Welcome to part two of Napoleon in Egypt, rejoining the campaign as he faces imminent attack by a huge Ottoman army... but decides to take the fight to them. It's an action-packed episode that we hope you'll enjoy. Thanks to our video sponsor Ground News. Compare news coverage from diverse sources around the world on a transparent platform driven by data. Try Ground News today and get 40% off your subscription: ground.news/epichistory.
Could you please list the songs you use from the killer soundtracks please. Especially the song you use in the short of ‘what were the Napoleonic wars’ and when Nelson found the French fleet in the last video
I HAVE AN INTERESTING FACT FROM THIS TIME. When Napoleon had made the tough decision to leave his wounded behind he had entrusted them to the care of the Armenian monks in the Monastery of Saint Nicholas in Jaffa. As a sign of his gratitude, he awarded the monks his military tent that he used in that campaign alongside his sword at the time. The painting in the video around the time this medical arrangement was being discussed is the monastery in question with the crenellated white walls in the background. The monks eventually cut the tent into several pieces of ritual clothing called chasubles which were worn by deacons and other seminarians during official church services. These relics and treasures are kept in the Cathedral of Saints James in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem to this very day! I had the honor of wearing one of these chasubles many times when we were asked to assist the church in its services. As a student of history, you could imagine my happiness everytime I wore one of them since they were once a part of the very fabric tent under which Napoleon rested and planned his daring victories. Small Edit: One of the chasubles still clearly bears the original stitching which reads "tent of General Napoleon"
My pleasure ladies & gentlemen. History comes alive when you hear stories and anecdotes such as these as opposed to just dates, events and individuals.
I just want to say, this is the best history channel ever. The Napoleonic content made me fall in love with History and I consider Napoleon as one of my greatest heroes. And thanks a large part to this channel, I will now be pursuing History as my career.
Napoleon was sure an interesting man, but I would never call such a butcher a hero. That would be almost like calling Hitler a hero. Napoleon waged war across Europe for decades? For what exactly? We need less wars and more peace.
@@stefang3709 No one in history is completely good or evil. While he did commit atrocities, he also waged brilliant campaigns and introduced several reforms like the Napoleonic Code. It is possible to appreciate one's achievements while also not forgetting the atrocities. It is foolish to turn a blind eye to either. Morover the emperor can't be compared to Hitler. Hitler was a politician, Napoleon was a military leader, commanding absolute loyalty of his soldiers and the last great leader to lead his armies in battle. During Hundred days, the troops sent to capture him joined his side, such was his charisma.
Napoleon's departure proclamation from Egypt in August 1799 in full text is so underwhelming and backstabbing it's no wonder Kléber was scathing, literally declaring: "Napoleon has fled back to Europe shitting his pants, without any regard for his desperate troops in Egypt, who have been sacrificed." "The news from Europe has determined me to proceed to France. I leave command of the army to General Kléber. The army will hear from me forthwith; at present, I can say no more. It costs me great pain to leave troops to whom I am so strongly attached. But my absence will be but temporary, and the General I leave in change has the confidence of the government as well as mine." Essentially Napoleon took his best commanders from Italy such as Lannes, Murat, Berthier, Marmont etc. back to France, effectively jumping ship never to return. In hindsight cold blooded, giving his troops false hope for two long years. "Screw this, I may come back at a better time, but do your best in a shitty situation guys, if you get back to France, I give you a parade, if not, nice knowing you." To be fair to Kléber in the ten months he was in command without clear instructions and with a near mutinous army he tried his best to control the situation with stunning victories outside Cario for example at the Battle of Heliopolis (March 1800) 10,000 French troops vs. 60,000 Ottoman troops. Also, he attempted to negotiate his army's withdrawal from Egypt via the Convention of El Arish (January 1800) that ultimately failed. But the convention's terms were later used as a template by the British to accept the French surrender at Alexandria in September 1801. Fun fact: Kléber's assassination in Cairo on June 14th, 1800, occurred on the same day his great friend General Louis Desaix was killed at the Battle of Marengo in Italy.
Yeah and aparently he was killed by some young radical muslim. Thats probably what CNN say. What a proejetion into history. Do people not read theis when they write script. He killed some invader. How can you judge his radicalism?
@@joshuagrover795 I wish to inform that Davout was not amongst those who left with Napoleon, who was eventually captured by the British for six months and released to France. After he came back and when Napoleon remembers about him he flattery invited him to rejoin the army for the second coalition in Italy, Davout is offended and instead goes to visit his mother first before joining Napoleon. (P.s Bessieres was amongst those who left with Napoleon.)
Ever since your very first video on Napoleon I have been addicted this series. It's everything that the Napoleon movie isn't. It's expertly and lovingly crafted into an extremely watchable and informative video, each and every time.
I also hear the heart rendering cries of one of Napoleon's dearest friends and one of France's finest general at Marengo. The friendship of Lannes, the strategic and tactical brilliant of Davout, embodied with the courage of Ney.
@@joshuagrover795 i think Desaix d1ed almost instantly. he would have only gasped for air for a few seconds. and yes, he could have been an even greater icon of history if he lived longer...
I am still amazed and in awe, that this content si completely for free. It inspired me to become your Patreon supporter, because you FULLY deserve it! Respect and cheers from Slovakia
this is my favorite channel on this app. Absolute legends everyone involved in the production of the videos. The depiction of everythign is unparalleled.
As a Person who was started War and Peace just hours before, that's video would be perfect for me to Understand Napoleonic era and his influence on Europe. Thank you Epic History❤❤❤❤ because your work deserves treasure but you give to us free.
I’ve learned more about napoleon from this channel than in any history class. Heard a lot about this infamous siege. Looking forward to finally seeing it
The only thing the British fleet managed to do was to save the UK from a French invasion really. It, obviously, played no role during the major campaigns on the continent.
@@solwen it was a direct cause on how the entire continental system worked, the French had to rely on diplomatic means to isolate British trade because they could not enforce a naval blockade. This in turn led to trade being major motives for both heavy french involvement in spain (peninsula war) and the invasion of russia. To say the Royal Navy's control of the seas did not impact the matters on the continent is absurd and flatout wrong.
@@solwenBritish navy implemented a blockade against Napolean. The Brits played an important role in the Peninsula war and at Waterloo. The Brits were the main financiers of the coalition wars against Napolean. Britain played a pivotal role in the Napoleanic Wars. Read a history book.
