American Reacts to Bertha Benz: The Journey That Changed Everything

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  • Опубліковано 14 гру 2022
  • original - - • Bertha Benz: The Journ...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 159

  • @Gr8Buccaneer
    @Gr8Buccaneer Рік тому +51

    actually,i saw a documentary about this a few days ago.at these days his car wasnt a succes,there where just no gasstations,so every thing went complicated and the people didnt liked it.but Bertha belived in it and stole it for this trip.the breaks were pretty bad and she came with the idea to put some stripes of leather on it,which made the breaks much more better,so she kinda invited the break pads.after all,she made it in 12hrs,with a horse you need 2 days with a night break.that proved how much better the "car "was,compared to the horse.after it went public and Carl improved the car with the inventions his wife made,it became a succes.

  • @shijoejoseph2011
    @shijoejoseph2011 9 днів тому

    That last shot of that child smiling... almost as if the innocent future smiling at what's to come! That last shot always gets me. Cinematography, music...all top notch!

  • @stephanos2758
    @stephanos2758 Рік тому +8

    Karl Benz was a legendary inventor. Bertha was just absolute legend

  • @saxon-mt5by
    @saxon-mt5by Рік тому +12

    Karl Benz may have built the car, but he saw it as a plaything and just drove it round the courtyard. It was Bertha's inspiration to see it as a practical means of transport and actually prove that it worked.

  • @Caionnech
    @Caionnech Рік тому +8

    Bertha Benz was the first woman who snatched her husbands Car for a roadtrip to had some fun^^

  • @abgekippt
    @abgekippt Рік тому +11

    The "Bertha Benz Route" is signposted. I have often cycled this route

  • @gladiusthrax4941
    @gladiusthrax4941 Рік тому +24

    In 2012 l went to see the Hockenheimring F1 race and we went to a place which was part of the road which she drove on, which was also part of the old and long Hockenheimring. That whole trip was like a pilgrimige for a pertol head. Also the Jim Clarck accident site and memorial is there. We also went to nearby Manheim where the car was invented and to nearby Mercedes-Benz museum in Stuttgart. On the way back we visited Sinsheim and Speyer museums which are beyond amazing. What a trip. That area is genesis. Everybody who loves cars should go there

    • @Kelsea-2002
      @Kelsea-2002 Рік тому +4

      A great but also accurate advertisement.This region has a lot to offer,including the wine route,the Black Forest,and the French Alsace.

    • @IWrocker
      @IWrocker  Рік тому +1

      Great information sounds intriguing 😎

  • @MrMerc-um1de
    @MrMerc-um1de Рік тому +6

    “Mercedes Benz,The best or nothing” ♥️

  • @kaiserlex6141
    @kaiserlex6141 14 днів тому

    If you think more about it you must have goosebumps cuz this is it this is the moment that is beginning of ours mobility and freedom.

  • @florianlipp5452
    @florianlipp5452 Рік тому +4

    What makes this journey so great is the fact that NONE of the infrastructure to support cars existed yet.
    No gas stations (of course).
    But even modern roads didn't exist. A part of Bertha's journey was on a roman road. Yes, they still used to roads of Roman Empire in the 1800s! The existing roads weren't built with cars in mind but rather horse carriages. (Horses don't mind a muddy track, cars do. Especially cars with the slim wheels used at the time).
    And neither existed car chauffeurs yet. Back in the day, rich people (and you had to be VERY rich to afford a car!) didn't drive their carriages themselves - they had drivers. But when no driver knows how to drive a motor car, you wouldn't buy one. Bertha's journey - and the fact that she was a woman - helped tremendously on that front as well: how hard can it be to learn how to drive one of those new fangled motor cars if even a woman can do it? (That's not me talking. I am just quoting the attitude at the time).

  • @DanielMcGregor
    @DanielMcGregor 2 місяці тому

    She was also the first to do a proper indurance run in the Patent Motorwagen. Carl Benz only took the car out on short drives until something minor failed. Her Jouney unveiled so many more issues that it convinced him to push the car more to it's limits. So technically she is also the worlds first proper test driver.

  • @ThomasKnip
    @ThomasKnip Рік тому +4

    Talking about "every strong man needs a strong woman". Bertha Benz sure was one!

  • @Dirk-Ulowetz
    @Dirk-Ulowetz Рік тому +22

    You spelled Pforzheim pretty well. 😊👍
    Interesting is, that Carl Benz was not the only inventor, that built a car in this year. Gottlieb Daimler did it also. Carl's was a three wheeler, Gottliebs had 4 wheels. One of them, not sure, who it was, also invented the first motorcycle.

