The 17th Century Crisis: Crash Course European History #11

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  • Опубліковано 22 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 799

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid 5 років тому +1026

    "Defenestration" is a word that always made me wonder why it exists. It's so oddly specific. Makes you wonder how often people used to throw others out of windows to merit inventing a word for it.

    • @danielfrancis3736
      @danielfrancis3736 4 роки тому +27

      It's German. Enough said.

    • @cellbiol7298
      @cellbiol7298 4 роки тому +84

      @@danielfrancis3736 It's Latin. The language of the time, used by historian and scientists. German would be "Fenstersturz", literally, "window drop".

    • @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin
      @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin 4 роки тому +15

      I think it was invented by writers or upper class socialites to sound smart. Shakespeare used to invent words too, iirc.

    • @arner5332
      @arner5332 4 роки тому +6

      @@cellbiol7298 i always thought it was a german word because it literally translates to un-windowing in german

    • @johnracy2871
      @johnracy2871 4 роки тому +6

      Origins: Latin-fenestram (meaning window) was adopted into German and the adapted to English structure.

  • @olin7422
    @olin7422 4 роки тому +653

    I like how this 13 minute video explained this better than the college board anointed 40 minute video.

    • @chrisdayton35
      @chrisdayton35 4 роки тому +27

      Olin cus the college board is filled with underpaid, uninspired, boomers.

  • @neemapaxima6116
    @neemapaxima6116 5 років тому +785

    Sir Isaac Newtown was born during the Thirty Years' War.
    It shows how nonlinear human progress can be.

    • @FroehligGirlz
      @FroehligGirlz 5 років тому +7

      So, maybe not an apple so much as a brick? A head?

    • @WhimsicalEloquence
      @WhimsicalEloquence 5 років тому +38

      Do you mean non-monotonic? Monotonicity refers to the directionality, i.e. something always getting or worse. A non-linear function could still be constantly improving/positive/monotonic.

    • @WalkTheHouse
      @WalkTheHouse 5 років тому +6

      Well, lots of things been thrown backwards and forwards, it may not have been an apple that was falling. Newton may have had another law...keep my head down be quite

    • @FloppsEB
      @FloppsEB 5 років тому +1

      it's clear that the apple fell along a fractal dimension of jesuit poppycock. close to e^pi.

    • @gumunduringigumundsson9344
      @gumunduringigumundsson9344 5 років тому +10

      Well Newton was a nerd.. one our best nerds ever. Looked at the moon and invented calculus.. invented a new type of telescope to look at it better... cmooon.. NEEERD! Nerds rock!

  • @MTBJJ2001
    @MTBJJ2001 Рік тому +54

    Man crash course has always been like a safe form of entertainment ya know? Like the intro, everything, just makes me feel safe and comfortable, I listen to crash course while I’m studying related topics, just to get me in that fun learning mode. I used to listen to crash course to fall asleep cause it’s so consistent and informative while not being boring

  • @matthewmcneany
    @matthewmcneany 5 років тому +825

    Imagine it, having an elite telling you that there's wealth pouring into your nation but yet you and many people you know are finding it harder and harder to pay for the basics of life.

    • @DocEonChannel
      @DocEonChannel 5 років тому +132

      The more things change, the more they stay the same...

    • @freefromreligion8090
      @freefromreligion8090 5 років тому +92

      Lust like now: CEOs getting richer than ever while middle and low earners see their purchasing power diminish

    • @RD-eg1df
      @RD-eg1df 5 років тому +73

      @Trigger Troll Yeah! Let's all be CEOs!

    • @pingpong8475
      @pingpong8475 5 років тому +38

      Please, understand that inflation is more than this. The elite had the silver, but they also experienced the inflation caused by the massive influx of silver. Many nations (By nations I mean royal families) experienced bankruptcies during this time because of the fact that they had to use more silver to pay soldiers, and not just that they also had even more soldiers to pay than before. This is when the monarchies became weak because they too lacked money, they literally had to go to debt just to continue their extravagant lifestyle because they had to keep their prestige at the same time to show their nobles and rivals that they still had power. Remeber that the royalty of the time were not usually as rich as many people think. They were almost always in debt after the 16th century due to the larger armies and navies they had to maintain and due to the inflation brought by the sudden influx of precious metals and gems.

    • @gumunduringigumundsson9344
      @gumunduringigumundsson9344 5 років тому +7

      @@RD-eg1df Good Idea. Why not..
      Automation and A.I. should end dependancy for the most neccesary things for all.. so no person will be dependent on others for survival.. *Cough! except nerds *COUGh! But good nerds don't abuse others so.. in theory everyone will be theyre own C.E.O. just doing theyre thing... me.. I'm going to sell dirt. Dirt for sale! Will be my company logo. Yours?

