in history class.
I'm from Buenos Aires City born and raised and in 20:22 the flag shown is not the flag of the city of Buenos Aires but rather the flag of the Province of Buenos Aires. The flag you're looking for has a black eagle holding the Calatrava cross on a white background which is remiscent of the city's founding coat of arms from Garay. I loved the video by the way, thanks for the great content!
I don't know how the algorithm figured out I needed to watch this, but I'm not complaining! for such a brief review of our history I think it was great. it is always interesting to see how others see us and what they put focus on. for those who became interested in Argentina because of this video, I hope one day you can tour the country. we have a wide variety of climates that make each corner of our land a beautiful place 😊
@@stevencooper4422 you mean the same British that invade the islands? Or a different kind of population? (spoiler: there are all British because they invade)
Very good video, I studied abroad in Buenos Aires a few years ago and it looks like you hit all the marks I want in an Argentine history video, especially like how you said "Los Argentinos descienden de los barcos." Good job!
what blows my mind it's I'm Brazilian and I didn't know a lot of those things. Here in Brazil, which was colonized by the Portuguese, we are (kind) separated from the rest of South America. I hate that. fun fact: besides that, the last state of Brazil to the south, Rio Grande do Sul, it's more culturally connected with Argentina. So much that the official name of who borns in the Rio Grande do Sul is "gaúcho".
the n*zis in Argentina stereotype is funny but kinda innacurate tho, most argentines are still ethnically italian and spanish and most germans inmigrated way before WW2 at the beggining of the XX century
@@mauriciomontiel280 The stereotype is about nazis fleeing and living in Argentina after the war, not that the majority of the population is nazi or german.
@@lhistorienchipoteur9968 I know and that's exactly what I was refering to but the stereotype is exagerated, people see Argentina as the country populated by people whose grandparents are war criminals, in most videos about Argentina you find this kind of comments lol The german diaspora on the other hand, the guy in the video says after italian and spanish germans are the third largest minority, Ive seen sources that there are actually more ethnically french and even mestizos than germans
* Video talking about Argentinan peronism exists * Argentinians: ..............................................uuuuuuuuuUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUH--------!
There’s anything we’ve learned throughout history is don’t mess with the rocks Britain claims, French pride, American boats, or start a land war in Asia
im from argentina but i live in hong kong, i speak spanish at home with my parents since they were born and raised in Arg. Although i have a lot of stories that my parents told me, this video was very useful. Thanks!
As an Argentine I've always seen my country's history as less interesting than that of the rest of the world. In high school I wanted to learn about the Roman Empire, the big revolutions in Europe and ww1, ww2 and the cold War. And while I did learn about those things for a very long time the focus was on our own history, which makes sense, but it wasn't even the "interesting part" of our history, which for me has always been the revolution, it was 20th century bullshit. I stayed in that mentality for. Along time and now I want to know more,i feel like I should know my own history better and these sort of videos with neat graphics and clear explanations always deepens my interest and love for my culture and history. And it's always nice to see these things in English as it carries my culture and history to places that might have never heard about it. Thank you very much :) A few notes: While, yes, the sun in our flag is that of a God of the Incas I would never say that a significant amount of our population identifies with them. If you say incas in Argentina, most people will think of Peru
En mi opinión, el Cruce de los Andes y la Batalla de Vuelta de Obligado son buenos ejemplos de lo interesante que nuestra historia llega a ser. Pero ya llegando al siglo XX ahí me disgusta y aburre mucho.
@@steampunkastronaut7081 La argentina tiene una historia re interesante, pasa que nos la enseñaban a las 8 de la mañana cuando estabamos cansados y nos queriamos ir a casa. Y a los que nos gustaba la historia queriamos llegar a las guerras mundiaes jasjajajaj. La del siglo XX es interesante si te la enseñan bien. Por ejemplo, me tuve que enterar yo, que durante el siglo XX tuvimos practicamente una guerra civil. Con tanques... y soldados disparandose. Honestamente sigo sin saber un pingo porque no lo investigué, pero si en la escuela me mostraban un buen par de tiros en la buenos aires de los 40 en adelante, o el bombardeo de la plaza de mayo en los años 50, me hubiera enganchado mucho más la clase de historia. Historia o se aprende de manera didáctica y con imágenes o te aburre hasta el hartazgo
Eso es culpa de la educación de acá y en parte porque a la juventud desde hace varias generaciones les importa una mierda las cosas que pasaron acá. Vende patria todos. Como sea, San Martín es GOD.
Argentina was the one of the richiest countries in the world in 1900. In 1913, it was richer than France or Germany, almost twice as prosperous as Spain, and its per capita GDP was almost as high as that of Canada. Peronism social economic policy eroded and weakened the economy into the political instabilty in a long-term. I visited Argentina a few times from 2011 to 2014. At that time, I had the Argentine girlfriend who spoke three languages - Spanish, English and French. 😊
I love the dramatic history in the making of this country. Like i wish I could have just sit back with some popcorn and watched all that history unfold lol. Argentina was a hot commodity 💁🏼♀️
You can thank a lady in the background for my click. Argentina is interesting to me having grown up listening to "Evita" when on long trips with my mom. Musicals for the encouragement of learning interesting history!
