@@prydain4131let Paris commune, German revolution of 1919, German labour uprising of 1923 and Great socialist October revolution scare you. Capitalist!
been listening to a TON of German ( and other countries ) military music ( prior, during, and after Nazi Germany Era ) due to youtubes weird algorithm lol ( dont mind it tho ), and I gotta say, German songs go hard. Especially imho 55 days at Peking. I dare say that German songs just sound way better than our own English songs.
its even better when playing Mordhau and then equipping the pesant perk. and after 30 minutes its a 50% pesants and 50% knight fight, even some propaganda going on from the pesant side against the bourgeoisie. funny expirience
There are many amry songs with a final stanza about coming back home after the war, this is the only one I've heard which has this stanza admitting defeat instead of celebrating a victory.
@@Robespierre228 This is sung in High German, not a southern dialect. It is just a more archaic form of High German with words that are no longer commonly used. Alemannic and Bavarian are the two southern dialect groups of German, and since I am a native speaker of Alemannic and I also know Bavarian very well from my father's side of the family, I should know ...
@Dan-jp8jr why did you feel the need to specify he was jewish? Edit: apparently, the youtuber deleted his comment, it was something like this: "A pro german Austrian, and a dumb jew."
@qymaen-jai-sheelal I didn't delete my comment the channel owner did. It's obvious you didn't learn much about history, so let me tell you a brief rundown. Europeans were very well known for their antisemitism martin luther, not king the og one you know, the one who started the reformation, which led to this peasant rebellion. He wrote a book named "On the jews and their Lies," so again, who's ideology would 16th century peasants support?
Whats very interesting about this song is how during the weimar republic, everyone from anarchists to authoritarian communists and even facists sang it. for very different reasons, mind you, but still. fascinating. im an anarchist myself, and i reckon more of us should adopt this anthem.
@@rallarix7996some are, some arent, and the anarchists are mostly also communist. I am a libertarian socialist/anarcho-communist myself. i just said that to list off the gambit of people who used this song.
@@mikemiki2328The concept of the "dictatorship of the proletariat" first arises in Marx's literature, and is absolutely not just a bolshevik idea. All Marxists believe in the establishment of the proletarian dictatorship. To be clear: when Marx uses "dictatorship" in this sense, he is not referring to autocracy or a single despot commanding a nation. Remember, the proletariat is the whole class of workers. Rather, Marx is referring to a class dictatorship, wherein the proletarian class makes the "dictates" or controls society. This is contrasted with the dictatorship of the Bourgeoisie or, in simpler terms, capitalism.
@@justagreekhistorian I found u familiar tho this is the first time I've seen u on my channel, if u r really familiar to me, tell me who u r cuz I forgot.
As Hansdampf says; specifically it is short for Greek "kyrie eleison". The singers are over-Germanizing the pronunciation; the "ei" part shouldn't sound like "ai". If there were a German word "lehs", that's what the last part should sound like.
Instability and distrust in the nobility and clergy in the 1500s due to the Protestant reformation, Italian wars, and the growing influence over the empire from Spain
Muy bien Stepan, apoyas a movimientos socialistas y revolucionarios campesinos como el de floryam geyers, eres un verdadero nacional socialista o nazbol
This is a very beautiful anthem, I can still feel the old German spirit, the old glorious great empire, whatever it is, I am always with those who fight against oppression 🇪🇪♥️🇩🇪
I am curious as to why they wanted so badly to set the monastery on fire. I would have thought the peasants would have had bigger beef with the nobility, or with the church hierarchy. I thought the monks took a vow of celibacy and poverty and cloistered themselves, minding their own business in the monastery. Why would the peasants want to pick a fight with them?