  • @ab76254
    @ab76254 5 років тому +499

    Me: Wow game of thrones is so violent!
    30-years war: *hold my beer*

    • @hemidas
      @hemidas 5 років тому +30

      Reality is often much stranger than fiction.

  • @andreeat608
    @andreeat608 5 років тому +420

    ''Now, I know what you're thinking, this whole history business is just one crisis after another''
    ... *Human life is just one crisis after another.*

    • @gramioerie_xi133
      @gramioerie_xi133 5 років тому +4

      *life in general

    • @hemidas
      @hemidas 5 років тому +6

      _"History is indeed little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind."_
      *Edward Gibbon*

    • @thereforeayam
      @thereforeayam 5 років тому

      That it ain't.

    • @niallquinn9128
      @niallquinn9128 5 років тому +2

      The solution is to be more and more in touch with the authenticity of yourself and the authenticity of events, not just what you're told or you're supposed to think.

    • @shenghan9385
      @shenghan9385 5 років тому +3

      Human life maybe full of crisis, but it should not be defined by them.

  • @RD-eg1df
    @RD-eg1df 5 років тому +719

    At no point did anyone stop to think "Is this what Jesus would do?"

    • @gumunduringigumundsson9344
      @gumunduringigumundsson9344 5 років тому +50

      I am very very very very veeeery very sure a lot did.. just not whole lot sometimes.. kinda forget to ask when having so much fun.. or when your mother in law demands to know why you have not avenged your whoever looming looking at you in a way that made the others think youre too much a sissy.. etc etc ..?

    • @zriiksparks5637
      @zriiksparks5637 5 років тому +14

      Jesus kicked the Jews out of the market yeet

    • @PiggySquisherCaleb
      @PiggySquisherCaleb 5 років тому +108

      As Nietzsche once said, "There only ever existed one Christian, and he died on the cross."

    • @eddgrs9193
      @eddgrs9193 5 років тому +29

      Combatant : "Is this what Jesus would do?"
      Catholic priest : "No... but for 3 gold coins - yes !"
      Combatant : "Seems legit"
      Protestant Combatant : "Dammit !"

    • @IkeOkerekeNews
      @IkeOkerekeNews 5 років тому +10

      They didn't care. It was all power consolidation for them.

  • @johgu92
    @johgu92 5 років тому +336

    The torching of Magdeburg led to the word "magdeburgisieren" which means to tptally destroy and plunder a city.

    • @mikeoxsmal8022
      @mikeoxsmal8022 5 років тому +15

      Ich werde mein Freunden magdeburgisieren.

    • @FlosBlog
      @FlosBlog 5 років тому +8

      Although, I never heard somebody use the word.

    • @johgu92
      @johgu92 5 років тому +16

      @@FlosBlog It probably was more used in the days of the 30 years war and not nowadays.

    • @FlosBlog
      @FlosBlog 5 років тому +1

      @@johgu92 Was -isierung a productive morpheme in Early Modern German?

    • @johgu92
      @johgu92 5 років тому +8

      @@FlosBlog -isierung is still very much in use in words like Modernisierung, Radikalisierung. The early modern german was different but similiar enough to make such an assumption, although there where many dialects which weren't to a large degree intelligible.

  • @halocemagnum8351
    @halocemagnum8351 5 років тому +704

    “Three decades of war”
    *begins rocking in Sabaton*

    • @nebojsag.5871
      @nebojsag.5871 5 років тому +37

      HAS MAN GONE INSANE?!!?!?

    • @lvd8122
      @lvd8122 5 років тому +1

      Name of the song?

    • @z4pax
      @z4pax 5 років тому +13

      @@lvd8122 A Lifetime Of War

    • @leedent6796
      @leedent6796 5 років тому +19

      WHEN THEY FACE DEATH THEY'RE ALL ALIKE,
      NO RIGHT OR WRONG
      RICH OR POOR
      NO MATTER WHO THEY WERE BEFORE
      GOOD OR BAD
      THEY'RE ALL THE SAME
      REST SIDE BY SIDE NOW
      *HAS MAN GONE INSANE*

    • @markkuiper7380
      @markkuiper7380 5 років тому +1

      8 decades of war

  • @MoeSalamaIbrahim
    @MoeSalamaIbrahim 5 років тому +36

    I was starting to feel bleak when John said "some good news is coming next week" and all of a sudden I got enormous goosebumps and teared of hope as if I had lived in the 17th Century. You rock, keep on making these videos forever.

