The Seven Years War: Crash Course World History #26

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  • Опубліковано 10 гру 2024

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  • @claudekennedy7855
    @claudekennedy7855 9 років тому +224

    "Winning is losing and losing is winning is losing. Such is life, and such is history."
    This show makes me happy.

  • @badatthegame1333
    @badatthegame1333 5 років тому +428

    "The Muggle Empire."
    Everyone else had magic.

  • @sorenhoefel9815
    @sorenhoefel9815 2 роки тому +98

    I've wanted to watch this series in its entirety since it first came out. Took me 10 years, but I finally got around to it and it's amazing to watch a few of the same videos 10 years apart. A better grasp of the scale and complexity of history has made me realize how impressive it is that you managed to make this entertaining, relatively short, and still give a coherent outline of world history.

  • @drewtrevaskus3621
    @drewtrevaskus3621 9 років тому +777

    Best last words, John Sedgwick; "they couldn't hit an elephant from this dista-"

  • @TheSecondVersion
    @TheSecondVersion 5 років тому +2083

    Petition to change the lame (and inaccurate) "Seven Years War" to the better "World War Zero"

    • @des1gnt1c58
      @des1gnt1c58 4 роки тому +26

      Omg yusssss

    • @amortality999
      @amortality999 4 роки тому +123

      Actually, it's World War -1. Napoleonic Wars are World War 0.

    • @Farandawayga
      @Farandawayga 4 роки тому +61

      @@amortality999so let's just rename them all

    • @nancyneyhart
      @nancyneyhart 4 роки тому +24

      Make an online petition PLEASE

  • @SuperHamsterhuey
    @SuperHamsterhuey 9 років тому +1239

    "The first treaty was signed in Paris"
    *Arrow points to Western Spain*
    Is there a Paris in Spain now?

    • @PanzerIVAE
      @PanzerIVAE 9 років тому +115

      SuperHamsterhuey Of course there is a Paris in Spain, didn't you also hear that Lisbon became the capital of Britain?

    • @SuperHamsterhuey
      @SuperHamsterhuey 9 років тому +80

      Giant Dad I'm not that great with Australian history. That's why I watch these videos

    • @candleinthewind9135
      @candleinthewind9135 9 років тому +18

      Of course there was once a Paris in Spain. Crashcourse can't possibly be wrong at anything.

    • @Bearsca
      @Bearsca 9 років тому +17

      candleinthewind Exactly, just as the Seven Years War wasn't actually a war. As the description says, it was a was. A very confusing one at that.

    • @Vaygor
      @Vaygor 9 років тому +2

      +SuperHamsterhuey I was just about to comment that.

  • @14coldplay
    @14coldplay 12 років тому +21

    i know this doesn't have much to do with the actual lesson but i love all of the little easter eggs in the thought bubble. finding cows in trees during the dark ages and a star fox arwing in this episode just shows how much fun people have making this series. thank you very much to all who make this possible.

  • @kayaanyoti
    @kayaanyoti 9 років тому +325

    John! You should do a video about the history about Prussia, which then became Germany! It'd be so interesting!!

    • @tremensdelirius
      @tremensdelirius 8 років тому +6

      +Kaya Anyoti Franco-Prussian War for Alsace-Lorraine

    • @PanzerIVAE
      @PanzerIVAE 8 років тому +3

      +Tremens Delirius A war that lasted like what? 7 Weeks? Pfft

    • @kayaanyoti
      @kayaanyoti 8 років тому +4

      +Aerunn Allado it was still cool man!!

    • @PanzerIVAE
      @PanzerIVAE 8 років тому +2

      ***** I was being sarcastic my friend, the Franco-Prussian War did decide alot of things.

  • @isardiv08
    @isardiv08 11 років тому +9

    I'm french and i didn't know about this war. Probably because the events in France at that time were bigger, but thank you so much for this show! I never stop learning

  • @alicatz6849
    @alicatz6849 6 років тому +11

    I love this topic. Such an underrated event in human history. Wished we talked more about it in school, not everything is all about the American civil war and ww2

  • @Sandouras
    @Sandouras 9 років тому +421

    You should have mentioned more of the continental fight and particularly the man of the war, Frederick of Prussia and his space marines, running from one side of prussia to the other to fend off attackers. Hell, the guy deserves his own episode. Who's with me?

    • @Fvalen1
      @Fvalen1 9 років тому +8

      Sandouras I dunno, I kinda like crash course history because its a lot less Eurocentric....
      *braces for flame comments*

    • @TheSuperCanucks
      @TheSuperCanucks 9 років тому

      +Fvalen1 It's been a month and none so far.

    • @marzbigman
      @marzbigman 9 років тому +3

      +Sandouras I Frderick the Great Episode would be awesome.

    • @TheWolfgangGrimmer
      @TheWolfgangGrimmer 9 років тому

      +Sandouras Space marines...?

    • @Sandouras
      @Sandouras 9 років тому +8

      Ghost7856 Space marines from Warhammer 40.000. Superhuman soldiers that can take on entire armies. Basically Prussians - Spartans in space.

  • @anacadian7590
    @anacadian7590 10 років тому +264

    A few points of correction;
    Most of the Acadians were actually from what is now Nova Scotia.
    While many Acadians were deported, thousands were killed. That tends to get glossed over a lot.
    A lot of Acadians actually returned to Atlantic Canada, and Acadian culture is very much a thing today, distinct from Cajun culture. The province of New Brunswick is basically bilingual because of the ongoing Acadian population there.
    Credit to you though for mentioning the Acadians at all. They tend to get passed over a lot when talking about that era of North American history.

    • @duncancowie4259
      @duncancowie4259 10 років тому +19

      Agreed. Mr. Green is using some mighty American-centric sources if all of the Acadians supposedly come from Maine. If he had gotten it right he could of mentioned the detail about the British not only deporting the French out of the highly fertile Annapolis Valley, but then stealing the land and repopulating it with... wait for it... the Mongols..., err, I mean New Englanders. But yes, great that the Acadians even got a mention.

    • @Raisonnance.
      @Raisonnance. 5 років тому +7

      Un acadien ! On vous oublie pas ici en France !

    • @chrismelanson9059
      @chrismelanson9059 5 років тому +1

      I think you would find the Acadian story very interesting and I would love to see a video on it. A good book on this story is the Melanson family story
      Acadian Family. Acadian Times

    • @oskarileikos
      @oskarileikos 5 років тому

      Have you listened to The Band's song Acadian Driftwood? It tells the story of the Acadians

  • @CollinBuckman
    @CollinBuckman 8 років тому +1564

    I'm annoyed you skipped the European part of this war, nobody ever talks about it in history classes.

    • @TanoBrati
      @TanoBrati 8 років тому +276

      Probably skipped it due to the European theatre's complexity, and this show's trying a bit too hard to ignore Europe.

    • @JazzyNym
      @JazzyNym 8 років тому +136

      I think...I think they were being sarcastic. Because literally that's all they go over in history class when discussing this war, unless you live in America in which they do touch on the American theater cause, you know, we have to learn about the history of our country.

    • @CollinBuckman
      @CollinBuckman 8 років тому +205

      JazzyNym I live in America, and all I was ever taught about the European part of the war was basically "Fighting also happened in Europe, but that doesn't matter."

    • @JazzyNym
      @JazzyNym 8 років тому +26

      Collin Buckman
      Really? Not even during world history? I mean, you may have gone over it but not in much detail so you don't remember it. Granted I may be biased cause I have also lived in more states than most people so I've been exposed to more school systems.

    • @CollinBuckman
      @CollinBuckman 8 років тому +67

      JazzyNym World History was in my opinion the most bare bones history class I've had so far. Like, all we really learned about medieval times was what feudalism is, then we just jumped to the Protestant Reformation.

  • @dfconfused1
    @dfconfused1 12 років тому +7

    I teach Social Studies and just stumbled on these today- you are brilliant. Thank you for all the effort you put in to create these!

