This guy is incredible. He is able to talk in a mostly coherent manner, remaining engaging and thoughtful, without taking a pause, for a whole bloody hour! No referring to notes! Wow...
Being a long time Lindyfan from the Åland Islands, I can only state that this is a surreal experience. I knew he was about something when I thought I spotted the old chap biking around town...
He was probably not talking about today, but the time from then to now. The stones weren't taken a few days ago either, but within a few years of the war
I love these nature documentaries featuring animals in their native habitat. A Lindy Beige wandering a historic fort hunting for spiked guns is as natural as this world gets.
@@CraftQueenJr But what is that lurking in the bushes? Could it be a French tourist? What will the Lindy do? Who will win this fight for territory? Who will run away? Will the Lindy survive? Stay tuned until the next time!
@@MrAchile13 (Squeeky, Marlin Perkins voice) "Just as the mother Beige protects her Lindey; Mutual of Omaha will protect you from predation by French tourists, with their deadly brioches, amphibian appendages and terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks."
The first time my grandmother told me about Calvary or skirmishers spiking the cannons o thought they just hammered spikes up and down the barrel. I still want to know how John Wayne putting mud in the cannons would render them to explode
@Cosmic Fool as a viewer I've seen that greater courses plus shit a million times and will NEVER go to their fucking site. When hear about that crap I dislike the video and go watch something else. I don't even care about the rest of the story. Unsubbed ages ago cause of this shit. Every time I come back to check a lindy video it's the same shit Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus
When Helsinki was founded by the Swedes they named it Helsingfors, I don't know when Helsinki came into the Finnish vocabulary. I think this is what he means when he says "the old Swedish name".
I once had a british gf (i'm german) with a soldier dad. Tough to convince, that's for sure...but we always had the meek french to bond over. And Band of Brothers, Company of Heroes and more weirdly even: footie ! Loving Borussia Dortmund beats having your grandparents fight each other to the death multiple times!
@@HappyBeezerStudios I think that goes for just about anyone. Americans are pretty passed about forever war in the middle east,but mention war in France and we'd be all about freedom fries, burning tires, and dumping out cases of wine.
I really love that Lindybeige has all the details pretty precisely correct. The political profile of Åland (or Ahvenanmaa as we say it in Finland) is really complex. You got it pretty well covered. As well as other things about the odd history of Finland. I love the fact that he understands the complexity of history and understands the importance of details.
I’m always excited for a new Lindybeige upload, but this time more than usual. I’m from the Åland Islands and have been to Bomarsund several times. One thing I recall from school is that the Russians were placing more men on Åland than what they could sustain. So they solved it by “taxing” the locals, forcing them to feed a large part of the Russian troops. This created even more hate towards the Russians. Legend has it that a fed up local made contact with the British and showed them the shallow and hard-navigated route that allowed them to attack Notvikstornet from a position that surprised the Russians. One interesting note is that during the negotiations in Paris 1856 after the war, Sweden insisted on making the islands demilitarised, Russia still being a real threat. Russia protested but it was ruled that the islands must not be fortified again. Although during wartime this has not mattered much. During WW1, Russia placed naval artillery on the islands (with the approval of France and Britain). With the Soviet aggressions of the Winter war and Continuation war, some Finnish troops were placed and parts of the archipelago were mined. But since then there has been no military activity on Åland. Åland is demilitarised to this day, and young men are exempted from the Finnish mandatory military service. And thanks for all of your nice videos btw
> This created even more hate towards the Russians. ... which were, actually, mostly Finnish in that garrison. But I'm sure the local Swedes couldn't care less.
@@vladimirdyuzhev Likely most of them were, but when it comes to those in charge, most of them were still Russians. The higher you got in the ranks the likelihood of you being a Russian increased. And that would be on purpose, because if there would be a rebellion against the Russians in Finland, they wouldn't want the Finns to have nearly as many nor nearly as well trained officers. At least partly for this reason the Jäger-movement was born in Finland.
Lindy talks history just like I thought I could when I was getting my history degree. I think I hold the world's record on putting people to sleep in less than 60 seconds.
Aww…you can work on it! Speaking the way Lloyd speaks is an art that requires years and years of practice. Learning about OPT (objective personality, based on the MBTI), helped me quite a bit. Maybe it can help you too.
Lindy, could you please do a video on the role of music on the battlefield? It's inception, evolution, and eventual, I suppose, practical demise? I see a lot of popular films depicting drums and bagpipes on the battlefield for the British in the 19th century for example, but it's quite hard to get a grip of how exactly this worked or came about. What about other nations or cultures aside from the British? Can't think of anyone better than you to give a good chinwag on this.
Interesting discussion about "spiking the guns". My father was a Marine cannoneer in the Vietnam war. He said that their technique for disabling the guns if they had to retreat (he never did) was to take a thermite grenade and chuck it into the muzzle end so it slide down the barrel against the (closed) breach. The thermite grenade would then go off and the molten steel running out of the grenade would weld the breech block to the back of the barrel, making it impossible to use it.
There's a rather merry finnish song about this "War of Åland" ("Oolannin sota"), the original lyrics having been written by one of the finnish defenders of Bomarsund taken to Britain as prisoner. The original lyrics were in fact a bit less merry as a whole than what the song eventually evolved into over time. You can find the song by the name "Oolannin Sota", but you won't find a version with the original lesser known lyrics, which would instead be called "Ålandin sota laulu". The original lyrics are written in this noticably older rather funny sounding finnish, but roughly translated the story the lyrics tell goes something like this: "A handful of sons of Finland were taken to the Åland fortress and enemies arrived. When the boys left to war to meet the enemy and defend fatherland. For the first time in june began the harsh war, about which I wish to write. With two hundred ships came to the Åland fortress the french and the englishman. Mountains and valleys echoed as sons of Finland fired and met the enemy. The french and the englishman begun firing at the stone walls and storming into the fort. Then an order was hastely given and the stone walls were sorely shot at and lots of enemies killed. Oh misery oh horror the death of the enemy as the sons of Finland killed. But what other could the boys do as the french and the englishman stormed in with thousands. Then the boys got really angry as the white flag was raised and the gates opened for the enemy. The boys were frustrated and angrily threw their weapons to the ground. Sixteenth day of august, the englishman took prisoners and took them away by ship. Then the boys were taken away to captivity in England, into the city of Lewes. There the boys were held in captivity for a year and eight months by the king of England. Then an order came from the emperor to release the boys from captivity and allow them to go back to their fatherland. Then the boys cheered and chanted as they left the city of Lewes and stepped into the chariots of fire. And the boys sang as they left that the English land here is wonderful, but more wonderful is our fatherland."
@@vladimirdyuzhev That is more or less how the finns saw it. The part of the Crimean war that took place in the Baltic sea was the only part of the war that concerned Finland on any level, which is why in Finland that part of the war is known as the "War of Åland". I'd also suspect that due to the rise of finnish nationalism at the time, finns had very little concern for the russians, hence why they're not even mentioned, despite forming the vast majority of the soldiers.
@@vladimirdyuzhev Finland was part of Russia then (Grand duchy), so guess where they drafted the troops for the defences? Same as in the 30 years war: In southern germany, swedish troops were well known for their finnish battle cries....o_0....because large parts of Finland were under swedish rule then, and guess who got drafted to be wasted in a bloody, brutal, endlessly dragging on conflict in central europe? jup.
@@effexon the 30 years war was basically between everyone. I think it started as leftovers of the religious wars between catholics and protestants, originally, and then at some point just devolved into a huge pile of manure with everyone trying to grab something, settling old grudges, or just trying to somehow stay afloat. It was basically a warlord economy for some time. Swedish forces, mainly consisting of drafted finns, were quite active in south-western germany for years. I am not sure, but maybe Wallenstein got them into the mess
I’m always impressed how he learns the material so he can then relate it back for the camera often in one stream of consciousness, including “Oh, I almost forgot!” moments. Those often add to the interest due to his enthusiasm for telling the story. And kudos for doing due diligence in the realm of finding and reconciling all possible accounts and points of view on the events.
