Interesting fact: Denmark actually never stopped recognizing the Baltic nations independence after 1940, they just closed their Embassies and acted like nothing happened. Then when the Soviets collapsed Denmark just reopened the Embassies, again, like if nothing happened. [Edit] Thanks for correcting me, it's true, Ambassadors are the people, and Embassies are the building. Sorry I got them messed up.
@@Riskystache Hardly surprising. For USA keeping cordial relations with USSR was plain and simply far more beneficial than throwing symbolic recognition which if anything would make situation worse. And in the end it was solid call. Danish or Icelandic recognitions were utterly irrelevant, it was USSR own collapse which secured Lithuania's independence.
@@morbidsearch Yeah I guess symbolic representation didn’t really matter when it was de facto the USSR, so just made it easier with the maps. Cool fact tho!
Technically, the Soviet constitution explicitly stated that the Union Republics (like Lithuania) could leave whenever they want to. Obviously Moscow wasn’t overly concerned on what their own laws actually said
Indeed, the integrity of the ussr was supposed to be held by triangle, party at the top, nkvd/kgb and the military. All of which were too rotten to handle gorbachev and his reforms
The fact that Gorbachov actually (eventually) allowed them to leave peacefully is one of the best things a government has done in human history- the USSR probably would have collapsed anyway, but he could have made it a bloody years-long conflict, like Yugoslavia or the Portuguese colonial empire or basically any empire before the last century. It's really sad that many Russian nationalists are paradoxically proud of every part of their countries' history, *except* this one which is actually worth being proud of
Ok, I know this is just a 3 minuter, but there was a lot more soviet intervention than this suggests. Vilnius tv tower definitely deserved a mention. When I visited Lithuania I was shocked at the events that generally went unreported in the west
Yeah, the West sucking up to "Gorby" as he was murdering protesters. He literally killed more people than the Manson family, yet for some reason they don't remember him as a serial killer.
Well might have as well talked about the use of the term “annexation” in the video, which is just silly, considering the amount of local collaboration and support soviets had on Lithuania and the other 2 Baltic states at least initially.
There's a street in every Lithuanian town named Islandijos gatvė in appreciation of Iceland's support to the restoration of independence. I think it's a nice touch, even if most Icelandic people don't know about it.
I've come to know a bunch of Lithuanian migrants living in Iceland and many of them have said that the only thing they knew about Iceland before moving here was that Iceland was the first nation to recognize they'r independence. They actually often bring that up when talking about Lithuania, and many of them even know the name of Iceland's prime minister at the time (I know a bunch of Icelanders who probably don't know who was prime minister at the time).
I’m an American of Lithuanian descent. When I went to Iceland, I thanked them for their courageous stance. The first President Bush and a lot of the Western press were treating Lithuania as troublemakers who were rocking the boat.
It's not meant to. HM is providing these as entertainment as well as education. It's meant to be short and punchy because we have..ooh I don't know.. THE WHOLE INTERNET to get any details. 😒
I’ve heard people who actually lived in the Soviet Union and they never lacked bread in the 80s. 30s sure but not the 1980s. They lacked a lot of things but not basic necessities like bread. There were indeed lines for so called “deficit” items. Items that were in short supply and that’s why you would have huge lines. But lines weren’t seen as something bad but rather a sign that the store had something interesting to buy that day. So saying bread lines isn’t right. They never were starving like in the 30s. They did however lack pretty much everything besides basic necessities which is why they were willing to stand in line when there was something besides the usual stuff on sale.
@@wertywerrtyson5529 I don't think people who think in msm-propagandised terms like "communism bad capitalism good" are going to read anything longer than a sentence or two.
The 1988 Olympic basketball team was a major source of Lithuanian discontent. 4 of the 5 starters were Lithuanian, but Moscow took credit. That got us both the Dream Team and the 1992 Grateful Dead Lithuanian tie-dye uniforms. The early 90s were so awesome...
a fleet of 50 ships commanded by Pliny the Elder was sent to help as soon the smoke from the Vesuvius was visible to those in Naples but it couldn't depart again from the port of Pompeii because of contrary winds, so many of the sailors sent to help, and Pliny himself, ended up dying. However, at least some of the richest men of the city were most likely able to escape either on their own or with some ships of the relief fleet since almost 18 hours passed from the first signs of the eruption to the catastrophic explosion.
@@brunogama5056 I don't see the point of this comparaison. US Secession War was caused because some states wanted to keep owning slaves, while Lituania was invaded by the USSR and by the Nazis during WWII, then occupied for 45 years
@@francemiaou Answer Me Please? Who was in Power in US in 1500? US not only invaded Native America Land. It commited Genocide, Ethnic Cleansing and Slavery. Now GO Back to Your Bubble Ok?
I absolutely love your channel, history has always been one of my favorite subjects and that you teach so much in so little time is awesome! Thanks for your work!
What's interesting about Latvia, Lithuania's neighbor, is that it also declared independence in 1990 (May of that year), and also suffered a half-assed intervention from Moscow, but nobody pays attention to it.
@pocketmarcy6990 Yes, and things were close to getting quite violent there. Thankfully, Dzhokhar Dudaev, commander of the Soviet garrison in Tartu, ignored his orders. Yes, that's the same Dudaev, who later led Chechen fight for independence (ultimately doomed).
@@pocketmarcy6990 Estonia's intervention came months after Lithuania (which was first, as the largest of the three), then Latvia (immediately after, with more coordinated resistance)
Wrong. Denmark was not "the first one to recognize Lithuania": it never recognized its (forced and thus illegal) incorporation into the Soviet Union in the first place.
Nordic countries have nothing to worry about from Russia, because the USSR's stalwart record of failure against Finland is a lesson to every Scandanavian of just how powerless the Soviets were in that region of the world. Note how Putin is TERRIFIED that Finland has joined NATO, now! lol
As someone whose ancestors hailed from Lithuania it's always good to see a video on the subject. My mum said the time she saw our Gran and Grandad at their happiest was in 1990, mainly because of their country being recognised and gaining independence and then the birth of my sister. That's how important it was to them. 😅
I remember seeing a political cartoon on a newspaper while waiting for breakfast at McDonalds as a kid showing 'Lithuania' being pulled away from the USSR as if it was thread, to say it was all about to unravel. I don't know why that is an image still stuck in my head. I was very little, but thought that 'Lithuania' was a neat word then.
I think what this video gets wrong is that Lithuania never actually joined USSR willingly, it was occupied. And this video implicates, that Lithuania wanted to leave due to economic situation. No, Lithuanians have fought guerilla (partisan) war during occupation and until 90s wanted independence. The opportunity was there. USSR never allowed to exit as a free state, even tho law stated that a state can leave any time it wants. USSR recognized Lithuania as independent country in 1920 and rennounced all claims on it. Somehow they still got away with it and everybody thinks it was fairly smooth, there were people killed, deported, opressed up until withdrawal of USSR army in 1993
Being 7 years old, remember armoured vehicles with troops on top driving through my residential street in capital Vilnius, arrogantly waving. This image stayed with me until this day, can't even imagine what any Ukrainian feel at the moment
@siouex i was 7 living 10 km from tv tower and i woke up because of tank shots 1991 01 13realised quickly something serious is going on...yeah watched tv translation till 3-4 am with parents
I spent an autumn in 1991 protecting our parliament with a gun. Soviets called us Nationalists in a sense of Nazis and illegal armed gangs, not recognizing as a proper military force. But we won in the end and Soviet army left our country in 1993.