    • @R4M_Tommy
      @R4M_Tommy Рік тому +7

      Benz Patent Motor Wagen
      VS
      Daimler Motor Carriage

    • @christiankastorf4836
      @christiankastorf4836 Рік тому +3

      Benz constructed his three-wheeler AROUND his engine, while Daimler just took a conventional carriage and put an engine in. Daimler also experimented with motorboats and he constructed a woden-framed motorcycle as early as 1885.

    • @m.h.6470
      @m.h.6470 Рік тому +3

      it is "pronounced", not "spelled", but yes, he did that pretty good.

  • @TTTzzzz
    @TTTzzzz Рік тому +7

    My mother remembered seeing her first car. She was about 10. That was in the late 20s near Rotterdam!

    • @jarlavdon7076
      @jarlavdon7076 Рік тому

      That is something else, to see something so different and worldchanging. Do you remember what she thought ?

    • @TTTzzzz
      @TTTzzzz Рік тому

      ​@@jarlavdon7076She was perplexed.

  • @basieluxanno7909
    @basieluxanno7909 Рік тому +3

    we learned at school in history, that the first train was a similar story.
    The people protested that the train would make the cows crazy and don't give any more milk. Yes the cows went crazy but only for a few days and after it the cows were fine. people weren't they were still against trains for a while.

  • @SovermanandVioboy
    @SovermanandVioboy Рік тому +9

    There is a video on UA-cam, called "Germany’s Oldest Street-Legal Car" - its a Benz Viktoria from 1894. U should look it up, if u want to see more about these old vehicles.

  • @SimonJPFuhrt
    @SimonJPFuhrt Рік тому +3

    We learned her story in history back in school. But since I saw the movie in television as an adult I could not imagine which courage she had an journey she made.

  • @johnvender
    @johnvender Рік тому +4

    That video is amazing. I first saw it a few years ago and the production is first class. I love the look on the little girl's face at the end after seeing an amazing female role model.

  • @xxx_phantom_xxxw_t_a9479
    @xxx_phantom_xxxw_t_a9479 Рік тому +11

    In 1888, in addition to what you mentioned, one must not forget that there was no internet, radio, TV and newspapers back then, but reports would come days, weeks or even months later, provided it was important enough for the country, the region . Today, if something happens somewhere, we know it minutes later or can even follow it live.
    Purely in terms of technical progress, in almost every respect, this time must have been damn interesting, from our point of view, from the point of view of "ordinary, simple" citizens, probably extremely disturbing, just trying to drive the oxen across the field as a vehicle drives past, the present meets the future, so to speak.
    "She believed in more than a car. She believed in herself." A great saying, especially the 2nd part should be taken to heart by more people (including women) without being arrogant.
    Do you see in that girl what I think I see? She sees the future coming, fascinated, probably curious, I would think.
    Women, well, some still say "back the stove with them" even today; The fact is, they have shaped life for much longer than we were aware, be it Bertha Benz or an even more impressive example is Marie Curie (1867-1934), winner of two Nobel Prizes in physics in 1903 and chemistry in 1911, on a Time when women were not actually allowed to think independently.

    • @betaich
      @betaich Рік тому +5

      in 1888 you had news papers and the telegraph was around for over 50 years. Newspapers were around for 200

    • @denzzlinga
      @denzzlinga Рік тому +1

      @@betaich and the railway reached pforzheim in 1861

  • @jeannettejensen308
    @jeannettejensen308 Рік тому +8

    The first working windshield wiper for a car was invented in 1903 by the American Mary Anderson (patent 1905), and in the 1910s windshield wipers became standard equipment on cars.

  • @ericpeglau9073
    @ericpeglau9073 Рік тому +2

    The four greatest minds in the automotive industry. Carl Benz, Wilhelm Maybach and Gottlieb Daimler as inventors of the automobile. Henry Ford, inventor of the production line.

    • @tubekulose
      @tubekulose 8 місяців тому

      Hey, what about Siegfried Markus?

    • @ockertbrits6907
      @ockertbrits6907 8 місяців тому

      Add Bertha Benz to that won't ya?

    • @micheldilly8531
      @micheldilly8531 2 місяці тому

      LOUIS RENAULT INVENTEUR DE LA BOÎTE DE VITESSE À PRISE DIRECTE 1898 ! 🇫🇷

  • @holgerczubka5453
    @holgerczubka5453 Рік тому +1

    I own a kind of biografy of Karl Benz (written 1936). The book is named "BENZ - Lebensfahrt eines deutschen Erfinders"/ BENZ - journey of life of a german inventor). The part with the "Ligroin" in the movie wasn´t that dramatically in reality.

  • @RSProduxx
    @RSProduxx Рік тому +1

    regarding the "hand starting an engine"... that was actually a problem with early cars... there were quite a few people killed or injured by winders back then...
    main reason why they invented electric starters

  • @svjaz
    @svjaz Місяць тому

    Before I retired, part of the Bertha Benz Memorial Route was my daily route to work.