Neutral in the Swedish sense, as in actively helping an evil power defeat those the swedes used to think of as brothers. A rather flexible kind of neutral I have to say.
@@perperson199 Actively helping to defeat? Norway was already thoroughly defeated when Sweden let wounded German troops and soldiers on leave travel trough Sweden, and only unarmed troops where allowed trough. The only armed Germans to go trough Sweden was a German division traveling from Norway to Finland in order to fight Russia. If Norway was already defeated why wouldn't we want Germany too help the Finns against the Russian invasion? What you are doing is insinuating that Sweden conspired with Germany to attack Norway. So dishonest.
As somebody who spent nearly every summer of his childhood on the Islands near Bomarsund i loved to hear about it in one of your videos. Greetings from Germany. Keep up your fantastic work!
Fun fact jsut up your alley - During the Battle of Waterloo when the British Heavy cavalry first charged the French coloumn forming into a line, they famously continued on across the valley and momentarily routed a very large proportion French artillerymen. Apparently none of the troopers carried any hammers or nails because, allegedly, orders were shouted to spike the guns but none could be spiked. This happened in the brief space of time after the guns were overrun and the French Lancers counter attacked. Had the Heavies had hammers and nails with them, the further progress of the battle would have been vastly different since Napoleon for the first time would no longer have artillery superiority.
I hope one day you've accumulated so much unused video material that you can go six levels deep, inception style. "so I've heard about this thing, let 6 months in the past me explain - yes but to begin here's me from two years ago talking about it - right, so 1 year ago...."
so you don´t put some hard liqure in the cannon. a bit like spiking the punch. So the that It will take hours before the cannon sober up and can hit anything. but your first idéa sounds fun too.
I've often wondered whether the account of Michel Ney furiously striking at a cannon with his sword towards the end of the battle of Waterloo may have actually been a mistaken instance of him actually attempting to spike a cannon.
Yes that's crossed my mind as well. Also I'm not alone in wondering why the French failed to spike the British/Allied guns when their crews retreated to the safety of the squares formed by the infantry during the massed French cavalry attacks. Could have made a vast amount of difference had any of the French cavalry the presence of mind to this during their ill timed, usupported, disasterous attack.
Just had my tonsils removed and now i gotta sit around for two weeks doing nothing, your videos are a great help, also going to try listen to war and peace
..........................and breathe!...... I so admire your ability to do this, organize it in your head, remember places and dates ( for the most part) and then spew it all out seemingly in one take... ... :D
Some of the Finnish soldiers (at the time: Russian soldiers) who were taken prisoner in this battle wrote a song, "Oolannin sota" (Finnish for "The war of Åland"), while they were serving their 2 year POW sentence in England. The song is still sung to this day and pretty much every Finnish person alive knows it. The original version recounted the events of the battle in great detail, although in the early 1900s some details of the defeat which were deemed too embarrassing were removed.
Once again Lloyd you have turned what would have been a dreadfully dull topic had any other UA-camr covered it and made it 100% more interesting! All teachers should look to you to see how one can make learning fun and enjoyable!
Actually, using the American 1861 Ordance manuals terms, spiking a gun can include blowing it up and making it completely unusable, or shoving something inside the barrel. You can even make use of a temporarily spiked gun without removing the spike first. Here is the exert: Spiking and unpiking guns, and rendering them unserviceable. To spike a piece, or to render it unserviceable.-DriTe into the Tent a jagged and hardened steel spike with a soft point, or a nail without a head ; break it off flush with the outer surface and clinch the point inside by means of the rammer. Wedge a shot in the bottom of the bore by wrapping it with felt, or by means of iron wedges, using the rammer or a bar of iron to driTC them in; a wooden wedge would be easily burnt by means of a charcoal fire lighted with the aid of a bellows. Cause shells to burst in the bore of bronze guns, or fire broken shot from them with high charges. Fill a piece with sand over the charge to burst it. Fire a piece against another, muzzle to muzzle, or the muzzle of one to the chase of the other. Light a fire under the chase of a bronze gun, and strike on it with a sledge to bend it. Break off the trunnions of iron guns ; or burst them by firing them with heaTy charges and full of shot, at a high eleTatiou. When guns are to be spiked temporarily, and are likely to be retaken, a spring spike is used, haTing a shoulder to preTent its being too easily extracted. To unspike a piece.- If the spike is not screwed in or clinched, and the bore is not impeded, put in a charge of powder of J the weight of the shot, and ram junk wads oTer it with a handspike, laying on the bottom of the bore a strip of wood with a groove on the under side containing a strand of quick-match by which fire is communicated to the charge; in a bronze gun, take out some of the metal at the upper orifice of the Tent, and pour sulphuric acid into the grooTe for some hours before firing. If this method, several times repeated, is not successful, unscrew the vent-piece, if it be a bronze gun, and if an iron one, drill out the spike, or drill a new Tent. To drive out a shot wedged in the bore.-Unscrew the Tent-piece, if there be one, and drive in wedges so as to start the shot forward, then ram it back again in order to seize the wedge with a hook; or pour in powder and fire it, after replacing the Tent-piece. In the last resort, bore a hole in the bottom of the breech, drive out the shot, and stop the hole -with a screw. To use apiece which has been spiked. Insert one end of a piece of quickmatch in the cartridge, allowing the other to project out of the muzzle of the gun. Apply the fire to the quick-match, and get out of the way. When quick-match of sufiicient length is not at hand, insert one end in the cartridge, the other projecting in front of the shot, and, after ramming the cartridge home, throw -two or three pinches of powder into the bore. Place another piece of match in the muzzle, the end projecting out. The piece may be fired in this way without danger. Quick-match in the cartridge may be dispensed with by piercing three or four holes in the cartridge- bag. In this manner the gun may be fired with great rapidity.
actually you dont own or keep the audiobooks from audible, ive been using it for years but when i suggested to them that i might pause my subscription for a few months they politely reminded me that i would permanently lose access to the dozens of books on my account. rather different from "yours to keep forever", in spite of this i think audible is great. thanks for all your relentless hard work and excellent videos.
I actually remember seeing the spiking of a gun in some film or miniseries about the Napoleonic Wars. Once a gun position was captured, some soldier stayed behind while the others advanced and he started methodically hammering little spikes or nails into the ignition holes, to disable the field guns from further use. I think I've heard about such a thing before that, but seeing it in a live-action work was interesting, precisely because it's so rarely shown. And IIRC, the soldier who took to that duty was a cavalryman.
There’s a really good lecture by the naval historian professor Andrew Lambert of Kings Collage London on this topic called “the other Crimean war” - you can find it it on UA-cam
Mr. LindyHoppenBeigenHosen, I’ve been a subscriber since before 50k, Your content and presentation haven’t changed one bit. Fairly close to a million now, looks like you got it right from the start. You have a way with words and timing. The White Headhunter video is my absolute favorite. Thank you , sir.
Every time I hear cyclopean masonry I start thinking H.P Lovecraft, I had a few really weird images going through my mind while you were explaining everything lol.