  • @100aegir
    @100aegir 9 років тому +84

    "We have been so Eurocentric on crashcourse that all we are gonna say about the war in Europe is that Prussia and Great Britain..."...*cough*AndHannover*cough*
    "Fought France and Austria"...*Cough*AndRussiaAndSwedenAndSaxony*cough*
    "It was mainly fought by the british and french"...*cough*PRUSSIAandAUSTRIA*cough*
    "And as previously noted, the Prussians were fighting the French and the British were fighting the Austrian"...*cough*BritainNeverEngagedInBattleAgainstAustria,PrussiaFoughtAustria,France,RussiaAndSwedenPracticallyAloneOnTheContinentWithTheExceptionOfHannoverThatFoughtAgainstTheFrench*cough*
    "But the war wasn't really about land, it was about our old friend trade"...*cough*ItWasAboutLandAndGeopolitics,LandWasDesiredForEconomicReasonsAndAlsoForPoliticalReasons*cough*
    Ah, yeah, this was a bad history video about the SEVEN YEARS WAR, cannot wait for the video where you talk about the thirty years war and never mention Gustav Adolfus and rather talk about how the English participated...sort of...oh wait, I forgot, the thirty years war doesn't get a video because there was no way to turn it into a narrative about trade and it took place in Europe.

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 9 років тому +6

      +100aegir Lots of his videos took place in Europe. That's why he chose in this one to deemphasise it.

    • @100aegir
      @100aegir 9 років тому +9

      Ethan Davidson You mean in this video where he erases the entire European theater in a European war that started in Europe with the main fighting in Europe with all major participants being European. Oh, lets we not forget that the entire video still talks about FRANCE AND GREAT BRITAIN, TWO EUROPEAN POWERS THAT WERE SECONDARY PARTICIPANTS OF THIS WAR.
      He had at most made ten videos prior to this one about Europe and about three/four/five after depending after how you count it, and even then many of them had huge portions talking about other parts of the world (often America) or dismissing European accomplishments (remember when he dismissed the European Renaissance because 'only the high class actually got to enjoy the Renaissance' and then later in the next world history series continually praises classical Japan's cultural works even though the issue of only the highest of high class got to enjoy it was even greater), or when he talked about the dark ages where Europe only got a minute or two before rest of the world got praised.
      Hell, we literally went from only talking a bit about the Spanish empire straight into the seven years war, ignoring such wars for example the thirty years war, which you can thank largely for the rise of modern nation states, secularism and lowered looting in warfare.
      This is not to mention the inaccuracies in the video, some of them hilariously horrible and bad, such as saying that Spain 'gained' Cuba and the Philippines, when in reality they just got to keep it.
      He isn't somehow giving you a wider view on the oversea theater either, he spend more time on America than anything else, even emphasizing that the most important thing being that it set up for the american revolution, trying to turn one of the biggest and most major European wars prior to Napoleon into some kind of trivial matter, the Indian theater was left incredibly vague and unclear beyond 'Britain won and a trade company pushed the battles, also one event was used for propaganda'
      Tell me simply this before you respond, have you actually studied the seven years war? And no, this video does not count.

    • @PsyX99
      @PsyX99 9 років тому +6

      +100aegir You know that when he say he wont speak about Europe, he has the right not to mention every participant but only the MAIN ones, especially the ones that started it. He didn't want to do the conflict in Europe, so don't blame him for not doing it ! Clearly he wants to insist on the fact that this war was also OUTSIDE Europe, that it was a kind of "first world war".
      And yes they might be inaccuracies, the videos are 10 min long. It's not years of academic studies in 10 min. It's just brief notions so you can get a idea of what happened. That's all. "CRASHcourse".
      Yes, he likes trade. That's his little bias, or a different point of view of the situation. I wonder if he did work on that subject for a time. That being said, I like it. As a French I've learn the history with the French bias, and as a scientist / agronomy student I've learn it with the science/agricultural "bias"/point of view.

    • @100aegir
      @100aegir 9 років тому +8

      ***** "You know that when he say he wont speak about Europe, he has the right not to mention every participant but only the MAIN ones, especially the ones that started it"
      Maybe so, but that isn't what he did. He ignored Russia, one of the five main participants of the war and the largest nation in that war, meanwhile Spain, which came into the war very late and is almost never considered to be one of the main participants gets mentioned and is talked more about than even Prussia, who was the main participant of the war and the one who started it.
      "He didn't want to do the conflict in Europe, so don't blame him for not doing it !"
      He chose to talk about a war that was mainly and primarily set in Europe, and then he chooses to completely ignore the European theater. And again, the video was very Americacentric instead, as I have already addressed.
      "Clearly he wants to insist on the fact that this war was also OUTSIDE Europe, that it was a kind of "first world war"."
      He didn't need to erase and dismiss the European theater to do so.
      "And yes they might be inaccuracies, the videos are 10 min long. It's not years of academic studies in 10 min. It's just brief notions so you can get a idea of what happened. That's all. "CRASHcourse"."
      Inaccuracies such as saying that Spain gained Cuba and the Philippines, despite the fact they had it prior to the war by over a century is a pretty fucking stupid mistake to make if you are making videos about history. Not to mention another inaccuracy that is in your next point.
      "Yes, he likes trade. That's his little bias, or a different point of view of the situation. I wonder if he did work on that subject for a time. That being said, I like it. As a French I've learn the history with the French bias, and as a scientist / agronomy student I've learn it with the science/agricultural "bias"/point of view."
      The problem is the fact the war wasn't about trade, it was fought over land, more specifically Silesia, aka in Europe. That is what started the freaking war. The British were also looking to get land in the colonies, because you need land to produce more stuff. John Green instead insisted it wasn't about land but trade, ignoring the fact that it was about land that they could use to produce more stuff.
      Hell, his over focus on trade really gets fucking annoying, especially in one of his later videos about the vikings were he tries to twist the entire thing into a story that "Trade is inevitable and is what brought end to the viking age", which is just very ignorant (not to mention bunch of other inaccuracies there and ignoring viking culture almost completely besides a brief talk about Norse Paganism).
      John Green frequently has failed to come to grasps the complexity of history and in this video a lot of his flaws are glaringly obvious to anyone who studied the seven years war properly.

    • @PsyX99
      @PsyX99 9 років тому +3

      100aegir
      Like I said : 10 minutes videos. You wont learn history here, juste a few things. And if he want to develop something through his video such as "trade is important" I'm pretty sure he can.
      I'll just react to that "the video was very Americacentric instead"
      Well, if you forgot the part about Africa and India... yes.
      I'll say that this war seems more Frenchcentric to me. We always like to remember this war, how we were friend to the nice Indians, and how we sadly lose north America and our future in India to the Brits

  • @pascaleand0r
    @pascaleand0r 10 років тому +2

    As a french canadian whose history classes taught A LOT about the Seven Years War, I feel so included right now! :D

  • @wildecanuk
    @wildecanuk 12 років тому +9

    Thanks for mentioning the Acadians! Their expulsion and the general badass-ness (not sure where to put the "trait d'union" in that word) of the fur-traders (a.k.a. the voyageurs) are the coolest parts of french-canadian history, in my humble, misguided opinion.

  • @kelseyfriis2410
    @kelseyfriis2410 9 років тому +3

    I watched a bunch of these the night before my AP European test. I basically did nothing else to study and ended up getting a 3. Thanks Crash Course!

  • @nancechonx3
    @nancechonx3 12 років тому +5

    Please do a US History segment! I'm in AP US History & these would be really helpful to everyone. Last year, I used the World History ones to prepare for the AP exam & they really helped!

  • @cynthiasonier5142
    @cynthiasonier5142 9 років тому +13

    To Europe, this was just another war but for Canada, this was a major turning point for the country.
    As you know, even two centuries after that war, Canada is still bilingual. To quebeckers, the battle of the plains of Abraham are as significant and emotional as the Alamo can be to Texas and the deportation of the Acadians is still used by Quebec separatists as a reason why Quebec and English canadians just can't work together (even though separatists don't have a very smooth relationship with modern acadians (like me!) who still live mainly in New-Brunswick and would be left behind if Quebec separated). To this day, Quebeckers still celebrate their national holiday by a huge bonfire and concert on the plains of Abraham.
    As recent as 1967, when Charles de Gaulle visited Montreal for Expo 67 and famously offered his support to the Quebec independence movement, it was the culmination of a major show trip meant to avenge the humiliation of 1763. His slogan in Montreal, "Vive le Québec Libre!" did not give Quebec independence, it gave Canada independance since the federal government had to make a wide left turn in order to keep Quebec with new ideas like universal healthcare, separation of church and State, multiculturalism and taking its distance from the British crown (with our own flag, national anthem and constitution) to become a country with an identity of its own instead of just another british colony.

