@@HelicopterShownUpWhich is ridiculous... but i suppose we should expect it. Google is all like "don't be evil" and then becomes giant heartless greedy multinational corp like all the rest. I'd be less furious if they didn't show ads when they demonetize. They have EVERY incentive if demonetizing. It's fucking bullshit. Sometimes they just decide "oh we won't pay you" and we're supposed to be fine with it. But that money goes somewhere . i daresay it's encroaching on EVIL, the very thing they say not to do!
@@turan_kayaIt sort of stopped being enforced when the iberian union was formed. Since Portugal and Spain were ruled by the same king/emperor, there was no point in enforcing the treaty. That's why Brazil ended up expanding much further to the west
As an Arab and a casual historian, I have never seen a better explanation on UA-cam about the Middle East's religious/ethnic composition with historical context as well (aside from very minor mistakes in the beginning), great job 👍
@@somebodyanonymousxlike the story about the end of times somewhat contained some misunderstandings and gave credibility to some local myths and legends
Worth noting that in addition to all of the powers mentioned (Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Kurds, Mamluks and Turks), Egypt was also ruled for short periods by the French (1798-1802) and British (1882-1922).
Egypt wasn't really ruled by the British they were a loose protectorate so more like a vassal state that had foreign policy and finance handled by the British as well as allowing them to station troops but was otherwise self governing.
@@lukamg7368 Fatimids were Arabs bruh they even claimed direct descent from Muhammad. They were in the Maghreb yes but they were an Arab dynasty in fact they are among the most responsible for Arabisation of the Maghreb.
@@khalidibnelwalidd yes post-1922 the British had garrisons in the country (only in Suez post-WWII), trained its army etc, but it was an independent state. Egypt didn’t even declare war on Italy and Germany for invading its territory in 1940-42 (no doubt partly swayed by Mussolini’s promise of continued independence for the Egyptian kingdom under Italy’s sphere of influence), instead blaming the British presence for the invasion and leaving it to the British to fight it out themselves. King Farouk’s continued Axis sympathies and obstinance to Allied operations eventually led to an ultimatum for him to either abdicate or appoint a more accommodating cabinet, which he reluctantly did (of course the gravity of the situation became more clear when the British started burning their archives with Rommel approaching Cairo, a day Egyptians gave the dark nickname “Ash Wednesday”). So while clearly still within the British sphere of influence post-1922, as was/is the case with other Arab monarchies in the region, it wasn’t actually under British rule.
This type of demographic composition map was actually true of much of Europe--especially eastern and central Europe--prior to the rise of ethno-nationalism in the 19th and 20th centuries. German and Jewish communities once dotted many urban areas and settlements across the region and the distribution of settlements of other ethnic groups was often a chaotic patchwork where neat borders often couldn't be drawn based on ethnic or religious lines. The rise of nationalism and periodic forced assimilation and/or expulsion of various minority groups through the promotion of cultural uniformity was the chief thing that allowed countries like Spain, France, Italy, and Greece to seemingly have neat borders lined up for different ethnic homelands--and even then, smaller sub-regional identities still persist in those places such as with the Catalans. Nearly every area of the Middle East was also ruled by a succession of various big sprawling empires or kingdoms run by foreign conquerors for extended periods of time who displaced local or native populations in order to lower the possibility of a regional revolt and guarantee more unity in the broader empire, such as with the Babylonians and Persians.
A Hausa(Nigerian) Muslim who speaks Arabic is still a Hausa Muslim. It only makes sense if he finds more in common with his Hausa brethren, than Arabs.
@@Darius-_it’s weird because the phoenician identity and language itself died out centuries before the islamic expansion and that’s just the “islamic” expansion, arabic (itureans) was around much longer in lebanon than in most other arab countries lol
I'm 34 minutes and so far and as someone who has studied every religion developing in the Middle East, and the tribal differences ad nauseam, I want to thank you so far for how well this video is done. Explains things simply, in an easy-to-follow away, without really oversimplifying or dumbing down any of it.
This was mostly correct but there were some huge mistakes and clear bias through it, for example in Ottoman religious minorities could operate their own religious institutions, their own government institutions, their own schools, their own courts, they could even issue their own laws! Care to share which European empire gave such rights to any religious minority? But even then they were still ''persecuted'', i really wonder how exactly. Jizya tax was very very small price for having such rights and it wasn't even a high tax, for example wealthier regions like Greece never had any problems paying Jizya tax for over 500 years while only really poor regions like Serbia struggled to pay it so blood tax was collected instead. And those children perhaps were taken forcefully but they weren't becoming slave soldiers at all. They were receiving 4 years long education and depending on their success they were receiving further education and becoming Ottoman officials or were enlisted into Janissary corps which was receiving one of highest salaries among all Ottoman standing army but they were still ''slaves'' somehow.. Also claiming Muhammad Ali Pasha was a bashi-bazouk is a massive mistake, i really wonder where he could learn such a thing! Ali Pasha was an Albanian who received at least 10 years of education to become a ''general'' (Pasha is actually a Turkish rank close to general) to lead armies and govern provinces. But he indeed raised a small army of Albanians as bashi-bazouks. There was never an official Ottoman unit as bashi-bazouks but especially during war times Pashas were often raising irregular armies as bashi-bazouks so it just means irregular soldiers. As one of correct information, the infighting between Arabic tribes had been quite common as mostly Arabs were ruling themselves not Ottoman which allowed a lot of powerplay between tribes. In late 18th century first Saudi rebellion happened along with their radical ideology, same as their late atrocities they were quite brutal burning down towns and slaughtering ''non-Muslims'' as they wished. Ottoman ordered Ali Pasha to raise a large army in Egypt and end their rebellion. Ali Pasha did so without much resistance from Saudis but he had a large intact army now while Ottoman was quite weak so he decided his payment wasn't enough and asked for more by force. He never ever became ruler of Egypt, this is another huge mistake ''history channels'' are often making. Muhammad Ali Pasha remained as OTTOMAN GOVERNER of Egypt even after defeating Ottoman, only became governer of Syria etc as well. Ottoman attacked him back only few years later but didn't remove him from his position entirely only revoked his governship from other regions while he and his dynasty remained as governers of Egypt. Even in 1914 Egypt was still officially a part of Ottoman until WW1 began then British finally ended it by using the war as an excuse. As last even this map isn't enough to explain struggle in the region as more and more foreign powers kept always involving, for example Russian empire's invasion of Caucasus changed power balance entirely and Armenians became a russian proxy since then. It was somehow claimed that Armenian population disappeared because of genocide but it is completely false as in 1914 Russian empire invaded eastern Turkey so Ottoman wasn't even controlling Armenian majority cities in 1915 rather they were under control of RUSSIAN EMPIRE! After Ottoman defeats against russian empire Armenians wrongly believed Ottoman was about to collapse and rebelled as a russian proxy in late 1914. But ofc they were wrong and Ottoman displaced them into Syria and Lebanon to suppress their rebellion then most of them decided to migrate into Russian empire over Caucasus mountains. The whole point of this displacement was moving Armenians away from front lines with russian empire which was supplying them arms but ofc even Armenian rebellion is somewhat forgotten thanks to re-writing history efforts and ''historians'' like this guy..
@@ThePoutinePrince You are always free to confute anything i write if you can manage, but ofc your kind usually chooses to be smart ass rather than being actually smart..
It's shocking just how different the political landscape would look (in terms of progressive/moderate/conservative social policy, in particular) if different groups of people who were already living in the area had won certain conflicts.
I would hazard to guess zero difference. The region hit the jackpot on oil. Ijs that discovering silver mines in South America didn't magically make Spain more progressive. I'd say it made them much more corrupt after discovering cheap wealth than they were before discovering it. Its not plausible that dumping that much wealth on any nation state would somehow not lead to fast corruption and decadence and generally leaning on humanities more negative impulses. Most likely the worst excesses of even the United States of America can be plausibly explained that we do not actually struggle anymore as much as our pioneer and revolutionary ancestors, so it's very easy to fall into the habits Great Britain had. Whether it be Saudi Arabia or Oman, someone was going to get a huge amount of oil eventually. The wealth itself was very likely to make it cheap and affordable to remain coarse and not be motivated to progress very much. When the Ottomans made a lot of money being the middle men of trade, they were not motivated to change their ways as urgently as Portugal was motivated to start the Age of Exploration. And further though the Roman Republic began somewhat moral, when it reached the power of an empire, it lost much of the motivation to be so moral. Suffering builds character and luxury spoils it. But suffering is tragic and I would still alleviate suffering by sharing wealth with the poor. If no oil had been found in the desert I think they would have been likely to depend more on history and cultural learning centers for prestige on the world stage and been that much % more a little more peaceful land. It's hard to be sure but I feel that assuming that giving the oil to someone else and expecting them to be more noble with it is naive. They are likely equal as people but the oil itself is a temptation that would test any culture. 🤔
@@darthparallax5207 I was talking about other leaders in the area who had less backwards values winning militarily. Sure cruising off Oil would have always been a thing, but if the leadership aren't bigoted zealots, and don't rely on bigoted zealots to retain power, then who knows what could have happened as history marched ever forward.
@@meaghanorlinski8464 That's the key good guys don't harm innocents unnecessarily both sides have made it clear there bad guys but America acts like only one is an the restvof the world the other. Times like this I praise God for giving me two middle 🖕 fuck all degenerative killer's.
In the Middle East particularly, Western colonial powers didn't draw many borders themselves. Nearly all were legacy borders from the Ottoman Empire, or already under the direct control of local warlords and therefore self asserted. Even while ostensibly under control of European powers Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Israel all asserted their own borders through a mix of military and political power. This is why the modern borders of the Middle East mirror closely the independent rulers and internal administrative divisions of Islamic, and even pre-Islamic empires that came before it.