My parents and my grandpa was there with a gun too We're glad that you didn't use it, we're glad that nobody but the Soviets used it, because it could have turned out bloodier than it had.
Lithuania was one of the most painful nations to conquer in Supremacy 1914. I didn't knew much about geography since I kept forgetting about it, either way when I was Finland I went below and the moment I went for Lithuania for its grains resources, the amassing amount of soldiers that nation was astonishing. I got completely demolished. It may had been slightly my fault since I already had to go from top to bottom and already exhausted quite a bit of resources until there but man, that used to give me nightmares for a few weeks.
Actually they tried. Those of us old enough to remember have not forgotten. Strong western response, particularly from the nordic countries forced Gorbachev to cease the militant approach.
As a Lithuanian who loves history. I gotta disagre, it was support from other soviet republics people, especially ukraine and russians who made the biggest impact. Oh, how the times have changed.
@@Buggylt Of course, one should not forget the russians, ukrainians, belorusians and other people in USSR demonstrating against the violent approach taken by Gorbachev and the hardliners. But one should also not understate the massive pressure by western countries and the economic reliance of USSR on western aid. One also should not forget the will of Lithuanians to resist soviet forces with any mean available to them.
As a Lithuanian, I agree with @buggylt. It was infact the intense disapproval of other Soviet Republics, including the Russian people themselves, that forced Gorbachev to stop. This is what worries me most given todays context - the Soviet Russians were not brainwashed - they themselves have grown dead-tired of the empire of broken mirrors that the Soviet Union was, and wanted USSR to let the Baltics go, hoping the Baltics and Russia can continue good, wholesome neighbourship afterwards. Too bad Putin worked hard to make sure the Baltics continue to feel nothing but justified distrust to Russia :)
Lithuania was NOT allowed to go freely. The Republic of Lithuania declared independence from the Soviet Union on 11 March 1990 and thereafter underwent a difficult period of emergence. During March-April 1990 the Soviet Airborne Troops (VDV) occupied buildings of the Political Education and the Higher Party School where later encamped the alternative Communist Party of Lithuania, on the CPSU platform. The Soviet Union imposed an economic blockade between April and late June. In the events of January 13, 1991 exactly 14 civilians were killed while 702 were injured. Gorbachev could not understand that Lithuania, as well as Latvia and Estonia, did NOT want to be slave states in the Soviet Union and had been illegally occupied for 50 years.
I remember this. Rush Limbaugh recognised this as well and never bought into the Western infatuation with Gorbachev; he called those articles "gorbasms", lol.
And all of these decades later, we Lithuanians have not forgotten Iceland being the first to recognise us. This move has been so important to us that you can see it echo in our own politics today. Takk Ísland!
That's the proof of how this world recognizes 1st and always forgets 2nd. Here in Lithuania we worship Iceland for being the 1st to recognize our Independence. Some cities has "Iceland street", some officially throws a party celebrating Iceland's national holiday in summer... but this is the first time i ever heard that Denmark recognized us very soon after Iceland did! Thank you Denmark!
In every Lithuanian school when teaching about the Independence of Lithuania one of the first things we learn is that Iceland was the first legitimate country to recognize us. All of us are grateful x)
Three more video suggestions (assuming you’re still going to be doing Patreon polls going forward?): 1.) Why/How did South Sudan happen? 2.) How did Portugal hold onto Macau for as long as it did? 3.) How does Free Association work?
It's so funny how countries refuse to recognise Somaliland because it could encourage more African independence movements. Meanwhile it took decades of war and over 2 million deaths for South Sudan to be taken seriously. Is that what the world wants?
2. Same as the British with Hong Kong. The main difference was the original lease on Macau had no expiration date. They further enforced they would keep it for good at the Treaty of Peking in 1887 before changing their mind a century later and signing a joint-declaration to transfer it back to red China.
@@emberfist8347 The Portuguese were in China before Ming arrived. When the Ming arrived, every person that could recall the arrival of Portuguese in Hong Kong (yes, they arrived there before the British) was already long dead. While all that you said is true, we have to take into consideration that the relationship between Portugal x China is different from The UK x China: Portugal considered Macau an overseas state that was fully Portuguese. However as Portugal already lost Goa (where the population was ok bring Portuguese) for the Indian invasion, in the aftermath of a communist riot, it was clear that getting clear of Macau would not only save face, but save money as well.
The Act of Unrestoration of the Restoration of Lithuania which didn’t do anything to the Lithuania literally gives off the angry notes from the Allied Powers during the Anschluss of Austria.
You know what surprises me that Stalin didn't Deport the entire Baltic state region and replace it with ethnic Russians( because Stalin actually have the power to do that)
He had the power, but he didn't want more international bad press than he got already. He still tried to make people (like the Chinese for example) join his cause after all
The main reason is probably that between the time of the annexations in 39 and Barbarossa not much time for any of those concerns was present, but after WW2 many nazi collaborateurs were deported/arrested
I noticed a couple of areas, like Karelia, that did not gain full independence were shown in different colors on the falling apart map. It would be interesting to hear more about the levels of Independence they achieved and/or was there ever a threat of them completely departing?
@@MilanfromSerbia91911 correct but I wondered if there was ever any threat of then leaving the USSR/Russian Federation or if they were white on the map simply because they declared their autonomy.
Autonomous region Leaving doesn't do anything for them, the region is poor and Russian speaking, to cut off an enclave of Russia in the north doesn't accomplish them anything. Karelia isn't anything but Russian, unlike say the central Asian states which are mixed Russian/other languages/heritages, or unlike Ukraine Imagine being poor and completely reliant on the rest of your country, and now demanding independence and maybe something silly like demanding tolls on railroads built and maintained by the Russian state (not their own), from e.g goods from Murmansk to the rest of Russia. The country would not last long, it's just not meaningful, Karelians consider themselves Russian not Karelians, same way Texans consider themselves American, and an independent Texas is a joke and no one there really wants it (and that's an actually rich state which could probably make it fine independent, Karelia could not).
@@NotFound-sm9rg It certainly does rhyme when you realise it's the same guy pulling the same strings in the same way every time. The only difference with Ukraine is that it happened a little too close to a NATO country's border.
Ever since I remember that the Baltics were of the first regions to gain support for independence from the USSR (Not only to gain independence, but also from the recent memory of their annexation in WWII), I sometimes wonder if a Baltic Union was ever a possibility during the Soviets collapse
Never really made sense for us a union with how different the languages are, and the strong national movements of each nation. But we’ll always support our fellow Baltic brothers!
@@Riskystache Well yeah, it totally makes sense for their nations to remain independent, specially now that their not in real danger (NATO), although my doubt came more from the interwar mentality that central European countries had of coming as greater buffer against imperial powers (Specially Russia), like the proposal of the Intermarium; like a never again of coming under Soviet/Russian control again, and maintain independence. Although I imagine NATO quit that worry for the most part.
@@quinasreveure6533 ahh yeah my bad, no you’re definitely right on that. In the interwar period there was an attempt to increase cooperation between the armed forces of each Baltic state, but it was too little too late sadly
@@Riskystache Federation could be doable. An unitary state wouldnt. But there is simply no reason to change the status quo, things are good as they are.