  • @DietrichvonSachsen
    @DietrichvonSachsen 5 років тому +100

    "Unlike the Hundred Years War, the Thirty Years War did last for 30 years."
    While John isn't wrong, it is worth noting that, because of the international character of the Thirty Years War, that statement is only true when talking about the German states of the Holy Roman Empire. The war also included the Spanish and the Dutch fighting in the Eighty Years War, the Polish-Swedish War, and others beside.
    Seriously, the history of the Thirty Years War is a cluster**** of epic proportions.

    • @sirmeowthelibrarycat
      @sirmeowthelibrarycat 5 років тому +6

      DietrichvonSachsen 😢 Indeed so! Add the English Civil Wars (there were two) that also involved Scotland and Ireland hardly anywhere in Europe was unaffected. Include the Anglo - Dutch War and it appears that no nation was immune to war with any other nation during this period of history.

  • @thomasturner6980
    @thomasturner6980 5 років тому +313

    When starting a fire in a bakery causes the whole of London to burn down

  • @threaruscamuwundra7417
    @threaruscamuwundra7417 5 років тому +74

    This is exactly a case like you mentioned in the dark ages episode of World History. For the Dutch, this is considered the golden century, far from a period of crisis.

    • @mtksbctk
      @mtksbctk 5 років тому +7

      Raping Indonesia

  • @abbyslgamer
    @abbyslgamer 5 років тому +233

    Please consider posting sources in the desc. Myself and I’m sure many others would appreciate it greatly

    • @49metal
      @49metal 5 років тому +7

      Assuming there are sources, that would be splendid.

    • @kaihtheloner
      @kaihtheloner 5 років тому +16

      They used to post sources in the description box earlier but nowadays they never post sources. I was writing a term paper and found a video of Crash Course History to be immensely helpful however when I went to check sources, he didn’t post any in the description box so I couldn’t use it.
      Edit: They updated the description now. They added sources. Lol.

    • @49metal
      @49metal 5 років тому

      @@kaihtheloner Which does not imply a dearth of quality sources, of course.

    • @CarlosRios1
      @CarlosRios1 5 років тому +3

      Source: I already knew a lot about this just trust me on this one.

    • @johnmccallum8512
      @johnmccallum8512 5 років тому +4

      @Sam Smith If you "click" on show more you will find the links that you want.

  • @adamhosek1620
    @adamhosek1620 5 років тому +127

    Fun fact - It was actually the Third Defenestration of Prague! The second one took place already in 1483, but it remains less famous, because the uprising it was part of was not very succesful.
    Many minor errors, but the Thirty Years War is soooo complex and confusing, it would be impossible to cover it in less 14 minutes with no simplifications whatsoever. Good job! :)

    • @bobjordan9227
      @bobjordan9227 5 років тому +1

      Adam Hošek what was the first

    • @adamhosek1620
      @adamhosek1620 5 років тому +3

      @@bobjordan9227 As John mentioned, it took place in 1419 in the beginning of the Hussite wars (Czech "pre-protestants", Hussites, against the catholic authorities and crusaders mostly from the Holy Roman Empire). The war was just beginning as a sprawling uprising. The rebellious Hussites took over the city halls of Prague (there was more of them) and threw the catholic councillors out of the windows and the angry mob outside finished the job.

    • @bobjordan9227
      @bobjordan9227 5 років тому +1

      Adam Hošek could give sources or at least a source for there being a defenestration in 1483

    • @Urlocallordandsavior
      @Urlocallordandsavior 5 років тому +1

      And the second?

    • @Chris-hp9be
      @Chris-hp9be 4 роки тому +2

      Stop defenestrating people.!😂

  • @TheBard1999
    @TheBard1999 5 років тому +310

    Nice video, shame that you barely mention anything that happened in Eastern Europe. In 17th century both Russia and Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth went through destructive wars and civil wars. Moskov was sacked. And Wars in 17th century killed up to 30% of population of Polish Kingdom (more destructive than II World War), which lead directly to 3 partitions of PLC in 18 century.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +62

      Heck, the Commonwealth didn't need to be involved in 30 years war to be as (if not more) affected by warfare and famine as the rest of Europe.
      Also, this series largely ignores Eastern Europe, because it's adressed mostly to American students, to whom Eastern European history is irrelevant.

    • @Udontkno7
      @Udontkno7 5 років тому +22

      This is for APEH (Advanced Placement European History) which I took last year. We dont focus much on Eastern Europe until the 20th century.

    • @piotrkleszcz6782
      @piotrkleszcz6782 5 років тому +8

      They are mentioning Middle Europe (Bohemia) several times, there we have it xD

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +8

      @@nimajneb1219 Wait a minute. I've never suggested that the Americans are dumb. I merely stated that this series is aimed at them - and what they learn in schools.

    • @beth8775
      @beth8775 5 років тому +9

      I would be interested in watching a whole other series on eastern European history.