    • @thegreatwalrus6574
      @thegreatwalrus6574 9 років тому +2

      Cynthia Sonier One of the biggest things in our (assuming your're Canadian) history.

  • @piggypeincesspeyton
    @piggypeincesspeyton 11 років тому +14

    I am loving crash course history. It's been a great review for my A.P. Modern European History class and great for background about the wars we are studying! THANK YOU!!!!

  • @PewPew1234567
    @PewPew1234567 10 років тому +25

    Well the seven years war not mainly fought by the british and the french. The prussians played a huge role as well.

    • @randomsamno9
      @randomsamno9 10 років тому +3

      I didn't learn about the seven years war in school (and I'm British). The first time I had heard of it was after watching the film Barry Lyndon, in which the character of Barry Lyndon serves in the Prussian army for a brief period, so I thought the Prussians did have a big part in it after seeing that.

    • @PewPew1234567
      @PewPew1234567 10 років тому

      randomsamno9 Yup. Of course the prussians did not fight in america, but in europe they fought for seven years against France, Russia and Austria (and Sweden) and only had help from GB and some smaller german duchys and states, and although they lost some battles they managed to hold their own until the russian empress died and the new emperor decided to make peace because he admired frederick

    • @VCYT
      @VCYT 9 років тому

      ***** - an now they no longer exist - hahah.

    • @ImpCaesarHadrianvs
      @ImpCaesarHadrianvs 9 років тому

      +pewpew pew in europe

  • @Throughtheireyes91
    @Throughtheireyes91 9 років тому +427

    Not even a single mention of Frederick the Great? Probably the most important man in the 7 years war. His name alone would shadow over Robert clives name. This crash course is lacking.

    • @isaacparker810
      @isaacparker810 9 років тому +61

      TheHarslord he did categorically state he was going to ignore the european war

    • @amogus1415
      @amogus1415 6 років тому +7

      cant talk about everything

    • @yj9032
      @yj9032 6 років тому +2

      redblueredblue100 Robert Clive was taught in schools pretty much throughout South Asia

    • @warwickthekingmaker7281
      @warwickthekingmaker7281 6 років тому +2

      Americans...

    • @Kriegter
      @Kriegter 5 років тому +1

      better than theresa

  • @arjunkashyap1342
    @arjunkashyap1342 7 років тому +1

    7 Years War - Lasts 9 years or 23 years. Got to give to these naming guys. You are soooooooo good at naming this wars.

  • @sirbillius
    @sirbillius 6 років тому +17

    I remember watching these four years ago during my freshman year. I'm rewatching this one because I was curious about what happened in the war in Europe. I was sadly disappointed. Why the hate on Europe? It was an increadibly important war for Europe.

  • @meaganballew98
    @meaganballew98 6 років тому +22

    When he said "thank you four years of high school French" I felt that

  • @DanielBoutinAwesome
    @DanielBoutinAwesome 9 років тому +19

    While I super appreciate the inclusion of the acadian deportation in the video, acadian settlements weren't just limited to Maine, but mostly what is now know as Nova-Scotia, Cape-Breton, southern New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. Speaking as not only an acadian but also as someone who studies La Francophonie as a whole, it would be really cool to have a Crash Course on the acadian diaspora today, as well as francophone states and minorities across the world!

  • @esteban578
    @esteban578 7 років тому +2

    "The last words of a plague victim ooooooo" This guy cracks me up, best history teacher ever!!

