"The regiment would later on fight against Frederick the Great during the Seven years war." Where the Björneborgarnas met the Bärenburger Regiment on the other side. And only those who understand Swedish and German get the joke :)
@@XBadger1and sent 25 000 volunteer fighters and medics. Sweden had been a neutral country since1812, and no one had any expectations for them to change their policies
The more wars meant more technologic development and then rule over the World. Sadly, today European civilization decaying, dieing and be replaced with other peoples, who still have strong religion, values and family - everything native Western Europeans lost
@@mrobocop1666The center of power goes to the east, to Poland, Turkey, Ukraine, etc. Europe is not going anywhere. Because Eastern Europe has always been the custodian of European values. You'll see)
I like how this movie shows Swedish military tactics - firing a volley and charge as they were most of the time outnumbered and couldn't exchange the volleys. Instead they took advantage in shock combat.
Firing one volley and then charging was not an unusual tactic at the time. The British army, a professional army, not conscripted levies used it frequently. "Give'em a volley then charge" was the common order, as used effectively against Napoleon's Imperial Guard at Waterloo.
The frequent use of it was what made it special, as well as using pikes for charging the enemy for extra shock value was the truly unique thing, but it's not shown here. Besides, pikes wouldn't have done much vs dug in positions like this. The grenadiers are the best for clearing that sort of thing, also cannons of course, but sadly the Swedish force could not bring their guns to the battle in time. The Swedish cannons that's in this movie, to give a little more movieness to the whole thing, were not there historically.
There is no certainty about the composer of this, but Carl Michael Bellman has been the usual suspect. Also Christian Fredric Kress has probably composed a part of it, especially the end part. This was originally a part of musical plays, and it became a military march only later, in 1850'ies. In 1851 there was a musical play, where an actor, who represented Döbeln, stood in the stage dressed in the uniform of the Pori regiment (Döbeln was a commander of this regiment in 1808 - 1809 war against Russia), when this march was played. That is why they started to call this the march of Pori. The words were created first 1858 by Topelius. They were not a very bloody, but Runeberg made his own version about them two years later, and this version became an instant hit. Runebrg had used the French anthem as an example, and that is why the words are very aggressive and bloody. There are several Finnish translations about the lyrics, the most popular one was made by Klemetti. We Finns use this march in several occasions, and usually the instrumental version. It is played every time a Finn wins a gold medal in the olympics. So I hope to hear it at least once in the olympic games in Beijing during the next month.
@@user3141592635 Bellman used many military marches as inspiration for his songs. Epistel no 38 "Undan ur vägen" was for example inspired by this military march: ua-cam.com/video/2rdxAU7JHj0/v-deo.htmlsi=xb72N2ETi7Mf_qLN Epistel no33 "Stolta stad" was inspired by another Swedish military march ua-cam.com/video/DpBzryh6KeA/v-deo.html Bellman - n:o 5b - Se svarta böljans hvita drägg was also written to a similiar tune that the warmongering Hat party used as a justification for the war with russia in 1741: Sinclairvisan ua-cam.com/video/lfSWPQ4FvDg/v-deo.html
@@user3141592635, but Bellman probably only composed the main theme. He didn't have any idea, how incredibly bloody the most common lyrics of this song would several generations later become. But Runeberg knew well the famous French anthem and he copied it's bloody content. Byt the way those Beijing Winter Olympics were pretty good for Finland, because we won our first icehockey gold in men's icehockey. And Iivo Niskanen won 15 km in men's classic cross-country skiing.
The Finns made up a third of the 120.000 man strong Swedish military that fought in the Great Northern War. While about two-thirds was Swedes. And a tiny minority consisted of solidiers from Swedens Baltic and German provinces. A few Saxon solidiers were also caputered in battle and pressed into Swedish service.
@@johanolsson8516 While Finnish national identity did not exist at this point, Finnish ethnicity was a thing, and while the distinction has been greatly overstated in the past, I don't think referring to the Finnish-speaking people from the Eastern part of the realm as "Finns" is incorrect
I heard the bayonett battles werent at all so common. It seems soldiers avoided them. One of the sides typically broke off... A teacher in military history told this.
It may not have been common, but it wasn't unheard of either. Especially with the Swedish army. The Swedes not only did not avoid melee, but actively preferred bayonet fighting to ranged combat. It was part of their official doctrine, their training and their tradition. The French, Austrians and British also had a reputation for not shying away from melee combat. In the battles of Fontenoy, Culloden, Quebec, Saratoga and many others, a large proportion of casualties was caused by bayonets.
It's kind of true. Bayonet charges were actually a common tactic. What was unusual was indeed that the other side just stood there to get bayoneted. At the time wars was fought by units, in formation. A unit that lost cohesion was just useless: few were actually dead.
The cannon was usually loaded with grape-shot and was fired in a more horizontal attitude. The howitzer used in more close quarter with exploding canister overhead.
I gave my four and half a years, older brother a strike to the mouth, as 12 years old to set an argument. Now I won the argument for all times that can pass, ever. He knows this even as we are 60+ We are still good friends and love eachother.
Björneborgarnas march has been the honor march of the Finnish army since 1918. Björneborg is the name of the Finnish city of Pori in Swedish. That battle shown in this video is from Poltava battle 1709. The Swedish army lost that battle. A great number of Finns fought in that battle in the Swedish army.