  • @SystemBD
    @SystemBD 5 років тому +23

    The realistic human hands in the "though bubble" section fit surprisingly well. Like if Eldritch abominations were playing with the contenders of the war. Great stuff.

  • @filmscentre19
    @filmscentre19 5 років тому +16

    Hi Mr Green I have always been a fan of Crash Course! They are concise, informative, appropriately planned etc. I really hope you guys can start a Clash Course Geography because it will be beneficial to our lessons in school and a variety of other reasons. Thank you so much!

  • @mathtriangle34
    @mathtriangle34 5 років тому +8

    Crash course has inspired me to make my own educational channel! Thanks so much!

    • @Joe-if8dn
      @Joe-if8dn 5 років тому

      Math Triangle love it ! I subbed

  • @PoliticsInChina
    @PoliticsInChina 5 років тому +6

    You’re really killing it in these videos John - great job, very fun learning.

  • @davidbukowski3463
    @davidbukowski3463 5 років тому +90

    Good video, but you definitely should have talked about places outside Central Europe. Cromwell was completely destroying Ireland, Poland had sacked Moscow, etc.

    • @oddballskull1941
      @oddballskull1941 5 років тому +15

      This series does seem a bit idk..vague? Europe is a huge huge continent, in this way it feels like they are picking what they deem important for us to know, but what about all these countries individual history that we may otherwise never learn about

  • @TheGreatCooLite
    @TheGreatCooLite 5 років тому +121

    I guess you could say that in 1570, *winter was coming*

    • @karlkarlos3545
      @karlkarlos3545 5 років тому +11

      I have long argued that Game of Thrones has actually as much in common with the 30 years war as with the war of the roses.

    • @cowboyflipflopped
      @cowboyflipflopped 5 років тому +1

      Ferdinand: All your base are belong to us. You have no chance to survive. Make your time.

    • @thereforeayam
      @thereforeayam 5 років тому

      "coming news"

    • @experssion123
      @experssion123 5 років тому

      2070 extreme summer is coming

  • @SaiyanHeretic
    @SaiyanHeretic 5 років тому +40

    Ah, good ol' defenestration! The scriptwriter's method of choice for dispatching your villain in a G to PG-13 film.
    Unless you show the landing. Then it is very R-rated.

    • @nope2dat
      @nope2dat 5 років тому

      SaiyanHeretic this is Sparta Prague!

    • @oddballskull1941
      @oddballskull1941 5 років тому

      Kill the beast!

    • @karllandegren9727
      @karllandegren9727 4 роки тому

      @@nope2dat Isn't it ironic that Prague's football team is called "Sparta Prague"?

  • @Tourian
    @Tourian 5 років тому +2

    These videos keep getting better and BETTER!!

  • @Hawkster52
    @Hawkster52 5 років тому +52

    When you're a Sabaton fan and just waiting eagerly for Gustavus Adolphus to enter the story.

  • @NeillGuitars
    @NeillGuitars 5 років тому +39

    A small comment on something you said. In the second defenestration, Ferdinand's people didn't say it was a miracle because they were saved by the manure. According to them, angels lowered them gently to the ground.

  • @sleeper_san619
    @sleeper_san619 5 років тому +11

    Almost at 10mil because of how much knowledge you bring to the table. Also, loved the art today.

  • @TiltedJesterStudios
    @TiltedJesterStudios 5 років тому +102

    oh!OH! Mr. Green MR. GREEN? "Yes me from the past"

  • @qpSubZeroqp
    @qpSubZeroqp 5 років тому +3

    Thank you for making this series! Thank you for making all of the series

  • @ferriteproductions2456
    @ferriteproductions2456 5 років тому +9

    “History resists simplicity” John Green
    “This war was caused by, you guessed it, religion”
    John Green

    • @karlkarlos3545
      @karlkarlos3545 5 років тому

      It was "caused" by religion -- Not, it was all about religion. Does semantic even matter anymore to people?

    • @ferriteproductions2456
      @ferriteproductions2456 5 років тому

      The causes of the war were complex. There are many historians that argue that when the Protestants seized all church property that that caused the war. Had they not, there may not have been battle or at least not to the scale we saw. So yes, there are different interpretations for the cause or causes (more than one) of the war. For John Green to say religion (a term used for everything from druidism to Catholicism) caused the war, is just a poor choice of phrasing at best.