UA-cam premier blows, I see it in my subscription feed, hit it, get annoyed, do something else, forget about it. Then by the time it's actually available to watch it's been buried by the other ACTUAL videos in my feed.
Im mexican, now i understand the Argentinian Spanish accent!! Omg its a form of Spain Spanish and Italian accent in spanish that also sounds like the Italian english accent! That blew my mind!!! Wth! Thats awesome!!
My great great grandfather had a whole town named after him near Buenos Aires. His name was Coronel Isleño. I have been trying to learn more about him and I recently learned people still live there! However their all in deep poverty unfortunatly.
Fun fact: The Buenos Aires Province flag showed for its factions in this video it was actually created recently, as the Province of Buenos Aires and the federal capital of Buenos Aires have their own regional government, but the province lacked a banner of their own. The city and country capital of Buenos Aires have their own historic flag.
Great content, thanks. A minuscule correction, though: Buenos Aires is not named after the "Good winds", it is just that their patron saint is our Lady of Bonaire, an invocation from Sardigne favoured by sailormen. Wack side note: up to few years ago, Buenos Aires was not the name of the city, officially, but of the harbour. Just like Rio de Janeiro, the harbour was named way before there were any settlement there.
I'm argentinan, and most of the war-related history that you glossed over is what we are thought in school. I remember even making a mock trial of Rosas. IIRC, I had to defend him.
Hey you, angloparlant person, if you are reading this and thinks this video was a bit complicated...remember this. The Argentinean history, without the simplification for all public of this video, is way, way, way, way, way, way, way more complex, chaotic and complicated.
Great video. About the Malvinas islands, they were part of the Spanish Empire until the Argentine independence en 1816, after then they become to be a part of the Argentine territory. The British Empire invaded the islands in 1833 by force renaming them "Falkland Islands". For this reason and because they are part of the Argentine continental platform, we claim it as a part of our territory until today and consider they are occuiped by a invader force, no matter of the 1982's war. Thank you for reading and cheers from Argentina.
@@TheMasonK the islanders are invaders, they are people carried from the UK. Imagine a group of squatters that broke into your house and vote who is the new owner of the house.
@@ezeqleandr considering that the islands have been under British rule longer than anyone else at this point I’d say it’s their house. Also this “house takeover” happened almost 200 hundred years ago. The people there want to remain a part of the UK, not Argentina.
Argentina has one of the most interesting histories in the world, especially out of those countries that are not well covered in the English language. I would love to do a series of videos on the country exploring a lot of its complexities.
What did you use for source for the Malvinas part? The spanish didnt recognise the british claims, the english ended up recognising the spanish ones, the french settled 1 year before the english, Argentina had a colony in Malvinas 1829, etc
_"La va a tocar para Diego, ahí la tiene Maradona, lo marcan dos, pisa la pelota Maradona, arranca por la derecha el genio del fútbol mundial, deja el tendal y va a tocar para Burruchaga... ¡Siempre Maradona! ¡Genio! ¡Genio! ¡Genio! Ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta... ¡¡GOOOOOOOOL!!! ¡¡¡¡GOOOOOL!!!! ¡Quiero llorar! ¡Dios Santo, viva el fútbol! ¡Golaaazooo! ¡Diegoooool! ¡Maradona! Es para llorar, perdónenme... Maradona, en recorrida memorable, en la jugada de todos los tiempos... Barrilete cósmico... ¿De qué planeta viniste para dejar en el camino a tanto inglés, para que el país sea un puño apretado gritando por Argentina? Argentina 2 - Inglaterra 0. Diegol, Diegol, Diego Armando Maradona... Gracias, Dios, por el fútbol, por Maradona, por estas lágrimas, por este Argentina 2-Inglaterra 0"_
In English the continents are considered North America & South America or collectively the Americas. America is the country USA. In Latin America you are taught that the continent is America. It is correct to refer to USA as America.
As argentinian, i belive some of this needs some further explaining. Mostly with peron and the subsequent military goverments, as this was an extremely important period, wich influences and in most part caused the misery in wich we live in argentina today. Great video.
We have to do a little review of the location of the original or native peoples that you do in the video... the "Mapuches" are actually originally from Chile, on the other side of the mountain range... in the area of Buenos Aires and the Pampa (the great plains) were precisely the so-called "pampas" and the huarpes are common in the provinces of San Juan and Mendoza (below where the video locates them) they created an irrigation system in my province called "acequias" that It supplies all the public trees, something like the Roman aqueducts, by gravity.
Argentina is such a beautiful country, I wish could visiting someday.
Greetings from Argentina
You want to visit a country you’re already in?
@@migogogo12gogo4 he is joking
@@user-qs6xz1bu6b well that went over my head 😂
JAJJSJAJAJ sos capo Diego
hajhajshajhsh a mi igual me re coparia ir a argentina
saludos desde cataluña o/
I'm from Argentina, and if you thought it was complicated, believe me, it's even more complicated.
Uff y con lo de las guerras civiles, complicadísimo.