@@marceloandrade1522, yes, that war was going on 1700 - 1721. The end part of that (1714 - 1721), when the Russian army controlled practically whole Finland, is called here in Finland as Isoviha (the Great Wrath), which described well that time. One third of the Finns died because of the war, hunger and diseases.
Это наша общая история, хорошая она или плохая, если бы не было этой истории нам даже не о чем было говорить и обсуждать, а так история интересная! Всем счастья и здоровья! 🇷🇺+🇸🇪=🤝❤
The best battle is not man against man. The best battle is to encircle the enemy and win over them with less loss of man. Like the Finns did. God blessed the Finns partially.
The Swedes had only 4 cannons and 17 thousand soldiers, the Russians had 86 cannons and 42 thousand soldiers, however, the Russians won with great difficulty and very heavy losses. Incredibly, the Swedes, having 21 times fewer guns and 2.5 times fewer soldiers, were still able to take the Russian redoubts and were one step away from victory. If the Swedes had at least 15 more guns and 5 thousand soldiers, they would have won.
If you type ss before the youtube.com adress in the field in the top corner above you can download any youtube video - en.savefrom.net/1-youtube-video-downloader-5/ . But for best sound quality I would usually just record the music with a music program and with the "stereo mix" setting on my computer. There are also other ways you can download youtube clips, like with VLC player
Создатели этих кадров не потрудились понять суть линейной тактики тех лет. Батальоны шли в бой четырьмя шеренгами. При сближении с противником останавливались и шеренги стреляли поочередно меняясь местами - одна шеренга стреляла, остальные заряжали ружья. Так обеспечивалось постоянство стрельбы, залп за залпом. В случае атаки кавалерии, батальон строился в каре (квадратом) и продолжал непрерывную стрельбу. Кавалерия отступала. А если противник дрогнул и нарушил свои ряды, то только тогда можно было пойти в штыковую атаку, но лишь для того, чтобы враг не успел построиться в каре и чтобы получить возможность атаковать его кавалерией. Рассыпной строй это признак поражения. Кавалеристы рубят одиночных солдат саблями и поражают пиками. Перезарядить ружья одиночные солдаты не успевают и им остается только бежать с поля боя.
Net sovsem tochno. Bolshoi chasti 18.veka armii kareem ne ispolzovalis'. Tolko vnom nachali ispolzovatsya etoi formacii vo vremya revolucionih i napolenskih voinei.
@@АндрейГоловань-л4ъ Problema wikipedie v tom chto tam kazhdi pishet to shto ugodno i chto informacie po raznom v raznih variantah yazikov. Ya naprimer s zhenoi porugals' po voprosu vahabizma neskolko nedli nazad po etom shto v angliskoi verzi pishet shto vahabizm shkola v sunizme a ruskom variantu takogo net i ona dumaet chto vahabizm sovrsheno samostayatelno napravlenie v islame. V angliskoh verzi wikipedie navoditsya "tercio" katori bil chto to cud po drugom a posle kare kak kare tolko s nachala revolucionarnih voini. Menya lichno neizvesno srazhenie iz 7 godne voini kde bi etoi formaiciom ispolzovalisya.
Research showed most soldiers facing each other in this situation shot over the enemies' heads. For two reasons, first, the natural aversion of killing your fellow man and second, it was about self preservation: "we won't shoot you, if you don't shoot us". Many soldiers would have known the different wars which took place were merely part of a power game from which they could hardly be truly invested. Most deaths on the battle field occurred from grape shot from cannons or when one side ran away, which was what usually happened. Even then it was only a small number of sociopaths from the winning side, who did most of the killing in the pursuit.
I think that the bad precision of the muskets made people miss their targets, as the chance of hitting anything at all at ranges over say 80 meters was piss poor. And badly diciplined armies usually fired their guns before the enemy had come close enough for musket fire to be accurate and effective. And the long time it took to reload a musket prevented them from firing another shot before the enemy attacked with swords and bayonets. So the key was to do like the Swedish army, and show extreme dicipline and not firing their guns until the enemy was extremely close, so close that they were almost impossible to miss. And then the entire batallion fired its guns in one salvo. And after that would the battlefield be covered in smoke from gun powder making it impossible to fire at any longer ranges with any precision, aside from all other reasons already metnioned. So as soon as the salvo had been fired, did all Swedish troops rush forward with swords, bayonets and pikes. And the psychological impact was usually devestating. Swedens enemies usually outnumbered the Swedes 3 or 4 to 1, but still did they usually lose a battle becuase the Swedish assault was simply unstoppable. Bayonets were deadly as you say, but often times we do only talk about perhaps say 100-200 people getting killed while the rest of an army of 10.000 men were fleeing. So the role of the muskets and bayonets was not so much to kill people, but rather to break down the will to fight of the enemy regiment and make them flee from the battlefield like scared rabbits and surrender. Artillery could be very effective as you say, but it was a weapon for defensive operations because they were slow and clumsy to move around. And the real killer of armies back in those days were not the enemy troops, but rather diseases, hunger, cold and such. Not even the battle of Poltava was any decisive in this regard, as much more Swedish soldiers died from diseases than from the russian army. And fighting morale was what determined the outcome of battles more than anything else. Even depite numerical inferiority and a long list of stupid mistake by Swedish Generals during the battle of Poltava, did the Swedes come extremely close to win the battle during the final engagement when the two lines of infantry was battering each other. But this time around it was the russians that achieved a breakthrough first and won. However later in the war, in 1712 and onwards did warfare change. And the role of mobile artillery as a war winning weapon became appearent - at for example the battle of Gadebusch in 1712.
