Fun fact: One of the groups to come to Ireland's aid during the Potato Famine was the Native American Choctaw Nation. Fresh off their own atrocity of the Trail of Tears, the Choctaw sent food aid and advisors to Ireland to help feed a fellow oppressed people and develop more sustainable farming methods so that such a calamity might not happen again. A Choctaw embassy was even established in Dublin and today there is a monument to the Choctaw and the help they gave to the Irish.
sirrliv I remember a couple years ago the Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister) visited the Choctaw people during a diplomatic tour around the US. It was his first stop and he publicly thanked the Choctaw for their great showing of compassion even to those who’s descendants took part in taking and settling Choctaw land. It was a cool moment.
People say they landed in a town near Cork City called Midleton which I love very near. That's why we have 'The Feathers' which is these large metal feathers and look very nice. I don't know how true it is but that's what people say is the reason they are there.
That is one beutiful piece of history. It say much about human ability to empathize due to similar experiences, and seeing compassion despite such vastly different athnical and cultural backgrounds always make me happy.
Additionally, Ireland has started a scholarship system for Choctaw students to welcome them to study in some of our third level colleges. They receive their fees paid and a €10,000 stipend. Ireland and the Choctaws have a really powerful and positive relationship with each other, it’s very beautiful.
Also last year, crediting the Choctaw relationship for inspiring them, Ireland donated €2.5 million euro to the Hopi and Navajo tribes during coronavirus struggles.
Another fun fact: During the Irish famine and irish migration to the US, many irishmen were enlisted to fight on Mexico's invation. The poverty and opression they found in Mexico, their catholic religion and the abuses american soldiers made during the war reminded them their own opression and suffering in Ireland. So many soldiers led by Captain John Riley desserted the US Army and fought on the mexican side as "Saint Patrick's Batallion". In Mexico City we have a monument with the names of all of them and a street called "Irish martyrs" were their last battle was fought.
Fun Fact: The U.S. government denied proper aid for two native american groups during the height of the COVID Pandemic and Ireland caught wind of this and raised several million dollars to help the Navajo and Hopi tribes as a thank you for the $170 raised by the Choctaw during the famine. There is definitely a special bond between the Irish and Native Americans. I am half Anishinaabe and Half Irish so I go by Irishinaabe. I visited Ireland back in 2015 and was welcomed with open arms everywhere I went. I hope to go back again one day.
I’m very proud of my people to help out others.. we know how hard it can be.. very happy you were welcomed my friend.. be sure to come back and have a point of the black stuff.. I’m from co.Meath :) all the best from Australia 🇦🇺
Yeah I went and traced my geneology and found out it basically encompasses the British Isles So since this is the history side of OSP and we know the early relations the British had with Ireland and Scotland, and keep in mind this is really more of a joke than you know, self-loathing, I basically hate myself
It's one of the very few places that has less people than it did 200 years ago what with the population of most countries absolutely exploding during that time. Although it's very close to matching prefamine levels now. Just under five million in the Republic of Ireland and just under two million in Northern Ireland versus about eight million before the famine.
My favorite Irish joke: "Hey stranger, before we become friends, I need to know. Are you Catholic or Protestant?" "I'm an atheist, actually." "Okay... but are you a Catholic atheist or a Protestant atheist?"
natkatmac did you know you actually CANT exit the catholic church ever even if you are an atheist so it is actually possible to be a catholic atheist lol
I believe they actually did have a written language: Ogham. A fairly mind blowing vertical writing structure. It's named for the Celtic God of language: Ogma. Ogma set up a competition where the winner got to have Ireland named after them. Ériu won, obviously.
Yes, Ogham is a fascinating language, I found it very easy to learn! However, whilst Ogham was used for writing it did not allow for a literary tradition. The vast majority of culture was oral, so even though there are some ancient pieces of Ogham text, they are few and far between, leading most of our cultural knowledge from that time to be from secondary or foreign sources. Also, unsurprisingly, Ogham filled a similar role to futhark, nordic runes, as they were highly ritualised and representative as well as alphabetical. Due to this it was mainly druids who were capable of reading and writing it, and much of what they did produce was for ceremonial purposes, not records of events or educational material
Totally. I looked for GOOD Irish history documentations for a long time. There are none that aren't beyond biased and made from an English perspective.
@@ErinOC_1306 - Canadian here, I know more about Irish history than I do American history. Canadian history was shoved down my throat so I know a bit about that but... Irish history is grand so...
@@user-jh9nx6tl1nThe Mythology. It's so amazingly unique compared to almost any other, especially when you see the weird way it merged with a version of Catholicism while keeping it's stories generally intact Also as well our culture values "Just being good craic" above all else. As long as you're able to have a laugh you're pretty much sorted. (Also a lot of this applies mainly to rueal areas, the urban culture isn't nearly as great). Everyone in the rural areas know each other and the country is so small you'd be surprised by how many people have connections to your area. For the best summary of Irish culture look up Sgt. Ducky on YT
The picture at 9:31 is of my grand uncle Peter Dwyer. I have it framed above me fireplace. He joined the Irish Volunteers with his two brothers in 1914. He took part in the Kilcoole gun running, where the Irish Volunteers imported over 300 rifles and 2000 rounds of ammunition from Imperial Germany. During the 1916 Easter Rising, he was based in Enniscorthy in Wexford. He and his brothers lead of group of 50 men to capture the town of Ferns. After the Dublin rebels surrendered, he and his men were transported to prison in Dublin by boat. He was imprisoned in Frongoch interment camp in Wales but released in 1918 after a general amnesty for prisoners was called. After he was released he quickly joined the North Wexford Brigade of the IRA and was appointed Commander of C Company in the 1st Battalion. He stole some explosives from a shipment heading to a quarry in early 1919. The explosives would be later used to blow railway lines to prevent the rapid transportation of Britain soldiers. In late 1920, he and his brothers rescued an IRA Volunteer named William Kavanagh from capture, who had been so badly beaten by the Black and Tans he had to go to hospital. After the Anglo-Irish treaty, the brigade was split. Peter and his men served with the Pro-treaty forces. He served in the Battle of Dublin, where he took place in fighting on Sackville (now O'Connell) street.
Interesting that they were transported to Dublin by boat. About 80 KM . despite there being intercity roads between the towns. The British did not control the land, nowhere was safe for them. In the 1970s, Gallagher tabacco used to export tobacco between Belfast an d Dublin. The I R A seized so much of it, Gallagher's started sending the tabac from Belfast to Dublin via Liverpool. A two hour journey took 3 days, But the Brits did say the tobacco was being delivered without incident or hindrance of any kind. They were, in fact quite correct in that respect. But not in the problems with the logistics. Not a word about them in the press release.
The most infuriating thing about the famine is we actually were producing enough food, but it was all being exported to britain. At no point did they stop and think “ hey, maybe we should let the starving people producing our food have some of it so they dont all die”
compendious succient it was sold by british landlords in ireland to other british people in britain while the actual farmers barely got paid enough to be allowed to live on their own land which was taken from them :)
Great video, born and raised in Ireland my whole life, same as my family before me. One thing I’ll never forget is when a white American woman called me a coloniser, crazy how little people know of Irish history across the world
Reminds me of how weird people, especially Americans, got about that scene in Bend It Like Beckham where the guy says he understands oppression because he's Irish. For some reason people insisted he couldn't horribly understand it because he's white and like...and? It's really frustrating to see people be so flat out racist and reductive. And it's not like Americans don't know what's happened to the Irish over the years either! That's even more frustrating.
On behalf of sane Americans (whose lineage comes from Ireland as well as other places) I whole heartedly apologize for our pampered ignorant people...🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤷♂️💯
Fun Fact: During the Great Famine, when the potato crop failed and the people starved, what many people don’t know is that there was food in the country, they just exported 90% of crops and produce were shipped off to England. Hence many Irish refer to the Famine as ‘The Great Starvation’
I still am amused by the fact that with all it's internal struggles, it was the Ottomans who sent out a significantly charitable help as far as I'm aware, even though Queen Victoria was against it. See, Abdulmejit I for some reason, decided to help out the starving Irish people, either out of the softness of his heart. Or just to spite English Queen. Victoria herself send out a help of 2,000 pounds, so they demanded Ottomans to evade helping them worthier than that. So the Ottomans did send 1,000 pounds of cash, and also smuggled 5 ships of food to Irish lands. I even saw an Irish newspaper from some date around the Great Hunger, thanking the Sultan for showing Christian values and not being indifferent to people in need. History is weird.
@@karylhogan5758 yes, the Choktaw nation (think I spelled it wrong) we also donated a few million euros to them earlier this year as they were experiencing a drought in quarantine. The money was raised by the public, the Irish and American governments didnt do anything to help them
England itself traumatised by its own invasions...and then decides to go and conqueror the world in catharsis...though not the areas which invaded England.
@@frederickhudson5017 the British murdered thousands of people for their religion and we're then scared of Irish home rule cus "we'll be discriminated against!" Britain are histories "good guys"
@@hiddensinix2767 Yeah, never said they didn't do any of that or were wrong in what they did...just an idea (more joke than anything) on what the legacy of Englands own experiances with being conquered might have had on their conquests of other lands. Though on a note about "good guys"...I think its fair to say that not many nations in the world can be considered to have held upstanding morality throughout their existance. But I think its fair to say at some specific points x nation is more (sometimes by little, sometimes by alot) morally right or good than y nation or does something good at a certain point. To take an example America has had some pretty fucked up moments in its history (slavery and segregation for example) but at the same time also had some good moments in its history (ww2 (and yes I do know the United States was not perfect but I think its fair to say they were better than the Nazis or Japanese)). The same applies to Britain, it has done barbaric things at points (such as colonisation and slaughter of native peoples in building an empire). but also at some points it was "moral" or did the right thing (such as not surrendering/ceasing fighting with Germany in 1940). As such there is no real "good guy" throught history rather times were some nations are more good than others. Apologies if that was long winded or made no sense but I just wanted to say what I thought on that.
@@eoinhanna5161 They are leaving you alone. It's just that the damned NI Assembly can't get over itself long enough to do anything to help with reunification. Or anything else for that matter. Example: won't the DUP be surprised to find the Westminster Parliament has passed an abortion bill.
This is a great comment!! I didn't actually know until today (41 years old) about the whole thing of "actually there WERE no snakes, we think it was just a euphemism for pagans?" Wow! UA-cam is amazingly educational.
As An Irish Person, Great Video Detailing My Countries Long And Rich History!... I'd Like To Point Out That Ireland Was Populated Thousands Of Years Before 400BC, The Earliest Date So Far Known For Human Activity On The Island Is Around 7000BC This Era Is Known As The Mesolithic Era In Irish History, We Then Have The Neolithic Era Where One Of Our Most Iconic Landmarks Were Built (The Burial Complex Of Newgrange, Knowth & Dowth Known As "Brú Na Bóinne"/Bend Of The Boyne In Irish Gaelic) Built In 3500BC... Making It Thousands Of Years Older Than The Pyramids Of Giza And Stonehenge...
I mean, I remember when Red stole his chair and format for the Trope Talks, and I guess she just kinda ended up keeping it? I kinda picture Red like a cat sitting on the edge of his chair and then slowly expanding and pushing him off
Fun fact: it's possible Ireland had the first legally upheld right to healthcare in history, as well as protections and rights for the mentally ill. This was about 1300 years ago.
Ahh what the hell, there's no pronunciations online seeing as it's a near dead language so how was she supposed to know really? It drove me mad too but I'd hardly pronounce Spanish sentences fluently on my first try.
@@ASmartNameForMe I imagine that yes, of course there are pronunciations online, why wouldn't there be? Still 30,000 people speak it daily and the rest of us all have some and it's taught every day in schools. Are you just ignoring all this? Had conversations with Irish language hating Irish people who would complain that it doesn't matter how the language is pronounced and that it's only pedantic to care. To which I replied "so if I made a glaring mistake in French or Spanish would you think that was okay?" Names are important and caring about them is too. I've had my name butchered so many times it's not funny (and not particularly hard either) all it takes is a little attention to detail and, weirdly, listening.
