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The Canadian Revolution: Explained (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • Опубліковано 18 сер 2024
  • Twitter: / tenminhistory
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    Turns out Canada had a revolution. It didn't go very well but they tried. This obviously means that New Zealand is now the good dominion.
    Sources:
    THE CANADIAN REBELLIONS OF 1837-38: AN EPISODE IN NORTHERN BORDERLAND HISTORY by T. P. Dunning
    The Meaning of Patriot: The Canadian Rebellion and American Republicanism, 1837-1839 by Marc L. Harris
    The Patriot War of 1837-1838: Locofocoism with a Gun? by Andrew Bonthius

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,8 тис.

  • @TheCsel
    @TheCsel 4 роки тому +2905

    i imagine somewhere in London, since ancient times, there's a plaque that displays the amount of days since the last rebellion in the empire.

    • @christianfreedom-seeker934
      @christianfreedom-seeker934 4 роки тому +181

      😂😂 "We have had (180) days without a rebellion, let's keep the Empire safe and go for 2 years!" 😁😁

    • @davidroberts7282
      @davidroberts7282 4 роки тому +76

      I can also tell you with certainty in this scenario the ancient Britons didn't originally set up that plaque, it was the ancient world superpower supreme, the Roman's, who conquered Britian in 43 CE, and essentially ruled all of modern-day England, Wales, and periodically controlled areas of southern and central Scotland (Caledonia) for 400 years until basically leaving in 410 CE to help defend other regions of a ever-dimishing empire.

    • @2.0pewdiepie53
      @2.0pewdiepie53 3 роки тому +87

      *It's been 0 days since last rebellion*
      (Next day)
      *It's been 0 days since last rebellion*

    • @allenjenkins7947
      @allenjenkins7947 3 роки тому +12

      The most recent rebellions have been by people wanting to stay in the Empire.

    • @bullhuss
      @bullhuss 2 роки тому +2

      @@allenjenkins7947 good

  • @LedosKell
    @LedosKell 4 роки тому +6610

    The Canadian Revolution is often reenacted after hockey games.

    • @colton.421
      @colton.421 4 роки тому +190

      As a Canadian hockey player, you’re 100% correct

    • @Desmaad
      @Desmaad 4 роки тому +48

      Only after a Canadian team enters the playoffs.

    • @pixlplague
      @pixlplague 4 роки тому +79

      DURING hockey games. Sorry.

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh 4 роки тому +18

      @@pixlplague that's of course sorry pronounced with a long o.

    • @PunkerWithABoner
      @PunkerWithABoner 4 роки тому +20

      Well it is in Canadian Folklore that the first official hockey game ended in massive brawl

  • @Lordboring1478
    @Lordboring1478 3 роки тому +2489

    As a Canadian, I can tell you our revolt is probably one of the least climactic in history

    • @oniauri3214
      @oniauri3214 3 роки тому +132

      I went in mildly intrigued, but by the end i thought "im not sure what i expected but im not surprised."

    • @fattiger6957
      @fattiger6957 2 роки тому +166

      In the end, Canada's true path to becoming a country was long, boring and with a lot of talking. Not so much the action movie that was American Independence.

    • @adrianred236
      @adrianred236 2 роки тому +2

      Yes, Shoot first then apologize.

    • @shrekdaddy4478
      @shrekdaddy4478 2 роки тому +8

      I live Washington but we talk a surprising amount of Canada

    • @beauwatkins9096
      @beauwatkins9096 2 роки тому +22

      How Canada became Canada was vimmy ridge

  • @sparrowpelt20xx61
    @sparrowpelt20xx61 4 роки тому +4999

    Canada: *starts a revolution*
    U.S.A.: I’m so proud.
    Great Britain: Don’t encourage him!!!

    • @nsq2229
      @nsq2229 3 роки тому +50

      Lol

    • @sevinceur1766
      @sevinceur1766 3 роки тому +31

      USA didn’t try any revolts against the British at that time, so I don’t know why you make it sound like a parent being proud of his kid following in in his footsteps.

    • @jeffreypierson2064
      @jeffreypierson2064 3 роки тому +135

      @@sevinceur1766 Do the American Revolution and the War of 1812 ring a bell?

    • @sevinceur1766
      @sevinceur1766 3 роки тому +8

      Jeffrey Pierson This was after, hence why I said “at that time”.

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 3 роки тому +27

      After the War of 1812 though, America and Britain worked in every way possible to avoid future conflicts (although relations were very sour for several more decades). The Oregon Territory is an example of this. Even when America broke away in the 1770s and early 1780s, they had critical French help. I'm not sure where Canada thought they might get powerful support, as the US definitely wasn't that interested.

  • @eribalaj5525
    @eribalaj5525 4 роки тому +6417

    A list of reforms:
    -Be Good
    -Don’t be bad
    I can see why the British couldn’t accept this very realistic list of reforms

    • @sandrojones8068
      @sandrojones8068 4 роки тому +29

      no

    • @Rynewulf
      @Rynewulf 4 роки тому +128

      The British government still struggles with that, it's almost a defining characteristic

    • @sandrojones8068
      @sandrojones8068 4 роки тому +22

      Lol. Get rekt noobs. The British Empire was Great. If you say it wasn't, then you're butthurt.

    • @sandrojones8068
      @sandrojones8068 4 роки тому +19

      @Wilhelm II. The German empire was also great. It was a shame Britain and Germany fought. They're brothers.

    • @voluntaryextinction8710
      @voluntaryextinction8710 4 роки тому +12

      Wilhelm II. Just a small mistake in your logic. It wasn’t that the British letting certain territory’s keeps there culture and religion that came back to bite them. If they hadn’t then the territories would have been in constant rebellion

  • @Darkred28
    @Darkred28 4 роки тому +5242

    "I'm NOT sorry." - Canada

  • @nickmcgargill6216
    @nickmcgargill6216 3 роки тому +83

    *Britain:* "Canada! Are you being rebellious??"
    *Canada:* "Sorry, I'll calm down."

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 3 роки тому +2

      *Royal Navy armada shows up*
      "You said something, mate?"
      "No sir."

  • @dominiccarrano9513
    @dominiccarrano9513 3 роки тому +1527

    Britain: the overbearing dad
    France: the nice mom
    America: the rebellious oldest child
    Canada: the well behaved younger brother
    Australia: the crazy youngest son
    Spain: the crazy uncle.

    • @Chris-hp9be
      @Chris-hp9be 3 роки тому +248

      Germany: the strict aunt

    • @thegreatwunkus4779
      @thegreatwunkus4779 3 роки тому +192

      Russia: the babushka

    • @cynthius6567
      @cynthius6567 2 роки тому +40

      Time to rewatch Hetalia, I guess!

    • @hosseinramez3293
      @hosseinramez3293 2 роки тому +149

      New Zealand:the youngest brother no one knows about because they're always in Australia's shadow
      South Africa: the step brother
      Portugal:Spain's twin brother
      Brazil:Portugal's son and the cousin
      Argentina Mexico etc: Spain's children and also cousins
      Italy:The chill uncle
      Ireland:Britain's nemesis neighbor

    • @KaijuTurtle
      @KaijuTurtle 2 роки тому +86

      “The nice mom” I cannot sufficiently express the sarcastic laughter this elicited from me

  • @elpear6979
    @elpear6979 4 роки тому +3824

    UK: No Independence
    Canada: "I am slightly upset"
    UK: "Sweats in British"

  • @ninjasheep7492
    @ninjasheep7492 4 роки тому +4857

    So the time Canadians didn’t say please when asking for freedom.

    • @ogrejd
      @ogrejd 4 роки тому +103

      Actually, that's basically what we did here in Nova Scotia, getting the first "responsible government" in the British Empire.
      (edit: Well, for a little while, anyways, until Britain and the Canadas decided to rope us and New Brunswick into Confederation...)