Where do the Finns come into this? The Swedes are fighting the Russians. And isn’t this film (“The Sovereign’s Servant”) about two Frenchmen sent into exile?
Finland was part of Sweden back then, as Sweden was the strongest power in northern Europe and had beaten up Russia, Germany, Poland and Denmark-Norway in numerous wars and conquered land from russia (the provinces Ingria and Kexholm) and from Germany (Pomerania and Stade) and Poland (Livonia) and Denmark (the provinces Scania, Jämtland, Gotland, Halland, Blekinge and Bohuslän). Finland was however part of Sweden already back in the 1150s. So the Swedish army therefore consisted of a large number of regiments of various origins.. Swedish, Finnish, German, Estonian, and Latvian. Plus large numbers of mercenary troops from Scotland and Germany. And of captured enemy troops that fought on the Swedish side and formed French, Saxon, Swiss and Bavarian regiments. But the core of this army was the Swedish and Finnish troops. Finland despite its language difference was considered a part of Sweden and not just a conquered province. It belonged to Sweden for 800 years - which is far longer than my home province Jämtland which have only been a part of Sweden for 400 years. So when this military march Björneborgarnas marsch was written back in the 1700s it was considered a Swedish military march. Finland only became a country much later, in 1917. However just because Finland only have existed as a country for little more than only 100 years, does not mean that this country lacks a rich military history. Troops from Finland have basically fought in every war Sweden has fought and participated in most of the major battles Sweden has fought, side by side with Swedish troops. And the song text to Björneborgarnas march clearly shows that: _"Sons of a people whose blood has been shed, On the battle field of Narva; Polish sand; at Leipzig's moor on Lützen's hills"_ So far I have mostly uploaded Swedish/Finnish military music on my channel. But I will one day in the future upload some purely Swedish military marches from the 1600s and 1700s. But the list of marches is long and can compete with that of France, England and Germany in that regard. I have also uploaded a march used by a Latvian Dragoon regiment that fought in Swedish service during the Great Northern war - Schlippenbach's March.
What a wonderful time, really ! In those days, people knew how to kill each other with elegance and tore each other apart with panache ! Marvelous, indeed !
Someone should explain to film-makers like this one that bayonet wounds accounted for a very small percentage of combat outcomes up to the end of the 19th century, and that they were almost always the result of quarrels between soldiers in the same unit....
I just love how the two Russian give their "dirty stares" to the Danish soldiers, but QUICKLY change their tunes when Danish soldiers get into "firing" position.
The Baltic is already an internal NATO lake. Just wait until the Russian Federation begins to disintegrate. Like the USSR and the Russian Empire. Russians want to have an empire but do not want to create, so all their creations disappear from history@@454FatJack
I don't know if this is the same version of this march that is played in this video. But hey, its still a fife and drum version. www.yorkshirecorpsofdrums.com/Schwedischer%20Marsch.html If you just want a piano version of this march there are hundreds of places you can find notes for free. I have even seen a learn to play version on youtube.
Would the Finn , Norwegian, Dane and Swedes won in a battle on the Rus in the north ? We would have devastated them and won the battle so extremely well.
Meaningless killing of men. The old hand-grenade is cool though. It is a bömb made out of cast Iron, filled with corned black-powder, timed with a fuze :) It could also be shot out from a cannon or Howizer :)
Me and my army - my friends, how much am I going to fight against the other room or against the girls and millions of allies - army we are going to fight
Not sure it happened quite like this, but I'm no expert. Bayonet charges seemed to be pretty rare and musketry was performed at a decent range. I mean what we think of as a decent range would be different to those chaps, because muskets don't have much of a range lol
The difference was in the equipment. During the time of muskets the square formations were the most efficient way to concentrate fire and manuevre on the battlefield.
@@veryrancid3128 See Me as the best brother, as you can see me, not the older brother or younger one, but just the brother. Even my older brother hurt me sometimes, but when I grew up , I stroke him hard with the fist. He never dared to challenge hes little brother once again. Now we are very good equal brothers again. I also never tried to be over him, for it was not my way. I set a score to my elder brother, he got the thing. No more fighting. As with the Swear an the Geats in the 600 or 700's, but their was way more bloody and different. At last they became good friends in the end. I am Upplänning, Södermanlänning and Western + Eastern-Geat and Gotlänning all at the same time :) Well, and Norlänning and Lapp also. Smålänning and Skåning. I am Finnish as well as before 1809. The Swear and Geats fought the very great battle of Bråvalla. I Think this was the last great battle in Sweden. Perhaps ~700 AD. Valkyriorna fick flyga skytteltrafik till Valhall med alla döda.
"The regiment would later on fight against Frederick the Great during the Seven years war."
Where the Björneborgarnas met the Bärenburger Regiment on the other side. And only those who understand Swedish and German get the joke :)
for ppl that dont get it put "Björn" and "Bären" into google translate (or atleast i think thats the point of the joke lol)
@@Eric-eu6rl it is.
What movie is this
Heh !
@@Me-zj4fd sovereign's servant
Makes me want to replay Empire Total War again.
Kalmar Union tillbaka
@@AJPlanet74fan heller
Make sure to add the Emipre 2 mod, closest thing to a sequel well come
if you want a mod like this video,you should add imperial destroyer,the uniforms are really accurate and the ai is good
@@AJPlanet74🤮
The Finn is my brother, it does not matter wich one of us is older, for we are brothers.
Awww
Finlands sak är vår!