Honestly this was pretty straightforward. It isn't biased mostly because it is simply presenting the facts in as best it can given any included inaccuracies that may arise with historical records written by people who might be inclined to include their own bias in them. And for that I do applaud Jazby. Well done sir! 10/10
This was mostly correct but there were some huge mistakes and clear bias through it, for example in Ottoman religious minorities could operate their own religious institutions, their own government institutions, their own schools, their own courts, they could even issue their own laws! Care to share which European empire gave such rights to any religious minority? But even then they were still ''persecuted'', i really wonder how exactly. Jizya tax was very very small price for having such rights and it wasn't even a high tax, for example wealthier regions like Greece never had any problems paying Jizya tax for over 500 years while only really poor regions like Serbia struggled to pay it so blood tax was collected instead. And those children perhaps were taken forcefully but they weren't becoming slave soldiers at all. They were receiving 4 years long education and depending on their success they were receiving further education and becoming Ottoman officials or were enlisted into Janissary corps which was receiving one of highest salaries among all Ottoman standing army but they were still ''slaves'' somehow.. Also claiming Muhammad Ali Pasha was a bashi-bazouk is a massive mistake, i really wonder where he could learn such a thing! Ali Pasha was an Albanian who received at least 10 years of education to become a ''general'' (Pasha is actually a Turkish rank close to general) to lead armies and govern provinces. But he indeed raised a small army of Albanians as bashi-bazouks. There was never an official Ottoman unit as bashi-bazouks but especially during war times Pashas were often raising irregular armies as bashi-bazouks so it just means irregular soldiers. As one of correct information, the infighting between Arabic tribes had been quite common as mostly Arabs were ruling themselves not Ottoman which allowed a lot of powerplay between tribes. In late 18th century first Saudi rebellion happened along with their radical ideology, same as their late atrocities they were quite brutal burning down towns and slaughtering ''non-Muslims'' as they wished. Ottoman ordered Ali Pasha to raise a large army in Egypt and end their rebellion. Ali Pasha did so without much resistance from Saudis but he had a large intact army now while Ottoman was quite weak so he decided his payment wasn't enough and asked for more by force. He never ever became ruler of Egypt, this is another huge mistake ''history channels'' are often making. Muhammad Ali Pasha remained as OTTOMAN GOVERNER of Egypt even after defeating Ottoman, only became governer of Syria etc as well. Ottoman attacked him back only few years later but didn't remove him from his position entirely only revoked his governship from other regions while he and his dynasty remained as governers of Egypt. Even in 1914 Egypt was still officially a part of Ottoman until WW1 began then British finally ended it by using the war as an excuse. As last even this map isn't enough to explain struggle in the region as more and more foreign powers kept always involving, for example Russian empire's invasion of Caucasus changed power balance entirely and Armenians became a russian proxy since then. It was somehow claimed that Armenian population disappeared because of genocide but it is completely false as in 1914 Russian empire invaded eastern Turkey so Ottoman wasn't even controlling Armenian majority cities in 1915 rather they were under control of RUSSIAN EMPIRE! After Ottoman defeats against russian empire Armenians wrongly believed Ottoman was about to collapse and rebelled as a russian proxy in late 1914. But ofc they were wrong and Ottoman displaced them into Syria and Lebanon to suppress their rebellion then most of them decided to migrate into Russian empire over Caucasus mountains. The whole point of this displacement was moving Armenians away from front lines with russian empire which was supplying them arms but ofc even Armenian rebellion is somewhat forgotten thanks to re-writing history efforts and ''historians'' like this guy..
It is absolutely biased, in many ways. Not “simply presenting the facts” at all. Subtle language is hiding things like Ottoman colonialism and modern Druze life in “the Levant,” aka Israel and the Palestinian Territories. Whatever one’s opinion of the current situation is, that term simply obscures the plain truth. Also the term ”Arabization” to represent centuries of forced conversions (on pain of death), destruction of native tribal cultures, etc.
@@EverythingInTheFramealthough they did battle with the _horserider_ tribes. And let's not forget the heretic spoilsports who brought tanks to perfectly fine cavalry battles.
This is absolutely amazing! And only part 1 of 10 planned?! I don't even know where you will go from this as it is already so comprehensive! Not since the days of Masaman have I been so excited for a youtube mapping project.
Not sure it's the right niche but if anyone's interested in Early Modern warfare, Ottoman, Safavid, Moghul, etc., I hotly recommend Schwerpunkt's videos series
This was mostly correct but there were some huge mistakes and clear bias through it, for example in Ottoman religious minorities could operate their own religious institutions, their own government institutions, their own schools, their own courts, they could even issue their own laws! Care to share which European empire gave such rights to any religious minority? But even then they were still ''persecuted'', i really wonder how exactly. Jizya tax was very very small price for having such rights and it wasn't even a high tax, for example wealthier regions like Greece never had any problems paying Jizya tax for over 500 years while only really poor regions like Serbia struggled to pay it so blood tax was collected instead. And those children perhaps were taken forcefully but they weren't becoming slave soldiers at all. They were receiving 4 years long education and depending on their success they were receiving further education and becoming Ottoman officials or were enlisted into Janissary corps which was receiving one of highest salaries among all Ottoman standing army but they were still ''slaves'' somehow.. Also claiming Muhammad Ali Pasha was a bashi-bazouk is a massive mistake, i really wonder where he could learn such a thing! Ali Pasha was an Albanian who received at least 10 years of education to become a ''general'' (Pasha is actually a Turkish rank close to general) to lead armies and govern provinces. But he indeed raised a small army of Albanians as bashi-bazouks. There was never an official Ottoman unit as bashi-bazouks but especially during war times Pashas were often raising irregular armies as bashi-bazouks so it just means irregular soldiers. As one of correct information, the infighting between Arabic tribes had been quite common as mostly Arabs were ruling themselves not Ottoman which allowed a lot of powerplay between tribes. In late 18th century first Saudi rebellion happened along with their radical ideology, same as their late atrocities they were quite brutal burning down towns and slaughtering ''non-Muslims'' as they wished. Ottoman ordered Ali Pasha to raise a large army in Egypt and end their rebellion. Ali Pasha did so without much resistance from Saudis but he had a large intact army now while Ottoman was quite weak so he decided his payment wasn't enough and asked for more by force. He never ever became ruler of Egypt, this is another huge mistake ''history channels'' are often making. Muhammad Ali Pasha remained as OTTOMAN GOVERNER of Egypt even after defeating Ottoman, only became governer of Syria etc as well. Ottoman attacked him back only few years later but didn't remove him from his position entirely only revoked his governship from other regions while he and his dynasty remained as governers of Egypt. Even in 1914 Egypt was still officially a part of Ottoman until WW1 began then British finally ended it by using the war as an excuse. As last even this map isn't enough to explain struggle in the region as more and more foreign powers kept always involving, for example Russian empire's invasion of Caucasus changed power balance entirely and Armenians became a russian proxy since then. It was somehow claimed that Armenian population disappeared because of genocide but it is completely false as in 1914 Russian empire invaded eastern Turkey so Ottoman wasn't even controlling Armenian majority cities in 1915 rather they were under control of RUSSIAN EMPIRE! After Ottoman defeats against russian empire Armenians wrongly believed Ottoman was about to collapse and rebelled as a russian proxy in late 1914. But ofc they were wrong and Ottoman displaced them into Syria and Lebanon to suppress their rebellion then most of them decided to migrate into Russian empire over Caucasus mountains. The whole point of this displacement was moving Armenians away from front lines with russian empire which was supplying them arms but ofc even Armenian rebellion is somewhat forgotten thanks to re-writing history efforts and ''historians'' like this guy..
I mean, the whole of history has more interesting topics than central america, but they have a lot to tell, more so out of corruption and terrorism sadly.
@@anti-spiral159I mean, that's subjective tbh. Like, the rise of the timurids and the Mughal can be classified as an interesting topic or useless I information depending where you live for example.
stuff like the general captaincy of Guatemala and the federal republic of central America, as well as Panama and pre Colombian Mesoamerica could make a decent video
This was mostly correct but there were some huge mistakes and clear bias through it, for example in Ottoman religious minorities could operate their own religious institutions, their own government institutions, their own schools, their own courts, they could even issue their own laws! Care to share which European empire gave such rights to any religious minority? But even then they were still ''persecuted'', i really wonder how exactly. Jizya tax was very very small price for having such rights and it wasn't even a high tax, for example wealthier regions like Greece never had any problems paying Jizya tax for over 500 years while only really poor regions like Serbia struggled to pay it so blood tax was collected instead. And those children perhaps were taken forcefully but they weren't becoming slave soldiers at all. They were receiving 4 years long education and depending on their success they were receiving further education and becoming Ottoman officials or were enlisted into Janissary corps which was receiving one of highest salaries among all Ottoman standing army but they were still ''slaves'' somehow.. Also claiming Muhammad Ali Pasha was a bashi-bazouk is a massive mistake, i really wonder where he could learn such a thing! Ali Pasha was an Albanian who received at least 10 years of education to become a ''general'' (Pasha is actually a Turkish rank close to general) to lead armies and govern provinces. But he indeed raised a small army of Albanians as bashi-bazouks. There was never an official Ottoman unit as bashi-bazouks but especially during war times Pashas were often raising irregular armies as bashi-bazouks so it just means irregular soldiers. As one of correct information, the infighting between Arabic tribes had been quite common as mostly Arabs were ruling themselves not Ottoman which allowed a lot of powerplay between tribes. In late 18th century first Saudi rebellion happened along with their radical ideology, same as their late atrocities they were quite brutal burning down towns and slaughtering ''non-Muslims'' as they wished. Ottoman ordered Ali Pasha to raise a large army in Egypt and end their rebellion. Ali Pasha did so without much resistance from Saudis but he had a large intact army now while Ottoman was quite weak so he decided his payment wasn't enough and asked for more by force. He never ever became ruler of Egypt, this is another huge mistake ''history channels'' are often making. Muhammad Ali Pasha remained as OTTOMAN GOVERNER of Egypt even after defeating Ottoman, only became governer of Syria etc as well. Ottoman attacked him back only few years later but didn't remove him from his position entirely only revoked his governship from other regions while he and his dynasty remained as governers of Egypt. Even in 1914 Egypt was still officially a part of Ottoman until WW1 began then British finally ended it by using the war as an excuse. As last even this map isn't enough to explain struggle in the region as more and more foreign powers kept always involving, for example Russian empire's invasion of Caucasus changed power balance entirely and Armenians became a russian proxy since then. It was somehow claimed that Armenian population disappeared because of genocide but it is completely false as in 1914 Russian empire invaded eastern Turkey so Ottoman wasn't even controlling Armenian majority cities in 1915 rather they were under control of RUSSIAN EMPIRE! After Ottoman defeats against russian empire Armenians wrongly believed Ottoman was about to collapse and rebelled as a russian proxy in late 1914. But ofc they were wrong and Ottoman displaced them into Syria and Lebanon to suppress their rebellion then most of them decided to migrate into Russian empire over Caucasus mountains. The whole point of this displacement was moving Armenians away from front lines with russian empire which was supplying them arms but ofc even Armenian rebellion is somewhat forgotten thanks to re-writing history efforts and ''historians'' like this guy..
Wow, what an incredibly complicated mix of cultures, religions, identities, and beliefs you have described here.. Truly fascinating though. Thanks for the excellent, well-researched content!
Great video! It shows the rich diversity of the region while starting to show just how complex a task drawing borders would have been. On top of religion, tribe & ethnicity one would need to consider: 1. The viability of the proposed state (could it be effectively governed? Access to freshwater/trade? would it be able to defend borders? etc) 2. Who would receive power in the new state? 3. Competing historical claims 4. What the people in any new state want. 5. What other powers would agree to based on their own geopolitical interests.
There’s a simple solution, create a large Arab state ruled by the Hashemite descendants of the prophet. This was the “obvious” answer and the promise of the British/French to the Arabs. But then the British and French betrayed the Arabs and signed the infamous Sykes-Picot.
@@Handle0108San Reno conference. Sykes-picot was denied by league of nations, never took efect. Peeps avoid san reno cause that would question lebanon, jordan, syria and iraq as much as israel.
@@puraLusa all those states were creations of European imperialists, Arabs were a United nation before that. It’s unfortunate what France and Britain did.
@@Handle0108yeah and as the video explained for almost 45 minutes that would’ve been a horribly inefficient, ethnically and religiously messy, state bursting at the seams from internal conflict. Quit larping
@@sucloxsucloxsson I am actually Middle Eastern for your info, don’t pretend to be a smart-ass when it comes to the Middle East from watching one video mate. I am well aware of the politics in our region, and I am hundred percent certain that an Arab state with the Hashemite kingdom at the leadership position would be the best government.