Mesero 🤥👃🇦🇷📉📉
@@diegogonzalez6622 siendo de México no te podes burlar literalmente de nadie XD
Agreed, I'm from there as well oh boy, just a little look into todays politics could drive someone crazy
Well, if you explore a little bit on modern Argentina, you can see that they made they own insults. Like the rest of Hispanic America
You got me smiling with the mini fernet in the hands of a soldier
7:45
lol
Jajajajaj no me di cuenta
HE KNOWS
"Here is where things get a little MESSY"
I mean i can't be the only one who thought of Lionel
Now it's Messie
@@axelrenehalley7700 JAJAJDJSJS,entendí esa referencia pa
ok, the guy who made this video is a comedy genius
Messi
Meeessiii (sheepish)
ngl, i was rooting the entire time for argentina, sad that it had all these problems that later affected it, even now im hoping for the best for argentina. Also cool history, saludos desde México
Gracias hermano!
gracias bro!
Muchas veces nos separa el ego y las pelotudeces como los estereotipos y el futbol! Tu comentario me alegro y espero que siempre recordemos que somos todos parientes. Te mando un abrazo y un saludo cálido desde Argentina.
My aunt went to live in mexico! Hermoso pais y ni hablar su comida!
You know, that saying of "Los argentinos descendemos de los barcos" also became basically a meme.
La mayoría de los argentinos son castizos y no europeos. El 80% de los argentinos, tiene al menos un antepasado indígena.
@@olafharoldsonnii4713 Ok.
@@olafharoldsonnii4713 Creo que es al revés, el 80% tiene al menos un antepasado europeo, y el 50% al menos uno de pueblos originarios.
Son tan racistas, jajaja. ¿A quién le interesa eso? Somos todos latinos, y ciertamente nadie será mejor acogido en Europa que acá porque para ellos somos todos iguales.
@@olafharoldsonnii4713 un 97% de los argentinos tiene al menos un antepasado europeo, sólo un 30% tiene un antepasado indígena. Un 85% son predominantemente blancos. Saludos
Nadie:
Alberto: ¿ALGUIEN DIJO *BARCOS*?
Al parecer viene de antes
😂
jajajaja
Pobre tipo
jajajajajaj posta que me acorde de eso
Si nombran a Menem y sus naves espaciales, me caigo de culo.
Se quedó en los 80, justo como evitando la parte de la estratósfera
Jajajaj
menem el mejor presidente de la argentina y lo dice un peruano
Se quedó en la estratosfera de Menem, literalmente
@@1lyxbollyvykn714 No fue el mejor ni de cerca, todos los presidentes de hace 100 años antes fueron mucho mejor que el gobierno corrupto de Menem, es como si yo te dijera casi sin saber del tema que Fujimori fue el mejor presidente de Perú solo porque lo habrá dicho algún referente liberal.
I was born in Argentina, but my family are Koreans. I never fully learned Argentine history since we moved to the US when I was 13. Thanks for the abridged history of my home country
No te la dieron en la escuela o que?
Que interesante historia la tuya saludos desde 🇦🇷
@@ncrveteranranger2368 seguramente no
@@ncrveteranranger2368 No se da un carajo de historia en la escuela,
@@Microdancer depende del profesor/a
As an argentinian I gotta say it's extremely hard, especially with Perón, to keep yourself on the gray line, and I'm surprised of how well you handled it here.
He handled Perón very well
Bring back the team from Bariloche...
Por que hablamos en ingles si en este comentario somos todos argentinos?
Acordáte, gray va con E
Edit: También puede ir con A, gracias tía Yenifer, te quiero
@@CableSpark872 Pootas
This was pretty cool. My wife came to the US from Argentina in her late 20s and we have gone back numerous times to stay with her family and see different parts of the country. Their hospitality is wonderful.
I have two small issues with the video, the first one is that the flag of the Buenos Aires province (shown at 9:38) was created in the 1990's by a high school student. The other is that this gives the appearance that the mapuches were the only native peoples in these parts, and they weren't.
In fact, they were on the western side of the Andes.
I noticed the mapuche spot too. The original peoples of the Patagonia and Southern Pampas were the tehuelche or aonek'enk cultures. Even the word "tehuelche" is actually a term that the mapuches used to refer to the aonek'enk in their own language after they migrated to Eastern Patagonia and subjugated this people not long before the Independence Wars started.
cuando los pueblos originarios vivian en esta parte del mundo NO IMPORTABA UN CARAJO DE DONDE ERAN dejate de joder con tu nazionalismo facho.
Buenos Aires is called like that in honor of María del Buen Ayre, the Spanish name for Madonna di Bonaria, which is a title of the Virgin Mary that was venerated by Italian and Spanish sailors
Aire*
@@adamraserovaquera Figura como Buen Ayre también
@@adamraserovaquera Ayre con y tambien es correcto, el idioma evoluciona, antes Buenos Aires se escribia "Buenos Ayres".
Traducción
@@adamraserovaquera Si , pero en un principio fue Buenos Ayres Arjentina , medio raro jajajajaja
Excelet video. One little observation: in pre argentinian period the Patagonia was not inhabitated by mapuches. There was a combination of different original inhabitants that where: theuleches, Theusen, pehuenches, Querandies (in Buenos Aires provonce) and some more. Mapuches are Chilean and they come to invade some times to stole livestock and women but they didn't established in Patagonia. The "conquista del desierto" was not against mapuches. Was against a diverse amount of tribes. Some of them even joins the argentinian confederation and supplied soldiers.
