🚩 Help support HistoryMarche on Patreon and get ad-free early access to our videos for as little as $1: www.patreon.com/historymarche 🚩 As requested by many of you in the comments, I merged all parts of the Battle of Yarmuk into one video, for easier viewing. Thank you all for watching the video ❤
thank you for this great video/gift on the blessed month of Ramadan. Alhamdulillah! edit: just one criticism or advice for future videos about islamic history, if possible use the names of the companions of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ instead of pictures from artists, depicting their faces.
Have actual biologists ever examined if the method to "preserve water" in kamel stomachs makes even sense as described? Sounds like a typical pre scientific tall tale.
there is many battles khalid fought like yarmuk and many others clashes which is deserved to make more battles vedioes about him hope you do it ❤❤❤ big thanks to the chanel
How do you know a general is legendary? It's when he sends his troops to block the enemy's escaping route before they even decide to escape. That's what I call unmatched confidence
When death approached Khaalid Bin al-Waleed and he realised that, he wept and said: "I witnessed such and such battles, and there is no place on my body the size of a handspan that has not received a blow from a sword or been pierced by an arrow or hit by spear. But here I am, dying on my bed as a camel dies. May the cowards eyes never sleep. I sought death in the places where it may be sought, but it was only decreed that I should die on my own bed.” [Siyar A’laam An-Nubula’, 1/382] Edit: wow 2.3k likes thank you guys Edit: I put the source of the quote Edit: his nickname that the prophet gave him was was " The drawn sword of God " or " The unsheathed sword of God "
It's because he was honored with the title of " Sword of Allah" by Prophet Muhammed peace be upon him. So God's unsheathed sword shouldn't die at battle field. If so it implies that God's sword was broken by a some random mortal. It's God's decree.
Abu Ubayda ra is one of the senior companions of the prophet pbuh. He has a very high status in Islamic history. He later became the governor of the Levant (Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria) One time the Caliph (Umar) visited him and saw him living in a straw hut on the outskirts of Damascus with nothing in the Hut but a prayer mat and bread crumbs for food. The governor of what used to be the most prosperous province of the Roman empire, and one of the most prosperous of the Islamic Caliphate. Umar ra said: “O Abu Ubaidah! The life of this dunya (world) has changed all of us but I swear upon Allah that you are just the same as you were in the time of the Prophet pbuh“
Yarmouk was one of the most consequential battles ever fought. Its echoes still ring loud and clear across the world, nearly a millennium and a half later.
@@supremercommonderthere already was the Arabs just took over the Persian empires position. Even the early Roman Empire had Chinese silk. It’s true that the Arabs took control of the Silk Road but that road existed before the caliphate
Hahahaha! The Byzantines were mentally and morally crushed by these ferocious words of the great Muslim General: Khalid ibn Al-Walid (The Sword of Allah) ❤️
Yeah buts its not a great way to make friends or inspire loyalty is it ? Most of these primitive Bedouin tribes murxered each other at some point in time and the various dynastic succesors were so ego tistical and paranoid they even muurded theire fathers and brothers slo they could have what they craved ie to boss people about ! Its all a bit shallow but typical of all Dictators or ayaltolahs ?
@@davidmiller4078 The words are being delivered at a battlefield, and not on the dinner table, you don't make friends on the battlefield..you are there to fight...that is the way of battles and wars....
Goosebumps. It's not the difference in numbers that standout, it's the fact that these were Byzantine's elite forces. Greater numbers, better equipped, better armoured, experienced generals all outdone by pure genius and incredible bravery.
@@pauldorfman701 That is pure coping. The Byzantine army was vastly superior in every respect. I already know your response. Just pause and reflect before you reply.
@@pauldorfman701 Everything he said is correct, the Byzantines had the numbers, they where better equipped and had experienced leadership. I fail to see where he got carried away. Clearly the Arabs showed great courage and incredible brilliance in their leadership. Trying to diminish their achievement is petty and a disgrace.
However, there appear to be numerous mistakes on Vahan’s part out of I can only imagine sheer arrogance and being baited. The one on one’s with officers being killed in front of their troops not just damaged morale, but also troop cohesion and discipline. Furthermore I feel Vahan misused his cavalry (by keeping them in reserve instead of exploiting frequently exposures and openings) and the four divisions each working on their own, rather than coordinating and supporting one another. There were moments, as portrayed here, where Khalid could have found himself surrounded by cataphracts, overextended and alone, but the cavalry stood back to only aid their own sections. So although Khalid ultimately outwitted his opponent, his opponent allowed it by a string of bad decisions.
I'd not previously known much about the Muslim generals of history. My word, what a superb general Khalid was - truly one of the all-time greats! Thank you for educating me!
Its interest if we read about history. Khalid ever lost but before he became moslem. He was lost at khadaq battle and almost lost at uhud before, if sahabah archer contingent didnt make mistake, khaled would be lost also. And yes general can beat him is our beloved Prophet Muhammad pbuh 2 battle that became one of reason he became moslem. His tactical on left wing at yarmouk, i think he got it from learning Prophet tactical
@@agusteamwind1071 يا اخي معلوماتك خاطئه فا خالد لم يكن قائدا في غزوة الخندق بل كان القايد هو ابو سفيان وانما خالد كان قايد بسيط وتحت تصرفه جنود قليل وقد عبر الخندق هو وقليل معه ولاكن النبي صلى الله عليه وسلم واصحابه استبسلو ودافعو بكل قوه حتى ارسل الله رياح شديده على الاحزاب واقتلعت خيامهم ورجعو الى مكه واسلم خالد بعدها بفتره بسيطه ولم يهزم خالد ابدا
@@Authentic-1tywhat the reason you said im shia? l always love sahabah all. When that was happen? If you read about history yo will be know thats battle just before Khalid RodiallohuAnhu became moslem.
@@eitantovey2570 real men find it courageous to be prepared to die for ur faith and country rather than a problem. It is the likes of u whom Khalid referred to when he said may the eyes of cowards never sleep
@@sulaiman1630 sure Sulaiman, if that's how you think. My problem with Khalid's statement is that the men specifically love death. Being willing to lay down one's life for their country is admirable, and is not morally corrupt. Intentionally seeking out death for oneself though is a real issue, and leads to more world conflict than anything else in existence today.
This is one of the most hard fought field battles prior to the gunpower age. Several DAYS of exhaustive fighting that included a whole day of rest because both sides were pushed to their limits. The Romans had the edge in most of the engagements but failed to deal a decisive blow. The Arab commander was very smart to give Khalid operational command. One of the most impressive battlefield achievements and just one of Khalid's tactical masterpieces.
It is rare to see such unbiased opinion when it comes to Khalid, westerners always have a knee-jerk reaction and dismiss Muslim achievement to the two empires just being tired. Thank you.
@@lordshang8838 I'm american and khalid is my favorite general ever. The sword of allah deserves much more recognition. He's just as amazing as hannibal or alexander.
You have to keep in mind the... lets call it "tradition of historical story telling" in the early islamic culture. So many of the important battles of the Arabs during that time supposedly took several days, (despite this beeing super rare) included single combat (which the Arabs usually won) and clever trickery by the Arabs. Its almost formulaic, and therefore not really believable. I guess we can trust the claims about who won the battles, but as soon as you see those elements, you should realize that its an islamic source, and therefore be sceptical about any details.
@@Omega0850 i've heard this pushback before and I think it's dishonest. If we're gonna say that propoganda plays a role in recording military history you better be dismissing Alexander's unbeaten record because I'm not seeing Persian and Indian sources corroborating his undefeated streak. Its a bunch of greek fanboys who have a cultural reason to elevate Alexander. I'm more inclined to believe that no general has ever come out of their career without losing at least one battle, but if you win a major war of course sources are gonna paint you as a god. Either Alexander AND Khalid and others are undefeated or no one is. You cant have it both ways.
And it had everything as I said in another post: pitched battles, skirmishes, countless duels, generals fighting generals one-on-one, women stabbing men in the face, camels biting horses, generals smack talking and more!
That is a lie and is downplaying the genius of Walid and the tenacity of the Arabs at the time. Both the Sassanian and Roman empires were weaker at the time but still the most powerful nations in the world and far stronger than the newly formed umayaad caliphate.
@Florentino Perez arabs also were exhausted from years of civil war called ridda war. also the romans and sassanids still had a lot more population and resources
I hear people questioning Umar's decision to demote Khalid with some wrongfully accusing him of jealousy while the real reason was to show that all victories are from Allah alone and not some commander, but if we see the bigger picture and take a leaf from Hannibal's history, we can actually see the wisdom behind it. It was said about Hannibal by one of his commanders that he knew how to get victories, but he didn't know how to use them. A similar case can be seen here as well. The end goal was not to just beat large armies into submission and send war booty to Medinah, the main goal was to spread the word of God all over the world. This includes everything, from rules of warfare to rules of administration and even basic day to day life. And Khalid, though an absolute UNIT in warfare, and excellent in administration, lacked the level of knowledge about Islamic rulings and teachings of Prophet ﷺ that Abu Ubaydah had. He was among the firsts to accept Islam, was known for his piety and knowledge of Islam. He was called "The safekeeper of Ummah" by Prophet ﷺ himself. By appointing him as the leader of Muslim front in that region the dynamics of that front is changed from military expedition to inviting more people towards Islam. Hence appointment of Abu Ubaydah was not only justified but also necessary for Islam to flourish in that region.
Best argument for this issue I've ever read in my life! It should also be noted that Khalid tended to take absurdly huge risks in his campaigns while Abu Ubaida was more cautious and wise, we can see clearly an epitome of his wisdom when he appointed Khalid as the overall commander when the need arose. He didn't care about his position, he was wise enough to see the ultimate goal and worked towards achieving it by any means even at the cost of his own reputation and power
@@deeipomar2366 Khalid has stated multiple times that when he goes to battle, he goes wishing death. Dying in battle is all he ever wanted. That was NOT what Omar wanted though for his companions in the army. Omar was a very cautious religious leader, he was scared for the Muslims in Khalid’s army to throw their lives away, and was scared Khalid would lead them to death. Khalid was too risky, and Omar used to cry when he hears Muslims dying in battles. Omar did what he thought was right.
I recommend exploring the Battle of Uhud, a historical event where the Muslim army faced defeat against a non-Muslim force. Initially, the non-Muslims were struggling in the war, but with strategic maneuvers led by Khalid ibn Walid, the tide of the battle shifted in their favor. This marked a significant comeback. The defeat of the Muslim army in this battle serves as a lesson, emphasizing the importance of tactics in warfare. It conveys the message that mere devotion to Islam may not guarantee victory; understanding and employing strategic approaches are crucial. The Battle of Uhud underscores the idea that certain natural laws and rules cannot be overcome solely through religious devotion. When you take all logical actions, you can now expect the help of Allah. This should be the approach of Muslims to each challenge they have.
@@mervankadrijovski705you can call those non muslims as Sassanians Or religious wise Zoroastrians If you can remember muslims as one side, then why not the other side???
I believe khaalid ibn waleed is the greatest to ever lead a battle, not for his unbeaten record millaterily, but due to his unbeaten duels, be it against the Arabs, Sassnids and Romans. I never seen a commander like this, who exceled on one vs one, and undefeated.