We (as a species) are still getting used to living together in large groups. For the vast majority of human history our thinking was 'only my family matters,' which progressed to 'only my tribe matters,' which progressed to 'only my town matters,' which has now progressed to 'only my country matters. Learning to tolerate, how to learn to live together in larger and larger groups. Has been a slow and often bloody process. But when you consider that In the last ten thousand or so years. We've gone from being a species that lives in small nomadic hunter gatherer groups to being a species that lives in villages (mostly in the countryside) to being a species that lives in large cities (about 80% of us now do) we should appreciate the speed and magnitude of the progress we've made and maybe even give ourselves a pat on the back...
I think realistically, the fall of the Ottoman Empire was going to result in bloody conflict regardless of the interference of the French and British. Whether it made things worse is a difficult question to answer, perhaps letting them duke it out by themselves for a decade or so would have resulted in a new era of stability, or maybe they'd be just as much as war in the modern day in this alternate timeline as they are in ours.
Funnier part is, since Turkish dominion ended, nobody could form a more peceaful and serene order in the vast region and before Turks rose to sultanhood from mercenary status, Muslim world were busy eating eachother for centuries in early medieval times.
Because Turk's are warriors and they kept whole islam world safe meanwhile arabs constantly backstab Ottomans.Arabs never contributed half of Balkans did.@@subutaynoyan5372
The most in-depth middle east discussion I have EVER seen, I cannot believe this is only part 1 of ten!! Are you setting out to make an entire college course for free?
nothing short of an amazing effort, while I heard about most this information here and there I have never seen it played out like this. thanks to you the middle east has a new prospective in my eye. if a UA-cam video ever deserved a standing ovation this definitely deserves one, thank you.
FINALLY SOMEONE SAID IT, Despite few small inaccuracies (which is still more accurate than 99% of content available) I am happy you pointed out that problem of the middle east is not as simplistic as border disputes
6 points to consider when identifying an 'Arab':- 1- People migrate and intermix , and there is no single nation on earth with a pure heritage. Trying to divide people into certain ethnicities and races is impossible and absurd. And it is absolutely okay for a nation to claim more than one heritage. 2- Arabic is a civilizational language much like Latin, Turkish or English which are spoken by millions of non native descendants today. 3- Unlike the original latins who are no longer traceable today, the original Arabic speakers still maintain their pure paternal lineages and many of them refuse to intermarry with Arabized non-Arabs. In fact there are various conflicts between the Arabised and the original Arabs around the Arab world, such as the example of Iraq mentioned in the beginning of the video, northern Syria and Sinai in Egypt. 4- Even if you could distinguish between the Original Arabs and the Arabised Arabs, there is still the question of what are these original Arabs and what are there origins? The original Arabs are divided into two groups, each claims to be the 'true Arabs'. The first is the Qahtanites, thought to be the first inhabitants of western Arabia, and their native language was Himyaric. The second is Adnanites, Armeiac descendants who settled western Arabia and intermixed with the Qahtanintes and the Arabic language was formed by their interactions. They claim they are the descendants of Ismael, the Egyptian son of Abraham. In addition to these two groups, there are tens of other extinct ethnic groups that have settled Arabia in the recorded history, and possibly contributed to the Arabic language and culture such as Thamud, Magan, Nabatians, Sebeans, and others. 5- The 'Arab world' is furthermore divided by vast deserts which divide the Arab world into small habitable green pockets, such as the levant, the Nile valley, south Iraq, Oman, Yemen and the Maghreb. This geographical diaspora has maintained a level of cultural distinction in each pocket. 6- Finally the most important point is that Pan-Arab nationalism and Anti-Arab Nationalism (Pharoanism, Phenoacianism, Pan-Berbeirsm, Pan-Nubiasm,..etc) are very politicized. Modern Arab nationalism was ironically enough started mostly by Christian Arabs in order to find a common cause with Muslim Arabs in their fight against the Ottomans but the idea was ignored and ridiculed by most of Arabs due to the awareness of the immense tribal, regional, ethnical , and religious diversity of the Arab world. Later on the Hashimites adopted the idea and used it to justify their rule over the Arab world but the ideology only really kicked in due to the Arab-Israeli conflict which required a strong bond between the different Arabic speaking nations to protect their holy Islamic and Christian sites. An interesting example of how the ethnic heritage of a nation can be politicized is Egypt. Despite being ruled by an Albanian dynasty and with a mostly Arabized population, Egypt adopted Pan-Arabism in the 20th century which allowed it as the most developed country in the region to project its influence upon the smaller newly formed other Arab nations. However, in the last decade Egypt's geopolitical role diminished due to internal instabilities and instead of influencing other Arab countries, it became a victim of the never ending Arab conflicts surrounding it. It became a battlefield between the Saudi-backed military junta and the Qatari-backed Islamists. In addition to being subject of trst attacks from groups based in Libya, Sudan and Syria. As a result Pheroanism gained popularity among Egyptians as a way to escape the chaos of the Arab world and the foreign interferences by fellow Arab nations.
@@dinosaurusrex1482 yes, what i mean is that turkish at some point in history became dominant many aspects such as trade, science, politics and islamic theology so strangers seeked to learn it to benefit from it
Brother, At 11:40 you mentioned Al Sunni twice, al Sunni wanted abu bakar when al Shai'a wanted Ali.. Thank you for a great video, I know now about my origin more than what I learned in 35 years, keep up the good work
One very important mistake this map makes is dividing sunni school of thoughts across border lines. This simply isn't the case. People almost always only identity as sunni and look at all of the schools of thoughts when deciding on an issue And I don't mean that as in "we all live in peace" but rather, in most places, if you ask someone "are you a maliki or shafihi?" you'll get a blank stare because either they don't know what either of those things are, they just use elemets from both of them, or they never thought about it. It's like asking "are you an Oxford comma user?" the person you're asking obviously use one or the other, or just a mix of both, but it's not something most people pay attention to/know what it means or care about much
Never have I ever been so fascinated and engrossed in a video that ultimately gave me a confused and massive headache! Very well done indeed. I learned a lot.…… I think. I’m not so sure I’ll remember all of this. But, it was extremely interesting. I now need a beer.
This is an insane level of depth. I thought "he forgot to mention the jews in the middle east" and then you did extensively. 44 minutes of info and its only 1/15? wow. well done.
The big issue is that the idea of the nation state is uniquely European. It works well in Europe and east Asia where people have been relatively homogeneous culturally, ethnically, and religiously for centuries an their colonies in the Americas but it doesn’t work well in places like South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East where tribes and empires have been the mainstay of the regions. What exactly is an Iraqi? Is a Sunni Kurd just as iraqi as a Shia Arab? Are Tajiks, Pashtos and Hazsras all equally afghans? It all gets worse when resources are discovered such as oil, minerals, or even water. Even if a map could more easily be drawn along ethic or religious lines would Saudi Arabia willingly give up its oil reserves in the east? Would Afghanistan give up its rivers in the south? Would Iran sacrifice land on all its borders?
Egypt has always been what you may call a nation state. The idea of a nation state didn't really start with europe, more so the modern shape/style of a nation state
Which Is more reason why a Supranational political and economic union of mutual cooperation like the EU would be the best thing to happen for the Middle East imo. And in fact the Ottoman Empire should have created a Supranational "Commonwealth of mutual political, economic and military cooperation" between it's constituent parts in the 20th century before ww1 and just avoid joining ww1 in general.
The nation state is not "natural" and has to be created by human force, like any society. It only "works" in Europe because all the wars and forced conversions and ethnic cleansings and expulsions and genocides and language campaigns have already happened in the past, during the Middle Ages and the World Wars. Europe didn't just naturally have neat borders with ethnically homogenous populations, it took a lot of enforced suffering to get there. The Iberians forced Jews and Muslims to convert or flee. The French committed linguicide on the Occitan language, look up La Vergonha. The Greeks and Turks had a forced population exchange. And so on... Meanwhile in the Ottoman Empire everybody was coexisting relatively peacefully until the rise of nationalism, and with the creation of nation states came the suffering. Not to say that the empire should have remained in place, I don't know that.
I hope we will be able to get a video series like this for South Asia (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, etc) and Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Indonesia, and The Philippines).
It's funny to me how we live in an age where ethnostates are viewed as a bad thing, but simultaneously the west gets blamed for not drawing borders along ethnic lines in the middle east and Africa. It's also kind of arrogant to think that imposed borders can prevent wars in regions that were never peaceful to begin with.
I think "along ethnic borders" is usually the criticism, but it comes from a place of being completely arbitrary, not necessarily inadherence to ethnic groups. They also wouldn't be "ethnostates" as much as nation-states, because ethnostates heavily implies exclusionary practices which dispel minorities or enforce certain cultural practices over others.
I completly agree with your last point but... I think you're confused about "ethnostate" and "nation state". An ethno-state is a state that exclude people from other ethnicity, while nation state accept minority. And a nation is not the same as an ethnicity. It's a bit controversial to take this exemple, but let say the USA, there is an "USA" nation. With people feeling americans. But those americans can be hispanic, afro-american, etc
What's arrogant is to act like independent countries could not be expected to negotiate and redraw their borders themselves. Instead some colonial power many decades ago is blamed.
@@BountyFlamor Once you draw borders, they're fixed. I'm sorry, but no, you can't expect countries to just "negotiate and redraw their borders themselves" lmao. What an incredibly naive idea. Have you ever bothered to look into how these negotiations would work? Any time in history where two countries meet to discuss borders and one side just willingly gets absorbed, annexed, or split by another? When you set a border, it's going to be defended militarily, you can't just redraw it.
@@juliank6793 You must have never heard of a young country called South Sudan, just to name one example. Of course, there was violence involved, but it ended in negotiations and the two parties managed to do it by themselves.
Great video, but there are some corrections: 1-At the time of the rise of the Saudi state, al-muntafiq didn't settle or control Eastern Arabia anymore, rather it was under the control of the Bani Khalid, a subtribe of the previously ruling banu jabr clan, rather, the Muntafiq power base was in southern Iraq, at the city of Basra. The ottomans officially integrated them into the administrative structure by making the district (sanja) of muntafiq but they still had major power in the vilayet of basra. But still, the saudis did indeed battle them and they battled the Saudis too. 2-The Kharijites, pronounced khar-ij-ite, not kha-ji-rite, weren't really the predecessors to the ibadis, rather the ibadis are the only surviving kharejite sect 3-I wouldn't say salafis reject all other madhabs, more like they don't view the scholarly differences as compulsory and more arbitrary than other sects, that is if you can call salafism a sect, since in most cases its an outside term 4-Nubians are well respected in Egypt and the views of some racists and TV hosts like Tamer Amin, who mirrors government sentiment who sometimes clashes with nubians due to their housing crisis, do not reflect the views of the general Egyptian populace. Its pretty saddening that you fell into this trap of generalisation. Other than that, amazing job on the research, it's really rare to see someone so committed to a video about the middle east
Very interesting video, really enjoyed it. I would love to learn more about the cultural distinctions between the majority Arab countries, which are rarely talked about and much simplified here in the West
I really loved the depth of this video. It is very well animated and narrated. My only critique is the lack of categorisation of the Arabic ethno-linguistic subgroups. I don't see why you'd go into detail about the different kinds of Turkics, Iranics, etc but never even mention that the Arabs are not just sedentary and nomadic peoples of different Islamic/Christian sects, but are also divided into well-defined groups such as Levantine, Mesopotamian, etc. This is an essential categorisation that explains why there was a clear struggle in uniting countries like Syria and Egypt under the UAR and such.