I would've have liked it if you included how Hawaii was the first nation to recognize Argentinian independence and how Filipinos under French-Argentine Hypolite Bouchard even assisted in the war of independence.
Are you Argentinian as Well ?
@@Pablo-ig7tx Nope, Filipino.
@@renesarabia6442 I had no Idea about Filipinos helping Argentina, Really good info...!
@@Pablo-ig7tx Im glad to inform you. Even the flag of the Philippine Revolution, the Sun with a face is taken from Argentina's Sun of May.
@@renesarabia6442 Actually the Sun on the Argentina's Flag is The Inti Sun from the Incas, i dont remember if it is explained on the vidéo, i guess yes but the Inca culture is still very strong on the Northwest part of the country from the Dna, to the gastronomy, vocabulary in our Spanish accent, The Quechua language and some ruins in a number of provinces...
As always, fantastic work.
So all those I watch but dislike also watch each other. Small world I guess.
A wizard did it.
AAAMAMA
2 words colliding
:0 loff your videos ^-^✿
Watching this with my German great grandpa’s electrician-helmet on.
Oh ok that’s coo- wait does the helmet have a spike on it
@@obi-wankenobimasterjediand5091 Nope, just two small holes and some lightning bolts.
SWEET HOME ALABAMA
@ligma nutz you do know that the M36 Stahlhelm isn’t bulletproof right? (Depending on time of Joining the SS he could have a M1916 Stahlhelm which also isn’t bulletproof) And yes, I know this is a joke comment.
@ligma nutz because you were misinformed that the helmet was bulletproof so I needed to inform you.
I noticed immediately when you started talking that your voice sounded different. The new mic works great! Your voice sounds much crisper than before!
Thank you for your hard work to put out those videos. They are as superb as ever!
I am not Argentine, but its history really is fascinating along with the US and Mexico. Btw, the US also smuggled a lot of Nazis, it was known as project paper clip. The only reason the Argentine ones are infamous, is because the government didn’t have the same success as the US in developing tech.
I mean, developing tech wasn't the aim in Argentina, so...
@@juangabrielnavarro227 Well Perón did sneak them in with that intention but obviously he failed to deliver on it. So….
@@doscaminos204 i think he kinda succeded in the long term since there are Peronistas (ppl that align with Peron), that negate said events
@@tomasaldinio2295 Well he did accomplish a cult following that’s a sad reality lol. But I meant that if his intentions were to exploit the Nazi minds for a super power Argentina, he failed miserably.
Lot of nazis Is the only known others country bruh
It would have been cool if, besides mentioning Argentina's links to Germany in ww2, you also mentioned the other side to its neutrality was their important business providing their beef exports to Britain, and the fact that Argentina sent over 4000 volunteers to fight along the British, especially in the Royal Air Force in UK and Canada! There's even a documentary about a 103 year old surviving veteran filmed this year. It wasn't all so biased in favor of Germany. Believe it or not, Britain had long been considered a friend nation in terms of diplomacy and economic investments and influence, as well as the thriving angloargentine community (the Malvinas/Falklands issue persisted, but it didn't gain diplomatic prominence until Perón's regime and onwards).
I love the art on these videos. Rosas looks so spot on and cute 😂 it was a very nice video overall!
It's an undeniable fact Argentina was close to Germany and Italy due to their cultural heritage hailing from immigration. However, Britain was their main economic ally and also a nation they were close with. While the population was divided between the Allies and the Axis, the government was decidedly in favor of not joining either side of the conflict militarily.
Those Argentinian volunteers who went to fight in the WW2 on the UK side while born in Argentina their parents or grandparents were British, but the Argentinian government had a stronger affinity towards the axis, only reason they stayed "neutral" was because commerce with UK was the main source of money for the country.
Grande Perón 😎🤏
There was a strong division within the Armed Forces themselves and it has to do more with the foundation of said branches. The argentine army took its model from the Prussians and the navy from the British, so there was always an undercurrent there, where the Army would always be more favorable to the German military model while the Navy were more friendly with British naval notions. It's obviously not that cut and dry but there was that undercurrent. My grandma used to tell me that during the war Naval officers would voice their support for the allies via Churchill's Victory sign and get into scuffles with army officers.
@@Rukhage la grieta como siempre presente
I know Latin America is huge but if it's not too much to ask may you please make one on Nicaragua 🇳🇮 my small country. Thank you for your videos, love History!
You guys make a really good cigar. Like really really good.
Vive Nicaragua brother
I'm also Nicaraguan, i really want Nicaragua to follow in the foot steps of it's neighbor Costa Rica.
Que buen toque el soldado con el fernet
ME LO PERDI
7:45
de nada
Classic Fernanduco
Love Argentina from Turkey
thank you 🇦🇷🇦🇷🇦🇷
@@pepsi9829 es por los de Alberdi?
@@cirokistermann7834 :u???
@@pepsi9829 tu nombre, es por los herederos de Alberdi?