I really enjoy these types of videos where you accurately recount a historical battle or the life of a historical person. Please keep them coming and don't worry about the length or digressions they are lots of fun 😊
We actually do something similar in modern combat. But instead of messing with the rifles we would mess with their ammo. We would add small explosive ammo and let the Taliban or ISIS "find" or steal the ammo and have it circulate throughout their ranks. It doesn't look any different and its spread throughout working ammo so suddenly their rifle would just explode in their face while trying to shoot at us. This serves a few different purposes. It really drops moral, and makes them doubt their sources, equipment, and generally make them not want to fight. Now it's not such an explosive that it kills the user but it may take out their eyes or just get tiny scraps of metal in their face..It does destroy the weapon and make it useless....We also use that logic on other equipment that is much more devastating and lethal as well as let's us track the location of the main leaders and murderers and take out an entire cell with a push of a button...I can't say exactly what it is because it's still classified information, but try to remember this comment down the road when it becomes unclassified and you hear stories of how we use to take out people that make IED's
@Beaujangles McJiggle No I wasn't in Intel, I'm a trigger puller...but the info I dropped is already out there. Trust me I made sure! lol...I thought Lloyd and his audience we appreciate hearing about some military history.......and future hehe
Pretty smart tbh. Though you do know that Taliban and ISIS sympathisers constantly watch UA-cam videos looking for stuff like this right? It might seem ridiculous but Lloyd IS partly a *military* history channel so you never know.
@@CarrowMind Yeah that's fine, I want them to know if one happened to see it...Not a good idea to try and kill allied troops. Everyone gets found eventually
Love Ur work Lindbeige - haven't seen any new videos from you for a while - hope your still making them because they are wonderful- great stuff - never disappointed with any of your videos- they're all informative and interesting and entertaining- an important trilogy- well done for all your work - great stuff
I had the opposite reaction learning about spiking cannons. I had never heard the phrase, and the first time I learned of it was in the film Alatriste. It was during the opening scene where a small group of men sneak into an enemy camp at night, and my dad mentioned what they were doing since he (correctly) assumed I wouldn't know what it was.
Fun fact, during the American war of independence, the captain John Paul Jones was able to take over a fort _on the British mainland_ and spike all of the cannons. The town, Whitehaven, was one of the biggest ports in the UK at the time, where Jones had begun his career, and he would've been able to seriously damage the British naval capacity if his crew hadn't gotten drunk and failed to burn all the ships in the harbor. The town has a statue of him now.
You mean landed at Whitehaven which had 400 ships at anchor, but destroyed or captured none of them; captured an almost empty fort, but left the other fort when his men were frightened by a noise and finally had to drag his men from the pub where they were all pissed and retreated with 3 prisoners, one of whom was a child.
I salute them for starting Whitehavens tourist trade. They did much better than the French when landing in Wales and being repulsed by a band of grandmothers wearing national dress.
This was the first time I heard the term, and honestly one of the first and funnest sounding things that came to mind with "spiking" was to pour alcohol or something into the chamber to make it wet and keep powder from lighting until it's been properly dried out, which really isn't going to happen in the middle of a battle, maybe oil.
Wonderful pronounciation of Åland! Long time fan from the islands and, have to say, a great explanation of our political (both current and past) situation in the middle of Baltic!
Patrick Ancona, and you would promptly damage your stock and break it next time you fire. If you are lucky, the stock just splits and you end up with the barrel in one hand and the stock in the other. Or you end up with the barrel in your head and the stock on the floor with all the blood.
@@RealCadde It's an iron nail not a diamond. At the very least it's not going to splinter if you use the butt plate. Muskets weren't delicate objects , they were bashed about, dropped, and used as clubs in combat. If its too weak to be used as a hammer how the hell do you think it's going to take the force of discharging?
I only recently discovered Lloyd and his massif, fans, brilliantly researched explanations on many aspects, topics historical of warfare and subsequent results. Informative and numerous, his enthusiasm for his subject engages on many levels, keep on loving your motivational teachings Lloyd, it's massive fun.
Interesting that you mentioned Govenor's Island in New York. Just across from there at Fort Hamilton (Brooklyn) there was a fort which had been dismantled in the 1960s to make room for a building. This fort had massive granite blocks which were dovetailed together. From the front, it looked like a standard wall, but with the dovetailing, it could withstand direct fire from a cannon. At one point a large turf covered berm had Been added to reinforce the wall even further. Took forever to dismantle it; wrecking ball kept bouncing off it. Finally had to use a crane and lift the blocks, one by one, straight up. If I can find the article I had about it, I'll edit this comment and put the name of the fort (Which I can't remember) in it. And, no, it wasn't Fort Hamilton. There were a series of forts on the site.
Hey its åland! Thats where i live! :D Was a couple of years ago i was by the Bomarsund ruins though, really nice seeinga video by you Lindy of the fortress we had here on our little island, thanks! :D
@joanne chon Not bad actually, think at most we have had like 18 cases out of the about 30 000 population. But now the government have let up on some restrictions, letting even Swedes in, as long as they have a valid reason (having a summer house here is apparently valid enough...). So if we are unlucky infected swedes will come and the numbers will rise, i hope not... But just letting up the restrictions alone is stupid to do already.
That is like saying the Germany isnt "germany" but "Deutschland". Different languages often have different names for different countries. :P Pretty sure your comment is satire though, but still wanted to respond just incase it wasnt, have a good day.
Lindy i watched every one of your videos like this one, history psychology that last about an hour. And they are the best ever i hope you make more because nowadays i dont see many of these kinds of videos from you... These are the BEST!
28:50 The base names of the three towers (with translations) are Prästö (Priest island), Notvik (a bay used for seine fishing) and Brännklint (a hilltop of bare rock where a fire has been kept, possibly as a signal). Similar names appear all over the Swedish speaking coast. Swedish may add -s- for genitive (not always) and -tornet for tower. Similarly Finnish adds -(i)n torni. So the local names are Prästötornet, Notvikstornet and Brännklintstornet. Finnish uses Prästön torni, Notvikin torni and Brännklintin torni (the names aren't translated - some areas have parallel names in two or more languages, such as Helsinki/Helsingfors).
Being from Åland, I find it difficult to believe that first of all Lindybeige has been here, and second of all that I haven't found this video earlier. Fantastic work!
A good talk upon an almost forgotten campaign. I have been enjoying doing some studying upon the British naval attacks upon the Grand Duchy of Finland during the Crimean War. However, I would like to point out something that needs correcting, you stated, "Charles Lucas...thus becoming a significant figure in history because he was the very first man to win the Victoria Cross...and this does also accentuate the lie that is that Victoria Cross is made by melted down cannons that were captured at the Siege of Sevastopol because the Siege of Sevastopol hasn't happened yet, this is the beginning of the Crimean War" While you are correct that Mr Lucas' actions came before the Siege of Sevastopol and thus he became the first person to win a VC by date of action, he was not the first individual to be awarded it. That honour would go to Lieutenant Henry Raby of the Royal Navy for his actions on the 18th June 1855 during the Siege of Sevastopol. This was because the VC was not established until 29th January 1856 (near the end of the Crimean War, which ended 30th March 1856). The awarding process was made retrospective to 1854 to allow it to be awarded to all those who had served during the Crimean War. The first medal presentation ceremony was held on 26th June 1857 at Hyde Park, 62 men were awarded the medal, with the order of presentation going by rank. Lucas was fourth to be given the VC by Queen Victoria. The majority VCs are produced from the Cascabels of two cannons that are held in a special vault at MoD Donnington, while these canons were captured at Sevastopol, they are Chinese in origin. But due to interesting circumstances, many of the First and Second World Wars' VCs are made from other metals. So it isn't quite a lie, it is a misunderstanding. Sources:- Symbol of Courage: The Men Behind the Medal: Max Arthur hancocks-london.com finland-at-war.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-first-victoria-cross-and-finnish.html
I've watched this video in full twice, and I just realized the joke at 5:03 about the Russian double headed eagle being a mutant from Chernobyl. Good one Lindy.