@Florentino Perez no one is fool enough to die for nothing, not the person at levels of Khalid ibn walleed. his desire was to die for his faith and mission. as we can see he did accomplished it with success.
@Florentino Perez They spread islam to the whole middle east, later reaching north Africa and Spain and Iran and Afghanistan, that was the ultimate victory
@@saloua277 well we are seeing today how me, iran and in particularly afganistan are doing great under centuries of islam rule :) ultimate victory belongs to christian west
They don't fight it's the plane from the begining was to encouraged who get back and remember them that they will not be their wife's anymore so that they would fight to the victory and that's what happened in the end.
This was a rumor and not a fact that women fight alongside Muslim men If this happens, it means that men's hearts become weak and their faith in God weakens
The final day of the battle was the most unexpected one that really show Khalid's brilliant mind as military commander. he knew that the Byzantines were expecting the muslim to not attack, so he decided to attack. He knew that the Byzantines were exhausted by the constant battle so he attacked on the flanks with overwhelming cavalry numbers. He truly one of the greatest general of all time
Khalid did everything right. He didn’t make any mistakes. However, for me, this was less one of his masterclasses in strategy, tactics, etc. and more one of him showing sheer force of will and the ability to instill bottomless motivation in his troops. By rights, they’ve should have broken many times, but kept coming on like mad men. Having many of their wives in the camp behind them must have helped a lot too. What man isn’t going to fight like a cornered lion imagining his wife r*ped and sold into slavery if the battle is lost.
@@The_ZeroLine The Arabs should thank their Hasanid brothers, it was they who first fled, leaving a big gap, but who is sorry in the Byzantine army is the Slavs-Federats who fought very well as mercenaries federates. Although the Arabs are great, the victory is hard, but sure. The Byzantine Empire punished itself by simplifying the legions and making out of a great army - detachments of mercenary federates ...
@@The_ZeroLine In 636, the Christian Arabs were the first to flee, in 1071 the Christian Turks were the first to flee. Fun fact. Both battles were a strong blow to the Byzantine Empire. Poorly selected mercenaries)
@@Sigma_man_88 The information is incorrect about the battle, the numbers of the Byzantines reached 400 thousand and the number of Muslims only 38 thousand, and the battle ended in only one day, this is the reality of Yarmouk, but in the videos they brought drama to the battle and made it 6 days, and this is not true, the Arabs crushed the Byzantines in only one day
@@lorenzZ2 Nonsense...An army of 400 thousand troops at that time impossible because of logistic problems. The video shows the truth as much as possible.
The last words of Khalid Ibn Waleed.... " Tell all the cowards of the world who are afraid of death that if death had happened on the battlefield, then Khalid would not have died on his deathbed "
The translation can be a bit misleading. When it says they love death it is referring to themselves, it means that they would love to die (as martyrs) more than the opposition love to live their lives
Heard a lot of talk about Khalid on the comment threads for other battles. This is my first time actually seeing him in action. So impressive on so many levels.
And this is his most conservative battle by the way 😂 I suggest you watch the battle of Wallaja, Muzzayah, Al Firaz. If you want to see unorthodox genius tactics. Video: early Muslim expansion by kings and generals
You should watch the battle of Uhud in this channel. It is when Khalid is still not a muslim and he facing Prophet Muhammad and defeated him in that Battle. Imagine. The one who defeated the prophet in a battle later became the most brilliant general Islam ever had.
I every time i read about this battle and all the heroes who fallen in it i cry. 100 warriors who fought with our great Prophet himself in the battle of bader were present in this battle. Even my own tribe (Banu Bakr) have lost so many sons in this battle for Islam god is great. We are nothing without Islam we are absolutely nothing
Id like to thank you so much for this video! Id also want to note this: That when day 3 or 5 ended, Khalid changed the troops of his flanks. The left with the right and vice versa. The aim of this was psychological warfare so that the enemy flanks mirroring his army would see new faces/warriors and would believe that the Muslims received reinforcements when they did not. Khalid would have his army hold 2 torches instead of 1 at night to show that reinforcements have arrived and early in the morning he'd have his horses kick the sand to create large clouds of dust showing that reinforcements actually arrived. General Khalid is definitely one of the brightest military minds to ever walk this earth. I read one of the comments below and please please make a long compilation of Khalids military achievements starting from the Sassanids and ending with the yarmouk battles, just like Hannibals video which I watch at least 3 times a year as its one of my fave videos on youtube! Thanks again!
ما ذكرة أستخدمه في معركة موتة مع نفس الجيش بس كان في عهد الرسول صلى الله عليه وسلم كان عدد المسلمين ٣٠٠٠ وهي من مهدت لمعركة اليرموك وأبرزة فطنت خالد حتى في الإنسحاب من المعركة ويطول الحديث حول هذه المعركه حول أسبابها وأهدافها ومكاسبها أرجو إن تكون الترجمة من قوقل 😅❤ وهي من
BMA He was given the title by prophet "Sword of Allah"! So he didn't die fighting but on bed with guilt of not dieing in battlefield!! Indeed Sword of Allah couldn't break!!!
We don't care westerners ratings. Muslims are on Top. Since we love for Allah and die for Allah... Every Muslims are as like khalid Bin Walid. Cowards want to live this world but we Muslims want after world.
@@doyouknoworjustbelieve6694 lol it's an Arabic tradition to give nicknames to the people. Like what Prophet Muhammad PBUH gave to Khalid as Sword of the God (Saifullah) as the Prophet named one of his companion as "Abu Huraira" (father of the kitten), as he loved to foster kittens and feed cats. due to the personal attributes of those persons. As all Prophets are rightly guided so Prophet recognized the courage, fighting expertize, leadership of Khalid in the battlefield, so he was nicknamed by the Prophet so. At his death bed, Khalid RA said that there isn't a place on his body that hasn't been wounded, injured during countless battles he had fought throughout his life. No matter how much he craved for the martyrdom, he was disappointed to never get that status due to the fact that the Prophet nicknamed him as the sword of the God. And he died at the ripe age on a bed with no assets to his name.
Props to Abu Ubayda for being super humble instead of an ego to get in the way of good counsel. I mean how many countless times have we seen that happen a general is demoted for being too popular and a lieutenant or rival is promoted? I’m guessing the troops would have followed Khalid (no guarantee though since Ubayda was super respected too) no matter what, but it didn’t need to get there either. Then going out into single battle in his ‘50s like some shit out of Game of Thrones.
It fascinates me how little interest Khalid had in playing the political game. He was a warrior first and foremost and gave very little consideration to the politics of the early Caliphate. He was popular enough across the ranks to take seize control if he'd wanted to, but he died having felt like he was cast aside for simply being great at leading armies. The Sword of Allah is my favorite field marshall ever. His ability to march through desert with ease is nothing short of impressive.
Read the Qur'an, and understand they were the generation that Allah revealed the Qur'an to, so if anyone was to embody the teachings of the Qur’an, it was them. People analyze others from their perspective, so a man of ego and Arrogance will see ego and Arrogance in others, but these flaws don't exist in all men, an unkind man believes all people are unkind, and may see kindness as a weakness, not all men are equal, and only Allah knows what the hearts conceal ☝🏻
What missing here is the fact that Abu Ubayda is a great man known for his humility outside of warfare He didn't even care about status or ranks to begin with
@@xIAMxTHATxGUYx yes. Muhammad pbbuh was also a sword. Sent to dispel darkness... to set the ground for final battle... between Jesus pbuh vs Antichrist.
On the fourth day, when Yazid and Abu Ubaidah withdrew, the withdrawal was difficult, and he was saddened by the loss of the left side of the Muslims, but Ikrimah ibn Abi Jahl advanced, saying, “Who pledges allegiance to death?” So he presented with him 500 soldiers and attacked the Romans. They were brave and valiant in fighting until they were all martyred. Honor him from slowing down the Romans so that the Muslims would be able to seek advice and rectify the situation
Khalid marches through desert without water, Hannibal marches through the alps, both masters in envelopment and cavalry tactics, man the "Romans" really can't catch a break...
one of the most successful military commander, he destroyed the Roman Army several times and also Persian army, and capture the lands known as Iraq and Syria from those defeated armies. he had done, that every warrior can only wish. such a honorable warrior he is. Vahan was against the wrong person to fight against, perhaps he done his best but Khalid was ahead of him in many aspects of war technique.
Vahan's biggest mistake was to offer them Peace, which the Muslims shockingly refused. More than 1300 years' hindsight, it really isn't shocking at all.
@@Troopertroll Why Vahan was in the Battle field? For peace?🤔 Then. 1st he tried to bribe the Khalid Ibn Walid considering him a looter but he was a conqueror. And When he realized he can't win from Outnumbered enemy so he offered 2nd peace. As we know Khalid was Conqueror he refused it and won the Battle and write the history but not as a looter.
@@MAli-rr9km He was on the battlefield to... *checks notes* defend his land that Muslims invaded? Are you asking if general that was trying to stop invasion is there for peace? How about you ask what was Khalid doing there, was he there for peace? What is this strawman logic? I get that you are proud of people that have literally nothing to do with you, but reading most comments in this video, filled mostly with historical revisionists is mindboggling to me.
@@Proph3t3N What a Conqueror has to do with peace? A Conqueror does love all of the world, that's why A Conqueror wishes to Occupy and Rule on everyone. That's what Khalid was doing. Vahan was a hurdle Infront of him and he crushed the Hurdle and Conquer the Roman's lands. That's the straight forward. Is there any difficulty to understand?
@@MAli-rr9km Yea, I do not know why I'm trying to reason with religious zealots. But it's pretty distressing what I just read. Hopefully you will never leave whatever village or far away hole you are typing this from.
The military career of Saifullah al Maslul Abu Suleyman Khalid ibn al-Walid ibn Mughaira ibn Abdillah ibn Umar ibn Makhzum ibn Yaqazah: Numerous pre-Islamic battles Battle of Uhud (625) Battle of the Trench (626-627) Battle of Mu'ta (629) Conquest of Mecca (629) Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Nakhla) (630) Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Banu Jadhimah) (630) Battle of Hunayn (630) Expedition of Tabuk (630) Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Dumatul Jandal) (630) Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (2nd Dumatul Jandal) (631) Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Najran) (631) Battle of Buzakha (632) Battle of Ghamra (632) Battle of Naqra (632) Battle of Zafar (632) Battle of Butah (633) Battle of Aqraba (633) Siege of the Gardens of Death (633) Battle of Dhat al-Salasil (633) Battle of the River (633) Battle of Ullays (633) Battle of Walaja (633) Battle of al-Hira (633) Battle of al-Anbar (633) Battle of Dawmat al-Jandal (633) Battle of Muzayyah (633) Battle of Saniyy (633) Battle of Zumail (633) Battle of Ayn al-Tamr (633) Battle of Firaz (634) Battle of al-Qaryatayn (634) Battle of Huwwarin (634) Battle of Marj Rahit (634) Battle of Bosra (634) Battle of Ajnadayn (634) Battle of Yaqusa (634) Battle of Marj al-Saffar (634) Battle of Fahl (634 or 635) Battle of Marj ar-Rum (635) Battle of Marj Dimashq (635) Siege of Damascus (634-635) Battle of Sanita-al-Uqab (634) Battle of Maraj-al-Debaj (634) Siege of Emesa (635-636) Battle of Yarmouk (636) Siege of Emesa (636) Siege of Jerusalem (636-337) Battle of Hazir (637) Siege of Aleppo (637) Battle of Qinnasrin (637-638) Battle of the Iron Bridge (637) Siege of Antioch (637) Siege of Germanicia (638) The number of battles surpasses 100 when smaller scale and unknown engagements are considered.