This channel truly is the greatest of the great on UA-cam for covering Napoleonic history in the most entertaining, unbiased, well narrated and visually appealing. Would love to potentially see a video on Trafalgar in the future!
Woah, idk if that has been done before, but notice how when we return to the battlefield map at 20:00 the shores on both flanks are now stained bloodied after the desperate retreat of the Ottomans to the sea and then just seeing the French army continue their march upward. That was a cool detail to show the aftermath.
This masterful presentation fills in numerous ambiguities in Andrew Roberts' otherwise brilliant bio. The battles at Acre, Mount Tabor and Aboukir are detailed with graphic depictions of troop movements and other descriptions missing from his tour de force. Bravo to Epic History once again!
This channel seems to be very different from any other History Documentary channel, Not only that this channel has high-quality content but they seem to add a vibe that suits the Environment and the Event. I really thank the Content Creators for their work and effort! I would love to potentially see Krasny with full cover!
The siege, where they cut off a Frenchman’s head and displayed it makes me think what did they expect was going to happen next? The fact that there was a slaughter afterwards does not surprise me, and should not have surprised the Ottomans.
thank you Epic History for putting your time and effort on Napoleon. Even though he has ups and downs, he is a man i always look up to, especially his beloved Marshal Oudinot (a Marshal for which Napoleon said, was timid, i felt i would have been like that with the Emperor but still amazed), thank you so much! i wish so dearly to live during his lifetime to witness his legacy unfold with my very own eyes.
I can’t wait, your episodes only become better albeit the other ones were already almost at the max. I wonder if this is the one that will touch the max. In my personal opinion you have produced the best videos of all videos I have ever seen. Once again, respect your work so much.
We just watched such an epic masterpiece of warfare, strategy, intrigue and action, perfectly interpreted by a high-quality content creator. It’s surreal, we are lucky for this.
08:24 Commodore Sir Sidney Smith , from Royal Navy was like James Bond of French Revolution/Napoleonic War era. He torched half of French Navy and most of its supplies to crisp during evacuation of Toulon at the last stage of siege of Toulon in 1793. He was involved in several intelligence operations in Revolutionary France at Bretagne and captured in 1794 and held as prisoner of war for three years before escaping from Le Temple prison outside Paris ( almost an impossible feat but he got aid from French monarchist agents he planted) He had a personal feud against Napoleon , waged a very effective campaign in Holy Land and Egypt during French invasion and occupation of Egypt and Levant. For example when French sent propaganda leaflets both among Christians and Muslims of Levant , Sir Sidney made a counter propaganda , displaying French propaganda leaflets aimed seperately to Christians and Muslims to each other that wrote that Napoleon would destroy Christians or Muslims etc...That made both sides to become hostile to French. It was Commodore Smith's ship of line HMS Tigre that intercepted and captured the flotilla which carried French siege guns bound to Napoleon's army before Acre. He also led defences of British sailors and marines and given command of a large Turkish contingent to defend the wall of Acre. Later he made more psychological warfare against French out of Acre , displaying their captured siege guns and sending British newspapers (arrived from Britain a few months late) via couriers during truces in fighting so Napoleon and French realised how badly French situation turned out in Italy in War of Second Coalition and French Army got demoralised. Napoleon then determined to go back to France ASAP since all gains he made for France inItaly was lost there.
@AkshayNumberOne 4 tháng trước I just want to say, this is the best history channel ever. The Napoleonic content made me fall in love with History and I consider Napoleon as one of my greatest heroes. And thanks a large part to this channel, I will now be pursuing History as my career.
It's incredible what Napoleon achieved with so little resources and men against such odds time after time. If the British didn't sink the French fleet and he kept receiing small amounts of reinforcements it's not impossible he could have marched onto and taken Constantinople in a couple of years considering how poorly the ottomans were performing on land.
"So little resources"?! 😂 40,000 elite troops from the best military in the world along with the best of the French Navy is not "so little resources". Quite the opposite. What is really incredible how reckless wasteful and costly the pointless invasion of Egypt was. Napoleon lost the best of the French Navy for no good reason, ensuring that the French Navy would never catch up to the British Navy as Egypt would become the first of multiple unmitigated Napoleonic military disasters. That is what actually happened, not what would have happened as you dream of.
@@RidleyScottOwnsFailedDictators 40,000 men is a fairly small expedition only slightly more than Sir John Moore's failed expedition and with his men Napoleon conquered and occupied egypt and advanced into Judea defeating armies 4 times larger than his own. Compare that to what sir John moore achieved in spain with comparable resources (nothing). This efficiency is what allowed Napoleon to stand out from his peers there's a reason Wellington said of Napoleon 'his presence on the field made the difference of forty thousand men'. That is a real quote from someone who knew what he was talking about not some insecure bluster from what I can presume to be an internet nationalist given your username.
@@timjones2822 And if I could fly and had x-ray vision, I would be Superman. What would have happened is not what actually happened. The best of the French Navy destroyed. Their best ships, admirals and seamen underwater. Depleting elite French troops, forced marches eerily similar to what would happen in Russia but with sand instead of snow. Napoleon abandoning his troops, never sending reinforcements to aide as France is forced to withdraw Egypt in defeat. A costly, pointless failed invasion for Napoleon. That is what actually happened.
@@RidleyScottOwnsFailedDictators and if you could read sources ciritically and study history you could be making constructive arguments. You keep asserting elite troops were sent but these were kept in Europe to defend France not sent on a mission the Directory wanted to see fail.Then you keep asserting Napoleon sent the fleet which is fine as long you you ignore that he wasnt consul yet let alone commander in chief of all armed forces, the loss at Aboukir bay rests in the hands of the naval commander not Napoleon. To return to my example, you wouldn't blame the leader of the british fleet who evacuated moores remants for moores humiliation on the land campaign. This is just the reverse. But again given your name you seem to have an axe to fring rather than interest in recognising the drmarcation of authorities. But I've wasted enough time on someone who has no interest or capacity to see reason.
@@timjones2822 If "if"s and "but"s were candy and nuts......Let me tell you a more compelling "if", because your ifs are mundane and predictable. If The Egyptian Campaign had been a stand alone war, and had not merged into the War of Second Coalition, France would have lost SIX wars under Napoleon. 1)Egyptian Campaign 2) Haitian Invasion of 1804 3) Peninsular War 4) Russian Invasion 5) 6th Coalition 6) 7th Coalition. No one lost more wars for one country. Now that is a compelling "if".
