The Siege of Leningrad (1941-44)

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 3 січ 2019
  • The Siege of Leningrad was one of the longest sieges in history.
    The German forces were to hold the city under siege therefore starving the soviet defenders to death.
    However, they did not expect such a heroic resistance by the Leningrad defenders...
    Become a Simple History member: ua-cam.com/users/simplehistory...
    Support us on Patreon: / simplehistory
    Copyright: DO NOT translate and re-upload our content on UA-cam or other social media.
    SIMPLE HISTORY MERCHANDISE
    Get the Simple History books on Amazon:
    www.amazon.com/Daniel-Turner-...
    T-Shirts
    teespring.com/stores/simple-h...
    Simple history gives you the facts, simple!
    See the book collection here:
    Amazon USA
    www.amazon.com/Daniel-Turner/e...
    Amazon UK
    www.amazon.co.uk/Daniel-Turner...
    www.simplehistory.co.uk/
    / simple-history-5494376...
    / simplehistoryyt
    Credit:
    Created by Daniel Turner
    Narrator:
    Chris Kane
    www.vocalforge.com
    Music Credit
    'Failing Defense' , 'All This - Scoring Action' , 'Cortosis - Scoring Action' by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
    Artist: incompetech.com/
    Eyes of Glory- Aakash Gandhi
    Sources:
    Gerhard L. Weinberg, A World at Arms, a Global History of World War II
    Jeremy Black, World War Two, A military history
    Peter Calvocoressi, Guy Wint, Total War, the story of World War II
    Georgy Zhukov, The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov
    The World at War - By Mark Arnold-Forster

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,7 тис.

  • @HistoryHouseProductions
    @HistoryHouseProductions 5 років тому +3354

    It’s so crazy to think how long these sieges were. I was so different 872 days ago. I can’t even imagine being under siege the whole time....

    • @afinoxi
      @afinoxi 5 років тому +103

      Well you couldn't. You were shot or starved generally.

    • @afinoxi
      @afinoxi 5 років тому +61

      @@REEEPROGRAM siege of Candia , 21 years. Yeah...

    • @alvag6
      @alvag6 5 років тому +23

      Well Netherlands colonizing other country for 350 years so
      Then colonized again by japan for 3.5 years

    • @MairusPleilinen
      @MairusPleilinen 5 років тому +8

      Well have you played Rainbow 6 siege :-DDDD

    • @kairndreamer2885
      @kairndreamer2885 5 років тому +17

      @@shayanabrouce686 Many did surrender already in Ukraine (some also offered to join against the Soviets and faced the same fate); none were accepted and the news traveled quickly. The Slavic peoples, Catholics, East Orthodox, Jews, Republicans (Communists included), etc. were all forced to unite against the Nazis and their collaborators, or face total annihilation and erasure.

  • @Simplehistory
    @Simplehistory  5 років тому +2170

    872 days

  • @Dante8731
    @Dante8731 5 років тому +1886

    28 workers of the Institute of Plant Industry died of starvation while keeping the collection of 200,000 seed samples, several tons in total. This collection saved many thousands during the post-war recovery.

    • @v44n7
      @v44n7 5 років тому +112

      Incredible, I didn't knew that, thanks for sharing

    • @andro7862
      @andro7862 5 років тому +168

      Heroes, they knew what had to be done, at all costs.

    • @SuperNgin
      @SuperNgin 4 роки тому +85

      Благодарю тебя за эту информацию. Она поможет понять то отчаянье и отвагу граждан блокадного Ленинграда. Thanks to you for that information. It might to help to understand that despair and valour of citizens of besieged Leningrad!

    • @kodingkrusader2765
      @kodingkrusader2765 4 роки тому +26

      @@SuperNgin the citizens had valor. Valor for a brutal dictator that exterminated tens of millions of his own people.

    • @SuperNgin
      @SuperNgin 4 роки тому +34

      @@kodingkrusader2765 you have no idea of valor. Да и пошел ты.

  • @infinity6212
    @infinity6212 4 роки тому +3239

    My great grandmother was a firefighter in the sieged Leningrad until 1943. She is still alive.

  • @JustinY.
    @JustinY. 5 років тому +5504

    Almost three years. Years. It's insane to even try and think of what those guys endured.

    • @zach7372
      @zach7372 5 років тому +297

      Is this a serious Justin y comment?

    • @dominatordude7535
      @dominatordude7535 5 років тому +92

      Yeah it is the real Justin Y.

    • @zach7372
      @zach7372 5 років тому +230

      @@dominatordude7535 yeah but it's the first of his comments I've seen that isn't a joke or something.

    • @kstreet7438
      @kstreet7438 5 років тому +64

      Justin Y. A serious Justin comment crazy.

    • @kstreet7438
      @kstreet7438 5 років тому +4

      Samuel Cayford in way shorter time too

  • @juuzos6016
    @juuzos6016 5 років тому +5744

    Imagine traveling back in time to realize everything actually looks like Simple History animation

  • @acerusea5156
    @acerusea5156 4 роки тому +1868

    Soviet high ranking officer: *messes up once*
    Georgy Zhukov: Allow me to introduce myself

    • @lenin4074
      @lenin4074 3 роки тому +6

      420 LIKES, IM NOT RUINING THIS

    • @dripsnake44
      @dripsnake44 3 роки тому +5

      Fortnitegamer 123L5 I’m sorry little one *presses like button*

    • @iamjoeysteel
      @iamjoeysteel 3 роки тому +34

      You have to make a series of critical mistakes before they would send Zhukov. He's one man and can't be everywhere at once. To his credit, his duty and incredible work saved many more millions of Soviet lives.