Diamonds And Dynamite Cosplay “near dead” I’m not saying it’s gonna die anytime soon but even in its main country only around a few thousand can actually speak it fluently
A friend of mine visited Ireland at some point during the Troubles and, while walking down the street, a group of guys called out to her "Are you Catholic or Protestant, then?" Startled and characteristically forthright, she called back "I'm Jewish." They had no idea what to do with that information, so she kept walking and was un-harassed for the rest of the trip. She said it was the one and only time she's ever felt that being Jewish made her safer than if she were a Christian.
Yes sectarianism is a huge problem facing Irish society especially in Ulster. We need to remind people of the Irish heroes that were protestant such as Theobald Wolfe Tone.
FearOfFacts you can’t be replaced by immigrants. The whole point of immigration is that you want to be part of the country, so most of the time you’ll be assimilated into the culture, not destroy it. For every young couple that comes to Wales, their children will be part of the culture, even if their parents are not. Immigration is really only bad if the country’s overpopulated, which it definitely isn’t.
Rachel Haslingden I believe it’s pronounced Llanfechell, an actual place. (Cl (Cl = hiss) - ah - nv - eh - ch (like you’re trying to get a glob of phlegm out of the back of your throat) - eh - cl.)
Scotland, Ireland, England, Wales. The four nations lived together in harmony, But everything changed when the English attacked... Edit: Is that “God bless ye merry gentleman” playing in the background or are my ears just broken?
More like four groups that used to get along then the Romans wiped out Celtic influences on England then when they left Germanics came in took their place. England is basically a Germanic filler in a Roman mould
@@britopia1341 did you even watch that video? and even that's not true there were countless rebellions during the occupation, Do the fenians ring the thick bell that is your skull
Frosthawk2815 On a few occasions there was trouble. For the vast majority of the time it was peaceful. You can make a point without having to insult people. The RoI is very peaceful now but it isn’t the whole of Ireland. Northern Ireland is very peaceful for the most part nowadays too. Whether Northern Ireland was apart of the UK or RoI there would still be sectarian trouble. That’s just the way it is there. And Irishman can come in my house and eat out of my fridge if he wants. The rest of our isles are pretty peaceful. I think more people from the RoI and Great Britain should move to Northern Ireland make love and make money and turn the place into something more prosperous.
RH It’s you that’s trying to rewrite history. Northern Ireland isn’t a state. I don’t know of anybody who says it is. The UK is a state and Northern Ireland is apart of it. A united Ireland will happen. But it’ll be when the whole of Ireland is in the UK.
@@britopia1341 The only way thats ever going to happen is over the bodies of 6 million Irish people, not a single one of us now or every will ever led an Brit hold sovereign power over the island ever again. Imediate and terrible war will befall any british force that attempts it, your entire nation will be in flames in moments there are so many of us in the uk. Try us we dare you.
2:57 Whenever I Think Of This I Just Imagine Saint Patrick Walking Around Ireland Swinging A Staff Around Or Something, And Some Guy Asks Him What He's Doing, And He Says "Getting Rid Of The Snakes!", When The Guy Points Out There Are No Snakes, He Simply Says "See? It's Working!"
My family came to America during the famine, and we held on to Irish culture quite tightly. Most of my family speaks Irish (I speak very little on account of living in Florida away from most of my family, but I do want to learn), and we still practice a lot of Irish traditions. Ive been there like 4 times and I want to go back. Permanently. Seems like a nice place to chill, play D&D and collect a massive library, and have a rabbit farm.
@Adam Sloan You got nothing of use to say? Or are you going to keep on bringing up an irrelevant thing that has nothing to do with this? I think its probably the latter. Now, shoo
@Adam Sloan We can only hope migrants will push up our population numbers, and help to export our superior sports (football and hurling) to their home countries. Everyone deserves those, and unfortunately the uhh... migrants (god that part of our history is loaded as fuck, basically they were both the victims of and the tools of British imperial colonialism)... to Australia kinda forgot the rules for football on route and had to make them up again (at least they didn't defect to soccer) and and the Candians got cold and confused so made a sport based off hurling that used ice. As it stands our population is too low; it feels like a single great catastrophe could end our traditions. More migrants who are willing to embrace and enrich our culture can make us so much stronger.
That's what I thought too, that one poor island getting a lot of abuse. I just came back from a trip to Ireland. I've been to both Republic and North. And I have to say that the way they empathize with other oppressed nations (which at the moment includes Ukraine) after going through such a tumultuous history themselves is inspiring. In Dublin there are many signs of support to Ukraine. It felt surreal to learn about Irish history during my stay there and live in a world where a similar thing is happening at the same time. The Irish are fun and friendly people and the country is beautiful and full of interesting and beautiful places. The way these people persevered and managed to hold on to their culture and traditions is amazing.
@@bubblesnstuff1458 There are some rough parts of Dublin, like every city, not so big a problem in the countryside but walking the wrong place at night in the city as a foreigner will probably get you robbed
During my time living in Ireland, I learned about the history of the country and found it strangely similar to my own country, Korea. Being invaded by foreign powers, intellectual development and a love of music and storytelling.
Cabbage and stew as well according to Tumblr. It's strange how eerily similar the two are. Perhaps being brutally oppressed causes certain traits to form? Like, maybe the history of oppression leads to certain art forms or whatever (which could explain why Irish music and art is so good imo). How many other countries have similar stories and developments? Also, I wonder how well the Koreans and Irish got along when people began having children together-- plenty to bond over.
A few things: (i) You mentioned that the Scots were planted in Ireland in the 17th century, but didn't mention that the Scots were originally an Irish tribe who invaded Caledonia about a thousand years previously (ii) Ulster is NOT the same as Northern Ireland; Ulster was an ancient kingdom that consisted of 9 counties, only 6 of which make up Northern Ireland. (iii) The terms Northern Ireland, The North of Ireland, Ulster and The 6 Counties, are used about the same place by different groups of people with different political views. As they used to say during the Troubles 'If you're not totally confused, you don't understand what's happening.'
I agree with what most of what you have to say except the idea that the ulster Scots were orginally irish, they weren't they were scots, an off shot of Anglo saxon.
@@pete4580 The area north of Hadrians wall was inhabited by two main tribes; the Caldones and the Picts. In the 6th century the Irish tribe called the Scots set up the kingdpm of Dalriada (my spelling is probably wrong) in what is now Argyll. From there they spread out, gradually conquering the rest of Caladonia and renaming it Scotland.
@@moonkeele i know that but he was referring to the ulster Scots who are anglo saxons in origin and weren't gallic He was claiming they were originally Irish which is a fantasy
Your third point sounds a lot like how Spaniards and Catalonians talk about Castilian versus Spanish as languages. Catalonia has a unique culture and some would argue a different language (and I would agree, Catalan is deffo not Spanish). But some argue that Castilian (the dominant Spanish dialect) is the language spoken by all of Spain. In Latin America, Spanish (Español) and Castilian (Castellano) are used as synonyms for the Spanish language. But in Spain, where Catalonia has been pushing for independence from Spain for decades, calling Spanish "Castellano" carries separatist undertones, while simply calling it "Español" is more conciliatory and less politically charged.
It's worth noting that Ulster is still a modern precisely defined province rather than just an ancient kingdom consisting of the same six northern Irish counties and the same three Irish counties. As a result the terms aren't as interchangable as you suggest; Cavan is part of Ulster but is not part of Northern Ireland for instance.
@@slook7094 not really. there's a FUCKTON of evidence of the welsh being one of the biggest splinter group's of the celt's after the Anglo-Saxon invasion, with record's of the slow change from Brittonic (the original Celtic language) into welsh
@@matthewmac5787 They were Romano-British. They retreated from the Anglo-Saxons and the Vikings to the other side of England and turned into the Welsh.
@@lv2draw1 You are right in some regards for sure. Unlike even Ireland which was "unified" with England (and eventually Great Britain, UK etc) Wales was just straight up annexed into England. Though Ireland was invaded earlier Wales was the first to be fully conquered (and unlike Ireland that conquest was maintained). It mostly depends on what you considered to have happened "earlier" though I'd say both count equally.
My favourite part about growing up in Northern Ireland is that our history unit doesn’t include 80% of this but instead we learn about world war 2 about 4 times throughout your entire education but you end up learn half of this stuff because everyone still is salty about the English but we won’t say it out loud.
@@BJGvideos it's complicated but basically CCEA (the exam board for secondary school who set the exams & therefore what we have to learn) serve all schools, Catholic and Protestant so they have to make a history course that isn't offensive to Protestants while recognising what Catholics suffered, but they tend to lean more towards Protestants than Catholics so all we get taught about the Troubles in GCSE History (CCEA) is the undeniable truth, not the entire story.
The potato famine was not as simple as you suggest. Ireland produced quite a lot of other food like wheat and barley but much of it had to be sent to Britain. Also, the landowners were trying to force people off the land anyway.
these people don't care about the facts, all they want is the narrative to make england and britain look evil - it's sme kind of internet joke spouted by people with half knowledge that they use to fuel their persecution complexes
@@daedalus7286 Google translate to resuce yet again. "It is always nice to see our native langue on the internet! That was miles away from your "marketing.""
What about the Dutch, Germans, French,Americans,Spanish,Portuguese,Italians,Japanese and Chinese. The UK isn’t the only country to have done imperialism.
Yes, your point being? I mentioned that every country has done imperialism at some point in its history so it’s not fair to criticise and single out Britain for what all of our nations have done . Forgiveness is a word besides imperialism has brought the world benefits, for starters without it not a single country in this planet would exist .
@@Valencetheshireman927 mate it's a joke and I'm to tiered to rage in the comments of a video it's a joke about Britain wanting more land for their empire because the British empire is really big and 65 people kinda liked it and that's it. I'm not attacking the UK this is probably one of the most benine jokes about imperialism that there is. I'm done bye.
The history of Ireland and the UK is amazing. The rivalry in sport they have is so understandably massive due to their past conflicts. Most fascinating place in the World by far IMO.
I've got a friend who lives in Derry and when I was visiting him, he told me that the death toll from the famine/genocide was so bad that Ireland is still affected by it and their population still hasn't recovered.
the famine also had some major effects on the irish language itsself as a lot of the irish speakers either died or fled and i think to this day it hasnt recovered enough, and it probably wont with the globalisation of english
"It's time to complain about Enlgand!" ~Irish people from three counties over break through every wall like a small army of Kool-Aid men~ What? I heard my name. Are we complaining yet? I'll get the tea started
Fun fact: William III of Orange, after becoming King of the United Kingdom, actually wanted to return the confiscated land to the original Irish owners but was blocked by parliament.
Honestly that’s a part of colonial history that fascinates me: that there were always people who disliked the actions that the government / parliament / king did but were outvoted or blocked from doing anything. I’ve read transcripts from parliamentary debates in the 1890’s where people rightfully point out that ‘hey if the public knew the things we were doing to these foreign countries and how much these crimes against humanity were costing us they’d be appalled’ It’s easy to think that European colonialism was a monolith when it was actually the actions of a greedy leadership doing monsterous things while dragging oblivious citizens along for the ride. And it was nearly always the rich upper class idiots who could afford to be politicians leading the way to get yet more money and power.
Obviously this doesn’t excuse anything, but I always find it interesting to remember that colonial powers weren’t this completely greed-driven hive mind but rather a boys club of rich kids taking the world for a selfish joyride
@@TheJH1015 yeah because today they are just sectarian people who want to oppress Irish catholics. Yet they worship this guy William who actually himself wanted to given the stolen land many of those orangemen have today back to the Irish
@@ThatGreyGentleman I guess, but that's all they have in common. French is much more similar to English than Irish is with its patterns and many pronunciations.
Kimarous Oof tell me about it I’m irish- English and a Mancunian on top of it Like there’s precarious mix of her stuff and then there’s ‘my grans a Irish Roman Catholic and we’re from Manchester’
The reality of the human race in general is that due to our tendency to "explore" and conquer, we all have mixed DNA somewhere down the line that possesses both the enslaved and the oppressor. For instance, apart from the obvious Irish/English connection that is being discussed that I share in my heritage as well, I have slavic heritage as well. The word "slave" stemmed from the Slavs who were enslaved at one point by the Romans. It is a viscous cycle that never seems to break. Might as well accept that no heritage is without its bloody and painful truths. And we can't assume that just because one aspect was enslaved by another that there weren't early days where the same wasn't done amongst there own people either. Did you know that some people have a genetic code that protects certain individuals from getting shaking sickness accrued from eating human flesh? How do you think that developed? There are multiple indications in certain cave sights of early humans where bones were found with scrapings indicative of cannibalism... and that they were likely from warring tribes. Overall, humanity is beautiful and terrible alike and we all have that in common that we share.