Kleber was probably Frances best General after Napoleon , Hoche and Desaix , an architect who became. A soldier , he was a veteran of the war in Germany, he clearly knew the difference between a discipline Prussian army and an army of Peasants like the Ottomans .
@@parkeroof4705 Janissaries were famously gunpowder armed ottoman soldiers from the 17th Century. The ottomans used Cannons at Constantinople in 1453 and guns at Vienna in 1683. If 116 years later they don't have enough guns to enable a victory over a force 20 times smaller on home ground advantage they only have themselves to blame.
I love the New Logo! Although I will miss the old one too... Great Video... I can't wait for the Napoleon Saga to continue into the second campaign in Italy!
The level of quality of your content is just over the top. Even the longest videos make me forget to breathe. I hope you keep working hard because you show people what they have to see. Thank you!
Kleber was an S tier general, with skills that would rival his compatriots Napoleon and Moreau. It's also worth noting that Eugene was with Napoleon throughout the whole campaign, he was with him in Acre when they almost got hit with a cannon ball.
A letter from Jazzar Ahmad Pasha to Napoleon: "The Ottoman Empire did not appoint me as a minister and leader to hand over this city to you. I am Bosnian Cezzar Ahmed Pasha. I will not give you a drink from this city until I reach the rank of martyr."
@@Kestrel-777 lol...hiding like a dog. that's not a defeat. only men to defeat him are Charles,de tolly, Wellington,bluchard...not some debouched pasha
@@kasadam85 haha damn I guess you really don't like Turks if you would love to see them get their cheeks clapped time and again. I mean military-wise a rematch today wouldn't be fair; France has blue water navy,domestically produced cruise missiles nukes and an aircraft carrier. Unlike Turkey France builds most of its own kit no begging the Russians for air defence systems and the US for planes. On an individual level there's a reason nobody exactly thinks 'healthy' when they think of turks. Turkiye's obesity rate is 10% higher than France's, 30% of Turks smoke when 20% of French do. As a general rule turks live 6 years less than the French. Just like in Napoleon's time the turks truly are the sick men of Europe. But to be fair I don't blame them given Turkiye's economic state I'd probably have to eat cheaply and unhealthily too!
I have to be honest, at 25:13 I got a tear in my eye. Say what you may about the expedition, the fact that they found the answer to a language that has always left our species in wonder is something that’s truly beautiful. Epic history never ceases to amaze me.
Noo why change the old logo? 😢 it was perfect the whay it was, this new one seems a but generic to me.. but anyways, I love your content guys, keep the amazing work ❤
The Quality of these videos is just insane bro Wish you all the best from my heart ❤ because you guys will not make us look very childish and dizzy in front of our children in the future
Napoleons plan was pretty interesting actually. So I know, he had planned to march through Persia to India. He did ally Persia later, which was being modernized by the energetic and modernising prince Abbas Mirza, that later reformed his army to beat the larger Ottoman and participated in Napoleon's invasion of Russia. If Napoleon would had defeated the Ottomans, allied them, or win in Russia (possible by sticking to his original plan) it would be realistic for him to be able to march with a Franco-Iranian army to India. Iran would be able to support with a modern army to make the campaign easier. I also believe Napoleon, if he played his cards right could started a Franco-Iranian lead independence war in India which would not just bleed Britain dry, but also create an important ally to France. They would had been Iberia for the British. Napoleon in India would had been something interesting to read in the history books.
Very interesting post ! I did some research into the French archives and the relationship of Napoleon with Persia is incredible to study. To be precise, he planned to ally Persia because first he wanted to reach independent Afghanistan (Durrani Empire) in order to muster an army to lead across India and join indians rebels. Why Afghanistan ? Because of the Pashtun people living across this country and parts of Western India which could have been useful for an invasion with the support of French troops. Despite Napoleon fail in Egypt, this plan will stay active by negociating an official treaty (Finckenstein) and sending an ambassador into Persia for trying to convince the Shah to ally with France. But spies and banditry indirectly paid by Britain will put an end to this plan by intercepting communications and by weighing support for the Shah against the Russian threat, especially after the war in the Caucasus and the famous French retreat from Russia.
Knowing Napoleons stubbornness and and ambition, im sure in India, with a strong army he would march and try to conquer China itself, or st least part of it
@dale6947 I wouldn’t say it’s impossible. I’d rate it quite possible. Hard, but possible. Hard but possible in the same way as Hannibal marching over the Alps.
@@Fuzznator Marengo is in this 5 years gap that they will close. But yeah some spinoffs would be cool though not featuring napoleon (trafalgar, any naval encounter, ...)
@@burnstick1380 the nile also and even less decisive battles like lutzen and bautzen would be interesting but i dont think they are gonna do those two, dresden i hope. ulm would be interesting also
Even the Russians helped the Ottomans in Egypt. The Russian fleet came from the Black Sea, passed through Istanbul, and joined the Ottoman fleet, and together they expelled the French from some of the Ionian islands that they had occupied in 1798 ...Then Ottoman Empire and Russia formed a republic consisting of 7 Greek islands, known as Septinsular Republic
5:39 he was right. By killing the messenger, they shouldn't be surprised of what happened to them. They started butchery, Napoleon ended it by butchery
Excellet work 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 that deserves 👍🏻 but I noticed a small mistake on the map. Dalmatia wasn't part of Ottoman empire since 1699. In 1797. after fall of Venice Dalmatia was under Austrian rule for short period between 1797.-1805. After battle of Austerlitz it was part of Kingdom of Italy 1805.-1809. and after battle of Wagram it was part of Illyrian provinces 1809.-1813. Greetings from Croatia
i love how even this early, you can see the seeds of Napoleon's downfall in his personality. Stubborn and misguided ambitions to be the "next Alexander", a desire to win at all costs -- which of course, ended up costing him everything.
Yes, while running a juggernaut French military into the ground. Napoleon was nothing more than a delusional thug with deranged delusions of grandeur hijacking a powerful military/arsenal from a lost and confused nation. Napoleon was not the next Alexander or Caesar, great military commanders who end in total military victory, he was the first Hitler, goons who run the powerful militaries they seized to total destruction.