  • @ayushpatel9385
    @ayushpatel9385 6 років тому +16

    I love this
    hi my name is John Green this is crash
    00:02
    course world this Rio my gosh today
    00:05
    we're gonna talk about war clothes
    00:07
    everywhere
    00:08
    so traditionally historians are pretty
    00:09
    keen on wars because they feature
    00:11
    clearly delineated beginnings and
    00:13
    middles and ends and because they always
    00:14
    have a fair bit of death and drama and
    00:16
    mortally wounded generals who have great
    00:18
    last words like let us cross over the
    00:21
    river and rest under the shade of those
    00:23
    trees whereas the last words of plague
    00:25
    victims are always like oh sorry plague
    00:28
    victims as if you don't have enough
    00:29
    troubles now you've got me teasing you
    00:31
    about your uninspired death throes wars
    00:34
    have easy wins where's whose and why's
    00:37
    1861 to 1865 the United States the North
    00:41
    versus the South to end slavery and save
    00:44
    the Union there's a great marine are you
    00:45
    gonna show us the hidden complexities
    00:47
    behind something we already think we
    00:49
    understand again sorry me from the past
    00:51
    but yes however to placate you here are
    00:53
    some more explosions below the 17th and
    00:56
    18th century saw a bunch of top-notch
    00:58
    Wars but today we're gonna focus on the
    01:00
    Seven Years War also called the French
    01:01
    and Indian Wars because it was the first
    01:03
    truly global war in fact no less a
    01:06
    historian than Winston Churchill called
    01:08
    it the first world war but we've been so
    01:10
    Eurocentric here on crash course that
    01:11
    all we are going to say about the entire
    01:13
    war in Europe is that Prussia and Great
    01:16
    Britain fought France and Austria and
    01:18
    that the Austrian Hapsburgs wanted to
    01:20
    win back Silesia which they failed to do
    01:22
    there that's all you get Europe so the
    01:24
    Seven Years War lasted for anyone anyone
    01:26
    23 years I hate you me from the past but
    01:30
    as it happens by sheer coincidence you
    01:32
    are not necessarily wrong
    01:34
    [Music]
    01:42
    so the when the Seven Years War began in
    01:45
    1756 and ended in 1763 unless you
    01:49
    believe as many historians do that the
    01:50
    Seven Years War lasted 23 years because
    01:52
    it was really a continuation of the war
    01:54
    for Austrian succession many of the fact
    01:56
    that much of the information in today's
    01:58
    episode is taken from a book called the
    02:00
    global Seven Years War 1754 to 1763 a
    02:04
    nine-year period as for the who it was
    02:06
    mainly fought between the British and
    02:08
    the French seen here re-enacting the
    02:10
    knife fight from either beat it or West
    02:12
    Side Story depending on your age but
    02:14
    some of the British were actually
    02:15
    Americans and both the British and the
    02:17
    French were supported by American
    02:19
    Indians and I was fighting in India
    02:20
    between Indian Indians the British and
    02:22
    the French and as previously noted the
    02:24
    French were fighting the Prussians and
    02:25
    the British were fighting the Austrians
    02:27
    the where Europe the continental US the
    02:29
    Caribbean Sea off the coast of Africa
    02:31
    India basically the world and the why
    02:33
    ostensibly land British colonists wanted
    02:36
    to expand and to land west of the
    02:38
    original 13 colonies and that land was
    02:40
    technically held by the French who left
    02:41
    it alone except for a bunch of Trading
    02:43
    Post and they were like June of
    02:44
    appallingly
    02:45
    thank you four years of high school
    02:47
    French anyway the war wasn't really
    02:49
    about land it was really about our old
    02:50
    friend trade the British wanted to
    02:53
    expand into the American interior to
    02:55
    allow for more colonists because the
    02:56
    British benefited both from the export
    02:58
    of raw materials from the Americas and
    03:01
    the import of British consumer goods to
    03:03
    the America some more colonists meant
    03:05
    more trade which meant more wealth which
    03:07
    meant ever fancier hats and the French
    03:10
    realized that this British Atlantic
    03:11
    maritime trade was making Britain so
    03:13
    rich that Britain might come for
    03:14
    France's actually valuable colonies
    03:17
    which were not in the continental US but
    03:19
    those slave based sugar plantations in
    03:21
    the Caribbean so the fighting began
    03:22
    around here and while the British did
    03:24
    send over actual British troops much of
    03:26
    the early fighting was done by colonial
    03:28
    militias probably the most famous
    03:29
    commander of British troops was a
    03:30
    Virginia colonel named George Washington
    03:33
    in fact he may have actually started the
    03:35
    shooting at the Battle of Fort Necessity
    03:36
    in May of 1754 Washington was captured
    03:39
    in that battle but then he was
    03:40
    immediately released because
    03:41
    eighteenth-century war was super weird
    03:44
    anyway the real North American action
    03:45
    was in New York and Canada at the battle
    03:48
    at the plains of Abraham in 1759 for
    03:50
    instance the British defeated the French
    03:52
    and captured the city of Quebec both
    03:54
    the British commander general wolf and
    03:55
    the French commander general Montcalm
    03:57
    were killed in that battle with the
    03:59
    death of the former being immortalized
    04:00
    and this famous painting by Benjamin
    04:02
    West has indicated by the picture almost
    04:04
    all the battles in North America
    04:05
    featured significant participation by
    04:07
    Native Americans different native tribes
    04:09
    sided with both the British and the
    04:11
    French but as a broad generalization
    04:12
    Native Americans were more likely to
    04:14
    support the French up to this point
    04:15
    shrewd Indian tribes had been able to
    04:17
    play the British and the French off each
    04:19
    other and maintain a degree of autonomy
    04:20
    for themselves and as long as the French
    04:22
    were present the British were prevented
    04:24
    from encroaching too much on lands
    04:25
    Native Americans were using for hunting
    04:27
    and agriculture now we haven't talked
    04:28
    much about American Indians mostly
    04:30
    because they were geographically
    04:31
    isolated and didn't have a written
    04:33
    language but let's at least give them a
    04:34
    thought bubble before the arrival of the
    04:36
    Europeans most Native Americans lived in
    04:37
    tribal groups and they subsisted on a
    04:39
    combination of small-scale agriculture
    04:41
    and hunting and gathering depending on
    04:43
    where they were situated there were too
    04:44
    many tribes to generalize about specific
    04:46
    social structures but it's probably safe
    04:48
    to say that in terms of gender they were
    04:49
    much more egalitarian than the Europeans
    04:52
    who they met up with which may explain
    04:53
    why European women who were taken
    04:55
    captive by Indians sometimes preferred
    04:57
    to stay with the tribe rather than be
    05:00
    rescued although that's somewhat
    05:01
    controversial one thing we can say about
    05:03
    the Indians their notions of what it
    05:05
    meant to hold property were very
    05:07
    different from those of the Europeans
    05:09
    individual Indians did not own land in
    05:13
    the European sense they used it and not
    05:15
    always particularly intensively
    05:17
    Europeans when they came to North
    05:19
    America had a hard time even recognizing
    05:21
    that the Indians were raising crops
    05:23
    because their forms of farming were so
    05:25
    different from European agriculture so
    05:28
    the French and especially the English
    05:29
    just assumed that the Indians weren't
    05:31
    improving the land which meant that they
    05:33
    didn't own the land so that meant that
    05:35
    it was okay for Europeans to take it as
    05:37
    you might imagine that was problematic
    05:39
    for the Indians in general Indian tribes
    05:41
    initially got along better with the
    05:42
    French than with the Dutch or English
    05:43
    because one the French did not settle in
    05:46
    large numbers as they were mostly
    05:47
    traders and fur trappers and two French
    05:49
    missionaries who made the journey to the
    05:51
    Americas were Catholic often Jesuits who
    05:53
    were so intent on converting the Indians
    05:55
    that they took the time to learn Indian
    05:57
    languages and try to make Catholicism
    05:59
    more amenable to Indian religion the end
    06:01
    result of the war a greatly reduced
    06:03
    French presence on the American mainland
    06:05
    meant that Indians too
    06:06
    easily played the British and French off
    06:08
    each other which opened the floodgates
    06:10
    of British settlers in the end the
    06:12
    American Indians were perhaps the
    06:13
    biggest losers of the seven years here
    06:16
    thanks thought-bubble so 2,000 miles
    06:17
    south in the Caribbean there was also
    06:19
    quite a lot of fighting between the
    06:20
    British and the French over sugar
    06:22
    colonies most of these were naval
    06:23
    battles and by 1761 Spain got involved
    06:25
    because you know they had some sugar
    06:27
    colonies of their own while these
    06:28
    battles get a lot of ink it's
    06:29
    interesting to note that by far the
    06:30
    greatest threat to combatants was
    06:33
    disease by October of 1761 the British
    06:35
    had lost about a thousand men to war and
    06:38
    5,000 to disease meanwhile in West
    06:41
    Africa the British and the French were
    06:42
    fighting there too because you know why
    06:44
    not the British attacked the French had
    06:45
    a trading post called st. Louis stand up
    06:48
    made me say all right fine San Louie and
    06:51
    at a town called Garre both in Senegal
    06:53
    why well trade of course Senegal was the
    06:56
    main source of gum arabic which is
    06:57
    notable for many reasons but most
    06:59
    importantly it is a key ingredient in
    07:01
    the diet coke and mentos phenomenon so
    07:04
    of course the British wanted lots of it
    07:06
    and the French were also fighting the
    07:07
    British in India in the 18th century
    07:09
    India was nominally ruled by the Mughal
    07:11
    Empire but I'm saying that wrong aren't
    07:12
    I oh yeah that sounds more plausible but
    07:15
    as throughout most of its history the
    07:16
    real power in India lay with local kings
    07:18
    and princes sometimes called Nawab and
    07:20
    these princes just like their European
    07:22
    counterparts were constantly vying for
    07:23
    power and control over more territory
    07:25
    and to ge

  • @embot1998
    @embot1998 11 років тому +45

    I know this sounds odd but this is the first time I have heard someone talk about the Seven years war in english

    • @embot1998
      @embot1998 10 років тому +6

      I'm in French Immersion and all my life I have learned history in french, so ya

    • @coffee.cat1179
      @coffee.cat1179 10 років тому +1

      ***** same here... so much better in your first language... and with John Green

    • @tenaciousdean6179
      @tenaciousdean6179 10 років тому

      This is the first time I've heard about it

    • @s.ophiarm
      @s.ophiarm 6 років тому

      Embot1998 wow

    • @rory_person_being
      @rory_person_being 6 років тому +5

      For living in Canada, one of the major fronts of the war, I have learned way too little about the war. All that I learned from school is that Britain and France were at war and Britain won and got New France.

  • @mercyt6431
    @mercyt6431 8 років тому +7

    Wow thanks !!!! Seriously, I'm British and French and I've never heard of this war. HOW??!

  • @ThatIcelandicDude
    @ThatIcelandicDude 7 років тому +1

    what ive learned from crash course so far its that our entire history evolves around on thing... Hats!

  • @roserogers3336
    @roserogers3336 6 років тому +4

    Glad I read the comments before I used this video to study for my ap Euro exam

  • @eeblio
    @eeblio 11 років тому +8

    I really love your videos, thank you John Green, they teach history in a fun and interesting way. However, sometimes it's hard to keep up with you because of how fast the videos are. Keep making videos! Can you do more Meso-American stuff please?

  • @putridamayanti2326
    @putridamayanti2326 9 років тому +43

    A 12 minutes video about 7 years war and he only mentioned Prussia TWICE... I am not amused...

  • @ISmith-yy8xx
    @ISmith-yy8xx 9 років тому +3

    my teacher includes these videos in her lesson plans quite often. But my class is so loud that I can't hear over them. So I've just started writing the titles down and looking them up at home. Then I watch in my free time so I can one-up my class mates every one and a while.

  • @louisiananlord17
    @louisiananlord17 8 років тому +42

    Here's what most people don't see though. Had France won in North America there would have been a Canadian Revolution instead of an American one because the French Crown would have had to raise taxes to control New York and some of New England. And they would have needed new manpower to control the British Caribbean as well. So France would have been in the winning/losing scheme too. And had the British and French sat down and talked about the borders and trade disputes, it would have saved more lives in the long run. But meh, I'm just talking smack.