Much respect to the Irish. One of the few people who felt oppression and learned to sympathize and aid others undergoing it as well. San Patricios, Choctaw support, Solidarity with Palestine.
@@mkn.567 no but they could see the oppression in Germany at the time and decided to stay out and then punished any soldiers who want to fight in the war. How about how an Irish member of the EU parliament voted against sanctions against Russia and said you should not punish Russia for the invasion
@@Chambo1990 Yeah... They also didn't get involved with Rwanda or Darfur or Bosnia or Armenia. And? So for any credit to be given to anyone they must meet your arbitrary metric of absolute consistency?
The thing is that manifested as centuries of rebellions, war and hedge culture, the scars of which are all over the country today. People praise Ireland for rising up, and many americans I've met idolise the IRA, not realising that they were, and are terrorists. In the years of occupation, they were what was needed to free the country from the yoke that was choking it, but in the times of the troubles, they evolved to use modern gang warfare tactics, up until the Good Friday Agreement, they drove car-bombs into civilian centers. Even now, the successors to the IRA, and UVF are little more than gangland criminals in the eyes of the Republic. The thing that I feel needs to be praised isn't how hardy Ireland is, it's how flexible our culture is. The vikings came, burned, pillaged and looted, and then settled here, and were absorbed into our culture. Then the Normans did the same, and they were referred to as "More Irish than the Irish themselves". Then the English Occupation, The Spanish Armada was shattered off the west coast, and we absorbed what they brought, and this all continues on in the modern day, with Africans, Indians, Chinese, and Eastern Europeans all bringing their culture here, and willingly and gladly adopting our culture. The vast majority of my neighbors are Polish born or bred, but they're as Irish as anyone else in the eyes of the community. So what Ireland's true success story is, is integration. Wherever we went when we left our country, we brought our culture with us, and fused it with local cultures, and whenever a peoples came to us en masse, we took their culture, and brought it into ours, and shared ours with them.
As someone from Ireland I was really pleased with your knowledge of Irish history, its vast, confusing at times and a lot of non Irish people really struggle with it so I was really pleased with your video on it
One of my favourite story's of my family is about a prison nearby my home that has a wall that has a large patch of cement that stands out from the rest of the wall I learned through my grandfather that my great great grand father had fought during the Easter rising and had evaded arrest he had blown a hole in the wall to break everyone out it's one of the many things that caused my interest in history
Huh. This is strangely similar to a story about my great uncle, down to the prison with the weird cement patch in the wall. Wonder if we’re thinking of the same place
ArrZarr Yeah what he said But just remember if you want to come to Wales at some point to learn a couple of words and be respectful in general. Diolch = thanks So there’s one
@@DrORRB-qm7fl I went to university in Bangor. It was a few years back but the only Welsh word that sticks with me is Fish. Can't remember the spelling "Pysgothyn"? but I'm familiar with the pronunciation. Once while driving through southern Wales, I got about half an hour's entertainment trying to pronounce "Trellech" correctly :D
@@fuzzyhair321 Oh trust me, the Dutch have PLENTY of things to complain about the English... the Dutch Year of Disaster 1672, the Boer Wars and the Fall of Srebrenica come to mind.
European history is just a game of which country can be the biggest dick to everyone else. England is definitely one of the best at the game but has some competition.
Not everyone hates England. Just because you yourself hate England does not mean every one else does .🤦♂️The UK is actually one of the most liked countries in the world, beneath Canada.
You did an amazing job summarising Irish history without making it seem boring. Were so intertwined with the british that we dont really have our own history separate from them. Fun Fact #1, They dont teach anything related to Ireland in british schools since we are the only country that fought our way out of the commonwealth. Fun Fact #2, Before the british invaded, Ireland had Brehon Law, which allowed women to be judges and leaders and everything incredibly fair.
Oh they traded Saxon, picts and Welsh too in Ireland. The Norse didn't discriminate between the peoples of these isles. What's that shitty tune again.....that Britons never will be slaves.....
As an irishman my first reaction was oh god, post watching thank you for loving my country... and thank you for avoiding gaelic words they genuinely are almost never pronounced as they look!
Hey Blue, just wanted to say you did a great job on the video. As someone from Ireland, I'm delighted to see someone do an amazingly accurate and entertaining video on its history. Also thank you for showing some restraint and not doing a terrible Irish accent (although I do love a terrible accent).
i doubt ireland will blow up again, things will carry on as usual as theyve always have in the past 30yrs. memories are rosey and nobody is interested in a fight anymore
I never exactly understood the problem. Just use the Good Friday Agreement as the basis and have some security checks behind the border which modern technology would make a non-issue of. Problem solved.
Some people reckon that if Brexit does happen, it means that Northern Ireland and the republic or Ireland will officially leave the Uk and that if they do, it might lead to Scotland fully leaving as well. So basically England will look like an idiot of a country and will be utterly humiliated.
@@agenttheater5 Well since it's Labour and SNP, whose MPs are Remain, who want the 2nd Scottish referendum (which was meant to be once in a generation thing) I sincerely doubt that. As stated in this video the GFA allows NI to leave whenever they so please, why haven't they left already? The problem is more of a recurrence of the Troubles and the New IRA then anything else. You make it seem like Parilment still has international dignity and prestige.
Fun fact: We did not go through a famine because of a potato blight, We went through it because all of our healthy crops were being exported to the united kingdom and any aid other countries would give us also went to the united kingdom. They tried to murder our entire country off essentially. You also really skipped over so much history from the plantation of Ireland and how that really changed everything up. You did briefly mention it but its so much bigger than what you had gone through and more important.
That's not entirely true actually. While crops were exported from Ireland during the famine suggesting that aid from other countries meant for Ireland went to the UK is a lie.
@@cathalodiubhain5739 Genocide actually has conditions that have to be met in order to qualify, and the famine doesn't. You can't just declare things hoping they're true.
@@Pizza23333 The Famine, or An Górta Mór, the Great Hunger, took more than one million lives, between those that died of starvation and those that left Ireland for a better life in America or elsewhere in the world. Those who were left behind in Ireland experienced a desperation that led to a massive change in politics and nationalism - it was only a few years later, in 1858 that the Irish Republican Brotherhood was founded. The British government and the British and Irish Protestant landowners still required the Irish peasants and laborers to pay their rent for the land they could not work due to the blight and the hunger upon them. In a lush island surrounded by water teaming with fish and land that fattened pig and cattle alike, how could one failed crop cause a Famine? According to British law, Irish Catholics could not apply for fishing or hunting licenses. Their pigs and cattle were sent to England to feed the British and to export for trade, while the landlords kept the fine cuts for themselves. Ireland was part of the British Empire, the most powerful empire in the world at that time - yet the British government stood by and did nothing to help their subjects overcome this hardship. In our time, an enforced famine such as this would be labeled genocide yet in the 1800s it was merely an unfortunate tragedy. As defined in the United Nation's 1948 Genocide Convention and the 1987 Genocide Convention Implementation Act, the legal definition of genocide is any of the acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, including by killing its members; causing them serious bodily or mental harm; deliberately inflicting on a group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; and forcibly transferring children of the group to another group. The British policy of mass starvation inflicted on Ireland from 1845 to 1850 constituted "genocide" against the Irish People as legally defined by the United Nations. A quote by John Mitchell (who published The United Irishman) states that "The Almighty indeed sent the potato blight, but the English created the Famine.
From the Greek word for tribe (or race), genos, and the Latin term -cide, the word genocide refers to the extermination of the peoples of a nation (or religious group) carried out by an organization, usually a government. Such is the case when discussing the British treatment of Ireland during the potato blight; treatment which was based in the history of Ireland. William Makepiece Thackcray wrote: "...It is a frightful document against ourselves...one of the most melancholy stories in the whole world of insolence, rapine, brutal, endless slaughter and persecution on the part of the English master...There is no crime ever invented by eastern or western barbarians, no torture or Roman persecution or Spanish Inquisition, no tyranny of Nero or Alva but can be matched in the history of England in Ireland." (Metress, 2) A famine did not truly exist. There was no food shortage in Ireland evidenced by the fact that the British landowners continued to have a varied diet and food stuffs were exported. This was not the first failure of the potato crop in the history of Ireland. The starvation (and genocide) occurred as the British carried on their historical exploitation of the Irish people, failed to take appropriate action in the face of the failure of the potato crop, and maintained their racist attitude toward the Irish. The Penal Laws, first passed in 1695. were strictly enforced. These laws made it illegal for Catholics (Irish) to own land, and required the transfer of property from Catholics to Protestants; to have access to an education, and eliminated Gaelic as a language while preventing the development of an educated class; to enter professions, forcing the Irish to remain as sharecropping farmers; or to practice their religion. In addition, Catholics (Irish) could not vote, hold an office, purchase land, join the army, or engage in commerce. Simply put, the British turned the Irish into nothing better than slaves, subsisting on their small rented farms. The exportation of wheat, oats, barley, and rye did nothing to help the financial status of the poor farmer. The produce was used to pay taxes and rents to the English landlords, who then sold the farm products for great profit. These profits did nothing for the economy of Ireland, but did help the English landlords to prosper. The Irish farmer was forced to remain in poverty, and reliant on one crop, potato, for his subsistence. The potato became the dominant crop for the poor of Ireland as it was able to provide the greatest amount of food for the least acreage. Farming required a large family to tend the crops and the population grew as a result of need. Poverty forced the Irish to rely upon the potato and the potato kept the Irish impoverished. As the economic situation worsened, landlords who had the legal power to do so, evicted their Irish tenant farmers, filling the workhouses with poor, underfed, and diseased human beings who were destined to die. A caption under a picture shown in The Pictorial Times, October 10, 1846, best describes the circumstances of the great starvation, and the nature of the genocide: "Around them is plenty; rickyards, in full contempt, stand under their snug thatch, calculating the chances of advancing prices; or, the thrashed grain safely stored awaits only the opportunity of conveyance to be taken far away to feed strangers...But a strong arm interposes to hold the maddened infuriates away. Property laws supersede those of Nature. Grain is of more value than blood. And if they attempt to take of the fatness of the land that belongs to their lords, death by musketry, is a cheap government measure to provide for the wants of a starving and incensed people."(Food Riots, 2) It is time for the world to stop referring to this disastrous period in Irish history as the Great Famine, and to fully realize, and to acknowledge, the magnitude of the crime that systematically destroyed Irish nationalism, the Irish economy, the Irish culture, and the Irish people.
That phrase "Kiss me I'm Irish" I'd see in my Irish grandparents' house has a whole other meaning now because Ireland sure did need some kind of love and support 95% of the time
Oh god this is so perfectly timed it’s almost creepy! I just started a creative writing story set in Ireland (which I am NOT from, but trying to do as much research as possible)
Don't forget to add class as a way to say cool or awesome. Also " For the craic" is a way we say for the fun or for the laugh. For example: A: What's the craic lads? B: Me and the lads are going to [insert place here]. A: that's class. And then you add in extra stuff for your chosen accent based on where the story takes place and done.
Just as an interesting aside, the Choctaw Nation scraped together what they could during the Famine and donated to a relief fund because they thought the suffering of the Irish people was greater than their own. A great act of generosity from one nation oppressed by WASPs to another nation oppressed by WASPs!
Semi related story: My family is a bunch of English Protestants, and meanwhile my friends' family is a bunch of Irish Catholics. He jokes about car bombs, I joke about him starving Is it in poor taste? Yes. Is it hilarious? Also yes.
LCraftCat I’m Australian, with the usual crazy blend of English, Scottish, Welsh & Irish ancestry (along with a few others; American Indian, Danish, German & Huguenot French)... & I laughed at this, I don’t know why- I’m sick & miserable right now, so the momentary distraction was- nice?
One can get away with that sort of thing with friends. I say fucked up things to my brother I'd never say to a stranger; it's all about mutual respect and knowing boundaries.