Excelente !! Muchas gracias por seguir colgando estas joyas, yo siempre a la espera del próximo episodio, el mejor canal de sobre las guerras napoleónicas, saludos de Perú.
your videos need to be broadcast on TV and taught in educational institutions, because from 15 minutes of your narration I learned more information than in 10 years of being in school
Lannes: shot in the neck at Acre, marches 500 km back through the desert and fights again at Aboukir. Murat: shot in the face and still captures the enemy commander at Aboukir. What sort of incredibly strong men these were...
77-year-old Cezzar Ahmet Pasha, who humiliated Napoleon in front of Acre and collected the heads of captured French soldiers. He was the real strong one, not the clowns you count
are you planning to do a video on the second italian campaign and the battle of marengo? scarce few youtube videos cover this topic and I feel like it would tie up your incredible series on napoleonic history very well
No hay palabras para describir el amor, respeto y calidad que teneis por la historia. Teneis los documento más complejo sobre la figura de Napoleón en todo Internet y gratuita. No hay calificativo del valor historiografico para usuarios que desconocen la figura del corso
The painting in 7:15 is from the naval battle of Grand Port in Mauritius islands in 1810, which resulted in a french victory and had nothing to do with events in Acre. I see that he flags of the ships have somehow been removed, as the dismasted ship in the centre of the picture was actually a british one.
“What’s your ultimate goal in life?” “I want to be on UA-cam.” “Oh, you want to be a UA-camr?” “No, I want quotes from and paintings of me to appear on screen as troops move around a map to Joseph Heath’s song ‘General.’”
I feel Epic History has excellently covered most of the Napoleonic wars ranging from Napoleons rise to his ultimate downfall, yet there seems to still be a missing piece in the war of the second coalition and the events leading up to Napoleons coronation. I suppose this will eventually be released through as the Egypt series directly precedes it
Napoleon's victories of Mount Thabor and 2nd Aboukir were very good victories. If Napoleon had not failed at the siege of Acre , he would have conquered all the Middle East since Egypt until India.
He had barely 10 thousand men to campaign with he couldn't sustain any supply line over or garrison even a portion of that territory. The campaign was lost when the British sank his fleet at Aboukir. It was always doomed to fail and the idea to invade Egypt was bad from the beggining.
That’s quite a stretch, he couldn’t take a city in Syria, but if he took that city he’d reach India? I’m not saying it was beyond his capabilities but he’d need much more resources.
Welcome to part two of Napoleon in Egypt, rejoining the campaign as he faces imminent attack by a huge Ottoman army... but decides to take the fight to them. It's an action-packed episode that we hope you'll enjoy. Thanks to our video sponsor Ground News. Compare news coverage from diverse sources around the world on a transparent platform driven by data. Try Ground News today and get 40% off your subscription: ground.news/epichistory.
Nice ❤❤❤
Could you please list the songs you use from the killer soundtracks please. Especially the song you use in the short of ‘what were the Napoleonic wars’ and when Nelson found the French fleet in the last video
LOVE YOUR CONTENT GUYS 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤❤
Guys I found it, it’s Aftermath by elison
The best place for more information about soundtracks is our Patreon page, where we also upload selected soundtracks in full!
I HAVE AN INTERESTING FACT FROM THIS TIME.
When Napoleon had made the tough decision to leave his wounded behind he had entrusted them to the care of the Armenian monks in the Monastery of Saint Nicholas in Jaffa.
As a sign of his gratitude, he awarded the monks his military tent that he used in that campaign alongside his sword at the time.
The painting in the video around the time this medical arrangement was being discussed is the monastery in question with the crenellated white walls in the background.
The monks eventually cut the tent into several pieces of ritual clothing called chasubles which were worn by deacons and other seminarians during official church services.
These relics and treasures are kept in the Cathedral of Saints James in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem to this very day!
I had the honor of wearing one of these chasubles many times when we were asked to assist the church in its services.
As a student of history, you could imagine my happiness everytime I wore one of them since they were once a part of the very fabric tent under which Napoleon rested and planned his daring victories.
Small Edit:
One of the chasubles still clearly bears the original stitching which reads "tent of General Napoleon"
Good lord that was sure an interesting fact to hear! Thank you for sharing
What an amazing story, thank you! What an honor you were able to experience
Very nice.
Wow thats really interesting. Crazy that you got to experience that
My pleasure ladies & gentlemen.
History comes alive when you hear stories and anecdotes such as these as opposed to just dates, events and individuals.
I just want to say, this is the best history channel ever. The Napoleonic content made me fall in love with History and I consider Napoleon as one of my greatest heroes. And thanks a large part to this channel, I will now be pursuing History as my career.
Thank you Epic History TV!!!! We all love your amazing lessons!
Same here!!
Napoleon was sure an interesting man, but I would never call such a butcher a hero. That would be almost like calling Hitler a hero. Napoleon waged war across Europe for decades? For what exactly? We need less wars and more peace.
@@stefang3709 No one in history is completely good or evil. While he did commit atrocities, he also waged brilliant campaigns and introduced several reforms like the Napoleonic Code. It is possible to appreciate one's achievements while also not forgetting the atrocities. It is foolish to turn a blind eye to either. Morover the emperor can't be compared to Hitler. Hitler was a politician, Napoleon was a military leader, commanding absolute loyalty of his soldiers and the last great leader to lead his armies in battle. During Hundred days, the troops sent to capture him joined his side, such was his charisma.
@@stefang3709 wars were waged on France, Napoleon was just winning them.
Kleber:" We are losing this war"
Napoleon:" You mean YOU are losing this war. Bye!"
Napoleon's departure proclamation from Egypt in August 1799 in full text is so underwhelming and backstabbing it's no wonder Kléber was scathing, literally declaring: "Napoleon has fled back to Europe shitting his pants, without any regard for his desperate troops in Egypt, who have been sacrificed."
"The news from Europe has determined me to proceed to France. I leave command of the army to General Kléber. The army will hear from me forthwith; at present, I can say no more. It costs me great pain to leave troops to whom I am so strongly attached. But my absence will be but temporary, and the General I leave in change has the confidence of the government as well as mine."
Essentially Napoleon took his best commanders from Italy such as Lannes, Murat, Berthier, Marmont etc. back to France, effectively jumping ship never to return. In hindsight cold blooded, giving his troops false hope for two long years. "Screw this, I may come back at a better time, but do your best in a shitty situation guys, if you get back to France, I give you a parade, if not, nice knowing you."
