How Free was the Free City of Danzig? (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • Опубліковано 12 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,4 тис.

  • @AFGuidesHD
    @AFGuidesHD 4 роки тому +3111

    let's also militarily guarantee the status quo to make sure war definitely won't break out

    • @Nietabs
      @Nietabs 4 роки тому +11

      R/sadcringe

    • @attacheli9591
      @attacheli9591 3 роки тому +27

      @@Nietabs ?

    • @520lun
      @520lun 3 роки тому +98

      @@Nietabs r/ihavereddit

    • @obiwanfisher537
      @obiwanfisher537 3 роки тому +3

      Status quo - youre in the army now

    • @mog5397
      @mog5397 3 роки тому +2

      @@Nietabs r/sadcringe
      Lmao i wont post it because im almost never using reddit, i just wanted to understand reverse your cringe

  • @Argos-xb8ek
    @Argos-xb8ek 5 років тому +8595

    Its funny whenever I hear the word "free" or "people's" in the title of a city or country it's usually the most restricted.

    • @kevintrang3007
      @kevintrang3007 5 років тому +1017

      Don't forget "democratic" (NK for example)

    • @anne.andromeda
      @anne.andromeda 5 років тому +835

      @@kevintrang3007Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Double point

    • @martinmortyry7444
      @martinmortyry7444 5 років тому +406

      Free Democratic People's Republic of *X*

    • @matthewlaurence3121
      @matthewlaurence3121 5 років тому +286

      Free States are so called because they are free to make their own rules; essentially means “independent sovereignty”, as opposed to belonging to a union of other states.

    • @silent_stalker3687
      @silent_stalker3687 5 років тому +41

      Kevin Trang
      The Middle East before.
      “Hey, we’re armed and able to keep things peaceful as much as we can, hey allies give us better guns.”
      Allies: democracy
      Everyone not allied and also the majority that votes
      “It’s free real state.”
      The allied and group that kept it together
      “We sided in the wrong war.”
      US: *surprise pikachu face* the shitty people vote to keep the shitty city shitty?!

  • @franciscomm7675
    @franciscomm7675 5 років тому +4402

    Danzigers. I never thought such word existed

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 5 років тому +123

      Sounds kinda stupid to be honest.

    • @r8rgtrs
      @r8rgtrs 5 років тому +410

      @@merrittanimation7721 sounds perfectly fine from the perspective of the German language and it's not like English has anything else to offer in this case (see also "Londoner", "New Yorker", etc.)

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 5 років тому +102

      @@r8rgtrs Fair

    • @BlueAversion
      @BlueAversion 5 років тому +14

      I didn't think there ever was a place called 'Germany Proper' either, but according to 2.20 there is/was.

    • @JamesFTW1
      @JamesFTW1 5 років тому +13

      danzinger z

  • @albar2989
    @albar2989 5 років тому +1030

    Frederick the great - 0:19
    "Mein Gott!! What happened to my partition!??"

    • @ivoandonov3576
      @ivoandonov3576 5 років тому +3

      Tf where do you see him

    • @dylanhultman3922
      @dylanhultman3922 5 років тому +35

      @@ivoandonov3576 background. Looks like a ghost.

    • @bluemountain4181
      @bluemountain4181 5 років тому +8

      Wow great spot

    • @Osterochse
      @Osterochse 5 років тому +28

      Btw technically Danzig did not become a part of Prussia in the first partition, but in the second in which Fredrick the Great did not partake in. His successor king Fredrick William II was king at that time.

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod 4 роки тому +6

      The Entente did not expect the Germans to agree to give up all that land. After WW1 it was expected that Germany would negotiate and the Entente and the Central powers would come to reasonable agreement to bring about a lasting peace. Germany was in a state of Chaos at the time and just accepted whatever deal was offered and signed it. The treaty of Versailles was such an unreasonable piece of nonsense only because the Germans didn't negotiate.
      Making Germany give up all that territory pretty much guaranteed a 2nd world war.

  • @aleksandarvil5718
    @aleksandarvil5718 5 років тому +2372

    Next time, *"How free was Free City of Tangier?"* (DURING 1924 - 1956) in Moroco

    • @rzul
      @rzul 5 років тому +93

      *How free is the city of england

    • @danielmills7801
      @danielmills7801 5 років тому +8

      Found the Hipster

    • @CSLucasEpic
      @CSLucasEpic 5 років тому +29

      It was an International Zone, it was never actually free, not even by name.

    • @Andjac2010
      @Andjac2010 5 років тому +24

      How about the Free City of Trieste after the Second World War?

    • @kaeso101
      @kaeso101 5 років тому +3

      Ohhhh yeasss please do that... that's an interesting one

  • @Deriak27Forever
    @Deriak27Forever 5 років тому +3487

    You really should have mentioned that the Poles decided to build a new port city, Gdynia, a couple kilometers northwest of Danzig. It was imperative for Poland to have a port they had total control over, in contrast to the compromise they had with the Free City of Danzig. By the time WWII loomed Gydnia overshadowed Danzig in terms of economic importance; it was the largest port on the Baltic Sea, and the tenth in Europe in fact, despite only having half of Danzig's population (250k vs 120k).

    • @qzg7857
      @qzg7857 5 років тому +412

      I was thinking the same. It was very important that Polrs knew that city will never be totaly in their hands thats why Gdynia was born. Wich was one of the fastest growing cities in the world at that time. Video was good but for me it was lacking this

    • @cageybee7221
      @cageybee7221 5 років тому +229

      @@qzg7857 cities tend to grow fast when the demands of an entire nations economy force the government to build it

    • @Omnesomm2
      @Omnesomm2 5 років тому +240

      Which makes it even more nonsensical for Britain to escalate a second global conflict because of a German city of 350k. Thanks papa Chamberlain for the guarantees, 50 years of Soviet dictatorship was such a nice treat.

    • @cageybee7221
      @cageybee7221 5 років тому +34

      @@Omnesomm2 oh no how dare the soviets industrialize your country in less than 3 decades and bring with them guarantees of a stable livelihood and a secured future. despicable. truly i feel your pain.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +559

      @@cageybee7221 Never mind thousands of officers shot like dogs in the forest, university proffessors, any member of the elites either imprisoned or shot, thousands of regular people imprisoned, burned houses, land taken from average Joe, because the country had the ability to industralize fast.

  • @james64ibm
    @james64ibm 3 роки тому +1455

    All things considered, creating "The Free City of Danzig" was just another one in the long list of follies inside the Treaty of Versailles.

    • @juniorcrusher2245
      @juniorcrusher2245 3 роки тому +10

      The events would have taken place either way. The Soviet union was rising and I'm sure Poland wouldve stretched to its modern borders today or even annexation by the Soviet union all the way to cologne even

    • @seco000
      @seco000 2 роки тому +95

      @@looinrims Why most of the stuff people criticize about the Treaty of Versailles was done by Britian and France?

    • @boio_
      @boio_ 2 роки тому +10

      @@seco000 ^

    • @sephikong8323
      @sephikong8323 2 роки тому +67

      People complaining about Versailles when it was by far the most moderate and conciliatory treaty of the era, compare it to Sèvres, Trianon and Brest-Litovsk and it's incredibly mild, the fate of the polish corridor is the textbook example of that : to not piss off the Germans too much they allowed them to keep East Prussia instead of all of Prussia (which honestly, they could easily have lost all of it in any other treaty of the era) and as for West Prussia, the winners not only ensured that Germans could travel through the corridor unimpeded but they also tried to make the Free City to appease the Germans. There's more examples elsewhere but basically, Versailles was extremely generous compared to what it could have been (like Turkey becoming ....... I don't know how to qualify those borders they were supposed to have, or Russia not only losing a great deal of it's economically significant regions whilst having to pay reparations that were based off their pre war financial states, whereas Versailles again had much more reasonable reparations especially when compared to these ones, and a truly gargantuan amount of it's land and population was lost and made into German puppets that made it incredibly vulnerable)

    • @clouds-rb9xt
      @clouds-rb9xt 2 роки тому

      I read this in his voice lol

  • @ecoper210
    @ecoper210 5 років тому +731

    During the Polish-Soviet war German workers refused to take in supplies for Poland from western Europe.That is why in the 30' Poland took great effort to build another port in Gdynia which was majority Polish to be not dependent on the German city.