Was just going to look for a couple of minutes to see if it was worth coming back to this later. 51 minutes later... Seems like I don't have to do that.
Hey, I'm a big fan of your channel and I'm so happy to find a video about the fort we have on the island where I'm from! And you even pronounced the name of our island correctly. Very cool. Many thanks and greetings from Åland! :D
Aktually king Oskar I of Sweden knew very well that he was "the first" when he took the throne because he knew his Swedish history. Hence he knew that there had never been a Swedish king before him namned Oskar, making him Oskar I! All Swedish kings through the history of Sweden has recieved their number upon ascending the throne! They are not some numbers made up long after their deaths to differentiate between them as you seem to think.
Unless the Swedes do it differently there's no point calling king Oskar the first during during his life. Only when another ascendant of the throne takes the name Oskar. Then the first is added to make it possible to distinguish them. For example see the english king John, or the current king of the Netherlands Willem-Alexander.
@@barthoving2053 They do it differently, the number is part of the name. The assumption is that there will be more kings with the same name, whatever name you chose, since swedish kings are often named after their ancestors.
@@hamstsorkxxor As a swede, I have to admit I am unsure how we do. We'll simply have to see when our Crown princess becomes Queen, since she will be the first regent with the name Victoria. :)
From the coins of the era you can see that he was named King Oscar and one of his sons was then Oscar II. But then again his monogram shows that he is Oscar I, so both might be right.
There used to be, at least some papers were. Remember this was all brand new, it's just like social media now, eventually, hopefully, we'll start to see more and more integrity when it comes to online news.
The majority of working journalists do their best to be accurate. We hate the fake news BSers even more than ordinary people, because they discredit and undermine the work we do to inform the public. But sadly, people would rather have Fox "News" than good, well-researched newspaper journalism.
Honestly my favourite thing to do after a nice night out is sit down and watch Lloyd, I've got 1 question though, what's up with jeor Mormont in the back and will we ever get a rant on how GoT gets fighting wrong?
"This was going to be a short video"
Classic, Lindy, classic.
Makes you wonder just how long his videos would be if he set out to make a LONG one. 🤔
Makes me wonder if Lindy and Jingles are Cousins
it was a good one
@@francoislacombe9071 "This is going to be a very long vid-"
You nailed it!
I bet Lindy could upload a video aboat the Anglo-Zanzibar war and make it longer than the war itself
That's too easy, this video is longer than that! Now the 2008 Anjouan invasion is a tougher nut to crack!
I love zanzabarre ! It feels funny , just to say ! Zanzabarre! Mo mo more! Zanzebare ! Yes ! Bravo bring on to me ! Tales of ole zannsabarre!
ok but for christmas i want a video on the 100 year war that is longer than the war itself
lol yep, true that.
"These Russian guns still got the double-headed eagle, see this was used before Chernobyl" lmao
best reason to keep those guns there, reminder of that.
Classic British humor. Deadpan, understated, priceless.
Same with "Sweden" and "needin'"
@@segurosincero4057 Took me a bit. I honestly thought it was about symbolism. Glad I was wrong.
I love Lloyds humor
"I'm getting a little bit off the point here"
-Lindybeige summing up his channel in a sentence. Those tangents are why we watch :P
Imagine the disappointment of he were brief.
Delightful meandering.
@Grassy Knoll Geezer Butler, but I can see the resemblance :P
This guy is incredible. He is able to talk in a mostly coherent manner, remaining engaging and thoughtful, without taking a pause, for a whole bloody hour! No referring to notes! Wow...
He does refer, but that doesn't create a difference though, still a legend
Being a long time Lindyfan from the Åland Islands, I can only state that this is a surreal experience.
I knew he was about something when I thought I spotted the old chap biking around town...
He was probably not talking about today, but the time from then to now. The stones weren't taken a few days ago either, but within a few years of the war
Same
Whaat, never thought this would happen
Ambrose Burnside
good evenings or the good mornings
it is a racist to call the asian peoples sloop
and the spelling it is wrong it is slope
homebrandrules the spelling is not wrong! A sloop is a boat, and he didn’t even say anything about Asians.
I love these nature documentaries featuring animals in their native habitat. A Lindy Beige wandering a historic fort hunting for spiked guns is as natural as this world gets.
Here we see the lesser spotted lindy enthusiast in it's natural habitat....
@@fecklessrogue3725 Very well done! (scampers away from a clearly more witty predator)
Joined by a young history student, the larve form.
@@CraftQueenJr But what is that lurking in the bushes? Could it be a French tourist? What will the Lindy do? Who will win this fight for territory? Who will run away? Will the Lindy survive? Stay tuned until the next time!
@@MrAchile13 (Squeeky, Marlin Perkins voice) "Just as the mother Beige protects her Lindey; Mutual of Omaha will protect you from predation by French tourists, with their deadly brioches, amphibian appendages and terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks."
“Expanded a bit” almost an hour later... LOVE IT
Said every other video...
The first time my grandmother told me about Calvary or skirmishers spiking the cannons o thought they just hammered spikes up and down the barrel.
I still want to know how John Wayne putting mud in the cannons would render them to explode
I HATE how he hides the ad in the middle of the vid, ALWAYS have to get up to skip and dislike
@Cosmic Fool as a viewer I've seen that greater courses plus shit a million times and will NEVER go to their fucking site.
When hear about that crap I dislike the video and go watch something else. I don't even care about the rest of the story. Unsubbed ages ago cause of this shit. Every time I come back to check a lindy video it's the same shit
Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus Greater courses plus
@@vonclaren1 mash the L key a couple times.
This dude makes me even more excited about history, because his excitement is so contagious.
History is contagious,
It happens every day.
History is dead....but not when Lindybeige talks about it....😮
"Helsingfors is the old Swedish name for Helsinki"
It's also the *current* Swedish name for Helsinki.
When Helsinki was founded by the Swedes they named it Helsingfors, I don't know when Helsinki came into the Finnish vocabulary. I think this is what he means when he says "the old Swedish name".
Huh, don't tell the Finns...
@@twitchstaff4226 youre an idiot.
@@twitchstaff4226 "Internationally"? What the fuck is "internationally" when it comes to names?
Do you mean "English"?
@@twitchstaff4226 Wrong. Both are correct as Finland has two national languages - Finnish and Swedish.
>51 minutes Lindybeige video
I mean, Christmas was a month ago, but I'm fine with this
Why is this video so short?
I know the feeling Ernesto
I had to look it up; the audiobook of War and Peace he suggests is 61 hours and 6 minutes.
@@whelk He should record an audiobook version for his channel. Probably wouldn't take him more than a week.
everyday away from christmas is a day towards it, so, in essence, christmas is always as Lindy shows us here
Notifications for lindybeige always make my day better
I third it!
I'm a simple man. I see a lindybeige video, I click.
agreed. His videos always takes priority in the feed
Yeah, except this video is watered to almost an hour long.
I fourth it!
"Beat the French ! _Altough they're not the enemy this time it's the Russians_ but cmon ! Do it again !"
Ah Lindy , you never change...
I once had a british gf (i'm german) with a soldier dad.
Tough to convince, that's for sure...but we always had the meek french to bond over. And Band of Brothers, Company of Heroes and more weirdly even: footie !
Loving Borussia Dortmund beats having your grandparents fight each other to the death multiple times!
He still made sure to accuse the French of being filthy muck-covered cholera spreaders!
Pretty sure the officers refused to call the Russians anything but the French as that had become the common term for the enemy.
If there is one thing in common between the british and the germans, it's their universal disdain for the french
@@HappyBeezerStudios I think that goes for just about anyone. Americans are pretty passed about forever war in the middle east,but mention war in France and we'd be all about freedom fries, burning tires, and dumping out cases of wine.