The problem was never the drawing of the borders but the enforcement of the nation state within a territorial entity. The League of Nations and later UN forced these borders to be recognized under a new world order to a region and people that never enforced such rigid divisions. There’s a lot of emphasis on the religious and ethnic differences causing conflict within these borders but these are more a side effect of the enforced notion of a nation state as opposed to just sporadic ethnic-religious conflict. The borders aren’t the problem. It’s the forced notion of nation states.
I do wonder that even if the Europeans did not enforce the notion of a nation-state, would the various ethnicities in the region come up with it themselves, especially after having observed it from the foreigners.
Assyrians are not descended of ancient assyrians. That's like saying people in Tuscany are actually ancient etruscans, a group that stopped existing by 500BC. Ancient assyrians were long wiped out as a group by millenia of Roman-Persian rule. There was no Assyrian ethnicity by the time Christianity was spreading, to ignore this let alone to claim that the entirety of this "assyrian" group simply converted and were the only ones to do so is simply retrospective projection. That is like saying neolithic farmers in Palestine were actually Jews even though the concept of a Jew did not exist. Modern Assyrians are an ethno-religious group of native christians, yes, just because they adopted the name Assyrian in relation to the area they lived in does not make them descendents of ancient Assyrians, which they are not.
I see you've made another fantastic video as usual! Just as a little request though, can you start including your sources in the description of your video, or in a pinned comment?
I completely get that. But when it comes to sources for these videos the list is almost endless. I don't tend to pick out 3 or 4 books to use as sources. It tends to be 1 chapter or article to help write essentially 2 or 3 lines. By the point I list is almost so long it starts to become as useless as not having one. If there's anything you want a source on in particular though, I can send that over.
@@JabzyJoe I get that, but it would really give justice to the amount of work you put into them, a triumphant list proving your efforts and credibility even more. And I really like looking at this sort of behind-the-scenes and even read the said sources because I like many others are interested. So you really should consider doing it anyway, a bibliography is a badge of honour amongst historians.
@@JabzyJoe Full Bibliographies are vital for any sort of history documentary. I greatly appreciate your content--and am seriously impressed that you aren't just paraphrasing Wiki articles and the likes, as I've seen FAR too many history UA-camrs do--but at the moment there's not really a way for people to assess how reliable your videos are.
There is a sect of Syriac Christians who have been living in Malabar/Kerala since 52AD - now a large community in modern Kerala. There is also a smaller community of Malabar Jews since 380BC - the "Cochin Jews". Most have emigrated to Israel now. Do a video on them sometime
As an Arab I see this documentary as the most informative and unbiased documentary on the subject, I even learned new things about my history, thank you for your great effort
I thought this was a fun video where you were going to tell an alternative division plan to Sykes-Picot agreement. I feel like I had a lecture on Middle East and Muslim History, now. I feel cheated, in the best way possible. Thanks.
this was fun to watch. the distinction made between shias and sunnis was a little simplistic tho. Shias have more sects because they have been prosecuted minorities, but Shia schools too have historically had major disagreements, specially with regards to the Hellenic concepts and their application to Islamic theology. A good example of this would have been the Minha episode during the Abbasid rule.
aye he aknowledges he simplifies the situation alot as discussion of the complexities and history of each religious sect would be too long and require alot of videos
I really am impressed how deep you went with this. I believe the only thing missing here is you having a deep understanding of Arabic language because it will make you understand much more about the history of Arabs and will give you another aspect of this history. Overall, there are some conceptual mistakes about some aspects, but honestly great efforts and thank you for the honest hard work.
There is no pure blood anywhere in the world not in England not in China not in Egypt not in India so this is not an argument. Egyptians are Arabs period
Well, this type of division ignores a few important factors: These groups did not historically divide themselves by ‘rulers’, but rather by important cities. Cities naturally originate from geography and climate; food and water access being likely the most important factors. Food commodities did not travel long in old times till modern engine powered vehicles and refrigeration, with perhaps exceptions of water routes carrying grains. Also, mountains and other hard-to-cross areas like big rivers, lakes, deserts etc. made for good borders between more centralized powers. In areas where population density was low, such as mountains and desert, rule was established via tribes, some of which still seem to have some sort of impact. I guess before the times of nationalism and national military mobilization, countries and borders didn’t really mean much in this area. Countries were a sum of loosely coupled cities that paid varying degrees of taxed and provided some number of soldiers during war. Even control of natural resources come into play later on, since trade was not this controlled and regulated.
Arabic proverb cited by the North African analytic historian Ibn Khaldun of the fourteenth century: dawlah 'ind al-turk, din 'ind al-'arab wa adab 'ind al-furs Power (rests) with the Turk, religion with the Arab, and culture with the Persian.
Great video watched the whole thing. There was just one thing Kurds ancestors are a mix of ancient tribes such as the Gutians, Carduchis in addition to the Medes. There is an ancient Sumerian clay tablet called “Land of Karda” that talks about ancient Kurds .
Whenever people act like european partitions caused all the problems in Africa and the Middle East I just laugh. Most of these places will have ethnic strife regardless of how you divide them. In fact, they had strife before, so why would anyone expect them not to have any after? In parts of Africa there are groups living within fifty miles of each other who co sider themselves completely different tribes to their neighbours. Unless one plans to divide Africa and the Middle East into ten thousand countries, you will always have antagonistic groups in the same state.
Granted it's not the cause of all the problems, but the current issues are very much the result of european partition and nation building. You also don't need to divide Africa or the middle east into small nation states to realize that leaving an ethnic group like the kurds without a nation of their own is a folly of European nation building.
I’m sure this will be uncontroversial
Only as controversial as the white man destroying the customs of a society it barely comprehended.
@@vos3373Since when do barbarians think other than the Greeks?
Lol
@Savetion..What language is that
@@didacclivilleoriol7057 Dutch
It still astonishes me that we have access to these types of contents for free.
Unbelievable effort and research.
It's disappearing fast, censorship becomes a worse problem every year for educational creators it seems.
Comments like those killing me, Just encouraging everything to be priced.
@@HelicopterShownUpWhich is ridiculous... but i suppose we should expect it. Google is all like "don't be evil" and then becomes giant heartless greedy multinational corp like all the rest.
I'd be less furious if they didn't show ads when they demonetize. They have EVERY incentive if demonetizing. It's fucking bullshit.
Sometimes they just decide "oh we won't pay you" and we're supposed to be fine with it.
But that money goes somewhere . i daresay it's encroaching on EVIL, the very thing they say not to do!
@@itzikashemtov6045You misunderstand i think. We happy no cost money. It's priceless, but free. the best of life is priceless but free. Right?
@@itzikashemtov6045 "Just encouraging everything to be priced." ------ exactly, they're such idiots
We should have give it all to Portugal, it's their land according to the teatry of Tordesilhas.
😂
I wonder if they ever abolished that or it's technically still valid , somehow
@@turan_kayaIt sort of stopped being enforced when the iberian union was formed. Since Portugal and Spain were ruled by the same king/emperor, there was no point in enforcing the treaty. That's why Brazil ended up expanding much further to the west
As a portuguese I can say that we don't want none of that $hit.
@@erdnasiul87but u guys would get those sweet oil
As an Arab and a casual historian, I have never seen a better explanation on UA-cam about the Middle East's religious/ethnic composition with historical context as well (aside from very minor mistakes in the beginning), great job 👍
From which country are you from, Z?
I think there is a better one on usefull charts done by al muchadima, but it's only on religion
How much is taught in school? And how much do we know?
What were these minor mistakes?
@@somebodyanonymousxlike the story about the end of times somewhat contained some misunderstandings and gave credibility to some local myths and legends
Worth noting that in addition to all of the powers mentioned (Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Kurds, Mamluks and Turks), Egypt was also ruled for short periods by the French (1798-1802) and British (1882-1922).
Egypt wasn't really ruled by the British they were a loose protectorate so more like a vassal state that had foreign policy and finance handled by the British as well as allowing them to station troops but was otherwise self governing.
Berbers ruled it as well, the Fatimid dynasty and even during Pharaonic times (the Libyan dynasties)
@@lukamg7368 Fatimids were Arabs bruh they even claimed direct descent from Muhammad. They were in the Maghreb yes but they were an Arab dynasty in fact they are among the most responsible for Arabisation of the Maghreb.
British actual residence was 1882-1956,i.e 74 years
Not short at all
@@khalidibnelwalidd yes post-1922 the British had garrisons in the country (only in Suez post-WWII), trained its army etc, but it was an independent state.
Egypt didn’t even declare war on Italy and Germany for invading its territory in 1940-42 (no doubt partly swayed by Mussolini’s promise of continued independence for the Egyptian kingdom under Italy’s sphere of influence), instead blaming the British presence for the invasion and leaving it to the British to fight it out themselves.
King Farouk’s continued Axis sympathies and obstinance to Allied operations eventually led to an ultimatum for him to either abdicate or appoint a more accommodating cabinet, which he reluctantly did (of course the gravity of the situation became more clear when the British started burning their archives with Rommel approaching Cairo, a day Egyptians gave the dark nickname “Ash Wednesday”).
So while clearly still within the British sphere of influence post-1922, as was/is the case with other Arab monarchies in the region, it wasn’t actually under British rule.
Hey, Jabzy. Do you plan on covering the Finnish-Korean hyperwar?
my great grand father in law removed 8 times fought in that war 😢
@@skittlesnakes sad to hear about Asian on Asian violence 😔😔😔😔😔
Nokia vs samsung, so violent.
Never again will we see the glory of 8 inch average penis length 😔
Fun fact: North Korea and Norway are only separated by a single country.
This type of demographic composition map was actually true of much of Europe--especially eastern and central Europe--prior to the rise of ethno-nationalism in the 19th and 20th centuries. German and Jewish communities once dotted many urban areas and settlements across the region and the distribution of settlements of other ethnic groups was often a chaotic patchwork where neat borders often couldn't be drawn based on ethnic or religious lines. The rise of nationalism and periodic forced assimilation and/or expulsion of various minority groups through the promotion of cultural uniformity was the chief thing that allowed countries like Spain, France, Italy, and Greece to seemingly have neat borders lined up for different ethnic homelands--and even then, smaller sub-regional identities still persist in those places such as with the Catalans. Nearly every area of the Middle East was also ruled by a succession of various big sprawling empires or kingdoms run by foreign conquerors for extended periods of time who displaced local or native populations in order to lower the possibility of a regional revolt and guarantee more unity in the broader empire, such as with the Babylonians and Persians.
The point is that the idiotic idea of a "nation state" is desastreous. Countries were always mixed, and will always be.
In the end, the smaller states would be conquered by the bigger states, just like Europe.
Romans: Damn it, history repeats itself
Let 'em do it to eachother, worked out for us in the end, didn't it? Better than to engage in "white saviour colonialism".