  • @CaptianInternet
    @CaptianInternet Рік тому +6

    The term "Power-Couple" fits on so many levels to those two. It is such a beautiful story. Fun fact: That exact route is nowadays a testing route for the self driving cars for Mercedes. There is somewhere a video about that too.

  • @panamafloyd1469
    @panamafloyd1469 Рік тому +5

    Gottlieb Daimler (the conteporary of Benz that Dirk Ulowetz mentioned) named his cars after his daughter. Her name was "Mercedes". ;) The two companies merged a few years later. I had a friend in college who was into vintage Mercs. Every time I'd mention that my old BMWs could do x,y, and z "better", he'd say "Maybe..but I'll stick with the guys who invented the thing."
    I hope he still has his '64 "Pagoda" SL..I'll bet that car would be worth $60K these days.

    • @outwest59
      @outwest59 Рік тому +8

      Mercedes was not Daimler's daughter, she was the daughter of Emil Jelinek, an Austrian entrepreneur who invested in Daimler race cars and named them after his daughter "Mercedes" (he actually named pretty much everything after her, their house at the french Riviera was "Villa Mercedes" and so on). So when his race cars won a race, people wanted to buy a Mercedes, hence Daimler started to call his car line-up "Mercedes".... BTW, the Jelinek family was Jewish, so Hitler and his ilk drove around in a car that was named after a little jewish girl...

    • @panamafloyd1469
      @panamafloyd1469 Рік тому +4

      @@outwest59 , thanks for the clarification! Man, to think I've been wrong for so many years.. :D

    • @shi01
      @shi01 Рік тому +1

      $60k for a well maintained "Pagode" would be a bargain. These things can go up to $150k these days.

    • @panamafloyd1469
      @panamafloyd1469 Рік тому

      @@shi01 , that's amazing! I knew collectors valued them - but not *that* much! They are pretty cars, though. And I actually enjoyed the way my buddy's car handled more than the chassis that replaced it in the '70s.

    • @christiankastorf4836
      @christiankastorf4836 Рік тому

      No, that was some man with the typical Austrian name of "Jellinek" (What are three people from Vienna? Two Czechs). He was an early race-driver and had an agreement with the Daimler Company: If they allowed him to put the brand name of his daughter Mercedes onto their cars he would promote their sale. That PR-couo must have worked. Gottlieb Daimler had long been dead by then. He only lived to the year 1900.

  • @cmbk75
    @cmbk75 Рік тому +2

    Carl & Bertha, a movie from 2011 for example. It does contain some historical facts 😉

  • @ItsJakeTheBrake
    @ItsJakeTheBrake Рік тому +15

    Sorry to say, but that film is not historically accurate at all. The setting is ridiculous and the reactions of the people are just nonsensical. We're talking about the age post industrial revolution.
    But here's a few fun historical tidbits about this trip. Bertha and her sons didn't actually know the way to Pforzheim and just went to places they knew that were kinda on the way and the just asked for the right way.
    Bertha also invented the first brake pads during the trip, when the rudimentary brakes (wooden blocks) were worn out and weren't capable of slowing the car during downhill sections and she asked a shoe maker to put leather strips on the brakes, which performed better and she could easily change them once they were worn out.
    The car broke down a few times from things like a clogged fuel or a worn out ignition wire, which Bertha fixed herself, with things she had on her.
    The car only had 2 gears, which weren't enough for getting uphill, so her sons had to push it. One of the first improvements Carl made to the car was to add another gear, so it could go uphill.
    Bertha basically stole the car, because Carl didn't really believe it would be a success, so she set out to prove to him that it would be. Word spread and half way through her trip, people and press were waiting to see her driving the car. Not only did she prove to Carl that the car would be a success, she got the attention of the people and the media. I guess the rest is history.
    Bertha was an inventor, mechanic, PR genius and probably the world's first real test driver

  • @akyhne
    @akyhne Рік тому +3

    I have a documentary somewhere on my computer, with a lengthy story telling of this trip she made.
    She actually took the car, without her husband knowing, because she wanted to promote and prove a concept. The automobile.

    • @ockertbrits6907
      @ockertbrits6907 8 місяців тому

      Which made her the first car thief 😆

    • @stepfathermonk4691
      @stepfathermonk4691 7 місяців тому

      I have an idea.
      GTA Bertha 1890
      Hmm ... but maybe it's boring.
      No speedlimits
      No trafficsigns
      Even "drink and drive" is not forbidden
      THE GOOD OLD TIMES

  • @AnalogDude_
    @AnalogDude_ Рік тому +2

    This was a documentary on National Geographic or History channel a couple of years back.
    I was stunned by the story of Benz together mr Maybach that invented the functional carburator with Benz, aswel the Story of dr ing Ferdinant Porsche was impresing.