I went to school in NI and then went to an all prod college and never saw a pile of people again until recently when I saw a man called Oisin and pulled down my hood and pulled up my collar and ran at yelling welcome to east Belfast ya fenian. Later I met him again behind 3cm glass in a jailhouse because apparently that’s a hate crime and attempted assault.
@@galacticcore0796 1) Sneks are adorable and 2) Sneks feed on small rodents like rats and mice and do a great job of keeping populations low which helps stop the spread of disease. Cats do a similar job but here less is definitely not more
@@anniesearle6181 Ireland got off relatively easily as far as plague went. It's why blue didn't mention it in the video, it barely struck Ireland at all. And besides, modern Ireland has more than enough cats to keep the mice to a reasonable population.
@@AndrewGeierMelons I wasn't talking about the plauge, I was talking about disease in general. Also rats and mice do massive damage to stored crops, which probably didn't help during the famines
This was a truly fascinating video, and has served to only further my love of learning all things Irish (both historical and mythological) even more The effort put into both researching and making this visually striking is (as with all your other videos) obvious, combined with the charm and charisma that each of the OSP narrators bring to their respective videos, makes you're content addictive, and easy to watch, whilst also being highly informative and entertaining What remains of Irish folklore is also highly interesting, and it just so happens that OSP also have videos on that! (And to anyone who is seeking a new language, I would highly recommend (as predictable as it sounds) Irish, it's a wonderful language that is sadly fading, and it would be a shame to see it die now after it endured everything it has) It's thanks to content like yours that has kept my passion for learning about the past alive And for that i thank you
Seeing Northern Ireland actually talked about and acknowledged is so nice. We're still recovering from the Troubles in ways and with Brexit the peace is becoming more and more tenuous. We also haven't had a government for nearly 3 years now because our devolved one fell apart and England refuses to really do anything about it so yknow. They're still on their bullshit Thank you for this video it's so nice to see my country talked about and it not be made into a joke
Fantastic video! as an Irish man myself, may I say thank you for making such a well informed and through explanation of our history and culture, it even thought me some things I wasn't aware of. Go raibh maith agat!
That is... not what I've heard as the correct pronunciation to be. Not saying you're wrong, just pointing out that it's very much too inconsistently pronounced to say one is for sure "the right one". You probably knew that, sorry. ...The way Red says it might just be wrong though. ;)
Fun fact: One of the groups to come to Ireland's aid during the Potato Famine was the Native American Choctaw Nation. Fresh off their own atrocity of the Trail of Tears, the Choctaw sent food aid and advisors to Ireland to help feed a fellow oppressed people and develop more sustainable farming methods so that such a calamity might not happen again. A Choctaw embassy was even established in Dublin and today there is a monument to the Choctaw and the help they gave to the Irish.
sirrliv I remember a couple years ago the Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister) visited the Choctaw people during a diplomatic tour around the US. It was his first stop and he publicly thanked the Choctaw for their great showing of compassion even to those who’s descendants took part in taking and settling Choctaw land. It was a cool moment.
People say they landed in a town near Cork City called Midleton which I love very near. That's why we have 'The Feathers' which is these large metal feathers and look very nice. I don't know how true it is but that's what people say is the reason they are there.
@@alexmcbride7563 didnt the ottomans send food too ?
@@firstlast-pq1tx Well, they try. And as the Queen forbid them to do, they had to do some smuggling to pass their food aid XD
That is one beutiful piece of history. It say much about human ability to empathize due to similar experiences, and seeing compassion despite such vastly different athnical and cultural backgrounds always make me happy.
Additionally, Ireland has started a scholarship system for Choctaw students to welcome them to study in some of our third level colleges. They receive their fees paid and a €10,000 stipend. Ireland and the Choctaws have a really powerful and positive relationship with each other, it’s very beautiful.
Also last year, crediting the Choctaw relationship for inspiring them, Ireland donated €2.5 million euro to the Hopi and Navajo tribes during coronavirus struggles.
Another fun fact: During the Irish famine and irish migration to the US, many irishmen were enlisted to fight on Mexico's invation. The poverty and opression they found in Mexico, their catholic religion and the abuses american soldiers made during the war reminded them their own opression and suffering in Ireland. So many soldiers led by Captain John Riley desserted the US Army and fought on the mexican side as "Saint Patrick's Batallion". In Mexico City we have a monument with the names of all of them and a street called "Irish martyrs" were their last battle was fought.
this is neat
@@reginaldbentworth9159 And definitely sounds like something the Irish would do.
The Chilean War of independence was led by O'Higgins, a Chilean of Irish descent.
This should be a film.
Majority of Irish fought for the us
Fun Fact: The U.S. government denied proper aid for two native american groups during the height of the COVID Pandemic and Ireland caught wind of this and raised several million dollars to help the Navajo and Hopi tribes as a thank you for the $170 raised by the Choctaw during the famine.
There is definitely a special bond between the Irish and Native Americans. I am half Anishinaabe and Half Irish so I go by Irishinaabe. I visited Ireland back in 2015 and was welcomed with open arms everywhere I went. I hope to go back again one day.
I’m very proud of my people to help out others.. we know how hard it can be.. very happy you were welcomed my friend.. be sure to come back and have a point of the black stuff.. I’m from co.Meath :) all the best from Australia 🇦🇺
Haha, Irishinaabe. That's good.
Nice
Yeah I went and traced my geneology and found out it basically encompasses the British Isles
So since this is the history side of OSP and we know the early relations the British had with Ireland and Scotland, and keep in mind this is really more of a joke than you know, self-loathing, I basically hate myself
This ils (was) here! Right in the heart of Europe. OMG!
“It’s time to complain about England!” Is it a day ending in Y already?
Yeah seems like it happens every other, other day
My favorite day
A popular activity in any area that was once colonized by England. Also England itself.
As an American, I can confirm.
"Screw England" should be a secondary EU slogan.
(Not so) fun fact: The population of Ireland is still lower than it was before the Great Famine. That's how devastating it was.
Blew my mind when I found this out a while ago. Mind bogglingly sad
No wayyyy
It's one of the very few places that has less people than it did 200 years ago what with the population of most countries absolutely exploding during that time. Although it's very close to matching prefamine levels now. Just under five million in the Republic of Ireland and just under two million in Northern Ireland versus about eight million before the famine.
Ireland doesn't have a high birth to death rate is about 0.4 so a very small increase
Keep mind not all of those people died. Many emigrated and struck a pretty big blow to an already very damaged economy
My favorite Irish joke:
"Hey stranger, before we become friends, I need to know. Are you Catholic or Protestant?"
"I'm an atheist, actually."
"Okay... but are you a Catholic atheist or a Protestant atheist?"
natkatmac did you know you actually CANT exit the catholic church ever even if you are an atheist so it is actually possible to be a catholic atheist lol
Eldy yeah it's annoying
@@ZenLeee what to do you mean, explain
thats not a joke i have literally been asked this
Also Dara O'Brien's joke:
"Now I don't believe in God or Religion or any of that sort of stuff. I'm still Catholic though!"
I believe they actually did have a written language: Ogham. A fairly mind blowing vertical writing structure. It's named for the Celtic God of language: Ogma. Ogma set up a competition where the winner got to have Ireland named after them. Ériu won, obviously.
That is such a cool story
Yes, Ogham is a fascinating language, I found it very easy to learn!
However, whilst Ogham was used for writing it did not allow for a literary tradition. The vast majority of culture was oral, so even though there are some ancient pieces of Ogham text, they are few and far between, leading most of our cultural knowledge from that time to be from secondary or foreign sources.
Also, unsurprisingly, Ogham filled a similar role to futhark, nordic runes, as they were highly ritualised and representative as well as alphabetical. Due to this it was mainly druids who were capable of reading and writing it, and much of what they did produce was for ceremonial purposes, not records of events or educational material
Correct! Ogham is also unique because it is written entirely on trees!
I’d hate to *harp* you on the *Eires* of the Irish, but there is a severe lack of Irish history and I’m glad you talked about it.
Maybe I'm biased, I do live here after all, but I find Irish culture to be one of if not the most interesting culture in the world
@@lizardlegend42 Can you tell some interesting things about it?
Totally. I looked for GOOD Irish history documentations for a long time. There are none that aren't beyond biased and made from an English perspective.
@@ErinOC_1306 - Canadian here, I know more about Irish history than I do American history. Canadian history was shoved down my throat so I know a bit about that but... Irish history is grand so...
@@user-jh9nx6tl1nThe Mythology. It's so amazingly unique compared to almost any other, especially when you see the weird way it merged with a version of Catholicism while keeping it's stories generally intact
Also as well our culture values "Just being good craic" above all else. As long as you're able to have a laugh you're pretty much sorted. (Also a lot of this applies mainly to rueal areas, the urban culture isn't nearly as great). Everyone in the rural areas know each other and the country is so small you'd be surprised by how many people have connections to your area.
For the best summary of Irish culture look up Sgt. Ducky on YT
The picture at 9:31 is of my grand uncle Peter Dwyer. I have it framed above me fireplace.
He joined the Irish Volunteers with his two brothers in 1914. He took part in the Kilcoole gun running, where the Irish Volunteers imported over 300 rifles and 2000 rounds of ammunition from Imperial Germany. During the 1916 Easter Rising, he was based in Enniscorthy in Wexford. He and his brothers lead of group of 50 men to capture the town of Ferns. After the Dublin rebels surrendered, he and his men were transported to prison in Dublin by boat. He was imprisoned in Frongoch interment camp in Wales but released in 1918 after a general amnesty for prisoners was called. After he was released he quickly joined the North Wexford Brigade of the IRA and was appointed Commander of C Company in the 1st Battalion. He stole some explosives from a shipment heading to a quarry in early 1919. The explosives would be later used to blow railway lines to prevent the rapid transportation of Britain soldiers. In late 1920, he and his brothers rescued an IRA Volunteer named William Kavanagh from capture, who had been so badly beaten by the Black and Tans he had to go to hospital. After the Anglo-Irish treaty, the brigade was split. Peter and his men served with the Pro-treaty forces. He served in the Battle of Dublin, where he took place in fighting on Sackville (now O'Connell) street.
May Peter, a hero to these lands, rest in peace. Fíor-ghrá agus bród. Go raibh maith agat.
Thaats sooo coooool!
My great great great aunt jennie millner was also a volunteer but was K.I.A
Interesting that they were transported to Dublin by boat. About 80 KM . despite there being intercity roads between the towns. The British did not control the land, nowhere was safe for them.
In the 1970s, Gallagher tabacco used to export tobacco between Belfast an d Dublin. The I R A seized so much of it, Gallagher's started sending the tabac from Belfast to Dublin via Liverpool.
A two hour journey took 3 days, But the Brits did say the tobacco was being delivered without incident or hindrance of any kind.
They were, in fact quite correct in that respect. But not in the problems with the logistics. Not a word about them in the press release.
I was in the 21st Infantry Battalion C Company. (21 INF. BN. C. COY) I proudly wore the Dwyer Insignia. 🇮🇪
The most infuriating thing about the famine is we actually were producing enough food, but it was all being exported to britain. At no point did they stop and think “ hey, maybe we should let the starving people producing our food have some of it so they dont all die”
It was SOLD to Britain
@@compendioussuccient6784 no it wasn't lol wtf
@@compendioussuccient6784Only by the rich Not by the ordinary starving people.
compendious succient it was sold by british landlords in ireland to other british people in britain while the actual farmers barely got paid enough to be allowed to live on their own land which was taken from them :)
Ellie strange definition of British but ok
Great video, born and raised in Ireland my whole life, same as my family before me. One thing I’ll never forget is when a white American woman called me a coloniser, crazy how little people know of Irish history across the world
Reminds me of how weird people, especially Americans, got about that scene in Bend It Like Beckham where the guy says he understands oppression because he's Irish. For some reason people insisted he couldn't horribly understand it because he's white and like...and? It's really frustrating to see people be so flat out racist and reductive. And it's not like Americans don't know what's happened to the Irish over the years either! That's even more frustrating.
They assume we all have the same history it’s craziness
“Woke” politics rots the brain and corrodes society. Resist it wherever you find it.
Because to some people, all white people must obviously have the same history. Daft.