I really love that Lindybeige has all the details pretty precisely correct. The political profile of Åland (or Ahvenanmaa as we say it in Finland) is really complex. You got it pretty well covered. As well as other things about the odd history of Finland. I love the fact that he understands the complexity of history and understands the importance of details.
"is that Vik tower?"
"no, its Notvik tower"
I’m always excited for a new Lindybeige upload, but this time more than usual. I’m from the Åland Islands and have been to Bomarsund several times.
One thing I recall from school is that the Russians were placing more men on Åland than what they could sustain. So they solved it by “taxing” the locals, forcing them to feed a large part of the Russian troops. This created even more hate towards the Russians.
Legend has it that a fed up local made contact with the British and showed them the shallow and hard-navigated route that allowed them to attack Notvikstornet from a position that surprised the Russians.
One interesting note is that during the negotiations in Paris 1856 after the war, Sweden insisted on making the islands demilitarised, Russia still being a real threat. Russia protested but it was ruled that the islands must not be fortified again.
Although during wartime this has not mattered much. During WW1, Russia placed naval artillery on the islands (with the approval of France and Britain).
With the Soviet aggressions of the Winter war and Continuation war, some Finnish troops were placed and parts of the archipelago were mined. But since then there has been no military activity on Åland.
Åland is demilitarised to this day, and young men are exempted from the Finnish mandatory military service.
And thanks for all of your nice videos btw
> This created even more hate towards the Russians.
... which were, actually, mostly Finnish in that garrison. But I'm sure the local Swedes couldn't care less.
@@vladimirdyuzhev Likely most of them were, but when it comes to those in charge, most of them were still Russians. The higher you got in the ranks the likelihood of you being a Russian increased. And that would be on purpose, because if there would be a rebellion against the Russians in Finland, they wouldn't want the Finns to have nearly as many nor nearly as well trained officers. At least partly for this reason the Jäger-movement was born in Finland.
I suspect the reason the dates are different is because Russia was using a different calender at the time.
Oh yea. Red October in November. And that kinda thing
"You see those things were there before Chernobyl"
*Chuckles*
Sounds a bit offensive towards the Russian national symbol. Love Lloyd's videos anyway.
@@extremus79 The moment a 2 headed eagle complains, we'll feel sorry for it.
@@derpimusmaximus8815 No doubt.
(But it won't. It can't complain. It's only a symbol))
@@extremus79 *woooosh*
@@extremus79 I'm sure Lloyd will file Russian complaints in the same place as French ones.
Lindy talks history just like I thought I could when I was getting my history degree. I think I hold the world's record on putting people to sleep in less than 60 seconds.
Aww…you can work on it! Speaking the way Lloyd speaks is an art that requires years and years of practice.
Learning about OPT (objective personality, based on the MBTI), helped me quite a bit. Maybe it can help you too.
You don’t learn history where you get the degree and I fear you may have ruined it for yourself by not learning it before hand
Lindy, could you please do a video on the role of music on the battlefield? It's inception, evolution, and eventual, I suppose, practical demise?
I see a lot of popular films depicting drums and bagpipes on the battlefield for the British in the 19th century for example, but it's quite hard to get a grip of how exactly this worked or came about. What about other nations or cultures aside from the British?
Can't think of anyone better than you to give a good chinwag on this.
The majority had to do with signals, commands, and orders. Not needed anymore because of radios lol
If you request a video from LindyBeige you should become a patreon of his. That will show you are serious.
@@andrewa9694 what a gatekeeper, chill buddy
@@float7567 I'm chill - just saying $ talks persuasively
@@andrewa9694 ...the dollar sign is a snake pole dancing.
You should talk about the Falklands with the Harrier operations. That would be interesting. Very interesting. And very British.
it's really a long flight to Falklands...for a youtube video
Or perhaps even the amazing mission of the Vulcan bombers!
Lindybeige is like the most British person I've ever seen in my life.
Or Rhodesian bush war. Very interesting.
@SuperSmashyfication Indeed. As long as we keep them north of Zambezi.
Interesting discussion about "spiking the guns".
My father was a Marine cannoneer in the Vietnam war. He said that their technique for disabling the guns if they had to retreat (he never did) was to take a thermite grenade and chuck it into the muzzle end so it slide down the barrel against the (closed) breach. The thermite grenade would then go off and the molten steel running out of the grenade would weld the breech block to the back of the barrel, making it impossible to use it.
There's a rather merry finnish song about this "War of Åland" ("Oolannin sota"), the original lyrics having been written by one of the finnish defenders of Bomarsund taken to Britain as prisoner. The original lyrics were in fact a bit less merry as a whole than what the song eventually evolved into over time. You can find the song by the name "Oolannin Sota", but you won't find a version with the original lesser known lyrics, which would instead be called "Ålandin sota laulu".
The original lyrics are written in this noticably older rather funny sounding finnish, but roughly translated the story the lyrics tell goes something like this:
"A handful of sons of Finland were taken to the Åland fortress and enemies arrived.
When the boys left to war to meet the enemy and defend fatherland.
For the first time in june began the harsh war, about which I wish to write.
With two hundred ships came to the Åland fortress the french and the englishman.
Mountains and valleys echoed as sons of Finland fired and met the enemy.
The french and the englishman begun firing at the stone walls and storming into the fort.
Then an order was hastely given and the stone walls were sorely shot at and lots of enemies killed.
Oh misery oh horror the death of the enemy as the sons of Finland killed.
But what other could the boys do as the french and the englishman stormed in with thousands.
Then the boys got really angry as the white flag was raised and the gates opened for the enemy.
The boys were frustrated and angrily threw their weapons to the ground.
Sixteenth day of august, the englishman took prisoners and took them away by ship.
Then the boys were taken away to captivity in England, into the city of Lewes.
There the boys were held in captivity for a year and eight months by the king of England.
Then an order came from the emperor to release the boys from captivity and allow them to go back to their fatherland.
Then the boys cheered and chanted as they left the city of Lewes and stepped into the chariots of fire.
And the boys sang as they left that the English land here is wonderful, but more wonderful is our fatherland."
I couldn't help but notice that the word "Russians" is nowhere to be seen.
I guess it was a completely separate, England vs. Finland Crimea war :-)
@@vladimirdyuzhev That is more or less how the finns saw it. The part of the Crimean war that took place in the Baltic sea was the only part of the war that concerned Finland on any level, which is why in Finland that part of the war is known as the "War of Åland".
I'd also suspect that due to the rise of finnish nationalism at the time, finns had very little concern for the russians, hence why they're not even mentioned, despite forming the vast majority of the soldiers.
@@vladimirdyuzhev Finland was part of Russia then (Grand duchy), so guess where they drafted the troops for the defences? Same as in the 30 years war: In southern germany, swedish troops were well known for their finnish battle cries....o_0....because large parts of Finland were under swedish rule then, and guess who got drafted to be wasted in a bloody, brutal, endlessly dragging on conflict in central europe? jup.
@@paavobergmann4920 I thought 30 year war was between france and germany, how sweden got into it?
@@effexon the 30 years war was basically between everyone. I think it started as leftovers of the religious wars between catholics and protestants, originally, and then at some point just devolved into a huge pile of manure with everyone trying to grab something, settling old grudges, or just trying to somehow stay afloat. It was basically a warlord economy for some time. Swedish forces, mainly consisting of drafted finns, were quite active in south-western germany for years. I am not sure, but maybe Wallenstein got them into the mess
I'll say it again and again, your ability to tell stories is just marvelous. Thank you!
I’m always impressed how he learns the material so he can then relate it back for the camera often in one stream of consciousness, including “Oh, I almost forgot!” moments. Those often add to the interest due to his enthusiasm for telling the story. And kudos for doing due diligence in the realm of finding and reconciling all possible accounts and points of view on the events.