  • @peterhoz
    @peterhoz Рік тому +1

    If you ever go to Germany, make sure you visit the Mercedes Benz HQ/Museum.

  • @davidpelc
    @davidpelc Рік тому +1

    in 1888 in whole Europe trains were pretty normal transport, so i don´t think that car would be such technical mirracle from another world for people. ;)

  • @JohnHazelwood58
    @JohnHazelwood58 Рік тому +5

    Americans: "We invented the car!"
    Young german girl: "Hold my Mercedes-Benz steeringwheel...!" XD

    • @Arsenic71
      @Arsenic71 Рік тому +5

      Yes it seems to be a common misconception in the States - people thinking Henry Ford invented the car. He invented mass-production but certainly not the car.

    • @Rick_Zune
      @Rick_Zune Рік тому +2

      @@Arsenic71 He didn't even invent mass production or the assembly line and for sure not the car, that's just something Americans think for some bizzare reason.

    • @chastitymarks2185
      @chastitymarks2185 Рік тому +2

      @@Arsenic71 Mass-production via assembly line was invented by the french. To build a car via assembly line was the idea of a group of black engineers, Ford stole their idea and then told everybody else that it was his idea all along.

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 Рік тому +1

    I think there is a mod in the game assetta corsa where you can download the first Benz car and drive it on the Nürburgring. It takes a while to get to the finish..... I have seen an exact working replica of this car in a Dutch automobile museum.

  • @carloshortas2155
    @carloshortas2155 Рік тому +1

    A very Suttle commercial but extremely powerful on the message being sent.

  • @BarrySuridge
    @BarrySuridge Рік тому

    Yes! In 1888 and the Americans, contrary to popular belief, never invented the automobile (let alone the steam engine). The Americans did, however, come up with the Autoped in 1915.

  • @norbertlevas3819
    @norbertlevas3819 Рік тому

    Thanks for great video!

  • @christiankastorf4836
    @christiankastorf4836 Рік тому

    Just to destroy a popular myth: "Motorwagen #1" with its flimsy wheels from "penny-farthing" bicycles and its faulty steering was nothing but a prototype and failed on cobbled streets or dirt roads. Dr. Dunlop had not yet made his important invention or at least Benz had not heard of it, either. Benz took "Motorwagen #1" to pieces again and started work on "#2" and then "#3". Those prototyes had more durable conventional "artillery wheels" with wooden spokes and a much stronger frame. And it was that very "#3" that his wife used for her journey. It was later sold and as far as I know is a museum exhibit either in London ("Science Museum" in South Kensington) or as a loan in the Benz-Museum in Benz's place of birth (NOT the Daimler-Benz Museum in Stuttgart). The remaining parts of "Motorwagen #1" were later given to the "Deutsches Museum" in Munich which opened its doors in the early 1900s. As the blueprints had survived in Carl Benz's drawers as well, it was possible to reconstruct the car to its original appearance. All those many replicas that puff around all over the world are based on that. Carl Benz died in 1929, his wife Bertha outlived him for another 15 years. Benz's rival Gottlieb Daimler had been half a generation older, he died in 1900. Benz and Daimler never met in life, maybe their lawyers did as there were lawcases about patent rights.

  • @keithwilson1554
    @keithwilson1554 Рік тому +1

    Many people had already seen Steam Driven Vehicles so yes there would have been pockets of people who had never seen any self propelled vehicles hence their reaction.

  • @NocnaGlizda
    @NocnaGlizda 8 місяців тому

    Witch? It's a bit of an exaggeration to call out a witch but if it was a village then indeed people may have thought they were seeing a witch. Some information.
    The locomotive was invented in 1804. And loco looks more like a monster than this vehicle from Benz.
    ---------------------------
    The first internal combustion, petroleum fueled motorcycle was the Daimler Reitwagen. It was designed and built by the German inventors Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach in Bad Cannstatt, Germany, in 1885.
    -------------------------
    The first full-scale working railway steam locomotive was built in the United Kingdom in 1804 by Richard Trevithick, a British engineer born in Cornwall. This used high-pressure steam to drive the engine by one power stroke.
    --------------------
    1783. Arguably the first really successful steamboat, the Pyroscaphe was built by Claude-François-Dorothée, Marquis de Jouffroy d'Abbans. She was a paddle steamer whereby a steam engine would power sidewheels, or paddles, that would move the vessel through the water.
    --------------------
    In 1863 the Sub Marine Explorer was built by the German American engineer Julius H. Kroehl, and featured a pressurized work chamber for the crew to exit and enter underwater. This pre-figured modern diving arrangements such as the lock-out dive chamber, though the problems of decompression sickness were not well understood at the time.[26] After its public maiden dive in 1866, the Sub Marine Explorer was used for pearl diving off the coast of Panama. It was capable of diving deeper than 31 m (102 ft), deeper than any other submarine built before.
    -------------------
    The development of various types of vehicles has even exploded. Cars (vehicles with engines) practically appeared last. Practically because only airplanes appeared later because in 1903 thanks to the Wright brothers. Holy crap, dishwashers appeared in 1850!
    ---------------------
    Robert Anderson is often credited with inventing the first electric car some time between 1832 and 1839.
    The following experimental electric cars appeared during the 1880s:
    In 1881, Gustave Trouvé presented an electric car driven by an improved Siemens motor at the Exposition internationale d'Électricité de Paris.
    In 1884, over 20 years before the Ford Model T, Thomas Parker built an electric car in Wolverhampton using his own specially-designed high-capacity rechargeable batteries, although the only documentation is a photograph from 1895.
    In 1888, the German Andreas Flocken designed the Flocken Elektrowagen, regarded by some as the first "real" electric car.
    ----------------------
    We often forget about the real inventors because "the famous ones" overshadow the original authors of various inventions.