    • @MrFallingfromgrace
      @MrFallingfromgrace 4 роки тому +9

      @@ogrejd And then we got excited about sending troops to put down the western rebellions and forgot Nova Scotia was and to this day is hosed in Confederation. lol

    • @dittbub
      @dittbub 4 роки тому +9

      Turns out you catch more flies with honey :3

    • @Fatihturk0071
      @Fatihturk0071 4 роки тому +6

      The British Crown would like to know your location...

    • @thefrightful9303
      @thefrightful9303 4 роки тому +12

      @@protonmaximum6193 You're halfway to Freedom, keep going. Cut some royal heads off if you have to.

  • @princevesperal
    @princevesperal 3 роки тому +338

    A few things to add:
    - Lower-Canada also declared independence as a republic, with patriot Robert Nelson as president. The declaration was very progressive for the time, in particular with regards to First Nations.
    - The reason Durham recommended the fusion of both Canadas was to assimilate the French through demographic and political drowning. He was extremely harsh on the French, calling them "a people without history or culture".
    - The fusion of both Canadas was largely beneficial to the English-speaking Upper-Canada, which had incurred a significant public debt, whereas the French-speaking Lower-Canada had spent much less in infrastructures because the undemocratic English political elite did not care about the well-being of the French citizenry. So Lower-Canada ended-up bailing out Upper-Canada.
    - Basically, when the English-speaking settlers in Canada (mostly American Loyalists) were a minority compared to the French-speaking population who had settled there many generations ago, they insisted and obtained to have their own separate province, Upper-Canada, in which they would be a majority. As soon as demography favoured them, the English obtained the reconstitution of a united Canada.

    • @notahandle965
      @notahandle965 2 роки тому +57

      "Everyone I don't like has no history or culture" - political proverb

    • @louisd.8928
      @louisd.8928 2 роки тому +58

      Not to mention also that in the Parliament of the United Province of Canada, both the French and English side got the exact same number of seats, despite the French outnumbering the English 3 to 1. This was intentional, to make sure that the French would not be in control. However, the moment when the English population outgrew the French, seats were redistributed to make sure the English had more.

    • @rampantmutt9119
      @rampantmutt9119 Рік тому +3

      @@notahandle965 In the cases of Canada, the United States of America, Australia, and New Zealand, this is true.

    • @gabrielgiguere2108
      @gabrielgiguere2108 Рік тому +20

      "WhY DoEs QuEbEc WaNtS tO SePeRaTe" they said and keep saying, english history class don't teach that to their students

    • @shonewarrior2178
      @shonewarrior2178 Рік тому +6

      @@rampantmutt9119 lol No, in Quebec we had a great culture. Canada borrowed everything from us. Everything you know as Canadian comes from us. We had our own literature, music, dance, food, language, philosophy. We had everything, it all changed with the 60’s and the Quiet Revolution that was done by communists to Secularize Quebec and take it out of its roots.

  • @shake_well6923
    @shake_well6923 3 роки тому +159

    Quebecer here, (French (Lower) Canadian)
    Lord Durham, the new governer that unified the two colonies is seen here as a bad figure in our history.
    He was highly racist toward french Canadians, calling them an inferior race, without history or culture.
    He also stated that Quebec was the only one to blame for the whole revolution.
    The principal objective of the act of union was mostly to assimilate the french canadian, not to create a fair union of states.
    It failed, since we still have our language, history and culture :)
    PS. While the rest of Canada celebrate Victoria day on may 25th (queen's birthday). We in quebec have Patriot's Day on the same date, to celebrate Papineau's rebellion.

    • @hutlazzz
      @hutlazzz 2 роки тому +16

      vive le sacrifice des patriotes !

    • @papamartino
      @papamartino 2 роки тому +9

      On a gardé la tête à Papineau finalement ;)

    • @TheCaptainSplatter
      @TheCaptainSplatter 2 роки тому +1

      When you guys gonna be independent?

    • @shake_well6923
      @shake_well6923 2 роки тому +19

      ​@@TheCaptainSplatter In my opinion, never. The last referendum was extremely close in 1995, and was finally decided by the mostly english speaking and americanized city of Montreal, which was also home to the vast majority of immigrants who identified more with being Canadian than Quebecer and maybe didn't understand fully the power dynamics between provinces and federal governements. (ask an Immigrant where he's moving, and he'll say proudly "Canada" not Quebec)
      Today, the new generation are more and more americanized, and identifies more as "Canadians" at home and abroad. There is a mass exodus of young people leaving the regions in favor of larger cities, especially Montreal. There are also even more immigrants than back then, who won't identify with the culturally unique Quebecer identity.
      We have a saying about this change
      "Avant l'anglais, on l'apprenait pas... On lui sacrait une volée" roughly translated to "we used to beat up the english (person), not learn it (language)"
      The political party whose whole identity was centered around Quebec Independance is basically gone today. (Our current PM used to be a member of)

    • @ctibpo991
      @ctibpo991 2 роки тому

      @@TheCaptainSplatter TROC (the rest of Canada) is Québec's colony. Quebeckers cross the Ottawa River and make a bunch of laws in Ottawa that apply to TROC but not Québec. They have their own tax and immigration laws. Everyone in Québec know how much the poorer provinces get in transfer payments but none of them know they are net recipients of these payments as well. The only people that truly wanted Québec to separate were people from Newfoundland as they figured it would take 8 hours off their drive to Toronto to see their cousins.

  • @timmmahhhh
    @timmmahhhh 4 роки тому +1455

    I can hear the dialogue of the Canadian Revolution now.
    "I'm not your friend, buddy!"

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. 4 роки тому +754

    I find that "Stars, yo" written on the American flag extremely funny. :)

    • @dmechanicodude3960
      @dmechanicodude3960 4 роки тому +51

      Given the amount of us flag changes over the years, I am willing to accept that as the new national flag.

    • @pepperVenge
      @pepperVenge 4 роки тому +33

      I think 1959 to Present is the longest time the US Flag hasn't changed.

    • @black10872
      @black10872 4 роки тому +9

      @@pepperVenge not until Puerto Rico becomes a state or California breaks apart.

    • @capitalistball2924
      @capitalistball2924 4 роки тому +1

      @@black10872
      california ain't ever gonna break apart. The U.S wouldn't allow that.

    • @black10872
      @black10872 3 роки тому +6

      @@capitalistball2924 That's up to the residents of the state to decide. It happened to Virginia. That's why we have a separate state called West Virginia.

  • @Shadowkey392
    @Shadowkey392 4 роки тому +208

    You know why we Canadians are so often thought of as nice and polite? Because the people who find out otherwise don’t typically survive the experience to tell of it.

    • @cybercat29
      @cybercat29 3 роки тому +8

      And those that do tell others to be nice to Canada if they don't want to find out what Canada would do to them if they anger Canada 🇨🇦

    • @Mr_T_Badger
      @Mr_T_Badger 2 роки тому +4

      There was a very good and very violent reason the Germans hated us in the Great War.

    • @scotandiamapping4549
      @scotandiamapping4549 2 роки тому +3

      But now I kno- aw crap RUN!

    • @selfiekroos1777
      @selfiekroos1777 2 роки тому +3

      Canadians are not nice. They are insanely passive aggressive.

    • @katlynklassen809
      @katlynklassen809 2 роки тому +11

      @@selfiekroos1777 yeah other countries miss it. It is the British side magnified. Other countries are like hey polite americans but no the Americans are nicer and more polite they can just be louder and more brash. Canadians have much more murk behind their civility. Winters make them tough though. Lots of primary industry keeps a large portion of the population level headed and ernest.

  • @GaysianAmerican
    @GaysianAmerican 4 роки тому +63

    Egypt sees Canadian naming conventions:
    I see you're a man of civilization as well

  • @ihavetowait90daystochangem67
    @ihavetowait90daystochangem67 4 роки тому +891

    *T A S K F A I L E D S U C C E S S F U L L Y*

    • @bvthebalkananarchistmapper5642
      @bvthebalkananarchistmapper5642 4 роки тому +37

      I've never seen a more appropriate usage of that meme.