To be fair to Kléber in the ten months he was in command without clear instructions and with a near mutinous army he tried his best to control the situation with stunning victories outside Cario for example at the Battle of Heliopolis (March 1800) 10,000 French troops vs. 60,000 Ottoman troops. Also, he attempted to negotiate his army's withdrawal from Egypt via the Convention of El Arish (January 1800) that ultimately failed. But the convention's terms were later used as a template by the British to accept the French surrender at Alexandria in September 1801.
Fun fact: Kléber's assassination in Cairo on June 14th, 1800, occurred on the same day his great friend General Louis Desaix was killed at the Battle of Marengo in Italy.
🤣🤣🤣😂😂
Yeah and aparently he was killed by some young radical muslim. Thats probably what CNN say. What a proejetion into history. Do people not read theis when they write script. He killed some invader. How can you judge his radicalism?
😂😂😂😂 hilarious
@@joshuagrover795 I wish to inform that Davout was not amongst those who left with Napoleon, who was eventually captured by the British for six months and released to France. After he came back and when Napoleon remembers about him he flattery invited him to rejoin the army for the second coalition in Italy, Davout is offended and instead goes to visit his mother first before joining Napoleon.
(P.s Bessieres was amongst those who left with Napoleon.)
Ever since your very first video on Napoleon I have been addicted this series. It's everything that the Napoleon movie isn't. It's expertly and lovingly crafted into an extremely watchable and informative video, each and every time.
i can hear the sound of cannons near Marengo!
let's march together, Epic History TV!
I also hear the heart rendering cries of one of Napoleon's dearest friends and one of France's finest general at Marengo.
The friendship of Lannes, the strategic and tactical brilliant of Davout, embodied with the courage of Ney.
@@joshuagrover795 i think Desaix d1ed almost instantly. he would have only gasped for air for a few seconds.
and yes, he could have been an even greater icon of history if he lived longer...
Eagerly waiting for the battle of Marengo. Truly astonishing series!
Documentary films are popular in Korea... Thank you so much for releasing such a great historical documentary for free.^^
Napoleon's Egyptian Campaign is not talked about enough. Loved the video. It was great to listen too.
Good idea, Epic History team. Looking forward to it!
New Epic History Napoleon stuff, love to see it. Waterloo Remastered is a dream.
I am still amazed and in awe, that this content si completely for free. It inspired me to become your Patreon supporter, because you FULLY deserve it!
Respect and cheers from Slovakia
Thank you!
this is my favorite channel on this app. Absolute legends everyone involved in the production of the videos. The depiction of everythign is unparalleled.
As a Person who was started War and Peace just hours before, that's video would be perfect for me to Understand Napoleonic era and his influence on Europe. Thank you Epic History❤❤❤❤ because your work deserves treasure but you give to us free.
It all went like 3 minutes. Such an amazing work!
I’ve learned more about napoleon from this channel than in any history class.
Heard a lot about this infamous siege. Looking forward to finally seeing it
what would you like to see, colonialism?
@@Albarorabsolutely, I call it winning
@@AlbarorIt had nothing to do with " colonialism "...
You wouldn’t wanted to be alive then and suffered due to this war only to remember it in this life it was barbaric
Do you know who lived in Egypt before muslims ?@@Albaror
British fleet are the nightmare of Napoléon and the french
The only thing the British fleet managed to do was to save the UK from a French invasion really.
It, obviously, played no role during the major campaigns on the continent.
As a Frenchman I often dream about the British fleet harrassing me and my troops
@@solwen it was a direct cause on how the entire continental system worked, the French had to rely on diplomatic means to isolate British trade because they could not enforce a naval blockade.
This in turn led to trade being major motives for both heavy french involvement in spain (peninsula war) and the invasion of russia. To say the Royal Navy's control of the seas did not impact the matters on the continent is absurd and flatout wrong.
@@solwenBritish navy implemented a blockade against Napolean. The Brits played an important role in the Peninsula war and at Waterloo. The Brits were the main financiers of the coalition wars against Napolean. Britain played a pivotal role in the Napoleanic Wars. Read a history book.
Were*
Love the new logo guys! Great job on it. And your Napoleónic content is awesome 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🇨🇵🇨🇵🇨🇵🇨🇵🇨🇵🇨🇵
To bad they are racist. Calling someone who killed invader young radical is just absurd. He was killed by locals. Thats all
The quality of these videos are astounding. Absolutely gripping and well demonstrated battles.
This channel truly is the greatest of the great on UA-cam for covering Napoleonic history in the most entertaining, unbiased, well narrated and visually appealing.
Would love to potentially see a video on Trafalgar in the future!
Thank you! Trafalgar is in the pipeline!
Woah, idk if that has been done before, but notice how when we return to the battlefield map at 20:00 the shores on both flanks are now stained bloodied after the desperate retreat of the Ottomans to the sea and then just seeing the French army continue their march upward. That was a cool detail to show the aftermath.
Dude been waiting for this forever. Smith was a legend and so was this battle. So pivotal!
This masterful presentation fills in numerous ambiguities in Andrew Roberts' otherwise brilliant bio. The battles at Acre, Mount Tabor and Aboukir are detailed with graphic depictions of troop movements and other descriptions missing from his tour de force. Bravo to Epic History once again!
Another Epic History Masterpiece 🇫🇷🇹🇷🇬🇧
This channel seems to be very different from any other History Documentary channel, Not only that this channel has high-quality content but they seem to add a vibe that suits the Environment and the Event. I really thank the Content Creators for their work and effort! I would love to potentially see Krasny with full cover!
The siege, where they cut off a Frenchman’s head and displayed it makes me think what did they expect was going to happen next? The fact that there was a slaughter afterwards does not surprise me, and should not have surprised the Ottomans.
They where Muslims... Thinking isn't their key asset
@notyourbusiness1980 just like Hamas when they attacked Israel......now they the Palestinians getting slaughtered again.
@@notyourbusiness1980tell that to the men of Acre
If they thought it would impress the French, who were the most famous head cutters of the decade, they were wrong.