That didn't really happen in modern Europe though, didn't it?
I wish the great power would fuck off so we Saudi can take all of Arabia and Jordan/Iraq/Syria
@Tsuruchi_420 "Didnt happen" Poland-Lithuania, Sweden, French Empire, German empire Austria-Hungary, Russian Empire.
yeah alot of lebanese do identify as phoenicians, mostly christians, but has seen an increase in the muslim population aswell
A Hausa(Nigerian) Muslim who speaks Arabic is still a Hausa Muslim. It only makes sense if he finds more in common with his Hausa brethren, than Arabs.
@@Darius-_it’s weird because the phoenician identity and language itself died out centuries before the islamic expansion and that’s just the “islamic” expansion, arabic (itureans) was around much longer in lebanon than in most other arab countries lol
@@riverman6462people in Lebanon speak Arabic as as their first language
And phoichen identity was dead by the time of the islamic conquest
The Muslims are not Lebanese. They are Palestinian invaders
And they're immediately ridiculed
I'm 34 minutes and so far and as someone who has studied every religion developing in the Middle East, and the tribal differences ad nauseam, I want to thank you so far for how well this video is done. Explains things simply, in an easy-to-follow away, without really oversimplifying or dumbing down any of it.
This was mostly correct but there were some huge mistakes and clear bias through it, for example in Ottoman religious minorities could operate their own religious institutions, their own government institutions, their own schools, their own courts, they could even issue their own laws! Care to share which European empire gave such rights to any religious minority? But even then they were still ''persecuted'', i really wonder how exactly. Jizya tax was very very small price for having such rights and it wasn't even a high tax, for example wealthier regions like Greece never had any problems paying Jizya tax for over 500 years while only really poor regions like Serbia struggled to pay it so blood tax was collected instead. And those children perhaps were taken forcefully but they weren't becoming slave soldiers at all. They were receiving 4 years long education and depending on their success they were receiving further education and becoming Ottoman officials or were enlisted into Janissary corps which was receiving one of highest salaries among all Ottoman standing army but they were still ''slaves'' somehow..
Also claiming Muhammad Ali Pasha was a bashi-bazouk is a massive mistake, i really wonder where he could learn such a thing! Ali Pasha was an Albanian who received at least 10 years of education to become a ''general'' (Pasha is actually a Turkish rank close to general) to lead armies and govern provinces. But he indeed raised a small army of Albanians as bashi-bazouks. There was never an official Ottoman unit as bashi-bazouks but especially during war times Pashas were often raising irregular armies as bashi-bazouks so it just means irregular soldiers.
As one of correct information, the infighting between Arabic tribes had been quite common as mostly Arabs were ruling themselves not Ottoman which allowed a lot of powerplay between tribes. In late 18th century first Saudi rebellion happened along with their radical ideology, same as their late atrocities they were quite brutal burning down towns and slaughtering ''non-Muslims'' as they wished. Ottoman ordered Ali Pasha to raise a large army in Egypt and end their rebellion. Ali Pasha did so without much resistance from Saudis but he had a large intact army now while Ottoman was quite weak so he decided his payment wasn't enough and asked for more by force. He never ever became ruler of Egypt, this is another huge mistake ''history channels'' are often making. Muhammad Ali Pasha remained as OTTOMAN GOVERNER of Egypt even after defeating Ottoman, only became governer of Syria etc as well. Ottoman attacked him back only few years later but didn't remove him from his position entirely only revoked his governship from other regions while he and his dynasty remained as governers of Egypt. Even in 1914 Egypt was still officially a part of Ottoman until WW1 began then British finally ended it by using the war as an excuse.
As last even this map isn't enough to explain struggle in the region as more and more foreign powers kept always involving, for example Russian empire's invasion of Caucasus changed power balance entirely and Armenians became a russian proxy since then. It was somehow claimed that Armenian population disappeared because of genocide but it is completely false as in 1914 Russian empire invaded eastern Turkey so Ottoman wasn't even controlling Armenian majority cities in 1915 rather they were under control of RUSSIAN EMPIRE! After Ottoman defeats against russian empire Armenians wrongly believed Ottoman was about to collapse and rebelled as a russian proxy in late 1914. But ofc they were wrong and Ottoman displaced them into Syria and Lebanon to suppress their rebellion then most of them decided to migrate into Russian empire over Caucasus mountains. The whole point of this displacement was moving Armenians away from front lines with russian empire which was supplying them arms but ofc even Armenian rebellion is somewhat forgotten thanks to re-writing history efforts and ''historians'' like this guy..
most well adjusted turkish nationalist
@@ggoddkkiller1342 not mentioning all these things is not the same as a mistake, cmon.
@@ThePoutinePrince You are always free to confute anything i write if you can manage, but ofc your kind usually chooses to be smart ass rather than being actually smart..
@@Manpacxs Hmm, if they are intentional they wouldn't be mistakes perhaps you are right.
It's shocking just how different the political landscape would look (in terms of progressive/moderate/conservative social policy, in particular) if different groups of people who were already living in the area had won certain conflicts.
Same story the whole world an timeliness over. An it's rarely the good guys who win until the end at least.
I would hazard to guess zero difference.
The region hit the jackpot on oil.
Ijs that discovering silver mines in South America didn't magically make Spain more progressive. I'd say it made them much more corrupt after discovering cheap wealth than they were before discovering it.
Its not plausible that dumping that much wealth on any nation state would somehow not lead to fast corruption and decadence and generally leaning on humanities more negative impulses.
Most likely the worst excesses of even the United States of America can be plausibly explained that we do not actually struggle anymore as much as our pioneer and revolutionary ancestors, so it's very easy to fall into the habits Great Britain had.
Whether it be Saudi Arabia or Oman, someone was going to get a huge amount of oil eventually. The wealth itself was very likely to make it cheap and affordable to remain coarse and not be motivated to progress very much. When the Ottomans made a lot of money being the middle men of trade, they were not motivated to change their ways as urgently as Portugal was motivated to start the Age of Exploration.
And further though the Roman Republic began somewhat moral, when it reached the power of an empire, it lost much of the motivation to be so moral.
Suffering builds character and luxury spoils it. But suffering is tragic and I would still alleviate suffering by sharing wealth with the poor.
If no oil had been found in the desert I think they would have been likely to depend more on history and cultural learning centers for prestige on the world stage and been that much % more a little more peaceful land.
It's hard to be sure but I feel that assuming that giving the oil to someone else and expecting them to be more noble with it is naive. They are likely equal as people but the oil itself is a temptation that would test any culture. 🤔
@@darthparallax5207 I was talking about other leaders in the area who had less backwards values winning militarily. Sure cruising off Oil would have always been a thing, but if the leadership aren't bigoted zealots, and don't rely on bigoted zealots to retain power, then who knows what could have happened as history marched ever forward.
@@Trump2024aswwho is good and who is bad? Everyone justifies their own violence and expansionism.
@@meaghanorlinski8464 That's the key good guys don't harm innocents unnecessarily both sides have made it clear there bad guys but America acts like only one is an the restvof the world the other. Times like this I praise God for giving me two middle 🖕 fuck all degenerative killer's.
Thank you for covering this Jabzy, I look forwards to the next few months of videos!
In the Middle East particularly, Western colonial powers didn't draw many borders themselves. Nearly all were legacy borders from the Ottoman Empire, or already under the direct control of local warlords and therefore self asserted. Even while ostensibly under control of European powers Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Israel all asserted their own borders through a mix of military and political power.
This is why the modern borders of the Middle East mirror closely the independent rulers and internal administrative divisions of Islamic, and even pre-Islamic empires that came before it.
Thank you, people have blame this problems on western colonialism forgetting that non white people have agency to.
Not mentioning how the hated "straight line" borders actually cut through DESERT!
The FUCK are you taking about during the OTTOMAN EMPIRE there wes no iraq or syria jordan they were artificial created
@@animeXcaso not rly, there was no straight line borders imposed by the ottomans.
I think he is referring to the sykes picot borders
@@someguy4512
Honestly this was pretty straightforward. It isn't biased mostly because it is simply presenting the facts in as best it can given any included inaccuracies that may arise with historical records written by people who might be inclined to include their own bias in them. And for that I do applaud Jazby. Well done sir! 10/10
İ agree
This was mostly correct but there were some huge mistakes and clear bias through it, for example in Ottoman religious minorities could operate their own religious institutions, their own government institutions, their own schools, their own courts, they could even issue their own laws! Care to share which European empire gave such rights to any religious minority? But even then they were still ''persecuted'', i really wonder how exactly. Jizya tax was very very small price for having such rights and it wasn't even a high tax, for example wealthier regions like Greece never had any problems paying Jizya tax for over 500 years while only really poor regions like Serbia struggled to pay it so blood tax was collected instead. And those children perhaps were taken forcefully but they weren't becoming slave soldiers at all. They were receiving 4 years long education and depending on their success they were receiving further education and becoming Ottoman officials or were enlisted into Janissary corps which was receiving one of highest salaries among all Ottoman standing army but they were still ''slaves'' somehow..
Also claiming Muhammad Ali Pasha was a bashi-bazouk is a massive mistake, i really wonder where he could learn such a thing! Ali Pasha was an Albanian who received at least 10 years of education to become a ''general'' (Pasha is actually a Turkish rank close to general) to lead armies and govern provinces. But he indeed raised a small army of Albanians as bashi-bazouks. There was never an official Ottoman unit as bashi-bazouks but especially during war times Pashas were often raising irregular armies as bashi-bazouks so it just means irregular soldiers.
As one of correct information, the infighting between Arabic tribes had been quite common as mostly Arabs were ruling themselves not Ottoman which allowed a lot of powerplay between tribes. In late 18th century first Saudi rebellion happened along with their radical ideology, same as their late atrocities they were quite brutal burning down towns and slaughtering ''non-Muslims'' as they wished. Ottoman ordered Ali Pasha to raise a large army in Egypt and end their rebellion. Ali Pasha did so without much resistance from Saudis but he had a large intact army now while Ottoman was quite weak so he decided his payment wasn't enough and asked for more by force. He never ever became ruler of Egypt, this is another huge mistake ''history channels'' are often making. Muhammad Ali Pasha remained as OTTOMAN GOVERNER of Egypt even after defeating Ottoman, only became governer of Syria etc as well. Ottoman attacked him back only few years later but didn't remove him from his position entirely only revoked his governship from other regions while he and his dynasty remained as governers of Egypt. Even in 1914 Egypt was still officially a part of Ottoman until WW1 began then British finally ended it by using the war as an excuse.
As last even this map isn't enough to explain struggle in the region as more and more foreign powers kept always involving, for example Russian empire's invasion of Caucasus changed power balance entirely and Armenians became a russian proxy since then. It was somehow claimed that Armenian population disappeared because of genocide but it is completely false as in 1914 Russian empire invaded eastern Turkey so Ottoman wasn't even controlling Armenian majority cities in 1915 rather they were under control of RUSSIAN EMPIRE! After Ottoman defeats against russian empire Armenians wrongly believed Ottoman was about to collapse and rebelled as a russian proxy in late 1914. But ofc they were wrong and Ottoman displaced them into Syria and Lebanon to suppress their rebellion then most of them decided to migrate into Russian empire over Caucasus mountains. The whole point of this displacement was moving Armenians away from front lines with russian empire which was supplying them arms but ofc even Armenian rebellion is somewhat forgotten thanks to re-writing history efforts and ''historians'' like this guy..