@@cirokistermann7834 si, mi logo y nombre se inspiraron en Alberdi
Great video , you made our history easy a good looking to watch, and some small details are great ! Thanks. Greetings from Rio Negro , Patagonia Argentina!!
Im from Argentina and I love this video, although some facts are dubious in claims, are more romantic and poetic than realistic, this is not a critique at all, (just showing other nuances of history). LIke the Inti sun for example, not so romantic, the founders that choose the Sun was mostly cause they wanted to have leverage from the native population against the spaniards, mostly on the North were the spaniards foothold of the peruvian viceroyalty was the strongest, and where the native "incan" population lived. Second the 1680 settlement is COMICALLY big and developed compare to buenos aires by that time, that was not more than 5 blocks. Also the Mapuche and the "porteños", (people from buenos aires) didn't get into contact at all. The skirmish and warring relations they had was with other tribes of the pampas, and not the mapuches that are a fairly modern tribe of the Andes. (Remember between buenos aires and the andes there are 1000km) . (comments)
Also you frame the Concordancia as Naziphile, but they were in fact more capitalistic in the british sense more than the american one. And they were in fact couped by the naziphile wing of the army for them being too close to the allies. Peron and etc
@@M86KIA I know that, since I'm a Freemason myself... but still is not that direct, yes there's a lot of Masonic symbolism but it's not that directly stupidly put or secret or conspiranoic.
4:11 I cannot believe you actually took the time to set up the ships right. This is a caravela redonda, 4 masts, two square sails at the front and two latin sails (triangular) at the back. Crazy
History if Argentina in a nutshell: debt debt debt more debt and a little more of debt
hyperinflation isn't an economic concept, it's a way of life.
Falklands and *M o r e D e b t*
That more Greece
Dont forget the taxes
I'd say boats, gauchos, football, asado, debt, debt, debt and a little more of debt lol
Man I remember years ago when I narrated a few of these for you lmao
Hi Cougar from EzPz
What the hell are you dubbing
Isnt this the guy from Ezpz
Cool cougar
Appreciated cougar
Hey man, amazing work, just wanted to point out that in 5:12 you explain the origin for name Buenos Aires is because of the "good winds" that brought the saliors safely to these lands. Actually, the city was named Trinidad at the time and the port was named Buenos Aires, but this is to honor an "image" of the Virgin Mary called Santa María de los Buenos Aires.
Bro, I love your videos. I'm from Salta. Here was one of the biggest trade centers before Potosí, mostly mules that the silver miners needed. And it was suach a important and strong commerce that in our declaration of independence it has the sign of the representatives from Mizque, Charcas and Chichas; but no from actual Uruguay (because BsAs didn't want them)
Very Good!!! Well explained video about Argentina's history. Just a small contribution; the Federal League didn't refuse to attend the Congress, they were forbiden to do so because the oligarchy of Buenos Aires already knew about their idea of a Confederation and will mess their Centralist plan. Then, about the rest, just fantastic! Congratulations!
Despite the whole harboring Nazis thing, I would say that after Italy and Spain, England is the European country that had more influence in modeling Argentina's shape. Pre Perón leaders were big admirers of England, and the whole cattle industry, the railroads networks and plenty of Buenos Aires landmark architecture is greatly inspired by the UK. I honestly don't see much German influence here except for a couple of German founded towns.
Even greater than England, Portugal and France has more influence. Most of the old buenos aires building were constructed with French style, that was why buenos aires was called "the Paris of South america". Portugal move to Brazil in some point, so much of out vocabulary nowadays comes from some Portuguese words. England has a great impact in introducing football and the railway, but nowadays, the rail way is pretty much abandoned thanks to the sindicalist
Well, until 1945, traffic in Argentina drove on the left side of the road. Even today, trains still drive on the left track in Argentina
@@thefallen2811 like in all latinoamerica, whats your point?
Arquitectura neo gótica no es exclusiva de RU.
German influence is all over my province of Misiones (north east Argentina) where aproximately 30 % of people are German descendants, me included, and practically 4 of 10 people I know have at least one grandparent of German surname. Some of my friends have 3 out of 4 grandparent with Germanic origins (others include Polish, Ukranian and in minor numbers Russian, Finns and Northern Europeans). There are less Italian descendants here than in Buenos Aires, for instance, but there are a lot of Spanish descendants too, and castizos there are too, yes, only than less than in oter provinces.
Argentina is such an amazing place! Greetings from Argentina
Venganse a Argentina, que los recebimos con amor 🤗
*les roba*
Saquenmen porfavor D:
@@pepsi9829 vete porfavor
@@serac7017 En eso estoy.
Abraços do brasil pra Argentina!!!🇧🇷🤝🇦🇷
I clicked on this lukewarm of my interest in Argentina, but damn you got me looking up more
Why do you have interest in argentina?
@@kobs7863 this video
As an Argentine, it's quite a good video. Of course it's mostly superficial and, specially on 20th century history, it could have included a bit more info. But hey it's quite complete and solid. Perhaps going a bit deeper about the figures of Rosas and Perón and the "anti-inperialism" that they stand for could have been good aditions as the imperialism vs anti-inperialism dispute is one of the defining features of Argentina's history.
Totalmente de acuerdo.