What the hell did you put uhud for 😡😡😡 it is the battle where he nearly killed the prophet and where many of the prophet's loves ones died plus in the trench he did nothing the prophet was the leader and imam ali killed amr and the trench was suleiman the persian's idea khalid had no role back then. Correct your info. Plus don't dare to celebrate ugud ever again.
Can you imagine being on a forced march to your impending doom while having to drink water that was sitting in a camels stomach for a few days in the desert. And here I am complaining about the water buffalo tasting funny.
@@Jay514-kw7om no,they ran out of water and were left with no chice except to drink from camels,and it is no surprise if arabs from desert of that time do it....
There is a part of the story missing, yes it happened temporarily until the army was about to perish after the number of camels decreased but Khalid did not cross the desert except with the help of an expert who knew the desert well, that person knew the way to the desert and knew where to find water from under the ground and so when the army was about to die they reached an area containing an ostrich egg (an indication among the ancient Arabs that it was an area containing water) and so that man saved Khalid's army from perishing, this story was not mentioned @@Jay514-kw7om
The way and short period of conquering the Byzantine and Sassanid empires at the same time is something words can’t describe its greatness and it’s the greatest military campaign of all time
Khaled Ibn Al-Walid (the drawn sword of God) He fought about 100 battles with the two largest empires at the time, and was never defeated in his life. “By God, I have brought to you men who love death as you love life.”
Trust me, the victories of khalid will make cartoon main characters feel more realistic To balance thing out, historians need to stretch their imagination and downplay the numbers of the opponents and keep giving reasons to justify the loss There is reason why no muslim population against Umar's decision to demote khalid and later banned him from any military involvement, to prevent the population from being fanatics like the roman whom treat Julius caeser as deity due to his success.
There are more than 200K armies of romans there... I read the script but christians seem to be very shy to admit it then they reduce the numbers in the history... If there are only 40K armies, never in history the soldiers of muslim said "what a big number of armies right there" Then Khalid said "It is not numbers who define the big or small armies, it's the number of the winning on the battlefield, they are losers, we are the winner"
This was the 600s, and the Byzantines just got through a devastating war with the Sasanians. There is no possible way there were 200,000 Romans under arms in any battle.
@@xenon_silva Wikipedia even says "ancient sources" when describing those numbers. I would think you'd be smart enough to realize that scholars in the 600s probably weren't the most accurate individuals.
And this brought on what is now called "The Dark Ages" where the rich and learned culture of Late Antiquity was destroyed by a barbarian horde, never to recover. The World would now be 1500 years more advanced than it is if not for the constant jihad and destruction of mostly peaceful civilizations. "Oh but Islamic scholars saved the works of the ancients", not they didn't, the dhimmis managed to hide some things and there rest were in Constantinople - despite the Caliphate's armies working hard to destroy it all as "blasphemy" and "unbelief". This was one on the worst days in human civilizational progress yet the very common false narrative pretends the opposite.
@@sj9367 Well, when one gets into the archeology of the origins of Islam rather than the orthodox narrative that emerged a century later with Caliph Abd Al Malik (and solidified 2 centuries later) a very interesting picture emerges (such as the early mosques having qiblas pointing to Petra in Jordan and only later moving to Mecca - this would make Allah not YHWH but Dushara, and then Islam's commandments make sense, as they are different to those of YHWH). Too bad Muslims never learn the archaeology, as you might moderate the lust for death and mayhem a bit - and the resulting Dark Ages. Sharia is man-made by the way, so while piousness is generally a good thing there are limits. Salaam :)
Unlikely it was ever said. Most of these famous lines said pre/during battle were invented post facto by historians for obvious reasons. However, this entire week-long battle was so epic it really doesn’t require any embellishment.
So unreal... Khalid ibn al-Waleed never lost a battle when he leads. On top of that, 95% of these battles his opponents were numerically superior in number and have better quality of war equipements. It just beyond human comprehension!!
He should be atleast Napoleon or Hannibal skill tier commander tbh And maybe higher since he doesn’t lose any battle and always jumps where the fighting is the thickest to die a warriors death (unsuccessful)
BTW, Khalid is amazing, but I wouldn’t call this situation all odds being against him until what was it day 4, but rather solidly not in his favor. Because as we’ve seen when armies this large fight, if you punch just one big hole you can send an army 3-4x your size routing. It’s when you get into an exhausting day long battle that numbers tend to tell. The first day’s fighting wasn’t a pitched battle. After that, this has got be one of the most epic battles of all time. Both these armies were tough as nails. As of day 5, the odds really were totally against Khalid.
@Florentino Perez Khalid RA is way above Subutai. Subutai was given army over 100k troops, always outnumbering their enemy and mongols used tactic of fear to kill everyone civilians kids elderly and women. That had an insane psychological impact. However Subutai did lost a couple of battles against Chinese. While Khalid always had less troops and resources and won battles on shear genius tactics and bravery, always leading from the front and never losing a battle against the far ahead superpowers like Romans and Persians.
“When I am in the battlefield, I love it more than my wedding night with the most beautiful of women” Khalid ibn Al-Walid. Commander of Rashidun Army. Fought 100 battles undefeated with 2 world superpowers. Always outnumbered but never outgunned.
First of all he wasn’t always outnumbered. Second of all there are many other commanders which were undefeated like Scipio Africanus, Alexander the Great and Timur of the Timurid empire. Third of all, I don’t believe he actually fought in a hundred battles but I do believe it was close to that number
Fourth, those superpowers weren’t even superpowers anymore as they were at war for decades, their numbers were depleted, the common people were tired etc.
Plus, weren’t Allah and Muhammad supposed to be the lovers of peace and unity? But Khalid was a conqueror, pillager and slaughterer? How does that make him the sword bearer of Allah? And he is also supposed to have been the companion of Muhammad? Sounds like bs to me
@@ekoscenter-kw6cg Well that's a dishonest comparison due to the sheer difference in warfare. If we're talking pure achievements Napoleon conquered much more and defeated many more nations/empires. They were both the greatest generals of their respective time and while I love the genius and bravery of Khalid (RA), Napoleon simply achieved much more
@@none2912 Napoleon lost the war. He lost some battle. He didn't need to be on the front. He was not even among the soldiers when they lost to Russia. Charles the III of Sweden was even better than Napoleon. His presence improved the morale.
@@ekoscenter-kw6cg So? It doesn't take away any of his achievements and he was against 2 empires and 4 military powerhouses fighting on 6 fronts at the same time, it was a completely different war and also Khalid while not outright "losing" has had military failures failing to achieve his goal such as Battle of Trenches. I also don't understand this desire for him to fight on the "front", like I stated before musket warfare is completely different and he needs to employ his strategies by overseeing the whole battlefield, we're talking about feats and military tactical prowess not bravery which he still was a charismatic and committed leader Charles is noway near the level of Napoleon and his achievements nor does any historian agree with you, the reason you say this was due to his reckleness in thrusting himself in battle paralleled with Khalid's. In fact the reason Khalid would fight in the front is that he wished to die fighting for the sake of Allah and die on the battlefied. Napoleon singlehandedly expanded French territory across all of Europe establishing client states and introducing the Napoleonic Code that would have legalistic implication up until today. Khalid was a tactical genius but lacking in strategy and if it wasn't for Abu Ubaydah he would not have been able to establish states under Islam
Romans were more than 200k, but the christian historians felt shame and reduced the numbers, and If there number was really 40k the war would have ended in 1 day. Khalid Ibn Al Waleed was a real warrior, out beloved Prophet gave him the title of "The Sword of Allah". He fought 100 wars and won all.
Some cool tidbits about Zirrar/Dirrar: -he fought topless and without a shield -he killed 36 commanders in duels at Ajnadayn, not Yarmouk as the video says -he blocked the enemy retreat at yarmouk -he killed over 100 men at the siege of Oxyrhynchus Bahnasa -he died 4-5 years after the battle of yarmouk shown in the video, of the plague
What more can be said beyond the accolades that have been given concerning Khalid ibn Waleed….I chose the name Saiful-Islam because of Khalid when I embraced Islam in 1975….definitely one of the best military commanders of all time across generations….as well it is Khalid prowess that causes The Battle of Uhud to be as hotly contested as it was….Khalid ibn Waleed, Saifullaah, The Sword of God…may he be at rest in his grave and granted paradise on the last day in which there is no doubt, Ameen
That final day of the battle is wow with how depleted Khalid's army was I'm surprised the left flank didnt disintegrate before his charge could defeat the roman army amazing.
Love you Military Marche for battle of Yarmouk Again, Military history is my favorite subject & This Man Khalid ibn AL walid is kind of super hero for me.. He destroyed & defeated two super power's of that time when no one think of Arabs more then bandits.. So thanks again ❤️
Really want to read these when the British Empire destroys the Ottoman Empire during the first world war lmao. Or when the Russians did it...or the Austrians...or the poles...or even the portuguese, or...nevermind.
It is said an officer named George came from the Roman line and called Khalid out for a one to one battle but instead he asked him about Islam. He accepted Islam and fought with the Muslims he became a martyr that day.
Bro all of history is slowly being dumbed down and carefully written in America these days. So many important historical events/ people/ places i read about or see now i never even heard about in school 10 15 years ago
What kind of empires? Rome was defeated by the Romans themselves, the Sassanids were in a civil war for the throne. Well, you won the recumbent one, be proud!)
@25:38 "The next day, Vahan persisted with the same battle plan." Reminds me of Lee at Gettysburg. Beaten back the previous two days, he doubled down with Picket's charge.
How do you Drink from camles? They don't Store extra water. Their humps are full of fat. They conserve water better in their blood and intestines. So they either drank water from the stomach, which would be filled with digestive enzymes and Not drinkable or from the entestines. Or do you mean the Urine, which dehydrates you even more, AS Urine is a waste product.
Unfortunately that wasn't a joke! Because Christian Byzantium ultimately failed and Constantinople was lost for the Christians. Also unfortunately, the British and French victors of the First World War did not procure Constantinople and the other former Greek territories of Asia Minor to the Greeks.
Khalid was a military genious. He was godlike tactician and great to time management especially to spot the critical moments and the necessary moves in order to keep his lines or to destroy the enemy ones. I think it remembers me Subutai who won countless battles and campains under the Jenkins Chan rule. He was also very adaptive like Velisarius and had the same fate like Velisarius: he got attention by jealous leaders and other commanders who feared his fame and legendary victories. On the other hand the backbone of his army in this fight were ...arab women who threatened their sons and husbands in order to keep the line. I think this was almost hilarious and this happened at least twice near their camps when arab fighters were ready to collapse.