@@ggoddkkiller1342Thank you.
It is absolutely biased, in many ways. Not “simply presenting the facts” at all. Subtle language is hiding things like Ottoman colonialism and modern Druze life in “the Levant,” aka Israel and the Palestinian Territories. Whatever one’s opinion of the current situation is, that term simply obscures the plain truth. Also the term ”Arabization” to represent centuries of forced conversions (on pain of death), destruction of native tribal cultures, etc.
@@Historian212conversion was for the most part coerced not forced. Same with the reconquista until the ending phase.
You mean to tell me that an area with thousands of years of history is intrinsically complicated and more than some people riding camels.
If you think about it it is just people riding camels though
@@EverythingInTheFramealthough they did battle with the _horserider_ tribes.
And let's not forget the heretic spoilsports who brought tanks to perfectly fine cavalry battles.
This is absolutely amazing! And only part 1 of 10 planned?! I don't even know where you will go from this as it is already so comprehensive! Not since the days of Masaman have I been so excited for a youtube mapping project.
Not sure it's the right niche but if anyone's interested in Early Modern warfare, Ottoman, Safavid, Moghul, etc., I hotly recommend Schwerpunkt's videos series
Kings and Generals along with Dose of History has crazy good Middle East history videos too
This was mostly correct but there were some huge mistakes and clear bias through it, for example in Ottoman religious minorities could operate their own religious institutions, their own government institutions, their own schools, their own courts, they could even issue their own laws! Care to share which European empire gave such rights to any religious minority? But even then they were still ''persecuted'', i really wonder how exactly. Jizya tax was very very small price for having such rights and it wasn't even a high tax, for example wealthier regions like Greece never had any problems paying Jizya tax for over 500 years while only really poor regions like Serbia struggled to pay it so blood tax was collected instead. And those children perhaps were taken forcefully but they weren't becoming slave soldiers at all. They were receiving 4 years long education and depending on their success they were receiving further education and becoming Ottoman officials or were enlisted into Janissary corps which was receiving one of highest salaries among all Ottoman standing army but they were still ''slaves'' somehow..
Also claiming Muhammad Ali Pasha was a bashi-bazouk is a massive mistake, i really wonder where he could learn such a thing! Ali Pasha was an Albanian who received at least 10 years of education to become a ''general'' (Pasha is actually a Turkish rank close to general) to lead armies and govern provinces. But he indeed raised a small army of Albanians as bashi-bazouks. There was never an official Ottoman unit as bashi-bazouks but especially during war times Pashas were often raising irregular armies as bashi-bazouks so it just means irregular soldiers.
As one of correct information, the infighting between Arabic tribes had been quite common as mostly Arabs were ruling themselves not Ottoman which allowed a lot of powerplay between tribes. In late 18th century first Saudi rebellion happened along with their radical ideology, same as their late atrocities they were quite brutal burning down towns and slaughtering ''non-Muslims'' as they wished. Ottoman ordered Ali Pasha to raise a large army in Egypt and end their rebellion. Ali Pasha did so without much resistance from Saudis but he had a large intact army now while Ottoman was quite weak so he decided his payment wasn't enough and asked for more by force. He never ever became ruler of Egypt, this is another huge mistake ''history channels'' are often making. Muhammad Ali Pasha remained as OTTOMAN GOVERNER of Egypt even after defeating Ottoman, only became governer of Syria etc as well. Ottoman attacked him back only few years later but didn't remove him from his position entirely only revoked his governship from other regions while he and his dynasty remained as governers of Egypt. Even in 1914 Egypt was still officially a part of Ottoman until WW1 began then British finally ended it by using the war as an excuse.
As last even this map isn't enough to explain struggle in the region as more and more foreign powers kept always involving, for example Russian empire's invasion of Caucasus changed power balance entirely and Armenians became a russian proxy since then. It was somehow claimed that Armenian population disappeared because of genocide but it is completely false as in 1914 Russian empire invaded eastern Turkey so Ottoman wasn't even controlling Armenian majority cities in 1915 rather they were under control of RUSSIAN EMPIRE! After Ottoman defeats against russian empire Armenians wrongly believed Ottoman was about to collapse and rebelled as a russian proxy in late 1914. But ofc they were wrong and Ottoman displaced them into Syria and Lebanon to suppress their rebellion then most of them decided to migrate into Russian empire over Caucasus mountains. The whole point of this displacement was moving Armenians away from front lines with russian empire which was supplying them arms but ofc even Armenian rebellion is somewhat forgotten thanks to re-writing history efforts and ''historians'' like this guy..
I think a history of Central America would be nice, I feel like they are forgotten between North and South America.
He won't even know what the reserva misquita was.
@@hispalismapping155Britain: Descendants of criminals, what do you expect?
I mean, the whole of history has more interesting topics than central america, but they have a lot to tell, more so out of corruption and terrorism sadly.
@@anti-spiral159I mean, that's subjective tbh. Like, the rise of the timurids and the Mughal can be classified as an interesting topic or useless I information depending where you live for example.
stuff like the general captaincy of Guatemala and the federal republic of central America, as well as Panama and pre Colombian Mesoamerica could make a decent video
42:28 For a bit of an extra information, Bashi Bozouk means “not right in the head” in Turkish (Başı Bozuk). So they were expectedly - brutal.
Tintin moment
This was mostly correct but there were some huge mistakes and clear bias through it, for example in Ottoman religious minorities could operate their own religious institutions, their own government institutions, their own schools, their own courts, they could even issue their own laws! Care to share which European empire gave such rights to any religious minority? But even then they were still ''persecuted'', i really wonder how exactly. Jizya tax was very very small price for having such rights and it wasn't even a high tax, for example wealthier regions like Greece never had any problems paying Jizya tax for over 500 years while only really poor regions like Serbia struggled to pay it so blood tax was collected instead. And those children perhaps were taken forcefully but they weren't becoming slave soldiers at all. They were receiving 4 years long education and depending on their success they were receiving further education and becoming Ottoman officials or were enlisted into Janissary corps which was receiving one of highest salaries among all Ottoman standing army but they were still ''slaves'' somehow..
Also claiming Muhammad Ali Pasha was a bashi-bazouk is a massive mistake, i really wonder where he could learn such a thing! Ali Pasha was an Albanian who received at least 10 years of education to become a ''general'' (Pasha is actually a Turkish rank close to general) to lead armies and govern provinces. But he indeed raised a small army of Albanians as bashi-bazouks. There was never an official Ottoman unit as bashi-bazouks but especially during war times Pashas were often raising irregular armies as bashi-bazouks so it just means irregular soldiers.
As one of correct information, the infighting between Arabic tribes had been quite common as mostly Arabs were ruling themselves not Ottoman which allowed a lot of powerplay between tribes. In late 18th century first Saudi rebellion happened along with their radical ideology, same as their late atrocities they were quite brutal burning down towns and slaughtering ''non-Muslims'' as they wished. Ottoman ordered Ali Pasha to raise a large army in Egypt and end their rebellion. Ali Pasha did so without much resistance from Saudis but he had a large intact army now while Ottoman was quite weak so he decided his payment wasn't enough and asked for more by force. He never ever became ruler of Egypt, this is another huge mistake ''history channels'' are often making. Muhammad Ali Pasha remained as OTTOMAN GOVERNER of Egypt even after defeating Ottoman, only became governer of Syria etc as well. Ottoman attacked him back only few years later but didn't remove him from his position entirely only revoked his governship from other regions while he and his dynasty remained as governers of Egypt. Even in 1914 Egypt was still officially a part of Ottoman until WW1 began then British finally ended it by using the war as an excuse.
As last even this map isn't enough to explain struggle in the region as more and more foreign powers kept always involving, for example Russian empire's invasion of Caucasus changed power balance entirely and Armenians became a russian proxy since then. It was somehow claimed that Armenian population disappeared because of genocide but it is completely false as in 1914 Russian empire invaded eastern Turkey so Ottoman wasn't even controlling Armenian majority cities in 1915 rather they were under control of RUSSIAN EMPIRE! After Ottoman defeats against russian empire Armenians wrongly believed Ottoman was about to collapse and rebelled as a russian proxy in late 1914. But ofc they were wrong and Ottoman displaced them into Syria and Lebanon to suppress their rebellion then most of them decided to migrate into Russian empire over Caucasus mountains. The whole point of this displacement was moving Armenians away from front lines with russian empire which was supplying them arms but ofc even Armenian rebellion is somewhat forgotten thanks to re-writing history efforts and ''historians'' like this guy..
Lmao
@@ggoddkkiller1342 are you turkish?
@@p1xelat3d Yep, im Turkish.
Wow, what an incredibly complicated mix of cultures, religions, identities, and beliefs you have described here.. Truly fascinating though. Thanks for the excellent, well-researched content!
@ lahma69
"Fascinating" Hmm...
When a large enough
number of them move
to YOUR country they
eventually attempt to
take over YOUR country
Great video! It shows the rich diversity of the region while starting to show just how complex a task drawing borders would have been.
On top of religion, tribe & ethnicity one would need to consider:
1. The viability of the proposed state (could it be effectively governed? Access to freshwater/trade? would it be able to defend borders? etc)
2. Who would receive power in the new state?
3. Competing historical claims
4. What the people in any new state want.
5. What other powers would agree to based on their own geopolitical interests.
There’s a simple solution, create a large Arab state ruled by the Hashemite descendants of the prophet. This was the “obvious” answer and the promise of the British/French to the Arabs.
But then the British and French betrayed the Arabs and signed the infamous Sykes-Picot.
@@Handle0108San Reno conference. Sykes-picot was denied by league of nations, never took efect.
Peeps avoid san reno cause that would question lebanon, jordan, syria and iraq as much as israel.
@@puraLusa all those states were creations of European imperialists, Arabs were a United nation before that. It’s unfortunate what France and Britain did.
@@Handle0108yeah and as the video explained for almost 45 minutes that would’ve been a horribly inefficient, ethnically and religiously messy, state bursting at the seams from internal conflict. Quit larping
@@sucloxsucloxsson I am actually Middle Eastern for your info, don’t pretend to be a smart-ass when it comes to the Middle East from watching one video mate. I am well aware of the politics in our region, and I am hundred percent certain that an Arab state with the Hashemite kingdom at the leadership position would be the best government.
We (as a species) are still getting used to living together in large groups. For the vast majority of human history our thinking was 'only my family matters,' which progressed to 'only my tribe matters,' which progressed to 'only my town matters,' which has now progressed to 'only my country matters.
Learning to tolerate, how to learn to live together in larger and larger groups. Has been a slow and often bloody process. But when you consider that In the last ten thousand or so years. We've gone from being a species that lives in small nomadic hunter gatherer groups to being a species that lives in villages (mostly in the countryside) to being a species that lives in large cities (about 80% of us now do) we should appreciate the speed and magnitude of the progress we've made and maybe even give ourselves a pat on the back...