Lindybeige, long videos are far better than short ones.
Not if they have a lower Information density
@@fionafiona1146 can they even?
17:40 - "... neutral in the Swedish sense... "
I'm probably not the only Norwegian who found that funny.
Quite.
There are some Finns that find it equally amusing. 😄
Neutral in the Swedish sense, as in actively helping an evil power defeat those the swedes used to think of as brothers. A rather flexible kind of neutral I have to say.
@@perperson199 Actively helping to defeat? Norway was already thoroughly defeated when Sweden let wounded German troops and soldiers on leave travel trough Sweden, and only unarmed troops where allowed trough. The only armed Germans to go trough Sweden was a German division traveling from Norway to Finland in order to fight Russia. If Norway was already defeated why wouldn't we want Germany too help the Finns against the Russian invasion? What you are doing is insinuating that Sweden conspired with Germany to attack Norway. So dishonest.
@@2canines Well not conspiring, just being neutral in a very swedish way. But I admire your sense of outrage
As somebody who spent nearly every summer of his childhood on the Islands near Bomarsund i loved to hear about it in one of your videos. Greetings from Germany. Keep up your fantastic work!
Fun fact jsut up your alley - During the Battle of Waterloo when the British Heavy cavalry first charged the French coloumn forming into a line, they famously continued on across the valley and momentarily routed a very large proportion French artillerymen. Apparently none of the troopers carried any hammers or nails because, allegedly, orders were shouted to spike the guns but none could be spiked. This happened in the brief space of time after the guns were overrun and the French Lancers counter attacked. Had the Heavies had hammers and nails with them, the further progress of the battle would have been vastly different since Napoleon for the first time would no longer have artillery superiority.
"How many of my videos have you watched!?"
Enough to know that I have exactly enough time to make my bowl of ramen while you go on about your sponsor.
Now that's using your noodle...👍😑🍲
@@JTA1961 I see what you did there
Newspapers being fictitious? Why I never.
Never in my life
I hope one day you've accumulated so much unused video material that you can go six levels deep, inception style. "so I've heard about this thing, let 6 months in the past me explain - yes but to begin here's me from two years ago talking about it - right, so 1 year ago...."
Imagine how many hard drives he has lying around full of raw video footage waiting to be used!
so you don´t put some hard liqure in the cannon. a bit like spiking the punch. So the that It will take hours before the cannon sober up and can hit anything. but your first idéa sounds fun too.
I've often wondered whether the account of Michel Ney furiously striking at a cannon with his sword towards the end of the battle of Waterloo may have actually been a mistaken instance of him actually attempting to spike a cannon.
Yes that's crossed my mind as well. Also I'm not alone in wondering why the French failed to spike the British/Allied guns when their crews retreated to the safety of the squares formed by the infantry during the massed French cavalry attacks. Could have made a vast amount of difference had any of the French cavalry the presence of mind to this during their ill timed, usupported, disasterous attack.
Just had my tonsils removed and now i gotta sit around for two weeks doing nothing, your videos are a great help, also going to try listen to war and peace
..........................and breathe!...... I so admire your ability to do this, organize it in your head, remember places and dates ( for the most part) and then spew it all out seemingly in one take... ... :D
You know it's a good day when Lindybeige makes a short 50min video.
0:34 Very good pronounciation of "Åland". - A Swede (not the root vegetable)
Mattias Bengtsson incorrect.
I can verify.
/ also a Swede
Triple verified by a Swedish speaking Finn (eminently better source when it comes to Åland, obviously)
"Suomenlinna" was a slightly harder one :)
I like how he knows 'Å' and 'Ä'. He should learn 'Ö' to complete the set.
@Lindy aim for the vowel in "heard".
As a person from Åland this video makes me very happy.
Some of the Finnish soldiers (at the time: Russian soldiers) who were taken prisoner in this battle wrote a song, "Oolannin sota" (Finnish for "The war of Åland"), while they were serving their 2 year POW sentence in England. The song is still sung to this day and pretty much every Finnish person alive knows it. The original version recounted the events of the battle in great detail, although in the early 1900s some details of the defeat which were deemed too embarrassing were removed.
Nothing better than a cup of tea while watching a 51:08 minutes long Lindybeige video about the glorious British navy! Huzzar!
Once again Lloyd you have turned what would have been a dreadfully dull topic had any other UA-camr covered it and made it 100% more interesting! All teachers should look to you to see how one can make learning fun and enjoyable!
Actually, using the American 1861 Ordance manuals terms, spiking a gun can include blowing it up and making it completely unusable, or shoving something inside the barrel. You can even make use of a temporarily spiked gun without removing the spike first.
Here is the exert:
Spiking and unpiking guns, and rendering them unserviceable.
To spike a piece, or to render it unserviceable.-DriTe into the Tent a jagged
and hardened steel spike with a soft point, or a nail without a head ; break
it off flush with the outer surface and clinch the point inside by means of
the rammer. Wedge a shot in the bottom of the bore by wrapping it with
felt, or by means of iron wedges, using the rammer or a bar of iron to
driTC them in; a wooden wedge would be easily burnt by means of a charcoal
fire lighted with the aid of a bellows. Cause shells to burst in the
bore of bronze guns, or fire broken shot from them with high charges. Fill
a piece with sand over the charge to burst it. Fire a piece against another,
muzzle to muzzle, or the muzzle of one to the chase of the other. Light a
fire under the chase of a bronze gun, and strike on it with a sledge to bend
it. Break off the trunnions of iron guns ; or burst them by firing them
with heaTy charges and full of shot, at a high eleTatiou.
When guns are to be spiked temporarily, and are likely to be retaken, a
spring spike is used, haTing a shoulder to preTent its being too easily extracted.
To unspike a piece.- If the spike is not screwed in or clinched, and the
bore is not impeded, put in a charge of powder of J the weight of the shot,
and ram junk wads oTer it with a handspike, laying on the bottom of the
bore a strip of wood with a groove on the under side containing a strand
of quick-match by which fire is communicated to the charge; in a bronze
gun, take out some of the metal at the upper orifice of the Tent, and pour
sulphuric acid into the grooTe for some hours before firing. If this method,
several times repeated, is not successful, unscrew the vent-piece, if it be a
bronze gun, and if an iron one, drill out the spike, or drill a new Tent.
To drive out a shot wedged in the bore.-Unscrew the Tent-piece, if there be
one, and drive in wedges so as to start the shot forward, then ram it back
again in order to seize the wedge with a hook; or pour in powder and
fire it, after replacing the Tent-piece. In the last resort, bore a hole
in the bottom of the breech, drive out the shot, and stop the hole -with a
screw.
To use apiece which has been spiked.
Insert one end of a piece of quickmatch
in the cartridge, allowing the other to project out of the muzzle of
the gun. Apply the fire to the quick-match, and get out of the way.
When quick-match of sufiicient length is not at hand, insert one end in
the cartridge, the other projecting in front of the shot, and, after ramming
the cartridge home, throw -two or three pinches of powder into the bore.
Place another piece of match in the muzzle, the end projecting out. The
piece may be fired in this way without danger. Quick-match in the cartridge
may be dispensed with by piercing three or four holes in the cartridge-
bag. In this manner the gun may be fired with great rapidity.
In the Sharpe novels they destroy guns by loading a double charge of powder and two balls, then inserting wedges.
o
actually you dont own or keep the audiobooks from audible, ive been using it for years but when i suggested to them that i might pause my subscription for a few months they politely reminded me that i would permanently lose access to the dozens of books on my account. rather different from "yours to keep forever", in spite of this i think audible is great. thanks for all your relentless hard work and excellent videos.