    • @-Faris-
      @-Faris- 4 роки тому +26

      BV The Balkan Anarchist Mapper The japanese leader Hideki Tojo tried to hang himself when japan surrendered to the allies. He was caught and rescued by the allied soldiers, in which he was later trialed, and hanged to death

    • @Pain-mr2hn
      @Pain-mr2hn 4 роки тому +4

      *MISSION FAILED, WE'LL GET UM NEXT TIME*

    • @steveryan1799
      @steveryan1799 4 роки тому

      @@-Faris- Now that's funny.

  • @eden4279
    @eden4279 4 роки тому +2349

    [Insert joke about Canadians being polite]

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 4 роки тому +63

      You should see them in sporting events especially in Baseball and Hockey, politeness is none existent in those instances.

    • @LZin-uk5nh
      @LZin-uk5nh 4 роки тому +25

      In case of an American invasion to Canada, the Canadian plan is to stay at home, ask us nicely to leave and hope we get bored and return.

    • @LORDTHUNDERX
      @LORDTHUNDERX 4 роки тому +23

      @@LZin-uk5nh Wrong, In the Case of an American Invasion, we light up the many fields of Marijuana, Invasion is cancelled due to the munchies

    • @katnerd6712
      @katnerd6712 4 роки тому +10

      French Canadians aren't polite :P

    • @peppermintmapper6460
      @peppermintmapper6460 4 роки тому +7

      Canadians are actually some of the rudest people. I live in Canada and I’ve seen so many backstabbing jerks.
      Quick tip: Come to Scarborough to see WHAT IT’S REALLY LIKE :)

  • @JohnCampbell-rn8rz
    @JohnCampbell-rn8rz 4 роки тому +7

    I grew up about a quarter of a mile from Montgomery's Inn, the tavern then several miles west of Toronto where MacKenzie & his compatriots planned the Upper Canada portion of the rebellion. Walked by it every day going to high school. So I feel I have a tiny bit of skin in this game. MacKenzie's middle name Lyon is pronounced "lion" & Louis-Joseph Papineau's name is pronounced Papin O as in boat. I love these snippets & am constantly amazed by how much detail you manage to cram into a few short minutes. Thanks.

  • @TeenageMutantZuckerTurtle
    @TeenageMutantZuckerTurtle 3 роки тому +148

    Canadian Revolution:
    “Can we please have reforms?”
    “No”
    “Then we’ll get our guns and be independent, sorry.”
    “No”
    “Well can we have anything?”
    “You can have one Canada instead of two Canadas”
    “But why would we wan-“
    “You can have one Canada instead of two Canadas”
    “Yes mother.”

  • @adamhunter3692
    @adamhunter3692 4 роки тому +728

    I like how this video is called "THE Canadian Revolution" as if there was only one. Lets not forget the Red River Rebellion and the North West rebellion both led by the Metis Louis-Riel

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 4 роки тому +20

      It's that word "rebellion".
      It indicates it was a minor affair.

    • @AnniversaryRoad
      @AnniversaryRoad 4 роки тому +99

      @@alanpennie8013 The two rebellions led by Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont were anything but minor affairs. They shaped modern Canada and the western provinces and played a tremendous role in the subjugation and ongoing discrimination of Metis and aboriginal peoples in Canada. The rebellions further drove the wedge between English and French Canada due to the Metis predominantly speaking French.

    • @legrandliseurtri7495
      @legrandliseurtri7495 4 роки тому +25

      @@alanpennie8013 I'd say Louis-Riel was far more important than the pathetic attempt of the patriot.

    • @leifharmsen
      @leifharmsen 4 роки тому +36

      There was no revolution. Just rebellions. No state was overthrown.

    • @randomclouds4404
      @randomclouds4404 4 роки тому +7

      The French Revolution was definitely the only revolution in France's history.

  • @thetrashmaster1352
    @thetrashmaster1352 4 роки тому +1187

    Meanwhile in Australia: "Hey Britain can we make a new country called the Commonwealth of Australia"
    UK "Why not become a dominion like Canada and New Zealand?"
    Aus "We want states and a senate and maybe some colonies and stuff"
    UK "You're making me proud son. Here is a quarter of Antarctica and British New Guinea as a parting gift."
    Aus "Thank you so much UK, now we are going to become a democracy and give women the right to vote."
    UK Crying to itself* "The child we always wanted"
    USA "Okay, this is weird."

    • @sxcJOELisNotsexy
      @sxcJOELisNotsexy 4 роки тому +59

      It's still no Republic

    • @christianfreedom-seeker934
      @christianfreedom-seeker934 4 роки тому +89

      Probably because the British Parliament didn't want to provoke another uprising? There was a small miners revolt that looked a lot like a last stand at the Alamo but like the Alamo the defenders were doomed. Not too many people know about that revolt. It was really over before it began.

    • @marsupialmole3926
      @marsupialmole3926 4 роки тому +48

      @Troy Bailey As an Australian, this makes me profoundly uncomfortable

    • @jurisprudens
      @jurisprudens 4 роки тому +53

      @@marsupialmole3926 Why? Britain was not the worst Empire to be the offspring of.

    • @animatorofanimation128
      @animatorofanimation128 4 роки тому +92

      @Troy Bailey Yeah Australia has always been seen by the British as their most successful colony. In the modern day they are a powerhouse in their own right and the bastion of the West in the East

  • @specialunit0428
    @specialunit0428 4 роки тому +4

    FUN FACT: Lord Durham made a note book of all recommendations for reform and that same note book was used for other colonies to stop potential rebellions.

  • @joc6344
    @joc6344 3 роки тому +34

    From what I remember from highschool, the French Patriots movement wasn't for independence. The members couldn't agree on that point, but they all wanted reforms for French Canadian's right and representation, since they were persecuted, ruled by English merchants and excluded from pretty much everything.

    • @louisd.8928
      @louisd.8928 2 роки тому +3

      It wasn't for independence, but for responsible government and representative government.

    • @brustar5152
      @brustar5152 Рік тому

      @@louisd.8928 And here I thought it was over which end of the soft boiled egg was to be opened first.

  • @GILGATRAX-DestroyerOfWorlds
    @GILGATRAX-DestroyerOfWorlds 4 роки тому +814

    I always love to see videos on Canada but I was confused by the title. We generally refer to these events as the Rebellions of 1837-38, not the Canadian Revolution (some quebecois might call it a revolution). Also, Papineau is pronounced like “papi-noh” not “papi-new”

    • @carlosluque2346
      @carlosluque2346 4 роки тому +87

      in quebec we call it la rébellion des patriotes
      edit: wasn't guerre but rébellion

    • @paranoidrodent
      @paranoidrodent 4 роки тому +95

      Nah, I've never heard it called a revolution in Quebec. It's a rebellion. Revolutions overthrow the existing system and the only revolution in Quebec history is the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s (which refers to a massive cultural transformation, not armed conflict).

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 4 роки тому +26

      Maybe our You Tuber is imitating an Anglophone Upper Canadian with a willed ignorance of the way French is normally spoken.

    • @paireon3419
      @paireon3419 4 роки тому +18

      If it had been successful then we would call it a revolution, but it wasn't so we don't.

    • @robertrichard6107
      @robertrichard6107 4 роки тому +3

      Wasn't 'Lower (French) Canada' called Acadia until the Brits sent them on their way? And wasn't the word Canada bastardized Athabascan for Kanata just like the capital (or the river) Ottawa pronounced Odoway? And in upper Canada isn't Sault Ste. Marie still considered the 3rd oldest (white pilgrim) settlement in North America behind Montreal, and St. Augustine?

  • @ilnur9973
    @ilnur9973 4 роки тому +719

    Canada: *revolts*
    Everyone else: you weren't supposed to do that

    • @androzani
      @androzani 4 роки тому +14

      Brandell Von Almire
      America: Wooooooo yea!