  • @seorsamaclately4294
    @seorsamaclately4294 Рік тому +2

    Your pronunciation of Pforzheim was spot on.

  • @alensmic6100
    @alensmic6100 Рік тому +1

    Carl & Bertha the movie 2011 but not conected with this short clip this is from 2019

  • @RSProduxx
    @RSProduxx Рік тому

    5:40 it´s fine, close enough

  • @akain1000
    @akain1000 Рік тому +2

    That's nice but this is better ;-) The Beast of Turin returns to Goodwood

  • @asmodon
    @asmodon Рік тому +2

    She took her sons with her because the car couldn’t go uphill very well. So the sons had to got off and push whenever they got to a hill.

  • @rudyweber1573
    @rudyweber1573 Рік тому

    You shoud look for the movie and Story of R. Diesel its a industrial aktion movie

  • @indo6005
    @indo6005 Рік тому

    I’m from the town where she was born and the story is, that her husband invented that car and she supported him an d worked with him. But he was to afraid to present the car to world…and so she “stole” the car one morning and traveled like in the movie described. The rest is history….

  • @kingofshit303
    @kingofshit303 Рік тому

    I drove that in Gran Tusrismo 4 😂

  • @HenryLoenwind
    @HenryLoenwind Рік тому

    This dramatisation looks like 1788 and people react like it's 1688. Aside from the fact that even back then village folks wouldn't treat a woman of obvious standing that way.
    That whole area was a centre of industry in the 1880s, with decades-old train lines crisscrossing it. And while the farming villages that dotted the landscape had not yet changed very much, people were well aware of what was going on in and near the cities that were just half a day's walk away.

  • @LuziBeerbaum
    @LuziBeerbaum Рік тому +1

    If you love this story check out "Clärenore Stinnes" 😉

  • @GrainneCarney
    @GrainneCarney Рік тому

    Great video as per. Not a movie, but the Donut team did a Past Gas podcast episode on this story, well worth the listen.

  • @user-iz9ck4zl3v
    @user-iz9ck4zl3v Рік тому

    That was cool!

  • @rainermarx5217
    @rainermarx5217 Місяць тому

    Not only were there no cars, there were also no real roads or road maps. If you asked for directions along the way, the other person had probably never seen the destination because it would have been a two-day journey by horse-drawn carriage. Here is an English documentary from the BBC= The world's first long-distance car journey - BBC REEL ua-cam.com/video/Bb5EIWymZp4/v-deo.html

  • @keithwilson1554
    @keithwilson1554 Рік тому +2

    But the EV haters alive back then (called Luddites) would be saying Oh you'll have range anxiety, There is no Infrastructure, No suitable Roads only good For Horses and Cattle. It scares the Kids with the Noise ....etc,etc

  • @benbrits6638
    @benbrits6638 Рік тому

    theirs a tv series cars that chanced the world that you must watch

  • @Adam-ik4wf
    @Adam-ik4wf Рік тому +1

    I thought the same Ian I was thinking that they could make a tv series or movie because I would watch it for sure if that short video is anything to go by

    • @tubekulose
      @tubekulose 8 місяців тому

      There is a TV-movie ("Carl & Bertha") from 2011. 🙂

  • @albyz7623
    @albyz7623 Рік тому

    Aka "The horseless carriage"

  • @thomasnieswandt8805
    @thomasnieswandt8805 Рік тому

    IDK if anyone said it yet, but she wasnt just the first person to drive a car, she was also the first person who was known for "driving without a licence" To test that thing legaly, the Emperor himself gave Karl Benz the licence to drive it on the road. The first ever drivers licence. However it was handed to Karl Benz, but Berta was like "Na, im the one who test it."