On behalf of sane Americans (whose lineage comes from Ireland as well as other places) I whole heartedly apologize for our pampered ignorant people...🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️🤷♂️💯
Fun Fact: During the Great Famine, when the potato crop failed and the people starved, what many people don’t know is that there was food in the country, they just exported 90% of crops and produce were shipped off to England. Hence many Irish refer to the Famine as ‘The Great Starvation’
It just plain old genocide
important context: true before the famine, but by 1847 ireland had become a net importer of food
Did the same to India, they took the food of India same left them dying from hunger.
I'm English and my history teacher is Irish. You can probably imagine all the fun conversations we've had.
Teacher: And that's when the British began to colonise Ireland, *isn't that right, William.*
William Pym Would you like some fertilizer?
Hey William you like potatoes? Good I left a present in your car
I can imagine all the salt
Oh William, what happened in *insert year here*
I still am amused by the fact that with all it's internal struggles, it was the Ottomans who sent out a significantly charitable help as far as I'm aware, even though Queen Victoria was against it. See, Abdulmejit I for some reason, decided to help out the starving Irish people, either out of the softness of his heart. Or just to spite English Queen.
Victoria herself send out a help of 2,000 pounds, so they demanded Ottomans to evade helping them worthier than that. So the Ottomans did send 1,000 pounds of cash, and also smuggled 5 ships of food to Irish lands.
I even saw an Irish newspaper from some date around the Great Hunger, thanking the Sultan for showing Christian values and not being indifferent to people in need.
History is weird.
Eh, people are weird
Well I dont care what his reasons were, but knowing queen victorias history it was probably to spite her
An Irish football team, Drogheda United, have the star and crescent moon of the Ottomans in honour of their donation
So did natives in America ... in Ireland a plaque was erected to remember this kind gesture..
@@karylhogan5758 yes, the Choktaw nation (think I spelled it wrong) we also donated a few million euros to them earlier this year as they were experiencing a drought in quarantine. The money was raised by the public, the Irish and American governments didnt do anything to help them
This is the perfect example of why the phase “I wish you the luck of the Irish”
Is a insult
Well when you think about it with all that was thrown at us, we are lucky our culture survives
@@thejazzy6012 honestly I think that’s just shear force of will at this point
@@gwenjoyce4719 yeah you*re right 😂😂
@@thejazzy6012 that's more of a lack of fucks to give anymore I think lmao
I wish you the luck of the Irish. Specially the luck from before the 1600's
Irish history summarized "But wait, it gets worse!"
To be fair, that describes a lot of world history.
“Oh shit, this sucks! This is a deep pain... Oh, cool, it gets worse!”
I heard the same thing about Poland's history.
@@jackpollard550 Your reference makes me giggle.
"Hey Russia, they're talking about you."
"Что?"
@@jackpollard550 no you're wrong.
Theres...umm...you know...
Oh...
Therapist : how did these issues start?
England : nice island you got there
Ireland : and that's where the trouble started
England itself traumatised by its own invasions...and then decides to go and conqueror the world in catharsis...though not the areas which invaded England.
"And he just kinda never left"
Troubles*
@@frederickhudson5017 the British murdered thousands of people for their religion and we're then scared of Irish home rule cus "we'll be discriminated against!" Britain are histories "good guys"
@@hiddensinix2767 Yeah, never said they didn't do any of that or were wrong in what they did...just an idea (more joke than anything) on what the legacy of Englands own experiances with being conquered might have had on their conquests of other lands.
Though on a note about "good guys"...I think its fair to say that not many nations in the world can be considered to have held upstanding morality throughout their existance. But I think its fair to say at some specific points x nation is more (sometimes by little, sometimes by alot) morally right or good than y nation or does something good at a certain point. To take an example America has had some pretty fucked up moments in its history (slavery and segregation for example) but at the same time also had some good moments in its history (ww2 (and yes I do know the United States was not perfect but I think its fair to say they were better than the Nazis or Japanese)). The same applies to Britain, it has done barbaric things at points (such as colonisation and slaughter of native peoples in building an empire). but also at some points it was "moral" or did the right thing (such as not surrendering/ceasing fighting with Germany in 1940). As such there is no real "good guy" throught history rather times were some nations are more good than others. Apologies if that was long winded or made no sense but I just wanted to say what I thought on that.
History of Ireland. As an English an I shall find a corner to hide in.
Englishman living in NI here, close to the border and all. I think I'm gonna need a drink.
This wouldn't happen if you left us alone for 5 minutes
@ghost clown i also live close to the border in ni
@@eoinhanna5161 They are leaving you alone. It's just that the damned NI Assembly can't get over itself long enough to do anything to help with reunification. Or anything else for that matter. Example: won't the DUP be surprised to find the Westminster Parliament has passed an abortion bill.
no u ain't, GET BACK 'ERE
“I drove all the snakes out”
“We don’t have any snakes tho”
“Your welcome”
This is a great comment!! I didn't actually know until today (41 years old) about the whole thing of "actually there WERE no snakes, we think it was just a euphemism for pagans?" Wow! UA-cam is amazingly educational.
You’re
I thought it was, "You're welcome". Am I wrong?
@@lepmuhangpa nope, they can’t spell in ireland
@@kenrehill8775 How do you know he's Irish?
As An Irish Person, Great Video Detailing My Countries Long And Rich History!... I'd Like To Point Out That Ireland Was Populated Thousands Of Years Before 400BC, The Earliest Date So Far Known For Human Activity On The Island Is Around 7000BC This Era Is Known As The Mesolithic Era In Irish History, We Then Have The Neolithic Era Where One Of Our Most Iconic Landmarks Were Built (The Burial Complex Of Newgrange, Knowth & Dowth Known As "Brú Na Bóinne"/Bend Of The Boyne In Irish Gaelic) Built In 3500BC... Making It Thousands Of Years Older Than The Pyramids Of Giza And Stonehenge...
Why Must You Write Like This ?
It actually goes back to 12,500 BC
@ no, its believed to be 9000
Peep this comment it needs to be seen
This is a very long song title
I guess Blue's permanently standing now
I mean, I remember when Red stole his chair and format for the Trope Talks, and I guess she just kinda ended up keeping it? I kinda picture Red like a cat sitting on the edge of his chair and then slowly expanding and pushing him off
@@isa7165 I think so. Which is why it kinda feels like Red slowly pushed Blue out
@@paulinebonafous6623 it's cause Blue kept stealing the chair during trope talks.
Three Tragedies made in Belfast;
1. The Troubles
2. The Titanic
3. GoT Season 8
Too soon.
They did give us a cute pug though.
you forgt storment
>me
As a Born in bred Belfast native, I approve of this comment. 😂
Fun fact: it's possible Ireland had the first legally upheld right to healthcare in history, as well as protections and rights for the mentally ill. This was about 1300 years ago.
Really? That’s interesting, do you have a link? Seems like an interesting read :)
The Brehan laws ,divorce was legal ,compensation for all manner of things ,the British dragged us back to the stone age ,
And yet our healthcare now is some of the most expensive and abysmal in western europe woopie
Irish History in 5 words:
"And then The Troubles started..."
Kinda like how Russia's motto is "and then it got worse"
ethan hatcher I mean, one of your kings was called Ivan the *terrible*, I think that’s not a good sign for things to come
@@OttoGraff-fu8pj I think recent translations have that as 'Formidable' now... from 'Terrible'.
What? No. It's "and then the English came along"
@taniths 1st and only sgt iron on duty No, that's Ancient Greece. Or, more accurately: "Unfortunately, Zeus was feeling horny..."
0:55 "I'm just gonna try and say as few Irish names as possible so I don't embarrass myself."
*Red has flashbacks to the Cú Chulainn episode*
Oh dear. I was like "Red I respect you mate but that is not how that name is pronounced"
Ahh what the hell, there's no pronunciations online seeing as it's a near dead language so how was she supposed to know really? It drove me mad too but I'd hardly pronounce Spanish sentences fluently on my first try.
@@ASmartNameForMe I imagine that yes, of course there are pronunciations online, why wouldn't there be? Still 30,000 people speak it daily and the rest of us all have some and it's taught every day in schools. Are you just ignoring all this? Had conversations with Irish language hating Irish people who would complain that it doesn't matter how the language is pronounced and that it's only pedantic to care. To which I replied "so if I made a glaring mistake in French or Spanish would you think that was okay?" Names are important and caring about them is too. I've had my name butchered so many times it's not funny (and not particularly hard either) all it takes is a little attention to detail and, weirdly, listening.
@@ASmartNameForMe it is not a dead language. Cmon buddy, that is colonial garbage.
Diamonds And Dynamite Cosplay “near dead” I’m not saying it’s gonna die anytime soon but even in its main country only around a few thousand can actually speak it fluently
I’m Irish and I approve of this message.
Same
Same
Same
same
Agreed.
A friend of mine visited Ireland at some point during the Troubles and, while walking down the street, a group of guys called out to her "Are you Catholic or Protestant, then?"
Startled and characteristically forthright, she called back "I'm Jewish."
They had no idea what to do with that information, so she kept walking and was un-harassed for the rest of the trip.
She said it was the one and only time she's ever felt that being Jewish made her safer than if she were a Christian.
That was such a close call 😭
Yes sectarianism is a huge problem facing Irish society especially in Ulster. We need to remind people of the Irish heroes that were protestant such as Theobald Wolfe Tone.
Wales is a forgotten child playing with clay in the corner at this point.
FearOfFacts you can’t be replaced by immigrants. The whole point of immigration is that you want to be part of the country, so most of the time you’ll be assimilated into the culture, not destroy it. For every young couple that comes to Wales, their children will be part of the culture, even if their parents are not. Immigration is really only bad if the country’s overpopulated, which it definitely isn’t.
Llanfieafechan
Rachel Haslingden I believe it’s pronounced Llanfechell, an actual place. (Cl (Cl = hiss) - ah - nv - eh - ch (like you’re trying to get a glob of phlegm out of the back of your throat) - eh - cl.)
@@oldfridge5059 i live there
@@oldfridge5059 are in south or north
Scotland,
Ireland,
England,
Wales.
The four nations lived together in harmony,
But everything changed when the English attacked...
Edit: Is that “God bless ye merry gentleman” playing in the background or are my ears just broken?
Only Daniel O'Connel, master of all 4 nations, could bring peace. But when the world needed him most he vanished.
More like four groups that used to get along then the Romans wiped out Celtic influences on England then when they left Germanics came in took their place. England is basically a Germanic filler in a Roman mould
The poor Wales
Please, peace was never an option
Aye, where’s Cornwall on this list
5:07 Blue's excitement at getting to complain about England is contagious and honestly, relatable
“Drove the snakes out of Ireland”
Me: “looks around”
Me: nah, the British are still here.
Robert Michaels The only time Ireland has ever been united and at peace was when it was apart of the United Kingdom 🇬🇧
@@britopia1341 did you even watch that video? and even that's not true there were countless rebellions during the occupation, Do the fenians ring the thick bell that is your skull
Frosthawk2815 On a few occasions there was trouble. For the vast majority of the time it was peaceful. You can make a point without having to insult people. The RoI is very peaceful now but it isn’t the whole of Ireland. Northern Ireland is very peaceful for the most part nowadays too. Whether Northern Ireland was apart of the UK or RoI there would still be sectarian trouble. That’s just the way it is there. And Irishman can come in my house and eat out of my fridge if he wants. The rest of our isles are pretty peaceful. I think more people from the RoI and Great Britain should move to Northern Ireland make love and make money and turn the place into something more prosperous.
RH It’s you that’s trying to rewrite history. Northern Ireland isn’t a state. I don’t know of anybody who says it is. The UK is a state and Northern Ireland is apart of it. A united Ireland will happen. But it’ll be when the whole of Ireland is in the UK.
@@britopia1341 The only way thats ever going to happen is over the bodies of 6 million Irish people, not a single one of us now or every will ever led an Brit hold sovereign power over the island ever again. Imediate and terrible war will befall any british force that attempts it, your entire nation will be in flames in moments there are so many of us in the uk. Try us we dare you.