    • @Raisonnance.
      @Raisonnance. 5 років тому

      I dont think a révolution would happen because France was so rich at this time

    • @samrevlej9331
      @samrevlej9331 4 роки тому +4

      @@Raisonnance. Rich? France was brought to the edge of bankrupcy by the Seven Years' War, and the support guven to the Americans during the War for Independence completed that process. That's the main medium cause of the French Revolution in 1789: the king had to call the Estates Generals to determine new ways of securing public finances, and the Third Estate was so ignored it went and made itself into a National Assembly.

  • @theunnoob8519
    @theunnoob8519 9 років тому +46

    Crash Course directed by Michael bay

  • @edhaje
    @edhaje 8 років тому +98

    the flag more likely represent the napoleonic war rather than seven-years war.

  • @LiamCreech
    @LiamCreech Рік тому +4

    Imagine the first poor soul who accidently found out coke + mentos = EXPLOSION!

  • @ArcticTemper
    @ArcticTemper 10 років тому +7

    Please do CrashCourse British History!

  • @tcpgblizzard
    @tcpgblizzard 10 років тому +25

    Do more on Britain, its history is as deep and rich as any in the world.

  • @jp5morin
    @jp5morin 10 років тому +4

    Just a minor point of correction (because as an historian, I'm a bit nit picky...). John states that the Acadians are deported in 1755 from Main. In reality, they were deported mostly from the French settlements in what is today Nova Scotia around the Bay of Fundy. While there are some Acadians who did later settle in Main and other parts of New England, most francophones were from Quebec and settled in the mid-1800s during the textile boom in towns (for example at Lowell, Massachusetts).

  • @EdgeOfLight
    @EdgeOfLight 10 років тому +10

    Thank you, you vastly helped me do my US history homework about this war ^^

  • @jacks.6243
    @jacks.6243 10 років тому +11

    I actually liked the idea, that this is mostly colony centric after almost only Europe before, but looking back on this now, it's kind of sad that we have two videos about mostly the american theatre (this and the one in US-history) and none in the European theatre (although my fingers continue to eb crossed for Europe history). Because it would have been kind of cool to hear about the Austro-Prussian conflicts and Friedrich II and his warfare the crash course style and the two videos would compliment each other better.

  • @arazemijo9674
    @arazemijo9674 5 років тому +8

    I think the whole concept of "owning" land is really frickin' strange actually; the only way you can really "own" something is if you create it yourself, but still people decide that when they find some land that's either uninhabited, inhabited by people who in their opinions aren't equipped to own it, or inhabited by people that they fought and killed and thus now have gained "ownership" over it, it is then "theirs" and they have the right to give it to someone else. But it was never "theirs" in the first place! The whole concept of owning land is abstract--even if the intentions of the people who thought it up were good (which they kind of weren't), it is still something we thought up that is not real in any way but our own minds, and yet people think it gives them liberty to do whatever they want with the land and those who simply want to exist peacefully on it, even destroy them all.
    This is my feelings on the subject, feel free to say whatever you want, I just wanted to say this.

  • @astridberwouts8432
    @astridberwouts8432 9 років тому +172

    Not being too Eurocentric: great! I would love to see a different pov!
    Completely forgetting that Europe exists: uhm...
    Instead of finding a good balance between not being Eurocentric but still showing some important things, he decided to almost completely ignore Europe. I must admit that I'm disappointed. I know very well that not everything in history is about Europe, but he seems very bitter that some things are. That's really small-minded for someone thinking they're so broad-minded. Sad, 'cause this series had potential to be both fun and informative about ALL parts of the world.

    • @PsyX99
      @PsyX99 9 років тому +11

      +Bear in the Woods Maybe he'll come back on that later ? For the record, it's a "crash" course. Not an 3 year academic course of the war...

    • @yj9032
      @yj9032 6 років тому +2

      Crybaby 👶 😢

    • @ScareSans
      @ScareSans 5 років тому +9

      @@yj9032 this is not a "roast me", this is an educational history video. if you want to throw around pointless insults, do it somewhere else.

  • @Rosierosie7
    @Rosierosie7 10 років тому +2

    I had to watch this for school, I was excited that John Green was in the video. I love his work

  • @2010AngelAbove
    @2010AngelAbove 10 років тому +4

    Brilliant video, straight to the point and a fantastic base to learn from :)
    I like the French/British focus, allows detailed descriptions of predominant and significant events, and provides a base to develop knowledge of other colonies involvement.

  • @AprilLVideos
    @AprilLVideos 10 років тому +6

    actually, at the end of the war, france had to give louisiana to spain, but spain gave it back in 1802, and then napoleon sold it to the usa in 1803 because he didn't want to expand into the americas

  • @elephantwarrior53
    @elephantwarrior53 10 років тому +20

    You missed a chance for a joke about how the French named everything after king Louis like:
    Louisville
    Louisiana
    That fort you mentioned
    King Louis the II-XIV (I think)

    • @prstudios3256
      @prstudios3256 6 років тому

      XV* There's your American, I would guess, education... Also II? As in the 2nd? A "bit" earlier.

  • @miazermeno5088
    @miazermeno5088 6 років тому +1

    if only my social studies teacher was this enthusiastic I would have so much fun all the time !!!!

  • @harrysonofbob
    @harrysonofbob 9 років тому +69

    Well that small talk about the war in Europe sounded real interesting. I understand that World history in the west is often pretty Euro- centric, but when a war or any other historical subject is about Europe, you might wanna let go of your white guilt and just talk about Europe.

    • @dtoudassous
      @dtoudassous 9 років тому +7

      Harrison Holt I think the point is that Europe gets talked about a lot, and 'the rest' not enough (definitely here in the UK), so I'm glad to get a more complete view of the story.

    • @MooseheadDrinker
      @MooseheadDrinker 9 років тому +6

      white guilt....fascinating concept, unfortunately i don;t feel it. I feel white pride.

    • @poolsoup6650
      @poolsoup6650 9 років тому +3

      He never talks about Prussia....They are the bad asses of the 7-years war, fighting the much larger Austrians and French

    • @MegaGanash
      @MegaGanash 9 років тому +5

      William Burke I'd still like a complete retelling. But like, they gloss over wars all the time on crashcourse and always go for the "You never thought of this" route on them. And it's kinda annoying.

    • @adamclark1972uk
      @adamclark1972uk 9 років тому +6

      There might be a reason why Europe gets talked about a lot, namely that for much of modern history Europe was the most significant and influential region of the globe and had the greatest effect on how the world is now.

  • @ReginaldHarrisJones
    @ReginaldHarrisJones 8 років тому +155

    Lol. The European field of conflict was the most crucial and historically significant theatre of the Seven Years War. Yeah, just ignore Frederick The Great-- the guy was a clown. Not like he won any decisive battles that shaped history or anything. Americans make me laugh, but I'm sure you laugh at us too, so we form a good partnership.

    • @patiwhite6209
      @patiwhite6209 8 років тому +8

      yeah not like he gave birth to one of the most sucsecful countrys on earth

    • @Questron71
      @Questron71 8 років тому +10

      I wouldn't go as far as calling Prussia "one of the most successful countries on Earth" but it surely stayed on the European Stage of politics and military power for the next 200 years after Fritz, even under the little corporal from Braunau.
      And I also wouldn't go as far as calling the European Theater unimportant just because the 7 years war in America led directly to the Revolution and Independence thus creating the US either, had the british won in America but lost in Europe and/or India the aftermath of the war would still have looked VERY different than it did.
      Basically the overseas theaters were more important for Britain and France as they had more to win or loose there, Britain had not even real territorial gains to hope for even if they won, they just kept up an alliance. But Austria and Prussia fought ultimately for survival. Had Frederick won too decisively the power of Maria Theresia might have been endangered, while a loss in the war might have shattered his still vulnerable and rather small kingdom beyond hopes of ever mattering again. It was the success in this war that left Prussia powerful enough to oppose France even after they lost against Napoleon in 1804 and in the long term to be able to dominate german politics at the end of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth. A lost war and the accompanying territorial losses would have cost them that power and Silesia was from them on the industrial powerhouse of Prussia with its coal and iron mines and metalworking capabilities. A ruffled core Prussia with only Brandernburg and the "true" Prussia at the baltic end of europe left to its name would have looked VERY differently.