    • @Shadowkey392
      @Shadowkey392 4 роки тому +3

      Canada:...sorry.

    • @bipboup7761
      @bipboup7761 3 роки тому +6

      There are french in canada, then there is nothing surprising 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @kamanashiskar9203
      @kamanashiskar9203 3 роки тому +3

      @@bipboup7761 Well, actually due to a bill passed in the early 1770s, the French Canadians had the same rights as British Canadians.

    • @ryancharlebois1043
      @ryancharlebois1043 3 роки тому

      Still to this day

  • @mcvgs1780
    @mcvgs1780 3 роки тому +15

    "Don't be French"
    -British Empire
    *angry maple noises*

  • @DavidL-ii7yn
    @DavidL-ii7yn 2 роки тому +7

    You missed most of the Arctic when you cut and paste your map.
    But the minefield of discussing Louis Riel's sedition would be a nice follow-up to this.

  • @THECOMMUNISTCHANNEL
    @THECOMMUNISTCHANNEL 4 роки тому +1684

    America: this is a Revolution
    UK: *dear God*
    America: there's more
    UK: *NO*
    Edit: (RIP Rick May)

    • @davidrossington9756
      @davidrossington9756 4 роки тому +145

      I have done nothing but start revolutions for 3 days!

    • @Twigs1836
      @Twigs1836 4 роки тому +110

      Gentlemen, synchronize your revolution watches.

    • @sviatoslavs.1305
      @sviatoslavs.1305 4 роки тому +86

      "For most men, that's no time at all. We are NOT most men. We are REVOLUTIONARIES. We will make these hours count!"
      - a random French-speaking gent in Canada, somewhere in late 1830s (texted).

    • @-et37-
      @-et37- 4 роки тому +51

      Tell me, did anyone here manage to kill a Redcoat? No? Then we still have a problem.

    • @THECOMMUNISTCHANNEL
      @THECOMMUNISTCHANNEL 4 роки тому +15

      @@-et37- and an axe

  • @leobrulotte1448
    @leobrulotte1448 4 роки тому +64

    Fun fact: I went to the same high school as Louis-Joseph Papineau. I only missed him by a century or two...

  • @icemanire5467
    @icemanire5467 2 роки тому +7

    An appropriate time to appear in my suggestions.

  • @PackedWolf
    @PackedWolf 4 роки тому +193

    I'm sad you didn't mention the fact that we got a parliament out of Durham's recommendations. The revolution was the last time that the Governor General used their dictatorial powers in Canada, from then on they always accepted whatever the parliament decided.

    • @christianfreedom-seeker934
      @christianfreedom-seeker934 4 роки тому +4

      There was a real concern with some merit in London that the new and growing USA would try to lay claim to Canada, either by settlement or by force. Thankfully the Mexicans gave us an excuse to fight them!

    • @simonrancourt7834
      @simonrancourt7834 3 роки тому +17

      Durham also recommended the French Canadian be forcefully assimilated.

    • @Hashishin13
      @Hashishin13 3 роки тому +2

      The governor general shut down parliament under the last PM.

    • @rileycreep6358
      @rileycreep6358 2 роки тому +2

      If I do recall, William Lyon Mackenzie king in the 30s is the real reason the Governor General has no real power

    • @ChrisCoulson101
      @ChrisCoulson101 2 роки тому +1

      @@rileycreep6358 That's what I was taught in high school, but it's not actually right. The GG was entirely correct in that scenario. If there is another option to form government, the GG can exercise their discretion if they feel an election is unnecessary. See: 2017 British Columbia.
      I think the true exercise of responsible government in Canada was the Hippolyte-Lafontaine government after the Durham report.

  • @elemperadordemexico
    @elemperadordemexico 4 роки тому +1077

    Britain: don't revolt and submit
    Canada: uno reverse card: sorry mate

    • @1queijocas
      @1queijocas 4 роки тому +14

      So Britain revolted and submitted then ?

    • @elemperadordemexico
      @elemperadordemexico 4 роки тому +6

      @@1queijocas it would be funny though

    • @unitedkingdomofgreatbritai5498
      @unitedkingdomofgreatbritai5498 4 роки тому +3

      @@1queijocas but who did they revolt against tho maybe the monarchy

    • @ehs1452
      @ehs1452 4 роки тому +3

      @@1queijocas Yeah, this really makes no sense at all. Of course the internet continues to circle jerk Canada even when they fail badly.

    • @Desmaad
      @Desmaad 4 роки тому +6

      No, that would be "sorry, bud". Mate isn't really used here outside of biology.

  • @shorgoth
    @shorgoth 2 роки тому +19

    "eau" in french is pronounced "o". Also lord Durham's "reform" also included burning French Canadian villages and putting interdictions of teaching French in Acadian schools while the English speaker's revolt was so swept under the rug so throughly that most English speaking Canadians don't know they revolted with us at the time.

  • @westboy84
    @westboy84 3 роки тому +9

    Great to see a more obscure set of historical events covered! Though the rebellions led directly to the Act of Union, it also lay the foundations for responsible government in Canada, which came into effect in the late 1840s

  • @Gameflyer001
    @Gameflyer001 4 роки тому +115

    William Lyon Mackenzie's grandson later became Canada's longest-serving Prime Minister, William Lyon Mackenzie King.

    • @falconajc4113
      @falconajc4113 4 роки тому +6

      Bit of a nutcase tho...

    • @Gameflyer001
      @Gameflyer001 4 роки тому +5

      @@falconajc4113 yes... the seances namely.

    • @Hollywoodin2001b
      @Hollywoodin2001b 3 роки тому +11

      And he was insane. He held seances to consult his dead mom, had a dead dog stuffed and spoke to it, and would only make a decision if the hands on his clock formed a straight line.

    • @Gameflyer001
      @Gameflyer001 3 роки тому +5

      @@Hollywoodin2001b also was a lifelong bachelor, and wrote in a diary every day for years. At the time he died, he had around 40,000 pages worth of content that was eventually made public.

    • @thedwightguy
      @thedwightguy 3 роки тому +2

      @@Gameflyer001 think Regan without a strong wife.

  • @mrnonsense1031
    @mrnonsense1031 4 роки тому +231

    Canada: Britain, give me freedom, or else I'll politely ask you again!

    • @ehs1452
      @ehs1452 4 роки тому

      You do know Canada lost right?

    • @Admiral8Q
      @Admiral8Q 3 роки тому +9

      Don't make me ask politely a second time!!!

    • @gutsjoestar7450
      @gutsjoestar7450 3 роки тому +4

      lol
      Canada succeeded to be semi independent in 1867
      in the North americas act or something
      which instantly made Canada a dominion
      and no more a province of Britain

    • @kamanashiskar9203
      @kamanashiskar9203 3 роки тому +1

      Canada and the UK still have strong ties to each other though.

    • @taiwanesechainei5863
      @taiwanesechainei5863 3 роки тому

      @@gutsjoestar7450 its called the BNA act or british north america act

  • @jeffkadlec8264
    @jeffkadlec8264 2 роки тому +3

    I really enjoy the American flag with just "STARS" written on it.
    You, sir, are great at making minimalism hilarious!!

  • @Uzeil21
    @Uzeil21 2 роки тому +6

    Oh my bad I thought this video was about current events

    • @hugolafhugolaf
      @hugolafhugolaf 2 роки тому

      No, not really.

    • @lurk7967
      @lurk7967 2 роки тому +2

      @@hugolafhugolaf do you support what has happened in Canada for the past 2 years turning it into a two tier society?

    • @KamalasFakePolls
      @KamalasFakePolls 2 роки тому

      @@hugolafhugolaf Trudeau is fearfully shaving his legs in his bunker

  • @e.1165
    @e.1165 4 роки тому +44

    William Lyon Mackenzie's rebellion was actually more like 30 guys holed up in a tavern. One cannon brought a swift end to it.