In😊
Except the last time finland was invaded and sweden stayed neutral and watched
@@XBadger1and sent 25 000 volunteer fighters and medics. Sweden had been a neutral country since1812, and no one had any expectations for them to change their policies
For over a thousand years that's how us Europeans used to settle our national differences.
The more wars meant more technologic development and then rule over the World.
Sadly, today European civilization decaying, dieing and be replaced with other peoples, who still have strong religion, values and family - everything native Western Europeans lost
@@mrobocop1666The center of power goes to the east, to Poland, Turkey, Ukraine, etc. Europe is not going anywhere. Because Eastern Europe has always been the custodian of European values. You'll see)
@@dmytroandruhov9119Türkiye is not Europe
@@dmytroandruhov9119😂😂😂😂 Украина и Турция хранительницы западной культуры 😂😂😂
The birthrate is too low to engage in this sort of violence anymore.
I like how this movie shows Swedish military tactics - firing a volley and charge as they were most of the time outnumbered and couldn't exchange the volleys. Instead they took advantage in shock combat.
Firing one volley and then charging was not an unusual tactic at the time. The British army, a professional army, not conscripted levies used it frequently. "Give'em a volley then charge" was the common order, as used effectively against Napoleon's Imperial Guard at Waterloo.
Yes but this movie shows the battle of Poltava, Sweden's worst military defeat in history
@@andreapradelli5964 yeah but it wasn't because of incompetence, it was just a battle doomed from the start, like stalingrad
The frequent use of it was what made it special, as well as using pikes for charging the enemy for extra shock value was the truly unique thing, but it's not shown here. Besides, pikes wouldn't have done much vs dug in positions like this. The grenadiers are the best for clearing that sort of thing, also cannons of course, but sadly the Swedish force could not bring their guns to the battle in time. The Swedish cannons that's in this movie, to give a little more movieness to the whole thing, were not there historically.
@@HaurakiVet The Redcoats did it a lot during the American Revolution
There is no certainty about the composer of this, but Carl Michael Bellman has been the usual suspect. Also Christian Fredric Kress has probably composed a part of it, especially the end part. This was originally a part of musical plays, and it became a military march only later, in 1850'ies. In 1851 there was a musical play, where an actor, who represented Döbeln, stood in the stage dressed in the uniform of the Pori regiment (Döbeln was a commander of this regiment in 1808 - 1809 war against Russia), when this march was played. That is why they started to call this the march of Pori. The words were created first 1858 by Topelius. They were not a very bloody, but Runeberg made his own version about them two years later, and this version became an instant hit. Runebrg had used the French anthem as an example, and that is why the words are very aggressive and bloody. There are several Finnish translations about the lyrics, the most popular one was made by Klemetti. We Finns use this march in several occasions, and usually the instrumental version. It is played every time a Finn wins a gold medal in the olympics. So I hope to hear it at least once in the olympic games in Beijing during the next month.
Not my loved Bellman, Not him, he hated war.
@@user3141592635
Bellman used many military marches as inspiration for his songs. Epistel no 38 "Undan ur vägen" was for example inspired by this military march:
ua-cam.com/video/2rdxAU7JHj0/v-deo.htmlsi=xb72N2ETi7Mf_qLN
Epistel no33 "Stolta stad" was inspired by another Swedish military march ua-cam.com/video/DpBzryh6KeA/v-deo.html
Bellman - n:o 5b - Se svarta böljans hvita drägg was also written to a similiar tune that the warmongering Hat party used as a justification for the war with russia in 1741: Sinclairvisan ua-cam.com/video/lfSWPQ4FvDg/v-deo.html
@@user3141592635, but Bellman probably only composed the main theme. He didn't have any idea, how incredibly bloody the most common lyrics of this song would several generations later become. But Runeberg knew well the famous French anthem and he copied it's bloody content.
Byt the way those Beijing Winter Olympics were pretty good for Finland, because we won our first icehockey gold in men's icehockey. And Iivo Niskanen won 15 km in men's classic cross-country skiing.
One of the best battle scenes from a great Film about the Northern Wars.
WE ARE GETTING FORTERESSE OF VARDAHUS WITH THIS ONE 🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️ 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Yes
The swedish got removed in the vardo remake tho
Vardøhus, ye pretender!!!
DE KOMMER
2014:Classical music 2023:We be making out of Liepzig with this one.
Many Finns were also in the Swedish army during the Swedish Empire
The Finns made up a third of the 120.000 man strong Swedish military that fought in the Great Northern War. While about two-thirds was Swedes. And a tiny minority consisted of solidiers from Swedens Baltic and German provinces.
A few Saxon solidiers were also caputered in battle and pressed into Swedish service.
There were no finns in the swedish army during the Swedish empire, Just swedes! As finns were also just swedes back then
@@johanolsson8516 While Finnish national identity did not exist at this point, Finnish ethnicity was a thing, and while the distinction has been greatly overstated in the past, I don't think referring to the Finnish-speaking people from the Eastern part of the realm as "Finns" is incorrect
Wow, I would've never guessed...
@@heh9392 lol
WE'RE ESCAPING LEIPZIG FROM THE HORDES OF UNDEAD WITH THIS ONE!!!!!!!!
WE GETTING OUTTA VARDOHUS FORTRESS WITH THIS ONE 🔥🔥 💯💯
organs and whitesmoke
Its not guts and black powder. This is based 100 years before it when they had tricorns and not shakos.