    • @24kpull
      @24kpull 3 роки тому +3

      @@iamjoeysteel It would be better if he never was born then. The best communist is the dead one

    • @gnas1897
      @gnas1897 3 роки тому +5

      @@24kpull Shut-

  • @zicomitchell
    @zicomitchell 5 років тому +5983

    I swear to God, every time there's a crap Soviet Commander, Zhukov is there to replace him.

    • @badabada4251
      @badabada4251 4 роки тому +493

      No wonder even Stalin and Khruschev feared him

    • @rottensoul440
      @rottensoul440 4 роки тому +264

      Zhukov wasn't actually that great, in 1942 he turned the Rzhev salient into a meat grinder, losing more than two million men for minor territorial gains and comparatively light German casualties.

    • @badabada4251
      @badabada4251 4 роки тому +628

      @@rottensoul440 no generals has perfect battle records. Even Napoelon has his losts.

    • @Nostr00
      @Nostr00 4 роки тому +31

      Zhukov wasnt any better xD

    • @ShadowPatriot
      @ShadowPatriot 4 роки тому +84

      ​@@rottensoul440 i personally agree, that there were many losses, but due to his departure to Stalingrad front almost all operation turned into failure despite some liberated territories. And only because of Stalingrad success, offensive Rzhev operation(Mars) completed successfully

  • @aim2kill171
    @aim2kill171 5 років тому +3850

    GOTTA GIVE IT TO MY MAN SIMPLE HISTORY FOR NOT PUTTING ADDS EVERR 😤

    • @Simplehistory
      @Simplehistory  5 років тому +553

      We got demonetised on this video.. no ads or sponsors no more simple history channel..

    • @jgrechhardie
      @jgrechhardie 5 років тому +223

      F in the chat for simple history s bank account

    • @markshakur3617
      @markshakur3617 5 років тому +36

      To be honest it became my fav channel quick, I learn get smart and don't see useless ads. Gotta love it

    • @Katt1n
      @Katt1n 5 років тому +6

      @@jgrechhardie F

    • @aim2kill171
      @aim2kill171 5 років тому +1

      @@Simplehistory dont understand youtube language

  • @donhancock332
    @donhancock332 4 роки тому +725

    The " sawdust" in their bread was actually the inner bark of a kind of pine.Scraped and dried it was quite edible when mixed with a certain amount of flour.

    • @hydraliskin
      @hydraliskin 4 роки тому +65

      in finnish its called pettuleipä..we also in hard times eat it

    • @peterlonergan
      @peterlonergan 4 роки тому +24

      Apparently it's rich in vitamin c

    • @MannenFromNorth
      @MannenFromNorth 4 роки тому +31

      We have something similar in Norway to, when making fire food you could cut off some innerlining in the wood and eat it, it's like a wet chewing gum once you get it right, and it tastes surprisingly good and makes you full pretty fast.

    • @gregbaranszky545
      @gregbaranszky545 3 роки тому +24

      Are you trying to make eating trees sound okay?

    • @siyacer
      @siyacer 3 роки тому +39

      @@gregbaranszky545 are you trying to say it isn't?

  • @duncangraczyk7287
    @duncangraczyk7287 3 роки тому +132

    An old story about the siege. Shostakovitch, a famous Russian composer, wrote a symphony, simply called The Leningrad Symphony, to be preformed at the city. the malnourished performers, dressed in ragged clothes, preformed the symphony to a equally malnourished populace of Leningrad. The Germans, in their trenches, heard the symphony from the city center, and it is said, a German Captain, said "this city will never fall.". I don't know the validity of the story, but it brings hope that music creates courage, even in the face of overwhelming odds.

    • @Ivanofficial52
      @Ivanofficial52 Рік тому +14

      There's more: the Soviets we're shooting German planes so they don't interrupt the concert. The audience said the philharmony was literally shaking. While the music played only 3 bombs fell in the suburb

    • @Davidkiser13
      @Davidkiser13 5 місяців тому

      “And i dedicate my 7th symphony to the heroism of Leningrad” Dmitry Shostakovich

  • @SerpMolot
    @SerpMolot 5 років тому +3995

    America: do or die.
    Russia/USSR: die but do.