  • @generalflaviusaetius1997
    @generalflaviusaetius1997 5 років тому +3

    Man, this topic (Crisis of the 17th Century) requires more than a crash course considering the multitudes of violent deadly events causing human suffering on an epic scale globally. Issues like the Witch hunts which peaked during this time. Issues like 41% of the population of Ireland being wiped out, the English civil wars, French civil wars (which the great general Viscount Turenne fought in), the Great Northern War, the slow collapse of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth. Also aside from Western Europe, China was utterly devastated by the 4 decade long transition from Han Ming rule to Manchu Qing rule, such that over 25 million people died, 3 times the casualties of the Thirty years war. Regions like Henan lost 7/10 of their entire population to disease, drought and violence. Heck even in Africa, there was a Mauritanian Thirty Years war between the Arabs and Berbers. Truly one of the most interesting times to learn about.

  • @balinthonvari7723
    @balinthonvari7723 4 роки тому +1

    I love how you have found so many high quality pictures to illustrate the topic!

  • @stella187
    @stella187 5 років тому +3

    I found this video super interesting! Raised in Sweden, I leaned about the 30 Years War in history class, but never about the little ice age and (surprisingly and very sadly) never about the human misery that the war and the changing climate caused. It was always "Kings did that, Empire was that"... Thank you Crash Course, for providing me some nuance.

  • @iriscotrupi380
    @iriscotrupi380 4 роки тому +6

    I owe this man every passing grade I’ve ever received

  • @scipioafricanus5871
    @scipioafricanus5871 4 роки тому +23

    So how much famine, war, death and devastation are we gonna see?
    30-Years-War: Yes.

  • @aaronkhakha3139
    @aaronkhakha3139 5 років тому +106

    Guys they forgot to add European History after crash course in the title. Lol

    • @jlupus8804
      @jlupus8804 5 років тому +2

      I was gonna say!

    • @elaineandjohn9599
      @elaineandjohn9599 5 років тому +11

      Crisis!

    • @aaronkhakha3139
      @aaronkhakha3139 5 років тому

      - Joseph when I was watching it it which was just 2 or 3 hours after its upload, it didn’t have European history in the title.

  • @JemLeavitt
    @JemLeavitt 4 роки тому +1

    Well done video.

  • @Defenestration_of_Prague
    @Defenestration_of_Prague 4 роки тому +2

    I got WAY too excited about the Defenestration of Prague. Probably my favorite moment of history.

  • @woketoad2426
    @woketoad2426 5 років тому +3

    This has to be my favourite episode on the Euro history series, I personally prefer the more contained focus

  • @franciscomm7675
    @franciscomm7675 5 років тому +8

    "History is not one human story. It is all human stories"
    You couldn't have said it better

  • @JackDespero
    @JackDespero 5 років тому +3

    Our continent has been savaged by religion, yet people say that Christianity has never lead to conflict, unlike Islam. All of them have, which shows that the content doesn't really matter, because the problem is our tribalism.

  • @victorcabanelas
    @victorcabanelas 5 років тому +11

    I was reading about the defenestrations of Prague because of work a few months ago and they're fascinating. Especially the second one. Not only did the people that got thrown out of a 20 meters tall window survived but, also, they threw a secretary too (I'm guessing 'cause it's fun to throw people out of windows).
    As a side note, I think it's important to mention that before the conflict started, in Bohemia, there was freedom of religion. That probably made things even worse.
    That said, great video. Keep it up!

    • @aryaaaa70
      @aryaaaa70 4 роки тому

      Victor Cabanelas bddhd

  • @MrMineHeads.
    @MrMineHeads. 5 років тому +32

    Peace of Westphalia also brought the idea of sovereignty and nation-states.

    • @Ruhrpottpatriot
      @Ruhrpottpatriot 5 років тому +5

      Not only that. That peace and the war itself had a profund impact on the German mindset. Outside of a small period from 1888 to 1945, the main goal of German politics has been to equalize the power balance between various actors in the German speaking realm. Also, the sometimes morbid obsession with death and crime in arts (you think the US has many criminal TV series? Think again.) is attributed mainly to the 30 years war.

    • @Ruhrpottpatriot
      @Ruhrpottpatriot 5 років тому

      @Nub93 You didn't get my point at all.

  • @yotamravid3159
    @yotamravid3159 5 років тому +25

    4:05 SECOND Defenestration of Prague.
    It sounds silly, but the First Defenestration Of Prague brought on the Hussite wars, which were between Catholics and Protestants in the 1500s, and they featured the first use of mobile artillery (wagons with cannons mounted on them), the early models of Pike&Shot, pikes, in general, proved their worth on the battlegrounds of the Hussite wars, so it is kind of a big difference. It's kind of like the First and Second world wars - the first invented all the stuff and yes was a big deal everywhere but it was just a bunch of "local" wars, then the second turned out to be far bigger, and improved on and used the inventions of the first one.