@@AGreenPotato180 but they still had the music in the game (including this one)
no one talk about my summer car?
I heard the bayonett battles werent at all so common. It seems soldiers avoided them. One of the sides typically broke off... A teacher in military history told this.
It may not have been common, but it wasn't unheard of either. Especially with the Swedish army. The Swedes not only did not avoid melee, but actively preferred bayonet fighting to ranged combat. It was part of their official doctrine, their training and their tradition.
The French, Austrians and British also had a reputation for not shying away from melee combat. In the battles of Fontenoy, Culloden, Quebec, Saratoga and many others, a large proportion of casualties was caused by bayonets.
Swedes would often march to within 50 yards of the enemy, volley once, and give a furious bayonet charge
Suvorov said: bullet is stupid. Bayonett always finds its target. So I think at least some generals preffered charges.
@@Timrath The Swedes uses spears and swords more then the bayonet for the initial charge.
It's kind of true.
Bayonet charges were actually a common tactic.
What was unusual was indeed that the other side just stood there to get bayoneted.
At the time wars was fought by units, in formation.
A unit that lost cohesion was just useless: few were actually dead.
The cannon was usually loaded with grape-shot and was fired in a more horizontal attitude. The howitzer used in more close quarter with exploding canister overhead.
I gave my four and half a years, older brother a strike to the mouth, as 12 years old to set an argument. Now I won the argument for all times that can pass, ever. He knows this even as we are 60+ We are still good friends and love eachother.
Björneborgarnas march has been the honor march of the Finnish army since 1918.
Björneborg is the name of the Finnish city of Pori in Swedish.
That battle shown in this video is from Poltava battle 1709.
The Swedish army lost that battle.
A great number of Finns fought in that battle in the Swedish army.
the great northenm war?
@@marceloandrade1522, yes, that war was going on 1700 - 1721. The end part of that (1714 - 1721), when the Russian army controlled practically whole Finland, is called here in Finland as Isoviha (the Great Wrath), which described well that time. One third of the Finns died because of the war, hunger and diseases.
Footage from the Russian film,,Слуга государев"- "The Servant of the Sovereign".It was released in 2007.
I must have said that a million times already. And yet people comment and ask for the title of this movie...
Hypnotizing !😵💫 I feel I can take on anything while listening to this with no fear all of a sudden!
King Gustav II Adolf 🇫🇮 regiment from 16.2.1626-1809 in 🫡🇸🇪 Lion of North
1:13 He was serious and started leaping towards the enemy..
What a legend..
0:19 it looks like that one scene in the Patriot
you mean the Battle of Camden scene?
@@Zzyx773 yes
@@Zzyx773Yes
@@Zzyx773 yes
Yeah, soverign servant is like a East European "The Patriot".
WE GETTING ON THE BOAT WITH THIS ONE 🔥🔥🔥🔥🗣🗣🗣🗣
It is such a happy song! Kind regards from Sweden
Tack för uppladdningen av denna video med den bästa marschen.
👍👍👍👍
Это наша общая история, хорошая она или плохая, если бы не было этой истории нам даже не о чем было говорить и обсуждать,
а так история интересная!
Всем счастья и здоровья!
🇷🇺+🇸🇪=🤝❤
Ох, наши дорогие и заклятые то ли родственники, то ли просто соседи.
@@svenskriddare4162 Все кто с северо-запада, все родственники несмотря на страны, я сам из Санкт-Петербурга.
Бажаю тобі пошвидше стати учасником такої історії.Іноді краще мовчати чим говорити.Це про тебе убогий.
@@ВолодимирІванюк-х2эчого злий такий? Телепень.
🙏🌈Зря ты так! Возможно шведы хотят переиграть эти итоги?
Who's here after Sweden got removed from Vardøhus Fortress?
🙂🤚
Me :(
Me ;(
i didnt know
why tho
2:40 they begin storming without bayonets fixed, but end up a second later with fixed bayonets... unnecessary fault by the film-crew. Or the cutter.
is this minecraft
LOL
Whenever someone is accused of killings bros pet bunny and wolf in the GC:
He's Stupid 🗿
Close enough.
Ummm yes
Really cool
My neughbur is a Finn. I ask him this: Can I call you Finn or Finlander? He says it depends upon who you are. I say you are Finlander.
I like the howizers with the first grenades filled with powder. I am educated on a modern Cannon-Howizer -77
The best battle is not man against man. The best battle is to encircle the enemy and win over them with less loss of man. Like the Finns did. God blessed the Finns partially.
The Swedes had only 4 cannons and 17 thousand soldiers, the Russians had 86 cannons and 42 thousand soldiers, however, the Russians won with great difficulty and very heavy losses. Incredibly, the Swedes, having 21 times fewer guns and 2.5 times fewer soldiers, were still able to take the Russian redoubts and were one step away from victory. If the Swedes had at least 15 more guns and 5 thousand soldiers, they would have won.
если у бабушки был …… она была бы дедушкой:):):) История не терпит сослагательного наклонения. Шведы биты под Полтавой навсегда!!!!!!!!
Блядь, суки западные, англосаксы гребанные! Снова у вас Вова Путин виноват
Это битва под Полтавой. Пленные шведы потом в Сибири строили город Тобольск. Теперь в Тобольске много шведских фамилий.
Например?
@@politrazor согласен - не шведских, имеющих шведские корни.
@@politrazor министр обороны швеции Болин. В Тобольске куча с такой фамилией.