  • @heitorfuzii7398
    @heitorfuzii7398 5 років тому +2910

    I have some ideas for future videos
    -Remake of the battle of verdun video
    -battle of wuhan
    -Warsaw uprising
    -soviet invasion of afhganistan
    -Brazilian expeditionary force
    -battle of smolensk

    • @justas6235
      @justas6235 5 років тому +61

      Soviet invasion of Baltic’s

    • @jubisvaldo5450
      @jubisvaldo5450 5 років тому +29

      A video about the FEB whould be great (im a brazilian)

    • @duk6157
      @duk6157 5 років тому +2

      I had one but I can't remember

    • @CM-ls6fh
      @CM-ls6fh 5 років тому +32

      Battle of Wuhan, Second Sino Japanese War, Battle of Taierzhuang... so many great battles that could be talked about...
      We all pretend like the war was in Europe and Japan was done by 2 nukes. We seem to forget the insane sacrifice of 20,000,000 Chinese

    • @user-wn4jr6zz8f
      @user-wn4jr6zz8f 5 років тому +8

      Yugoslav Partizans too

  • @ossewa3939
    @ossewa3939 5 років тому +2609

    My mom: We'll just be in and out, real quick.
    What actaully happens: *1941-44*

  • @Khvost_
    @Khvost_ 5 років тому +721

    I'm from Saint Petersburg (aka Leningrad) myself. The amount of respect that those people deserve is impossible to express. They are truly heroic.

    • @PyromaN93
      @PyromaN93 4 роки тому +29

      Cheers from Gatchina, bro. They was true steel people, city wasn't surrender, and produced ammunition, guns, tanks and more under constant bombardment, and send it to the frontline.

    • @viatka_post
      @viatka_post 4 роки тому +15

      Ленин был шутником, он пообещал крестьянам землю, но так и не дал ее, но и крестьяне были шутниками, поэтому Ленин не видит землю до сих пор

    • @NapoleonBonaparde
      @NapoleonBonaparde 4 роки тому +10

      Yes indeed lots of respect for those Wehrmacht soldiers

    • @user-ii1cr9mr6s
      @user-ii1cr9mr6s 4 роки тому +30

      @@NapoleonBonaparde ok wehraboo

    • @jennyjohn704
      @jennyjohn704 4 роки тому +2

      @@NapoleonBonaparde Why?

  • @duncangraczyk7287
    @duncangraczyk7287 5 років тому +117

    they say, that when the preformed Shostakovitch's Leningrad symphony in a concert hall in Leningrad, by a starving orchestra and listened by malnourished people in the concert hall. A German commander, who heard the symphony being played form the hall. he then spoke to his men and said "this city will never be conquered" .

  • @bbcmotd
    @bbcmotd 5 років тому +1142

    Diary of Tanya Savicheva (age 11)
    Zhenya died on December 28th at 12 noon, 1941
    Grandma died on the 25th of January at 3 o'clock, 1942
    Leka died March 17th, 1942, at 5 o'clock in the morning, 1942
    Uncle Vasya died on April 13th at 2 o'clock in the morning, 1942
    Uncle Lesha May 10th, at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, 1942
    Mama on May 13th at 7:30 in the morning, 1942
    The Savichevs are dead
    Everyone is dead
    Only Tanya is left

    • @neitherman9997
      @neitherman9997 5 років тому +199

      I've just read about her
      I found it sad to think that after going through all that and surviving Leningrad, it's a disease that killed her before the war even ended

    • @markoap91
      @markoap91 5 років тому +39

      @@neitherman9997 Very sad. Reading this I was hoping she had lived.

    • @Andbriefly
      @Andbriefly 5 років тому +54

      @@markoap91 Таня умерла от туберкулёза кишечника в 1944 (по другой версии, это был энцефалит). 😔

    • @neomarks3623
      @neomarks3623 5 років тому +36

      @@markoap91 , she is dead on the "big land" because she had many diseases, that she toke in cold days of siege.

    • @neomarks3623
      @neomarks3623 5 років тому

      @Josip Broz Tito , she is dead on the "big land" because she had many diseases, that she toke in cold days of siege.

  • @vicrus5900
    @vicrus5900 4 роки тому +259

    My great grandma survived this siege, she was 13. She does bot like to talk about the siege, she still lives in Leningrad

    • @JackNotJacks
      @JackNotJacks 4 роки тому +17

      It’s called St. Petersburg now.

    • @vicrus5900
      @vicrus5900 4 роки тому +50

      @@JackNotJacks I am aware, I used Leningrad for its historical context

    • @SaifSheikh445
      @SaifSheikh445 4 роки тому +1

      You made a typo. I think you meant to say not not bot but its ok. You can always fix it

    • @SaifSheikh445
      @SaifSheikh445 4 роки тому +1

      Vicrus did you have any other family members that lived in Leningrad at the time

    • @user-nk6lz5kw7w
      @user-nk6lz5kw7w 3 роки тому +3

      the majority does not like to talk about the blockade

  • @americanninja4639
    @americanninja4639 5 років тому +740

    Honour to my great grandpa Sascha igorov(1921-1943) .declared missing near Novgorod.

    • @walkinggaming7348
      @walkinggaming7348 5 років тому +28

      Blyat

    • @canep
      @canep 4 роки тому +26

      It's either IgorEv or Yegorov. There's no such surname Igorov. You're welcome.