    • @zayan6284
      @zayan6284 5 років тому +2

      Wait 5 seconds before you comment

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid 5 років тому

      Maybe people in Prague should just stop throwing people out of windows. It never ends well.

  • @ldblokland463
    @ldblokland463 5 років тому +9

    No mention of the 80 years war, which was active at the same time.
    Still a great video tho.

  • @jessicalv6442
    @jessicalv6442 Рік тому

    Thanks for the sources and the brilliant explanation about the Thirty Years' War!! They help my history assignment a lot :)

  • @beedubb2653
    @beedubb2653 5 років тому

    Oooh, historical info, in a bite sized format, that allows me to consume even more. I think I just found a new favorite channel. Thx for posting.

  • @Jesse_Dawg
    @Jesse_Dawg 5 років тому +1

    Great job on this episode. Much love to John Green and team

  • @Tyear
    @Tyear 5 років тому +8

    8:52
    Spent the night in formation
    To the battle we march in the dawn
    We were ready to die for our king
    On the fields of Breitenfeld

  • @EurasiaOnYT
    @EurasiaOnYT 5 років тому +1

    Great video! You're a great inspiration for my new channel. Great video once again! 😊

  • @GreatgoatonFire
    @GreatgoatonFire 5 років тому +6

    Fun fact, in Sweden the fact that the Catholic were called "The Catholic League" has tainted the word league. Any sort of criminal groupe tends to be called a league for example.

  • @Elnadrius
    @Elnadrius 5 років тому +37

    Sabaton and Crush Course have video on same topic in the same week? That's interesting.
    So, a tradition states:
    GOTT MIT UNS!
    Or
    Noch ein bier!

    • @tacokoneko
      @tacokoneko 5 років тому

      deus vult?

    • @XmarkedSpot
      @XmarkedSpot 5 років тому +2

      @@tacokoneko ​ Deus vult translates to "god wants (it so/ this way)", Gott mit uns simply means "god with us". Both phrases shall transport the idea that whoever says it is acting with a deity's explicit approval.

  • @Livlikeliv
    @Livlikeliv Рік тому +2

    Up until the Peace of Westphalia part, I had no idea this video was the same thing that my college class spent a semester talking about. The video wass significantly better and cheaper

  • @andrewbatist6355
    @andrewbatist6355 5 років тому

    dear crash course world history.... your images archives are GORGEOUS ! thank you for making me visually interested.

  • @hayleyjarrett808
    @hayleyjarrett808 5 років тому +2

    The hands at 5:15 look very Monty Python. Love it.

  • @roryk101
    @roryk101 5 років тому +1

    This video makes me enjoy the 1632 series even more

  • @Vitalis94
    @Vitalis94 5 років тому +77

    It's Magdeburg, not Magdeberg, though.

    • @lamole329
      @lamole329 5 років тому +2

      but it's pronounced the same?

    • @landonfade
      @landonfade 5 років тому +3

      @@lamole329 no it''s not

    • @varana
      @varana 5 років тому +19

      @@lamole329 In English, -berg and -burg sound quite similar.
      In German, they're totally different - the "e" in -berg sounds like the "e" in "get", and the "u" in -burg sounds like the "u" in "put".

    • @hanagreg
      @hanagreg 5 років тому +10

      Flavius Stilicho no, they mean hill und fortress.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +8

      @Flavius Stilicho Berg is essentially a mountain/hill. While burg is a fortress, quite common equivalent in English would be -burry

  • @SuicideBunny6
    @SuicideBunny6 5 років тому +3

    8:49 Sabaton 'The lion from the north' and 'Gott mit uns', the only reason why this sounds familiar to me! 🤘

  • @acusticamenteconvusional9936
    @acusticamenteconvusional9936 5 років тому +5

    And as always literally just 1 mention to Spain who was together with Austria, France and Sweden one of the most important participants, besides being involved in the war from the beginning.

  • @m00rtin4
    @m00rtin4 5 років тому +2

    i tought u would dive deeper into the 30 years war and its phases itself more directly then discussing the little ice age again. but yeah it connects tho. imo 30 years war itself deserves a own episode just like 100 years war, 7 years war and ww1 and ww2.

  • @johnb8196
    @johnb8196 5 років тому +21

    Where’s the next episode? I’m looking forward to it

  • @ericsiegel1087
    @ericsiegel1087 5 років тому +13

    5:58 yo what's Ethan Klein doin there

  • @Geographus666
    @Geographus666 5 років тому +5

    Eh, I was looking forward to this episode since there was a small chance my hometown was going to be mentioned in it but sadly that didn't work out.
    Anyway, greeting from Münster.

    • @TheRageng
      @TheRageng 5 років тому

      Munster was a beautiful city and full of buzz during this time!