You clearly aren't familiar with how the Cistercians were back in the day; they literally were major landowners and defacto slave drivers, in fact they were like that not long after their founding. They even cheated local people who signed up to join the monastery by making them do all the physical work without ever promoting or even educating them whatsoever, even in the local vernacular. They even had internal feuds that got very bloody, just like the secular nobility, sometimes on ethnic lines like in England and Ireland, but other times it was political, either internally or externally. They also were active in persecutions along with the Dominican Order, including the infamous "Albigensian Crusade". Mind you, this was also back when the Pope could and did have people condemned to enslavement for all sorts of reasons, even entire cities (Florentines in 1376, the Venetians (1309, 1283 and 1509) and the Colonna family in 1535), and in at least one case the wives of clergymen (Pope Urban II, 1089, Council of Melfi) to enforce celibacy. There wasn't anything holy about them; they were as flawed, imperfect, fallible, and wretched as any human, and just as vulnerable to the corrupting temptations of power that everyone else is. I'm not even getting into the stuff a certain Borgia got up to, which hasn't been repudiated to this very day.
german peasants war is so complex, both the protestant and catholics form an alliance to crush them because they want to destroy aristocracy which is considered radical during that time
The Bundshu, although technically a different rebellion, I can imagine they used the same iconography since they were similar rebellions. I mean both the Dutch revolutionaries and the Parliamentarians used orange so I could see it.
@@gabrielcristian8038Cringe Pop History dingus not knowing that this Latin Phrase comes from Acts 2:44 and 4:32 and is therfore pretty much in the Ballpark of a Portestant Peasant Uprising. Thomas Müntzer even used this phrase when they tried to form a greater alliance with other peasant Uprisings like the Anabaptists. I believe the only specter haunting you is the worms in your brain.
@@Bartnuschler Cringe Pop History dingus not knowing that The song who's rite in Weimar Republic and who's yous bother by the Nazi and the GDR. I am prity shour that there weren't many Portestant Peasant Uprising in 1920.I have now idea why the Nazi you'd this song .(mauby bikes he melody of the song is arranged by German songwriter and later Nazi Fritz Sotke (1902-1970)). The GDR you'd the song bikes of its he lyrics are noted for their strong anti-clerical and anti-noble themes. On question did Heinrich von Reder rite this song to inspire Portestant Peasant Uprising. or did he have sum Uther reason.
@@gabrielcristian8038 the anon has the profile picture of an anarchist philosopher, Mikhail Bakunin, who had falling out with Marx. Also, 'OMNIA SUNT COMMUNINA' means something like 'All things belong to the common!', which, I suppose, portrays the spirit of the hymn well if we account that the aim of the HRE Peasant's Revolt was purging the aristocracy and clergy.
@@gbplayning60 Evil has a way of taking a moment in history when the peasants revolted against them and at the podium claiming "I identify with the peasants." That doesn't make the peasants at the time tyrants.
@@iamothemakhnovist20 so? How do you know some soldiers might have sung this? That's like saying they wouldn't play preussens Gloria because it was before nazis
@@BigScreamingBaby As an actual christian, I honestly despise these comments. They never actually change anyone's minds, it honestly seems like they harm the witness of god's kingdom on earth.
@@memeboi6017 Yeah I think these comments come from some peoples interpretation of 1 Corinthians 12, which if I'm not wrong basically says all Christians have to spread the word of God in their own way be it preaching or through actions or by teaching or any other way you can think of. So then these spammers take it in the most litteral way by just going to random post on online and saying "God loves follow Jesus ect ect ect" no matter how unrelated to Christianity or religion in general said post is(for example I've seen comments like this on shit posts lmao). While the Idea is nice and all I wholeheartedly doubt anyone has ever seen one of these comments and converted to Christianity.
@scarletgoat173 as an Orthodox choir singer, I'm gonna have to point out that this isnt how all of us think, your logic is flawed and filled with prejudice. Fellow people please speak out against this form of speech, it's filled with rot and will only keep spreading hate
I love youtube comments, "oh look a song about peasants rising up against the existing ruling class of their time and setting monasteries on fire, I wonder what their politics would've been if they existed now" a question that should answer itself
@@skeleex no not really , peasant republics mostly had different variant of christianity even though they preach communalism , idea came from jesus' teachings. Revisionism of history is dangerous and both communist and fascist are actively doing it.