Most of companion and advisors understood that khalid's removal is necessary in the long run Unlike hannibal whom achievement didn't gain anything, khalid's one cemented and last until today
Show me a commander in history, won all the wars when outnumbered, less trained, less equipped armies. This makes Khalid the greatest of all time. I respect Cesar or Subutai as commanders, but they were not winning like Khalid.
Only if you believe the blatant over exaggeration by Arab sources. Byzantine financial records as well as official reports state they had around 150k soldiers b4 the Persian war and by 641, 5 years after yarmouk, they still had 109k soldiers left. Both their eastern armies (a total of 50k soldiers b4 the persian war) was also still standing, meanwhile the Avars in the western front destroyed 1 of the 2 standing armies in the west and conquered much of byzantium European territory.
Also Byzantium field armies were 15-25k not 40k-200k, as evident by Justinian decades b4 sending 17k army to conquer and garrison the entire North African province and around 20-25k to do the same in Italy. The Byzantine military manual the strategikon also gave an example of a gigantic 35k army being fielded by the Roman's of old but something that is no longer possible in their own time.
@@JoshuaBernabe-mc4sqthe Romans and Persians on whatever accounts still have more soldiers, equipments, experiences, trainings, etc. The soldiers were paid professionals.
Thank you khalid and your troops. Without your sacrifices, we wouldn't have been here. May your brave souls rest in peace. Full respect to your brave souls, to your shed blood. ❤
It may win battles, but winning wars requires the full support of one's Population. Raising multiple armies, logistics, Unity factor, Justice system, morale etc. all count
Extremely was a magnificent & amazing historical coverage of Yarmuk battles and accurate evaluating about a brilliant & remarkable leading of Khalid ebn Walid ...History Marche channel always introduces excellent History coverage videos ...at that times both eastern Roman empire ( Byzantine empire )and its classic competitive (Ssassanian empire) were in death ( decline) phased....
It was mentioned in the video that the Byzantine army had 40,000 soldiers, but this is an error because this number would not have taken Khalid Ibn al-Walid 5 days of fighting to defeat him, but perhaps only 5 hours.. The lowest estimate of the Byzantine army was 150,000 soldiers
Can you imagine a man in his 50s going for a 1v1 death duel against a strong young general... Can you imagine Khalid risking his entire army to execute a pincer attack flank with all his cavalry... what was going through their minds as their horses galloped to surrond the enemy.. ya Allah...
🚩 Help support HistoryMarche on Patreon and get ad-free early access to our videos for as little as $1: www.patreon.com/historymarche
🚩 As requested by many of you in the comments, I merged all parts of the Battle of Yarmuk into one video, for easier viewing. Thank you all for watching the video ❤
thank you for this great video/gift on the blessed month of Ramadan. Alhamdulillah!
edit: just one criticism or advice for future videos about islamic history, if possible use the names of the companions of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ instead of pictures from artists, depicting their faces.
When will you start a series about Khalid? 👀
This will bring you eager followers from the whole Muslim world.
@@muslimresponse103
I agree with this advice 💚💚
Have actual biologists ever examined if the method to "preserve water" in kamel stomachs makes even sense as described? Sounds like a typical pre scientific tall tale.
there is many battles khalid fought like yarmuk and many others clashes which is deserved to make more battles vedioes about him hope you do it ❤❤❤ big thanks to the chanel
How do you know a general is legendary? It's when he sends his troops to block the enemy's escaping route before they even decide to escape. That's what I call unmatched confidence
That is a pretty good statement 👌
My man
a general who block enemy's escape route, even when his own army is seemed in losing position.
Facts. The double standards, hypocrisy and lack of education is insane as usual.
He learned from his campaigned against the persian/sasanid that the enemy will regroup or fight another day when they escape the battlefield
When death approached Khaalid Bin al-Waleed and he realised that, he wept and said: "I witnessed such and such battles, and there is no place on my body the size of a handspan that has not received a blow from a sword or been pierced by an arrow or hit by spear. But here I am, dying on my bed as a camel dies. May the cowards eyes never sleep. I sought death in the places where it may be sought, but it was only decreed that I should die on my own bed.” [Siyar A’laam An-Nubula’, 1/382]
Edit: wow 2.3k likes thank you guys
Edit: I put the source of the quote
Edit: his nickname that the prophet gave him was was " The drawn sword of God " or " The unsheathed sword of God "
His quote has been milked trillion times on this platform, Khalid Ibn Al Walid does not need any body recognition
@@سعيدصالح-ض3طhe needs way more recognition, very underrated.
@@صليعليالنبي-و6غ …He doesn’t need no recognition and he is not underrated
@@سعيدصالح-ض3طCalm your tits fanboy, if somebody's reciting a quote it's out of admiration, not necessarily to bring recognition to it.
It's because he was honored with the title of " Sword of Allah" by Prophet Muhammed peace be upon him. So God's unsheathed sword shouldn't die at battle field. If so it implies that God's sword was broken by a some random mortal. It's God's decree.
Abu Ubayda recognizing Khalid as the best commander is an underrated show of humility and belief in the cause, that is very rare in history
Muslim brotherhood works like that. Supposed to be like that.
But now... You gues it. They fight each other 😅
Islam instructions right now are not followed as strict as then ! @@DBT1007
@@DBT1007 Brothers always fight each other.
@@alwiyoni9542huh
Abu Ubayda ra is one of the senior companions of the prophet pbuh. He has a very high status in Islamic history. He later became the governor of the Levant (Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria)
One time the Caliph (Umar) visited him and saw him living in a straw hut on the outskirts of Damascus with nothing in the Hut but a prayer mat and bread crumbs for food. The governor of what used to be the most prosperous province of the Roman empire, and one of the most prosperous of the Islamic Caliphate.
Umar ra said: “O Abu Ubaidah! The life of this dunya (world) has changed all of us but I swear upon Allah that you are just the same as you were in the time of the Prophet pbuh“
Yarmouk was one of the most consequential battles ever fought. Its echoes still ring loud and clear across the world, nearly a millennium and a half later.
Battle of talas aswell Turks convert power technology. China lose Central Asia agains the Muslims
The world would be unrecognizable had the Arabs lost
@@MaXiMoS54 if the Arabs lost without the caliphate there wouldn’t be a flow of knowledge and technology from east to west
@@supremercommonderthere already was the Arabs just took over the Persian empires position. Even the early Roman Empire had Chinese silk. It’s true that the Arabs took control of the Silk Road but that road existed before the caliphate
@@supremercommonderbut whats the battle called when he fought with 60 men vs 60k men
*"If you refuse, there can only be war between us... and you will face men who love death as you love life."* how much of a badass can you be?
Hahahaha!
The Byzantines were mentally and morally crushed by these ferocious words of the great Muslim General: Khalid ibn Al-Walid (The Sword of Allah) ❤️
@@malikmultani1 hahah you spoke the truth.
Yeah buts its not a great way to make friends or inspire loyalty is it ? Most of these primitive Bedouin tribes murxered each other at some point in time and the various dynastic succesors were so ego tistical and paranoid they even muurded theire fathers and brothers slo they could have what they craved ie to boss people about ! Its all a bit shallow but typical of all Dictators or ayaltolahs ?
@@davidmiller4078 fathers and brothers? maybe before islam. islam forbids the killing of innocent.
@@davidmiller4078 The words are being delivered at a battlefield, and not on the dinner table, you don't make friends on the battlefield..you are there to fight...that is the way of battles and wars....
Goosebumps. It's not the difference in numbers that standout, it's the fact that these were Byzantine's elite forces. Greater numbers, better equipped, better armoured, experienced generals all outdone by pure genius and incredible bravery.
The Byzantine were in great decline at this point don’t get carried away. Their military had been in decline and training was not what it once was.
@@pauldorfman701 That is pure coping. The Byzantine army was vastly superior in every respect. I already know your response. Just pause and reflect before you reply.
@@pauldorfman701 bla bla bla Always declining excuse. Do you think muslim Had no wars before Yarmouk ? Lol
@@pauldorfman701 Everything he said is correct, the Byzantines had the numbers, they where better equipped and had experienced leadership.
I fail to see where he got carried away. Clearly the Arabs showed great courage and incredible brilliance in their leadership. Trying to diminish their achievement is petty and a disgrace.
However, there appear to be numerous mistakes on Vahan’s part out of I can only imagine sheer arrogance and being baited. The one on one’s with officers being killed in front of their troops not just damaged morale, but also troop cohesion and discipline. Furthermore I feel Vahan misused his cavalry (by keeping them in reserve instead of exploiting frequently exposures and openings) and the four divisions each working on their own, rather than coordinating and supporting one another. There were moments, as portrayed here, where Khalid could have found himself surrounded by cataphracts, overextended and alone, but the cavalry stood back to only aid their own sections. So although Khalid ultimately outwitted his opponent, his opponent allowed it by a string of bad decisions.
I'd not previously known much about the Muslim generals of history. My word, what a superb general Khalid was - truly one of the all-time greats! Thank you for educating me!
Its interest if we read about history.
Khalid ever lost but before he became moslem.
He was lost at khadaq battle and almost lost at uhud before, if sahabah archer contingent didnt make mistake, khaled would be lost also.
And yes general can beat him is our beloved Prophet Muhammad pbuh
2 battle that became one of reason he became moslem.
His tactical on left wing at yarmouk, i think he got it from learning Prophet tactical
@@agusteamwind1071
يا اخي معلوماتك خاطئه فا خالد لم يكن قائدا في غزوة الخندق بل كان القايد هو ابو سفيان وانما خالد كان قايد بسيط وتحت تصرفه جنود قليل وقد عبر الخندق هو وقليل معه ولاكن النبي صلى الله عليه وسلم واصحابه استبسلو ودافعو بكل قوه حتى ارسل الله رياح شديده على الاحزاب واقتلعت خيامهم ورجعو الى مكه واسلم خالد بعدها بفتره بسيطه ولم يهزم خالد ابدا
@@محترف-ث3ه i cant read it please translete english
@@agusteamwind1071 you must be a Shia, they undermine him and insult him and slander him. I'm nit surprised with your incorrect information
@@Authentic-1tywhat the reason you said im shia?
l always love sahabah all.
When that was happen?
If you read about history yo will be know thats battle just before Khalid RodiallohuAnhu became moslem.
"and you will face men who love death as you love life"
greatest one liner in a battlefield 🔥
The people who love paradise than deception and the wreckage of the world..true Muslim..
Literally the number one problem with Islam
@@eitantovey2570hmm cry hard
@@eitantovey2570 real men find it courageous to be prepared to die for ur faith and country rather than a problem. It is the likes of u whom Khalid referred to when he said may the eyes of cowards never sleep
@@sulaiman1630 sure Sulaiman, if that's how you think.
My problem with Khalid's statement is that the men specifically love death. Being willing to lay down one's life for their country is admirable, and is not morally corrupt. Intentionally seeking out death for oneself though is a real issue, and leads to more world conflict than anything else in existence today.