    • @wojciechkuske242
      @wojciechkuske242 5 років тому +39

      And Czechoslovakia exchange free pass to aid from Hungary (and all south) to Polish Zaolzie. They betray and stop trains.

    • @danielforeroc
      @danielforeroc 3 роки тому +35

      @SMA Productions "Polish-lithuanian" is not a nationality, the city was prussian baltic, but after centuries of influence by the Teutonic Order, the city was germanised. Poland did the same with L'viv and Vilnius, those cities had been ruthenian and lithuanian, but were assimilated during polish rule. All that changed after WW2.

    • @23GreyFox
      @23GreyFox 3 роки тому +23

      @SMA Productions It was a german city. The population said so.

    • @WarrockBugFinder
      @WarrockBugFinder 3 роки тому +24

      @SMA Productions thats not true Danzig was part of the Hanse and foundet by germanic settlers.

    • @WarrockBugFinder
      @WarrockBugFinder 3 роки тому +10

      @SMA Productions "From the wiki on Gdansk" no words needed.

  • @brandonlyon730
    @brandonlyon730 5 років тому +732

    Since we are the topic of Poland. How did Lithuania get so big in the first place prior to the Union with Poland?

    • @eri.ssddseff
      @eri.ssddseff 5 років тому +137

      im not sure nor researched on this but maybe the power vacum left after mongols left??

    • @kostam.1113
      @kostam.1113 5 років тому +197

      That was before the concert of nationalism, so Lithuania could incorporate almost anything

    • @izukawa8575
      @izukawa8575 5 років тому +157

      That region is mostly flat land. Easy to attack, hard to defend.

    • @Artur_M.
      @Artur_M. 5 років тому +136

      Moreover, it's not that Lithuanians just stepped into some power vacuum, they still had to fight with the Golden Horde for the control over the Rus'. The most famous and significant Lithuanian victory being the Battle of Blue Waters in 1362 (or maybe 1363).

    • @filiusreticulum2926
      @filiusreticulum2926 5 років тому +4

      Steppe

  • @jackluck2538
    @jackluck2538 5 років тому +2605

    I really like the easter egges you can find on your second viewing, Fredrick the Great's ghost at 0:20

    • @-et37-
      @-et37- 5 років тому +156

      Jackluck2 This channel is quality

    • @Trajan114
      @Trajan114 5 років тому +30

      I saw that :)

    • @richyhu2042
      @richyhu2042 5 років тому +14

      Know of any other good ones?

    • @Fauntleroy.
      @Fauntleroy. 5 років тому +60

      @@richyhu2042 Be sure to pause and read the Danziger constitution. :)

    • @mojewjewjew4420
      @mojewjewjew4420 5 років тому +8

      @@Fauntleroy. What is written there is very true thought.

  • @Rollo37
    @Rollo37 5 років тому +639

    0:02 you forgot the danish border. I know it's not that important, but just to let you know.

    • @Aviationlord7742
      @Aviationlord7742 5 років тому +113

      Rollo37 Denmark? You mean southern Sweden right?

    • @Noble2704
      @Noble2704 5 років тому +48

      @@Aviationlord7742 Sweden doesn't exist

    • @Kludgzenjammer
      @Kludgzenjammer 5 років тому +45

      @@Noble2704 Denmark and Sweden don't exist

    • @RealistikDash
      @RealistikDash 5 років тому +24

      @@Kludgzenjammer you guys mean *Britain*

    • @marcuscyl6653
      @marcuscyl6653 5 років тому +49

      He forgot to include Northern Schleswig

  • @merrittanimation7721
    @merrittanimation7721 5 років тому +584

    This whole concept always made me think the League of Nations was trying to bring city states to recreate Renaissance Italy in northern Europe.

    • @brandonlyon730
      @brandonlyon730 5 років тому +62

      Then why didn’t they break Germany back to a million pieces like it was before the Unification and perhaps with a weaker and smaller Prussia?

    • @syrialak101
      @syrialak101 5 років тому +60

      @@brandonlyon730 They would think that it would be too "cruel" to the German people probably.

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 5 років тому +7

      @@brandonlyon730 Ease them into it.

    • @gerdforster883
      @gerdforster883 5 років тому +107

      Germany wasn't broken up for three reasons:
      1. Noone wanted to set a precedent. Breaking up the Austro-Hungarian Empire happened (mainly) along ethnical lines, which is why it worked. In the case of Germany, that break-up would have created several states with the same ethnicity in them. Eventually, a unified Germany would have reformed and with THAT kind of precedent, what would have kept Germany from doing the same to say, France, given the chance?
      2. The US was against it, due to Wilson's doctrine of the right of national self-determination. And since the european Entente powers relied on american goodwill because of the war-time loans, the US had a strong say in these matters.
      3. The UK wanted to keep a strong enough Germany to keep the Soviets in check in the Baltic Sea.
      Also quite a few people in the british government did not trust the Poles (they insisted on the Danzig Free State, France wanted to just give the city to Poland).

    • @Alphastarilium
      @Alphastarilium 5 років тому +13

      @@gerdforster883 This isn't such a relevant reason but I think they also didn't split it up or at least weaken it too much so it would be strong enough to withstand a communist revolution.

  • @pelegsap
    @pelegsap 5 років тому +692

    At 0:22 and other times you represent Germans in Danzig as wearing Bavarian clothes... but Danzig was in Prussia. It's like representing the south English by a guy wearing a kilt.

    • @theserenedogeofvenice3895
      @theserenedogeofvenice3895 5 років тому +41

      It's not a design choice or failure, it's just laziness at this point. He keeps putting out more and more videos at shorter length.

    • @julibean5125
      @julibean5125 5 років тому +254

      Or maybe he is just using a stereotype that makes the visual differentiation between Poles and Germans easier, which wouldve otherwise been visualy completely identical, but that is maybe just me ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @bjarkel.993
      @bjarkel.993 5 років тому +22

      Actually a lot of the Danzigers were of Scots origin, so kilts could have been shown !!

    • @levmyshkin8366
      @levmyshkin8366 5 років тому +3

      I don’t think they wear kilts in any part of England, except on weekends.

    • @MrParapecik226
      @MrParapecik226 4 роки тому +6

      @@bjarkel.993
      Not really, at least not during 1920. This used to be true but somewhere around 1500's

  • @EsamforMEMES
    @EsamforMEMES 5 років тому +184

    0:20 I like how the spirit of fredrick the great is walking normally in the city xD

    • @KizanTM
      @KizanTM 5 років тому +8

      3samツ Easter eggu

    • @aminadabbrulle8252
      @aminadabbrulle8252 Рік тому +1

      Especially considering how adamantly the city kept telling him to fuck off.

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. 5 років тому +631

    Good video, but I think you should have mentioned Poland building the new port city of Gdynia right next to Gdańsk/Danzig.

    • @Artur_M.
      @Artur_M. 5 років тому +24

      @Hubert Dąbrowski Thanks! Can you believe that I stared at my comment for about 3 minutes, thinking "What is he on about? I wrote Danzig." and not seeing the extra n?

    • @johnshelton1141
      @johnshelton1141 5 років тому +29

      Thus, Danzig should have been returned to Germany when Gdynia was completed.