At that time ideologies were not that present among rebellious forces, they were simply hungry and devastated and didn't care who led them if they were well fed and the tyranny was over, and liberals were the ones to promise that
Shame this is German tbh. Of course it comes from a German region but Latin would be nicer since it promotes more unity in Europe and possibly the world.
would make little sense in the context of the song and its content though. Thomas Müntzer and Florian Geyer were very much opposed to using latin as they were protestants
This is not a fascist song, but rather a song commemorating the peasant's uprising in Germany. It was performed by socialists, communists, and unfortunately fascists as well.
@arthurmorgan830 Why communists? How can you equate an ideology that advocates for a classless society and common ownership, to one that is based on racial superiority and totalitarianism.
Ironically, Florian Geyer's brother was Grandmaster of the Teutonic Order, and Florian had actually negotiated a peace treaty between him and the Kingdom of Poland. Said peace treaty involved officially secularizing the Teutonic Order...not that they were ever all that unworldly. Kinda funny how Florian Geyer then went and warred against the same kind of authorities his brother's order had imposed and propped up in the Baltic. I guess it hits different when it's your own people.
For me it sounds like a language of powerful warriors, just like arabic and russian. Mind you that im black and have no conections to germany besides a german great grandpa who fled to Brazil after ww2. As the dude stated above, you're probably watching too many movies.
@@keerf255 The Nazis sure didn’t do it any favours. And I don’t watch war movies at all and have no interest in them really. German has always sound harsh and gutrerall to me. And most people would agree that it does.
"When Adam tilled and Eva span, Lord have mercy, when was then the aristocrat, Lord have mercy." Goes unbelievably hard.
…and when God had Samuel anoint David as King? Where does that fit into this narrative?
@@eldermillennial8330Only because the Israelites really wanted a king to be like the other cool levantine kingdoms.
me watching the communists and the fascists clash over who gets to use this song:
Me knowing it's supposed to tell about Geyer and the peasants not communism nor fascism:
@@skulldeathcorps me understanding the political economy of the 15th century and laughing derisively at you.
@@IulianusTabernarius😂 go ahead lil bro
@@IulianusTabernarius blud thinking he's him after typing this:
@@jeremiahcruz1071 fr
Finally it's not a stupid WWII edit
So true
The poor shall rise
@@Sero12245I hope not, have you seen them?
@@prydain4131let Paris commune, German revolution of 1919, German labour uprising of 1923 and Great socialist October revolution scare you. Capitalist!
@@mcboat3467nah German revolution of 1849
Facists and communists:arguing over who gets to use this song
Christian’s sitting in the corner: hold my beer
Peasants and workers fighting with fascism's "knights": Are we joke to you?
The guy ,who recored this in 1524 was a true genius
NOT THE UA-cam EMOJIS 😭😭😭😭😭😭
wtf is that emoji bruh 😭😭😭😭😭😭
what kinda emoji is that bruhh
Who let bro cook these emojis 💀😭🙏
Nah those emojis go hard ngl
Virgin:It’s a nazi song
Chad:It’s a peasant uprising song
You should search up "Nuijasota" it's a war about finnish peasants revolting during swedish control.
Bro 47 likes💀 I never get so many before
@@davin-yb7gnHere take 48th
me who originally heard this tune from youtube randomly recommending me some Russian song:
Technically it is partly a no no german and german imperial song
Friedrich Engels can explain to aspirant artists what this song is about.
as someone born in 1524 this is a classic
This is the 1500s equalvalent of mom said it's my turn to play on the Xbox
I don't understand
It was a peasents war agains the Catholic Church and Charles V
@@windfromfelixia yeah I know that, why would I not?
I was saying it to the other guy. He didnt understand the joke so i thought he maybe didnt know the songs lore
@@windfromfelixia then @ him
been listening to a TON of German ( and other countries ) military music ( prior, during, and after Nazi Germany Era ) due to youtubes weird algorithm lol ( dont mind it tho ), and I gotta say, German songs go hard. Especially imho 55 days at Peking. I dare say that German songs just sound way better than our own English songs.
I can hear Szara Piechota in some parts 🤯
its even better when playing Mordhau and then equipping the pesant perk.
and after 30 minutes its a 50% pesants and 50% knight fight, even some propaganda going on from the pesant side against the bourgeoisie. funny expirience
There are many amry songs with a final stanza about coming back home after the war, this is the only one I've heard which has this stanza admitting defeat instead of celebrating a victory.