  • @citchelus
    @citchelus 5 років тому +1

    awesome presentation!!!

  • @All3me1
    @All3me1 5 років тому +13

    It's Magdeburg not Magdeberg
    You did the same mistake with Augsburg in the last Episode

  • @Amadeu.Macedo
    @Amadeu.Macedo 4 роки тому

    Outstanding short resume' of the catastrophic 30 years war! Congratulations

  • @eddgrs9193
    @eddgrs9193 5 років тому +7

    HBO should make a 30 years war TV series.

  • @community1949
    @community1949 4 роки тому +3

    No wonder my people on my father's side of the family migrated to the midwest from Germany in Stuttgart, Baden Baden and the black forest. If they could't farm anymore, everything was too expensive and there was war everywhere it explains why about 15 people came over here. They came over her around 1780 and some even fought in the US Civil War.

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk 5 років тому +15

    And now I think I know why high school history skimmed past this whole war almost as if it were a footnote.
    Partly because it's obviously *hugely* complex.
    Partly because I don't think the faint of heart could have withstood hearing about it. I am by no means the toughest person when it comes to hearing and understanding disastrous things. I cried at this week's Animal Wonders video, for instance. But this made my stomach turn even as I tried my best to pay attention.
    And this happened hundreds of years ago, yet reminds me so strongly of things happening right NOW. It physically hurts me to think about that.

  • @kates4911
    @kates4911 4 роки тому +1

    i've been binging this bc as a german i barely learned about any of this in school (we just went over the world wars about 500 times for obvious and perfectly valid reasons) and it's soo interesting.
    but i would love to see some maps in these videos, because i have very little idea of what places belonged to which kingdoms at what time... i had to google where bohemia even was because no one really calls the region that anymore. maps in between the images would be really really really helpful

  • @jacobvaerst1300
    @jacobvaerst1300 Рік тому

    man my teacher used to always pull up your videos in high school, and here I am, i’m college struggling with a paper and you come to save me again 😂

  • @briantime3762
    @briantime3762 5 років тому +12

    No mention of the English civil war?

    • @cathykeller8551
      @cathykeller8551 5 років тому

      There is a separate episode in constitutionalism coming

  • @sonofcolors
    @sonofcolors 5 років тому +4

    How this episode was written without mentioning the creation of the nation state along with barely mentioning state Sovereignty is beyond me

    • @mschrisfrank2420
      @mschrisfrank2420 5 років тому

      Aspen Everclear Because it’s a 13 minute video covering several hundred years.

    • @sonofcolors
      @sonofcolors 5 років тому

      Chris Frank I only bring it up because a portion of this episode is dedicated to discussing the 30 years. The most potent effects of the 30 years war were the creation of sovereignty in western states along with the formation of the idea of nationhood which is why I though it be worth mentioning...

  • @llhants1
    @llhants1 5 років тому

    Another splendid video by Crash course.

  • @vetren23
    @vetren23 5 років тому +10

    How can you mention the treaty of Westphalia without talking about Westphalian sovereignty.

  • @faithpoggioli3817
    @faithpoggioli3817 5 років тому

    I never knew that the Thirty Years War was so violent! Great video!

  • @mr.leblanc9902
    @mr.leblanc9902 4 роки тому +3

    Hey John, thanks for explaining this century for me - it really helps. I still am not convinced the "Wars of Religion" were about religion. It seems that political ambitions were at the root of the 30 years war, and religious difference was simply used to permit the violence which would have been censured without it. As with France, eventually they didn't need to bother to pretend the war was for religious reasons. I also think the whole 'taking land away from people for the Catholic church' doesn't tell the whole story: these monasteries were violently occupied by rulers using the protestant reformation to do openly what they had been trying to do on the sly always: steal wealth that was given for religious reasons so that they could use it for worldly reasons, like war. That's my view.

  • @jaillencabarillos5737
    @jaillencabarillos5737 Рік тому

    thank u again for helping me in my quiz

  • @napoleon9970
    @napoleon9970 5 років тому +1

    I wish John was more excited when talking about history as he used to be

  • @FroehligGirlz
    @FroehligGirlz 5 років тому

    Bad news with a good response gives that news (or olds) immense value. 👏🏼👏👏👏👏

  • @slothfulcobra
    @slothfulcobra 4 роки тому +1

    The real terror of the casualties you can see if you look at the per-capita deaths. Millions died (estimates range from 3 to 10) out of a European population of 80 million. It's unfathomable.

  • @fuzzyhair321
    @fuzzyhair321 5 років тому +2

    i honestly had tears in my eyes when i saw that part of the good news, scientific revolution. still a long long way to go

  • @Vojtokae
    @Vojtokae 5 років тому

    Finaly, we were mention in Crash Course again, even though we began one of the deadliest war in history. Worth it!