They didn't want a Baltic union, they wanted union with the EU and got it. Being part of the EU, and especially NATO, was essential to ensuring they were not once again swallowed by the bear.
Gorbachev was an idealist. He actually did believe that Soviet Union can be kept together by peaceful means simply by offering members trade, cooperation and prosperity, similarly like European Union does it now. The problem is that there was no prosperity, and Russian ongoing oppression for decades turned pretty much everyone against them.
@@TestTest12332he actually was right. Most USSR members wanted to stay, as you can see by the Soviet referendum. But they did leave but only after some hard liner communists staged a coup to get rid of Gorbachev. And also describing it as a Russian oppression is very wrong. The longest serving and most oppressive Soviet leader wasn't even Russian.
@@gamermapper shut your as up ussr can go suk a dk russia is literally ussr just renamed nothing changed only thing good about russia is literally nothing
@@gamermapper people put in seats of power in the member states didn't want maybe. Bet population in every country did. Moscow was simply milking the member states. Where do you think their military power came from? Moscow fkin starved millions of Ukrainians to death.
Only critique I have is not mentioning the acts commited in Vilnius by the soviet army, in Lithuania this is one of the most important parts of this period
This is great! I really whish there was a definitive documentary on the period from 1989-1991 that completely explains the events that led to the fall of the USSR.
Not that Lithuania was "allowed", but they put a strong resistance on it. In fact Lithuanians, alongside Estonians and Latvians, formed a line of people across the three nations, singing in defiance against the authoritarian Soviet rule. The Soviets were ordered to shoot, but due to widespread public resistance, they had to accept to let it go. You have to give the Lithuanians credit for it.
@danielhalachev4714they literally shot people to kill, you're deeply misinformed by russian propaganda if you believe the lies of russians EVER being reluctant to massacre humans.
@danielhalachev4714 People went to protest knowing fully well that military can shoot them. Oh, and they brought tanks, they were there alright. And they ran over some people. Without courage of the people there wouldn't have been anything. Without the will of the people soviet shithole wouldn't have collapsed. Yes, circumstances were right, but the independence wasn't given, it was fought and won. You want to see what would have been otherwise? Just look at russia today. Those chicken shits would rather send their fathers, brothers and sons or go themselves to die for a dictator who gives 0 fucks about them and puts them in a meat waves.
My grandfather was a protester in '91 we even have a holiday for those people that eoughly translates as freedom protectors day. I am really proud of my heritage
"To fight" in the context of indepence usually means war. There was nothing like it. A dozen of civilian victims on january 13th 1991, absolutely pales compared to any war of secession in history
@@gryn1s lithuanian partisans were fighting from 1940 to 1980s with guns and we basically declared independence after taking over baiscally all of lithuania ofcourse soviets quickly took it back
2:09 and to this day, Iceland is still commemorated in Lithuania for their brave decision. In fact, one of the most popular leisure streets in central Vilnius is now called Iceland Street (Islandijos gatvė) on their behalf.
The Lithuanian guy with the funny beard was Vytautas Landsbergis. He is still alive, an impressive guy and would have deserved to be mentioned by his name.
@@junit1606that retarded narrative about kgb agent is pushed only by vatniks or russian bots, either of them should be behind a fence, further from civilisation
Now this is a ludicrous title "allowed to leave". Lithuanian people paid with their lives for freedom, 14 people were killed by russian soldiers during January 13th events and 8 Lithuanian border guards were brutaly tortured and killed by omon troops
And how does it change anything on the fact that they were allowed to leave in peace? In the end, the price they paid for that was incredibly small than if the Soviets had tried to keep the union at all costs.
Obviously there were some bloody skirmishes, but the USSR didn't stage a full invasion of the country to take it back. I think that's mostly what the video is getting at.
One of the big reasons the nations wanted to leave as well was because they found out about the WWII era Warsaw pact, and the discovery of the secret agreement for dividing conquered territories (which included their lands) resulted in a confrontation and the final nail in the coffin. There’s footage of some of that here on UA-cam somewhere.
@@virgaslt the secret protocols regarding the division of post war Europe were not widespread and publicly acknowledged until perestroika revealed it in 1989, this led to many member states formally protesting and using it as their reasoning for withdrawing from the union. While the knowledge may have been known in secret it wasn’t publicly acknowledged or admitted to until the fall of the union. They admitted to the pact itself initially for most of their history, but the secret protocols were a state secret that was kept even from the governments of the occupied states. I’ve lost track of it now, but there was a video on UA-cam of the congress and one of the Baltic republics confronting them about the secret protocols right at the end of the Union.
It was an incredibly ballsy and incredibly lucky thing to pull off (and I'm really happy that it worked), but it helped other nations follow suit. Landsbergis was arrogant, ballsy leader that correctly guessed the extent of USSR decline (the chap with goattee at the beginning of the video), but there was also a leader of a communist party (Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas), who was smart in not preventing any freedom movements but misreporting to the central commitee in Moscow on purpose, and you cannot exclude several thousand people participating in Sąjudis and protests against USSR understanding well enough they could be beaten by police (and they were, couple of times). Brazauskas went on to become a Lithuanian president later because he was liked as a persona even after having communist ties in the past.
Lithuania showed perfect example of bravery to all of us, other nations occupied by evil and bloody regime. This is why we Georgians love our friend Lietuva a lot! 🇬🇪❤🇱🇹
Also, while Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarusians were pretty much seen as the same group, Slavs... Lithuanians were Balts. Even in Soviet times, Lithuania and Latvia were pretty much "abroad," at least in the atmosphere.
1. The South Yemen was formerly the British protectorate called Aden which later was decolonized after WWII it became a situation similar to Korea, Vietnam, or Germany where the differing political systems led to two nations claiming to be Yemen. 2. The jungles of South America were too thick and impenetrable to create any infrastructure that would remove the gap. We tried and couldn’t do it. 3. Thailand is legally speaking not part of the Axis not being a signatory of the of the Tripartite or Anti-Comintern pacts but they joined the war on Japan’s side because they were invaded by Japan before Pearl Harbor and had to join at gunpoint.
This happened when I was in my mid-thirties, but I don't remember any of it. Well, yeah, I remember the USSR-falling-apart thing, but not specifically the role of Vilnius. I did have three little kids at the time, so that might have played a role...
as a Lithuanian they actually tried to stop us but faced huge resistance. Edit: Never knew this many people hated my country no wonder why I don't watch this garbage anymore
'Allowed to leave' is an highly offensive and inaccurate formulation. Lithuania was a independent country long before Soviet Russia occupied it, and the occupation itself was a huge violation of international law.
Lituania restored independence after brutal Russian occupation... After Lituania left Soviet Union, soon other countries followed a suit until the whole regime collapsed. Lituania has independent culture, completely different language from kirilica. The history of Lituania dates back to 1009 and in middle ages Grand Dutchy of Lituania was the size of current Germany + France combined. Thats why we call it RESTORATION of independence and not DECLARATION of independece. 💛💚❤
2:32 Wow, that's an interesting map. Is it all the objects of USSR who wanted independence? As Uzbekistan is shown broken into 2 parts(one being autonomous region), I am surprised that Tajikistan is not(because half of its territory is autonomous region as well). Actually later it will break out in civil war in Tajikistan.
Karelia getting independence would have been interesting. Finland would get an interesting new neighbour, almost a mirror version of itself (Karelian is practically a dialect of Finnish, much closer than Estonian) that never did manage to break away from Russia (until then of course!).