    • @toreq1127
      @toreq1127 5 років тому +42

      @@johnshelton1141 stuff like this this was decided mostly by france and britain and they made about 0 good decisions during the time between the wars so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @zejdland
      @zejdland 4 роки тому +11

      @@johnshelton1141 not really those lands were taken by The germans.. it was our land

    • @lightypower3412
      @lightypower3412 4 роки тому +10

      @@johnshelton1141 *Ekhem* Historically it was Baltic/Slavic, only around the early XIV century was the Polish then half of the city massacred by the German rioters (Who rebelled aganist the king Vladislav Łokietek)

  • @jakubklusek5816
    @jakubklusek5816 3 роки тому +131

    You forgot to mention that in the interwar period Poland built a new huge port and entirely new city of Gdynia, just some 20 kilometers north west from Gdańsk, and thus, polish trade became independent from good or bad will of the german authorities of Gdańsk. Today Gdańsk, Gdynia and Sopot (a town located between them) form one metropolitan area called Trójmiasto (triple city).

    • @dachydueljaxon
      @dachydueljaxon Рік тому

      Yes true. Are you also Polish?

    • @jakubklusek5816
      @jakubklusek5816 Рік тому +1

      @@dachydueljaxon Yes, but I'm not from that region. I'm from southern Poland

    • @christopher9727
      @christopher9727 Рік тому

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    • @xeon39688
      @xeon39688 9 місяців тому

      Danzig*

    • @Skeloperch
      @Skeloperch 8 місяців тому +2

      @@xeon39688 Cope. Poland owned Gdansk first before they got tag teamed by Russia, Prussia, and Austria. Germoids malding.

  • @konradzawadzki2616
    @konradzawadzki2616 3 роки тому +260

    1:10 my grandfather came from a German “polonised” (his father was German and his mother Polish) family and I have never heard my family mentioning any discrimination during the second Polish republic (1918-1939), contrary to what happened during the communist period when he had to change his surname (got rid of the aristocratic “von” in front) and still ended up prosecuted by the communist authorities. The Polish government before WW2 had much respect for his family, didnt confiscate any land (again contrary to the communist). Of course it helped that he basicly felt loyal to Poland not Germany (was in the Polish army) but he never had to hide his German roots

    • @felixjohnsens3201
      @felixjohnsens3201 3 роки тому +29

      My Grandgrandfather had a completely other experience...ok, could be that he came from the Baltic People how lived there before the Poles and Germans and how became German over time.

    • @jerikrazik4707
      @jerikrazik4707 2 роки тому +4

      @@felixjohnsens3201 I find that a funny statement " before the Germans and Poles" maybe you ment before Poland and Germany, or you ment before the Slavs or you ment that the Vidinist faith or the Prussian faith ( as I call it because it's basically the same) as there is no before germans in Eastern Europe. Tutons are only outlived by the Solduri the founders of the Soldatin. I find the Tutonic conquest really just like the Norman one- a 3rd party comming in and saying both groups lose, but other than the name of their thunder God and all father there is little outside of Baltic peoples that can separate them. Liths of course are different they are a horse people from the steps but they only are Balts by losing as much as the celts and being forced to where they are now.

    • @Mszaanisko
      @Mszaanisko 2 роки тому +5

      Like basically general Rómmel, whos name isn't so different than german Rommel, was a german descendant and he was one of the leaders of PL military. To be fair I can imagine after so many years of oppresion that common folks when given a chance wanted to make some revenge on germans, but as long as I'm checking sources, there were no direct laws nor any state created ethnic cleansings etc.

    • @Mszaanisko
      @Mszaanisko 2 роки тому

      Not that such cleansings wouldn't be a good idea, considering the german fifth column during WWII (so the germans who betrayed their polish neigbhoors and worked for the third reich during and just before the war, basically traitors)

    • @mariusludwig3971
      @mariusludwig3971 2 роки тому +2

      @@Mszaanisko Hey, I know how you meant that, but condoning or legitimizing ethnic cleansing is a bit ......
      The problem with such statements is that the other side can also use it. For example, the Nazis wanted to legitimize the invasion of the Czech Republic and Poland on the basis of discrimination and persecution of German minorities. If that had been factually true, Britain might not have intervened.

  • @williamharris8367
    @williamharris8367 2 роки тому +14

    I remember (very) briefly covering this topic in Grade 10 History class, but the textbook never explained what was meant by a "free city", and our teacher did not know. Thank-you for this concise explanation of how things worked.

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus 2 роки тому

      Your teacher sounds dumb

  • @wayneparker9331
    @wayneparker9331 5 років тому +27

    LOVED the text of that Danzig constitution you put up. Really hope you'll one day go back to 10 minute videos. It's clear that you're knowledgeable about the subject matters in your videos but restricted by time. Keep up the great work!!

  • @paxis7517
    @paxis7517 5 років тому +18

    I must warn you this may sound cliché but History matters is one of my favorite history channels and I do believe they can be mostly reliable and they're humor is a nice added bonus. In short also in my opinion an all around good history oriented channel. If you do not agree that is fine because ultimately I won't be majorly affected by it.

  • @Armorius2199
    @Armorius2199 5 років тому +68

    When will the Orthodox view on Protestantism come out?

  • @AlekWheeler
    @AlekWheeler 2 роки тому +16

    I remember reading an excerpt of the diary of WL MacKenzie King, Canadian PM during the time.
    While a perponent of middle powers (provided they were British and former colonies), till his dying day, he blamed Poland, and their refusal to grant the Germans the German corridor and Danzig.
    In fact, he was (like most of the Allies until WW2) pro-Hitler and believed that the Nazis wouldn’t have ever declared war had Poland not “provoked” them and just given in to appeasement.
    For what it’s worth, he’s currently the longest serving PM, not just in Canada, but in the entire former British Empire, he held seances to talk to the ghost of his dead mother and laid the groundwork for the post war world along with Churchill, FDR, Attlee and Truman.

    • @AFGuidesHD
      @AFGuidesHD 2 роки тому +7

      Many such diplomats blamed Poland when you read the diplomatic telegrams and for what it's worth they were right. Germany had no plans or intentions of war with Poland until the British encirclement policy undertaken on March 31st. Naturally diplomats and Commonwealth PMs wouldn't blame Britain for their actions. Rather the Poles for not returning to negotiations with Germany (which they broke from after receiving British military promises).

    • @mcuddy799
      @mcuddy799 2 роки тому +1

      And he remains unloved and forgotten in his home country to this day.

    • @Vrangelrip
      @Vrangelrip Рік тому

      @@AFGuidesHD oh yey a nazi apologist

  • @AndrewVasirov
    @AndrewVasirov 5 років тому +566

    Free City of Danzig was free as much as the Independent State of Croatia was independent.

    • @tataigre123
      @tataigre123 5 років тому +16

      ??? You clearly don't know anything

    • @wisemankugelmemicus1701
      @wisemankugelmemicus1701 5 років тому +35

      Andrew Vasirov You’re kind of right, but it depends on the definition of “free”. If by “free” you mean it didn’t belong to anyone, it was. If by “free” you mean self-determining, it wasn’t. And if you mean the government wasn’t 100% pro-nazi...it wasn’t.
      One out of three isn’t bad.

    • @sjakierulez
      @sjakierulez 5 років тому +5

      @@wisemankugelmemicus1701 Too bad we can't say the same about Croatia, or the Balkan as a whole really

    • @ivankraljevic1
      @ivankraljevic1 5 років тому +6

      Berlin,Bruxelles...What's the difference ?

    • @firefox3249
      @firefox3249 5 років тому +18

      And as much as the Democratic People's Republic of North Korea is democratic.

  • @mixererunio1757
    @mixererunio1757 5 років тому +76

    It's worth mentioning that Poland wanting to have sea port truly in its hands build new one - Gdynia basically from scratch. It's even more impressive if you remember that 20s and 30s were Great Depression times and building big city and port is very expensive.