2:57 Whenever I Think Of This I Just Imagine Saint Patrick Walking Around Ireland Swinging A Staff Around Or Something, And Some Guy Asks Him What He's Doing, And He Says "Getting Rid Of The Snakes!", When The Guy Points Out There Are No Snakes, He Simply Says "See? It's Working!"
I laughed harder then I should have at this
I mean, have you ever seen any photo of him? All he does is point at snakes by the sea apparently
Irish history super summarized: "God dammit, Britain"
I accidentalky read Brian instead of Britain XD
“God dammit, Brian”
That’s modern history summarised too, fortunately.
Or unfortunately. Yeah, unfortunately.
Hey! Don’t rope Scotland and Wales into this
Or England
My family came to America during the famine, and we held on to Irish culture quite tightly. Most of my family speaks Irish (I speak very little on account of living in Florida away from most of my family, but I do want to learn), and we still practice a lot of Irish traditions. Ive been there like 4 times and I want to go back. Permanently. Seems like a nice place to chill, play D&D and collect a massive library, and have a rabbit farm.
If i were u i wouldent live in Ireland till your eighteen unless you want your teeth kicked in at school..
Sounds like a dream! Good luck...
I haven't been able to find ANY history on Ireland for some reason so I found this video really interesting and useful, this channel is so cool
It's also run by a feminist.
Exactly, this channel is brilliant!
@@goofybutserious4807 and?
@@dantemaquiavelli9039 ok
@@goofybutserious4807 woman and feminist aren't synonymous
Celtics : *Exist*
🅰nglo-Saxons & Romans/Italians : *Its Free Real Estate*
Northern Ireland it's free real estate
The Romans never invaded Ireland
@@techmaster9775 Celtic is also used to describe all of Britain Pre Rome.
@@joeevans5770 good point
@@joeevans5770 And almost the entirety of Western Europe (syncretic cultures like the Celtiberians included).
The Irish population still hasn’t returned to pre-famine Numbers.
Ireland importing disposable economic migrants. Will hit that mark soon.
@Adam Sloan You got nothing of use to say? Or are you going to keep on bringing up an irrelevant thing that has nothing to do with this? I think its probably the latter. Now, shoo
@Adam Sloan I don't play Assassin's Creed.
@Adam Sloan We can only hope migrants will push up our population numbers, and help to export our superior sports (football and hurling) to their home countries. Everyone deserves those, and unfortunately the uhh... migrants (god that part of our history is loaded as fuck, basically they were both the victims of and the tools of British imperial colonialism)... to Australia kinda forgot the rules for football on route and had to make them up again (at least they didn't defect to soccer) and and the Candians got cold and confused so made a sport based off hurling that used ice.
As it stands our population is too low; it feels like a single great catastrophe could end our traditions. More migrants who are willing to embrace and enrich our culture can make us so much stronger.
@@cam4234 the irish do
That's what I thought too, that one poor island getting a lot of abuse. I just came back from a trip to Ireland. I've been to both Republic and North. And I have to say that the way they empathize with other oppressed nations (which at the moment includes Ukraine) after going through such a tumultuous history themselves is inspiring. In Dublin there are many signs of support to Ukraine. It felt surreal to learn about Irish history during my stay there and live in a world where a similar thing is happening at the same time. The Irish are fun and friendly people and the country is beautiful and full of interesting and beautiful places. The way these people persevered and managed to hold on to their culture and traditions is amazing.
Irelands a nice country people just dont go anywhere stupid if you want to keep your money..
@@Monkeybomb0 whats that supposed to mean???
@@bubblesnstuff1458 There are some rough parts of Dublin, like every city, not so big a problem in the countryside but walking the wrong place at night in the city as a foreigner will probably get you robbed
2:56 - Ireland didn't have snakes.
Or St. Patrick was damn good at his job.
I brought all the dead snakes back to life just to drive them out
The Snakes were non-catholics... Not actual Snakes. Its a wierd phrase for the actual story
St. Patrick: I drove the snakes out of Ireland.
Modern folks: There were never snakes in Ireland.
St. Patrick: You're welcome.
Exactly
St Patrick was an English man sold into slavery in Ireland, the viking trade ??????? You mean slavery Dublin, Cork etc were all built as slave storage
Me, an Irishman: *sees this video pop up*
Me: …
Me: *get's the kettle on*
Tae agus plé bai
Me: *gets the car and balaclava ready*
Next time offer us all one, will you?
Friday Knight same
Connas atá tú? Ba maith liom Cupán tae
I've never heard someone so effectively sum up irish history in less then 10 sentences before. Well done.
During my time living in Ireland, I learned about the history of the country and found it strangely similar to my own country, Korea.
Being invaded by foreign powers, intellectual development and a love of music and storytelling.
Cabbage and stew as well according to Tumblr.
It's strange how eerily similar the two are. Perhaps being brutally oppressed causes certain traits to form? Like, maybe the history of oppression leads to certain art forms or whatever (which could explain why Irish music and art is so good imo). How many other countries have similar stories and developments? Also, I wonder how well the Koreans and Irish got along when people began having children together-- plenty to bond over.
“It’s time to complain about Britain!”
-Every country liked that-
never before I am insulted by something I 100 percent agree with
Ah yes, the world's leading exporter of Independence Day holidays.
@@flankspeed Yeah we can't celebrate other countries independence from us or we would never bloody get to work
Everybody says Britain but we all know its England's fault
@@finlaybower imagine being stupid
A few things: (i) You mentioned that the Scots were planted in Ireland in the 17th century, but didn't mention that the Scots were originally an Irish tribe who invaded Caledonia about a thousand years previously
(ii) Ulster is NOT the same as Northern Ireland; Ulster was an ancient kingdom that consisted of 9 counties, only 6 of which make up Northern Ireland.
(iii) The terms Northern Ireland, The North of Ireland, Ulster and The 6 Counties, are used about the same place by different groups of people with different political views.
As they used to say during the Troubles 'If you're not totally confused, you don't understand what's happening.'
I agree with what most of what you have to say except the idea that the ulster Scots were orginally irish, they weren't they were scots, an off shot of Anglo saxon.
@@pete4580 The area north of Hadrians wall was inhabited by two main tribes; the Caldones and the Picts. In the 6th century the Irish tribe called the Scots set up the kingdpm of Dalriada (my spelling is probably wrong) in what is now Argyll. From there they spread out, gradually conquering the rest of Caladonia and renaming it Scotland.
@@moonkeele i know that but he was referring to the ulster Scots who are anglo saxons in origin and weren't gallic
He was claiming they were originally Irish which is a fantasy
Your third point sounds a lot like how Spaniards and Catalonians talk about Castilian versus Spanish as languages. Catalonia has a unique culture and some would argue a different language (and I would agree, Catalan is deffo not Spanish). But some argue that Castilian (the dominant Spanish dialect) is the language spoken by all of Spain.
In Latin America, Spanish (Español) and Castilian (Castellano) are used as synonyms for the Spanish language. But in Spain, where Catalonia has been pushing for independence from Spain for decades, calling Spanish "Castellano" carries separatist undertones, while simply calling it "Español" is more conciliatory and less politically charged.
It's worth noting that Ulster is still a modern precisely defined province rather than just an ancient kingdom consisting of the same six northern Irish counties and the same three Irish counties. As a result the terms aren't as interchangable as you suggest; Cavan is part of Ulster but is not part of Northern Ireland for instance.
Please do Wales soon, we need all the help reclaiming a national identity that we can get.
Ah, the Canada of the British Isles.
As an Irishman who has lived in Wales, I'd say your national identity is alive and well. Celts are playing the long game.
You were founded by Romano-British refugees, you've always been Brits.
@@slook7094 not really. there's a FUCKTON of evidence of the welsh being one of the biggest splinter group's of the celt's after the Anglo-Saxon invasion, with record's of the slow change from Brittonic (the original Celtic language) into welsh
@@matthewmac5787 They were Romano-British. They retreated from the Anglo-Saxons and the Vikings to the other side of England and turned into the Welsh.
Small correction, only 6 of Ulster’s 9 counties formed Northern Ireland, the other 3 are in the Republic of Ireland. Love the video 👍
Blue: mentions potato
Me: ah yes, the whole reason my family lives in america
We left Ireland before it was mainstream...
I have ancestors that left Ulster once the famines and the "hey, nice land. We're stealing it and renting it back to you" folks showed up.
My dads side of the family moved from Ireland to Scotland in the 1916 uprising
Same
Liam C it is a popular name
Ireland, also known as British imperialism's tutorial level.
Given how frequently they kicked the crap out of us in rebellions, I think we consider imperialism to be the Ninja Gaiden of history.
France being the tragic backstory of course.
We really were tbh. We were where the first major British colony and part of us is also the last
I thought that was Wales? Then again, they were considered part of england for a while while ireland was seen more as a colony so nvm ignore me
@@lv2draw1 You are right in some regards for sure. Unlike even Ireland which was "unified" with England (and eventually Great Britain, UK etc) Wales was just straight up annexed into England. Though Ireland was invaded earlier Wales was the first to be fully conquered (and unlike Ireland that conquest was maintained). It mostly depends on what you considered to have happened "earlier" though I'd say both count equally.
My favourite part about growing up in Northern Ireland is that our history unit doesn’t include 80% of this but instead we learn about world war 2 about 4 times throughout your entire education but you end up learn half of this stuff because everyone still is salty about the English but we won’t say it out loud.
Why wouldn't you learn about it?
@@BJGvideos it's complicated but basically CCEA (the exam board for secondary school who set the exams & therefore what we have to learn) serve all schools, Catholic and Protestant so they have to make a history course that isn't offensive to Protestants while recognising what Catholics suffered, but they tend to lean more towards Protestants than Catholics so all we get taught about the Troubles in GCSE History (CCEA) is the undeniable truth, not the entire story.
@@evincollins5198 That's odd. Still doesn't explain why they don't teach the full story but I guess "narrative" or something.
@@BJGvideos there would be protests and ensentially CCEA would be forced back to the middle ground, not full truth
@@evincollins5198 Seems like it would still be worth it. It's vital to tell the truth in history class.
The potato famine was not as simple as you suggest. Ireland produced quite a lot of other food like wheat and barley but much of it had to be sent to Britain. Also, the landowners were trying to force people off the land anyway.
these people don't care about the facts, all they want is the narrative to make england and britain look evil - it's sme kind of internet joke spouted by people with half knowledge that they use to fuel their persecution complexes
Couldn’t even fish if caught by a “landowner” you’re fecked
AH me country lets see how this goes
edit: Fisean iontach, go raibh maith agat.
Thank god i listened in irish class😂
Google translate to the rescue! "Great video, thanks."
Is rud dearfach é i gcónaí nuair a fheicim ár dteanga nádúrtha ar an Idirlíon! Go raibh míle as do "margaíocht"!
Bless you... or whatever
@@daedalus7286 Google translate to resuce yet again. "It is always nice to see our native langue on the internet! That was miles away from your "marketing.""
Me, a professional Irishman seeing this video title “ohhh noooo”
This Irish-American atheist saw it and thought, Well, let's give the guy a chance to get stuff wrong. What could it hurt?
@@stephenwright8824 cringe
@@stephenwright8824 Plastic Paddy
@@stephenwright8824 By Irish-American do you mean your parents are Irish or you have one great grandparent who knew someone who owned a pub?
What’s wrong with the title
Any land ever: *exists*
Britain: it's free real estate.
What about the Dutch, Germans, French,Americans,Spanish,Portuguese,Italians,Japanese and Chinese. The UK isn’t the only country to have done imperialism.
@@Valencetheshireman927 it had the biggest empire in world history
Yes, your point being? I mentioned that every country has done imperialism at some point in its history so it’s not fair to criticise and single out Britain for what all of our nations have done . Forgiveness is a word besides imperialism has brought the world benefits, for starters without it not a single country in this planet would exist .
@@Valencetheshireman927 mate it's a joke and I'm to tiered to rage in the comments of a video it's a joke about Britain wanting more land for their empire because the British empire is really big and 65 people kinda liked it and that's it. I'm not attacking the UK this is probably one of the most benine jokes about imperialism that there is.
I'm done bye.
J 19 the video is specifically about Britain, the meme is about claiming the most land, it aims for the victor, be happy we had at one time won
The history of Ireland and the UK is amazing. The rivalry in sport they have is so understandably massive due to their past conflicts. Most fascinating place in the World by far IMO.