@@domca4617 Yes, the language/dialect is pretty rare nowadays. Hence why it would be more of an alternative universe Finland, one where Russification eroded the culture and language away. But perhaps there might have been a revival had independence happened, where there's a small but growing number of Karelian speakers as it's taught in schools, a bit like Welsh or Gaelic. Russian would still be the language of the majority, but still...
I remember this period it was dicey and we all though things would get wild … we thought .. well in reality our adults as I was a kid .. they thought they’d just go out with a bang not a whimper .. so thank you so much Lithuania … not only am I glad your free .. but I’m glad Canada will be there for you
One thing that i dont remember the source from, is that Gorbachev, since he was born in the Soviey Union, didnt understand the separatist movements throught the USSR, thinking they were all "soviet citizens", disregarding ethnix diversity between russians, ukrainians, etc. Which is why he acted so hostile to baltic independence movements.
Interesting fact: Denmark actually never stopped recognizing the Baltic nations independence after 1940, they just closed their Embassies and acted like nothing happened. Then when the Soviets collapsed Denmark just reopened the Embassies, again, like if nothing happened.
[Edit] Thanks for correcting me, it's true, Ambassadors are the people, and Embassies are the building. Sorry I got them messed up.
Same with many other countries, including Finland.
Interestingly the United States did the same, so their lack of support in this situation is surprising.
@@Riskystache
I've seen world maps from the 50s and 60s continue to outline the Baltics, but they seemed to give up after that
@@Riskystache Hardly surprising. For USA keeping cordial relations with USSR was plain and simply far more beneficial than throwing symbolic recognition which if anything would make situation worse. And in the end it was solid call. Danish or Icelandic recognitions were utterly irrelevant, it was USSR own collapse which secured Lithuania's independence.
@@morbidsearch Yeah I guess symbolic representation didn’t really matter when it was de facto the USSR, so just made it easier with the maps. Cool fact tho!
Technically, the Soviet constitution explicitly stated that the Union Republics (like Lithuania) could leave whenever they want to. Obviously Moscow wasn’t overly concerned on what their own laws actually said
1:17 Knapoleon
Indeed, the integrity of the ussr was supposed to be held by triangle, party at the top, nkvd/kgb and the military. All of which were too rotten to handle gorbachev and his reforms
based Soviet. Kept their promises even if it make them look weak.
The fact that Gorbachov actually (eventually) allowed them to leave peacefully is one of the best things a government has done in human history- the USSR probably would have collapsed anyway, but he could have made it a bloody years-long conflict, like Yugoslavia or the Portuguese colonial empire or basically any empire before the last century.
It's really sad that many Russian nationalists are paradoxically proud of every part of their countries' history, *except* this one which is actually worth being proud of
@@AlexanderRM1000 he was a good man
Ok, I know this is just a 3 minuter, but there was a lot more soviet intervention than this suggests. Vilnius tv tower definitely deserved a mention. When I visited Lithuania I was shocked at the events that generally went unreported in the west
That's why Google is your friend.
Yeah, the West sucking up to "Gorby" as he was murdering protesters. He literally killed more people than the Manson family, yet for some reason they don't remember him as a serial killer.
West went to Persian Gulf to deal with some dude invading other country and Soviets went to VIlnius four days later.
Seems like a familiar story.
Well might have as well talked about the use of the term “annexation” in the video, which is just silly, considering the amount of local collaboration and support soviets had on Lithuania and the other 2 Baltic states at least initially.
There's a street in every Lithuanian town named Islandijos gatvė in appreciation of Iceland's support to the restoration of independence. I think it's a nice touch, even if most Icelandic people don't know about it.
Also couple Reykjavik named streets.
I've come to know a bunch of Lithuanian migrants living in Iceland and many of them have said that the only thing they knew about Iceland before moving here was that Iceland was the first nation to recognize they'r independence. They actually often bring that up when talking about Lithuania, and many of them even know the name of Iceland's prime minister at the time (I know a bunch of Icelanders who probably don't know who was prime minister at the time).
I’m an American of Lithuanian descent. When I went to Iceland, I thanked them for their courageous stance. The first President Bush and a lot of the Western press were treating Lithuania as troublemakers who were rocking the boat.
@@aDogNamedHandsome Because we knew this stuff will come back again.
Oh that's so nice, I'm from Iceland and I never knew that :3🇱🇹
My father was there at the television tower when the Soviets open fired. A short video like this really can't capture how tense and brutal things were
dude I see you commenting everywhere
It's not meant to.
HM is providing these as entertainment as well as education. It's meant to be short and punchy because we have..ooh I don't know.. THE WHOLE INTERNET to get any details.
😒
The Fake estonian is back again. He found Something more brutal than cocks of Teutonic horses
because this is bot
@@hari.sheldon
Come on brutal? don't be so dramatic compared to other places where millions died Vilnius was a walk in the park.
In the tough times of summer of 1991, Lithuania recognized Croatia. It meant a lot to us. Love to Lietuva from Hrvatska!❤🇭🇷🇱🇹
We love Croatia too mate
Love Croatia! Went there recently too. Beautiful is all I can say :)
We love u too my Croatian friend (I'm from Lithuania)
Croatia is just wrong christianity Serbia
@@kimono5181 incorrect. The difference is much bigger and more profound.
“Bread lines aren’t a sign of a strong economy.” What a good economic life lesson.
But remember:
Bread lines are a sign that communism is a bad system, but they're not a sign that capitalism is a bad system.
It were those bread lines that allowed the spread of communism in the first place
@@morbidsearch more precisely, it's still a sign that capitalism is a bad system, but not in the same meaning of bad as for communism.
I’ve heard people who actually lived in the Soviet Union and they never lacked bread in the 80s. 30s sure but not the 1980s. They lacked a lot of things but not basic necessities like bread. There were indeed lines for so called “deficit” items. Items that were in short supply and that’s why you would have huge lines. But lines weren’t seen as something bad but rather a sign that the store had something interesting to buy that day. So saying bread lines isn’t right. They never were starving like in the 30s. They did however lack pretty much everything besides basic necessities which is why they were willing to stand in line when there was something besides the usual stuff on sale.
@@wertywerrtyson5529 I don't think people who think in msm-propagandised terms like "communism bad capitalism good" are going to read anything longer than a sentence or two.
The 1988 Olympic basketball team was a major source of Lithuanian discontent. 4 of the 5 starters were Lithuanian, but Moscow took credit. That got us both the Dream Team and the 1992 Grateful Dead Lithuanian tie-dye uniforms. The early 90s were so awesome...
Lithuania's best contribution to the world is the song from The Routine in Friends.
I had one of those Grateful Dead Lithuanian tie-dye shirts!
I have a video idea: How did the Roman Government react to Pompeii?
Surprisingly, similar to what happens after modern day disasters. Throwing money at whoever survived and went back to finishing up a sports structure.
E
a fleet of 50 ships commanded by Pliny the Elder was sent to help as soon the smoke from the Vesuvius was visible to those in Naples but it couldn't depart again from the port of Pompeii because of contrary winds, so many of the sailors sent to help, and Pliny himself, ended up dying. However, at least some of the richest men of the city were most likely able to escape either on their own or with some ships of the relief fleet since almost 18 hours passed from the first signs of the eruption to the catastrophic explosion.