    • @gabed7407
      @gabed7407 5 років тому +17

      Yeah in some respects Gdynia actually became more successful than the city of Gdańsk itself

    • @TheBard1999
      @TheBard1999 5 років тому +17

      And as Gdynia grew, so did increase trade coming frought it. It made Danzig less revelant over time as Danzig was getting shrinking share of Polish sea trade.

    • @nb2008nc
      @nb2008nc 5 років тому

      The Great Depression didn't begin until late 1929

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 5 років тому

      In fact, the primary reason for Gdynia being built was concerned with easening emigration to the States which would then serve as a source of remittances for the struggling Polish economy. Danzig was enough for their regular Baltic trade.

    • @kev492001
      @kev492001 5 років тому +1

      Yeah, Poland did very good, with considering everything they had to do to become a European power, to stand up against Germany and the USSR. I believe I read that they was within another year of their army being fully modernized. They was also right about warning the world about Nazi Germany and the USSR.

  • @DD-wj5mz
    @DD-wj5mz 5 років тому +29

    Perhaps an episode on Kaiser Karl’s attempts to take back the throne of Hungary post Great War

  • @KniazJarema2137
    @KniazJarema2137 5 років тому +99

    A little correction. Poland didn't rely entirely on Gdańsk (Danzig) as a trade port during interwar period, but we built our own port in our own borders out of nothing. It is called Gdynia and is located right next to Gdańsk. In about 5 years Gdynia transformed from little fishing villiage to full grown international port from which operated some big passenger ships that connected Gdynia with New York. Even Germans, after they invaded Poland in 1939 used it to house their battleships like, for example, battleship Bismarck

    • @qzg7857
      @qzg7857 5 років тому +14

      @@gerdforster883 as much as i agree with you it was only true in the humble begings of Gdynia.
      In 1939 Gdynia transported more goods than Gdańsk it was modern with great railroad connections. Actually it was better suited for modern vessels and overshadowed Gdańsk.
      Yes riber was important but keep in minde that by that time it was also not as fast as train

    • @gerdforster883
      @gerdforster883 5 років тому +2

      @@qzg7857 Sure it overshadowed Danzig in the end. But I am pretty sure the Polish state would have prefered not to make the huge initial investment.
      And for most goods, the increased speed of railroads over the river is not really that important. Ore does not go stale ;)

    • @gerdforster883
      @gerdforster883 5 років тому +2

      @vitoduval Yes, but that was a few decades after the time we were discussing here ;)

    • @danielbishop1863
      @danielbishop1863 4 роки тому +5

      Basically, the reason for building the Gdynia seaport was:
      1. Poland fought a war against Russia, and thus had to import a bunch of military supplies from the West, via Danzig.
      2. Danzig's German dockworkers, who didn't particularly want to aid the Polish army, went on strike.
      3. This made Poland really unhappy with having its sea trade be dependent on a foreign state, so they decided it was necessary to have a 100% Polish-controlled port.

    • @Elenrai
      @Elenrai 4 роки тому

      @@gerdforster883 bloody tosspot go re-read

  • @Frankenbutt99
    @Frankenbutt99 5 років тому +23

    Can we get some videos about Trieste and Saar?

  • @femia4125
    @femia4125 3 роки тому +8

    I like how the characters always carry little signs and the facial expressions they make

  • @commonwealthrealm
    @commonwealthrealm 5 років тому +14

    How did you fail to mention how Gdansk/Danzig was the biggest and most prosperous city of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth for over two centuries before its fall as a result of Prussian annexation and marginalization of one of Europe's most powerful coastal cities? Secondly, Danzig was until the second partition of Poland-Lithuania and subsequent Germanisation of it, a multicultural city with Germans, Dutch, Poles, Italian and Jewish inhabitants living side by side. Another point you failed to mention was that Germany in 1918 had plenty of port cities both on the Baltic Coast and the North Sea: Konigsberg, Stettin, Rostock, Lubeck, Hamburg, Bremerhaven, Wilhelmshaven etc..., Resurrected Poland had none and Germany with its over 1000 kilometers long coastline wanted to refuse Poland access to the Baltic sea, yeah Teutonic Germans = later Prussians and Brandenburg had been dicks to Poles not just during WW2, but also during Bismarck's super racist Kulturkampf and constant oppression of the Poles of Greater Poland, Silesia, Masuria and Pomerania/West Prussia. The Free City of Danzig was another shameful chapter as the city had historically and lawfully been Polish, but with tradition for autonomic rule. And this is what Poland wanted to offer its inhabitants if it was granted the city, similarly to what they had done in the past and after the Silesian uprising granted the newly established Silesian Voivoideship close to full autonomy with exception of foreign policy and military. For Germany Danzig was a port with no real value, that had never been of importance unlike the ports in Konigsberg/Pillau and Stettin which Prussia and then Germany favoured. For Poland Gdansk/Danzig was everything and forced the Second Polish Republic to construct Gdynia next to the Free city over the span of under 15 years from 1925 to 1939. Yes Gdansk/Danzig was the only real port in 1919 in the Polish corridor, but by 1939 Poland had built a much more modern and better equipeed port than the one found in Danzig in Gdynia. Danzig was about to be marginalized no mater what which was proven since the Kriegsmarine stationed in Gdynia/Gdingen/Gotenhafen instead of Danzig. Finally the Danzigers were dumb enough to vote the Nazis into power in 1933 which efficiently doomed their city as Nazi Germany was then dumb enough to start a World War over it and since 1945 Gdansk is Polish again. More importantly it is one of the six big ones in Poland along with Warsaw, Krakow, Wroclaw, Lodz and Poznan and the most important port city and shipyard in the country responsible for the beginning of the end of the Iron curtain in the 1980s and a powerhouse in naval construction. Seriously this video was very weak.

    • @zubstep
      @zubstep 5 років тому +1

      Best comment. Great context added.

    • @bernhardt1557
      @bernhardt1557 4 роки тому +1

      All I see are cuck tears

    • @bernhardt1557
      @bernhardt1557 4 роки тому +1

      Of a country whose existence in modern times was only permitted as to be a buffer state between germany and russia

    • @spagetea3417
      @spagetea3417 4 роки тому +1

      @@bernhardt1557 Both countries have a claim to the city and poles are gonna argue its polish and germans will argue its german. And I dont think insulting a country and calling it a buffer state is going to change anything

    • @Har1ByWorld
      @Har1ByWorld 2 роки тому

      @@bernhardt1557 Who defited russian and are far better then germans tfu

  • @pauldowner1
    @pauldowner1 5 років тому +2

    History Matters upload a video on my birthday! Woo thank you :). Plus i've been to Gdansk and it's a stunning place.

  • @joshi3334
    @joshi3334 5 років тому +10

    0:01 The map of imperial Germany is wrong. It held some possessions of modern day southern Denmark.

  • @gymythe4th355
    @gymythe4th355 3 роки тому +21

    Please do a video on the history of james bizinet and how he became the lead donor.

    • @bkgames2
      @bkgames2 3 роки тому

      Great idea! *Clap*

  • @geoffwilliams6072
    @geoffwilliams6072 4 роки тому +5

    Timeline of Gdańsk (Danzig)
    Historical affiliations
    Kingdom of Poland 997-1227
    Duchy of Pomerelia 1227-1282
    Kingdom of Poland 1282-1308
    Teutonic Order 1308-1410
    Kingdom of Poland 1410-1411
    Teutonic Order 1411-1454
    Kingdom of Poland 1454-1569
    Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569-1793
    Kingdom of Prussia 1793-1807
    Free City of Danzig 1807-1814
    Kingdom of Prussia 1814-1871
    German Empire 1871-1918
    Weimar Germany 1918-1920
    Free City of Danzig 1920-1939
    Nazi Germany 1939-1945
    People's Republic of Poland 1945-1989
    Republic of Poland 1989-present

  • @eliasfefchak4646
    @eliasfefchak4646 5 років тому +47

    You should do something on kilingrad and how it transformed from German to Russian

    • @KerianRegis
      @KerianRegis 5 років тому +33

      @Sigurd Hlodversson Start shit, get hit.