@@elmascapo6588 without the british the city would have fallen easily
thank you Epic History for putting your time and effort on Napoleon. Even though he has ups and downs, he is a man i always look up to, especially his beloved Marshal Oudinot (a Marshal for which Napoleon said, was timid, i felt i would have been like that with the Emperor but still amazed), thank you so much! i wish so dearly to live during his lifetime to witness his legacy unfold with my very own eyes.
You should also cover Suvorov's expedition in Italy, there are some great battles there!
Suvorov is worth a video on himself regardless.
And Moreau or the other French revolutionary fronts
@@jarogniewtheconqueror2804not Moreau but Joubert
And Suvorov in Switzerland as well.
Battle of Zürich for example
I can’t wait, your episodes only become better albeit the other ones were already almost at the max. I wonder if this is the one that will touch the max. In my personal opinion you have produced the best videos of all videos I have ever seen. Once again, respect your work so much.
I love this channel. I'm an English learner and I also love history and I enjoy listening what I love in British accent ❤
An impeccable production as always
We just watched such an epic masterpiece of warfare, strategy, intrigue and action, perfectly interpreted by a high-quality content creator. It’s surreal, we are lucky for this.
08:24 Commodore Sir Sidney Smith , from Royal Navy was like James Bond of French Revolution/Napoleonic War era. He torched half of French Navy and most of its supplies to crisp during evacuation of Toulon at the last stage of siege of Toulon in 1793. He was involved in several intelligence operations in Revolutionary France at Bretagne and captured in 1794 and held as prisoner of war for three years before escaping from Le Temple prison outside Paris ( almost an impossible feat but he got aid from French monarchist agents he planted) He had a personal feud against Napoleon , waged a very effective campaign in Holy Land and Egypt during French invasion and occupation of Egypt and Levant.
For example when French sent propaganda leaflets both among Christians and Muslims of Levant , Sir Sidney made a counter propaganda , displaying French propaganda leaflets aimed seperately to Christians and Muslims to each other that wrote that Napoleon would destroy Christians or Muslims etc...That made both sides to become hostile to French. It was Commodore Smith's ship of line HMS Tigre that intercepted and captured the flotilla which carried French siege guns bound to Napoleon's army before Acre. He also led defences of British sailors and marines and given command of a large Turkish contingent to defend the wall of Acre. Later he made more psychological warfare against French out of Acre , displaying their captured siege guns and sending British newspapers (arrived from Britain a few months late) via couriers during truces in fighting so Napoleon and French realised how badly French situation turned out in Italy in War of Second Coalition and French Army got demoralised. Napoleon then determined to go back to France ASAP since all gains he made for France inItaly was lost there.
Sir Sidney was a legend!
@AkshayNumberOne
4 tháng trước
I just want to say, this is the best history channel ever. The Napoleonic content made me fall in love with History and I consider Napoleon as one of my greatest heroes. And thanks a large part to this channel, I will now be pursuing History as my career.
It's incredible what Napoleon achieved with so little resources and men against such odds time after time. If the British didn't sink the French fleet and he kept receiing small amounts of reinforcements it's not impossible he could have marched onto and taken Constantinople in a couple of years considering how poorly the ottomans were performing on land.
"So little resources"?! 😂 40,000 elite troops from the best military in the world along with the best of the French Navy is not "so little resources". Quite the opposite. What is really incredible how reckless wasteful and costly the pointless invasion of Egypt was. Napoleon lost the best of the French Navy for no good reason, ensuring that the French Navy would never catch up to the British Navy as Egypt would become the first of multiple unmitigated Napoleonic military disasters. That is what actually happened, not what would have happened as you dream of.
@@RidleyScottOwnsFailedDictators 40,000 men is a fairly small expedition only slightly more than Sir John Moore's failed expedition and with his men Napoleon conquered and occupied egypt and advanced into Judea defeating armies 4 times larger than his own. Compare that to what sir John moore achieved in spain with comparable resources (nothing). This efficiency is what allowed Napoleon to stand out from his peers there's a reason Wellington said of Napoleon 'his presence on the field made the difference of forty thousand men'. That is a real quote from someone who knew what he was talking about not some insecure bluster from what I can presume to be an internet nationalist given your username.
@@timjones2822 And if I could fly and had x-ray vision, I would be Superman. What would have happened is not what actually happened. The best of the French Navy destroyed. Their best ships, admirals and seamen underwater. Depleting elite French troops, forced marches eerily similar to what would happen in Russia but with sand instead of snow. Napoleon abandoning his troops, never sending reinforcements to aide as France is forced to withdraw Egypt in defeat. A costly, pointless failed invasion for Napoleon. That is what actually happened.
@@RidleyScottOwnsFailedDictators and if you could read sources ciritically and study history you could be making constructive arguments. You keep asserting elite troops were sent but these were kept in Europe to defend France not sent on a mission the Directory wanted to see fail.Then you keep asserting Napoleon sent the fleet which is fine as long you you ignore that he wasnt consul yet let alone commander in chief of all armed forces, the loss at Aboukir bay rests in the hands of the naval commander not Napoleon. To return to my example, you wouldn't blame the leader of the british fleet who evacuated moores remants for moores humiliation on the land campaign. This is just the reverse. But again given your name you seem to have an axe to fring rather than interest in recognising the drmarcation of authorities. But I've wasted enough time on someone who has no interest or capacity to see reason.
@@timjones2822 If "if"s and "but"s were candy and nuts......Let me tell you a more compelling "if", because your ifs are mundane and predictable. If The Egyptian Campaign had been a stand alone war, and had not merged into the War of Second Coalition, France would have lost SIX wars under Napoleon. 1)Egyptian Campaign 2) Haitian Invasion of 1804 3) Peninsular War 4) Russian Invasion 5) 6th Coalition 6) 7th Coalition. No one lost more wars for one country. Now that is a compelling "if".
Your Napoleon series is absolutely the best historical content, that I've even found on UA-cam! Thank you for your work!
Kleber: "1500 against 30000? I like those odds."
common French W.
Kleber was probably Frances best General after Napoleon , Hoche and Desaix , an architect who became. A soldier , he was a veteran of the war in Germany, he clearly knew the difference between a discipline Prussian army and an army of Peasants like the Ottomans .
@@AlexC-ou4ju guns vs swords hmm
@@parkeroof4705 Janissaries were famously gunpowder armed ottoman soldiers from the 17th Century. The ottomans used Cannons at Constantinople in 1453 and guns at Vienna in 1683. If 116 years later they don't have enough guns to enable a victory over a force 20 times smaller on home ground advantage they only have themselves to blame.