    • @TiberianFiend
      @TiberianFiend 4 роки тому +15

      Well, there were only 40 people living in Canada at the time, so that was a pretty big deal.

    • @micahmachiela3288
      @micahmachiela3288 4 роки тому +1

      Some did escape to Navy Island near New York and hang out there for awhile

    • @SteelFisher
      @SteelFisher 4 роки тому +1

      eh, it was big enough I had ancestors on both sides of that battle

    • @gavinsmith9871
      @gavinsmith9871 Рік тому

      His descendent (grandson?) made up for it though by becoming our longest-serving Prime Minister.

  • @FreedomLovingLoyalistOfficial
    @FreedomLovingLoyalistOfficial 4 роки тому +233

    we in school and the rest of Canada call it the rebellion of 1837-38 we never really called it the Canadian revolution

    • @canadiancrafter5100
      @canadiancrafter5100 4 роки тому +4

      yup

    • @konstantinosnikolakakis8125
      @konstantinosnikolakakis8125 4 роки тому +21

      Exactly (although much of the people here in Québec celebrate "Patriots day" instead of Victoria day in honour of the damn traitors).

    • @drunkenmasterii3250
      @drunkenmasterii3250 4 роки тому +28

      Konstantinos Nikolakakis are you really a traitor if you rebel against your invaders?

    • @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014
      @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014 4 роки тому +13

      The quebecors rebelled because the anglos wanted to assimilate them, and after lord durham concluded that there was nothing such as « french canadian culture » while chuckling

    • @jumperwilli7770
      @jumperwilli7770 4 роки тому +6

      Saguntum-Iberian-Greek Konstantinopoli After he said that,countless historians published books,in the end durham was false.

  • @byme9829
    @byme9829 2 роки тому +4

    Looks like it’s that time again

  • @Orcasgt22
    @Orcasgt22 2 роки тому +2

    I love that upper canada is on the bottem and lower canada is on the top of maps.

    • @mikegreen3485
      @mikegreen3485 2 роки тому +2

      For cartographers, "lower" and "upper" typically refer to the way the local rivers flow. This is also why "Lower Egypt" is north of "Upper Egypt"

  • @merrittanimation7721
    @merrittanimation7721 4 роки тому +126

    Americans during the war: Oh boy they finally got around to revolting.
    Americans after the war: I had so much faith in you.

    • @lukeh2556
      @lukeh2556 4 роки тому +18

      Canada got what it wanted in small bits from and following from the revolution. It's like the slow revolution, and honestly Canadians might have pushed harder for full revolution if they weren't so concerned about U.S. invasion.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 4 роки тому +11

      @@lukeh2556
      Slow revolution exactly. The existence of the USA was itself a warning to the Brits that they needed to accommodate colonial aspirations.

    • @lukeshaul820
      @lukeshaul820 4 роки тому

      @Ginger Surely you mean cup or mug of coffee?

  • @TheBrickMasterB
    @TheBrickMasterB 4 роки тому +142

    "I'm upset"
    *gets shot*
    Gods I love that

  • @Vinemaple
    @Vinemaple Рік тому +2

    This is amazing... I only know about this because I either randomly wiki'ed the Post Libel, or heard about it from the Technical Difficulties... it's something that I would think would be below even History Matters's radar!

  • @Firingblind
    @Firingblind 3 роки тому +8

    As a Canadian I am somewhat proud of how we are as a people. Generally regarded as polite, we tend to show our teeth when needed and when pushed become fairly fierce warriors, evidenced by our involvements in World Wars and events such as these (and hockey lol). Even today, JTF2 flies under the radar yet those in the know understand its a force to be reckoned with. Pretty cool :)

  • @mattkomar7622
    @mattkomar7622 4 роки тому +75

    The more significant Canadian Revolution happened on March 16, 1994 when Doug MacNeil of Kitchener decided to politely tell the employees at his local Tim Hortons that they got his usual coffee order wrong. He had been waiting to speak up for 14 years.
    He apologized for inconveniencing them and for raising his voice in an indoor setting.

  • @TripWagstaff5213
    @TripWagstaff5213 4 роки тому +20

    Thank you for acknowledging that most of Canada’s provinces today have only recently become part of Canada. I did hear about how in the American revolution Nova Scotia had a movement to join the rebellion and was called the 14th colony for a while, might be something cool to look into 🙂

    • @ninjakidfuntime29
      @ninjakidfuntime29 2 роки тому

      Did u know that either nunavut or the north west terretorjes were made in 1999😯

    • @Lowlandlord
      @Lowlandlord Рік тому +1

      @@ninjakidfuntime29 Nunavut. NW Territories have been around since Hudson's Bay sold their land to Britain, Alberta and Saskatchewan were both carved out of it at different points, as Nunavut would be much later. Easy way to remember is that Nunavut is mostly Native, and is run by Natives, not something that the government would have been okay with further back.

  • @brendanmckee1846
    @brendanmckee1846 3 роки тому +3

    It’s probably better to think of these as two separate risings since, though they did occur at the same time for similar reasons, they had very different goals. The Lower Canada Rebellion, for example, was particularly distinct and had great importance going forward. Led by the self-styled Patriotes, the rising escaped Papineau’s (pronounced Pap-e-noe) control quite quickly and, following the example set by France, aimed to set up a radical, liberal Quebec republic. Though they failed, the Patriotes and the rising were one of the earliest expressions of a distinct French Canadian nationalism and set the basis for the development of a self-aware Quebec identity later in the century

  • @nicolasrobitaille5903
    @nicolasrobitaille5903 3 роки тому +2

    Fun fact, Durham litteraly suggested to assimilate the french-speaker into the superior Brittish culture and language, which would be considered cultural genicide by modern standard. Raté.

  • @ducttape82
    @ducttape82 4 роки тому +21

    Fun Fact: William Lyon MacKenzie was the first mayor of Toronto

    • @satorigaming4369
      @satorigaming4369 3 роки тому +1

      And so was Wolfred Nelson the first mayor of Montreal

  • @kkwolf1922
    @kkwolf1922 4 роки тому +8

    Another event of canadien revolution was the Red River Rebellion. In 1869, Canada was just a new born nation looking to expand its influence over all of the newly published ruperts land when the Métis majority took over the local British fort and proclaimed self rule over the territory, eventually creating the province of Manitoba. I vastly simplified it and I’m no where near an expert on the topic, but it’s quite interesting and I would recommend anyone interested in Canadien history to check it out.

  • @nicholassmith7359
    @nicholassmith7359 2 роки тому +1

    "The American Dream" part was spot on.

  • @simshadows
    @simshadows 3 роки тому +7

    The 2 Canadas were united the make the french Canadiens minority in the Canadien goverment since Lower Canada now had to share his with upper Canada. It was also made to facilitate the assimilation of the french population.

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 2 роки тому

      I wish someone could assimiliate France itself into the human race. As neighbours they're a real pain in the ass.

  • @Jonnyc448
    @Jonnyc448 4 роки тому +151

    It’s not much of a revolution, they basically asked nicely and then said sorry afterwards. All that matters is the syrup is safe.

    • @thomassutton3608
      @thomassutton3608 4 роки тому +11

      Well not really the government asked nicely the British said no to all 92 demands a full scale revolution started putting up farmers with shovels and pitchforks against the best army at the time. Entire villages were burned by the British many were killed 12 were hanged and many many more were sent in exile to Australia. Not counting the people whom’s houses were pillaged and burned as they were assumed to be partisans of the rebellions.

    • @brycelandon6387
      @brycelandon6387 4 роки тому +3

      America took its freedom on the backs of musket-toting badasses. Canada stumbled into its freedom the same way a 15-year-old boy loses his V-card - he did it with his socks on.

