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The Redcoats with fixed bayonets, with colors flying-advancing and charging with the fifes & drums blaring the British Grenadier quick march won many battles for the British empire.
At least according to Napoleon and his top general Baron de Jomini, British infantry was actually most deadly when it fought defensively and used three rank volley fire. It was very difficult and therefore time consuming and most of all expensive to train infantry in three rank volley fire. Only the British Empire had the financial means to train its limited number of infantry forces to such a high skill.
@@commonhooman2885 the British used mostly Welsh archers during the Middle Ages. the Welsh were mostly too few and too poorly armored to fight British knights and armored infantry in pitched battles, so they settled for guerilla warfare and used archers at a distance. Soon the British recruited Welsh archers as mercenaries during the Hundred Years War against the French and won spectacularly in several major battles by using a large number of Welsh archers and concentrated arrow fire. This tradition was used again against Napoleon and many other armies. But again, gunpowder and bullets were even more expensive at the time, so only the British (and the Prussians who spent as much money they possibly could on their army), could afford to train their infantry to use rapid musket fire. So in a sense your hypothesis has some merit to it.
@@Ogre99 no, it really is about the battle of bunker Hill, and it sort of depicts how it was in reality, more than other paintings, I doubt this painting was made by the same painter of the battle of the plains of Abraham, which was made by Benjamim West.
I got up, put earphones in, grabbed my toy musket that I made a few years back out of a curtain rod, and practiced my times march to this. It really helped.
It was a little exaggerated, that kind of muskets were really imprecise, only on very short distance were lethal, they'd heavy losses when they went against riflemen, such as Bunker Hill, but rifles had the drawbacks of a slow recharge and no bayonet.
The official los Cholos Napoleonic server is now up and running! Join and meet like-minded people and plan events, campaigns, and more!
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I don't often need dentures but when I do I insist on the best: Waterloo Dentures!
3:08 best part.
I love its a mix of waterloo, mount and blade Napoleonic wars voice over and war and peace.
This is what we need Music and battle sounds We have The french and now the British
You know this image isnt from napoleonic war right?
Its from amarican revolutionary war
@@arcasey8388 yes and when did I say it was from the napoleonic wars?
The Redcoats with fixed bayonets, with colors flying-advancing and charging with the fifes & drums blaring the British Grenadier quick march won many battles for the British empire.
At least according to Napoleon and his top general Baron de Jomini, British infantry was actually most deadly when it fought defensively and used three rank volley fire. It was very difficult and therefore time consuming and most of all expensive to train infantry in three rank volley fire. Only the British Empire had the financial means to train its limited number of infantry forces to such a high skill.
@@thabomuso6254 i think it because they have strong marksmanship tradition since Medieval era
@@commonhooman2885 the British used mostly Welsh archers during the Middle Ages. the Welsh were mostly too few and too poorly armored to fight British knights and armored infantry in pitched battles, so they settled for guerilla warfare and used archers at a distance.
Soon the British recruited Welsh archers as mercenaries during the Hundred Years War against the French and won spectacularly in several major battles by using a large number of Welsh archers and concentrated arrow fire.
This tradition was used again against Napoleon and many other armies. But again, gunpowder and bullets were even more expensive at the time, so only the British (and the Prussians who spent as much money they possibly could on their army), could afford to train their infantry to use rapid musket fire.
So in a sense your hypothesis has some merit to it.
AND volley fire, in multiple ranks!!
Pretty sure the painting is of Bunker Hill if anyone is wondering
I think its the Abrahams Heights in the 7 Years war
@@Ogre99 no, it really is about the battle of bunker Hill, and it sort of depicts how it was in reality, more than other paintings, I doubt this painting was made by the same painter of the battle of the plains of Abraham, which was made by Benjamim West.
girls in music class: my favourite class i like so much
boys:
FOR KING AND COUNTRY!!!!!!
french and english cavalry signals before an infantry drum?
Dont worry about it. *hands you a musket* you know what to do
😂😂😂
I got up, put earphones in, grabbed my toy musket that I made a few years back out of a curtain rod, and practiced my times march to this.
It really helped.
relaxing, good for listening while playing some war game
Risk 😊😊👍
Man i love your videos
1:18 My jam.
We need one for the Spanish Army
Inmediatamente
Curraburraguerraricosuavez
_Guerra!_
We need a confederate version for we southerners
concur
That image is from bunker hill
Ah yes, just what I needed.
I would be so scared but would be prepared to die. Thinking about to save the women and children of my country.
Like most people back then, I would probably piss my pants
The bayonet is the sceptre of the battlefield, the British guardsman is the king who weilds it. "Now, now yours time! They won't stand"
2:58 for Queen and county!!!
Mount and blade napoleonic wars PTSD kicks in
Remember lads
Yes more!
"Hi didle right up the middle"
Army saying when it's a frontal attack.
Beat to quarters, march !....
probably the scariest sound in human history. redcoats marching towards you playing this tune.....that, you gotta worry about.
WHAT IN THE BLOODY HELL IS A MILE❗❗🔥🗣🗣🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥🦁🦁🦁🦁🦁☕☕☕☕☕☕☕☕
Who’s gonna tell him?
Like Barry Lyndon Infantry March. Different, they are in the Napoleonic war.
They are *E P I C M U S K E T*
The british grenadiers sounds so more intimidating without the fife
POUR LE DIEU, LA REINE, ET LE PATRIA!
La patrie*
We need one of the spanish army
Prussian*
God save the King 🇺🇦🦖🇬🇧✊
Alright lads forward march
POV: your fighting a group of rebels in England during an alternate 1862 timeline
Oh I love it
FOR KING & COUNTRY!
British grenadiers.
holdfast hear i come
0:06 so this is where g&bp got the trumpet sound
It comes from Waterloo 1970. G&B makes a lot of references to it but no one really finds them since it's such an old movie
At 1:50 it sounds like the flute player got hit
Is 2:35 from the Terror season one?
Roight Propah innit?
When hearing this 200 years ago, you knew you were getting colonized.
Is this not just British grenadiers march without fife?
Seen that movie - don't they all get mowed down?
Waterloo
bout 1/3 of them do
No. This was how armies fought before repetition rifles and such.
It was a little exaggerated, that kind of muskets were really imprecise, only on very short distance were lethal, they'd heavy losses when they went against riflemen, such as Bunker Hill, but rifles had the drawbacks of a slow recharge and no bayonet.
It's not from the " Barry Lyndon" motion picture, but it is the same drum and fife march
what's the actual song?
"The British Grenadiers"
point of listen: u are in the 1rst rank on a XVIII-XIX Century battle
And then a bunch of farmers, shopkeepers and lawyers blasted them to hell...and continued doing so until they ran out of ammo.
Hold This Postision...... Flag This Postision......for King And Country
Charge.....AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!