Blue: "Ireland never had snakes"
Me, thinking about deValera: if you say so
Oh shit! Shots fired!
@@JackSilver1410 Literally
Rj Peterson at Collins.
EJOArkhamGamer nice one baii
Me thinking about Dev and many, many, MANY more, and plenty far too recent
Last time i was this early Doggerland still existed
"I came here to murder my wives and trash Catholicism and I'm all out of wives." I'm dead, this is perfect
So are his wives.
@@jackpollard550 *especially his wives
But now they're... EX-WIVES!
He only murdered 2. He didn't run out of wives. His last wife outlived him.
Announcing his lordship the Duke of Nuken! Protector of Earth against the invading armies of Alien B@st@rds.
I've got a friend who lives in Derry and when I was visiting him, he told me that the death toll from the famine/genocide was so bad that Ireland is still affected by it and their population still hasn't recovered.
The population has recovered now but only in 2021 but it’s still wild 1845-2021 that’s how long it took to recover from the “famine”
@@bobbi1824 Jesus
@@bobbi1824 is it not still 1.5 million people less?
Bro I live in Derry, we are good hahaha
the famine also had some major effects on the irish language itsself as a lot of the irish speakers either died or fled and i think to this day it hasnt recovered enough, and it probably wont with the globalisation of english
"It's time to complain about Enlgand!"
~Irish people from three counties over break through every wall like a small army of Kool-Aid men~
What? I heard my name. Are we complaining yet? I'll get the tea started
🙄
Some people live to hate and be stuck on the past unable to forget or forgive but still able to make lies and complain about everything. 🤦♂️
@Fiona Hopkins that's not a thing
My headcanon is that something like that happened with the berlin wall
me an indian: may I join?
I remember when we did Ireland in year three, and I heard “celts” as belts that one time.
the 🅱elts
So we got Scotland and Ireland. Is Wales next?
No. Nobody cares about Wales!
I stills can't figure out if wales is supposed to be another country
England's first victim and last colony.
Gallwn ni cael fideo am cymru os gwelwch yn dda, glas?
Can we have a video about Wales please, Blue?
So does England get a video, then?
I'm an Irish History graduate from Ireland and I love this whole video, great job!
Last time I was this early Apollo and Hyacinthus were still together
Yas finally a vid bout my wee island of potatoes -Edit: Thanks for all the likes lads/lassies-
Just so you know, We dont like big E either.
And bad ass castles
Prince Edward Island?
Joking aside, it was a good video.
Same!!
Fun fact I actually live and am completely Irish!
*The Vikings*
The Irish: oh, Hi? Are you lost or- AH Jesus!
*the Normans*
The Irish: ah, here lads
*the British*
The Irish: *AH FIR FU*-
The Irish: ÓRÓ SÉ DO BHEATHA 'BHAILE!
@@rosiecooper8030 Could you say that again in English......please
An Irish king invited the Normans n to help him become high king though
@@Ella-by9yk Thats an irish song
@@Ella-by9yk It's basically hey come look at the state of your country, literally, it's closer to oy! welcome home
Fun fact: William III of Orange, after becoming King of the United Kingdom, actually wanted to return the confiscated land to the original Irish owners but was blocked by parliament.
Honestly that’s a part of colonial history that fascinates me: that there were always people who disliked the actions that the government / parliament / king did but were outvoted or blocked from doing anything. I’ve read transcripts from parliamentary debates in the 1890’s where people rightfully point out that ‘hey if the public knew the things we were doing to these foreign countries and how much these crimes against humanity were costing us they’d be appalled’
It’s easy to think that European colonialism was a monolith when it was actually the actions of a greedy leadership doing monsterous things while dragging oblivious citizens along for the ride. And it was nearly always the rich upper class idiots who could afford to be politicians leading the way to get yet more money and power.
Obviously this doesn’t excuse anything, but I always find it interesting to remember that colonial powers weren’t this completely greed-driven hive mind but rather a boys club of rich kids taking the world for a selfish joyride
If this is true, the continued existence of the Orangemen is fucking hilarious
@@justbeyondthecornerproduct3540 what, because they actually wanted the lives of the Irish to be somewhat better?
@@TheJH1015 yeah because today they are just sectarian people who want to oppress Irish catholics. Yet they worship this guy William who actually himself wanted to given the stolen land many of those orangemen have today back to the Irish
just to let ye all know "Tuatha" is actually pronounced "two-a"
I love that Celtic/Gaelic/Irish has so much in common with French...by ignoring most of the consonants in their words 😅
@@ThatGreyGentleman I guess, but that's all they have in common. French is much more similar to English than Irish is with its patterns and many pronunciations.
And people gripe about the English language!
@@ASmartNameForMe Hmm not so sure. Irish, like French, is more Latin based than English which is more influenced by the Germanic languages.
Oh BTW it's "thoo-ha" t has always a "th" sound in Irish but not like the English or Americans say "th" a thicker way like the French or Spanish do.
"It's time to complain about England!" (blood congeals in English-Irish mixed heritage)
Kimarous Oof tell me about it I’m irish- English and a Mancunian on top of it
Like there’s precarious mix of her stuff and then there’s ‘my grans a Irish Roman Catholic and we’re from Manchester’
I’m a norn Irish/Englishman aswell and it definitely gets confusing. Especially rugby
Me, watching this: Is 1/4ths English and Irish
Also me: No wonder I hate myself sometimes
The reality of the human race in general is that due to our tendency to "explore" and conquer, we all have mixed DNA somewhere down the line that possesses both the enslaved and the oppressor. For instance, apart from the obvious Irish/English connection that is being discussed that I share in my heritage as well, I have slavic heritage as well. The word "slave" stemmed from the Slavs who were enslaved at one point by the Romans. It is a viscous cycle that never seems to break. Might as well accept that no heritage is without its bloody and painful truths. And we can't assume that just because one aspect was enslaved by another that there weren't early days where the same wasn't done amongst there own people either. Did you know that some people have a genetic code that protects certain individuals from getting shaking sickness accrued from eating human flesh? How do you think that developed? There are multiple indications in certain cave sights of early humans where bones were found with scrapings indicative of cannibalism... and that they were likely from warring tribes. Overall, humanity is beautiful and terrible alike and we all have that in common that we share.
Think that’s hard? Try having mixed heritage of every country in the British isles... help
Ireland:Well things can’t get worse
England:IS THAT A CHALLENGE
Much respect to the Irish. One of the few people who felt oppression and learned to sympathize and aid others undergoing it as well. San Patricios, Choctaw support, Solidarity with Palestine.
They also got on with the Indians very well
What about WW2 where they were neutral
@@Chambo1990 were the irish in germany?
@@mkn.567 no but they could see the oppression in Germany at the time and decided to stay out and then punished any soldiers who want to fight in the war. How about how an Irish member of the EU parliament voted against sanctions against Russia and said you should not punish Russia for the invasion
@@Chambo1990 Yeah... They also didn't get involved with Rwanda or Darfur or Bosnia or Armenia. And? So for any credit to be given to anyone they must meet your arbitrary metric of absolute consistency?
Seeing as you’ve done Scotland and Ireland, could you do one on Wales? (I love the Celtic nations)
Ah the forgotten middle child...
If you haven't seen it, they released a video for Whales sometime last year
Brittany too
I'm devonian and I'd say we along with the corniche are the children left at the supermarket
I think the Irish have my favourite history so far.
They gave a giant f&ck you to anyone who wanted to subdue them, and it's GLORIOUS.
I would say they are just a very hardy people that stick to what they love
@@TheGameMage_
Cheers to that.
The thing is that manifested as centuries of rebellions, war and hedge culture, the scars of which are all over the country today. People praise Ireland for rising up, and many americans I've met idolise the IRA, not realising that they were, and are terrorists. In the years of occupation, they were what was needed to free the country from the yoke that was choking it, but in the times of the troubles, they evolved to use modern gang warfare tactics, up until the Good Friday Agreement, they drove car-bombs into civilian centers. Even now, the successors to the IRA, and UVF are little more than gangland criminals in the eyes of the Republic.
The thing that I feel needs to be praised isn't how hardy Ireland is, it's how flexible our culture is. The vikings came, burned, pillaged and looted, and then settled here, and were absorbed into our culture. Then the Normans did the same, and they were referred to as "More Irish than the Irish themselves". Then the English Occupation, The Spanish Armada was shattered off the west coast, and we absorbed what they brought, and this all continues on in the modern day, with Africans, Indians, Chinese, and Eastern Europeans all bringing their culture here, and willingly and gladly adopting our culture. The vast majority of my neighbors are Polish born or bred, but they're as Irish as anyone else in the eyes of the community.
So what Ireland's true success story is, is integration. Wherever we went when we left our country, we brought our culture with us, and fused it with local cultures, and whenever a peoples came to us en masse, we took their culture, and brought it into ours, and shared ours with them.
As someone from Ireland I was really pleased with your knowledge of Irish history, its vast, confusing at times and a lot of non Irish people really struggle with it so I was really pleased with your video on it
One of my favourite story's of my family is about a prison nearby my home that has a wall that has a large patch of cement that stands out from the rest of the wall I learned through my grandfather that my great great grand father had fought during the Easter rising and had evaded arrest he had blown a hole in the wall to break everyone out it's one of the many things that caused my interest in history
Huh. This is strangely similar to a story about my great uncle, down to the prison with the weird cement patch in the wall. Wonder if we’re thinking of the same place
A history of Wales would be much appreciated.
There's only so much shame this poor Englishman can take...
ArrZarr, don’t worry mate, no one is responsible for the sins of their ancestors.
ArrZarr Yeah what he said
But just remember if you want to come to Wales at some point to learn a couple of words and be respectful in general.
Diolch = thanks
So there’s one
@@DrORRB-qm7fl I went to university in Bangor. It was a few years back but the only Welsh word that sticks with me is Fish. Can't remember the spelling "Pysgothyn"? but I'm familiar with the pronunciation. Once while driving through southern Wales, I got about half an hour's entertainment trying to pronounce "Trellech" correctly :D
ArrZarr Awesome! Also it’s “pysgodyn”
“ Its time to complain about england” fuckin love it hahaha
"Time to complain about England" is my favourite part of the day.
“It’s time to complain about England!” Is that my European history teacher I hear?
except if youre portuguese or german/dutch :P
@@fuzzyhair321 Oh trust me, the Dutch have PLENTY of things to complain about the English... the Dutch Year of Disaster 1672, the Boer Wars and the Fall of Srebrenica come to mind.
European history is just a game of which country can be the biggest dick to everyone else. England is definitely one of the best at the game but has some competition.
Let’s just be honest here and say that everyone hates England (I say England because Wales and Scotland were just roped into this).
Not everyone hates England. Just because you yourself hate England does not mean every one else does .🤦♂️The UK is actually one of the most liked countries in the world, beneath Canada.
You did an amazing job summarising Irish history without making it seem boring. Were so intertwined with the british that we dont really have our own history separate from them. Fun Fact #1, They dont teach anything related to Ireland in british schools since we are the only country that fought our way out of the commonwealth. Fun Fact #2, Before the british invaded, Ireland had Brehon Law, which allowed women to be judges and leaders and everything incredibly fair.
So the Vikings set up trade in Irish cities, what did they trade, mostly the Irish.
Of course! Nerds were a valuable resource back then!
Irish pagan bards and Catholic monks.
They see me praying they hear you singing they trying to catch us Irish and nerdy🎶 I'm a dork over look me😅
Oh they traded Saxon, picts and Welsh too in Ireland. The Norse didn't discriminate between the peoples of these isles. What's that shitty tune again.....that Britons never will be slaves.....
As an irishman my first reaction was oh god, post watching thank you for loving my country... and thank you for avoiding gaelic words they genuinely are almost never pronounced as they look!
If most Irish people can’t pronounce Irish names. Good luck to everyone else
Hey Blue, just wanted to say you did a great job on the video. As someone from Ireland, I'm delighted to see someone do an amazingly accurate and entertaining video on its history. Also thank you for showing some restraint and not doing a terrible Irish accent (although I do love a terrible accent).