  • @zoolkhan
    @zoolkhan Рік тому

    And that is why we call the fuel in germany "Benz-In" the legacy lives in in the Daimler-Benz (Mercedes) brand...
    And diesel fuel is of course named after ferdinant diesel, the inventor of the diesel engine.
    It amazes me how many americans wonder if germans have electricity (not kidding) but then they go on driving a car completely ignorant to its history....
    (they usually answer ford invented the car. But all ford invented was the conveyer-belt-assembly line production method)
    Then they get into a plane (jet engine) .... to get x-rayed (ferdinant braun) in a clinic somewhere else, and while waiting for their appointment they watch on TV (Ferdinant braun) how another rocket (Wernherr von braun) goes into orbit....
    I guess, when all hollywood and allied-history books ever teach is that germans are the villains, it is kinda required to brush under the carpet that the world would not move as it does without them and their ingenuity. The only "braun" they ever will remember is hitlers spouse "eva" who had invented about nothing, and also contributed nothing to the world.
    Some education that is
    The english may know better, but there too goes the legend they had invented the first computer and jet engine, and both claims are proven to be wrong...
    Patriotism i guess. Good sport it is not.

  • @S_Black
    @S_Black Рік тому +1

    I think the dramatization is a bit silly. They shot it like a western

  • @wheelmanstan
    @wheelmanstan Рік тому

    Have you seen the old colorized footage from 1906 or 1911 New York? At least half the vehicles in that are horse and carriage..I mean cars are still such a new concept. This modern way of living is still very new. Horses were used for everything before then. We were living the same way for thousands of years. Riding animals...that was as normal as it got. Riding cars was abnormal. haha
    If the modern world still exists and is progressing in 50 or so years rather than just collapsing or decaying, I wonder what that footage will look like. I'm sure it'll be something beyond battery powered cars, some kind of wireless energy perhaps. Hopefully we still have horses though because at some point all this will collapse and we'll revert back to the horse and buggy..that's just how it works.

  • @MrOluf
    @MrOluf Рік тому

    You might have gest it. And a daugther named Mercedes.

  • @R4M_Tommy
    @R4M_Tommy Рік тому +1

    UA-cam upgraded you from one ad before the video to multiple ads.

    • @IWrocker
      @IWrocker  Рік тому

      I see big ads when I watch UA-cam now too, I heard that UA-cam pushes longer ads for lots of channels around Christmas time because of all the shopping

  • @stefanfeyle1096
    @stefanfeyle1096 Рік тому +1

    I knew the story but not this video. It's great. And you spoke out Pforzheim perfectly well. Greetings from Germany. 👋

  • @Miskolcer
    @Miskolcer 3 місяці тому

    "A which is coming"... OK, there was a bit too much drama in this.. In 1888 there were steam engines, locomotives, steam ships all over the world for almost 70 years. This film looks like they visited the middle 1600-s.

  • @abgekippt
    @abgekippt Рік тому +4

    Steam engines and the railway were already commonplace at that time. As dramatic as the reactions were portrayed in the film, it is certainly exaggerated.

    • @MrGrucha
      @MrGrucha Рік тому +2

      Exactly, 1888 was over 50 years after first railway was opened in Prussia (1835), in 1880 German railway was operating 9400 locomotives, transporting over 400 million passengers a year. Seeng car was definitelly a huge thing, but noone would see witchcraft in that.

    • @killerkraut9179
      @killerkraut9179 Рік тому

      Was it really necessary to pull the plow themself didnt hade they horses or ochsen in that time ?

    • @markusschenkl7943
      @markusschenkl7943 Рік тому +1

      @@MrGrucha 1835 is correct, but it wasn't in Prussia but in Bavaria, between Fuerth and Nuremberg. The line operated until the early 1920's. It was closed down due to competition with a tramline which was established right next to the train tracks in the 1880's.

    • @abgekippt
      @abgekippt Рік тому

      The "Badische Hauptbahn" from Mannheim over Heidelberg to Karlsruhe was build in 1840. This railway line runs along the route

  • @Engwatathraion
    @Engwatathraion 7 місяців тому

    Bertha Benz had the balls many men wish they had. And she doesn't get the credit for that.

  • @groenekever
    @groenekever Рік тому

    Same happening now for ev cars

  • @tobitobsen7826
    @tobitobsen7826 6 місяців тому

    And one still calls a liquid a gas

  • @mariafletcher6603
    @mariafletcher6603 Рік тому +2

    Wow that's a neat car. Crazy very brave women. I don't think I would have done that. love to you and the family. From UK 🇬🇧👍👍 b Safe take care. PEACE ☮️ an old cockney gal. Merry Christmas and a happy new year to you all. 🎄⛄🍺🕊️🎁❄️🦃🍷🍾

    • @module79l28
      @module79l28 Рік тому +1

      *woman

    • @IWrocker
      @IWrocker  Рік тому

      Merry Christmas to you!! Always great to see your comments 🎉👏😉🇺🇸🇬🇧

  • @chrisjarvis4449
    @chrisjarvis4449 4 місяці тому

    i love this and to hell with all this about not historically accurate nothing in this world is historically accurate its all belief . and the no thing back in that time unless you had a skill or were from money for the most part you worked a day to make it to the next but that's ok .