Totally agree.
Totalmente, le falta hablar muchísimo más de Perón y no hablo casi nada de Malvinas
@@matiasdecesare4066 y menem, el kirchnerismo o la crisis de 2001
@@nombreartistico91218 bueno eso no se si es tan ""histórico"", perón es muy importante
El ""anti imperialismo"" es la peor cagada que se le ocurrió a los latinos
As a mexican I loved your vídeo about Mexico, and as a latinoamerican I have to say that this vídeo of Argentina is beautiful, thanks!
Argentina that’s a very famous brand of corned beef in the Philippines they even have “karne norte “ too
"Karne norte"? That's literally North meat in Spanish but with a k instead of a c.
@@marcosreynoso3901 Filipino orthography, I guess. Spanish words like Alcalde, Informacion etc. are spelled Alkalde, Impormasyon, etc.
Argentina and Uruguay used to be great exporters of corned beef, especially during the world wars.
I'm glad you back, the work fantastic as always, hope see you soon
WOW! Amazing video man, i really didn't know that a french guy pretended to form a kingdom of all of Patagonia, LOL. There is a lot of things in this video that they don't teach us here in history class.
Argentina is one of the most curious Latin American countries.
When an italian and a german make a son that speak spanish
Yeah?
Second best right after Urugay whish used to be part of Argentina.
All Latin America is a curious place to know about
@Idk Idk ???
I can´t believe the little detail of the "granaderos" drinking fernet before fighting the British.
I loved it!
I'm from Buenos Aires City born and raised and in 20:22 the flag shown is not the flag of the city of Buenos Aires but rather the flag of the Province of Buenos Aires. The flag you're looking for has a black eagle holding the Calatrava cross on a white background which is remiscent of the city's founding coat of arms from Garay. I loved the video by the way, thanks for the great content!
Caballito?
I live in Patagonia and we will never forget our lost king. Small children write letters to his descendants in France
I don't know how the algorithm figured out I needed to watch this, but I'm not complaining!
for such a brief review of our history I think it was great. it is always interesting to see how others see us and what they put focus on.
for those who became interested in Argentina because of this video, I hope one day you can tour the country. we have a wide variety of climates that make each corner of our land a beautiful place 😊
I love that you made one of my country!!!
Our 🇦🇷
Are you both argentinian and swedish?
It's not about ego, it's about not being a pushover and still showing might. That's very important when it comes to geopolitics
17:54 The inhabitants were BRITISH who voted overwhelmingly to stay such!
@@stevencooper4422 you mean the same British that invade the islands? Or a different kind of population? (spoiler: there are all British because they invade)
@@matiasdecesare4066 You will never be white
@@stevencooper4422 I am Italian
@@matiasdecesare4066 Like I said. You'll never be white
Very good video, I studied abroad in Buenos Aires a few years ago and it looks like you hit all the marks I want in an Argentine history video, especially like how you said "Los Argentinos descienden de los barcos." Good job!
what blows my mind it's I'm Brazilian and I didn't know a lot of those things.
Here in Brazil, which was colonized by the Portuguese, we are (kind) separated from the rest of South America. I hate that.
fun fact: besides that, the last state of Brazil to the south, Rio Grande do Sul, it's more culturally connected with Argentina. So much that the official name of who borns in the Rio Grande do Sul is "gaúcho".
Well done on getting 500k subs guys you all deserve it.
Dang I need to share this with all my German friends
I just realised that my German grandpop wasn't an electrician during the war....
Ahem Austrian actually
the n*zis in Argentina stereotype is funny but kinda innacurate tho, most argentines are still ethnically italian and spanish and most germans inmigrated way before WW2 at the beggining of the XX century
@@mauriciomontiel280 The stereotype is about nazis fleeing and living in Argentina after the war, not that the majority of the population is nazi or german.
@@lhistorienchipoteur9968 I know and that's exactly what I was refering to but the stereotype is exagerated, people see Argentina as the country populated by people whose grandparents are war criminals, in most videos about Argentina you find this kind of comments lol
The german diaspora on the other hand, the guy in the video says after italian and spanish germans are the third largest minority, Ive seen sources that there are actually more ethnically french and even mestizos than germans
Finally a new JonTron!
* Video talking about Argentinan peronism exists *
Argentinians: ..............................................uuuuuuuuuUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUH--------!
There’s anything we’ve learned throughout history is don’t mess with the rocks Britain claims, French pride, American boats, or start a land war in Asia
Menorca doesn't say the same (H)
They dont own Rockall tho lmao
im from argentina but i live in hong kong, i speak spanish at home with my parents since they were born and raised in Arg. Although i have a lot of stories that my parents told me, this video was very useful. Thanks!