Not just the Roman government, I wonder how the Roman people reacted to it.
@@santiagoo.8958the main surviving documents would be from the people living there.
The Soviets did use force against Lithuanian civilians when they drove over them with tanks on January 13, 1991. 14 killed and over 140 injured.
Wow! US Secession War looks pale compared to that!
@@brunogama5056 I don't see the point of this comparaison. US Secession War was caused because some states wanted to keep owning slaves, while Lituania was invaded by the USSR and by the Nazis during WWII, then occupied for 45 years
@@francemiaou Answer Me Please? Who was in Power in US in 1500? US not only invaded Native America Land. It commited Genocide, Ethnic Cleansing
and Slavery. Now GO Back to Your Bubble Ok?
It wasn't about slaves @@francemiaou
@@erastvandoren Yes, Secession war was about slaves. That's a fact.
Proud to be Lithuanian, remember as a kid standing together with others protecting important buildings.
Yeah. But you're no Estonia.
@@MasterMalrubius Include Latvia too!
Didn't know knapoleon was surprised though 1:24
@@MasterMalrubius Estonia is basically the Disneyland of the Baltics.
Latvia is where its at.
@@smalltime0 They got Courland
I absolutely love your channel, history has always been one of my favorite subjects and that you teach so much in so little time is awesome! Thanks for your work!
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Because James Bissonette decided that Lithuania was too based for the Soviets
Stop false narratives 😂
The Patriots were also involved. Zanzibar Land was in support of this.
Nah
Bro blaming James all the time
James Basedsonette.
What's interesting about Latvia, Lithuania's neighbor, is that it also declared independence in 1990 (May of that year), and also suffered a half-assed intervention from Moscow, but nobody pays attention to it.
Didn’t something similar happen with Estonia as well?
@pocketmarcy6990 Yes, and things were close to getting quite violent there. Thankfully, Dzhokhar Dudaev, commander of the Soviet garrison in Tartu, ignored his orders. Yes, that's the same Dudaev, who later led Chechen fight for independence (ultimately doomed).
@@pocketmarcy6990 Yea and I think Lithuania as well but I'm not sure
@@pocketmarcy6990 Estonia's intervention came months after Lithuania (which was first, as the largest of the three), then Latvia (immediately after, with more coordinated resistance)
In Lithuania we always saw Latvia and Estonia in this together, you precious brothers and sisters
We gotta give a huge applause to Nordics (and Moldova) for being the first ones to recognize Lithuania, in spite of possible retaliation from USSR.
No way in hell the Soviet Union would retaliate against a western-alligned nation when they are already collapsing hard
Wrong. Denmark was not "the first one to recognize Lithuania": it never recognized its (forced and thus illegal) incorporation into the Soviet Union in the first place.
Nordic countries have nothing to worry about from Russia, because the USSR's stalwart record of failure against Finland is a lesson to every Scandanavian of just how powerless the Soviets were in that region of the world. Note how Putin is TERRIFIED that Finland has joined NATO, now! lol
At that time, the Soviets had bigger problems
@@majy1735 After going through the same with a Nazi’s around the same time I don’t blame them.
As someone whose ancestors hailed from Lithuania it's always good to see a video on the subject. My mum said the time she saw our Gran and Grandad at their happiest was in 1990, mainly because of their country being recognised and gaining independence and then the birth of my sister. That's how important it was to them. 😅
Lithuania was created a long long time ago. So independence was *regained in 1990.
@@damnboy451Yes, in 1990 Lithuanian independence was _restored._
I remember seeing a political cartoon on a newspaper while waiting for breakfast at McDonalds as a kid showing 'Lithuania' being pulled away from the USSR as if it was thread, to say it was all about to unravel. I don't know why that is an image still stuck in my head. I was very little, but thought that 'Lithuania' was a neat word then.
Cool!
I think what this video gets wrong is that Lithuania never actually joined USSR willingly, it was occupied. And this video implicates, that Lithuania wanted to leave due to economic situation. No, Lithuanians have fought guerilla (partisan) war during occupation and until 90s wanted independence. The opportunity was there. USSR never allowed to exit as a free state, even tho law stated that a state can leave any time it wants. USSR recognized Lithuania as independent country in 1920 and rennounced all claims on it. Somehow they still got away with it and everybody thinks it was fairly smooth, there were people killed, deported, opressed up until withdrawal of USSR army in 1993
Being 7 years old, remember armoured vehicles with troops on top driving through my residential street in capital Vilnius, arrogantly waving.
This image stayed with me until this day, can't even imagine what any Ukrainian feel at the moment
@siouex i was 7 living 10 km from tv tower and i woke up because of tank shots 1991 01 13realised quickly something serious is going on...yeah watched tv translation till 3-4 am with parents
Thanks for these videos, really appreciate it as a person who really loves history! ❤
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1:17 Knapoleon
@EEEEEEEE F
There's nothing we can do
I spent an autumn in 1991 protecting our parliament with a gun. Soviets called us Nationalists in a sense of Nazis and illegal armed gangs, not recognizing as a proper military force. But we won in the end and Soviet army left our country in 1993.
The Russian play book hasn't changed much since then has it? Just look at what they call the Ukrainians.
@@matthewgillies7509 - Correct. Just look at their official name for the Berlin Wall, "Antifaschistischer Schutzwall."
Nationalism was never a bad thing. It was made to be a boogieman so that european nations would accept occupation by foreign migrants.
@@postblitz I was gonna slam ya but I saw you follow the RTS game DORF so you're probably becoming cool.
My parents and my grandpa was there with a gun too
We're glad that you didn't use it, we're glad that nobody but the Soviets used it, because it could have turned out bloodier than it had.
That 'holding their breath' and then the doctor standing next to the fallen world animation almost offed me. Amazing!
As a Lithuanian, thank you for this video! It was intresting to see your spin on it.
Linkėjimai iš Vilniaus!
Mind your attitude, Nazi lover!
Lithuania was one of the most painful nations to conquer in Supremacy 1914. I didn't knew much about geography since I kept forgetting about it, either way when I was Finland I went below and the moment I went for Lithuania for its grains resources, the amassing amount of soldiers that nation was astonishing. I got completely demolished. It may had been slightly my fault since I already had to go from top to bottom and already exhausted quite a bit of resources until there but man, that used to give me nightmares for a few weeks.
@@VinnyUnion why are u talking about hoi4 or smth
@@Mortabluntoh, look. A fascist.
@@barsukascool mobile game
Actually they tried. Those of us old enough to remember have not forgotten. Strong western response, particularly from the nordic countries forced Gorbachev to cease the militant approach.
As a Lithuanian who loves history. I gotta disagre, it was support from other soviet republics people, especially ukraine and russians who made the biggest impact. Oh, how the times have changed.
@@Buggylt Of course, one should not forget the russians, ukrainians, belorusians and other people in USSR demonstrating against the violent approach taken by Gorbachev and the hardliners. But one should also not understate the massive pressure by western countries and the economic reliance of USSR on western aid. One also should not forget the will of Lithuanians to resist soviet forces with any mean available to them.
@danielhalachev4714 No. It is quite possible. It is simple to understand unless you are a complete moron.