    • @fahoodie1852
      @fahoodie1852 4 роки тому +1

      canep
      ё

    • @homierami7196
      @homierami7196 4 роки тому

      american ninja respect for your great grandpa

    • @FirstLast-cg9ic
      @FirstLast-cg9ic 4 роки тому +2

      Probably desserted

  • @lillyie
    @lillyie 4 роки тому +521

    Soviet Commanders: *loses to Germany*
    Zhukov: fine, i'll do it myself

    • @garmenlin5990
      @garmenlin5990 4 роки тому +11

      I get that reference

    • @patrioticamerican8114
      @patrioticamerican8114 2 роки тому +1

      Sad Konstantin noises

    • @LIONTAMER3D
      @LIONTAMER3D Рік тому

      zhukov, rommel, patton: they were commanders who could take one look at the layout of men/materials on a battlefield & know exactly what needed to be done, when, and how in order to win. stacking enemy bodies with maximum efficiency o.0

  • @aaronlee5073
    @aaronlee5073 4 роки тому +300

    As civilians, we here in America don’t know a damn thing about the brutality of war other than what we’ve seen on tv

    • @joshuablue7938
      @joshuablue7938 4 роки тому +40

      Bc it's ungodly difficult to invade the Americas

    • @jackluck2538
      @jackluck2538 3 роки тому +43

      Yeah, I mean thats what a two massive oceans will do for ya!

    • @Juan-wx5xz
      @Juan-wx5xz 3 роки тому +12

      Americans civilians : What is war? Lol

    • @grimreaper649
      @grimreaper649 3 роки тому +6

      @Horatio Nelson Europe and asia were nations born from war but I can't tell which one had the most bloody wars.

    • @normahansen6184
      @normahansen6184 3 роки тому +1

      @@joshuablue7938 oh shut up maybe in the past but not now

  • @Sapphiros
    @Sapphiros 5 років тому +218

    Dear Lord, 872 days...

    • @Simplehistory
      @Simplehistory  5 років тому +57

      its hard to imagine the suffering

    • @christianramirez6578
      @christianramirez6578 5 років тому +3

      @@Simplehistory but how does the suffering last almost 3 years for the Soviets not ready against the Germans.

    • @joshuahuntington5467
      @joshuahuntington5467 5 років тому +4

      Christian Ramirez can you explain that a bit better and I shall explain if i can

    • @raymondhamill270
      @raymondhamill270 5 років тому +20

      @@Simplehistory I remember reading somewhere that six members of the Soviet agriculture society had stored tons of grain the reason for why they did it was they were under orders to keep the grain safe for it to planted of the war four of the six members died from starvation but afterwards the grain was planted to help feed the people once the siege on the city was lifted.

    • @christianramirez6578
      @christianramirez6578 5 років тому +2

      @@joshuahuntington5467 like how Soviet Union lost so many lives since it was bigger than Germany and the Communist overthrown the government during the near ending of ww1?

  • @lutgardonabo319
    @lutgardonabo319 4 роки тому +420

    *Zhukov After Stalingrad*
    "Ah yes I can rest now"
    Stalin ; Zhukov I need you
    Zhukoz ; awwww c' mon

  • @WinteressNavja
    @WinteressNavja 5 років тому +630

    That's why WW2 is very important for us. We still remember what our ancestors have been through.

    • @boerekable
      @boerekable 4 роки тому +14

      Ww2 is important, because it is the only thing Putin could find what made Russian people pride and loyal to him at the same time.

    • @itwowed
      @itwowed 4 роки тому +66

      @@boerekable Putin Putin Putin Putin Putin Putin. Maybe time to stop?

    • @markd523
      @markd523 4 роки тому +29

      Селина Винтер Yes. I remember feeling SO ashamed and embarrassed in 2015 when Obama (I’m American) turned down his invitation to the 70th Victory parade in Moscow. It was politically motivated, due to tensions over The Ukraine. But politics should never be more important than a respect for history or the unimaginable sadness and loss that the Russian Nation endured to defeat The Third Reich on the ground. Your people were alone in that fight and it is only The Russians who would not have given up in such a terrible conflict. I really respect that Victory, but cannot comprehend how nightmarish was the cost. Russia will outlive our planet and our sun.

    • @homierami7196
      @homierami7196 4 роки тому +4

      Селина Винтер my two great grand fathers were fighting in the war and I respect them, one of them was fighting in Baltic fleet and he was in siege of Leningrad and the second one he was on katusha and event took participation in battle of Budapest

    • @Alsayid
      @Alsayid 4 роки тому +8

      @@markd523 I hate to tell you Mark, but Russia is already dying. Russian women barely have one child on average, and many of those from Muslims. The problem is no better in Western Europe or America.

  • @VlizOW
    @VlizOW 5 років тому +295

    Last time I was this early, Yugoslavia still existed 🥶🥶

    • @justanotherhuman.3649
      @justanotherhuman.3649 5 років тому +19

      Oooffffff.
      your coment shatered the USSR.

    • @fizii_
      @fizii_ 5 років тому +8

      That isnt funny

    • @merilazic9070
      @merilazic9070 5 років тому +2

      Lol

    • @TheGuy-yk1ut
      @TheGuy-yk1ut 5 років тому +3

      So you were never early

    • @slavicemperor8279
      @slavicemperor8279 5 років тому +12

      As a man from Balkans I really wish I was alive when Yugoslavia existed, my country is a hellhole now :(

  • @michaelmoreno-ramirez2556
    @michaelmoreno-ramirez2556 5 років тому +249

    *When you hear a large "UUUURRRRAAAAA" coming from over the hill*
    HANZ GET ZE LUGAH!