    • @little_wonderer9290
      @little_wonderer9290 4 роки тому +4

      @@thomassutton3608 At what point did we burn down the White House? Nobody seems to want to talk about that LOL

    • @generalkenobi5173
      @generalkenobi5173 3 роки тому +1

      @@brycelandon6387 i mean america received so much surpport at the time from other super powers who sent them troops etc to train up american civilians into proffesional soldiers. Add into the fact Britain was dealing with other wars at the time and the public opnion about the war in the states was shifting and british public were tired of it then you go yourself the making of an independence. For the most part the american independence was a series of british victories but in the end it was just too much for the british to continue. Public didn't want the war anymore, other superpowers and multiple countries got invovled, they were fighting other people the same time and it was expensive and boom you got ur asnwer.

    • @dennisschwartzentruber3204
      @dennisschwartzentruber3204 3 роки тому

      @@brycelandon6387 /But, we still got there . didn't we ?

  • @chrisscerbo5731
    @chrisscerbo5731 4 роки тому +11

    great video. in the USA they didnt teach us much about canada so it was nice to get this quick over view of Canadian history.

  • @ShadowTheBasementCat
    @ShadowTheBasementCat 3 роки тому +6

    The 'full-scale' revolt in Lower Canada was, in fact, pretty much limited to Montreal and to areas near the city, i.e. neighbouring villages, the Richelieu Valley and the area near the U.S. border south of Montreal. The rest of Lower Canada remained very much quiet, on account not only of the well-garrisoned stronghold in Quebec City but also of the influence of the local Catholic clergy, who had been alienated by Papineau's anti-clericalism, and of the opposition of the powerful land-owning aristocrats, both English and French-speaking, who saw the revolt as a liberally-inspired threat to their power.

    • @southerncoyote
      @southerncoyote 2 роки тому +1

      One of those times where had one thing been different, the whole outcome could have shifted. Had he been a devout catholic appealing to the upper class, who knows.

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 6 місяців тому +1

    Canada: "We're NOT sorry"
    UK: *Sweats in empire*

  • @jordanberndt4157
    @jordanberndt4157 4 роки тому +24

    Honestly, I'm Canadian and I didnt even know about this. It's like we're so ashamed of that one time we weren't nice we decided to just never talk about it again.

    • @zedxyle
      @zedxyle 4 роки тому +16

      Nah, you just didn't pay attention in your history class

    • @x999uuu1
      @x999uuu1 4 роки тому +6

      Are you from out west? You may not have spent alot of time on this

    • @jordanberndt4157
      @jordanberndt4157 4 роки тому +2

      @@x999uuu1 Yeah, I went to school in Alberta.

    • @archez8363
      @archez8363 4 роки тому

      @Jordan Berndt Embarrassment is very British

    • @54northca
      @54northca 4 роки тому +2

      @@jordanberndt4157 I'm from Alberta and we covered it in school, though not in depth. But then I find few people from Ontario were taught much if anything about the North West rebellion. And unless you are from the Maritimes you aren't taught about the Acadians. Unlike most countries we have yet to develop a "standard" national history / mythology.

  • @jf8465
    @jf8465 4 роки тому +50

    I didn’t even know they had one, I thought England just kinda forgot about you

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 4 роки тому +9

      The Brits have occasional lucid intervals.
      The unification of the two Canadas has been surprisingly successful.

    • @leifharmsen
      @leifharmsen 4 роки тому +7

      There was no rebellion and nobody forgot about anyone. Canada remains part of the Commonwealth.

    • @selinesbeau
      @selinesbeau 3 роки тому +2

      @@alanpennie8013 A significant portion of Quebec would disagree.

    • @nozecone
      @nozecone 3 роки тому +2

      You didn't even know we had one because we didn't - we had a rebellion (contrary to what another poster claimed).

    • @whiteprivilege4469
      @whiteprivilege4469 2 роки тому

      Read about the secret Canadian/American Patriot Societies that continued after this from 1842-1847.

  • @davidbailey8690
    @davidbailey8690 2 роки тому +1

    Fun fact: William Lyon Mackenzie was the grandfather of Canada's longest-serving Prime Minister, William Lyon Mackenzie King. WLMK is on the $50 bill, led Canada in WWII, and would talk to his dead grandfather via seances (and others, including his dead dogs).

  • @devilsoffspring5519
    @devilsoffspring5519 2 роки тому +1

    American Revolution: Bullets-&-corpses warfare
    Canadian Revolution: Beer drinking contest

  • @newbells1337
    @newbells1337 4 роки тому +102

    Canada: Aye dear father can I have my Independence and if I need to fight you then I'm not sorry!
    America: CoMe aT Me YoU GOdDAm REdCoAtS!! iM fRee noW!!

    • @Cjnw
      @Cjnw 4 роки тому +4

      oK nOrMiE

    • @BigD-nr8wn
      @BigD-nr8wn 4 роки тому +1

      @Angela Kindness ok Mr test video

    • @johnmemes6447
      @johnmemes6447 3 роки тому

      Baiesd comment

    • @SimonAshworthWood
      @SimonAshworthWood 2 роки тому +1

      By the time of that Canadian rebellion, the US govt preferred the status quo. I suspect this a reason for this was that the US capitalist ruling class was benefitting from trade with the British Empire.

  • @TheNewfyman
    @TheNewfyman 4 роки тому +4

    Really enjoyed this video. If you ever decide to do another Canadian topic I think the Fenian raids in 1866 and the early 1870’s would be really interesting to hear you talk about

  • @thenationaltimelyactionhou9328
    @thenationaltimelyactionhou9328 2 роки тому +3

    Oddly enough, I was born and raised here in Canada, but this is the first time I’m hearing about this.

  • @bobmabry1839
    @bobmabry1839 3 роки тому +3

    Thanks. Never heard this succinctly explained.

  • @hsdonnelly
    @hsdonnelly 4 роки тому +23

    A couple of other interesting things about this:
    a) After these "rebellions" (they are referred to as "rebellions" rather than "revolutions" in Canada), the British sent over Lord Durham as Governor General of Upper and Lower Canada with instructions to figure out what the heck was going on. Lord Durham's report made a number of recommendations. The most significant one was that the Governor General step back from "running the colony" (i.e. vetoing bills passed by the colonial legislature) and become a "constitutional monarch" style Governor General, much as what had existed in Britain since the early 1700's. This wasn't really adopted until 1849 when the Governor General signed "The Rebellion Losses Bill" which the English population celebrated by then burning down the legislature building (They perceived that it was giving compensation to the French who had rebelled against English rule). However this became the template for governing the rest of the British Empire going forward, or at least those parts that had large "settler" populations. (In Canada, this is referred to as "Responsible Government")
    b) William Lyon Mackenzie, the leader of the rebellion in Upper Canada quickly fled across the border to the U.S. to avoid being hung. The Americans greeted him like a hero of the American Revolution. Mackenzie then began setting up a provisional government for the Republic of Upper Canada. Volunteers began trickling in from various parts of the U.S. This being just after the 'Texas Revolution' in which American settlers broke free of Mexican tyranny so as to allow them to continue owning slaves (slavery had been abolished in Mexico), this seemed very much like the same thing: oppressed people rising up to gain their freedom.
    However the British were watching all this and eventually they decided they had had enough. So they sent a gunboat across the Niagara River to wharfs in Buffalo and sank the boat that had been supplying Mackenzie's little republic. The U.S. Government wasn't very pleased at this. However, the British argued that it was pretty obvious what was going on, so they had every right to strike back first. The American Government, not having done so well the last time they'd gone to war with Britain (1812) wasn't all that keen on giving it another try, so they let things stand.
    About 25 years later, the American Civil War is going on and suddenly a small Mexican port city very near the border with Texas suddenly starts doing a booming business, bringing in all sorts of items that can't make their way through the American blockade of the Confederate States of America. The U.S. Government then pulled out the previous incident involving Mackenzie and his little government and said, "Well, this is like that."
    The British, having set the precedent, had to more or less agree. However, some 50 years later, WW1 is going on and the Netherlands finds itself completely surrounded by German or German-Occupied territory. Britain once more pulls out the idea of 'anticipating harm' and puts a blockade on neutral Netherlands and only let through goods that are for domestic consumption.
    Fast-forward again to 2004 and George W. Bush announces that Sadam Hussain has "weapons of mass destruction". So, anticipating that he plans on using them, he engages in a 'preventative invasion' of Iraq.