I actually remember seeing the spiking of a gun in some film or miniseries about the Napoleonic Wars. Once a gun position was captured, some soldier stayed behind while the others advanced and he started methodically hammering little spikes or nails into the ignition holes, to disable the field guns from further use. I think I've heard about such a thing before that, but seeing it in a live-action work was interesting, precisely because it's so rarely shown. And IIRC, the soldier who took to that duty was a cavalryman.
Im wierdly excited that you have actually been to my home island! Hope you enjoyed it!
And it's rumoured that he's planning a trip to Australia soon to see our ruin.
There’s a really good lecture by the naval historian professor Andrew Lambert of Kings Collage London on this topic called “the other Crimean war” - you can find it it on UA-cam
Awesome. Saved to listen to later. The book, The British Naval Invasion of Finland, is awesome if you can find a copy.
This guy reminds me of my old chemistry teacher, mad as a march hare. Man that guy loved blowing things up 😂
Same here. Military History version of Mr Lee
My middle school chem teacher was a total pyro, loved demonstrating hydrogen or oxy/acetylene detonations.. a lot of fun
Gosh I do so enjoy the rambling. It all comes together in the end nicely.
Mr. LindyHoppenBeigenHosen, I’ve been a subscriber since before 50k, Your content and presentation haven’t changed one bit. Fairly close to a million now, looks like you got it right from the start. You have a way with words and timing. The White Headhunter video is my absolute favorite.
Thank you , sir.
Every time I hear cyclopean masonry I start thinking H.P Lovecraft, I had a few really weird images going through my mind while you were explaining everything lol.
* Laughs in townhouse *
Yes finally another video of Lindybeige rambling 51min long. The longer videos are so much better than the short ones.
Keep up the good work!
I really enjoy these types of videos where you accurately recount a historical battle or the life of a historical person. Please keep them coming and don't worry about the length or digressions they are lots of fun 😊
What a great presentation! I love the sudden recall moments where he remembers another detail. Very entertaining and informative.
"Short video"
*_51 minutes long_*
Still , this video made my day.
51 mins short... under an hr.
We actually do something similar in modern combat. But instead of messing with the rifles we would mess with their ammo. We would add small explosive ammo and let the Taliban or ISIS "find" or steal the ammo and have it circulate throughout their ranks. It doesn't look any different and its spread throughout working ammo so suddenly their rifle would just explode in their face while trying to shoot at us. This serves a few different purposes. It really drops moral, and makes them doubt their sources, equipment, and generally make them not want to fight. Now it's not such an explosive that it kills the user but it may take out their eyes or just get tiny scraps of metal in their face..It does destroy the weapon and make it useless....We also use that logic on other equipment that is much more devastating and lethal as well as let's us track the location of the main leaders and murderers and take out an entire cell with a push of a button...I can't say exactly what it is because it's still classified information, but try to remember this comment down the road when it becomes unclassified and you hear stories of how we use to take out people that make IED's
@Beaujangles McJiggle No I wasn't in Intel, I'm a trigger puller...but the info I dropped is already out there. Trust me I made sure! lol...I thought Lloyd and his audience we appreciate hearing about some military history.......and future hehe
@Beaujangles McJiggle Enough to inform the ignorant, enough to scare the wicked, NOT enough to know exactly what it is....Its all good
Pretty smart tbh. Though you do know that Taliban and ISIS sympathisers constantly watch UA-cam videos looking for stuff like this right? It might seem ridiculous but Lloyd IS partly a *military* history channel so you never know.
Wooo!
@@CarrowMind Yeah that's fine, I want them to know if one happened to see it...Not a good idea to try and kill allied troops. Everyone gets found eventually
I love that enemy commanders basically wrote each other references. Gentlemanly warfare at its best
Lindy I am watching your videos instead of doing my online classwork for college. Longtime fan. Stay safe. Cheerio.
Love Ur work Lindbeige - haven't seen any new videos from you for a while - hope your still making them because they are wonderful- great stuff - never disappointed with any of your videos- they're all informative and interesting and entertaining- an important trilogy- well done for all your work - great stuff
I had the opposite reaction learning about spiking cannons. I had never heard the phrase, and the first time I learned of it was in the film Alatriste. It was during the opening scene where a small group of men sneak into an enemy camp at night, and my dad mentioned what they were doing since he (correctly) assumed I wouldn't know what it was.
Fun fact, during the American war of independence, the captain John Paul Jones was able to take over a fort _on the British mainland_ and spike all of the cannons. The town, Whitehaven, was one of the biggest ports in the UK at the time, where Jones had begun his career, and he would've been able to seriously damage the British naval capacity if his crew hadn't gotten drunk and failed to burn all the ships in the harbor. The town has a statue of him now.
You mean landed at Whitehaven which had 400 ships at anchor, but destroyed or captured none of them; captured an almost empty fort, but left the other fort when his men were frightened by a noise and finally had to drag his men from the pub where they were all pissed and retreated with 3 prisoners, one of whom was a child.
@@billythedog-309 Well, if you put it like that, then.... yeah...
I don't think it's a statue of him It's just an American Shipman. There was a Pub named after him but it closed down recently.
@@billythedog-309 This version sounds more satisfying.
I salute them for starting Whitehavens tourist trade. They did much better than the French when landing in Wales and being repulsed by a band of grandmothers wearing national dress.
This was the first time I heard the term, and honestly one of the first and funnest sounding things that came to mind with "spiking" was to pour alcohol or something into the chamber to make it wet and keep powder from lighting until it's been properly dried out, which really isn't going to happen in the middle of a battle, maybe oil.
An excellent analysis of how and why the fort fell, very well presented as always.
I love these long form discussions Lindy - the more digressions the better!
Wonderful pronounciation of Åland!
Long time fan from the islands and, have to say, a great explanation of our political (both current and past) situation in the middle of Baltic!
"Ah, I've just remembered!...." Love that aspect of your videos :)
So the hammer is too small but youre fine with the idea of using a musket stock :l
Hahahaha! As a rifle man, that made me cringe.
@@beardedbjorn5520 Yeah, I can't imagine that using the buttstock of your musket as a hammer could be very good for your musket.
Did you expect Lloyd’s claims to be consistent?
Patrick Ancona, and you would promptly damage your stock and break it next time you fire. If you are lucky, the stock just splits and you end up with the barrel in one hand and the stock in the other.
Or you end up with the barrel in your head and the stock on the floor with all the blood.
@@RealCadde It's an iron nail not a diamond. At the very least it's not going to splinter if you use the butt plate. Muskets weren't delicate objects , they were bashed about, dropped, and used as clubs in combat. If its too weak to be used as a hammer how the hell do you think it's going to take the force of discharging?
I only recently discovered Lloyd and his massif, fans, brilliantly researched explanations on many aspects, topics historical of warfare and subsequent results. Informative and numerous, his enthusiasm for his subject engages on many levels, keep on loving your motivational teachings Lloyd, it's massive fun.
I love you Lindy. You're great, thank you.
Interesting that you mentioned Govenor's Island in New York. Just across from there at Fort Hamilton (Brooklyn) there was a fort which had been dismantled in the 1960s to make room for a building. This fort had massive granite blocks which were dovetailed together. From the front, it looked like a standard wall, but with the dovetailing, it could withstand direct fire from a cannon. At one point a large turf covered berm had Been added to reinforce the wall even further. Took forever to dismantle it; wrecking ball kept bouncing off it. Finally had to use a crane and lift the blocks, one by one, straight up. If I can find the article I had about it, I'll edit this comment and put the name of the fort (Which I can't remember) in it. And, no, it wasn't Fort Hamilton. There were a series of forts on the site.
Fort Totten? Possibly.
Lloyd where’s the exclamation mark? You, you, you said you would...!