This sounds very norse for some reason, probably because of Germanic language connection
damnn bro, calm. We arent responsible for ur complexes @@Robespierre228
@@Robespierre228calm down Prussoboo 💀 it’s not his fault u live in Minnesota and not Germany which you glorify so much
beg u shut up you gloomy knobhead@@Robespierre228
@@FishsBritishArmynow thats a bit too far
@@Robespierre228
This is sung in High German, not a southern dialect.
It is just a more archaic form of High German with words that are no longer commonly used.
Alemannic and Bavarian are the two southern dialect groups of German, and since I am a native speaker of Alemannic and I also know Bavarian very well from my father's side of the family, I should know ...
Gotta love German music. I
There’s just a vibe to it.
Very powerful song
This comment section makes me cringe more than Catholic Church made Thomas Muntzer.
I'm surprised anyone here knows people like him
@@robinrehlinghaus1944 He founded the rainbow movement almost 500 years before LGBTQ
Awesome
Peasent uprising for freedom✊
lets gooooo greetings from Greece 🔴🔴🔴🔴🔴🔴🔴
yes yes greece has a very beautiful flag🔴🔴🔴
Thanks for sharing.
a link to that flag perhaps? thanks
The translations have a few errors but otherwise nice job!
Yes I’m going to explain in the description, I translated so stupid
The peasants who died to fight for their own freedom looking down from Heaven to see two mentally ill ideologies fight over this song:
Be honest who would german peasants of the 16th century support a jew named Marx or a pro germany Austrian ?
@Dan-jp8jr why did you feel the need to specify he was jewish? Edit: apparently, the youtuber deleted his comment, it was something like this: "A pro german Austrian, and a dumb jew."
@@qymaen-jai-sheelal because jews were severely unliked in this point of history. Look no further than the starter of the reformation martin luther
man centrism is a hell of a drug, what do you think "set the monastery with the red rooster" means?
@qymaen-jai-sheelal I didn't delete my comment the channel owner did. It's obvious you didn't learn much about history, so let me tell you a brief rundown. Europeans were very well known for their antisemitism martin luther, not king the og one you know, the one who started the reformation, which led to this peasant rebellion. He wrote a book named "On the jews and their Lies," so again, who's ideology would 16th century peasants support?
Whats very interesting about this song is how during the weimar republic, everyone from anarchists to authoritarian communists and even facists sang it. for very different reasons, mind you, but still. fascinating.
im an anarchist myself, and i reckon more of us should adopt this anthem.
Seconded
If you're think communists are authoritan, that's means wahy ypu're know history and polics at very low level :)
@@rallarix7996some are, some arent, and the anarchists are mostly also communist. I am a libertarian socialist/anarcho-communist myself. i just said that to list off the gambit of people who used this song.
@@rallarix7996mate , bolshevics whole idea is proleterian dictatorship
@@mikemiki2328The concept of the "dictatorship of the proletariat" first arises in Marx's literature, and is absolutely not just a bolshevik idea. All Marxists believe in the establishment of the proletarian dictatorship. To be clear: when Marx uses "dictatorship" in this sense, he is not referring to autocracy or a single despot commanding a nation. Remember, the proletariat is the whole class of workers. Rather, Marx is referring to a class dictatorship, wherein the proletarian class makes the "dictates" or controls society. This is contrasted with the dictatorship of the Bourgeoisie or, in simpler terms, capitalism.
I just realized I made that map 💀
@@justagreekhistorian I found u familiar tho this is the first time I've seen u on my channel, if u r really familiar to me, tell me who u r cuz I forgot.
@@Falgen I am AndreMan/Andrew86Games
If you remember you asked for someone to make the map and I showed up to do that
@@justagreekhistorian ok I thank u again
Nice
Botho Lucas Chor version?
I have album Botho Lukas Chor - wenn die landsknecht singen, your version look more recent
What means "Kyrieleis".?
God have mercy
As Hansdampf says; specifically it is short for Greek "kyrie eleison". The singers are over-Germanizing the pronunciation; the "ei" part shouldn't sound like "ai". If there were a German word "lehs", that's what the last part should sound like.