    • @Catholic-Redpilled-Spaniard
      @Catholic-Redpilled-Spaniard 8 років тому +1

      damn right george

    • @politicalcorner162
      @politicalcorner162 5 років тому +2

      George Bailey its not all of us americans who ignore european history. i personally am with you

  • @datfisheboi6519
    @datfisheboi6519 5 років тому +15

    I like how the one time I know less about what was happening in Europe and was looking forward to finding out more about Europe was the one time you decided to almost completely ignore Europe lmao

  • @Crusader1338
    @Crusader1338 10 років тому +2

    These videos help massiveley with an essay I have to write on 18th C war and the Economy. Thanks!

  • @PimpinLlama420
    @PimpinLlama420 2 роки тому +3

    Here because of middle school nostalgia

  • @maxmustermann9058
    @maxmustermann9058 8 років тому +8

    So the British won the 7 Years War, but lost the peace, because of the war debt and the french were sour, because of their defeat, but when they won the War of the American Revolution, against the British, they had such a huge debt, that it lead to the French Revolution. Prussia seemed to be the only one to really capitalise on their victory and they were pretty battered from fighting half of Europe or more.

    • @pizzasub3194
      @pizzasub3194 7 років тому

      a forcible overthrow of a government or social order in favor of a new system. that's the definition of revolution. i'm pretty sure there has been a revolution in the us.

    • @pizzasub3194
      @pizzasub3194 7 років тому

      Blah b
      Every heard of the "revolutionary war?"

    •  7 років тому

      +Bardocks Father
      That's the name Americans have given the rebellion against the British. That's not a revolution, that's a rebellion to keep slavery legal and to keep wealthy merchants from having to pay taxes.

    • @pizzasub3194
      @pizzasub3194 7 років тому

      Blah b
      And when the "united states of America" was made. They weren't part of Great Britain anymore. So they overthrew the British government in favor of a new system/government.

    • @maxmustermann9058
      @maxmustermann9058 7 років тому

      + Blah b pointless semantics, dude. I agree that the term is not completely accurate, but I decided to use it because everybody knows what I am talking about and otherwise many might not have gotten what I meant. You just sound butthurt and picky, because "muh american revisionist terms", but who cares. The 100 Year War did not last 100 years and not the entire world participated in the World Wars either.

  • @HeyKevinYT
    @HeyKevinYT 5 років тому +15

    0:53 that one kid when the teacher leaves the classroom for a little bit

  • @melonlord1414
    @melonlord1414 7 років тому +1

    My history class (in Germany) almost exclusively talked about the war between Prussia and Austria and how it made Prussia the dominant power within "Germany". It's interesting how the same war can be talked about so differently.

  • @iielysiumx5811
    @iielysiumx5811 5 років тому +4

    Does video on seven years war, only briefly mentions the most important and influential theatre of war, the theatre that continued the rise of Prussia as well as the decline of France

  • @teviottilehurst
    @teviottilehurst 8 років тому +33

    The names England and Great Britain aren't interchangeable. GB is England, Scotland and Wales.

    • @teviottilehurst
      @teviottilehurst 8 років тому +8

      The UK is England (a country), Scotland (a country), Wales (which, as a principality, is technically part of the Kingdom of England but don't mention that to the Welsh!) and Northern Ireland (which is a province. Not part of Britain but part of the UK). Great Britain is Scotland, England and Wales; UK is Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The Channel Islands (Jersey, Guernsey, Sark, Alderney-all of Norman heritage) and the Isle of Man (Viking heritage) are not part of the UK. They are British Crown Dependencies. Cornwall, a county in England, has a Celtic heritage and was was once called West Wales. It feels different to the other English counties. There's more but i'll stop now. Please learn.

    •  8 років тому

      Yeahyeahyeah, and all that together forms England, just like I've said.

    • @teviottilehurst
      @teviottilehurst 8 років тому +4

      so untrue but i guess you are a foreigner so your ignorance is understandable.

    • @Aliestor
      @Aliestor 8 років тому +4

      He is just trolling

    • @franklinnguyen2272
      @franklinnguyen2272 8 років тому

      teviottilehurst, Great Britain uk and England are the same thing

  • @theonlylampshade
    @theonlylampshade 11 років тому +283

    You don't want to be too Eurocentric, so you basically miss out the entire European theatre of this European war? Slightly odd.

    • @OptimusWombat
      @OptimusWombat 10 років тому +37

      You have to consider the relative impact of each theater of war to the international system. At the end of the day, not a whole lot changed in Europe. In contrast, the Seven Years War gave Britan de facto control of the North American continent - and set in motion the conditions that would lead to the American Revolution, an even bigger deal.

    • @tigerwa
      @tigerwa 10 років тому +14

      OptimusWombat Bigger deal for Americans, the rest of the world including Britain were not that bothered, you need to check your personal interest before you start making sweeping comments.

    • @OptimusWombat
      @OptimusWombat 10 років тому +5

      tigerwa "Bigger deal for Americans, the rest of the world including Britain were not that bothered" - isn't that just a rephrasing of what I said? Or were you trying to be sarcastic? It's really hard to tell.

    • @jamiengo2343
      @jamiengo2343 6 років тому +1

      OptimusWombat so because a front wasn’t that important, we should forget about the hundreds of thousands of soldiers that died. Great history

    • @FK-tz7gs
      @FK-tz7gs 5 років тому +2

      tigerwa how stupid are you if it weren’t for the American Revolution the most powerful country in the world would have never existed. It is a big deal for everyone, just like if America never existed the whole course of history would be different

  • @monkfromtheeast
    @monkfromtheeast 10 років тому +1

    I love this show, but sometimes its a little too American-centric. He said that Acadians were deported from Maine to Louisiana, but that's not necessarily true. Most Acadians came from Acaidia, modern day New Bruinswick and Nova Scotia. This is how I always learned it, although I could be biased as well, seeing as I'm Canadian and this was taught in Canadian schools.

  • @devoyinator
    @devoyinator 10 років тому +156

    Is there anything on the British Empire on CrashCourse? I mean maybe I'm biased but he's done the Russian and Ottoman and Mongol Empires, and the British Empire was larger than any of them, the largest in history in fact.

    • @doneanddusted8119
      @doneanddusted8119 10 років тому +18

      but we already know about them. They are boring.
      plus this is going in chronological order, we will get there eventually.

    • @devoyinator
      @devoyinator 10 років тому +92

      DoneAnd Dusted It's boring? The largest empire in the world, who ruled so many areas that "the sun never set", had an unsurpassable navy which beat the French, Spanish and Germans and had its standard infantry provoke fear into almost all enemies was boring?
      Seems more interesting than half the stuff on here, and that stuff is pretty interesting anyway.

    • @devoyinator
      @devoyinator 10 років тому +36

      SD78 Unlike every other Empire in history right? *Sarcasm*

    • @doneanddusted8119
      @doneanddusted8119 10 років тому +11

      british weren't bad, they were an admirable empire, but we already know about them, that's why they are boring, we will be told things we already know

    • @devoyinator
      @devoyinator 10 років тому +8

      DoneAnd Dusted We don't know about them, name one of his videos where there's an episode on it. "Oh but there's a bit on episode x". You can't know everything about the biggest empire the world has every seen in a few minutes.

  • @1aundulxaldin
    @1aundulxaldin 11 років тому +16

    History abridged!

  • @jiaqishao6315
    @jiaqishao6315 8 років тому +26

    Once there was a seven years war...🎶🎶

  • @patricktuohy7062
    @patricktuohy7062 6 років тому +2

    Awesome job team, you guys are getting me through college as a procrastinator . Thank you❤

  • @mehdil827
    @mehdil827 10 років тому +6

    Looking at this in hindsight, Maria Theresa may have been awesome, but Frederick the Great was far superior.

  • @keriroy9460
    @keriroy9460 5 років тому +13

    "so basically the whole world" Asia: what am I chopped liver?

  • @4444-p2g
    @4444-p2g 8 років тому +4

    This should be shown in schools simply because it shows history in a presentable and approachable way.