Tuatha= tooha
This has been a really great summary, Ireland has such a rich and fascinating history
Brexit: *exists*
Good Friday Agreement: "Am I a joke to you?"
i doubt ireland will blow up again, things will carry on as usual as theyve always have in the past 30yrs. memories are rosey and nobody is interested in a fight anymore
@@fuzzyhair321 Here's hoping. The UK is a far better place now than it was in the 70s and 80s.
I never exactly understood the problem. Just use the Good Friday Agreement as the basis and have some security checks behind the border which modern technology would make a non-issue of. Problem solved.
Some people reckon that if Brexit does happen, it means that Northern Ireland and the republic or Ireland will officially leave the Uk and that if they do, it might lead to Scotland fully leaving as well. So basically England will look like an idiot of a country and will be utterly humiliated.
@@agenttheater5 Well since it's Labour and SNP, whose MPs are Remain, who want the 2nd Scottish referendum (which was meant to be once in a generation thing) I sincerely doubt that. As stated in this video the GFA allows NI to leave whenever they so please, why haven't they left already? The problem is more of a recurrence of the Troubles and the New IRA then anything else.
You make it seem like Parilment still has international dignity and prestige.
I've got to appreciate the clear outlining of the Welsh kingdoms before the act of union. I hope you do Wales soon
Fun fact: We did not go through a famine because of a potato blight, We went through it because all of our healthy crops were being exported to the united kingdom and any aid other countries would give us also went to the united kingdom. They tried to murder our entire country off essentially.
You also really skipped over so much history from the plantation of Ireland and how that really changed everything up. You did briefly mention it but its so much bigger than what you had gone through and more important.
That's not entirely true actually. While crops were exported from Ireland during the famine suggesting that aid from other countries meant for Ireland went to the UK is a lie.
@@Pizza23333 no it's not?????
@@Pizza23333 complete and utter bollox. It was forced genocide.
@@cathalodiubhain5739 Genocide actually has conditions that have to be met in order to qualify, and the famine doesn't. You can't just declare things hoping they're true.
@@Pizza23333 The Famine, or An Górta Mór, the Great Hunger, took more than one million lives, between those that died of starvation and those that left Ireland for a better life in America or elsewhere in the world. Those who were left behind in Ireland experienced a desperation that led to a massive change in politics and nationalism - it was only a few years later, in 1858 that the Irish Republican Brotherhood was founded. The British government and the British and Irish Protestant landowners still required the Irish peasants and laborers to pay their rent for the land they could not work due to the blight and the hunger upon them. In a lush island surrounded by water teaming with fish and land that fattened pig and cattle alike, how could one failed crop cause a Famine? According to British law, Irish Catholics could not apply for fishing or hunting licenses. Their pigs and cattle were sent to England to feed the British and to export for trade, while the landlords kept the fine cuts for themselves. Ireland was part of the British Empire, the most powerful empire in the world at that time - yet the British government stood by and did nothing to help their subjects overcome this hardship. In our time, an enforced famine such as this would be labeled genocide yet in the 1800s it was merely an unfortunate tragedy. As defined in the United Nation's 1948 Genocide Convention and the 1987 Genocide Convention Implementation Act, the legal definition of genocide is any of the acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, including by killing its members; causing them serious bodily or mental harm; deliberately inflicting on a group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; and forcibly transferring children of the group to another group. The British policy of mass starvation inflicted on Ireland from 1845 to 1850 constituted "genocide" against the Irish People as legally defined by the United Nations. A quote by John Mitchell (who published The United Irishman) states that "The Almighty indeed sent the potato blight, but the English created the Famine.
From the Greek word for tribe (or race), genos, and the Latin term -cide, the word genocide refers to the extermination of the peoples of a nation (or religious group) carried out by an organization, usually a government. Such is the case when discussing the British treatment of Ireland during the potato blight; treatment which was based in the history of Ireland. William Makepiece Thackcray wrote:
"...It is a frightful document against ourselves...one of the most melancholy stories in the whole world of insolence, rapine, brutal, endless slaughter and persecution on the part of the English master...There is no crime ever invented by eastern or western barbarians, no torture or Roman persecution or Spanish Inquisition, no tyranny of Nero or Alva but can be matched in the history of England in Ireland." (Metress, 2)
A famine did not truly exist. There was no food shortage in Ireland evidenced by the fact that the British landowners continued to have a varied diet and food stuffs were exported. This was not the first failure of the potato crop in the history of Ireland. The starvation (and genocide) occurred as the British carried on their historical exploitation of the Irish people, failed to take appropriate action in the face of the failure of the potato crop, and maintained their racist attitude toward the Irish.
The Penal Laws, first passed in 1695. were strictly enforced. These laws made it illegal for Catholics (Irish) to own land, and required the transfer of property from Catholics to Protestants; to have access to an education, and eliminated Gaelic as a language while preventing the development of an educated class; to enter professions, forcing the Irish to remain as sharecropping farmers; or to practice their religion. In addition, Catholics (Irish) could not vote, hold an office, purchase land, join the army, or engage in commerce. Simply put, the British turned the Irish into nothing better than slaves, subsisting on their small rented farms.
The exportation of wheat, oats, barley, and rye did nothing to help the financial status of the poor farmer. The produce was used to pay taxes and rents to the English landlords, who then sold the farm products for great profit. These profits did nothing for the economy of Ireland, but did help the English landlords to prosper. The Irish farmer was forced to remain in poverty, and reliant on one crop, potato, for his subsistence.
The potato became the dominant crop for the poor of Ireland as it was able to provide the greatest amount of food for the least acreage. Farming required a large family to tend the crops and the population grew as a result of need. Poverty forced the Irish to rely upon the potato and the potato kept the Irish impoverished.
As the economic situation worsened, landlords who had the legal power to do so, evicted their Irish tenant farmers, filling the workhouses with poor, underfed, and diseased human beings who were destined to die.
A caption under a picture shown in The Pictorial Times, October 10, 1846, best describes the circumstances of the great starvation, and the nature of the genocide:
"Around them is plenty; rickyards, in full contempt, stand under their snug thatch, calculating the chances of advancing prices; or, the thrashed grain safely stored awaits only the opportunity of conveyance to be taken far away to feed strangers...But a strong arm interposes to hold the maddened infuriates away. Property laws supersede those of Nature. Grain is of more value than blood. And if they attempt to take of the fatness of the land that belongs to their lords, death by musketry, is a cheap government measure to provide for the wants of a starving and incensed people."(Food Riots, 2)
It is time for the world to stop referring to this disastrous period in Irish history as the Great Famine, and to fully realize, and to acknowledge, the magnitude of the crime that systematically destroyed Irish nationalism, the Irish economy, the Irish culture, and the Irish people.
That phrase "Kiss me I'm Irish" I'd see in my Irish grandparents' house has a whole other meaning now because Ireland sure did need some kind of love and support 95% of the time
Oh god this is so perfectly timed it’s almost creepy! I just started a creative writing story set in Ireland (which I am NOT from, but trying to do as much research as possible)
Make sure someone says 'sound' in the story. We say that now
And have people use like at the end of sentences as well. It happens a lot
To that I say Slainte mhaigh.
Don't forget to add class as a way to say cool or awesome. Also " For the craic" is a way we say for the fun or for the laugh. For example:
A: What's the craic lads?
B: Me and the lads are going to [insert place here].
A: that's class.
And then you add in extra stuff for your chosen accent based on where the story takes place and done.
Also don't forget to say "ah for fecks sake"
"If there is two fish fighting in a puddle of water,probably an English passed there."
*Native American old saying*
Just as an interesting aside, the Choctaw Nation scraped together what they could during the Famine and donated to a relief fund because they thought the suffering of the Irish people was greater than their own. A great act of generosity from one nation oppressed by WASPs to another nation oppressed by WASPs!
And there was a suprising ottoman aid to the island. There is even a port which has cresent and star
@@mustafaardateker6004 yes they wanted to donate 10.000 English pounds but UK did not allow it so they gave it secretly with ships.
This reminds me of "secret book of kells", and "song of the sea".
2:44
the animations and tone of your voice goes so perfectly adorable together.
Semi related story:
My family is a bunch of English Protestants, and meanwhile my friends' family is a bunch of Irish Catholics.
He jokes about car bombs, I joke about him starving
Is it in poor taste?
Yes.
Is it hilarious?
Also yes.
LCraftCat
I’m Australian, with the usual crazy blend of English, Scottish, Welsh & Irish ancestry (along with a few others; American Indian, Danish, German & Huguenot French)... & I laughed at this, I don’t know why- I’m sick & miserable right now, so the momentary distraction was- nice?
Same lmao except I'm not a prod
Yep with me being Dutch-Irish, my family has a hard time not strangling each other at Christmas.
One can get away with that sort of thing with friends. I say fucked up things to my brother I'd never say to a stranger; it's all about mutual respect and knowing boundaries.
I went to school in NI and then went to an all prod college and never saw a pile of people again until recently when I saw a man called Oisin and pulled down my hood and pulled up my collar and ran at yelling welcome to east Belfast ya fenian. Later I met him again behind 3cm glass in a jailhouse because apparently that’s a hate crime and attempted assault.
"Oh golly gosh would you look at the clock, it's time to complain about England!" is my new catchphrase.
Persecution complex
Poor Ireland - they never had sneks :(
How sad.... Alexa play “the snek face playlist”
What do you mean “poor”?
@@galacticcore0796 1) Sneks are adorable and 2) Sneks feed on small rodents like rats and mice and do a great job of keeping populations low which helps stop the spread of disease. Cats do a similar job but here less is definitely not more
@@anniesearle6181 Ireland got off relatively easily as far as plague went. It's why blue didn't mention it in the video, it barely struck Ireland at all.
And besides, modern Ireland has more than enough cats to keep the mice to a reasonable population.
@@AndrewGeierMelons I wasn't talking about the plauge, I was talking about disease in general. Also rats and mice do massive damage to stored crops, which probably didn't help during the famines
This was a truly fascinating video, and has served to only further my love of learning all things Irish (both historical and mythological) even more
The effort put into both researching and making this visually striking is (as with all your other videos) obvious, combined with the charm and charisma that each of the OSP narrators bring to their respective videos, makes you're content addictive, and easy to watch, whilst also being highly informative and entertaining
What remains of Irish folklore is also highly interesting, and it just so happens that OSP also have videos on that!
(And to anyone who is seeking a new language, I would highly recommend (as predictable as it sounds) Irish, it's a wonderful language that is sadly fading, and it would be a shame to see it die now after it endured everything it has)
It's thanks to content like yours that has kept my passion for learning about the past alive
And for that i thank you
Hey can we get a history summarised of Cymru (Wales)
Cambria!
12 minutes of "..and then the English made it worse"
Cyru ar bith
@@knicknac95 if that's how you see welsh history that's sad or you're not welsh
WALES!🏴If only they added the Welsh dragon to the UK flag, it would look much better that way .
Seeing Northern Ireland actually talked about and acknowledged is so nice. We're still recovering from the Troubles in ways and with Brexit the peace is becoming more and more tenuous. We also haven't had a government for nearly 3 years now because our devolved one fell apart and England refuses to really do anything about it so yknow. They're still on their bullshit
Thank you for this video it's so nice to see my country talked about and it not be made into a joke
... But it is a joke.
The government is awful here that is true
@@jonas-savimbi3765 Then why not just..idk, rejoin Ireland?
@@EmilioReyes_97 You say that like our governments any better themselves lmao.
Lizadon07 wow
"Henry the 8th wanted to make himself a big deal"
Literally and figuratively.
Fantastic video! as an Irish man myself, may I say thank you for making such a well informed and through explanation of our history and culture, it even thought me some things I wasn't aware of.
Go raibh maith agat!
Blue: *Pronounces Cú Chullain right*
Me: YEEEEAAAAAHHHH
That is... not what I've heard as the correct pronunciation to be. Not saying you're wrong, just pointing out that it's very much too inconsistently pronounced to say one is for sure "the right one".
You probably knew that, sorry.
...The way Red says it might just be wrong though. ;)
@@clockworkkirlia7475 Yeah, true, there's probably like 40 different ways to pronounce the name.
I mean there are different Irish accents, but unless you’re in like Donegal it’s pronounced how he said it
There *are* regional pronunciations. Choose one, say it correctly, and i'm happy