    • @edgarratsep3631
      @edgarratsep3631 5 років тому +35

      Nazis:"Don't mind me just coming to slaughter eastern slavs."
      Also Nazis:"Why do slavs hate us?!"

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +18

      @Sigurd Hlodversson In case of Königsberg and Prussia, many Germans fled before said genocide could happen, though.

    • @SirFaceFone
      @SirFaceFone 5 років тому +8

      Hundreds of thousands of Poles died after the war as well when the German and Polish borders were moved westward

    • @oc8636
      @oc8636 5 років тому +35

      @@KerianRegis Riiiiiiiight. Because the people started the shit right?
      With that logic i could say the killing of jews was justified because they 'started shit' wich they didnt same as the German population

  • @losdirectosdetroopa973
    @losdirectosdetroopa973 2 роки тому +1

    Happy 1 million subs, this was the videos whith which I found you

  • @riko_z9962
    @riko_z9962 5 років тому +137

    so it's basically hongkong but in 1930s

    • @fclp67
      @fclp67 5 років тому +17

      Hong Kong isn't even a city state and never was it was a British colony then a Chinese special zone

    • @fotis_.__4819
      @fotis_.__4819 5 років тому +9

      @@fclp67 He talks about the situation and the specific events.

    • @dflatt1783
      @dflatt1783 4 роки тому +1

      Hrmm.... A few similarities I suppose.

    • @Tycini1
      @Tycini1 4 роки тому +2

      And you're basically basic with your basic anime avatar

    • @naruciakk
      @naruciakk 4 роки тому +2

      There are some similarities on a practical layer, and as I'm a citizen of Gdansk/Danzig, who really like the idea of our city's autonomy (because let's be clear, this was a real status of the Free City and also a status that the city had in Kingdom of Poland after 1454 and later in Poland-Lithuania as well) and as I identify myself as neither Polish nor German, I wouldn't argue if we had an extensive autonomy within Poland/EU.

  • @matepastorcic679
    @matepastorcic679 3 роки тому +9

    This is so high quality, in my opinion better than Oversimplified and you have so much good and interesting content. Keep up the good work.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims 2 роки тому +1

      That’s not a high bar to beat oversimplified

  • @akechijubeimitsuhide
    @akechijubeimitsuhide Рік тому +3

    The Tin Drum takes place mostly in Danzig in this exact time period, and it's a very interesting view into the city's life.

    • @onurbschrednei4569
      @onurbschrednei4569 Рік тому

      Yess! As do a lot of Gunter Grass books, like Cat and Mouse for example. Gunter Grass himself had grown up in Danzig in that time period.

  • @thelememonk
    @thelememonk 5 років тому +12

    Kdansk (1148), Gdansk (1173-86), Gdanzc (1178), Gdantz (1198), Danzk, Danzc (1209), Gdanizc (1220), Dancek, Danczk (1224), Gdancz (1235), Gdanzc (1238), in Danzeke (1248), Gdanzke (1267), Gdansk (1268), Danczk (1279), de Dancezc (1281), Gdanchek, Gdanchez (1283), Dantzig (1292), Gdantzik (1295), Gedani (1303), in civitate Gdansco (1310), Danzich (1310), Gdantczk (1325), Danzk (1342), Danczc, Gdanczk, Gdanczc (1342), Dantzigke, Dantzke (1357), Gdanczk (1434), Gdansk (1435), Gdansko (1457), Dantzigk (1471), Gdanysk (1483), in Gdanum (1510-29), Gdańsk, do Gdańska (1565), Gedanum civitas (1570), do Gdańska, pode Gdańskiem (1615), in civitate Gedanensi (1624), do Gdańska (1664), Danzig (1796-1802), Gdańsk, Danzig (1881), Freie Stadt Danzig (1920), Danzig (1939), Gdańsk (1945)

  • @Roderickdl
    @Roderickdl 5 років тому +2

    Thank you for this little piece of history.

  • @patrick8358
    @patrick8358 5 років тому +125

    Do the Easter Rising and the Irish Civil War.
    Do something out of left field like, I don't know, Israel and the Six Days' War, or maybe even the birth of modern Israel itself, if you're not afraid to open that can of worms. I feel like you could cover it in a fair and balanced way.

    • @sjakierulez
      @sjakierulez 5 років тому +3

      Just make sure to explain the role of the French and more importantly the British

    • @ChrisDynamo
      @ChrisDynamo 5 років тому +2

      This isn't 10 Minute History anymore, it's 2 Minute History; no way he can cover those topics in that amount of time.

    • @albar2989
      @albar2989 5 років тому +3

      @Iskander 122 you obviously know nothing about us. so generally, don't bother talking about subjects you don't understand or have knowledge about - not only about jews/israel - but generally in life.

    • @patrick8358
      @patrick8358 5 років тому +2

      @@ChrisDynamo Some of the videos approach 5 minutes. There's no reason he couldn't do a 10 minute video every once in a while. It's what the fans want.

    • @patrick8358
      @patrick8358 5 років тому +3

      @Iskander 122 As soon as you said "it's simple", you were wrong.
      Don't you watch the videos on this channel? That would lead a reasonable person to believe that you have at least a meddling interest in history, which would precipitate your understanding that literally nothing about any piece of history is simple. That's why historiography exists.

  • @jeffsanders1609
    @jeffsanders1609 4 роки тому +38

    0:52 Imagine if the city was called Danig instead

  • @modyafg
    @modyafg 4 роки тому +13

    I know it's old video but i think it was worth mentioning that Polish/Kashubian population was actively discriminated against by German population and cities council. My Grandpa was beaten up by Germans for being Polish and "polluting" the city. I'm so happy that nationalism and imperialism is slowly dying so situation like this don't happen anymore!

  • @somethingsempire962
    @somethingsempire962 5 років тому +96

    It even had its own anthem!
    Kennst du die Stadt am Bergsteinstrand,
    Umgrünt von ew' ger Wälder Band,
    Wo schlanke Giebel streben, Empor zum Sonnenschein.
    Ja sollt' ich fröhlich leben,
    Ja sollt' ich fröhlich leben,
    In Danzig
    In Danzig
    In Danzig müsst es sein!
    This is the first Text.
    I am realy Danziger.

    • @ran_3221
      @ran_3221 5 років тому +3

      I'll I read was Sicko Mode

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +13

      Most German towns had its own anthemns, it's not really suprising.

    • @nb2008nc
      @nb2008nc 5 років тому +5

      If you're a real Danziger you must be really old

    • @Retardeano
      @Retardeano 5 років тому +5

      So you're a German, still living in Danzig?

    • @somethingsempire962
      @somethingsempire962 5 років тому

      @@Retardeano No but Danziger sounds like ,,Ganz sicher'' which means: I am very sure.

  • @Daniel-kq4bx
    @Daniel-kq4bx 5 років тому +10

    I was there. Beautiful city. There was a street that used to be the Adolf Hitler Street and the Joseph Stalin Street. Lovely

    • @seanshure
      @seanshure 5 років тому +6

      At least theres equal opportunity for mass murders

    • @Daniel-kq4bx
      @Daniel-kq4bx 5 років тому +6

      @@seanshure *Mao breathes heavily*

  • @bikkiikun
    @bikkiikun 3 роки тому +14

    The Free City "solution" was just asking for trouble...

  • @alexanderchenf1
    @alexanderchenf1 5 років тому +3

    I love your “Golden Years” bit. Your animation has a GREAT sense of humor and is extremely cute!