This is one of the most hard fought field battles prior to the gunpower age. Several DAYS of exhaustive fighting that included a whole day of rest because both sides were pushed to their limits. The Romans had the edge in most of the engagements but failed to deal a decisive blow. The Arab commander was very smart to give Khalid operational command. One of the most impressive battlefield achievements and just one of Khalid's tactical masterpieces.
It is rare to see such unbiased opinion when it comes to Khalid, westerners always have a knee-jerk reaction and dismiss Muslim achievement to the two empires just being tired.
Thank you.
@@lordshang8838 I'm american and khalid is my favorite general ever. The sword of allah deserves much more recognition. He's just as amazing as hannibal or alexander.
You have to keep in mind the... lets call it "tradition of historical story telling" in the early islamic culture. So many of the important battles of the Arabs during that time supposedly took several days, (despite this beeing super rare) included single combat (which the Arabs usually won) and clever trickery by the Arabs.
Its almost formulaic, and therefore not really believable. I guess we can trust the claims about who won the battles, but as soon as you see those elements, you should realize that its an islamic source, and therefore be sceptical about any details.
@@Omega0850 i've heard this pushback before and I think it's dishonest. If we're gonna say that propoganda plays a role in recording military history you better be dismissing Alexander's unbeaten record because I'm not seeing Persian and Indian sources corroborating his undefeated streak. Its a bunch of greek fanboys who have a cultural reason to elevate Alexander. I'm more inclined to believe that no general has ever come out of their career without losing at least one battle, but if you win a major war of course sources are gonna paint you as a god. Either Alexander AND Khalid and others are undefeated or no one is. You cant have it both ways.
And it had everything as I said in another post: pitched battles, skirmishes, countless duels, generals fighting generals one-on-one, women stabbing men in the face, camels biting horses, generals smack talking and more!
No other man has simultaneously destroyed the two greatest empires of the time in the span of a few years…
One could argue Genghis Khan did it too
Romans weren't "destroyed" they outlived all caliphates and the greatest empire of that period was Tang China
That is a lie and is downplaying the genius of Walid and the tenacity of the Arabs at the time. Both the Sassanian and Roman empires were weaker at the time but still the most powerful nations in the world and far stronger than the newly formed umayaad caliphate.
true, he achieved what other can dream of.
@Florentino Perez arabs also were exhausted from years of civil war called ridda war. also the romans and sassanids still had a lot more population and resources
I hear people questioning Umar's decision to demote Khalid with some wrongfully accusing him of jealousy while the real reason was to show that all victories are from Allah alone and not some commander, but if we see the bigger picture and take a leaf from Hannibal's history, we can actually see the wisdom behind it. It was said about Hannibal by one of his commanders that he knew how to get victories, but he didn't know how to use them. A similar case can be seen here as well.
The end goal was not to just beat large armies into submission and send war booty to Medinah, the main goal was to spread the word of God all over the world. This includes everything, from rules of warfare to rules of administration and even basic day to day life. And Khalid, though an absolute UNIT in warfare, and excellent in administration, lacked the level of knowledge about Islamic rulings and teachings of Prophet ﷺ that Abu Ubaydah had. He was among the firsts to accept Islam, was known for his piety and knowledge of Islam. He was called "The safekeeper of Ummah" by Prophet ﷺ himself. By appointing him as the leader of Muslim front in that region the dynamics of that front is changed from military expedition to inviting more people towards Islam. Hence appointment of Abu Ubaydah was not only justified but also necessary for Islam to flourish in that region.
Best argument for this issue I've ever read in my life!
It should also be noted that Khalid tended to take absurdly huge risks in his campaigns while Abu Ubaida was more cautious and wise, we can see clearly an epitome of his wisdom when he appointed Khalid as the overall commander when the need arose. He didn't care about his position, he was wise enough to see the ultimate goal and worked towards achieving it by any means even at the cost of his own reputation and power
You are absolutely right
@@deeipomar2366 Khalid has stated multiple times that when he goes to battle, he goes wishing death. Dying in battle is all he ever wanted. That was NOT what Omar wanted though for his companions in the army. Omar was a very cautious religious leader, he was scared for the Muslims in Khalid’s army to throw their lives away, and was scared Khalid would lead them to death. Khalid was too risky, and Omar used to cry when he hears Muslims dying in battles.
Omar did what he thought was right.
May Allah grant you Jannah. You have explained it well.
Only a muslim can understand demoting of khalid ibn walid
I watched your videos about Batlle of Badr & Uhud, and now this is the 3rd video, i love your islamic historical battle videos, keep it up my friend.
Thank you so much for the support. Very kind of you!
Wow
159k dollar wow you so rich
@@mr.cannedble9724it’s IDR not dollar bro, it’s just around $10
Bhai itna paisa kaha se late ho derh lakh de diya sidha benchooo
Khalid is the only guy who can turn imminent defeat into victory. He did this in several battles.
True that my friend.
With help of Allah
It's Allah and not a person 🙏
I recommend exploring the Battle of Uhud, a historical event where the Muslim army faced defeat against a non-Muslim force. Initially, the non-Muslims were struggling in the war, but with strategic maneuvers led by Khalid ibn Walid, the tide of the battle shifted in their favor. This marked a significant comeback. The defeat of the Muslim army in this battle serves as a lesson, emphasizing the importance of tactics in warfare. It conveys the message that mere devotion to Islam may not guarantee victory; understanding and employing strategic approaches are crucial. The Battle of Uhud underscores the idea that certain natural laws and rules cannot be overcome solely through religious devotion.
When you take all logical actions, you can now expect the help of Allah. This should be the approach of Muslims to each challenge they have.
@@mervankadrijovski705you can call those non muslims as Sassanians Or religious wise Zoroastrians
If you can remember muslims as one side, then why not the other side???
I believe khaalid ibn waleed is the greatest to ever lead a battle, not for his unbeaten record millaterily, but due to his unbeaten duels, be it against the Arabs, Sassnids and Romans. I never seen a commander like this, who exceled on one vs one, and undefeated.
He also breaks swords on his enemies heads 😢😅
If Khalid was a roman general, he would be the top rank of "Spoilia Ultima" contributor to the Temple of Jupiter.
Are you sure?
That i knew, khalid ever lost battle
@@agusteamwind1071 what battle?
@@agusteamwind1071
How tf can he lose in the battle of the trench if there was no real battle.
"I bring you men who desire death as ardently as you desire life."
Khaleed ibn Waleed sword of Allah.
@Florentino Perez no one is fool enough to die for nothing, not the person at levels of Khalid ibn walleed. his desire was to die for his faith and mission. as we can see he did accomplished it with success.
@@FlorentinoPerez69well you are living for nothing. Let’s leave it there.
@Florentino Perez They spread islam to the whole middle east, later reaching north Africa and Spain and Iran and Afghanistan, that was the ultimate victory
@@saloua277 well we are seeing today how me, iran and in particularly afganistan are doing great under centuries of islam rule :) ultimate victory belongs to christian west
@zuxxx if you think wealth is the ultimate measurement of success then you and your group are truly lost
Brave Arab Women who fought along with Arab Men when it was emergency!
Salute Arab Women
They don't fight it's the plane from the begining was to encouraged who get back and remember them that they will not be their wife's anymore so that they would fight to the victory and that's what happened in the end.
They fid fight watch whole vdo@@ZohairVerde
@@ZohairVerdeI saw a story about a fighter who is a women but I can't recall the name but u can search and maybe u can find it
This was a rumor and not a fact that women fight alongside Muslim men
If this happens, it means that men's hearts become weak and their faith in God weakens
Arab men so weak they need women to help them hahahah
The final day of the battle was the most unexpected one that really show Khalid's brilliant mind as military commander. he knew that the Byzantines were expecting the muslim to not attack, so he decided to attack. He knew that the Byzantines were exhausted by the constant battle so he attacked on the flanks with overwhelming cavalry numbers. He truly one of the greatest general of all time
Khalid did everything right. He didn’t make any mistakes. However, for me, this was less one of his masterclasses in strategy, tactics, etc. and more one of him showing sheer force of will and the ability to instill bottomless motivation in his troops. By rights, they’ve should have broken many times, but kept coming on like mad men. Having many of their wives in the camp behind them must have helped a lot too. What man isn’t going to fight like a cornered lion imagining his wife r*ped and sold into slavery if the battle is lost.
@@The_ZeroLine The Arabs should thank their Hasanid brothers, it was they who first fled, leaving a big gap, but who is sorry in the Byzantine army is the Slavs-Federats who fought very well as mercenaries federates. Although the Arabs are great, the victory is hard, but sure. The Byzantine Empire punished itself by simplifying the legions and making out of a great army - detachments of mercenary federates ...
@@The_ZeroLine In 636, the Christian Arabs were the first to flee, in 1071 the Christian Turks were the first to flee. Fun fact. Both battles were a strong blow to the Byzantine Empire.
Poorly selected mercenaries)
@@Sigma_man_88 The information is incorrect about the battle, the numbers of the Byzantines reached 400 thousand and the number of Muslims only 38 thousand, and the battle ended in only one day, this is the reality of Yarmouk, but in the videos they brought drama to the battle and made it 6 days, and this is not true, the Arabs crushed the Byzantines in only one day
@@lorenzZ2 Nonsense...An army of 400 thousand troops at that time impossible because of logistic problems. The video shows the truth as much as possible.
The last words of Khalid Ibn Waleed....
" Tell all the cowards of the world who are afraid of death that if death had happened on the battlefield, then Khalid would not have died on his deathbed "
Great General who want die in Battlefield die in Bed
@@adrianfirmansyah15Yes, he fought more than a hundred battles in which he would not be defeated in any battle, and in the end he died in a butterfly
Umar ibn khattab had to dismiss Khalid cause people starting thinking it was Khalid who gave victory not Allah
@@Geographical_EditZ12 right
Talks in your prophet as.. s?😂😂🤣
‘As you will face men who love death as you love life’ true statement
…333 likes just how
The translation can be a bit misleading. When it says they love death it is referring to themselves, it means that they would love to die (as martyrs) more than the opposition love to live their lives
A true statement but certainly not of God.
@@classifiedname222 true
@@sw8741ofcourse it was said by companion of prophet
@@awaisjee466 Is it themselves or "ourselves"..? 🤔🤔🤔
"You will face men who love death as you love life."
- Khalid Ibn Walid 🥶🔥
Truly terrifying dude
He was once a man who was the biggest enemy of the musilms
Unhinged.
Heard a lot of talk about Khalid on the comment threads for other battles. This is my first time actually seeing him in action. So impressive on so many levels.
And this is his most conservative battle by the way 😂
I suggest you watch the battle of Wallaja, Muzzayah, Al Firaz. If you want to see unorthodox genius tactics.
Video: early Muslim expansion by kings and generals
@@mebarkiimad8999 thank you, I will.
He was given the title of Sword of Allah by prophet Muhammad PBUH.And he never lost even a single battle in his life Alhamdulilha 🫶❤️.
You should watch the battle of Uhud in this channel. It is when Khalid is still not a muslim and he facing Prophet Muhammad and defeated him in that Battle. Imagine. The one who defeated the prophet in a battle later became the most brilliant general Islam ever had.