    • @Ivan-fn8bf
      @Ivan-fn8bf 5 років тому +1

      @Dedi Wahyudi yea bro

    • @historystorieswithreggie2865
      @historystorieswithreggie2865 5 років тому +5

      Hanz there's only one thing to do
      What is it comandant?
      Go get the vodka and go berserk....
      After 3days of fighting 2 Germans were seen fleeing the scene with a bottle of vodka in their hands

    • @gillesdupouy8357
      @gillesdupouy8357 5 років тому

      HANZ GET DA FLAMMENWERFAH

    • @gillesdupouy8357
      @gillesdupouy8357 5 років тому

      @Dedi Wahyudi TENNO HEIKA... BANZAIIIIIIII

    • @Attila-xd2dy
      @Attila-xd2dy 5 років тому

      @@gillesdupouy8357 flammenwerfer*

  • @powersettingsm7172
    @powersettingsm7172 4 роки тому +1133

    America:
    We lost so many men in ww2
    Britain:
    We contributed more men in ww2
    Soviet Union:
    WE LOST MORE MEN IN ONE CITY THAN BOTH YOUR LOSSES COMBINED.

    • @kylekustka7086
      @kylekustka7086 4 роки тому +124

      @@karljohns4245 your comment is stupid, the british contributed a huge amount to the war effort but were efficent with there troops instead of throwing them waves and wave into battle

    • @lc9245
      @lc9245 4 роки тому +78

      @@kylekustka7086 Thanks to the sea in between. The British war effort is appreciated, but not significant in regards to the Soviet Union and United States. The British infantries were far more superior to their Germans counterpart, having much more training time, much better equipped, supported by far more superior fire power, possessed the best special force in the world, the Commandos. The British pit fall was their outdated tactics that caused more losses than necessary. Efficiency is up for debate when Market Garden exists.

    • @djhotdawg8435
      @djhotdawg8435 4 роки тому +90

      @@kylekustka7086 weren't Britain doing terrible against rommel in Africa despite having more numbers

    • @satou446
      @satou446 4 роки тому +5

      Dj hotdawg yeah

    • @Mohatheking19
      @Mohatheking19 4 роки тому +65

      @@kylekustka7086 if Britain wasn't an island nation the german would have invaded them just as easy as they invaded France , the only contribution Britain did was to destroy the luftwaffe and kill the experienced german pilots .

  • @abramo7700
    @abramo7700 5 років тому +660

    Nobody
    Germany: What if we make a 3 year siege and not even capture it

    • @Void_Wars
      @Void_Wars 4 роки тому +11

      M1A1 Abrams 3rd Generation MBT do you think they could? They were constantly pressured, just like the soviets.

    • @Adrianrafael04
      @Adrianrafael04 4 роки тому +90

      Nobody:
      USA: What if we invade Vietnam for over 10 years and not even capture it?

    • @2UNIEK
      @2UNIEK 4 роки тому +1

      @Mexodus How is a protest all the way in America gonna effect what's happening in Vietnam, especially with the draft. They're already there, lol.

    • @tyler774
      @tyler774 4 роки тому

      @@Adrianrafael04 usa wasn't the only country that try to invade vietnam

    • @Ios13056
      @Ios13056 4 роки тому +3

      @@Adrianrafael04 Vietnam btfo the french, aussies, americans, and kiwis

  • @HappiKarafuru
    @HappiKarafuru 5 років тому +171

    I remember ussr/russian ww2 tanker vet said
    "Yes, we will resist, we will resist this fight"
    Their fighting spirits is before they die, they make sure victory was at hand.

  • @kams8759
    @kams8759 5 років тому +193

    Leningrad: **has grad in it**
    Stalin: **holds it for 3 years**

    • @erinlee4310
      @erinlee4310 5 років тому +5

      Just Call Me Sköll Grad is Russian for “city”.

    • @kams8759
      @kams8759 5 років тому +1

      @@erinlee4310 makes sense then

    • @Gameflyer001
      @Gameflyer001 5 років тому +1

      @@erinlee4310 Also the case in the languages of the former Yugoslavia.

    • @HappiKarafuru
      @HappiKarafuru 5 років тому +1

      Boy, do they kept those word. They do hold it for 3 years.

  • @jan_kisan
    @jan_kisan 4 роки тому +372

    a huge thank you for just telling the story, without any anti-Soviet myths and clichés. you're doing a better job than most Russian and Western media.

    • @schdobbl1234
      @schdobbl1234 4 роки тому +22

      A huge thank you also from the other side, I know that we have done many cruels but in the most documentations the Germans are described as monsters. Greetings from munich

    • @CoolGuyLatvian
      @CoolGuyLatvian 3 роки тому +6

      russian media is controlled by the kremlin and they make soviet union look like it was the good guy in ww2

    • @jirouhorikoshi8747
      @jirouhorikoshi8747 3 роки тому +41

      @@CoolGuyLatvian So US was a good guy in ww2 ?