@@АлександрТокарев-ц5ш С 2022 министр обороны Швеции Пол Хеннинг Юнсон (Pål Henning Jonson). Так министр Болин или болен?!
@@MsGornist интернет вам в руки. Министр обороны в моей молодости Болин. Певец кажется Болин.
Avrupadadaki en sevdiğim dönem 18yy ancak böyle savaşlarda insanların böyle yok yere karşılıklı ateş ederek hayatlarını kaybetmeleride çok üzücü.
Björneborgarna (porilaiset) were Finns in the Swedisch army!
WERE MELEEING THE BARREL WITH THIS ONE 🗣️🔥🔥
Fr 🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥
WE BOUT TO LIGHT THE LIGHTHOUSE EARLY WITH THIS ONE🔥🔥🔥
I didn’t even put a single barricade yet bro
@@DaDMCREWWE HAVE 12 LINE INFANTRY WE’RE FINE!
BRO WHO TURN ON THE LIGHTHOUSE
@@Diamondmech6 you sure? It’s officers, not infantry
@@DaDMCREW oh WHY AINT E
ANY OF THESE DAMN OFFICERS CHARGING oh wait they sitting in the back
This is the regimental march for I-19 in Boden, northern Sweden.
I would reload part of the Muskets, beore attack.
Magnifique documentaire
Finns are somewhat Swedish people not speaking Swedish and vice versa. We do not speak Finnish easily. It it is not a Germanic Language.
Can you do it in the next Video?
what?
@@nattygsbordi did not write this?!??! Who did this i don't even understand what it means???!!
Which ones are the Finns and Swedes in the video? Thankyou
Finland were an integrated part of Sweden for 600 years.
Swedes and Russians. ( Finns were also Swedes back then)
@@bjornnylander8754 While Finnish national identity did not exist at this point but Finnish ethnicity was a thing. finns were never sweds
Is this Empire Clash?
Marş çok güzel ve heyecan verici. Savaş sahneleri muhteşem. Bu alay İsveçli mi Alman mı Fin mi ?
Blue and yellow colors are Swedish.
Björnebogs Regiment var i Finland a.k.a österland i Stormaktens tid i Sverige.
@Per Capita Finland is a natural part of Sweden. Half was swedes and half was finns.
Excellent! Where do I download this masterpiece?
If you type ss before the youtube.com adress in the field in the top corner above you can download any youtube video - en.savefrom.net/1-youtube-video-downloader-5/ . But for best sound quality I would usually just record the music with a music program and with the "stereo mix" setting on my computer. There are also other ways you can download youtube clips, like with VLC player
@@nattygsbord ah alright, thanks
Type Porilaisten marssi. It is a march of honour of Finnish Defence Forces.
@@carterp.5634 Slaget vid Narva, haha.
@@maxrostedt9047 Ja, och den svenska äran på samma sätt.
The drums are doing their job
My brother, if my novel Snake River is made into a movie, I want this music for it.
"Of course i love Denmark, they are our brothers"
*One drink later*
Создатели этих кадров не потрудились понять суть линейной тактики тех лет. Батальоны шли в бой четырьмя шеренгами. При сближении с противником останавливались и шеренги стреляли поочередно меняясь местами - одна шеренга стреляла, остальные заряжали ружья. Так обеспечивалось постоянство стрельбы, залп за залпом. В случае атаки кавалерии, батальон строился в каре (квадратом) и продолжал непрерывную стрельбу. Кавалерия отступала. А если противник дрогнул и нарушил свои ряды, то только тогда можно было пойти в штыковую атаку, но лишь для того, чтобы враг не успел построиться в каре и чтобы получить возможность атаковать его кавалерией. Рассыпной строй это признак поражения. Кавалеристы рубят одиночных солдат саблями и поражают пиками. Перезарядить ружья одиночные солдаты не успевают и им остается только бежать с поля боя.
Net sovsem tochno. Bolshoi chasti 18.veka armii kareem ne ispolzovalis'. Tolko vnom nachali ispolzovatsya etoi formacii vo vremya revolucionih i napolenskih voinei.
@@kaiserjager2754 Спорить не будем. В википедии по этому поводу пишут, что каре применялся в различных европейских армиях XVII-XIX века.
@@АндрейГоловань-л4ъ Problema wikipedie v tom chto tam kazhdi pishet to shto ugodno i chto informacie po raznom v raznih variantah yazikov. Ya naprimer s zhenoi porugals' po voprosu vahabizma neskolko nedli nazad po etom shto v angliskoi verzi pishet shto vahabizm shkola v sunizme a ruskom variantu takogo net i ona dumaet chto vahabizm sovrsheno samostayatelno napravlenie v islame.
V angliskoh verzi wikipedie navoditsya "tercio" katori bil chto to cud po drugom a posle kare kak kare tolko s nachala revolucionarnih voini. Menya lichno neizvesno srazhenie iz 7 godne voini kde bi etoi formaiciom ispolzovalisya.
Poltava! route to certain death and pain,Swedish soldiers met their bane
They got rekt.
Research showed most soldiers facing each other in this situation shot over the enemies' heads. For two reasons, first, the natural aversion of killing your fellow man and second, it was about self preservation: "we won't shoot you, if you don't shoot us". Many soldiers would have known the different wars which took place were merely part of a power game from which they could hardly be truly invested. Most deaths on the battle field occurred from grape shot from cannons or when one side ran away, which was what usually happened. Even then it was only a small number of sociopaths from the winning side, who did most of the killing in the pursuit.