  • @SahilSharma-ld4dg
    @SahilSharma-ld4dg 8 років тому

    Dude, i hate WHAP. I have to pass the class in about 3 months. I can' thank you enough of how these videos help me review. Thanks and keep rockin' :)

    • @sjt0809
      @sjt0809 8 років тому

      same. I'm in the class too and it's literally half asked lecture following the next and quiz after quiz...
      it makes me so annoyed...but people like John green with crash course are so lively and make it understandable and fun and its what history is supposed to be

  • @jjsc4396
    @jjsc4396 8 місяців тому +5

    Skip to 1:42

  • @Charlotte-lw3ox
    @Charlotte-lw3ox 7 років тому +5

    I literally came here JUST for Prussia, I thought it and the rest of Europe would be explained

  • @robert_wigh
    @robert_wigh 8 років тому +6

    The first world war: 1754 - 1763. Can’t wait until I tell my history teacher that! ☺

  • @kerimengin7624
    @kerimengin7624 9 років тому +1

    This year the Academic Decathlon topic is India. So, basic economics, Indian economics, Indian music theory, Indian art, basic art analysis, Indian history, statistics, etc. More videos on Indian history would be greatly appreciated by the Aca Dec community. Thanks!!!

  • @galacticsabc4407
    @galacticsabc4407 8 років тому +12

    the gunshot at the beginning scared me.

  • @sassycassgames3158
    @sassycassgames3158 9 років тому +11

    I ave to disagree with you on the urocintricity when studying the 7 yers war: I barely know anything about it. Every time my teachers ever talk about it, they always talk about the North American debacle..... Where were you taught about the Euro theater?

  • @elianes2864
    @elianes2864 10 років тому +4

    I'm sorry but this is quite American centric. I'm usually a big fan but you failed to mention that the Seven Years War meant the French and British's battle over who would get Canada went to the British. It was a monumental moment in Canadian history and would change it forever. Could have warranted a mention, I think. Also, the majority of Acadians came from Acadia - in the maritime Canadian provinces and eastern Quebec. I'm afraid I'm quite disappointed with this summary of the Seven Years War.

    • @ShennonLoker
      @ShennonLoker 10 років тому +2

      I'm going to disagree about the monumental importance of the Seven Year War was to us Canadians. Remember, we were staunch British or French colonists, who remained as loyal to the monarchy after the SYW, with the only difference that the French colonists now were subject to a loose British rule. I define our thought as an independent country to start with the American Revolution with the battle of Quebec, and as a knee jerk reaction to the American Civil War in where the US made several threats to take the British colonies to the north if they lost the south, and as reparations for the damage the CSS Alabama (confederate ship build by the British) did against the Union. Any reason for the US to take the British colonies could and was made by the Americans, specifically William H Seward, the leading voice for Manifest Destiny in regards to the British colonies and Rupert's Land. Also the Fenian raids didn't help matters either.
      I'm not trying to suggest the SYW wasn't important to the eventual development of Canada, just not as important as you suggest, but rather a smaller step of many towards that goal.
      The Acadians I can agree with, being from the Maritimes and eastern Quebec, but also Maine. John could have clarified that better, but I was happy with the summary.

    • @MKPiatkowski
      @MKPiatkowski 5 років тому

      @@ShennonLoker However, that "loose British rule" has led to the Quebec question that has dictated so much of Canadian politics right up to the present day. It has a huge role to play in the development in Canada.

    • @ShennonLoker
      @ShennonLoker 5 років тому

      @@MKPiatkowski That begs the question then, should we have assimilated the French colonies, force them to speak, read and write English and forcing them to abandon their French culture as the Americans would have done, or carry on as they were? If the English did, how would the newly formed Canada be any different than the USA in the eyes of the french? Hindsight is 20/20, but in 1867, they didn't have the luxury of 150 years of Canadian history to help with that decision.
      Hopefully this is clear, maybe, 1/2 cup of coffee so far.

  • @angelocicognini6174
    @angelocicognini6174 2 місяці тому +1

    Thanks for the video!

  • @shrek21go
    @shrek21go 10 років тому +5

    What I hate about this videos is this guy's constant need to diminish european accomplishments. He always talks about eurocentrism: well for a large period of time Europe was the center of the world, which has now shifted (not entirely) to America. So Europe is important for World History, I recommend John to furthermore consider this.

    • @strictlyred-bone8327
      @strictlyred-bone8327 9 років тому

      Erik Ortiz NO IT WASN'T, EUROPE CAME TO POWER ONLY AROUND THE 1800S!!! STOP YOUR BULLSHIT, EUROPE WAS A SHIT WHOLE FOR A LONG TIME!

    • @shrek21go
      @shrek21go 9 років тому +2

      Wrong, Europe is relevant since the Greeks... Also Europe colonized America in the 1500's, and from then onto 1945 they where the center of the world.

    • @shrek21go
      @shrek21go 9 років тому +1

      Strictly Red-Bone All those other cultures you mention were relevant. However you can't diminish the Greeks accomplishments, may things they had were passed on from other cultures and may others where invented there and then passed on until today: Examples? Philosophy, Astrophysics, Pythagoras, Democracy etc. etc. Eurocentrism has a reason, Europe practically conquered the world. European powers had influence from Asia to america, and the global culture we live in today is european. Why do you think everyone everywhere in the world learns english? English became the franc language since way before America rose to power. The British dominated the seas (and thus the world for a long period of time) so english had to be learned for commerce and several other reasons.

    • @strictlyred-bone8327
      @strictlyred-bone8327 9 років тому +1

      Erik Ortiz ,... How come Europeans can't read. I literately said that the "Greeks were smart". I was alluding to the fact of Greek accomplishment. ;I wasn't dismissing Greek ingenuity, nor European, I am just letting you know that there are humans outside of Europe :)
      Europe did take over a lot, and they were a dominant power, I will admit that. Though even before the Europeans were relevant, there were already brilliant people running the show, the Sumerians, The Indus, The mesopotamians, The Egyptians, so on. Also Asians and Africans helped contribute to the rise of Europe, their rich nations allowed Europe to strategically get a foot hold. Remember that Europe came last to the race of history, and they reign is somewhat still there. Though we must not forget the legacy of Europeans.
      I assume that you are Hispanic, if "ortiz" doesn't give it away, I am correct? I am not trying to be rude, and yes I am aware that it is conflicting with my pilot sentence if you are.

    • @shrek21go
      @shrek21go 9 років тому +2

      Strictly Red-Bone Of course other regions played a leading role in history. My only problem is that crash course doesn't seem to be able acknowledge the relevance Europe had in modern history. The seven-years war was a key even to the history of central Europe. Prusia rose to power and started to leave Austria behind in the race for the omnipotence amongst the german speaking peoples. The great clashes between the European powers had repercussion in other parts of the word or allowed for less powerful nations at the time to make a move.
      Well Ortiz is actually a Spanish surname . Although i am not European, i am "hispanic" as you say ;)

  • @valcrum321
    @valcrum321 9 років тому +100

    For being "Eurocentric" Crash course hasn't even explored the vast history of Germany or pre empire Britain, and by the way, where's NAPOLEON!!!

    • @cormacnimo
      @cormacnimo 9 років тому +15

      valcrum321 Napoleon is in the later episode. Just be patient

    • @klake5375
      @klake5375 6 років тому +4

      Azzinotica Napoleon fought in the napoleonic wars... Not the seven year war..

    • @rory_person_being
      @rory_person_being 6 років тому +10

      Napoleon wasn't even alive during the seven years war.

  • @nickynak3
    @nickynak3 10 років тому +29

    As a person whose ancestors are *all* actually from India, I find your use of the term 'Indian' to describe native/indigenous Americans rather irritating. The Europeans called them Indians when they landed because they thought they'd sailed all the way around the world to India. Surely enough time has passed that we shouldn't be still paying for this mistake?
    (I'm really enjoying the CC World History series though. DFTBA :))

    • @nickynak3
      @nickynak3 9 років тому

      ***** Haha! If I watched cricket, that would indeed annoy me ;)

    • @SketchyChris22
      @SketchyChris22 9 років тому +2

      nickynak3 Though I'm not sure how common it is for americans to call Native Americans, "Indians", but I think he was simply referring them to indians so as to not confuse one of the titles of the war, which was The French Indian War. Though to honest, considering at the time Native Americans were being called indians, it's confusing to know which they were referring to.
      Either way, don't blame Hank! D: Blame the writer! lol

    • @lucidlactose
      @lucidlactose 9 років тому +5

      nickynak3 The Native Americans were called Indians because they thought they were in the West Indies or Indonesia but never India.He said this in an earlier video though I can't remember which.