    • @ixibillixi1
      @ixibillixi1 3 роки тому +6

      Jirou Horikoshi better then nazis or the ussr

    • @mjevgeni
      @mjevgeni 3 роки тому +52

      @@ixibillixi1 USSR did most of the job defeating Nazis in WW2. So USSR was best in this particular case.

  • @andro7862
    @andro7862 5 років тому +21

    During the siege, 9 scientists at the Leningrad Institute of Plant Technology, a seed bank containing 250 000 different seeds, chose to starve to death rather than to eat the seeds, therefore preserving them for future generations.

  • @finnishguy4002
    @finnishguy4002 5 років тому +217

    R.I.P all those who died under this siege :(

    • @foximacentauri7891
      @foximacentauri7891 5 років тому +14

      Druing this war in general

    • @neonknight-1522
      @neonknight-1522 5 років тому +9

      @@joshuas.686 Rip for him too

    • @finnishguy4002
      @finnishguy4002 5 років тому +2

      @@user-jd6gq2vh5w Lol XD

    • @JanKowalski-gv2ol
      @JanKowalski-gv2ol 5 років тому +19

      @@joshuas.686 Come on, you gotta give him some credit, I mean he killed Hitler

    • @richardroberson2564
      @richardroberson2564 5 років тому +2

      @@foximacentauri7891 There was certainly many people in the Soviet Union, Italy, and Germany that needed to die.

  • @johnbeauvais3159
    @johnbeauvais3159 5 років тому +226

    You left out that the PPS-43 was designed within the city in 1942 and tested by firing out the window

    • @scarab2622
      @scarab2622 4 роки тому +19

      Also known as "Leningun"

    • @dariusstock2206
      @dariusstock2206 4 роки тому +14

      Some KV tanks were used to shoot from windows before its construction was complete.

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 5 років тому +89

    On the “Convoy of Life” on ice, the Soviets built snow forts and emplacements to shoot down potential planes or enemies seeking to disrupt he convoy.

    • @jan_kisan
      @jan_kisan 4 роки тому +9

      yep, this Road of Life was quite a feat in itself. i remember a video by a Russian historian, on the details of its planning, engineering, organisation in general, of the defence. scientists had to investigate the ice conditions, and all that.

  • @ankitsrivastava3125
    @ankitsrivastava3125 4 роки тому +246

    Me: Quarantine day 10 is tough
    Leningrad: Am I a joke to you ?

    • @soldierstudios7316
      @soldierstudios7316 3 роки тому +1

      This virus looks like it will be a while tho

    • @soldierstudios7316
      @soldierstudios7316 3 роки тому +1

      @Los Santos I know I am just saying that this virus can last a while I know they had it way harder

    • @soldierstudios7316
      @soldierstudios7316 3 роки тому

      @Los Santos ha ha

    • @exaid0556
      @exaid0556 2 роки тому

      Exactly why I, as Russian, purposely silence myself when i want to complain about quarantine - I remember that my ancestors were through much, MUCH worse.

  • @personinspace4286
    @personinspace4286 5 років тому +307

    Honestly this helps more than school 😂

  • @Just_Some_Guy_with_a_Mustache
    @Just_Some_Guy_with_a_Mustache 5 років тому +232

    This city...is in..UNACCEPTABLE... _CONDITIOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOON! _*_UNACCEPTABLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLE!_*
    Edit: Ooooohhhhh. _Lenin_ grad.

  • @gggaming4tg
    @gggaming4tg 5 років тому +108

    5:18
    That guy is just standing,exposed,holding a pistol,and firing like his fingers are micro sized

    • @Dramoklos
      @Dramoklos 4 роки тому +2

      That's a general

    • @helpiamstuckonthismanshead3385
      @helpiamstuckonthismanshead3385 4 роки тому +2

      Why is je still alive?

    • @supermario12295
      @supermario12295 4 роки тому +6

      And the riflemen fire in unisson. Talk about discipline

    • @aimanasyraf5657
      @aimanasyraf5657 4 роки тому +1

      definition of badassness

    • @darthvoodoo5026
      @darthvoodoo5026 3 роки тому +1

      From what I’ve heard, it was actually true that officers stood tall in battle, as it improved morale when the soldiers saw him braving enemy fire.

  • @maddog7795
    @maddog7795 4 роки тому +351

    The Russians showed true bravery in the face of terror.

    • @jounisuninen
      @jounisuninen 3 роки тому +13

      Stalin did not allow ordinary citizens and soldiers leave the City, so they had no other choice than show true bravery.

    • @maddog7795
      @maddog7795 3 роки тому +10

      @@jounisuninen your right. Its rlly sad tho, alot of people would have been saved if they could have evacuated.

    • @randied603
      @randied603 3 роки тому +3

      Things would be different if Stalin didn't lock the citizens into Leningrad

    • @ShizoidSProblemami
      @ShizoidSProblemami 2 роки тому +8

      There was no possible way to get out of this city. Also a losing of this city would result in decreasing the morale of Red Army, which would be resulted in much more losses.

    • @pratyushjena8815
      @pratyushjena8815 2 роки тому +1

      @Lactose Tolerant Only cry more

  • @Master5505
    @Master5505 5 років тому +535

    *Make a Warsaw Uprising video please!!! Greetings from Poland 🇵🇱*

  • @RevReverend
    @RevReverend 5 років тому +33

    I love how much longer the videos are getting as well as how much more action is being put into each scene. Keep up the good work.