  • @igorzkoppt
    @igorzkoppt Рік тому

    This short is better in acting, atmosphere and in most aspects than a whole bunch of recent Netflix shows and cinema movies. Brilliant!

  • @miguelagramos
    @miguelagramos Рік тому

    Nice history... did not now...

  • @ulrichhaepp2657
    @ulrichhaepp2657 Рік тому

    She did it alone, as her husband invented the automobile, did not believe in his invention she had a famous press resonance and enabled the selling progress. This is a DB ad.

  • @sambaker1080
    @sambaker1080 Рік тому

    Check out Yes Theory he has a lot of good stuff

  • @adrianp3098
    @adrianp3098 Рік тому

    Day 2 video 2 of asking you to look at modern day trans am cars because they still exhaust.

  • @henningpieterjordan7416
    @henningpieterjordan7416 Рік тому

    One of the things the german invested first...and many more..!!!!

  • @s.oliver3687
    @s.oliver3687 Рік тому

    As far as I remember her husband hasn't had the courage to drive the car.
    So she took it.

  • @parand8263
    @parand8263 Рік тому +1

    It was the 1880s. A woman rided something generating noises and stinks. Should be a whitch. Nowadays? Yeahaa! Who is right?

    • @killerkraut9179
      @killerkraut9179 Рік тому +2

      its exagereated
      the first steam train in germany existed in 1835 !

  • @Scenario8
    @Scenario8 Рік тому +9

    "behind every successful man there stands a woman" - I confirm this based on my own experience 🙂

    • @JohnHazelwood58
      @JohnHazelwood58 Рік тому

      true! ask my wife! ;)

    • @Scenario8
      @Scenario8 Рік тому +1

      I think your wife doesn't stand behind me :D

    • @taniaPBear
      @taniaPBear Рік тому +2

      Beside, I would hope, not behind.

  • @jotarhf
    @jotarhf Рік тому

    Hi, if you want to watch something with a bit of dark german humor, may you like to watch "Staplerfahrer Klaus", everyone who made a forklifter license in germany knows this..... with best regards from germany

  • @CavHDeu
    @CavHDeu Рік тому

    German alien inventions 👽

  • @Dimmie-pg2ng
    @Dimmie-pg2ng Рік тому +2

    Read the history where the Benz becomes his name Mercedes by an Austrian salesmen

  • @marcbaur677
    @marcbaur677 Рік тому +1

    As far i know there is a german Movie about Bertha Benz.

  • @kevinblankenburg4816
    @kevinblankenburg4816 Рік тому +2

    The first driver was female... And what a female. BTW I don't know where they shot the scenes, but believe me there were never donkeys in a German pub. It was a wealthy region, the best soil in all of Germany. She started on the outskirts of Mannheim (where the bicycle was invented) and went past Karlsruhe (look at the castles of Mannheim and Karlsruhe) to the capitol of German jewellers, Pforzheim.
    The pharmacy is still in existence... There has been a statue erected in memory of that fuel stop.

  • @ngk68
    @ngk68 Рік тому

    LOL 5:41 Pfortzheim

  • @mikkorenvall428
    @mikkorenvall428 Рік тому

    Ligroine sells booming.... =)

  • @satyrcreekergang4985
    @satyrcreekergang4985 Рік тому +1

    And she invented the disc brake. 😎
    Stay safe 🤘🇺🇲🇩🇰🤘

  • @benderbender9553
    @benderbender9553 Рік тому

    🇦🇺🇺🇲⚡⚡

  • @johnvender
    @johnvender Рік тому

    Something some may find interesting, the oldest car makers are 1. Peugeot: · 2. Tatra: · 3. Opel Automobile GmbH: · 4. Mercedes Benz: · 5. Skoda. Note that two of them are Czech :)

  • @Dan-fo9dk
    @Dan-fo9dk Рік тому +1

    At that time (1888) was engines well introduced both on trains and ships plus in industry. So that both work or self propelling vehicle of sorts were around was nothing new. Hence the video seems quite a bit over dramatised. The only correct there might be that the horses could react. On the lake of Mjøsa in Norway are there still a paddle steamship in traffic (worlds oldest in traffic )....and that one was put into operation in 1856.
    So here is a video you can react to about that unique ship: ua-cam.com/video/_vS_SywnKXA/v-deo.html

  • @killerkraut9179
    @killerkraut9179 Рік тому +1

    i think the video is extremely exagerated .
    And not much historically !

  • @MrStubbs8157
    @MrStubbs8157 Рік тому

    Where is the opressed woman in the story...🤣 People are forgetting that those couples worked together through harsh life.
    Just saying...