He also said short video
Hey its åland! Thats where i live! :D
Was a couple of years ago i was by the Bomarsund ruins though, really nice seeinga video by you Lindy of the fortress we had here on our little island, thanks! :D
@Finnic Patriot Åland is part of FInland?
@joanne chon Not bad actually, think at most we have had like 18 cases out of the about 30 000 population.
But now the government have let up on some restrictions, letting even Swedes in, as long as they have a valid reason (having a summer house here is apparently valid enough...).
So if we are unlucky infected swedes will come and the numbers will rise, i hope not...
But just letting up the restrictions alone is stupid to do already.
That is like saying the Germany isnt "germany" but "Deutschland".
Different languages often have different names for different countries. :P
Pretty sure your comment is satire though, but still wanted to respond just incase it wasnt, have a good day.
51 minute video on a subject that took 4 minutes to explain.
This is why we love you Lindy.
Lindy i watched every one of your videos like this one, history psychology that last about an hour. And they are the best ever i hope you make more because nowadays i dont see many of these kinds of videos from you... These are the BEST!
28:50 The base names of the three towers (with translations) are Prästö (Priest island), Notvik (a bay used for seine fishing) and Brännklint (a hilltop of bare rock where a fire has been kept, possibly as a signal). Similar names appear all over the Swedish speaking coast. Swedish may add -s- for genitive (not always) and -tornet for tower. Similarly Finnish adds -(i)n torni. So the local names are Prästötornet, Notvikstornet and Brännklintstornet. Finnish uses Prästön torni, Notvikin torni and Brännklintin torni (the names aren't translated - some areas have parallel names in two or more languages, such as Helsinki/Helsingfors).
You are one of the few people who don't annoy me with their sponsorship addresses.
I love it when lindy drops a long video oh yeah yeah
Why do so many people have deus ex avatar?
@@decem_sagittae it was just a fad for a bit. Search "oh yeah yeah"
Being from Åland, I find it difficult to believe that first of all Lindybeige has been here, and second of all that I haven't found this video earlier. Fantastic work!
Love all your sweaters! You clearly like history and enjoy sharing it. Much appreciated, touch of humor is brilliant! Happy conisour...❤️
"Minnie the Moocher" line snuck in there.... nice.
Hogwa5h Gaming
I was waiting for someone to point that out...
At 50:00 if anyone missed it
glad i wasnt the only one who caught that
And "double-headed eagle" :-)
A good talk upon an almost forgotten campaign. I have been enjoying doing some studying upon the British naval attacks upon the Grand Duchy of Finland during the Crimean War. However, I would like to point out something that needs correcting, you stated,
"Charles Lucas...thus becoming a significant figure in history because he was the very first man to win the Victoria Cross...and this does also accentuate the lie that is that Victoria Cross is made by melted down cannons that were captured at the Siege of Sevastopol because the Siege of Sevastopol hasn't happened yet, this is the beginning of the Crimean War"
While you are correct that Mr Lucas' actions came before the Siege of Sevastopol and thus he became the first person to win a VC by date of action, he was not the first individual to be awarded it. That honour would go to Lieutenant Henry Raby of the Royal Navy for his actions on the 18th June 1855 during the Siege of Sevastopol. This was because the VC was not established until 29th January 1856 (near the end of the Crimean War, which ended 30th March 1856). The awarding process was made retrospective to 1854 to allow it to be awarded to all those who had served during the Crimean War. The first medal presentation ceremony was held on 26th June 1857 at Hyde Park, 62 men were awarded the medal, with the order of presentation going by rank. Lucas was fourth to be given the VC by Queen Victoria. The majority VCs are produced from the Cascabels of two cannons that are held in a special vault at MoD Donnington, while these canons were captured at Sevastopol, they are Chinese in origin. But due to interesting circumstances, many of the First and Second World Wars' VCs are made from other metals.
So it isn't quite a lie, it is a misunderstanding.
Sources:-
Symbol of Courage: The Men Behind the Medal: Max Arthur
hancocks-london.com
finland-at-war.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-first-victoria-cross-and-finnish.html
In short: accounts vary.
S T O P
A L L O F Y O U
Reading War and Peace isn’t something you get through because it’s good for you! It’s really easy to read and compelling from start to finish.
I've watched this video in full twice, and I just realized the joke at 5:03 about the Russian double headed eagle being a mutant from Chernobyl. Good one Lindy.
Was just going to look for a couple of minutes to see if it was worth coming back to this later. 51 minutes later... Seems like I don't have to do that.
28:47 "Prästötornet" literally means Priest island tower
You are my favourite UA-camr
I leanred nothing from this but i truly do enjoy your presentation when i am drunk and playing sim games. Truly, your rambling are a comfort treat
Hey, I'm a big fan of your channel and I'm so happy to find a video about the fort we have on the island where I'm from! And you even pronounced the name of our island correctly. Very cool. Many thanks and greetings from Åland! :D
Aktually king Oskar I of Sweden knew very well that he was "the first" when he took the throne because he knew his Swedish history. Hence he knew that there had never been a Swedish king before him namned Oskar, making him Oskar I! All Swedish kings through the history of Sweden has recieved their number upon ascending the throne! They are not some numbers made up long after their deaths to differentiate between them as you seem to think.
Iirc there was even one who probably was the first king with his name, but he made up a number to make himself seem more credible/legit/whatever
Unless the Swedes do it differently there's no point calling king Oskar the first during during his life. Only when another ascendant of the throne takes the name Oskar. Then the first is added to make it possible to distinguish them. For example see the english king John, or the current king of the Netherlands Willem-Alexander.
@@barthoving2053
They do it differently, the number is part of the name. The assumption is that there will be more kings with the same name, whatever name you chose, since swedish kings are often named after their ancestors.
@@hamstsorkxxor As a swede, I have to admit I am unsure how we do.
We'll simply have to see when our Crown princess becomes Queen, since she will be the first regent with the name Victoria. :)
From the coins of the era you can see that he was named King Oscar and one of his sons was then Oscar II. But then again his monogram shows that he is Oscar I, so both might be right.
Wow, fake news has been common right from the start? Has there never been honest journalism?
There used to be, at least some papers were. Remember this was all brand new, it's just like social media now, eventually, hopefully, we'll start to see more and more integrity when it comes to online news.
@saladnuts
Adam: "Where is your brother Abel?"
Cain: "What do I know father, am I my brothers keeper?"
There was that week in the summer of 1921. Good times.
@saladnuts
The reference is to one of the first sins described in the Bible.
Gorg no have bananna, uhg. Gorg promiss, ugh!
The majority of working journalists do their best to be accurate. We hate the fake news BSers even more than ordinary people, because they discredit and undermine the work we do to inform the public. But sadly, people would rather have Fox "News" than good, well-researched newspaper journalism.
When she suddenly screams, " Hammer my touchhole!" you know she's a keeper.
This is what I'm subscribed for, love the long rants!
One of the most enjoyable episodes I have watched in some time.
lindy has a doppelganger captaining the brig at penny royal in launceston tasmania.
Its been too long since the last hour long video. I actually prefer your long winded rants even if Yotubes algorithm doesnt.
Honestly my favourite thing to do after a nice night out is sit down and watch Lloyd, I've got 1 question though, what's up with jeor Mormont in the back and will we ever get a rant on how GoT gets fighting wrong?
Excellent! Informative, interesting and enjoyable. Who needs the BBC these days when there’s quality stuff like this for blokes on UA-cam?
Nice that you took your time to visit our small island. You know way more about Bomarsund and the war than I do!
50:00 The King of Sweden "had all the things he was needin'." I'll just mooch off and catch a Cab.
*slow clap...
Well done!
Just don't mess around with bloke named Smokey, I hear he's a bit cokey.