  • @Arthur-ye2zh
    @Arthur-ye2zh 5 років тому +24

    It’s crazy how my great grandmother had to go through this and starve barley getting food in the city

  • @blank557
    @blank557 5 років тому +8

    I've read Salsibury's excellent book, "900 Days" which gives first hand accounts by survivors concerning the siege. There is one heart-rending account where a little girl in an freezing apartment wrote on a wall a daily record the name and death of each of her family members from starvation and cold, until she only remained, and was found dead. Tears.

  • @vincentmalab3289
    @vincentmalab3289 5 років тому +63

    Pls do next about The Battle of Kursk, the biggest tank battle in history.

    • @robertr954
      @robertr954 5 років тому +8

      Is not the biggest battle in history. The battle of Brody at Dubno is the biggest..

    • @para_magnus2200
      @para_magnus2200 5 років тому +7

      Robert R tank battle he said m

    • @stalinium4769
      @stalinium4769 5 років тому +2

      Vincent Malab yeah it’s Dubno

    • @admiralphilius8575
      @admiralphilius8575 5 років тому +1

      *INTO THE MOTHERLAND THE GERMAN ARMY MARCH!*

    • @vincentmalab3289
      @vincentmalab3289 5 років тому +4

      @@robertr954 yeah, it's the Battle of Brody during the Operation Barbarossa. I did a reaserch after you reply on my comment but the Battle of Kursk is the most known biggest tank battle by many.

  • @BigslattYSL
    @BigslattYSL 5 років тому +35

    Yes, History...
    _SIMPLE_ History

  • @saladbruh2625
    @saladbruh2625 2 роки тому +11

    Zhukov:
    Defenda Leningrad
    Defends Moscow
    Encircles Germans at Stalingrad
    Takes Berlin.
    Add what I missed.

    • @kayvan671
      @kayvan671 2 роки тому +8

      He also defeated the Japanese army in Mongolia.

    • @saladbruh2625
      @saladbruh2625 2 роки тому +3

      @@kayvan671 yeah thanks, khalkhin gol

  • @Unknown-vf8qz
    @Unknown-vf8qz 5 років тому

    nice vid as always , noticed a better quality on the latest vids

  • @Crazy_killer-qm8ju
    @Crazy_killer-qm8ju 5 років тому +17

    My history teacher struggled to find good videos so I told her about your channel and she loved it and uses it for every lesson now

  • @indianajones4321
    @indianajones4321 5 років тому +211

    Almost at 2 Million subscribers

  • @rumblymars1580
    @rumblymars1580 5 років тому

    Looks like you heard me! Thank you for making this, it’s amazing and informing.

  • @elenagoodson3004
    @elenagoodson3004 4 роки тому

    Thanks for breaking it down like this!

  • @kingsofserbiangameplay1623
    @kingsofserbiangameplay1623 5 років тому +471

    It's even horrifying to think about it. 872 days. Undernourished, under constant bombardment and under constant fear, for 872 days. But those heroic soliders and civilians never considered surrender or peace with Germans! Their moral was high, high until the last one of them. Until the last drip of blood! Eventually they persevered! Heroes, mostly forgotten by westerners, overshadowed by Staligrad in history books.
    The Seige of Leningrad

    • @jeffdebono624
      @jeffdebono624 5 років тому +22

      It wasnt bravery it was literally all males in russia had to fight. Russia loat 30% of its males after ww2

    • @JacatackLP
      @JacatackLP 5 років тому +19

      FinnishViking 1200 hmmm wonder where some bias could be in a name like that. Maybe a little salt at 2 losses in a row?

    • @thugpigeon8688
      @thugpigeon8688 5 років тому +8

      @@JacatackLP loss? simo is not agreeing

    • @JacatackLP
      @JacatackLP 5 років тому +8

      Thug Pigeon that’s like saying Germany didn’t win the war because Whitman. They *did* lose both the initial war and the continuation war, neither of which would have been necessary if they didn’t basically approach the pre-war negotiations plugging their ears with their middle fingers

    • @a.e.9821
      @a.e.9821 5 років тому +1

      Nothing really horrifying about it. Every siege is like that.

  • @marcusj3287
    @marcusj3287 5 років тому +121

    Learn more in 6:33 seconds then I did 4 years of history lol

    • @whydoievenhavesubs3317
      @whydoievenhavesubs3317 5 років тому +2

      Lol yeah i pearned everything that happened ww2 in a 20 min video not 45 mins at school

    • @comraderfluff6923
      @comraderfluff6923 5 років тому

      @@whydoievenhavesubs3317 ok ok what war happened on 41-44 ???

    • @ianofwater5188
      @ianofwater5188 5 років тому +1

      That's embarrasing.

    • @mrbalz5404
      @mrbalz5404 5 років тому +3

      @@comraderfluff6923 you meant 41-45

    • @OneSandMan
      @OneSandMan 5 років тому

      ZachSVK no its called “The Pacific Strategy” and happened through 1941 (when pearl harbor was bombed) to 1944 when japan surrendered. The war officially ended in 1945 from hitlers suicide.