As a Lithuanian, I agree with @buggylt. It was infact the intense disapproval of other Soviet Republics, including the Russian people themselves, that forced Gorbachev to stop. This is what worries me most given todays context - the Soviet Russians were not brainwashed - they themselves have grown dead-tired of the empire of broken mirrors that the Soviet Union was, and wanted USSR to let the Baltics go, hoping the Baltics and Russia can continue good, wholesome neighbourship afterwards. Too bad Putin worked hard to make sure the Baltics continue to feel nothing but justified distrust to Russia :)
Lithuania was NOT allowed to go freely. The Republic of Lithuania declared independence from the Soviet Union on 11 March 1990 and thereafter underwent a difficult period of emergence. During March-April 1990 the Soviet Airborne Troops (VDV) occupied buildings of the Political Education and the Higher Party School where later encamped the alternative Communist Party of Lithuania, on the CPSU platform.
The Soviet Union imposed an economic blockade between April and late June. In the events of January 13, 1991 exactly 14 civilians were killed while 702 were injured. Gorbachev could not understand that Lithuania, as well as Latvia and Estonia, did NOT want to be slave states in the Soviet Union and had been illegally occupied for 50 years.
I remember this. Rush Limbaugh recognised this as well and never bought into the Western infatuation with Gorbachev; he called those articles "gorbasms", lol.
@@zimriel It's a bit ironic that now it's the Rush Limbaugh's fans who are supporting Putin's Ukrainian invasion...
What makes me so happy is new History Matters videos
And all of these decades later, we Lithuanians have not forgotten Iceland being the first to recognise us. This move has been so important to us that you can see it echo in our own politics today. Takk Ísland!
That's the proof of how this world recognizes 1st and always forgets 2nd.
Here in Lithuania we worship Iceland for being the 1st to recognize our Independence. Some cities has "Iceland street", some officially throws a party celebrating Iceland's national holiday in summer... but this is the first time i ever heard that Denmark recognized us very soon after Iceland did!
Thank you Denmark!
iceland’s independence day is actually my birthday and im also a lithuanian, funny ties there lmao
That "holding their breath" snippet killed me 😂
I'm really much impressed with your personality here. And your posts are so interesting..
Of mankind we may say in general they are fickle, hypocritical, and greedy of gain.
In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart.
@@thomasnorris7285Please, it will be of benefit if you share more of your educational business lessons and ideas fact that's working recently.
I'm inspired to be a better person every day.@@maureencarson5493
@@maureencarson5493Honestly speaking real estate has been the best but crypto is better rough for fast wealth growth.
Proud of my country of Iceland coming to Lithuania's aid (even if it was only diplomatically)~
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@@EEEEEEEE Thank you for blessing me with your mighty letter. I am eternally grateful~
In every Lithuanian school when teaching about the Independence of Lithuania one of the first things we learn is that Iceland was the first legitimate country to recognize us. All of us are grateful x)
We have a street named after Iceland in our capital. Also one highway. It ain't much, but it's honest gratitude 😅
What else do they have to do there?
Soviet Union collapses
Kazakhstan: “ where did everyone go”
Three more video suggestions (assuming you’re still going to be doing Patreon polls going forward?):
1.) Why/How did South Sudan happen?
2.) How did Portugal hold onto Macau for as long as it did?
3.) How does Free Association work?
It's so funny how countries refuse to recognise Somaliland because it could encourage more African independence movements.
Meanwhile it took decades of war and over 2 million deaths for South Sudan to be taken seriously. Is that what the world wants?
2. Same as the British with Hong Kong. The main difference was the original lease on Macau had no expiration date. They further enforced they would keep it for good at the Treaty of Peking in 1887 before changing their mind a century later and signing a joint-declaration to transfer it back to red China.
@@emberfist8347 The Portuguese were in China before Ming arrived. When the Ming arrived, every person that could recall the arrival of Portuguese in Hong Kong (yes, they arrived there before the British) was already long dead. While all that you said is true, we have to take into consideration that the relationship between Portugal x China is different from The UK x China: Portugal considered Macau an overseas state that was fully Portuguese. However as Portugal already lost Goa (where the population was ok bring Portuguese) for the Indian invasion, in the aftermath of a communist riot, it was clear that getting clear of Macau would not only save face, but save money as well.
The Act of Unrestoration of the Restoration of Lithuania which didn’t do anything to the Lithuania literally gives off the angry notes from the Allied Powers during the Anschluss of Austria.
Got something 1:17 Knapoleon
You know what surprises me that Stalin didn't Deport the entire Baltic state region and replace it with ethnic Russians( because Stalin actually have the power to do that)
He had the power, but he didn't want more international bad press than he got already. He still tried to make people (like the Chinese for example) join his cause after all
I doubt "bad press" is something Stalin would have cared about.@@theultimatefreak666
Oh but he DID try, you know. Stalin reported a lot of the ethnic Balts/Estonians to Siberia.
a lot of russians moved into baltics
The main reason is probably that between the time of the annexations in 39 and Barbarossa not much time for any of those concerns was present, but after WW2 many nazi collaborateurs were deported/arrested
I noticed a couple of areas, like Karelia, that did not gain full independence were shown in different colors on the falling apart map. It would be interesting to hear more about the levels of Independence they achieved and/or was there ever a threat of them completely departing?
Karelia was once a Soviet republic
Don't know that much about Karelia, but Tatarstan's story from 1990 to 1995 or so is an interesting one
@@MilanfromSerbia91911 correct but I wondered if there was ever any threat of then leaving the USSR/Russian Federation or if they were white on the map simply because they declared their autonomy.
@@ivario thanks I will have to look their history up.
Autonomous region
Leaving doesn't do anything for them, the region is poor and Russian speaking, to cut off an enclave of Russia in the north doesn't accomplish them anything. Karelia isn't anything but Russian, unlike say the central Asian states which are mixed Russian/other languages/heritages, or unlike Ukraine
Imagine being poor and completely reliant on the rest of your country, and now demanding independence and maybe something silly like demanding tolls on railroads built and maintained by the Russian state (not their own), from e.g goods from Murmansk to the rest of Russia. The country would not last long, it's just not meaningful, Karelians consider themselves Russian not Karelians, same way Texans consider themselves American, and an independent Texas is a joke and no one there really wants it (and that's an actually rich state which could probably make it fine independent, Karelia could not).
Didn't expect to see a video about my country on this channel after watching it for a few years :) Thanks!
Nice to see people talk about Baltic countries, greetings from Estonia.
We love the people from the Baltics, they are some of the nicest, most honest, humble and reliable (smart too!) people we have ever met here in japan!
@@1kumokun Thank you we appreciate your people too.
"And so he sent troops into Lithuania to nominally protect the Russian-speaking people there from a decaying government"
Hey, I've seen this one!
It's a classic for sure
History rhymes)))
@@NotFound-sm9rg It certainly does rhyme when you realise it's the same guy pulling the same strings in the same way every time. The only difference with Ukraine is that it happened a little too close to a NATO country's border.
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Congrats, now you understand why all of Eastern Europe is reacting so heavily!
As Lithuanian, I would like to recognize Moldova, Iceland and Denmark as GOATS for being first to recognize our independence.
Ever since I remember that the Baltics were of the first regions to gain support for independence from the USSR (Not only to gain independence, but also from the recent memory of their annexation in WWII), I sometimes wonder if a Baltic Union was ever a possibility during the Soviets collapse
Never really made sense for us a union with how different the languages are, and the strong national movements of each nation. But we’ll always support our fellow Baltic brothers!