  • @kuzev
    @kuzev Рік тому +4

    This summer I visited Gdansk and went to the WW2 museum. The history of the free city of Danzig portrayed there is a bit different than what's stated in this video

    • @someone-wo5nu
      @someone-wo5nu Рік тому +2

      Polish government changing history up to their benefit¿!! Wow who could have guessed

    • @onurbschrednei4569
      @onurbschrednei4569 Рік тому +3

      is it from a polish nationalist standpoint?

  • @MolnarPohdap
    @MolnarPohdap 3 роки тому +10

    My junior high school German teacher was from Danzig. He always spoke (and taught!) German in his Danzig dialect, in which the city's name was pronounced "Danzisch" - and likewise, "zwansig" became "zwansisch," "ich" was "isch," etc.

    • @fyeahusa
      @fyeahusa 3 роки тому +2

      Pronouncing the 'ig' at the end of a word as roughly 'ich' or 'isch' is part of Standard German, not just a local Danzig dialect.

    • @timothytikker3834
      @timothytikker3834 3 роки тому +3

      As "ich," yes, as "isch," no, at least in my experience dealing with Germans over the years, and visiting Germany more than once. That German teacher told us after our visit to the Goethe Institute in San Francisco that when he was conversing in German with the staff there, they soon asked him "so, you're from Danzig?" His accent gave him away.

    • @Johnnygold332
      @Johnnygold332 2 роки тому +2

      🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱 GDANSK
      germany is🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷

  • @MidgeCat
    @MidgeCat 5 років тому +47

    I’m gonna say the D word
    *Danzigers*

  • @sakismakro8421
    @sakismakro8421 5 років тому +7

    Do a short documentary on the Greek civil war can you?

  • @DwRockett
    @DwRockett 4 роки тому +3

    0:21 lmao, nice ghost Frederick the Great there

  • @IsAcRafT
    @IsAcRafT 5 років тому +23

    From humble beginnings, passing to be a powerful nation in Europe, Disappeared 3 times, and yet coming back from the ashes each time and now have one of the best gaming studios of our generation Poland has a very interesting history, Greetings from Dominican Republic ^^

    • @infirmux
      @infirmux 3 роки тому

      and trying to lose it all again... :(

    • @5Penkets
      @5Penkets 3 роки тому +2

      Poland was made strong by the Entente because they wanted something to hold off the Soviets in the east. They should’ve just made a strong Ukraine or Lithuania and avoid these messy borders with Germany, also Ukraine and Lithuania weren’t as aggressive as Poland.

    • @PopelPL
      @PopelPL 3 роки тому +3

      @@5Penkets I beg your pardon

    • @5Penkets
      @5Penkets 3 роки тому +2

      @@PopelPL What ? Why do you need a pardon this is just what happened and we can’t change it. There were good reasons to choose Poland like it having more German influence, when Lithuania gained Memel they didn’t knew what were they doing with places like the Curonian spit which contained one of the best resorts in the German empire, and the people there were smart and educated where in Lithuania everyone were if comparing to the citizens of the memel region: absolute retards, even the president of Lithuania, Antanas Smetona only spent 1 day in Juodkrante and immediately left for Palanga saying: this is too expensive.
      A PRESIDENT HAD NO IDEA WHAT TO DO WITH A RESORT. And Same thing was for Ukraine, it was all under Russian influence the whole time, but Poland got parts of Germany and since the people there were under German influence they were way more educated, i think Poland was chosen because it was seen like a legit state with smart and educated people.

    • @michakrynicki7299
      @michakrynicki7299 3 роки тому +1

      @@5Penkets lithunia was to weak and small and Ukraine is berly a nation created 50 Years after the war in 1991

  • @jamescaley9942
    @jamescaley9942 5 років тому +12

    Do the Saar referendum 1935.

  • @stevelapointe180
    @stevelapointe180 5 років тому +9

    Fun fact, when the Teutonic Knights built the castle of Marlbork, near Gdańsk (Danzig), they named their elevated outhouse the “Danziger” so they could symbolically shit on the orignal Slavic inhabitants of the area every time they used it.

  • @sisyphusvasilias3943
    @sisyphusvasilias3943 5 років тому +16

    Poland, always geopolitically "inconvenient"

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +13

      What is so inconvinient about Polish location? It only becomes bad when Germany and Russia gang up against her. Germany and Russia are both as flat as Poland is.

    • @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542
      @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542 4 роки тому +3

      @@Vitalis94 germany is mountanious at the south and filled with rivers at north. Russia has defensible borders except for the Polish Cooridor and its filled with various biomes, regardless Poland is doomed if any of them gain power

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 4 роки тому +7

      @@hauntologicalwittgensteini2542 Poland is also mountainous to the south, has Oder river as it's western border, Bug as eastern, not unlike Germany.

    • @DrewPicklesTheDark
      @DrewPicklesTheDark 4 роки тому

      @@Vitalis94 Poland is geographically located in between the two of them, it was going to get caught in the crossfire either way. It wasn't the terrain itself.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 4 роки тому +2

      @@DrewPicklesTheDark In 20 century, Germany was located between France and Russia. And it still stands there today.

  • @mattc9998
    @mattc9998 5 років тому +18

    Why wasn't some border area of East Prussia granted to Poland for sea access instead of an area that would make Germany angry at having their land cut in two?

    • @erik7816
      @erik7816 5 років тому +8

      Because in East Prussia the germans were before WW2 in the Majority and königsberg was a important Metropol for Germany. Excuse the language.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +16

      The only viable ports in Prussia were Elbing, Königsberg and Memel, all majority German cities.

    • @mattc9998
      @mattc9998 5 років тому +8

      All valid points. It just seems ridiculous that a peace treaty would carve up a country in such a detrimental way that any person looking at a map could look at and say "these territories need to be joined up"

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 5 років тому +29

      @@mattc9998 But then again, the borders looked exactly like that before the Partitions of Poland. The idea of the Polish Corridor wasn't anything new, border looked like this for centuries before Poland dissapeared from the map.

    • @TheBlobik
      @TheBlobik 5 років тому +11

      ​@@mattc9998 Exactly as Vitalis pointed out, this was mostly due to historic reasons. Danzig used to be in possesion of Polish princes and kings for a few centuries overall (except about 200 years when it was owned by Teutonic Knights and 123 years when Poland did not exist). Its just that Prussia formed around it due to fusion of Prussia and Brandenburg. The same Prussia that was formerly a Polish vassal and was expected to be eventually annexed by Poland. Yet it grew independent and eventually took part in partitions of Poland. Oh the irony.

  • @hungarycountryball1056
    @hungarycountryball1056 5 років тому +25

    Do why did Hungary join the axis

    • @TheGreatCooLite
      @TheGreatCooLite 5 років тому +4

      I think he did that already

    • @icecoldpolitics8890
      @icecoldpolitics8890 5 років тому +4

      The Great CooLite he did Romania

    • @weeden1720
      @weeden1720 5 років тому +8

      Because German could retook some of Hungary lands which were lost after WWI

    • @oc8636
      @oc8636 5 років тому +2

      @Wilhelm II. *France
      Without the help of Britain the Rhineland would have been a French puppet state

    • @oc8636
      @oc8636 5 років тому +3

      @Wilhelm II. Yeah. Hell even the Russians wanted softer peace terms then the French

  • @notroll1279
    @notroll1279 2 роки тому +2

    Fun fact: the Danzig currency, the "Danziger Gulden" or Guilder was pegged to the British pound - which may not have been the obvious choice in a micro-state wedged in between Germany and Poland.

  • @tugs-erdene623
    @tugs-erdene623 3 роки тому +2

    0:20 Ghost of Frederick in the background

  • @janheist8861
    @janheist8861 5 років тому +6

    Can you do one about the Free City of Trieste

  • @saillok4923
    @saillok4923 5 років тому +6

    Nice video ! Now could you do one about the French occupation of Memel after ww1?