Watch the early muslim conquests by king and generals to see all his battles in details you would be suprise
I every time i read about this battle and all the heroes who fallen in it i cry. 100 warriors who fought with our great Prophet himself in the battle of bader were present in this battle. Even my own tribe (Banu Bakr) have lost so many sons in this battle for Islam god is great.
We are nothing without Islam we are absolutely nothing
Indeed, we are nothing without Him, we are nothing without His Deen, dear brother! 🥺
الله أكبر
Allahu Akbar
if you are nothing without Islam, then you are nothing
@@siyavushkhosrow yes, find out from the moment you close your eyes. Till then, keep having fun.
Id like to thank you so much for this video! Id also want to note this: That when day 3 or 5 ended, Khalid changed the troops of his flanks. The left with the right and vice versa. The aim of this was psychological warfare so that the enemy flanks mirroring his army would see new faces/warriors and would believe that the Muslims received reinforcements when they did not. Khalid would have his army hold 2 torches instead of 1 at night to show that reinforcements have arrived and early in the morning he'd have his horses kick the sand to create large clouds of dust showing that reinforcements actually arrived. General Khalid is definitely one of the brightest military minds to ever walk this earth. I read one of the comments below and please please make a long compilation of Khalids military achievements starting from the Sassanids and ending with the yarmouk battles, just like Hannibals video which I watch at least 3 times a year as its one of my fave videos on youtube! Thanks again!
This is the truly inspiring strategic thinking I wish we could learn more about. Battles are won before any soldier steps on the field.
ما ذكرة أستخدمه في معركة موتة مع نفس الجيش بس كان في عهد الرسول صلى الله عليه وسلم كان عدد المسلمين ٣٠٠٠ وهي من مهدت لمعركة اليرموك
وأبرزة فطنت خالد حتى في الإنسحاب من المعركة ويطول الحديث حول هذه المعركه حول أسبابها وأهدافها ومكاسبها
أرجو إن تكون الترجمة من قوقل 😅❤
وهي من
Khalid deserves a movie
True warrior
You will never see it,
Check out umar ibn khatabb movie it has Khalid ibn walid in it
@@simosan4451 go SWORD BATTLE ?.
Man Khalid surely must be the most underrated commander in history. What a monster
BMA
He was given the title by prophet "Sword of Allah"!
So he didn't die fighting but on bed with guilt of not dieing in battlefield!!
Indeed Sword of Allah couldn't break!!!
We don't care westerners ratings. Muslims are on Top. Since we love for Allah and die for Allah... Every Muslims are as like khalid Bin Walid. Cowards want to live this world but we Muslims want after world.
@@ENTERTAININGVIDEOS1
Sword of Allah?
Is Allah a warlord?
@doyouknoworjustbelieve6694 Allah us God
Translated to English, his Nick name was &The Sword of God*
@@doyouknoworjustbelieve6694 lol it's an Arabic tradition to give nicknames to the people. Like what Prophet Muhammad PBUH gave to Khalid as Sword of the God (Saifullah) as the Prophet named one of his companion as "Abu Huraira" (father of the kitten), as he loved to foster kittens and feed cats. due to the personal attributes of those persons.
As all Prophets are rightly guided so Prophet recognized the courage, fighting expertize, leadership of Khalid in the battlefield, so he was nicknamed by the Prophet so.
At his death bed, Khalid RA said that there isn't a place on his body that hasn't been wounded, injured during countless battles he had fought throughout his life. No matter how much he craved for the martyrdom, he was disappointed to never get that status due to the fact that the Prophet nicknamed him as the sword of the God. And he died at the ripe age on a bed with no assets to his name.
Props to Abu Ubayda for being super humble instead of an ego to get in the way of good counsel. I mean how many countless times have we seen that happen a general is demoted for being too popular and a lieutenant or rival is promoted? I’m guessing the troops would have followed Khalid (no guarantee though since Ubayda was super respected too) no matter what, but it didn’t need to get there either. Then going out into single battle in his ‘50s like some shit out of Game of Thrones.
It fascinates me how little interest Khalid had in playing the political game. He was a warrior first and foremost and gave very little consideration to the politics of the early Caliphate. He was popular enough across the ranks to take seize control if he'd wanted to, but he died having felt like he was cast aside for simply being great at leading armies. The Sword of Allah is my favorite field marshall ever. His ability to march through desert with ease is nothing short of impressive.
@@geordiejones5618 And died penniless to boot because he cared so little for wealth. He had wisdom.
Read the Qur'an, and understand they were the generation that Allah revealed the Qur'an to, so if anyone was to embody the teachings of the Qur’an, it was them. People analyze others from their perspective, so a man of ego and Arrogance will see ego and Arrogance in others, but these flaws don't exist in all men, an unkind man believes all people are unkind, and may see kindness as a weakness, not all men are equal, and only Allah knows what the hearts conceal ☝🏻
What missing here is the fact that Abu Ubayda is a great man known for his humility outside of warfare
He didn't even care about status or ranks to begin with
@@asmrnaturecat984 I gathered that more and more as the video went on.
Can we all appreciate how Zarrar was one MEAN UNIT, insane warrior prowess, respect !!! 💪💪
I laughed when I heard, pale faces. It wasn't in a racist way tho, he was referring to the Romans.
@@Authentic-1tyBecause most Arabs of the time were jet black. That was before the mass mixing with Persians and Turkic peoples...
In a siege in roman north Africa, he killed 160 by himself.
@@Authentic-1ty Pale faces was an expression of fear. It wasn't a racist phrase
@@laminsillah5999we wuz arabs and shieet
"May the eyes of cowards never rest”
Khalid ibn Alwaleed
Khalid ibn Al Walid “The sword of Allah” is absolutely one of my favorite historical figures ever 🇸🇦 ❤
ههههه عرفتك انت الي بتويتر حاظرني
انت بتويتر Timbo Rey. BigBoiTimbo
@@xIAMxTHATxGUYxdont change that name...we know who Al lata...we destroy that statue..khalid destroy it
A sword from the swords of allah
.
@@xIAMxTHATxGUYx yes. Muhammad pbbuh was also a sword. Sent to dispel darkness... to set the ground for final battle... between Jesus pbuh vs Antichrist.
Not even 1mil subscribers? Such a shame people don’t appreciate the level of content this channel is giving us for free.
Absolutely amazing video !
Khalid Ibn Walid is a legend amongst heroes ⚔
I believe his record be on as a battlefield commanded or duelling, is unmatched, his personal fighting skills were something else.
@Sun Light who da fook is that guy ?!
At Firaz he defeated the combined Roman and Persian superpowers forces. 🎉
@@CoolAdam247 a guy who beat 300,000 persian army with only 50 thousand
@Youdontdreamincryo and what did khalib ibn walid acheieve??
On the fourth day, when Yazid and Abu Ubaidah withdrew, the withdrawal was difficult, and he was saddened by the loss of the left side of the Muslims, but Ikrimah ibn Abi Jahl advanced, saying, “Who pledges allegiance to death?” So he presented with him 500 soldiers and attacked the Romans. They were brave and valiant in fighting until they were all martyred. Honor him from slowing down the Romans so that the Muslims would be able to seek advice and rectify the situation
Ikrimah Ibn Hisham 🤗😭
Dhiraar was also part of that death battalion and he was the only who survived and wasn't martyred of those 500s
@@ادلخنبدولیin which minute do you mean this
@@SumatrabjsBjsibn Abi Jahl ibn Hisham*
And the fact that Ikrimah's father was one of the biggest enemy of Islam during its first days......
Khalid marches through desert without water, Hannibal marches through the alps, both masters in envelopment and cavalry tactics, man the "Romans" really can't catch a break...
Yet again they won and destroyed both Empires and lasted for thousands of years. Cope
Hannibal empire was destroyed but khalid's empire was never destroyed even up to today, the Muslims continue to be a force to reckon with.
@@aminhemz4518 What force? Youre underdeveloped and you watch as Iraq gets tomahawked by US just recently. Muslims are oil playground for big players.
@@stanke1488 1.9 billion muslims and still going ... Cope much ?
@@HMalem that is completely irrelevant to my comment. Keep coping mudsIime
one of the most successful military commander, he destroyed the Roman Army several times and also Persian army, and capture the lands known as Iraq and Syria from those defeated armies. he had done, that every warrior can only wish. such a honorable warrior he is. Vahan was against the wrong person to fight against, perhaps he done his best but Khalid was ahead of him in many aspects of war technique.
Vahan's biggest mistake was to offer them Peace, which the Muslims shockingly refused. More than 1300 years' hindsight, it really isn't shocking at all.
@@Troopertroll Why Vahan was in the Battle field? For peace?🤔 Then. 1st he tried to bribe the Khalid Ibn Walid considering him a looter but he was a conqueror. And When he realized he can't win from Outnumbered enemy so he offered 2nd peace. As we know Khalid was Conqueror he refused it and won the Battle and write the history but not as a looter.
@@MAli-rr9km He was on the battlefield to... *checks notes* defend his land that Muslims invaded? Are you asking if general that was trying to stop invasion is there for peace? How about you ask what was Khalid doing there, was he there for peace? What is this strawman logic? I get that you are proud of people that have literally nothing to do with you, but reading most comments in this video, filled mostly with historical revisionists is mindboggling to me.
@@Proph3t3N What a Conqueror has to do with peace? A Conqueror does love all of the world, that's why A Conqueror wishes to Occupy and Rule on everyone. That's what Khalid was doing. Vahan was a hurdle Infront of him and he crushed the Hurdle and Conquer the Roman's lands. That's the straight forward. Is there any difficulty to understand?
@@MAli-rr9km Yea, I do not know why I'm trying to reason with religious zealots. But it's pretty distressing what I just read. Hopefully you will never leave whatever village or far away hole you are typing this from.
The military career of Saifullah al Maslul Abu Suleyman Khalid ibn al-Walid ibn Mughaira ibn Abdillah ibn Umar ibn Makhzum ibn Yaqazah:
Numerous pre-Islamic battles
Battle of Uhud (625)
Battle of the Trench (626-627)
Battle of Mu'ta (629)
Conquest of Mecca (629)
Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Nakhla) (630)
Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Banu Jadhimah) (630)
Battle of Hunayn (630)
Expedition of Tabuk (630)
Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Dumatul Jandal) (630)
Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (2nd Dumatul Jandal) (631)
Expedition of Khalid ibn al-Walid (Najran) (631)
Battle of Buzakha (632)
Battle of Ghamra (632)
Battle of Naqra (632)
Battle of Zafar (632)
Battle of Butah (633)
Battle of Aqraba (633)
Siege of the Gardens of Death (633)
Battle of Dhat al-Salasil (633)
Battle of the River (633)
Battle of Ullays (633)
Battle of Walaja (633)
Battle of al-Hira (633)
Battle of al-Anbar (633)
Battle of Dawmat al-Jandal (633)
Battle of Muzayyah (633)
Battle of Saniyy (633)
Battle of Zumail (633)
Battle of Ayn al-Tamr (633)
Battle of Firaz (634)
Battle of al-Qaryatayn (634)
Battle of Huwwarin (634)
Battle of Marj Rahit (634)
Battle of Bosra (634)
Battle of Ajnadayn (634)
Battle of Yaqusa (634)
Battle of Marj al-Saffar (634)
Battle of Fahl (634 or 635)
Battle of Marj ar-Rum (635)
Battle of Marj Dimashq (635)
Siege of Damascus (634-635)
Battle of Sanita-al-Uqab (634)
Battle of Maraj-al-Debaj (634)
Siege of Emesa (635-636)
Battle of Yarmouk (636)
Siege of Emesa (636)
Siege of Jerusalem (636-337)
Battle of Hazir (637)
Siege of Aleppo (637)
Battle of Qinnasrin (637-638)
Battle of the Iron Bridge (637)
Siege of Antioch (637)
Siege of Germanicia (638)
The number of battles surpasses 100 when smaller scale and unknown engagements are considered.