Nation's were formed out of forced assimilation, and genocide and expulsion of people's, that's the only reason they exist.
perhaps in the future.... only my planet matters....
I think realistically, the fall of the Ottoman Empire was going to result in bloody conflict regardless of the interference of the French and British. Whether it made things worse is a difficult question to answer, perhaps letting them duke it out by themselves for a decade or so would have resulted in a new era of stability, or maybe they'd be just as much as war in the modern day in this alternate timeline as they are in ours.
Funnier part is, since Turkish dominion ended, nobody could form a more peceaful and serene order in the vast region and before Turks rose to sultanhood from mercenary status, Muslim world were busy eating eachother for centuries in early medieval times.
It's not as if bloody conflict did not happen during the Ottoman empire.
Because Turk's are warriors and they kept whole islam world safe meanwhile arabs constantly backstab Ottomans.Arabs never contributed half of Balkans did.@@subutaynoyan5372
@@FrancisFjordCupolaNo one is saying it was bloodless... but it was relatively peaceful.
@@FrancisFjordCupolaGive me source, now.
The most in-depth middle east discussion I have EVER seen, I cannot believe this is only part 1 of ten!! Are you setting out to make an entire college course for free?
Very detailed video about the complex political dynamics of a region that has too often been generalized from the outside view. Thank you!
Your videos are so informative and well made, excited to watch the whole series
I can only imagine that the comment section will continue to develop peacefully and civilly as the video gets older.
nothing short of an amazing effort, while I heard about most this information here and there I have never seen it played out like this. thanks to you the middle east has a new prospective in my eye. if a UA-cam video ever deserved a standing ovation this definitely deserves one, thank you.
My man...I'm from the Middle East and I find this amazing. You've done your research, amazing job.
Levant gonna be totally peaceful and uncontroversial.
FINALLY SOMEONE SAID IT,
Despite few small inaccuracies (which is still more accurate than 99% of content available) I am happy you pointed out that problem of the middle east is not as simplistic as border disputes
As a muslim and an iranian i gotta say kudos man the info is so correct and i learned a lottt
6 points to consider when identifying an 'Arab':-
1- People migrate and intermix , and there is no single nation on earth with a pure heritage. Trying to divide people into certain ethnicities and races is impossible and absurd. And it is absolutely okay for a nation to claim more than one heritage.
2- Arabic is a civilizational language much like Latin, Turkish or English which are spoken by millions of non native descendants today.
3- Unlike the original latins who are no longer traceable today, the original Arabic speakers still maintain their pure paternal lineages and many of them refuse to intermarry with Arabized non-Arabs. In fact there are various conflicts between the Arabised and the original Arabs around the Arab world, such as the example of Iraq mentioned in the beginning of the video, northern Syria and Sinai in Egypt.
4- Even if you could distinguish between the Original Arabs and the Arabised Arabs, there is still the question of what are these original Arabs and what are there origins? The original Arabs are divided into two groups, each claims to be the 'true Arabs'. The first is the Qahtanites, thought to be the first inhabitants of western Arabia, and their native language was Himyaric. The second is Adnanites, Armeiac descendants who settled western Arabia and intermixed with the Qahtanintes and the Arabic language was formed by their interactions. They claim they are the descendants of Ismael, the Egyptian son of Abraham. In addition to these two groups, there are tens of other extinct ethnic groups that have settled Arabia in the recorded history, and possibly contributed to the Arabic language and culture such as Thamud, Magan, Nabatians, Sebeans, and others.
5- The 'Arab world' is furthermore divided by vast deserts which divide the Arab world into small habitable green pockets, such as the levant, the Nile valley, south Iraq, Oman, Yemen and the Maghreb. This geographical diaspora has maintained a level of cultural distinction in each pocket.
6- Finally the most important point is that Pan-Arab nationalism and Anti-Arab Nationalism (Pharoanism, Phenoacianism, Pan-Berbeirsm, Pan-Nubiasm,..etc) are very politicized. Modern Arab nationalism was ironically enough started mostly by Christian Arabs in order to find a common cause with Muslim Arabs in their fight against the Ottomans but the idea was ignored and ridiculed by most of Arabs due to the awareness of the immense tribal, regional, ethnical , and religious diversity of the Arab world. Later on the Hashimites adopted the idea and used it to justify their rule over the Arab world but the ideology only really kicked in due to the Arab-Israeli conflict which required a strong bond between the different Arabic speaking nations to protect their holy Islamic and Christian sites.
An interesting example of how the ethnic heritage of a nation can be politicized is Egypt. Despite being ruled by an Albanian dynasty and with a mostly Arabized population, Egypt adopted Pan-Arabism in the 20th century which allowed it as the most developed country in the region to project its influence upon the smaller newly formed other Arab nations. However, in the last decade Egypt's geopolitical role diminished due to internal instabilities and instead of influencing other Arab countries, it became a victim of the never ending Arab conflicts surrounding it. It became a battlefield between the Saudi-backed military junta and the Qatari-backed Islamists. In addition to being subject of trst attacks from groups based in Libya, Sudan and Syria. As a result Pheroanism gained popularity among Egyptians as a way to escape the chaos of the Arab world and the foreign interferences by fellow Arab nations.
Very good comment except for 4 and 6
@@Morso8 why do u disagree with 4 and 6?
Turkish is a civilizational language?
@@dinosaurusrex1482 yes, what i mean is that turkish at some point in history became dominant many aspects such as trade, science, politics and islamic theology so strangers seeked to learn it to benefit from it
@sepep6288 turkey doesn't have much influence anymore, though.
The timing of this series is almost eerie, great work
Brother, At 11:40 you mentioned Al Sunni twice, al Sunni wanted abu bakar when al Shai'a wanted Ali.. Thank you for a great video, I know now about my origin more than what I learned in 35 years, keep up the good work
I love opening my UA-cam and seeing Jabzy has once again, uploaded a quality video :). Thanks Jab! Can't wait for more
One very important mistake this map makes is dividing sunni school of thoughts across border lines. This simply isn't the case. People almost always only identity as sunni and look at all of the schools of thoughts when deciding on an issue
And I don't mean that as in "we all live in peace" but rather, in most places, if you ask someone "are you a maliki or shafihi?" you'll get a blank stare because either they don't know what either of those things are, they just use elemets from both of them, or they never thought about it.
It's like asking "are you an Oxford comma user?" the person you're asking obviously use one or the other, or just a mix of both, but it's not something most people pay attention to/know what it means or care about much
Never have I ever been so fascinated and engrossed in a video that ultimately gave me a confused and massive headache! Very well done indeed. I learned a lot.…… I think. I’m not so sure I’ll remember all of this. But, it was extremely interesting. I now need a beer.
This is an insane level of depth. I thought "he forgot to mention the jews in the middle east" and then you did extensively. 44 minutes of info and its only 1/15? wow. well done.
This is sooo cool pls continue this alhamdullilah someone finally looking at our islamic history without negativity
Great video as always.
The big issue is that the idea of the nation state is uniquely European. It works well in Europe and east Asia where people have been relatively homogeneous culturally, ethnically, and religiously for centuries an their colonies in the Americas but it doesn’t work well in places like South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East where tribes and empires have been the mainstay of the regions.
What exactly is an Iraqi? Is a Sunni Kurd just as iraqi as a Shia Arab? Are Tajiks, Pashtos and Hazsras all equally afghans? It all gets worse when resources are discovered such as oil, minerals, or even water. Even if a map could more easily be drawn along ethic or religious lines would Saudi Arabia willingly give up its oil reserves in the east? Would Afghanistan give up its rivers in the south? Would Iran sacrifice land on all its borders?
Egypt has always been what you may call a nation state. The idea of a nation state didn't really start with europe, more so the modern shape/style of a nation state
Which Is more reason why a Supranational political and economic union of mutual cooperation like the EU would be the best thing to happen for the Middle East imo. And in fact the Ottoman Empire should have created a Supranational "Commonwealth of mutual political, economic and military cooperation" between it's constituent parts in the 20th century before ww1 and just avoid joining ww1 in general.
The nation state is not "natural" and has to be created by human force, like any society. It only "works" in Europe because all the wars and forced conversions and ethnic cleansings and expulsions and genocides and language campaigns have already happened in the past, during the Middle Ages and the World Wars. Europe didn't just naturally have neat borders with ethnically homogenous populations, it took a lot of enforced suffering to get there.
The Iberians forced Jews and Muslims to convert or flee. The French committed linguicide on the Occitan language, look up La Vergonha. The Greeks and Turks had a forced population exchange. And so on...
Meanwhile in the Ottoman Empire everybody was coexisting relatively peacefully until the rise of nationalism, and with the creation of nation states came the suffering. Not to say that the empire should have remained in place, I don't know that.
@@felixer6308 I see what you are getting at but in an imperial system there is an inherent supremacy of one group over others
@@felixer6308 "Meanwhile in the Ottoman Empire everybody was coexisting relatively peacefully" Hahahaha NO
This was a great watch, jam packed with general and complex history.
Aside from a few inaccuracies here and there, I really love your videos and appreciate the amount of research you've done.
I believe the greatest thing everyone who watches this should be grateful for is ... that there wasn't a quiz afterwards.
Man you're so underrated
I'm an Arab history Nerd and this is Impressive.
bro did his research 🗿👍
I hope we will be able to get a video series like this for South Asia (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, etc) and Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Indonesia, and The Philippines).
Include Sri Lanka as well.
It's funny to me how we live in an age where ethnostates are viewed as a bad thing, but simultaneously the west gets blamed for not drawing borders along ethnic lines in the middle east and Africa.
It's also kind of arrogant to think that imposed borders can prevent wars in regions that were never peaceful to begin with.
I think "along ethnic borders" is usually the criticism, but it comes from a place of being completely arbitrary, not necessarily inadherence to ethnic groups. They also wouldn't be "ethnostates" as much as nation-states, because ethnostates heavily implies exclusionary practices which dispel minorities or enforce certain cultural practices over others.
I completly agree with your last point but... I think you're confused about "ethnostate" and "nation state". An ethno-state is a state that exclude people from other ethnicity, while nation state accept minority.
And a nation is not the same as an ethnicity. It's a bit controversial to take this exemple, but let say the USA, there is an "USA" nation. With people feeling americans. But those americans can be hispanic, afro-american, etc
What's arrogant is to act like independent countries could not be expected to negotiate and redraw their borders themselves.
Instead some colonial power many decades ago is blamed.
@@BountyFlamor Once you draw borders, they're fixed. I'm sorry, but no, you can't expect countries to just "negotiate and redraw their borders themselves" lmao. What an incredibly naive idea. Have you ever bothered to look into how these negotiations would work? Any time in history where two countries meet to discuss borders and one side just willingly gets absorbed, annexed, or split by another? When you set a border, it's going to be defended militarily, you can't just redraw it.
@@juliank6793 You must have never heard of a young country called South Sudan, just to name one example.
Of course, there was violence involved, but it ended in negotiations and the two parties managed to do it by themselves.
Q:How divided is the Middle East?
A: Yes.
Incredibile video ! great value!! thank you for this masterpiece !