    • @windex1613
      @windex1613 5 років тому +4

      Ohhn that's why we have good baguettes

    • @northatlanticcommonwealth1188
      @northatlanticcommonwealth1188 5 років тому +1

      Ah yes the mighty Memel

    • @5Penkets
      @5Penkets 3 роки тому +1

      @@windex1613 Memel was given to France, but Lithuanians living there rose up against them and the French pulled out leaving Memel to Lithuania.

  • @aksmex2576
    @aksmex2576 5 років тому +12

    I wish you had gone further back in history about the city and the area.

  • @Sly88Frye
    @Sly88Frye 4 роки тому +2

    Damn! That sounds like a very complicated situation to be a part of

  • @CraftsmanOfAwsomenes
    @CraftsmanOfAwsomenes 3 роки тому +1

    Why no mention of the city of Gdynia which was founded to serve as the main Polish port in the Baltic, circumventing Danzig?

  • @Doogie2K3
    @Doogie2K3 5 років тому +41

    That Danzig constitution tho ("In order to ensure international squabbling for the next 30 years or so")

  • @andriyg1244
    @andriyg1244 5 років тому +46

    0:19 So we got Friedrich II the Great and we already had Hitler's spirit. After few episodes we will see team of German ghost-leaders!
    I think, that Otto von Bismarck or Wilhelm II will be next.

  • @thomasturner6980
    @thomasturner6980 5 років тому +72

    Danzig independence: *exists*
    Hitler: *let me introduce myself*

  • @theNeorax
    @theNeorax 5 років тому +33

    0:20 *FRITZ!!*

  • @akhilt9583
    @akhilt9583 5 років тому +3

    Do some history of the Old Indian Empires as well

  • @annagabameandersson1314
    @annagabameandersson1314 2 роки тому +3

    Gdansk was a city built by a polish overlord around year 1000 the city is polish

    • @Ghreinos
      @Ghreinos 2 роки тому

      But there lived mainly germanic people and tribes and that's why most of it's architecture was half timbered germanic.
      Only because one polish dude founded t doesn't mean anything.

    • @user-od8nh9hc3p
      @user-od8nh9hc3p 2 роки тому +1

      @@Ghreinos that doesnt make it a german city

    • @Ghreinos
      @Ghreinos 2 роки тому

      @@user-od8nh9hc3p The people of Danzig voted to become a part of germany.

    • @Czar_Moss
      @Czar_Moss Рік тому

      @user-od8nh9hc3p if the majority of the city votes to be german then it should be german. doesn't matter who lives there or who made it 1k years ago.

  • @wildsurfer12
    @wildsurfer12 5 років тому +5

    To follow up this video you should do one on how Germany lost it’s eastern territories after WW2 and how their native German populations were expelled. I’ve always found it fascinating that such a removal of people is never discussed by the media or historians at all.

    • @wojciechkuske242
      @wojciechkuske242 5 років тому +2

      Native? Send by lebensraum and kulturkampf? Maybe "Drang nach Osten" doesn't exist!?

    • @tzarcoal1018
      @tzarcoal1018 3 роки тому +2

      @@wojciechkuske242. Most of the population there was indeed native, native germanized Slavic people. I have roots form upper Silesia, there is not a single German last name among them all -ski and -ek etc, they all lived there for centuries. Yet my family was expelled for being German....It was the culture, that was the problem, not the fact if they were native or not.
      Drang nach Osten was absolutely real, but just the most logical thing to happen. In the medieval times, people did not give a fuck about "unlawful invasion" or whatever. Expanding the territory, was just a normal thing, the impressive Roman Empire would not have reached it's glory if it stayed in Rome. In the case of the Germans, you have the sea in the north and the mountains in the south. In the East the French Empire was a highly developed and powerful empire. That German Knights and Realms would expand to the East was the logical result of the situation, so this is how we ended up with things like the Teutonic order... This is what Drang nach Osten means, but some of you absolutely brain-dead idiots, think it is some kind of conspiracy
      In a alternative scenario, if Russia would be very powerful much earlier and Poland would be stronger, we would talk about the polonisation of eastern Germany.

    • @johannbrrr8065
      @johannbrrr8065 2 роки тому

      @@tzarcoal1018 I find the name teutonige order a bit misleading, it was funded during the crusades in the holy land to protect a hospital and was founded by German knights. Later, when the holy land was reconquered by the Muslims it went back to Europe. At that time the polish kingdom was divided in dynastic struggles. One part of this Poland asked the teutonic order to come and protect them from their non Christian neighbour's, the Prussians, who seemed to be a military threat for this Christian part of poland, that's how the teutonic order got there, on invitation from Poland. I think that Silesia became German was connected with a dynastic marriage or so, which made it part of the holy Roman empire and caused a connection with Germany which in the long run had a germanizing effect, off course coupled with migration, which was often welcomed as they usually where skilled people with new tools and techniques who came, also from the Netherlands and Belgium, which at that point was already very well developed areas with partly Roman history.

  • @swevixeh
    @swevixeh 5 років тому +46

    "Diversity is our strength"

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 4 роки тому +27

      Yep, the "morally superior" allies ethnically cleansed 15 million Germans from eastern Europe after the war.

    • @yigitoz8387
      @yigitoz8387 4 роки тому +13

      @Don't question my comment 60 mil?
      Yeah all the people died in ww2 killed by germans your ignorence level is higher than karens

    • @nicolasaudra8709
      @nicolasaudra8709 4 роки тому

      Lol

    • @TheTollFace
      @TheTollFace 4 роки тому +2

      @Don't question my comment Complete and utter bullshit.

    • @DrewPicklesTheDark
      @DrewPicklesTheDark 4 роки тому +3

      @Don't question my comment You would really hate what Churchill did to India and FDR's opinion on negroes then.

  • @johnrohde5510
    @johnrohde5510 3 роки тому +2

    It's worth remembering that Poland built the nearby, rival port of Gdynia.

  • @masonmoran9260
    @masonmoran9260 5 років тому +1

    @historymatters I love your history videos. Keep up the great work!

  • @BDFJH
    @BDFJH 5 років тому +3

    I know you're getting bombarded by requests, but would you be able to do "How BIG a miracle was the "Miracle of the Rhine"?

  • @edwardblair4096
    @edwardblair4096 3 роки тому +7

    "We the People (of Danzig) in order to ensure international squabbling for like the next 30 years, do ordain and establish this Constitution.
    Article 1
    The League of Nations will decide everything. Stop whining. Also, you're no longer German."

  • @bruhyoulowontime9009
    @bruhyoulowontime9009 4 роки тому +7

    Man I love that band!
    Sorry I just wanted to make the joke

  • @courtneyrussell8277
    @courtneyrussell8277 Рік тому

    I love this channel.

  • @johnrohde5510
    @johnrohde5510 2 роки тому +2

    It's worth noting Poland built Gdynia as its own rival port to Danzig. After WW2 most of the ethnic German population fled or was expelled.

  • @napoleon8181
    @napoleon8181 5 років тому +64

    How to talk about the Polish Corridor for 3 minutes without mentioning the construction of Gdynia.

    • @MyVanir
      @MyVanir 4 роки тому +9

      He wasn't talking about the Polish Corridor, he was talking about Danzig's status.

    • @napoleon8181
      @napoleon8181 4 роки тому +3

      @@MyVanir Click the video and watch it and get back to me.

    • @ECloudDog
      @ECloudDog 4 роки тому +5

      The video is talking about how independent the city was not about some other city nearby it.

    • @napoleon8181
      @napoleon8181 4 роки тому +6

      @@ECloudDog Video sets up of the significance of Free Danzig as Poland's only real commercial outlet to the sea. But interwar Poland built its own Polish-governed alternative port, called Gdynia. This alternative port, even if never heavily trafficked, was important for taking political leverage away from Danzig. Leaving this out is like forgetting to mention East Germany in a history of Germany during the Cold War.