Me looking at the the Eastern Front called this comment section while i'm simply enjoying the music:
The Sub is quite misleading
?
@@toxicsaint3545 subtitle
@@suchendnachwahrheit9143yah, that was my english skill back then
wo bleibt des edelmannes töchterlein? da fehlt eine strophe!
👍🏻🎥🎥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
The old german alphabet is cute
This is gothic font not alphabet
@@gavin76585 trotzdem schön
@@gavin76585 *Fraktur
Heia hoho!
this reminds me of a few other similar songs
Original hood classic 🗣️🗣️
what is the german song name at time stamp 1:24
Same song, still.
Why did they uprise?
Instability and distrust in the nobility and clergy in the 1500s due to the Protestant reformation, Italian wars, and the growing influence over the empire from Spain
@@terrifictomato262 Thanks
But in what part of Germany or other country this uprising happend@@terrifictomato262
@HereComesTheMoney1 Parts of German-speaking Central Europe, especially what is now Germany, Alsace, Switzerland, and Austria.
@@HereComesTheMoney1just look up 'german peasants war' and read about it
aqui é um carvalho do futuro sei la
User "Stepan Razin" liked this song 🇷🇺
Muy bien Stepan, apoyas a movimientos socialistas y revolucionarios campesinos como el de floryam geyers, eres un verdadero nacional socialista o nazbol
Emelian Pukachev too
Thought this was vreikorps, can someone eloborate on this peasants war
It was Freikorps-Hitlerjugend song, which is about Peasants war.
The peasants war was an uprising of peasants in the region of Franconia in the 1520’s against Charles V and the Catholic Church
@@victimofchungus2039 damn, so way older than i thought
@@De_Creane The peasant's war was in 1520's, but song was written around 1920 by Nazi songwriter Fritz Sotke.
@@Nieboret it was actually written by Heinrich von Reder, Sotke composed the music.
This is a very beautiful anthem, I can still feel the old German spirit, the old glorious great empire, whatever it is, I am always with those who fight against oppression 🇪🇪♥️🇩🇪
only 1500s kids will remember
Где песни Румского султаната?
I don’t know
Ich weiß nicht
Ask Erdogan, he probably stole them... just like the election XD XD XD
I am curious as to why they wanted so badly to set the monastery on fire. I would have thought the peasants would have had bigger beef with the nobility, or with the church hierarchy. I thought the monks took a vow of celibacy and poverty and cloistered themselves, minding their own business in the monastery. Why would the peasants want to pick a fight with them?
cause all monks were rich back in the time. They owned a lot of stuffs such as lands and big fancy mansions.
You clearly aren't familiar with how the Cistercians were back in the day; they literally were major landowners and defacto slave drivers, in fact they were like that not long after their founding. They even cheated local people who signed up to join the monastery by making them do all the physical work without ever promoting or even educating them whatsoever, even in the local vernacular.
They even had internal feuds that got very bloody, just like the secular nobility, sometimes on ethnic lines like in England and Ireland, but other times it was political, either internally or externally. They also were active in persecutions along with the Dominican Order, including the infamous "Albigensian Crusade".
Mind you, this was also back when the Pope could and did have people condemned to enslavement for all sorts of reasons, even entire cities (Florentines in 1376, the Venetians (1309, 1283 and 1509) and the Colonna family in 1535), and in at least one case the wives of clergymen (Pope Urban II, 1089, Council of Melfi) to enforce celibacy.
There wasn't anything holy about them; they were as flawed, imperfect, fallible, and wretched as any human, and just as vulnerable to the corrupting temptations of power that everyone else is.
I'm not even getting into the stuff a certain Borgia got up to, which hasn't been repudiated to this very day.
@@teamnoob52These monks were basically warlords? Medieval Europe being Medieval Europe.
german peasants war is so complex, both the protestant and catholics form an alliance to crush them because they want to destroy aristocracy which is considered radical during that time
@@teamnoob52 And what was Martin Luther's problem with the peasants? You'd think he'd support them in their confrontation.