@@Riskystache Well yeah, it totally makes sense for their nations to remain independent, specially now that their not in real danger (NATO), although my doubt came more from the interwar mentality that central European countries had of coming as greater buffer against imperial powers (Specially Russia), like the proposal of the Intermarium; like a never again of coming under Soviet/Russian control again, and maintain independence.
Although I imagine NATO quit that worry for the most part.
@@quinasreveure6533 ahh yeah my bad, no you’re definitely right on that. In the interwar period there was an attempt to increase cooperation between the armed forces of each Baltic state, but it was too little too late sadly
@@Riskystache Federation could be doable. An unitary state wouldnt. But there is simply no reason to change the status quo, things are good as they are.
They didn't want a Baltic union, they wanted union with the EU and got it. Being part of the EU, and especially NATO, was essential to ensuring they were not once again swallowed by the bear.
James Bissonett could bring back and destroy the USSR. Bissonett giveth and Bissonnet can taketh.
1:17 Knapoleon is there, God day
The guy changing color while holding his breath was a nice touch
Thanks for the great video.. I truly miss those #10 minute ones
Gorbachev: Look, I'm going to be fair. You can leave if you REAAALLY want to, but of course you don't wan-
Lithuania: *leaves*
Gorbachev: :O
Gorbachev was an idealist. He actually did believe that Soviet Union can be kept together by peaceful means simply by offering members trade, cooperation and prosperity, similarly like European Union does it now. The problem is that there was no prosperity, and Russian ongoing oppression for decades turned pretty much everyone against them.
Basically haha 😅
@@TestTest12332he actually was right. Most USSR members wanted to stay, as you can see by the Soviet referendum. But they did leave but only after some hard liner communists staged a coup to get rid of Gorbachev. And also describing it as a Russian oppression is very wrong. The longest serving and most oppressive Soviet leader wasn't even Russian.
@@gamermapper shut your as up ussr can go suk a dk russia is literally ussr just renamed nothing changed only thing good about russia is literally nothing
@@gamermapper people put in seats of power in the member states didn't want maybe. Bet population in every country did. Moscow was simply milking the member states. Where do you think their military power came from? Moscow fkin starved millions of Ukrainians to death.
Only critique I have is not mentioning the acts commited in Vilnius by the soviet army, in Lithuania this is one of the most important parts of this period
Counter-Argument; 1:24 Knapoleon
@@adrianafamilymember6427thats just about sanctions, not about tanks in the streets
This is great! I really whish there was a definitive documentary on the period from 1989-1991 that completely explains the events that led to the fall of the USSR.
Not that Lithuania was "allowed", but they put a strong resistance on it. In fact Lithuanians, alongside Estonians and Latvians, formed a line of people across the three nations, singing in defiance against the authoritarian Soviet rule. The Soviets were ordered to shoot, but due to widespread public resistance, they had to accept to let it go. You have to give the Lithuanians credit for it.
@danielhalachev4714they literally shot people to kill, you're deeply misinformed by russian propaganda if you believe the lies of russians EVER being reluctant to massacre humans.
@danielhalachev4714There would been second guerilla war. My uncle was part of resistance.
@danielhalachev4714 People went to protest knowing fully well that military can shoot them. Oh, and they brought tanks, they were there alright. And they ran over some people. Without courage of the people there wouldn't have been anything. Without the will of the people soviet shithole wouldn't have collapsed. Yes, circumstances were right, but the independence wasn't given, it was fought and won. You want to see what would have been otherwise? Just look at russia today. Those chicken shits would rather send their fathers, brothers and sons or go themselves to die for a dictator who gives 0 fucks about them and puts them in a meat waves.
@danielhalachev4714 They did bring tanks. People formed a human barrier around the TV tower and some got literally crushed as tanks moved forward.
@@rebel8707 ha-ha-ha)
ACIU!!! Thank you so much for making this video!!! I've never been able to explain this in 3 minutes!!!
My grandfather was a protester in '91 we even have a holiday for those people that eoughly translates as freedom protectors day. I am really proud of my heritage
And 1:17 Knapoleon being shall ling
Imagine being proud of the failed generation which ruined the world
@@KekusMagnus aww look at little tankie jr, wanna milk and an cookie?😘
Proud of what? Maybe it didn't disappear in the Soviet Union but Lithuania is now in the process of dissapearing within the EU lol
@@gehdochnicht atleast they didn't die out of russian communism
Lithuania wasn’t “allowed” to leave the USSR they fought for their independence
"To fight" in the context of indepence usually means war. There was nothing like it. A dozen of civilian victims on january 13th 1991, absolutely pales compared to any war of secession in history
@@gryn1s lithuanian partisans were fighting from 1940 to 1980s with guns and we basically declared independence after taking over baiscally all of lithuania ofcourse soviets quickly took it back
@@gryn1sir dar pats lietuvius yra nx
As a Lithuanian, I am happy to see video sbout my country in this chanel.
So in short they wanted to stop it but couldn’t because problems.
Always a delight to see a new video of yours.
Lithuanian here, thanks a lot for making this video! 🙏
1:11 LMAO Gorbachev's Soviet Hawaiian shirt!
2:09 and to this day, Iceland is still commemorated in Lithuania for their brave decision. In fact, one of the most popular leisure streets in central Vilnius is now called Iceland Street (Islandijos gatvė) on their behalf.
Love LT so much, warm greetings from Bulgaria. Very cool country
The Lithuanian guy with the funny beard was Vytautas Landsbergis.
He is still alive, an impressive guy and would have deserved to be mentioned by his name.
Landsbergis is based and a proper chad 👌
@@ocqueoc He was a kgb agent, not a chad.
@@junit1606 earth is flat as well, right?
@@ocqueoc if you believe so, im not going to argue on that.
@@junit1606that retarded narrative about kgb agent is pushed only by vatniks or russian bots, either of them should be behind a fence, further from civilisation
Now this is a ludicrous title "allowed to leave". Lithuanian people paid with their lives for freedom, 14 people were killed by russian soldiers during January 13th events and 8 Lithuanian border guards were brutaly tortured and killed by omon troops
And how does it change anything on the fact that they were allowed to leave in peace? In the end, the price they paid for that was incredibly small than if the Soviets had tried to keep the union at all costs.
Obviously there were some bloody skirmishes, but the USSR didn't stage a full invasion of the country to take it back. I think that's mostly what the video is getting at.
Visited Lithuania a few years ago. Very underrated country. ❤
".....sent troops to Lithuania to protect the Russian speaking....." I love how Russia repeats Goebbels propaganda method even to this day.
One of the big reasons the nations wanted to leave as well was because they found out about the WWII era Warsaw pact, and the discovery of the secret agreement for dividing conquered territories (which included their lands) resulted in a confrontation and the final nail in the coffin. There’s footage of some of that here on UA-cam somewhere.
"they found out about the WWII era Warsaw pact" - what do u mean by that, ..- we knew it always.
@@virgaslt the secret protocols regarding the division of post war Europe were not widespread and publicly acknowledged until perestroika revealed it in 1989, this led to many member states formally protesting and using it as their reasoning for withdrawing from the union. While the knowledge may have been known in secret it wasn’t publicly acknowledged or admitted to until the fall of the union.
They admitted to the pact itself initially for most of their history, but the secret protocols were a state secret that was kept even from the governments of the occupied states.