    • @dougbarrett2049
      @dougbarrett2049 4 роки тому +1

      Nice train of justifications! Thanks

    • @christianfreedom-seeker934
      @christianfreedom-seeker934 4 роки тому +2

      Only we now know that Bush was lied to (Deepstate) and legally speaking we should NOT have invaded Iraq but instead asked the UN to double down on sanctions on Saddam Insane, who probably would have been deposed anyway....by radical Islamists! So yeah, the Middle East is a quagmire.

    • @nestlewaterreview1763
      @nestlewaterreview1763 4 роки тому +1

      Nice essay

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 2 роки тому +1

      @@christianfreedom-seeker934 Lol, you think Bush wasn't in on it?!!

  • @thomasnenneau2487
    @thomasnenneau2487 4 роки тому +16

    I believe it should be pronounced Papin-o, eau in French being pronounced "o"

    • @hughmungus1767
      @hughmungus1767 3 роки тому +2

      Also, as a lifelong Canadian, I've *always* heard William Lyon Mackenzie's middle name pronounced as "lion".

    • @TaftisBack
      @TaftisBack 3 роки тому

      r/whoosh

    • @robhobbs5589
      @robhobbs5589 3 роки тому +2

      my ears hurt every time his name was used

  • @jacobzaranyika9334
    @jacobzaranyika9334 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you🙏 for your support.

  • @Mr_T_Badger
    @Mr_T_Badger 2 роки тому +1

    I am told that my old next door neighbour’s house in Dundas, Ontario was where William Lyon Mackenzie hid during this time.

  • @MrCrazyeyes07
    @MrCrazyeyes07 4 роки тому +4

    Nice, the next Canadian video you should do should cover the Métis Red River Rebellion, and the North-West Rebellion.

  • @SuperWalshBros
    @SuperWalshBros 4 роки тому +4

    Thank you for covering this. Our own history classes dont even make mention of this (at least the ones I've taken on Canadian history).

    • @TheIceman567
      @TheIceman567 4 роки тому +1

      Carl Sandhop it’s a shame this is the real reason why Canada exist today. I’m from the USA I love learning about this.

    • @zedxyle
      @zedxyle 4 роки тому +2

      Our history classes do

    • @SuperWalshBros
      @SuperWalshBros 4 роки тому

      @@zedxyle That's good to know!

    • @x999uuu1
      @x999uuu1 4 роки тому +3

      What? Yes they did. If you live in Ontario, you learned of this in grade 7 history when you covered pre confederation Canada

    • @SuperWalshBros
      @SuperWalshBros 4 роки тому

      @JustEnd Yeah BC, that makes more sense...

  • @jonbooker6359
    @jonbooker6359 3 роки тому +1

    “Stars” on the flag killed me lol

  • @mayasej
    @mayasej 4 роки тому +10

    the french side was glorious tho and much more complicated than this.
    one of lord Durham's recommendation was forced assimilation and this created the Acadian and a lot of forced exile into other colonies and even, in the us making some part of Louisiana french. To this day, we speak French.
    Merci, de rien. Bonne journée.

  • @guillaumegiroux9425
    @guillaumegiroux9425 4 роки тому +6

    In Québec, the day of the revolt is a national holiday, which, fun fact, also falls on the Queen's birthday.

    • @zedxyle
      @zedxyle 4 роки тому +2

      Fun fact, the Journée des Patriotes has pretty much nothing to do with the first Monday preceding May 25th aside from the fact that the PQ in 2003 wanted something to further drown out Victoria Day in Quebec

    • @Xerxes2005
      @Xerxes2005 3 роки тому +4

      @@zedxyle What's wrong with that? That long dead English Queen is of no importance in Québec. While the Patriots are part of our history.

    • @zedxyle
      @zedxyle 3 роки тому +1

      @@Xerxes2005 the patriots play a far far far less important role in Quebec history than the British do.

    • @Xerxes2005
      @Xerxes2005 3 роки тому +2

      @@zedxyle Victoria is not "the British". And even so, screw them!

    • @zedxyle
      @zedxyle 3 роки тому +1

      @@Xerxes2005 Victoria is the embodiment of the British Empire, considering her long reign, and Montreal more than any other city in Canada flourished under her rule.

  • @reidwallace4258
    @reidwallace4258 4 роки тому +4

    *sees video title, then video length*
    Damn he went into depth on this one.

  • @sebastienpapineau1359
    @sebastienpapineau1359 4 роки тому +9

    Thanks for making a video on my great-great-great-great-great grandfather. :)

  • @marktufford1001
    @marktufford1001 3 роки тому +1

    Canadian History teacher here: There is no such thing as the Canadian Revolution. What this person is talking about is known here in Ontarwio as the Upper Canada Rebellion. It was highly localized, poorly organized and shut down almost immediately after it started. It did send the signal to Britain that they needed to look closer at the governance of British North America and inspired the Durham report, which did bring representative democracy. It most certainly WAS NOT a revolution in the same sense as the American or French Revolution. It was a small, isolated incident that cost very few lives and resulted in Britain creating a system of governance in the territory. The same thing happened in Lower Canada, but since the people were French speakers vs. English speakers it definitely took on a more nationalistic tone, but ultimately could only accurately be described as local unrest or a rebellion at best. Neither of these were revolutions.

  • @TheDolphinTuna
    @TheDolphinTuna 4 роки тому +3

    Remember learning about these rowdy boys back in history class. The one thing I remember is that our textbook mentioned that people were still finding bodies of dead rebels and soldiers in the springtime, as they were buried under intense snowfall.
    Spooky stuff.

  • @rockingthemike
    @rockingthemike 4 роки тому +12

    "papi-no" and "lion" not like "lyon", france (we definitely allowed americanization of the word to take hold) if you want proper pronunciations. :)

  • @alexpozniak4106
    @alexpozniak4106 Рік тому +1

    A recurring joke in your videos that I love is having the US flag be the stripes and just the word "Stars".

  • @simonfarley2310
    @simonfarley2310 2 роки тому +4

    This conflict was actually the main reason Canada (and later other British settler-colonies) got self-government. There probably would have been a lot more armed rebellions in these colonies (e.g. in the Australian colonies) later on had this not set a precedent, so it's pretty important!

  • @thescifigamer4447
    @thescifigamer4447 4 роки тому +6

    Is it just me that finds the phrase: "and then things started to turn a bit radical" to be a hilarious understamtment for rebellions.
    I think it should be used to describe more of these kinds of events:
    1789, France: There was a grain shortage, leading to higher food prices, while the aristocracy lived to total luxury, and then things started to turn a bit radical.
    1917, Russia: The tsar refused to end the war with Germany, there there was a food shortage, and then things started to turn a bit radical.
    The 1930s, Any country in Europe: The Great Depression lead to economic collapse, and a dispeling of the false sense of security that was brought about by the ending of "The War to End All Wars", and then things started to turn a bit radical.

    • @daviddewar6008
      @daviddewar6008 4 роки тому

      I know! Sometimes I have to pause and take in what he just said and laugh because how casually he says it. Its great

  • @northchurch753
    @northchurch753 4 роки тому +10

    We never really called it the Canadian Revolution we just call it the Upper Canada Rebellion. At least in my Province since ours was the Red River Rebellion

    • @attiepollard7847
      @attiepollard7847 4 роки тому

      What province is that?

    • @marjanp
      @marjanp 3 роки тому

      It's called Revolution only if it's successful.

    • @Efishrocket102
      @Efishrocket102 2 роки тому

      @@marjanp No it's not, a rebellion is (uncountable) armed resistance to an established government or ruler while a revolution is a political upheaval in a government or nation-state characterized by great change.