Lmaooooo😂 under rated comment for sure
I love the New Logo! Although I will miss the old one too...
Great Video...
I can't wait for the Napoleon Saga to continue into the second campaign in Italy!
So glad i found this channel. Awesome videos for a history fan. Well done
Battle of Mount tabour deserve its own special video. How clebear faced 35000 man with just 1500, amazing man.
Says a lot about the 35000 😂. Just fvcking charge
The level of quality of your content is just over the top. Even the longest videos make me forget to breathe. I hope you keep working hard because you show people what they have to see. Thank you!
You can sit all day and watch them sure kk
A word where Epic History has the same Budget as Ridley Scott is a perfect one.
Can't wait For it! Love your content guys 😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤
Kleber was an S tier general, with skills that would rival his compatriots Napoleon and Moreau.
It's also worth noting that Eugene was with Napoleon throughout the whole campaign, he was with him in Acre when they almost got hit with a cannon ball.
A letter from Jazzar Ahmad Pasha to Napoleon: "The Ottoman Empire did not appoint me as a minister and leader to hand over this city to you. I am Bosnian Cezzar Ahmed Pasha. I will not give you a drink from this city until I reach the rank of martyr."
and nepoleon duly smashed him.
@@c.augustedupin8860The loser Napoleon left Syria without even looking back.Go and learn history
@@c.augustedupin8860 well havent you watched doc. my friend, its napoleon's first major defeat
@@c.augustedupin8860 Did you not watch the video? He defeated Napoleon.
@@Kestrel-777 lol...hiding like a dog.
that's not a defeat.
only men to defeat him are Charles,de tolly, Wellington,bluchard...not some debouched pasha
I was so confused at first because of your profile picture, I was like: what is this video, I don't remember subscribing to this channel!? 😂
Just casually mentions the fact that Junot defeated a cavalry force 10 times his size (400-500) against 5000
To be fair it's French against Turkish, you would expect one shark to defeat 10 catfish.
@@Commonsensical513Would love to see those "sharks" face the Turkish "catfishes" in the present day 😂
@@kasadam85 haha damn I guess you really don't like Turks if you would love to see them get their cheeks clapped time and again.
I mean military-wise a rematch today wouldn't be fair; France has blue water navy,domestically produced cruise missiles nukes and an aircraft carrier. Unlike Turkey France builds most of its own kit no begging the Russians for air defence systems and the US for planes.
On an individual level there's a reason nobody exactly thinks 'healthy' when they think of turks. Turkiye's obesity rate is 10% higher than France's, 30% of Turks smoke when 20% of French do. As a general rule turks live 6 years less than the French. Just like in Napoleon's time the turks truly are the sick men of Europe. But to be fair I don't blame them given Turkiye's economic state I'd probably have to eat cheaply and unhealthily too!
@@kasadam85 the result would still be the same 🤣
Guys, there’s no need to bring race into this. It was entirely a doctrinal thing, the ottomans were fighting in the 17th century at this point
Please post more of Napoleon’s history!
I love all your Napoleon content more than any move made in the last 10 years. Great series well done sir!
This video was so well made!! Whenever I see Napoleon, I click
I have to be honest, at 25:13 I got a tear in my eye. Say what you may about the expedition, the fact that they found the answer to a language that has always left our species in wonder is something that’s truly beautiful. Epic history never ceases to amaze me.
indeed ❤❤❤
The French are still as smart as their newest Berbers. This is very amazing
Noo why change the old logo? 😢 it was perfect the whay it was, this new one seems a but generic to me.. but anyways, I love your content guys, keep the amazing work ❤
The Quality of these videos is just insane bro
Wish you all the best from my heart ❤ because you guys will not make us look very childish and dizzy in front of our children in the future
Can't wait! I'm sure it's another amazing video. Love the new logo btw!
Absolutely top notch production in every way, as always.
Thanks for your hard work
Amazing episode, the animations, the music. Spectacular work guys! Keep it up we support you!
Napoleons plan was pretty interesting actually. So I know, he had planned to march through Persia to India. He did ally Persia later, which was being modernized by the energetic and modernising prince Abbas Mirza, that later reformed his army to beat the larger Ottoman and participated in Napoleon's invasion of Russia.
If Napoleon would had defeated the Ottomans, allied them, or win in Russia (possible by sticking to his original plan) it would be realistic for him to be able to march with a Franco-Iranian army to India. Iran would be able to support with a modern army to make the campaign easier. I also believe Napoleon, if he played his cards right could started a Franco-Iranian lead independence war in India which would not just bleed Britain dry, but also create an important ally to France. They would had been Iberia for the British.
Napoleon in India would had been something interesting to read in the history books.
That was logistically impossible and would never had happened.
Bro thought he Alexander
Very interesting post ! I did some research into the French archives and the relationship of Napoleon with Persia is incredible to study. To be precise, he planned to ally Persia because first he wanted to reach independent Afghanistan (Durrani Empire) in order to muster an army to lead across India and join indians rebels. Why Afghanistan ? Because of the Pashtun people living across this country and parts of Western India which could have been useful for an invasion with the support of French troops.
Despite Napoleon fail in Egypt, this plan will stay active by negociating an official treaty (Finckenstein) and sending an ambassador into Persia for trying to convince the Shah to ally with France. But spies and banditry indirectly paid by Britain will put an end to this plan by intercepting communications and by weighing support for the Shah against the Russian threat, especially after the war in the Caucasus and the famous French retreat from Russia.
Knowing Napoleons stubbornness and and ambition, im sure in India, with a strong army he would march and try to conquer China itself, or st least part of it
@dale6947 I wouldn’t say it’s impossible. I’d rate it quite possible. Hard, but possible. Hard but possible in the same way as Hannibal marching over the Alps.
Very good video! Like always! Epic History is about quality and not quantity!
Extremely well done, you tell the story like no one else. Please continue to make more.
The only sad part about this series is that it's slowly coming to it's end.
sadly but they still have material left like marengo, trafalgar, dresden
@@Fuzznator Marengo is in this 5 years gap that they will close. But yeah some spinoffs would be cool though not featuring napoleon (trafalgar, any naval encounter, ...)