    • @thenintenbro7154
      @thenintenbro7154 4 роки тому +1

      napoleon8181 no this is about St.Danzig’s freedom

  • @Simix2803
    @Simix2803 5 років тому +21

    0:03 Germany also lost the south of Denmark but you didnt show it as them ever having it

    • @aksmex2576
      @aksmex2576 5 років тому +2

      To be fair Germany did take it at one point from the Danes. I don't know its history, but I think half of Holstein was German, Germany all of it fro. Danmark

    • @julibean5125
      @julibean5125 5 років тому +8

      @@aksmex2576 Schleswig-Holstein was since the end of the middle ages under Danish rule. Holstein remained a part of the HRE while Schleswig was a direct fiefdom of the Danish kings. While Holstein was domenantly German (>90%) Schleswig had a mixed population of Germans, Danes and Frisians. When Prussia annexed Schleswig-Holstein, they referred to an old "law" that was made when SH fell under Danish rule: "
      that they stay together forever undivided" and took everything. After WW1 they came to a sudden case of common sense and asked the people where they want to belong to and adjusted thier borders more or less accordingly.

    • @maxpayne7459
      @maxpayne7459 3 роки тому +4

      @@julibean5125 Prussia and Austria fought a War against Denmark after denmark wanted to take full Control over Schleswig-Holstein since they were not really integrated. Bad Decision since, for Prussia it broke some Treaty, they had with Denmark. So Prussia and Austria declared War on Denmark and they won. Prussia got Schleswig and Austria got Holstein. After the Brother War between Prussia and Austria where Prussia won, Prussia then formed the North German Conferderation.

    • @zepter00
      @zepter00 3 роки тому +1

      Gdańsk was aliasy Polish Timeline of Gdańsk
      Historical affiliations
      Kingdom of Poland 997-1227
      Duchy of Pomerelia 1227-1282
      Kingdom of Poland 1282-1308
      Teutonic Order 1308-1410
      Kingdom of Poland 1410-1411
      Teutonic Order 1411-1454
      Kingdom of Poland 1454-1569
      Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569-1793
      Kingdom of Prussia 1793-1807
      Free City of Danzig 1807-1814
      Kingdom of Prussia 1814-1871
      German Empire 1871-1918
      Weimar Germany 1918-1920
      Free City of Danzig 1920-1939
      Nazi Germany 1939-1945
      People's Republic of Poland 1945-1989
      Republic of Poland 1989-present

  • @Bookeyboo369
    @Bookeyboo369 2 роки тому +3

    My Opa is from here born and raised was made to leave became a “displaced person” due to it no longer being Danzig! Love when he feels like talking about his past. Considering it was so harsh and rough it’s very rare though!

    • @plrc4593
      @plrc4593 Рік тому +1

      You should have not started the war.

  • @alilabeebalkoka
    @alilabeebalkoka 5 років тому +2

    That is interesting! Well many of these special zones and districts that were international creates never really work out.

  • @nik65stgt60
    @nik65stgt60 Рік тому

    Very interesting! Thanks!

  • @spo666tty
    @spo666tty 5 років тому +26

    Whose idea was it to split Germany in such a horrific way that it was almost guaranteed to cause tension in the future?

    • @littlechemie5425
      @littlechemie5425 5 років тому +21

      French.

    • @comradeuro4255
      @comradeuro4255 5 років тому +27

      That land belonged to Poland for a millennium, it was the Germans(prussians) who got the funny idea to get rid of Poland to connect 2 parts of their country

    • @Uberkatze-
      @Uberkatze- 5 років тому +11

      Germans, those were ancestral polish lands

    • @chillaxo9863
      @chillaxo9863 5 років тому +2

      @@Uberkatze- read black lasers comment

    • @jackster2568
      @jackster2568 5 років тому +17

      @Black Laser Well it was 123 years and not 300 and there were many poles living there, I'm guessing you think Kosovo should also be a country because now Albanians live there so it means it's no longer Serbian land.

  • @JensStormLyngs
    @JensStormLyngs 4 роки тому +4

    He forgot north-schleswig as a loss in the treaty

  • @gleet2677
    @gleet2677 5 років тому +6

    I'm shocked but glad to see no Polish and German nationalist keyboard warriors arguing in these comments yet

    • @mirobudzinski7978
      @mirobudzinski7978 5 років тому

      @Nazx 36 thank you for your comment, any factual statements?

    • @mirobudzinski7978
      @mirobudzinski7978 5 років тому

      @mario barcelon thank you for your comment, any factual contribution?

    • @pacthug4life
      @pacthug4life 5 років тому +8

      @mario barcelon Claims that Poles are "keyboard warriors" by going on a keyboard Crusade against Poles. Got to love the hypocrisy

    • @pacthug4life
      @pacthug4life 5 років тому +2

      @mario barcelon Do you have a brain? You responded to an original about the keyboard warriors with a statement that they are "mostly poles...".

    • @nickurban6201
      @nickurban6201 5 років тому

      @QueensBridge Murderer Here comes the first one!

  • @kaifumoj
    @kaifumoj 2 роки тому

    Thanks for telling me history of my city!

  • @MorphingReality
    @MorphingReality 5 років тому

    Good stuff!

  • @PoweredByLS2
    @PoweredByLS2 3 роки тому +6

    I like this channel cause it doesn't seem to be biased.
    As he acknowledges the discrimination the Germans endured under Polish rule.
    Not the usual "the Germans were evil" drivel......

  • @rickyharrisons977
    @rickyharrisons977 5 років тому +42

    Make a video about the polish occupation of moscow in 1612

    • @Artur_M.
      @Artur_M. 5 років тому +9

      Oh yes! The "Dimitriads" is such a messy yet fascinating topic.

  • @TheRealLifeRobert
    @TheRealLifeRobert 5 років тому +18

    What happened to Prussia after World War 2?

    • @Giloup92
      @Giloup92 5 років тому +41

      Prussia was officially « dissolved » by the Allied Powers. And a good part of its former territory was annexed by Russia and Poland.

    • @102830189291
      @102830189291 5 років тому +42

      and all the Germans there got murdered and raped and had to flee to the new german border

    • @ObywatelMurawjow
      @ObywatelMurawjow 5 років тому +1

      at least they had new border

    • @elicoptericus
      @elicoptericus 5 років тому +41

      @Black Laser It's because it wasn't on their orders but on Stalin's orders who also deported hundreds of thousands of Poles from what today is Belarus or tens of thousands of Romanians from what today is Moldova and the Chervnisti and Bugeac zones of Ukraine.

    • @oc8636
      @oc8636 5 років тому +25

      @Black Laser 'evicted instead of genocide'
      Well tell that to the Soviets driving through Prussia burning down villages + rounding up and shooting of the male population.

  • @Warriorcats64
    @Warriorcats64 Рік тому +2

    The real reason was Kelly didn't think Danzig was a Moneymaker, hence her absence in mentions this time.

  • @manueldesousa5054
    @manueldesousa5054 4 роки тому +2

    One of my best friends here in Germany is of Danziger descent :D

  • @timschutz9068
    @timschutz9068 5 років тому +4

    A bit glossed over. But the topic was a bit too specific. My taste. Love your vids anyway❤️

  • @15oClock
    @15oClock 2 роки тому +11

    Every peak into Polish history ends up being a peak into inspiration for The Witcher.

  • @lsb2623
    @lsb2623 5 років тому +16

    Mother... Tell your children not to walk my way,
    Tell your children not to hear my words
    What they mean, What they say
    Mother

  • @bryncox1136
    @bryncox1136 5 років тому +2

    Could you do videos on the dissolution of Vichy France, before the Allied victory, and the Italian invasion of France in 1940?

  • @Fredric_Cedrich
    @Fredric_Cedrich 2 роки тому

    I’m reading The Tin Drum & this helps a lot