What the hell did you put uhud for 😡😡😡 it is the battle where he nearly killed the prophet and where many of the prophet's loves ones died plus in the trench he did nothing the prophet was the leader and imam ali killed amr and the trench was suleiman the persian's idea khalid had no role back then. Correct your info. Plus don't dare to celebrate ugud ever again.
Khalid didn’t participate in battle of the trench
@@ahmedabboh9583 He did, but did not do anything significant there.
Can you imagine being on a forced march to your impending doom while having to drink water that was sitting in a camels stomach for a few days in the desert. And here I am complaining about the water buffalo tasting funny.
I'm pretty sure it was the horses who drank from the camels stomachs, the men drank their personal water rations
@@Jay514-kw7om no,they ran out of water and were left with no chice except to drink from camels,and it is no surprise if arabs from desert of that time do it....
No,arabs actually did it and it was common for them@@Jay514-kw7om
@@Jay514-kw7om
You are right. Horses drunk the water from the camel stomach.
There is a part of the story missing, yes it happened temporarily until the army was about to perish after the number of camels decreased but Khalid did not cross the desert except with the help of an expert who knew the desert well, that person knew the way to the desert and knew where to find water from under the ground and so when the army was about to die they reached an area containing an ostrich egg (an indication among the ancient Arabs that it was an area containing water) and so that man saved Khalid's army from perishing, this story was not mentioned
@@Jay514-kw7om
Khalid ibn al walid was one of the greatest warrior and general of all time and one of the most underrated
Greatest general ever not only for military mind but look at the amount single duels he had with other generals
The way and short period of conquering the Byzantine and Sassanid empires at the same time is something words can’t describe its greatness and it’s the greatest military campaign of all time
Khaled Ibn Al-Walid (the drawn sword of God)
He fought about 100 battles with the two largest empires at the time, and was never defeated in his life.
“By God, I have brought to you men who love death as you love life.”
Khalid and Hannibal are my two favourite leaders. Their tales are legendary.
Saladin and eugen and alhajaj takafi and mohalab ibn abi safra
Everybody's gangster until Zarrar throws his shield and takes his armor off!
lol
😎
His trade mark was he use to fight with out armour and shiled🗿🦁❤️💪☝️
He owns record of killing most enemies at battle,killing 36 at Ajnadyn in a duel and 160 at seige of Oxyrhynchus bahnasa...
I'd love to see a whole show on khalid.
Pretty much like how you did to Hannibal (Brilliant btw)
I'm still surprised how other generals were covered with their own videos, but not khaalid ibn Waleed.
100%
Trust me, the victories of khalid will make cartoon main characters feel more realistic
To balance thing out, historians need to stretch their imagination and downplay the numbers of the opponents and keep giving reasons to justify the loss
There is reason why no muslim population against Umar's decision to demote khalid and later banned him from any military involvement, to prevent the population from being fanatics like the roman whom treat Julius caeser as deity due to his success.
Look for the kings and generals video about early Islamic conquest
@@asmrnaturecat984 it's sad knowing about the downplay number like you mentioned, hope the balancing thing is not just for biased reason
There are more than 200K armies of romans there... I read the script but christians seem to be very shy to admit it then they reduce the numbers in the history... If there are only 40K armies, never in history the soldiers of muslim said "what a big number of armies right there"
Then Khalid said "It is not numbers who define the big or small armies, it's the number of the winning on the battlefield, they are losers, we are the winner"
Exactly. There were 250k Romans and only 40k muslims in the war
This was the 600s, and the Byzantines just got through a devastating war with the Sasanians. There is no possible way there were 200,000 Romans under arms in any battle.
@@Dekline25 then why does Wikipedia say so?
@@xenon_silva Wikipedia even says "ancient sources" when describing those numbers. I would think you'd be smart enough to realize that scholars in the 600s probably weren't the most accurate individuals.
If it was 40k to 25k then they won't be counting them to numeric high
This is the best series HistoryMarche ever produced. I often go back to watching it. I really hope they produce more of Khalid’s battles.
Always a pleasure HM, thank you for keeping History alive. Keep up the good work guys.
Khalid is a key that opened Lands for the Arabs & Muslims.❤ His military brilliance is top notch
And this brought on what is now called "The Dark Ages" where the rich and learned culture of Late Antiquity was destroyed by a barbarian horde, never to recover. The World would now be 1500 years more advanced than it is if not for the constant jihad and destruction of mostly peaceful civilizations. "Oh but Islamic scholars saved the works of the ancients", not they didn't, the dhimmis managed to hide some things and there rest were in Constantinople - despite the Caliphate's armies working hard to destroy it all as "blasphemy" and "unbelief". This was one on the worst days in human civilizational progress yet the very common false narrative pretends the opposite.
He would have slapped you for giving him credit thats rightfully due to Allah only.
@@sj9367 Well, when one gets into the archeology of the origins of Islam rather than the orthodox narrative that emerged a century later with Caliph Abd Al Malik (and solidified 2 centuries later) a very interesting picture emerges (such as the early mosques having qiblas pointing to Petra in Jordan and only later moving to Mecca - this would make Allah not YHWH but Dushara, and then Islam's commandments make sense, as they are different to those of YHWH). Too bad Muslims never learn the archaeology, as you might moderate the lust for death and mayhem a bit - and the resulting Dark Ages. Sharia is man-made by the way, so while piousness is generally a good thing there are limits. Salaam :)
@@staubsauger2305
Not true the golden age of science begin with islam the abassides without islam the world would be in dark
"I am the killer of Romans, I am the scourge sent upon you!"
One of the most killer lines in history.
When he said “it’s Khalidin time” and khalid over romans and Persians I cried tears of joy
Indeed, sounds epic omg
Unlikely it was ever said. Most of these famous lines said pre/during battle were invented post facto by historians for obvious reasons. However, this entire week-long battle was so epic it really doesn’t require any embellishment.
@@The_ZeroLine It was psychological warfare. Zarrar was known for this and feared as 'the half naked warrior'
@@awaisjee466 they was religiously motivated, 10/10 in moral, and skilled
In one battle the byzantine empire went from a superpower to an underdog
😂😂😂😂
So unreal... Khalid ibn al-Waleed never lost a battle when he leads. On top of that, 95% of these battles his opponents were numerically superior in number and have better quality of war equipements. It just beyond human comprehension!!
نعم لإن الحرب كانت بين الحق والباطل بين الخير والشر كان الله من ينصره ويلهمه
Khalid was an absolute genius in strategy.
and he was a strong and fearless warrior
@@Magicallstore so was every single Arab warrior. was highly determined and religiously motivated
Crazy battle ,All odds were against him yet Khalid still won the battle
He should be atleast Napoleon or Hannibal skill tier commander tbh
And maybe higher since he doesn’t lose any battle and always jumps where the fighting is the thickest to die a warriors death (unsuccessful)
He psyched out Yahan. I love hearing details of generals sh*t talking even if most of it usually never happened.
BTW, Khalid is amazing, but I wouldn’t call this situation all odds being against him until what was it day 4, but rather solidly not in his favor. Because as we’ve seen when armies this large fight, if you punch just one big hole you can send an army 3-4x your size routing. It’s when you get into an exhausting day long battle that numbers tend to tell. The first day’s fighting wasn’t a pitched battle. After that, this has got be one of the most epic battles of all time. Both these armies were tough as nails. As of day 5, the odds really were totally against Khalid.
Putting your ladies in the camp behind you is a great way to ensure the men fight to the death and for all they’re worth.
@Florentino Perez Khalid RA is way above Subutai. Subutai was given army over 100k troops, always outnumbering their enemy and mongols used tactic of fear to kill everyone civilians kids elderly and women. That had an insane psychological impact. However Subutai did lost a couple of battles against Chinese. While Khalid always had less troops and resources and won battles on shear genius tactics and bravery, always leading from the front and never losing a battle against the far ahead superpowers like Romans and Persians.
Khaled Ibn Al Waleed said on his death bed :
Khalid Ibn Al Walid does not need your recognition, you people milked his quotes
Khaled İbn AL Waleed could not die in a Battlefield, he is the Sword of Allah
Thanks!
Thank you so much for the support. Very kind of you!
“When I am in the battlefield, I love it more than my wedding night with the most beautiful of women”
Khalid ibn Al-Walid.
Commander of Rashidun Army. Fought 100 battles undefeated with 2 world superpowers.
Always outnumbered but never outgunned.
Sayyidina Khalid Ibnu Al Walid "Saifullah Al Maslul" (The Sword bearer of Allah) Radhi Allahu 'anhu.
First of all he wasn’t always outnumbered. Second of all there are many other commanders which were undefeated like Scipio Africanus, Alexander the Great and Timur of the Timurid empire. Third of all, I don’t believe he actually fought in a hundred battles but I do believe it was close to that number
Fourth, those superpowers weren’t even superpowers anymore as they were at war for decades, their numbers were depleted, the common people were tired etc.
Plus, weren’t Allah and Muhammad supposed to be the lovers of peace and unity? But Khalid was a conqueror, pillager and slaughterer? How does that make him the sword bearer of Allah? And he is also supposed to have been the companion of Muhammad? Sounds like bs to me
How many weddings did he have? Khalid seemed like a man who only had time for military matters and helping the people.
One of the greatest battle to ever occur and brilliantly covered as always by History Marche. Keep up the great work.
Khalid was probably the greatest general to ever grace the battle field a tactical genius,motivator and fearless
Napoleon has more feats
@@none2912Napoleon didn't lead from the front, didn't do personal duel. Khalid was not only a genius tactician but also a fearless duelist soldier.
@@ekoscenter-kw6cg Well that's a dishonest comparison due to the sheer difference in warfare. If we're talking pure achievements Napoleon conquered much more and defeated many more nations/empires. They were both the greatest generals of their respective time and while I love the genius and bravery of Khalid (RA), Napoleon simply achieved much more
@@none2912 Napoleon lost the war. He lost some battle. He didn't need to be on the front. He was not even among the soldiers when they lost to Russia. Charles the III of Sweden was even better than Napoleon. His presence improved the morale.