I’ve lost track of it now, but there was a video on UA-cam of the congress and one of the Baltic republics confronting them about the secret protocols right at the end of the Union.
the daisy field got a rainbow upgrade! thanks james and gang!
I am extremely grateful to you, for talking about Lithuania!
It was an incredibly ballsy and incredibly lucky thing to pull off (and I'm really happy that it worked), but it helped other nations follow suit. Landsbergis was arrogant, ballsy leader that correctly guessed the extent of USSR decline (the chap with goattee at the beginning of the video), but there was also a leader of a communist party (Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas), who was smart in not preventing any freedom movements but misreporting to the central commitee in Moscow on purpose, and you cannot exclude several thousand people participating in Sąjudis and protests against USSR understanding well enough they could be beaten by police (and they were, couple of times). Brazauskas went on to become a Lithuanian president later because he was liked as a persona even after having communist ties in the past.
Greetings from Estonia to my lithuanian friends!!!
“How many dictators does it take, to turn an empire into a Union of ruinous states? It’s a disgrace what you did to your own people!” Rasputin
"your daddy beat you like a dog and now youre evil"
"You're from Georgia, sweet Georgia, and the history books unfold ya"
@@ironnwizzard"as a messed up mothafucka bent in the mind"
"As a messed up motherfucker bent in the mind, who built a superpower but paid the price."
"As a messed up motherfucker, bent in the mind"
Lithuania showed perfect example of bravery to all of us, other nations occupied by evil and bloody regime.
This is why we Georgians love our friend Lietuva a lot! 🇬🇪❤🇱🇹
You know its a good day when HM uploads you know its a good day ( or for me night 😅 )
Also, while Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarusians were pretty much seen as the same group, Slavs... Lithuanians were Balts. Even in Soviet times, Lithuania and Latvia were pretty much "abroad," at least in the atmosphere.
No, they weren't basically the same group.
Because it meant Lithuania would be ruled by James Bisonette
Nah
@jamesbissonette8002 You're probably too busy putting food on history matters table
@@jamesbissonette8002it pays to be the first mentioned alphabetically. However, it be a shame if I an Acevedo outstaged you my prairie bovine friend
1:24 Knapoleon
@jamesbissonette8002 1:17
Knapoleon
Some video ideas:
1)Why were there 2 Yemen?
2)Why does the Darien Gap exist?
3)Why did Thailand join the Axis?
1. The South Yemen was formerly the British protectorate called Aden which later was decolonized after WWII it became a situation similar to Korea, Vietnam, or Germany where the differing political systems led to two nations claiming to be Yemen.
2. The jungles of South America were too thick and impenetrable to create any infrastructure that would remove the gap. We tried and couldn’t do it.
3. Thailand is legally speaking not part of the Axis not being a signatory of the of the Tripartite or Anti-Comintern pacts but they joined the war on Japan’s side because they were invaded by Japan before Pearl Harbor and had to join at gunpoint.
Next video idea: "Why Lithuania looks like a squashed Africa"
Most surprisingly, north and west border looked exactly like that all the from the Lithuanian kingdom (1253). It would be a long video
This episode seems very crisp and I can’t explain why
Never clicked so quick, love when you upload
"It's not us, it's you." Pretty accurate summation of the Soviet Republics wanting out.
This happened when I was in my mid-thirties, but I don't remember any of it. Well, yeah, I remember the USSR-falling-apart thing, but not specifically the role of Vilnius. I did have three little kids at the time, so that might have played a role...
Why isn't Estonia included in the Soviet silhouette on the thumbnail?
One possible reason could be because technically Estonia had already declared sovereignity in 1988.
Keep up the good work man!
I wish that we get another Q and A for the end of the year
as a Lithuanian they actually tried to stop us but faced huge resistance.
Edit: Never knew this many people hated my country no wonder why I don't watch this garbage anymore
A human barrier to stop tanks? And the hesitation of the soldiers to open fire?
Not enough resistance to stop the soviet army, Gorbačov just didnt give the order to start a full scale war.
ah yeah, 12 people held against the soviet army that didnt want to invade.
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Do you live in Lithuania?
Lithuania mentioned🔥🔥🔥🗣️🗣️
'Allowed to leave' is an highly offensive and inaccurate formulation. Lithuania was a independent country long before Soviet Russia occupied it, and the occupation itself was a huge violation of international law.
These are valuable viewing. I often think, "I know that story". Then I watch and learn plural things.
Another amazing video
Lituania restored independence after brutal Russian occupation... After Lituania left Soviet Union, soon other countries followed a suit until the whole regime collapsed. Lituania has independent culture, completely different language from kirilica. The history of Lituania dates back to 1009 and in middle ages Grand Dutchy of Lituania was the size of current Germany + France combined. Thats why we call it RESTORATION of independence and not DECLARATION of independece. 💛💚❤
2:32 Wow, that's an interesting map. Is it all the objects of USSR who wanted independence? As Uzbekistan is shown broken into 2 parts(one being autonomous region), I am surprised that Tajikistan is not(because half of its territory is autonomous region as well). Actually later it will break out in civil war in Tajikistan.
Karelia getting independence would have been interesting. Finland would get an interesting new neighbour, almost a mirror version of itself (Karelian is practically a dialect of Finnish, much closer than Estonian) that never did manage to break away from Russia (until then of course!).
@@Croz89Maybe in 1920, but now it is practically all Russian.
@@domca4617 Yes, the language/dialect is pretty rare nowadays. Hence why it would be more of an alternative universe Finland, one where Russification eroded the culture and language away. But perhaps there might have been a revival had independence happened, where there's a small but growing number of Karelian speakers as it's taught in schools, a bit like Welsh or Gaelic. Russian would still be the language of the majority, but still...
@@domca4617Borg Assimilation
Grettings from Poland to all fellow Lithuanians
If History Matters ever does more videos on nations that collapsed or broke up, he NEEDS to use that glass breaking sound effect.
Great video as always 👍🏻
I remember this period it was dicey and we all though things would get wild … we thought .. well in reality our adults as I was a kid .. they thought they’d just go out with a bang not a whimper .. so thank you so much Lithuania … not only am I glad your free .. but I’m glad Canada will be there for you
I love how the short answer for the entire USSR just dying is always "Gorbachev was too nice"
Blame Yeltsin not him. He caused the ultimate collapse and we made that drunkard the first President.
Opposite of how Russian Empire/USSR rises
@@adrianafamilymember6427 "modern problems require modern solutions"
Gorbachev had a distinct lack of Stalin. And was a much better human for that.
The USSR would have died by one way or another. Gorbathew just kept a whole lot of people from dying.
One thing that i dont remember the source from, is that Gorbachev, since he was born in the Soviey Union, didnt understand the separatist movements throught the USSR, thinking they were all "soviet citizens", disregarding ethnix diversity between russians, ukrainians, etc. Which is why he acted so hostile to baltic independence movements.
Sound effects are top.
I’m really enjoying this one
I just love how the August Coup was meant to make URSS great again buy in the proccess just FKED everything to worst lmao
Finally! Video about Lithuania and Baltics! Thank you :)
I am thankful to the people who came before me and fought for my right to speak Lithuanian.
Just wow. USSR providing local languages and culture all the way throughout its existence.
@@samerealityone can I begin laughing at your face now or is there more bs you wanna share?
nice video
The flower field prancing thing got updated!