Bro its been so long im glad for a new vid
As an Argentine I've always seen my country's history as less interesting than that of the rest of the world. In high school I wanted to learn about the Roman Empire, the big revolutions in Europe and ww1, ww2 and the cold War. And while I did learn about those things for a very long time the focus was on our own history, which makes sense, but it wasn't even the "interesting part" of our history, which for me has always been the revolution, it was 20th century bullshit. I stayed in that mentality for. Along time and now I want to know more,i feel like I should know my own history better and these sort of videos with neat graphics and clear explanations always deepens my interest and love for my culture and history. And it's always nice to see these things in English as it carries my culture and history to places that might have never heard about it. Thank you very much :)
A few notes: While, yes, the sun in our flag is that of a God of the Incas I would never say that a significant amount of our population identifies with them. If you say incas in Argentina, most people will think of Peru
AGREED , honestly our country story is a lil ... boring? Idk but i never liked it
En mi opinión, el Cruce de los Andes y la Batalla de Vuelta de Obligado son buenos ejemplos de lo interesante que nuestra historia llega a ser. Pero ya llegando al siglo XX ahí me disgusta y aburre mucho.
@@steampunkastronaut7081 La argentina tiene una historia re interesante, pasa que nos la enseñaban a las 8 de la mañana cuando estabamos cansados y nos queriamos ir a casa. Y a los que nos gustaba la historia queriamos llegar a las guerras mundiaes jasjajajaj.
La del siglo XX es interesante si te la enseñan bien. Por ejemplo, me tuve que enterar yo, que durante el siglo XX tuvimos practicamente una guerra civil. Con tanques... y soldados disparandose. Honestamente sigo sin saber un pingo porque no lo investigué, pero si en la escuela me mostraban un buen par de tiros en la buenos aires de los 40 en adelante, o el bombardeo de la plaza de mayo en los años 50, me hubiera enganchado mucho más la clase de historia. Historia o se aprende de manera didáctica y con imágenes o te aburre hasta el hartazgo
Eso es culpa de la educación de acá y en parte porque a la juventud desde hace varias generaciones les importa una mierda las cosas que pasaron acá. Vende patria todos.
Como sea, San Martín es GOD.
0:03 AND THE WINGED HUSSARS ARRIVED
Hey man,
Just wanted to say that I really like your videos, they are very informative. Keep up the good work 🙂
Alto video wachin, gracias por tanto falta mucha info pero we, esta bien como video por encima.
Argentina was the one of the richiest countries in the world in 1900. In 1913, it was richer than France or Germany, almost twice as prosperous as Spain, and its per capita GDP was almost as high as that of Canada. Peronism social economic policy eroded and weakened the economy into the political instabilty in a long-term. I visited Argentina a few times from 2011 to 2014. At that time, I had the Argentine girlfriend who spoke three languages - Spanish, English and French. 😊
Suibhne is back with another epic vid! I hope to learn more about this unique South American nation.
I love the dramatic history in the making of this country. Like i wish I could have just sit back with some popcorn and watched all that history unfold lol. Argentina was a hot commodity 💁🏼♀️
You can thank a lady in the background for my click. Argentina is interesting to me having grown up listening to "Evita" when on long trips with my mom. Musicals for the encouragement of learning interesting history!
just found this channel, definitely one of my fav history channel
Thank you so much for becoming a member
Argentina is very beautiful country and very humble and always smile of the argentinian people
LOVE FROM THE PHILIPPINES 🇵🇭❤🇦🇷 VAMOS ARGENTINA
They are anything but humble. But yea, it is a pretty country.
Lol you are right on that. Anything but humble
Least humble country in earth haha😅
Yeah we're not humble, cuantas copas tenés negro envidioso. Jk! Love from Argentina.
UA-cam premier blows, I see it in my subscription feed, hit it, get annoyed, do something else, forget about it. Then by the time it's actually available to watch it's been buried by the other ACTUAL videos in my feed.
me too, just realized you can hit the "set reminder" button and it will send you a message when the video is out
@@Jazira13 how dare you give me solutions for problems >:(
Good job, but Argentine history is very complicated, even for Argentines like me. But it's good to see a distant, unbiased look.
Im mexican, now i understand the Argentinian Spanish accent!! Omg its a form of Spain Spanish and Italian accent in spanish that also sounds like the Italian english accent! That blew my mind!!! Wth! Thats awesome!!
My great great grandfather had a whole town named after him near Buenos Aires. His name was Coronel Isleño. I have been trying to learn more about him and I recently learned people still live there! However their all in deep poverty unfortunatly.
Dude, Argentinians are so awesom...
Greetings from Argentina
Devolvele el "chiste" al 2014...
Fun fact: The Buenos Aires Province flag showed for its factions in this video it was actually created recently, as the Province of Buenos Aires and the federal capital of Buenos Aires have their own regional government, but the province lacked a banner of their own.
The city and country capital of Buenos Aires have their own historic flag.
Como colombiano me gusta mucho este video, mas videos así de la historia de países americanos
Great content, thanks. A minuscule correction, though: Buenos Aires is not named after the "Good winds", it is just that their patron saint is our Lady of Bonaire, an invocation from Sardigne favoured by sailormen. Wack side note: up to few years ago, Buenos Aires was not the name of the city, officially, but of the harbour. Just like Rio de Janeiro, the harbour was named way before there were any settlement there.
The history of Morocco would make a great video and I would be honoured to help.
Very well made video, it's worth it and i really like it. You could also make one video about Estonia in one Europe country.❄🙃🇪🇪
😍 thanks a lot! 🇦🇷
I'm argentinan, and most of the war-related history that you glossed over is what we are thought in school. I remember even making a mock trial of Rosas. IIRC, I had to defend him.