@@burnstick1380 the nile also and even less decisive battles like lutzen and bautzen would be interesting but i dont think they are gonna do those two, dresden i hope. ulm would be interesting also
Even the Russians helped the Ottomans in Egypt. The Russian fleet came from the Black Sea, passed through Istanbul, and joined the Ottoman fleet, and together they expelled the French from some of the Ionian islands that they had occupied in 1798 ...Then Ottoman Empire and Russia formed a republic consisting of 7 Greek islands, known as Septinsular Republic
Best channel on youtube, not even close
Love the music they used throughout the video while Napoleon was in Egypt and the Levant.
Best history channel on UA-cam hands down
5:39 he was right. By killing the messenger, they shouldn't be surprised of what happened to them. They started butchery, Napoleon ended it by butchery
Before the Marengo i would like to see Suvorov's italian and Swiss campaign. It may distinguish you from other youtubers. Hope that will helps.
Amazing video as always, thank you!
I haven't watched yet but I already know it's gonna be yet an other masterpiece
How did I miss this on release? Keep up the world class content!
They changed their logo and format, that might have been it (it was for me).
"Napoleon is thrilled to hear this" lmao you know it's bad when your opponent is excited to charge you head on.
Your videos always bring me joy
Thank you
one of the best and more informative videos seen lately. bravo
I just noticed that you have a new logo.
I love it! But not as much as I love your content! Learning more and more about Napoleon from you all!
Excellet work 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 that deserves 👍🏻 but I noticed a small mistake on the map.
Dalmatia wasn't part of Ottoman empire since 1699.
In 1797. after fall of Venice Dalmatia was under Austrian rule for short period between 1797.-1805.
After battle of Austerlitz it was part of Kingdom of Italy 1805.-1809. and after battle of Wagram it was part of Illyrian provinces 1809.-1813.
Greetings from Croatia
Thank you for this fascinating piece of work.
i love how even this early, you can see the seeds of Napoleon's downfall in his personality. Stubborn and misguided ambitions to be the "next Alexander", a desire to win at all costs -- which of course, ended up costing him everything.
Yes, while running a juggernaut French military into the ground. Napoleon was nothing more than a delusional thug with deranged delusions of grandeur hijacking a powerful military/arsenal from a lost and confused nation. Napoleon was not the next Alexander or Caesar, great military commanders who end in total military victory, he was the first Hitler, goons who run the powerful militaries they seized to total destruction.
Thank you very much for the Arabic translation, dear sir
>Babylonian
>asks for Arabic translations
don't you have a bit of pride left?
@@porphyry17 Babylonians are semetic people who originated from arabia 😐😐
I dont know how you always do do great documentaries. Always inspire and makes me feel.
This is so unbelievably good. Thank you.
There are no channels on youtube as good as Epic History Tv.
Don't forget to update your napoleonic wars playlist please. It misses the campaign of egypt and italy
8:48 for a split second my mind wandered and I thought I was watching a video about the Crusades, so strange to think of Napoleon in the Holy Land
It is the crusade of the French revolution.
Now you only need to do the battle of Marengo and then you'd have covered all of Napoleon's major battles
Excelente !! Muchas gracias por seguir colgando estas joyas, yo siempre a la espera del próximo episodio, el mejor canal de sobre las guerras napoleónicas, saludos de Perú.
Who decided it was a good idea to cut off the head of a messenger from a larger superior army waiting outside your own city?
Will this series continue? Its incredible
I love your content. Thank you
your videos need to be broadcast on TV and taught in educational institutions, because from 15 minutes of your narration I learned more information than in 10 years of being in school
Love this. Graphics is amazing
The value of Napoleon’s marshals can only be understated
All the best to everyone
Lannes: shot in the neck at Acre, marches 500 km back through the desert and fights again at Aboukir.
Murat: shot in the face and still captures the enemy commander at Aboukir.
What sort of incredibly strong men these were...
77-year-old Cezzar Ahmet Pasha, who humiliated Napoleon in front of Acre and collected the heads of captured French soldiers. He was the real strong one, not the clowns you count
are you planning to do a video on the second italian campaign and the battle of marengo? scarce few youtube videos cover this topic and I feel like it would tie up your incredible series on napoleonic history very well
No hay palabras para describir el amor, respeto y calidad que teneis por la historia. Teneis los documento más complejo sobre la figura de Napoleón en todo Internet y gratuita. No hay calificativo del valor historiografico para usuarios que desconocen la figura del corso
Great video! Glad to see, that you cover relatively unknown parts of Napoleon's life and career.
Looking forward to Marengo episode ;)
I dont have enough of these Napoleon videos 🤣😳
The most interesting I have watched too
The painting in 7:15 is from the naval battle of Grand Port in Mauritius islands in 1810, which resulted in a french victory and had nothing to do with events in Acre. I see that he flags of the ships have somehow been removed, as the dismasted ship in the centre of the picture was actually a british one.
I suppose they could not find a painting of the actual event?
not all events were afforded a painting back then. certainly not the less significant@@FireEagle1796
“What’s your ultimate goal in life?”
“I want to be on UA-cam.”
“Oh, you want to be a UA-camr?”
“No, I want quotes from and paintings of me to appear on screen as troops move around a map to Joseph Heath’s song ‘General.’”
I feel Epic History has excellently covered most of the Napoleonic wars ranging from Napoleons rise to his ultimate downfall, yet there seems to still be a missing piece in the war of the second coalition and the events leading up to Napoleons coronation. I suppose this will eventually be released through as the Egypt series directly precedes it
Your videos always make my day. How do you manage to keep up this level of excellence?
Napoleon's victories of Mount Thabor and 2nd Aboukir were very good victories.
If Napoleon had not failed at the siege of Acre , he would have conquered all the Middle East since Egypt until India.
If he had a steady supply line he could have ended the Ottomans the same way Alexander did Persia
@@jarogniewtheconqueror2804I think so .
But he didnt. He ran away and left his men to die like an opportunistic coward.
He had barely 10 thousand men to campaign with he couldn't sustain any supply line over or garrison even a portion of that territory. The campaign was lost when the British sank his fleet at Aboukir. It was always doomed to fail and the idea to invade Egypt was bad from the beggining.
That’s quite a stretch, he couldn’t take a city in Syria, but if he took that city he’d reach India? I’m not saying it was beyond his capabilities but he’d need much more resources.