@@ekoscenter-kw6cg So? It doesn't take away any of his achievements and he was against 2 empires and 4 military powerhouses fighting on 6 fronts at the same time, it was a completely different war and also Khalid while not outright "losing" has had military failures failing to achieve his goal such as Battle of Trenches. I also don't understand this desire for him to fight on the "front", like I stated before musket warfare is completely different and he needs to employ his strategies by overseeing the whole battlefield, we're talking about feats and military tactical prowess not bravery which he still was a charismatic and committed leader
Charles is noway near the level of Napoleon and his achievements nor does any historian agree with you, the reason you say this was due to his reckleness in thrusting himself in battle paralleled with Khalid's.
In fact the reason Khalid would fight in the front is that he wished to die fighting for the sake of Allah and die on the battlefied.
Napoleon singlehandedly expanded French territory across all of Europe establishing client states and introducing the Napoleonic Code that would have legalistic implication up until today. Khalid was a tactical genius but lacking in strategy and if it wasn't for Abu Ubaydah he would not have been able to establish states under Islam
His army is twice as small as their enemy. And He took the victory by force His tactic was amazing
Why am I always so tense when I listen to these like I don't already know how history turned out
Right during Ramadan. Perfect timing. And great content. 👍
Romans were more than 200k, but the christian historians felt shame and reduced the numbers, and If there number was really 40k the war would have ended in 1 day.
Khalid Ibn Al Waleed was a real warrior, out beloved Prophet gave him the title of "The Sword of Allah". He fought 100 wars and won all.
absloutely correct
Exactly
That's Fuct
why not 2.5 million? lets make it 10 million actually to have better odds right?...
I think it's logistically impossible to have 200k
Dude fights 2 empire simultinously. What a warrior..
Let's appreciate the editor who tried so hard to write Arabic words from left to right
fr
Some cool tidbits about Zirrar/Dirrar:
-he fought topless and without a shield
-he killed 36 commanders in duels at Ajnadayn, not Yarmouk as the video says
-he blocked the enemy retreat at yarmouk
-he killed over 100 men at the siege of Oxyrhynchus Bahnasa
-he died 4-5 years after the battle of yarmouk shown in the video, of the plague
Freedom for Palestine and Gaza 🇵🇸 ❤
What more can be said beyond the accolades that have been given concerning Khalid ibn Waleed….I chose the name Saiful-Islam because of Khalid when I embraced Islam in 1975….definitely one of the best military commanders of all time across generations….as well it is Khalid prowess that causes The Battle of Uhud to be as hotly contested as it was….Khalid ibn Waleed, Saifullaah, The Sword of God…may he be at rest in his grave and granted paradise on the last day in which there is no doubt, Ameen
That final day of the battle is wow with how depleted Khalid's army was I'm surprised the left flank didnt disintegrate before his charge could defeat the roman army amazing.
Teşekkürler.
Thank you very much for the support! Very kind of you.
Love you Military Marche for battle of Yarmouk Again, Military history is my favorite subject & This Man Khalid ibn AL walid is kind of super hero for me..
He destroyed & defeated two super power's of that time when no one think of Arabs more then bandits.. So thanks again ❤️
There is no one worthy to worship except ALLAH.
Not even him
Allah does not exist
@@andrewholdaway813 no except for him!
@@cyberWarrior7519
There is no one worthy of worship
Really want to read these when the British Empire destroys the Ottoman Empire during the first world war lmao. Or when the Russians did it...or the Austrians...or the poles...or even the portuguese, or...nevermind.
What a superb series! Thanks for rereleasing them as one video.⚔🐎🏹
It is said an officer named George came from the Roman line and called Khalid out for a one to one battle but instead he asked him about Islam. He accepted Islam and fought with the Muslims he became a martyr that day.
True words
This seem like he got converted by priest on age of empire LMAO
You’re the best! Still waiting for more Khalid’s battles as you promised.
😂 Same here 😂
I don’t boring as hell
@@ninohergotic1 Salty. Khalid>All Croatians/Balkans that have ever lived
@@ninohergotic1halid was a million times a man you could never be, you are merely a male. Put respect where it is due.
@@ninohergotic1 Ottoman empire took the whole Balkans for hundreds of years, humble yourself .And purify your tongue before speaking about Khalid
Western world seems to ignore the fact that Islam was once a superpower crushing down two previous superpowers The Roman and Sasanid Empire
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
For almost 800 years from 700 to 1600 (Golden age of Islam)
they know !
Bro all of history is slowly being dumbed down and carefully written in America these days. So many important historical events/ people/ places i read about or see now i never even heard about in school 10 15 years ago
What kind of empires? Rome was defeated by the Romans themselves, the Sassanids were in a civil war for the throne. Well, you won the recumbent one, be proud!)
@25:38 "The next day, Vahan persisted with the same battle plan." Reminds me of Lee at Gettysburg. Beaten back the previous two days, he doubled down with Picket's charge.
There is an interesting fact not mentioned. khalid, when scouted the enemy army, he said these people are not experts at wars 🤯
Would be great to see a khalid series as HM did with Hannibal which was exceptional.
Thanks for your hard work HM!
My pleasure! Great seeing you in the comments. Got Uhud on the way too in the next 2-3 weeks hopefully.
@@HistoryMarche Make Mongol invasion of Rus'
@@HistoryMarche Wow ! The battle of Uhud is going to be epic ! 😱
Great! Badr was one of my favorites, so I'm looking forward to Uhud too!
@@HistoryMarche Just make sure that you take the story of the battle from the right sources
Khalid Bin Waleed was the best commander to ever exist! ❤
Khalid Bin Al-Waleed was one of the greatest military minds the world has ever produced.
People yapping about how the roman and Persian empires were declining while Muslims literally drinking water from slaughtered camels 😂
Fr muslims were still completely outmatched
How do you Drink from camles? They don't Store extra water. Their humps are full of fat. They conserve water better in their blood and intestines. So they either drank water from the stomach, which would be filled with digestive enzymes and Not drinkable or from the entestines. Or do you mean the Urine, which dehydrates you even more, AS Urine is a waste product.
@@leonvoelker7639 I think they drank it from the stomach or intestines. What I want to say is they were way outmatched by the Persians and Romans
How he did that
Unfortunately that wasn't a joke! Because Christian Byzantium ultimately failed and Constantinople was lost for the Christians. Also unfortunately, the British and French victors of the First World War did not procure Constantinople and the other former Greek territories of Asia Minor to the Greeks.
Khalid was a military genious.
He was godlike tactician and great to time management especially to spot the critical moments and the necessary moves in order to keep his lines or to destroy the enemy ones. I think it remembers me Subutai who won countless battles and campains under the Jenkins Chan rule.
He was also very adaptive like Velisarius and had the same fate like Velisarius: he got attention by jealous leaders and other commanders who feared his fame and legendary victories.
On the other hand the backbone of his army in this fight were ...arab women who threatened their sons and husbands in order to keep the line. I think this was almost hilarious and this happened at least twice near their camps when arab fighters were ready to collapse.
Umar wasn't jealous of him! We have different considerations than you.
Most of companion and advisors understood that khalid's removal is necessary in the long run
Unlike hannibal whom achievement didn't gain anything, khalid's one cemented and last until today
God is nothing like Him
He's not Godlike
He is a slave of God.
Game changer in Levant. Certainly made a lasting impact on the region for ages to come.
I hope historymarche produce more of Khalid battles
شكرًا
Thank you so much for supporting my work. Very kind of you.
Imagine how good is Khalid Bin Walid in Total War if he lives in the current era. Unbeatable champ.
Give him TW Attila and he could win any battle with a single unit of cavalry
Khalid would have dominated the campaign with his single cavalry
There's a mod for that time period in Total War Attila. It's called 634 Fire and Swords
@@RokibHassan-on2ox He would be so OP he might conquer Constantinople by turn 3 or something lol
This channel deserves atleast a million subs
Show me a commander in history, won all the wars when outnumbered, less trained, less equipped armies. This makes Khalid the greatest of all time. I respect Cesar or Subutai as commanders, but they were not winning like Khalid.
Only if you believe the blatant over exaggeration by Arab sources. Byzantine financial records as well as official reports state they had around 150k soldiers b4 the Persian war and by 641, 5 years after yarmouk, they still had 109k soldiers left. Both their eastern armies (a total of 50k soldiers b4 the persian war) was also still standing, meanwhile the Avars in the western front destroyed 1 of the 2 standing armies in the west and conquered much of byzantium European territory.
Also Byzantium field armies were 15-25k not 40k-200k, as evident by Justinian decades b4 sending 17k army to conquer and garrison the entire North African province and around 20-25k to do the same in Italy. The Byzantine military manual the strategikon also gave an example of a gigantic 35k army being fielded by the Roman's of old but something that is no longer possible in their own time.
@@JoshuaBernabe-mc4sqthe Romans and Persians on whatever accounts still have more soldiers, equipments, experiences, trainings, etc. The soldiers were paid professionals.
Hahahahaha show your numbers you still lost @@JoshuaBernabe-mc4sq
Thank you khalid and your troops. Without your sacrifices, we wouldn't have been here. May your brave souls rest in peace. Full respect to your brave souls, to your shed blood. ❤
Genious commander, superior strategy, and fanathic fighters win wars as usual
MUSLİMS DESTORY romans.
It may win battles, but winning wars requires the full support of one's Population. Raising multiple armies, logistics, Unity factor, Justice system, morale etc. all count
@@muhammadadeel8639 true
“May the eyes of cowards never sleep”
Aaameen.
THE UNDEFEATED COMMANDER, THE UNDEFEATED SOLDIER,
THE SWORD OF GOD, THE SWORD OF ALLAH, KHALID IBN AL-WALID🔥
Hahahaha in your dreams😂😂🤣🤣🤣😂
@@PualClinton-qc3ru you do not know history. So shut up and hide your ignorance...
Khalid in Arabic means Immortal
May his soul rest in peace. 😊
Yes! Time for another awesome compilation!
Extremely was a magnificent & amazing historical coverage of Yarmuk battles and accurate evaluating about a brilliant & remarkable leading of Khalid ebn Walid ...History Marche channel always introduces excellent History coverage videos ...at that times both eastern Roman empire ( Byzantine empire )and its classic competitive (Ssassanian empire) were in death ( decline) phased....
Have to say love the sound effects 😂 as I was busy defrosting my freezer listening to this, the biff, boff was tops. Excellent video, thank you!
I love these middle eastern warfare videos, thank you! A lot of brilliant figures that deserve recognition.
Covering the military ventures of the Arabians.
It was mentioned in the video that the Byzantine army had 40,000 soldiers, but this is an error because this number would not have taken Khalid Ibn al-Walid 5 days of fighting to defeat him, but perhaps only 5 hours..
The lowest estimate of the Byzantine army was 150,000 soldiers
No
No.
@@FelipeBuegos
140k bzyantines (Roman sources)
In *Battle* *of* *Yarmuk*
Bzyantines troops + Ghassanid troops + non-muslim Arab troops = total 140k Army (Roman sources)
@@-1-Humanity No
Can you imagine a man in his 50s going for a 1v1 death duel against a strong young general...
Can you imagine Khalid risking his entire army to execute a pincer attack flank with all his cavalry... what was going through their minds as their horses galloped to surrond the enemy.. ya Allah...
sends chills down my spine thimking about this