  • @MismeretMonk
    @MismeretMonk 5 років тому +4

    11:05-11:32 "A day may come when the courage of Men fails, when we forsake our friends and break all bonds of fellowship. An hour of wolves and shattered shields when the Age of Men comes crashing down." Aragorn

  • @leedent6796
    @leedent6796 5 років тому +6

    Everyone else in the comment section: Hey nice video Joh-
    Sabaton Fans: *ALL TOGETHER GOTT MIT UNS*

  • @eduardoramirezjr4403
    @eduardoramirezjr4403 5 років тому +5

    Aaahhh, yes! The good old days!

  • @christian80645
    @christian80645 5 років тому +34

    are you sure the painting at 7:52 is Christian IV of Denmark? I believe it's Christian V of Denmark (the grandson of Christian IV)

    • @Argacyan
      @Argacyan 5 років тому +10

      It's literally the Wikipedia picture of Christian the 5th

    • @strange144
      @strange144 5 років тому +14

      @- king- Two mistakes in this one that would have taken literally one google search to fix doesn't bode well for quality control. So I care.

    • @Bell_Matt
      @Bell_Matt 5 років тому

      - king-
      People who value accuracy; you must lean Left politically, the way you dismiss context.

    • @Argacyan
      @Argacyan 5 років тому +11

      *right. The right usually dismisses or outright fakes history. The alternative would be capitalist cause faking history is very lucerative in the right situation.

    • @jacobschmidt
      @jacobschmidt 5 років тому

      @- king- well Stalin did the great purge with that one famous photo, Hitler faked archeological digs that "showed the superiority of the German race". Idk what Churchill did to fake history but I dont think it would be as egregious? I'm kinda ignorant on the subject though as Hitler and Stalin were, you know, a little bit more cruel and more prominent than churchill

  • @melonlord1414
    @melonlord1414 5 років тому +1

    Calling Wallenstein the CEO of War fits way to well. He basically used his army like a company to extract more wealth from the country. He even tried to have as little battles as possible, because they meant loosing men that could be used to squeeze money out of villages.

  • @AleaumeAnders
    @AleaumeAnders 5 років тому +2

    Ever wondered, how the rich and densely settled hanse land of Mecklenburg and Pommerania could become the almost depopulated wilderness it is today? Loosing 75% of your population during the 30 years war, followed by the lengthy reconquest from the Swedes, Napoleon, the soviet conquest in WWII and finally the depopulation of the unification... it's a lot that this landscape had to take, but the tombstone basically was planted during the 30 years war.

  • @falderappes3074
    @falderappes3074 5 років тому +1

    I hope you will make a video about the eighty years war cuz it braught enormous wealth to the netherlands in the 17th century

  • @p.bamygdala2139
    @p.bamygdala2139 5 років тому +1

    I'd love it if you could do a video about The Flavians, the fall of the second temple, and Bar Kockbah revolts, and whether we can trust the accounts of Josephus.
    And if it's not too controversial for your channel, I'd like to see your scholarly breakdown of the Serapis timeline.

  • @patpatcat1036
    @patpatcat1036 5 років тому +8

    Yay I love this Chanel it gives you so much information 👏🏻😂😂❤️

  • @grifflancer2999
    @grifflancer2999 5 років тому +5

    8:25 Wherever there is Catholic brutality there is also Jesuits.

  • @ahmedbadran3881
    @ahmedbadran3881 5 років тому

    Wonderful effort. Keep going.

  • @m00rtin4
    @m00rtin4 5 років тому +1

    So we gonna get some a episode after the sience one involving louis 14 th aka sun god? How about the great northern war and war of spanish succession? Cant wait for 18th century in this series. So many wars, so much enlightment and discovery!

  • @YakAttack915
    @YakAttack915 5 років тому

    Great stuff as always

  • @susannasunarno
    @susannasunarno 5 років тому +1

    Thank you. I love your content. I traveled round Europe years ago and wanted to learn the history of this region. But for me, It's difficult to me to learn complex history in Europe. So many wars, kings, kingdoms and all. This channel helps me to understand what was going on. I can't wait to dig into more and more stories.

  • @michalhruska3100
    @michalhruska3100 5 років тому

    Every time I read my sources on the Bohemian nobility, it crackes me up. With such ease they'd utter phrases like 'have these gentlemen wander off the windows' and 'let the angels catch the true in faith'...

  • @MartinKyral
    @MartinKyral 5 років тому +1

    In the area I am from (Eastern Bohemia) around 50% of total population was lost during the 30 years war. No all perished though: as a consequence of the counter-reformation, many people had to leave their homes to avoid forces conversion to the catholicism..