    • @nickynak3
      @nickynak3 9 років тому

      KoalaFaceGuy You're quite right, and I realised this after I posted the OP (then couldn't be bothered to change it).
      I think my point still stands that although they are called 'Indians' they have pretty much nothing to do with India :)

    • @neeks7046
      @neeks7046 6 років тому

      In the US (at least in south and south western) Native Americans are always called Indians, unless you are a Native American. It’s awful and gross, but it’s prominent

  • @lightsideofsin8969
    @lightsideofsin8969 5 років тому +2

    In fear of being too euro centric they didn't talk much about Europe at all in the entire course. Yes, many people are being taught about Europe more than anything else but that doesn't mean that it wasn't important or that you can leave it out entirely. The Seven Year War was a euro centric war and he only talked about the US.

  • @TheGamingParadise22
    @TheGamingParadise22 7 років тому +5

    I came he for the European, especially the Prussian part.

  • @frederickii893
    @frederickii893 7 років тому +4

    IM SORRY WAS I NOT GREAT ENOUGH FOR THIS EPISODE

  • @규현찾으러수만리
    @규현찾으러수만리 5 років тому +9

    0:51
    "However, to placate you, here are some more explosions BO BO BO BO BO BO " AHAHAHAHAHA I DIED

  • @khiyahillyard3290
    @khiyahillyard3290 7 років тому +1

    Correction regarding the Acadian Expulsion: Acadia, where the Acadian inhabited and were expelled from, was mainly consisted of what is now Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and PEI, Canada not Maine.

  • @milbsg1102
    @milbsg1102 10 років тому +21

    I really like these video's but I'm starting to find John's determination to avoid a European context slightly exasperating. I'm all for seeing history in a different light, and exploring world cultures from their own perspective as opposed to the Western Anglo-Saxon view which ruled supreme pretty much from the time of Macaulay...
    That being said, when John said he wasn't going to look at Europe because previous video's had been too "Eurocentric" I had to slap my forehead. I have no idea how he could come to that conclusion, seeing as his video's are so keen to avoid Western Europe. Only a handful of his video's look at Western Europe post the Roman Empire; the Dark Ages, the Renaissance and the Spanish Empire spring to mind. But even these video's only look at Europe for half the time or less. The Dark Ages covered Europe in a minute or so, and the Renascence video did its best to downplay Europe and the renaissance entirely in favour of the Ottoman Empire. The fact is, some import things did happen in Europe, the credit for which must overwhelmingly be given to those European countries who took part, they should be covered in full.
    It just seems strange that this video bypasses the European element to the 7 years War. Not mentioning the rivalry between Prussia and Austria is bizarre, since if you see the 7YW as an extension of the War of the Austrian Succession (Which John alludes to at the beginning) then their conflict is at the heart of that later war. Also something that needs more emphasising is that the 7YW established Britain's position (though not uncontested) as the Western World's leading superpower (certainly financially), and all that meant in turns of the growth of commercialisation, globalisation, industrialisation not just in Europe, but Worldwide.

  • @planetaxolotl4398
    @planetaxolotl4398 4 роки тому +3

    I’m just amused that this showed up in my recommended seven years after it was uploaded

  • @MegaMentholMan
    @MegaMentholMan 8 років тому +3

    WHY do people, especially history people, review Native American history WITHOUT ONCE mentioning treaties??

  • @johntindell9591
    @johntindell9591 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you

  • @fryaplays7509
    @fryaplays7509 9 років тому +38

    I listened to the beginning and started flipping out.
    I learned this in Hetalia. X3

    • @bordercollienerd
      @bordercollienerd 9 років тому +4

      So I'm not the only one who thought Hetalia XD

    • @fryaplays7509
      @fryaplays7509 9 років тому

      +bordercollienerd nope XD

    • @roshpotter06
      @roshpotter06 8 років тому +1

      Hetalia teaches you so much - and then makes those same things unbearably hilarious.

    • @namehhere
      @namehhere 6 років тому

      hell yes

    • @InuyashaTT
      @InuyashaTT 6 років тому

      I was looking for this

  • @antagonizerr
    @antagonizerr 9 років тому +17

    As a descended French Acadian, I'm rather insulted that you claim the expulsion was from "Maine to Louisiana", which I can only assume you picked up from Wikipedia. While many families moved to Maine AFTER the expulsion, the Acadian peninsula was predominantly in Nova Scotia. My family moved to Gaspe Quebec while many of my relatives left for the American south. Fact checking. It's a thing.

    • @Cyfiero
      @Cyfiero 9 років тому +5

      Wikipedia cannot be expected to say and as well does not say that the expulsion of the Acadians is from "Maine to Louisiana." I add "cannot be expected," (or should not?) because Wikipedia, in spite of being open to edit by anyone, tends to be far more technical and perfectionistic than any other source online besides ones from universities.

    • @sherrish_
      @sherrish_ 9 років тому +1

      Sol Pacificus indeed.

    • @antagonizerr
      @antagonizerr 9 років тому +3

      The article on the expulsion is correct, but I'll wager he took his info from the original 'acadians' page that reads; "The colony was located in what is now Eastern Canada's Maritime provinces (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island), as well as part of Quebec, and present-day Maine to the Kennebec River."
      The insult was that he omitted everything else and focused on Maine which represented less than 1% of Acadian culture, and is even in dispute over whether they could even be considered Acadian, having arrived 50 years after the last migration.
      Here's the Link. I've tried changing it in the past, but it always gets shifted back; en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acadians

    • @Laura_B__
      @Laura_B__ 9 років тому +1

      antagonizerr I was surprised to hear him say that as well. I am Canadian and I have never heard that the Acadians were from Maine. It's quite clear they were primarily from Nova Scotia. It gets rather tiring sometimes, hearing Americans claiming that Canadian inventions, events, and even people were actually American. (I know, there was no USA at the time of the Seven Year's War, but still.)

    • @antagonizerr
      @antagonizerr 9 років тому +1

      Laura B
      Maine was one of the dozen destinations AFTER the expulsion. There were, however, french settlers there before, but only 50 years after the primary recorded migrations, tho their numbers could be counted on one hand. Hardly a 'colony'. Americans love to take credit for other cultures, but they can suck it if they think they can take my lineage from me. Make no mistake, I like Americans, especially since I have plenty of distant blood down south, but my family was one of the first on these shores and I'm damn proud of that.

  • @captain_outis
    @captain_outis 10 років тому +4

    In the description, it says "It was a very confusing was."
    I think it should say 'a very confusing war'.

  • @CowboyGittarMan
    @CowboyGittarMan 9 років тому +1

    Nice reference to the last words of Stonewall Jackson. Even though it had nothing to do with the Seven Years War, I enjoyed it.

  • @boredbritishguy
    @boredbritishguy 10 років тому +12

    A re-telling of a significantly European war with very little mention of the European theatres for fear of being Eurocentric and and a disproportionate focus on the American theatre... on a topic that would later be re-visited completely from the American perspective in the CrashCourse US History series. Not CrashCourse's best work.

    • @emmyemmye
      @emmyemmye 6 років тому

      chill they did their best

  • @emilyfulton728
    @emilyfulton728 2 роки тому +3

    can i use this as a resource for my university paper? i have to do a presentation in my 2nd year history course on the 7 years war focusing on France and this has the most digestible and useful information for the north American part of it. not sure if title fly because its a video on youtube....

  • @eliparker7151
    @eliparker7151 11 років тому +34

    I'm gonna be _that_ guy and complain about the flags

    • @nickclements9754
      @nickclements9754 11 років тому

      What's wrong with them?

    • @eliparker7151
      @eliparker7151 11 років тому +1

      Did you watch the video

    • @nickclements9754
      @nickclements9754 11 років тому

      yes

    • @eliparker7151
      @eliparker7151 11 років тому

      They may have removed it, bit I recall there being a time when John Green admits to having the wrong flag or something. Dude, Iade this comment months ago

    • @nickclements9754
      @nickclements9754 11 років тому

      OK