  • @nagmashot
    @nagmashot Рік тому

    typical movie made everything in the passed ugly and dirty... the pharmazy they got the petrol from was actualy quite nice

  • @damienthimonier4900
    @damienthimonier4900 Рік тому +1

    Too bad it's not really the first one.
    The first journey in car, outside cities, was Etienne Lenoir, inventor of the two-stroke engine. He made a 6-7 miles in the countryside of Paris, in 1862.
    Siegfried Markus did the same thing in the countryside of Vienna, in 1870 ... but being a Jew, his heritage was destroyed during WW2, in favor of Daimler and Benz.

    • @martinstock
      @martinstock 8 місяців тому

      The girl the Mercedes cars are named after was Jewish. While Siegfried Markus converted 25 years old to Protestantism.
      The 1870 ride of Siegfried Markus is disputed. Others time it considerably later.
      Siegfried Markus owned 130 patents, mostly related to combustion engines. Thus he was obviously aware of this procedure and also wealthy enough to apply for patents. He never disputed the patent of Carl Benz (unlike Gottlieb Daimler). Despite living the longer part of his life in Vienna he kept his Mecklenburg-Schwerin citizenship, was such as German as Carl Benz (Baden) and Gottlieb Daimler (Württemberg).

  • @diedampfbrasse98
    @diedampfbrasse98 Рік тому +4

    what a load of bs in the video and the commentary about people back in those days ... you kids do realize that steam powered carriages and busses were a thing already for quite some time at that point? And that steam powered tractors (traction engines) worked on fields? Sure, those were still rare and expensive, but people knew about them for years in the 1880s.
    While a light weight car with combustion engine would certainly have raised attention, noone would be shocked or scream of witches by a carriage without a horse.

    • @asmodon
      @asmodon Рік тому

      Nobody outside of London or Paris would have ever seen a steam powered vehicle that wasn’t a train and steam tractors were extremely rare. Sure, yelling witch is rather overdramatising. But comparing the Bertha Benz’ Journey in the Benz Patentwagen with some steam carriage that never caught on is pretty silly.

    • @diedampfbrasse98
      @diedampfbrasse98 Рік тому +2

      @@asmodon curse your poor education ... in Germany socalled Lokomobiles (mobile steam engines) slowly creeped onto fields since 1810. By 1850 already there were mutliple companies renting selfdriving steam engines aka tractors to larger farms. By 1880 every farmer at least knew well that selfdriving engines existed, quite a number even having worked alongside them.
      All while Germans also knew about steam busses as they were presented to the public with quite some circus (they werent unique to england/france), which ended up with a first bus line with a german-made steam bus opening up in 1884 (more following) ... they indeed had their short time of success outside of the UK and france before the combustion engine took over.
      Only thing amazing about the benz car was its new type of engine and tiny size/weight, not the concept of an engine driven vehicle.
      Steamengines of all sorts were far too famous and on everyones mind back in those days, even whereever they werent driving it was simply the thing to talk about during the industrial revolution.
      Also noone said these machines were equals in any way ... the criticism was about the silly idea that people would be at a loss seeing something engine driven on a street, which by the 1880 certainly wasnt the case in Germany.
      The Benz Patentwagen is famous and was the first commercially succesful, but not particular unique in its time ... mind you that 1863 already a first car with combustion engine was driven 18km by Étienne Lenoir and since then a couple of odd prototypes of such vehicles were build in the modern world.
      But business as usual, fame distorting history and creating some silly ideas about what common people knew back then.

    • @asmodon
      @asmodon Рік тому

      @@diedampfbrasse98 you seem hurt that I didn’t take your silly arguing about steam buses seriously. Even back then nobody cared about them.

    • @diedampfbrasse98
      @diedampfbrasse98 Рік тому +1

      @@asmodon come back and try again after you got yourself some actual education. Piece of advise: UA-cam is a bad school, you better look elsewhere for education.

    • @asmodon
      @asmodon Рік тому

      @@diedampfbrasse98 I wrote my masters thesis in economics about local labour markets in Germany during industrialisation. But keep it up, you seem to be very knowledgeable when it comes to juvenile insults.

  • @raman9756
    @raman9756 Рік тому

    Same hostility happens to EV Drivers now days. There are always the old-ways-people who don´t like change and fear change and therefore hate all people that do changes and like progress

  • @geomax3465
    @geomax3465 7 місяців тому

    The "She Believes In Herself" is pure Woke BS... The truth is she believe in her husband and make the journey to prove to the world he was right about cars.

  • @lindgruen3118
    @lindgruen3118 Рік тому +3

    This movie is 80% bullsh...

  • @23GreyFox
    @23GreyFox Рік тому

    The movie is a over dramatic with a 1000 liter tank full of feminism. Don't take it to seriously.