Great video, but there are some corrections:
1-At the time of the rise of the Saudi state, al-muntafiq didn't settle or control Eastern Arabia anymore, rather it was under the control of the Bani Khalid, a subtribe of the previously ruling banu jabr clan, rather, the Muntafiq power base was in southern Iraq, at the city of Basra. The ottomans officially integrated them into the administrative structure by making the district (sanja) of muntafiq but they still had major power in the vilayet of basra. But still, the saudis did indeed battle them and they battled the Saudis too.
2-The Kharijites, pronounced khar-ij-ite, not kha-ji-rite, weren't really the predecessors to the ibadis, rather the ibadis are the only surviving kharejite sect
3-I wouldn't say salafis reject all other madhabs, more like they don't view the scholarly differences as compulsory and more arbitrary than other sects, that is if you can call salafism a sect, since in most cases its an outside term
4-Nubians are well respected in Egypt and the views of some racists and TV hosts like Tamer Amin, who mirrors government sentiment who sometimes clashes with nubians due to their housing crisis, do not reflect the views of the general Egyptian populace. Its pretty saddening that you fell into this trap of generalisation.
Other than that, amazing job on the research, it's really rare to see someone so committed to a video about the middle east
I agree
Very interesting video, really enjoyed it. I would love to learn more about the cultural distinctions between the majority Arab countries, which are rarely talked about and much simplified here in the West
This video gave me a head ache and i'm probably gonna rewatch this a lot while also needing a lot of time to process the information
Insightful and thorough
Watching a similar video about Europe would be interesting. :)
Druze dude here, small correction, the biggest Druze population is found in southern syria on the Druze Mountain region.
I really loved the depth of this video. It is very well animated and narrated.
My only critique is the lack of categorisation of the Arabic ethno-linguistic subgroups. I don't see why you'd go into detail about the different kinds of Turkics, Iranics, etc but never even mention that the Arabs are not just sedentary and nomadic peoples of different Islamic/Christian sects, but are also divided into well-defined groups such as Levantine, Mesopotamian, etc. This is an essential categorisation that explains why there was a clear struggle in uniting countries like Syria and Egypt under the UAR and such.
Maybe because they aren't Arabs but arabised?
Skyes: “How should we divide up the Middle East…….straight line?”
Picot: “Straight line.”
Excellent vid...!!!
... Just became your newest sub...!!! 👍🏽 👍🏽 👍🏽
The problem was never the drawing of the borders but the enforcement of the nation state within a territorial entity. The League of Nations and later UN forced these borders to be recognized under a new world order to a region and people that never enforced such rigid divisions.
There’s a lot of emphasis on the religious and ethnic differences causing conflict within these borders but these are more a side effect of the enforced notion of a nation state as opposed to just sporadic ethnic-religious conflict. The borders aren’t the problem. It’s the forced notion of nation states.
I do wonder that even if the Europeans did not enforce the notion of a nation-state, would the various ethnicities in the region come up with it themselves, especially after having observed it from the foreigners.
Balfour
@@khoivo7947 Nope, it was reactionary in some parts like Algeria and Morocco.
Assyrians are not descended of ancient assyrians. That's like saying people in Tuscany are actually ancient etruscans, a group that stopped existing by 500BC. Ancient assyrians were long wiped out as a group by millenia of Roman-Persian rule. There was no Assyrian ethnicity by the time Christianity was spreading, to ignore this let alone to claim that the entirety of this "assyrian" group simply converted and were the only ones to do so is simply retrospective projection. That is like saying neolithic farmers in Palestine were actually Jews even though the concept of a Jew did not exist. Modern Assyrians are an ethno-religious group of native christians, yes, just because they adopted the name Assyrian in relation to the area they lived in does not make them descendents of ancient Assyrians, which they are not.
On another note: do you have a schedule for the other 9 parts? I think I'll subscribe and hope you keep it up. Amazing work!
Wow jus wow , great job dude one of the Best videos on this topic
Great video. A Tour de force. Really puts things in perspective.
Absolutely amazing video.
Man, this is some comprehensive take. Great work!
I see you've made another fantastic video as usual! Just as a little request though, can you start including your sources in the description of your video, or in a pinned comment?
I completely get that. But when it comes to sources for these videos the list is almost endless. I don't tend to pick out 3 or 4 books to use as sources. It tends to be 1 chapter or article to help write essentially 2 or 3 lines. By the point I list is almost so long it starts to become as useless as not having one.
If there's anything you want a source on in particular though, I can send that over.
@@JabzyJoe I get that, but it would really give justice to the amount of work you put into them, a triumphant list proving your efforts and credibility even more. And I really like looking at this sort of behind-the-scenes and even read the said sources because I like many others are interested. So you really should consider doing it anyway, a bibliography is a badge of honour amongst historians.
@@JabzyJoe Full Bibliographies are vital for any sort of history documentary. I greatly appreciate your content--and am seriously impressed that you aren't just paraphrasing Wiki articles and the likes, as I've seen FAR too many history UA-camrs do--but at the moment there's not really a way for people to assess how reliable your videos are.
@@p00bixand that’s a good thing. UA-cam videos should be held in contempt in lieu of a traditional education with accredited professors and textbooks.
@@p00bix you completely misunderstood.
Wow, This might be the best summary of the middle east. Well done sir :)
Wow, what a video. Great job on this. I can't even imagine how much time this took to make
This video is a banger mate. Good job! It was super interesting and thorough.
Great video
@Savetion.. no thanks
There is a sect of Syriac Christians who have been living in Malabar/Kerala since 52AD - now a large community in modern Kerala. There is also a smaller community of Malabar Jews since 380BC - the "Cochin Jews". Most have emigrated to Israel now. Do a video on them sometime
economic migration is not very interesting
@@henryhudson9556 wow😦 when? where?
A map key on this video would be a game changer
I can't believe Jabzy knew about the Hamas attack and its impact on the UA-cam algorythm this much in advance
Yes been waiting for this series for so long ❤❤❤❤❤
As an Arab I see this documentary as the most informative and unbiased documentary on the subject, I even learned new things about my history, thank you for your great effort
Witch school did you go most arab schools in arabian nations teach this !!!!!
@@faisalalsanea4025 not all of it, especially the tribal history, for example I didn’t know that al sabah and al khalifah comes from bani utbah tribe
@@fbm010google search.
GEN Z generals "write that down! Write that down!!"
Nice one bro looking forward for the next one
Before i watch: spicy
This is so comprehensive. Love the work you’ve put into it.
I thought this was a fun video where you were going to tell an alternative division plan to Sykes-Picot agreement.
I feel like I had a lecture on Middle East and Muslim History, now. I feel cheated, in the best way possible.
Thanks.
Thank you very much for that information... It's so much more than us in the west would ever be privileged to know❤
Amazing Video, great information. I learned some of it in History here in Lebanon but not all. Outstanding effort.
I am Maronite from Israel ✝️
this was fun to watch. the distinction made between shias and sunnis was a little simplistic tho. Shias have more sects because they have been prosecuted minorities, but Shia schools too have historically had major disagreements, specially with regards to the Hellenic concepts and their application to Islamic theology. A good example of this would have been the Minha episode during the Abbasid rule.
aye he aknowledges he simplifies the situation alot as discussion of the complexities and history of each religious sect would be too long and require alot of videos
I love how in-depth and nuanced your videos are! I'm so sick of people blaming all of the middle east's problems on Sykes-Picot.
It certainly didn't help.
Didn't help
@@Jon-ox7hk i never said it did
Jaw Dropping STUDY ! I Appreciate the great effort you took !!
Thank You.
I will listen again.
Great content! Just one minor suggestion: you should put your sources in the video description or at the end
I really am impressed how deep you went with this. I believe the only thing missing here is you having a deep understanding of Arabic language because it will make you understand much more about the history of Arabs and will give you another aspect of this history. Overall, there are some conceptual mistakes about some aspects, but honestly great efforts and thank you for the honest hard work.
I tried the basics, but I can't even pronounce the numbers properly haha
@@JabzyJoealso tried learning Arabic, the sounds that we don't have in English were the hardest part
@@JabzyJoe Keep it up, it’s amazing, and we can’t wait to see you one of the biggest channels on UA-cam 🙏🏻
Wouldn't it make sense to also then learn Persian?
Egyptians are not arabs. They are cousins. True, a big part of Egyptians are mixed with Arab, but not pure arab blood.
There is no pure blood anywhere in the world not in England not in China not in Egypt not in India so this is not an argument. Egyptians are Arabs period
They generic Arabs
Well, this type of division ignores a few important factors:
These groups did not historically divide themselves by ‘rulers’, but rather by important cities. Cities naturally originate from geography and climate; food and water access being likely the most important factors. Food commodities did not travel long in old times till modern engine powered vehicles and refrigeration, with perhaps exceptions of water routes carrying grains.
Also, mountains and other hard-to-cross areas like big rivers, lakes, deserts etc. made for good borders between more centralized powers.
In areas where population density was low, such as mountains and desert, rule was established via tribes, some of which still seem to have some sort of impact.
I guess before the times of nationalism and national military mobilization, countries and borders didn’t really mean much in this area. Countries were a sum of loosely coupled cities that paid varying degrees of taxed and provided some number of soldiers during war. Even control of natural resources come into play later on, since trade was not this controlled and regulated.
That was very comprehensive. Thank you!
ugh i was waiting for this about every colony even looking for it for YEARS and moment i stop thinking abt it this shows up
Arabic proverb cited by the North African analytic historian Ibn Khaldun of the fourteenth century:
dawlah 'ind al-turk, din 'ind al-'arab wa adab 'ind al-furs
Power (rests) with the Turk, religion with the Arab, and culture with the Persian.
Zirto
Great video watched the whole thing. There was just one thing Kurds ancestors are a mix of ancient tribes such as the Gutians, Carduchis in addition to the Medes. There is an ancient Sumerian clay tablet called “Land of Karda” that talks about ancient Kurds .
Kurds decent from Iranians
@@bugrasevinc9696 most Kurds come from non Iranians such as Gutians and Carduchis our ancestors were non iranic
@@bugrasevinc9696zaten biz siz eksik olmazsınız.
@@tekhayat5995 ne demeye çalıştığını anlamadım
@@Gutians what you say doesn't make any sense how could "some" Kurds decent from different races
Almost every single arab wants to be part of a unified arab state. That's how you bring peace.
You just shaved off 45 min off my workday. Thanks.
Greatest Video Title Ever???
Whenever people act like european partitions caused all the problems in Africa and the Middle East I just laugh. Most of these places will have ethnic strife regardless of how you divide them. In fact, they had strife before, so why would anyone expect them not to have any after? In parts of Africa there are groups living within fifty miles of each other who co sider themselves completely different tribes to their neighbours. Unless one plans to divide Africa and the Middle East into ten thousand countries, you will always have antagonistic groups in the same state.
Roman: the least European Berber
Granted it's not the cause of all the problems, but the current issues are very much the result of european partition and nation building. You also don't need to divide Africa or the middle east into small nation states to realize that leaving an ethnic group like the kurds without a nation of their own is a folly of European nation building.
@@TheSkcube Nationalism is a very modern idea in history
@@TheSkcube Even if they did it back then, all the surrounding nations would unite to divide the territory among themselves.
@@domca4617 by that logic we shouldn't have created a Jewish state surrounded by Arab states.