Is that a fricking shoe for a banner?
yes, the peasant's boot was his banner
The Bundshu, although technically a different rebellion, I can imagine they used the same iconography since they were similar rebellions.
I mean both the Dutch revolutionaries and the Parliamentarians used orange so I could see it.
@@TheRealBillderdon't listen to this guy, take a look at his avatar:
OMNIA SUNT COMMUNIA!
Viva la Anarchie!
cringe commie spotted on a song that has nothing to do with marx
@@gabrielcristian8038Cringe Pop History dingus not knowing that this Latin Phrase comes from Acts 2:44 and 4:32 and is therfore pretty much in the Ballpark of a Portestant Peasant Uprising.
Thomas Müntzer even used this phrase when they tried to form a greater alliance with other peasant Uprisings like the Anabaptists.
I believe the only specter haunting you is the worms in your brain.
@@Bartnuschler Cringe Pop History dingus not knowing that The song who's rite in Weimar Republic and who's yous bother by the Nazi and the GDR. I am prity shour that there weren't many Portestant Peasant Uprising
in 1920.I have now idea why the Nazi you'd this song .(mauby bikes he melody of the song is arranged by German songwriter and later Nazi Fritz Sotke (1902-1970)). The GDR you'd the song bikes of its he lyrics are noted for their strong anti-clerical and anti-noble themes.
On question did Heinrich von Reder rite this song to inspire Portestant Peasant Uprising. or did he have sum Uther reason.
@@gabrielcristian8038 the anon has the profile picture of an anarchist philosopher, Mikhail Bakunin, who had falling out with Marx.
Also, 'OMNIA SUNT COMMUNINA' means something like 'All things belong to the common!', which, I suppose, portrays the spirit of the hymn well if we account that the aim of the HRE Peasant's Revolt was purging the aristocracy and clergy.
"Old German Rebel Song" it would be better you write
German had many rebels so I can’t rewrite.
For those of you who don't know, this song was created in 1525 during the German Peasant Revolution.
Hahaha, I thought he was a Nazi.
the song was written the 20s and is based one a poem about florian geyer from the 1800s
The melody was composed in the 1920s, but the lyrics are much older (so german peasants weren't actually singing this tune during the uprising)
@@gbplayning60 Evil has a way of taking a moment in history when the peasants revolted against them and at the podium claiming "I identify with the peasants." That doesn't make the peasants at the time tyrants.
Imagine being a polish soldier in 1939 and your hearing the enemy hear this, youd either be hella confused or just sing szara piechota back at them
Assuming you know German
@@idratherhidethat6033theyd recognise the tune
this song is not nazi, not even aggressively nationalist. This was about a peasant revolt not about trying to genocide Germany's neighbors
@@iamothemakhnovist20 so? How do you know some soldiers might have sung this? That's like saying they wouldn't play preussens Gloria because it was before nazis
The song uses the tune of szara piechota
Go back to God while you still can God Bless you all Amen
Is there something anti-Christian about this song?
no
@@peytonscott9023No I think this is just a Christian spam comment.
@@BigScreamingBaby As an actual christian, I honestly despise these comments.
They never actually change anyone's minds, it honestly seems like they harm the witness of god's kingdom on earth.
@@memeboi6017 Yeah I think these comments come from some peoples interpretation of 1 Corinthians 12, which if I'm not wrong basically says all Christians have to spread the word of God in their own way be it preaching or through actions or by teaching or any other way you can think of. So then these spammers take it in the most litteral way by just going to random post on online and saying "God loves follow Jesus ect ect ect" no matter how unrelated to Christianity or religion in general said post is(for example I've seen comments like this on shit posts lmao). While the Idea is nice and all I wholeheartedly doubt anyone has ever seen one of these comments and converted to Christianity.
Оооо. Эту песню я написал
припини говорити лайно
Прекрати говорить дерьмо!
@@Falgen подтверждаю, это он написал эту песню. Я был свидетелем.
Haya xhoho
That map is shaped like a dog
What kinda dawg you got?
@@Smallsilka dog’s head, yea I see it
Oh no plebeian songs
oh no indeed
@scarletgoat173 Isn't your god saying that you have to spread love and mercy?