I think that the bad precision of the muskets made people miss their targets, as the chance of hitting anything at all at ranges over say 80 meters was piss poor. And badly diciplined armies usually fired their guns before the enemy had come close enough for musket fire to be accurate and effective. And the long time it took to reload a musket prevented them from firing another shot before the enemy attacked with swords and bayonets.
So the key was to do like the Swedish army, and show extreme dicipline and not firing their guns until the enemy was extremely close, so close that they were almost impossible to miss. And then the entire batallion fired its guns in one salvo. And after that would the battlefield be covered in smoke from gun powder making it impossible to fire at any longer ranges with any precision, aside from all other reasons already metnioned.
So as soon as the salvo had been fired, did all Swedish troops rush forward with swords, bayonets and pikes. And the psychological impact was usually devestating. Swedens enemies usually outnumbered the Swedes 3 or 4 to 1, but still did they usually lose a battle becuase the Swedish assault was simply unstoppable. Bayonets were deadly as you say, but often times we do only talk about perhaps say 100-200 people getting killed while the rest of an army of 10.000 men were fleeing.
So the role of the muskets and bayonets was not so much to kill people, but rather to break down the will to fight of the enemy regiment and make them flee from the battlefield like scared rabbits and surrender.
Artillery could be very effective as you say, but it was a weapon for defensive operations because they were slow and clumsy to move around.
And the real killer of armies back in those days were not the enemy troops, but rather diseases, hunger, cold and such. Not even the battle of Poltava was any decisive in this regard, as much more Swedish soldiers died from diseases than from the russian army.
And fighting morale was what determined the outcome of battles more than anything else. Even depite numerical inferiority and a long list of stupid mistake by Swedish Generals during the battle of Poltava, did the Swedes come extremely close to win the battle during the final engagement when the two lines of infantry was battering each other. But this time around it was the russians that achieved a breakthrough first and won.
However later in the war, in 1712 and onwards did warfare change. And the role of mobile artillery as a war winning weapon became appearent - at for example the battle of Gadebusch in 1712.
Can u tell me the name of this music? please😁
It's in the name you dumb f-
LOOK AT THE DANG TITLE
Certified blood and iron moment
And to think this song is the last thing some people heard
Where do the Finns come into this? The Swedes are fighting the Russians. And isn’t this film (“The Sovereign’s Servant”) about two Frenchmen sent into exile?
Finland was part of Sweden back then, as Sweden was the strongest power in northern Europe and had beaten up Russia, Germany, Poland and Denmark-Norway in numerous wars and conquered land from russia (the provinces Ingria and Kexholm) and from Germany (Pomerania and Stade) and Poland (Livonia) and Denmark (the provinces Scania, Jämtland, Gotland, Halland, Blekinge and Bohuslän).
Finland was however part of Sweden already back in the 1150s.
So the Swedish army therefore consisted of a large number of regiments of various origins.. Swedish, Finnish, German, Estonian, and Latvian. Plus large numbers of mercenary troops from Scotland and Germany. And of captured enemy troops that fought on the Swedish side and formed French, Saxon, Swiss and Bavarian regiments.
But the core of this army was the Swedish and Finnish troops. Finland despite its language difference was considered a part of Sweden and not just a conquered province. It belonged to Sweden for 800 years - which is far longer than my home province Jämtland which have only been a part of Sweden for 400 years.
So when this military march Björneborgarnas marsch was written back in the 1700s it was considered a Swedish military march.
Finland only became a country much later, in 1917.
However just because Finland only have existed as a country for little more than only 100 years, does not mean that this country lacks a rich military history. Troops from Finland have basically fought in every war Sweden has fought and participated in most of the major battles Sweden has fought, side by side with Swedish troops.
And the song text to Björneborgarnas march clearly shows that: _"Sons of a people whose blood has been shed,
On the battle field of Narva; Polish sand; at Leipzig's moor on Lützen's hills"_
So far I have mostly uploaded Swedish/Finnish military music on my channel. But I will one day in the future upload some purely Swedish military marches from the 1600s and 1700s.
But the list of marches is long and can compete with that of France, England and Germany in that regard.
I have also uploaded a march used by a Latvian Dragoon regiment that fought in Swedish service during the Great Northern war - Schlippenbach's March.
What a wonderful time, really ! In those days, people knew how to kill each other with elegance and tore each other apart with panache ! Marvelous, indeed !
Movie title?
The Sovereign's Servant (2007)
Someone should explain to film-makers like this one that bayonet wounds accounted for a very small percentage of combat outcomes up to the end of the 19th century, and that they were almost always the result of quarrels between soldiers in the same unit....
I just love how the two Russian give their "dirty stares" to the Danish soldiers, but QUICKLY change their tunes when Danish soldiers get into "firing" position.
Danish???
G&BP Fans trying really hard not to make a meme out of this (IMPOSSIBLE):
how me and my friends feel like when we're doing line battles
Oh, Oh, oh..!!!
Where is the rest of the film..?
Слуга Государев 2007 год Россия
Mais le film a l'air super !! Qui peut me donner le titre ? Tack !!
The Sovereign's Servant (Fantassins, seuls en première ligne) 2007
Meningslöst dödande i allmänhet, men som jag skrivit nedan, det var extra synd om de fina oskyldiga hästarna.
COME ON LADS WE’LL SHOW EM WHAT WE GOT
Finns eventually got the same rights as Swedes under the Swedish King. No serfdom for example. Pay tax of the land you own, not more.