  • @oldfartatplay-rj7zp
    @oldfartatplay-rj7zp Рік тому +3

    One of my ancestors was sentenced in Absentia to be hanged for his role in the rebellion to the Family Compact. He escaped to Texas, where he died of yellow fever.
    And another was a member of the Royal Engineers, in Canada, about the same time.
    I'm perversely proud of both of them.

  • @marcarvalho86
    @marcarvalho86 2 місяці тому

    I'm a proud Canadian... did not know any of this. Thanks for the knowledge. It is much appreciated.

  • @austinwild6723
    @austinwild6723 4 роки тому +5

    Fun fact from a Canadian History Student: Canada didn't become the modern definition of "Canada" as we know it today territorially until 1949, and legally until 1982.
    Newfoundland and Labrador vehemently opposed the Confederation of Canada because they would not get nearly as much recognition in Parliament as they would as an independent crown colony (which to be fair is a truth) and they would in effect be picking up the rest of the colonies tabs when the debt became pooled together (this was actually a massive issue in Nova Scotia in particular, where 17 of their 18 MPs were against joining). But when the colonies complained to Great Britain about this they sorta just ignored them because they actively advocated for one large dominion instead of several smaller colonies (it put less of a strain on them economically) and it made no sense to break up a larger and, in their eyes, more efficient colony. Newfoundland was allowed to be left alone because they hated the idea so much they burned effigies of John A. Macdonald, and so was an independent dominion until 1949: where a slim majority (like 52% or something) wanted to join Canada so the British (at this point almost bankrupt from WW2) was VERY eager to capitalize this.
    By 1982, the Canada Act of 1982 gave Canada complete autonomy over its governance because up until that point the British Parliament had the power to amend our constitution at any time they wished (though through the Statute of Westminster of 1931 Canada and many other Dominions had more autonomy acting within their own self interests, they were still heavily influenced by the British).
    So in reality, whenever we celebrate Confederation Day it's more like we graduated high school and after going to college were monitored by helicopter parents until almost 40 years ago... while our angsty older brother the USA just sorta said "See ya" after high school after refusing to help pay the bills for crashing the family's car into our French neighbours house (we took over their house but still) and have been surprisingly successful the last couple hundred years by beating up the rest of the neighbourhood.

    • @x999uuu1
      @x999uuu1 4 роки тому +4

      Id argue Canada was alot more independent because of the Westminster Statute than you say we were.
      Also it still cracks me up how the only thing that got newfies to join was bankruptcy lol

    • @christianfreedom-seeker934
      @christianfreedom-seeker934 4 роки тому

      Thanks for the history lesson! So you guys were NOT a real nation until 1982? Wow! Pretty heavy stuff.

    • @austinwild6723
      @austinwild6723 4 роки тому

      Anonymous Libertarian sorta more like we weren’t fully autonomous until 1982

  • @ngamashaka4894
    @ngamashaka4894 4 роки тому +6

    Missing a lot of information.
    You did not talked about the fact the English hanged a lot of the patriotes and a few was sent to Australia.
    You also did not talked about the burning of the parlement in Montreal by the English...

    • @TomGB-81
      @TomGB-81 4 роки тому

      During those days, what is a "patriot" in Canada?

    • @sergelauzon7763
      @sergelauzon7763 3 роки тому

      @@TomGB-81 Je le suis encore en 2021.

  • @cdntrooper3078
    @cdntrooper3078 2 роки тому +1

    Wow i have a test on this on Thursday thank you this popped up in my recommended and i needed this

  • @KekusMagnus
    @KekusMagnus 2 роки тому +1

    What isn't mentioned here is that Lord Durham was of the opinion that French Canadians had "no culture worth preserving" and that the best way to prevent them from rebelling again was to culturally assimilate them into the English Canadian populace, which was the primary reason the two canadas were merged. This hostility brought french canadiens together and it is at the root of the modern Quebecois nationalism.

  • @TwinArsonists
    @TwinArsonists 4 роки тому +8

    You're map of Canada in the beginning is missing most of the Arctic Archipelago FYI.

  • @x999uuu1
    @x999uuu1 4 роки тому +6

    Ok few things.
    1) I know it was probably for the clicks, but the conflict is usually called the "rebellions of 1837" or the "upper Canada/lower Canada rebellions" over here.
    2) I feel that you kind of overstated how widespread the LC rebellion was. Whilst it did have a decent amount of support, they only really won one battle against the British army (Battle of Saint-Denis). They were crushed in every other conflict.
    3) The impact was massive. Both Canadas were non functioning "democracies" before this point. As you mentioned, only the upper class could vote. It was a feature the British had put in place after the American Revolution when loyalist refugees were streaming across the border. They thought the commoners couldnt be trusted with democracy.
    Part of Lord Durham's report called for responsible government. It meant Canada got actual democracy. These political forces eventually inspired politicians like the fathers of confederation to unite Canada.
    Also now that we're on the topic, please do a video on the attempted American invasion of Quebec during the Rev War.

  • @SylviusTheMad
    @SylviusTheMad 3 роки тому +3

    Not Canada's only armed revolt. There were also the Red River Rebellion and the Northwest Rebellion, both led by Métis leader Louis Riel.

  • @stephenzeni
    @stephenzeni 3 роки тому +1

    As a Canadian living in Ontario. We were always taught that the 1832 - 1837 revolts were rebellions not revolutions but eh call it what you will

    • @woolyl
      @woolyl 3 роки тому

      Same in Québec, and we also call them ''patriots''

  • @DanteTheDemon7
    @DanteTheDemon7 4 роки тому +6

    There are actually quite a few revolts and rebellions in Canada’s history such as the Red River Rebellion and the North-West Rebellion which lead to the formation of the province of Manitoba.

    • @attiepollard7847
      @attiepollard7847 4 роки тому

      What's the previous Providence before Manitoba?

    • @x999uuu1
      @x999uuu1 4 роки тому

      @@attiepollard7847 it was the Red River colony

  • @westvirginian7412
    @westvirginian7412 4 роки тому +9

    The Hunters' Lodge arose among Lower Canadian refugees, which recruited both Canadians and Americans. The U.S. Army sent troops into Canada to help the British quell the rebels. Ironic, given our own revolution. :)

    • @dennisschwartzentruber3204
      @dennisschwartzentruber3204 3 роки тому

      / Thus starting a trend carried on to this very day !

    • @nozecone
      @nozecone 3 роки тому

      "The U.S. Army sent troops into Canada to help the British quell the rebels." Huh? Never heard of that before - where'd you get that?

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 2 роки тому

      @@nozecone the library

    • @nozecone
      @nozecone 2 роки тому

      @@crowbar9566 I've read a bit on the subject and can't recall anything about American troops in Canada, so I'm afraid I'll have to remain skeptical for the time-being.

  • @tomkelly8827
    @tomkelly8827 3 роки тому +2

    I live in upper Canada, Ontario, and I may have learned about this a long time ago but thanks for the refresher! Very interesting!

  • @ppineault
    @ppineault 2 роки тому +2

    My favorite description of Canada ever!.....John Oliver: "Canada....when Great Britain and America had a baby and left it out in the snow"....😂still chuckling over that one :)

  • @HellbirdIV
    @HellbirdIV 4 роки тому +26

    Canada: Hey America since you guys talk big about getting rid of the British, freedom and liberty and all that will you help us with our independence?
    America: Yes, but actually no.

    • @TiberianFiend
      @TiberianFiend 4 роки тому +3

      America: No entangling alliances.

    • @genesis6d7
      @genesis6d7 3 роки тому

      the time in history when America was a pussy to the British after the War of 1812. Then America grew bigger balls and deep pockets and became the Dos XX man of the world

    • @Warsie
      @Warsie 3 роки тому +2

      @@genesis6d7 The Vritish did recognize antagonizing the USA over time was a vad idea, as the US was vecoming more powerful over the years relative to the Vrits, and that Canada would ve threatened more and more.