@scarletgoat173oh wow… this is random! ☦️
@scarletgoat173 Nothing more cringe than losers like you shitting on other religions.
@scarletgoat173 as an Orthodox choir singer, I'm gonna have to point out that this isnt how all of us think, your logic is flawed and filled with prejudice. Fellow people please speak out against this form of speech, it's filled with rot and will only keep spreading hate
Heh... absurd
I love youtube comments, "oh look a song about peasants rising up against the existing ruling class of their time and setting monasteries on fire, I wonder what their politics would've been if they existed now" a question that should answer itself
revolutionary
more than likely communist in nature
Anarcho-syndicalist commune, as were most politically active peasant at the time.
CNT-FAI
Traj making serbija
this is a liberal song not a fascist or communist.
yeah but liberalism in the 1500's might as well have been communism to the heads of state
@@skeleex no not really , peasant republics mostly had different variant of christianity even though they preach communalism , idea came from jesus' teachings. Revisionism of history is dangerous and both communist and fascist are actively doing it.
it was left wing in nature, much like the french revolution
At that time ideologies were not that present among rebellious forces, they were simply hungry and devastated and didn't care who led them if they were well fed and the tyranny was over, and liberals were the ones to promise that
BAHAHAAHHAHAHAAHAH
...💀...
it is, in fact, not a nazi song
⚡⚡
🤡🤡🤡
🤡🤡🤡
📍Itaticaia, Mato Grosso, Brasil
@@s-ts-4348Baita verdade, o nome diz tudo!!!
@@bernardoh3654 pois é kkkkk
mortem ad fascism
mortem ad liberalismum
mortem ad leninism
vivat Marxsim
Peak Marxist cringe
@@nabartek true, reject Marx, embrace Kim il sung Kim jong il though
Eternal devotion to juche
I like potato chips
@parsSinner777 looks like someone is a good lapdog of the elites
@parsSinner777 looks like someone doesn't know how to make an argument ☝️🤓🤓
Shame this is German tbh. Of course it comes from a German region but Latin would be nicer since it promotes more unity in Europe and possibly the world.
would make little sense in the context of the song and its content though. Thomas Müntzer and Florian Geyer were very much opposed to using latin as they were protestants
And why would it need to do that? This is a German folk song, not a pan-european song.
This is just straight up cringe.
Are you daft … Germany was more of the promoter of a United Europe
ok weirdo
Why play fascist song
It's a protestant song. Against the Catholic church.
This is not a fascist song, but rather a song commemorating the peasant's uprising in Germany. It was performed by socialists, communists, and unfortunately fascists as well.
Read the lyrics before commenting.
@@trtyuiopunfortunately fascists AND communists as well
@arthurmorgan830 Why communists? How can you equate an ideology that advocates for a classless society and common ownership, to one that is based on racial superiority and totalitarianism.
Fun fact he's wearing a warmackt uniform
Who? And you didn’t spell Wehrmacht right
@@Jumbatatogot me dying😂😂😂
my name borat
Haha hoe hystû?borat?
yo tabby
İsnt this song about teutonic crusaders or this is a version
No it's the peasants war
Ironically, Florian Geyer's brother was Grandmaster of the Teutonic Order, and Florian had actually negotiated a peace treaty between him and the Kingdom of Poland.
Said peace treaty involved officially secularizing the Teutonic Order...not that they were ever all that unworldly.
Kinda funny how Florian Geyer then went and warred against the same kind of authorities his brother's order had imposed and propped up in the Baltic. I guess it hits different when it's your own people.
German sounds so evil.
Lol. Watched a bit too much Hollywood didn't ya? Also, the pitch of the singing has been lowered in this video.
@@keerf255 lol fr hollywood makes germans look evil
For me it sounds like a language of powerful warriors, just like arabic and russian.
Mind you that im black and have no conections to germany besides a german great grandpa who fled to Brazil after ww2.
As the dude stated above, you're probably watching too many movies.
Bacause you were told that Men are evil,this was also the norm in their time.
@@keerf255 The Nazis sure didn’t do it any favours. And I don’t watch war movies at all and have no interest in them really. German has always sound harsh and gutrerall to me. And most people would agree that it does.