Судя по флагам фильм на тему Северной войны 1700- 1721 гг, закончившаяся Ништадским мирным договором.
And 1703 mega disaster. 🏗️🏛️St Petersburg built on old Swe land’s.. still z At the Baltic😢
The Baltic is already an internal NATO lake. Just wait until the Russian Federation begins to disintegrate. Like the USSR and the Russian Empire. Russians want to have an empire but do not want to create, so all their creations disappear from history@@454FatJack
Это Полтава! Фильм про двух французских дворян, которых Луи 14й отправил одного к Петру, другого к Карлу.
@@454FatJackэто не старая шведская земля. Здесь жили племена словен, кривичей и водь с ижорой. Это все предки современных россиян.
Name of the film please
"Sovereign Servant"
@@dubrei🙏🙏
THE DRUMMM ARE MAKING MEEE INSANEEE
För flickor som älskar hästar, vad säger de ? En full kanonkula i hästen, eller en 25 mm gjutjärnskula i kroppen från ett kanister.
1:41 wtf is Erliing Haaland doing?
This is a very realistic movie.
is this a film or something? if so what is it called?
The sovereign's servant
A russian movie from 2007
@@nattygsborddonde se puede ver?😊
@@KevinGutierrez-j5y I don't know where to find it. I watched it on a DVD many years ago. Maybe you can search for it on videos on Bing
"Vad fan har Björn Borg med det här att göra?" (If you know you know) :)
What happens if musket added in minecraft 😅
Colonization of villages
The VikinR devasteted them with their shields, axes and swords, all.
where can i get the partiture?
I don't know if this is the same version of this march that is played in this video. But hey, its still a fife and drum version.
www.yorkshirecorpsofdrums.com/Schwedischer%20Marsch.html
If you just want a piano version of this march there are hundreds of places you can find notes for free. I have even seen a learn to play version on youtube.
Как они это снимали?!
I don't like that the comment section is now filled with G&B comments
I'm not hating
Real
0:35 KO
I hate the fact music videos about the Napoleonic wars and even bagpipe ones get G&B references
Would the Finn , Norwegian, Dane and Swedes won in a battle on the Rus in the north ? We would have devastated them and won the battle so extremely well.
Многие до тебя пробовали. Закончили все одинаково.
yet you did not, entire army was almost wiped out and sweden empire collapsed.
Не победили, да и норвежцы с датчанами были на нашей стороне
Сражение при Полтаве?
Да
Should i play this in Band?
What's the name of the movie?
Слуга государев (in Russian), The Sovereign's Servant (in English). 2007
1:13 total war
Meaningless killing of men. The old hand-grenade is cool though. It is a bömb made out of cast Iron, filled with corned black-powder, timed with a fuze :) It could also be shot out from a cannon or Howizer :)
few know the meaning of corned black powder.......
When the battle is over, you will change over to the Swesdish Marsh.
we making it out of vardohus fortress with this one!!!111!!1🔥🔥
Me and my army - my friends, how much am I going to fight against the other room or against the girls and millions of allies - army we are going to fight
Are they French or Swedish I don’t understand I think
The blue are Swedish And the green are Russia.
suomi, finland 1976
adolf was born
Now loading year 1995
I love how fighting has changed, you don’t just stand and get shot
Yeah instead you get blown to pieces by a drone in the sky.
@@samuelskogqvist5565 If you’re in a third world country
Not sure it happened quite like this, but I'm no expert. Bayonet charges seemed to be pretty rare and musketry was performed at a decent range. I mean what we think of as a decent range would be different to those chaps, because muskets don't have much of a range lol
The difference was in the equipment. During the time of muskets the square formations were the most efficient way to concentrate fire and manuevre on the battlefield.
@@cryovizard9461 Are there wars in non third world countries?
In the Service, we hid in the forests, shot with 155 mm Haubits, moved away. We were armed with a G3-Rifle, every man.
Das gefällt mir , ichbin aus Bayern , schönes Land , hier geboren , auch meine Mutter u meine Großeltern .. Super .. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🌻❤
А кто плац разравнял бульдозерами и катками закатал до ровного состояния, чтобы маршеровалось удобно?!
Выбирали поле сражения
Древние укры ровняли ложками.
What movie was this from? I want to get it.
The Sovereign's Servant (2007)
The Swedes and the Finns suit together, despite our different languages.
i see you as a big brother.. kinda annoying, but well meaning.. and in a tight spot we can rely on eachother
@@veryrancid3128 See Me as the best brother, as you can see me, not the older brother or younger one, but just the brother. Even my older brother hurt me sometimes, but when I grew up , I stroke him hard with the fist. He never dared to challenge hes little brother once again. Now we are very good equal brothers again. I also never tried to be over him, for it was not my way. I set a score to my elder brother, he got the thing. No more fighting. As with the Swear an the Geats in the 600 or 700's, but their was way more bloody and different. At last they became good friends in the end.
I am Upplänning, Södermanlänning and Western + Eastern-Geat and Gotlänning all at the same time :) Well, and Norlänning and Lapp also. Smålänning and Skåning.
I am Finnish as well as before 1809.
The Swear and Geats fought the very great battle of Bråvalla. I Think this was the last great battle in Sweden. Perhaps ~700 AD.
Valkyriorna fick flyga skytteltrafik till Valhall med alla döda.
No more fighting between the Geats and the Svear.
@@user3141592635 because very soon they will be replaced with Muhammad and Ibrahim