You were on the Chad side of history 💪
Your video are fantastic , keep it up
Can you do Caribbean Latin countries like Haiti, Puerto Rico, Cuba, or Dominican Republic?
You should make a video about the history of New Zealand
Hopefully, one day Argentina will be the great country it once was and where so many Spanish inmigrated. Fuerza Argentina!
These are great videos! Please do Chile next
I love this channel!!!
HELL YES BROTHER ANOTHER VIDEO
These maps with animations suck me in. Thanks for another great episode of animated history.
Hey you, angloparlant person, if you are reading this and thinks this video was a bit complicated...remember this.
The Argentinean history, without the simplification for all public of this video, is way, way, way, way, way, way, way more complex, chaotic and complicated.
XD
Great video. About the Malvinas islands, they were part of the Spanish Empire until the Argentine independence en 1816, after then they become to be a part of the Argentine territory. The British Empire invaded the islands in 1833 by force renaming them "Falkland Islands". For this reason and because they are part of the Argentine continental platform, we claim it as a part of our territory until today and consider they are occuiped by a invader force, no matter of the 1982's war. Thank you for reading and cheers from Argentina.
That is what you were told, sadly you were lied too.
@@samwisegamgee8773 English are pirates, end of the discussion.
Well maybe but the people of the Falklands have voted to remain a part of the United Kingdom overwhelmingly.
@@TheMasonK the islanders are invaders, they are people carried from the UK. Imagine a group of squatters that broke into your house and vote who is the new owner of the house.
@@ezeqleandr considering that the islands have been under British rule longer than anyone else at this point I’d say it’s their house. Also this “house takeover” happened almost 200 hundred years ago. The people there want to remain a part of the UK, not Argentina.
Argentina has one of the most interesting histories in the world, especially out of those countries that are not well covered in the English language. I would love to do a series of videos on the country exploring a lot of its complexities.
I love your art style
There are two anomalies in modern ecomics: Japan and no one knows why its economy keeps growing, Argentina and no one knows why it isnt.
Insane levels of corruption?
Thats no mistery, m8
peronismo
Kirchnerist Socialism
@@MineScape_Marvels and severe fiscal imbalance
XD
What did you use for source for the Malvinas part?
The spanish didnt recognise the british claims, the english ended up recognising the spanish ones, the french settled 1 year before the english, Argentina had a colony in Malvinas 1829, etc
_"La va a tocar para Diego, ahí la tiene Maradona, lo marcan dos, pisa la pelota Maradona, arranca por la derecha el genio del fútbol mundial, deja el tendal y va a tocar para Burruchaga... ¡Siempre Maradona! ¡Genio! ¡Genio! ¡Genio! Ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta... ¡¡GOOOOOOOOL!!! ¡¡¡¡GOOOOOL!!!! ¡Quiero llorar! ¡Dios Santo, viva el fútbol! ¡Golaaazooo! ¡Diegoooool! ¡Maradona! Es para llorar, perdónenme... Maradona, en recorrida memorable, en la jugada de todos los tiempos... Barrilete cósmico... ¿De qué planeta viniste para dejar en el camino a tanto inglés, para que el país sea un puño apretado gritando por Argentina? Argentina 2 - Inglaterra 0. Diegol, Diegol, Diego Armando Maradona... Gracias, Dios, por el fútbol, por Maradona, por estas lágrimas, por este Argentina 2-Inglaterra 0"_
Buena válvula de escape tenemos! Creo que despues de éste Mundial,ya algunos saben que Buenos Aires,no es la capital de Brasil,ova,ova!
I appreciate it a lot when you say America in this video and refer to the continent. It’s a relief seeing people use the term correctly.
In English the continents are considered North America & South America or collectively the Americas.
America is the country USA.
In Latin America you are taught that the continent is America.
It is correct to refer to USA as America.
As argentinian, i belive some of this needs some further explaining. Mostly with peron and the subsequent military goverments, as this was an extremely important period, wich influences and in most part caused the misery in wich we live in argentina today. Great video.
a little correction, Plate was not a nickname for Silver, Plata means Silver in spanish, so Rio de la Plata, means "River of Silver"
No, en el ingles de la epoca se traduce como "River Plate". O porque te pensas que el mismo club que se fundo en la rivera tiene ese mismo nombre?
@@EmpanadaDeCaca no sabía eso, gracias
Please do a history video of Portugal 🇵🇹
Amazing video but you should have gotten at least to 2001 when we had 5 presidents in a week
To be fair, to explain all that happened there deserves its own hour long video
15:40 "now here is where things get a bit Messi" that was a good one😂😂😂😂
We have to do a little review of the location of the original or native peoples that you do in the video... the "Mapuches" are actually originally from Chile, on the other side of the mountain range... in the area of Buenos Aires and the Pampa (the great plains) were precisely the so-called "pampas" and the huarpes are common in the provinces of San Juan and Mendoza (below where the video locates them) they created an irrigation system in my province called "acequias" that It supplies all the public trees, something like the Roman aqueducts, by gravity.
Great vid you keep improving,pls next time Egypt🇪🇬🦅