  • @zeydjericho
    @zeydjericho 5 років тому

    Thank you! Great work.

  • @Nova-yi3cp
    @Nova-yi3cp 5 років тому

    Love your vids keep up the good work👍

  • @apetrenko_ai
    @apetrenko_ai 5 років тому +17

    Thank you for this great video! People in the West generally don't know these pages of history. As a follow up you can cover the story of Tanya Savicheva, a child who lived in Leningrad during the siege. This is one of the darkest war stories you can imagine.

  • @alexk155k9
    @alexk155k9 5 років тому +9

    Finally
    I’ve been waiting for this for ages. Love your guys vids

  • @sincereyoutubeapology
    @sincereyoutubeapology 4 роки тому +15

    The animation on these videos is AMAZING. Watching the Russians use their svt40s, mosin nagants, and ppks and the Germans with their kar98k and mp40s, etc is so impressive. The little details in combination with the awesome presentation can't be beat. I love this channel and all these videos.

  • @TrueCourse
    @TrueCourse 4 роки тому

    Tragic. I hope many people out there who catch this presentation (and many others) would spark an interest in history - that we may hope and pray never repeat such tragedies. Thanks for sharing!

  • @ivanmorello868
    @ivanmorello868 5 років тому +18

    Its a good day when simple history uploads a video

    • @joshuahuntington5467
      @joshuahuntington5467 5 років тому +1

      Ronin Ivan Romanov I swear to god you damm commies I shall burn YOU ALL
      First hop in the car we are going for pizza in Italy

    • @ivanmorello868
      @ivanmorello868 5 років тому

      @@joshuahuntington5467 I was russian in my past life and I served as a sniper in the 1st Baltic Front. I was Ivan Sidorenko. I was the soviet sniper that gained 500 kills and awarded the "Hero of the Soviet Union" award

    • @joshuahuntington5467
      @joshuahuntington5467 5 років тому

      Ronin Ivan Romanov your wish is my command commie

    • @joshuahuntington5467
      @joshuahuntington5467 5 років тому

      Ronin Ivan Romanov sooooo.......is that a no to 🍕

    • @ivanmorello868
      @ivanmorello868 5 років тому

      @@joshuahuntington5467 that's a no

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 5 років тому +54

    Please do USS Pueblo incident, it’s an interesting event that happened in my nation during the Cold War

    • @grahamlopez6202
      @grahamlopez6202 5 років тому

      Mail me a north Korean ak. I cant find one anywhere and I need it for my collection

    • @andrewe.2464
      @andrewe.2464 5 років тому

      Provocateur rly cuz I never wished that

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 5 років тому

      the only thing that happened in your nation besides the occasional famine and embargo

    • @joshuahernandez410
      @joshuahernandez410 5 років тому

      * United States Government wants to know your location

  • @thehengy3232
    @thehengy3232 5 років тому +1

    I’m glad you posted this as I’m doing a project for school on it 😁😆

  • @vivekt.2038
    @vivekt.2038 5 років тому

    Well Happy new Year Simple History .

  • @hppeti-dz9zs
    @hppeti-dz9zs 5 років тому +5

    Thank you! I was waiting for this video! Thank you! Thank you! Great video!

  • @karlwisch6016
    @karlwisch6016 5 років тому +1775

    Make Philippine American War 1899-1902
    Please reply simple history.

    • @hayderfeleyeh476
      @hayderfeleyeh476 5 років тому +23

      That will be cool

    • @tngtrivedi
      @tngtrivedi 5 років тому +13

      I know.

    • @thelabminer2048
      @thelabminer2048 5 років тому +17

      YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS

    • @CallOSaulTitan
      @CallOSaulTitan 5 років тому +40

      Yeah, especially the 3 bells have just been returned back to the philippines after the pillaging

    • @harveyfong7617
      @harveyfong7617 5 років тому +1

      nop

  • @MyTownDrunk
    @MyTownDrunk 3 роки тому

    I love you guys thanks for the history lesson as always. This is very important stuff y'all

  • @Zellzify
    @Zellzify 5 років тому +8

    5:10 I like the officer who just stands there and shooting with his Luger like its nothing. Must be a huge morale boost for the soldiers taking cover

  • @jole0000
    @jole0000 5 років тому +1198

    A Russian general marched with his division into Finland. While marching, he heard a scream:
    "One Finn matches 10 Russians!"
    The general sent 10 men towards the scream. He heard gunshots, and when they ceased he heard the same voice screaming:
    "One Finn matches 100 Russians!"
    The general sent 100 of his men to fight, he heard fighting and when it ceased he heard again the same voice:
    "One Finn matches 1000 Russians!"
    Pissed off, the general sent 1000 of his best men. He heard intense fighting, and after it saw a badly wounded Russian return saying "It's a trap! There is 2 of them!"

    • @para_magnus2200
      @para_magnus2200 5 років тому +59

      jole000 you must be bullshitting with me

    • @jole0000
      @jole0000 5 років тому +200

      @@para_magnus2200 its a joke of course

    • @para_magnus2200
      @para_magnus2200 5 років тому +55

      jole000 I thought that at first
      For it should be other way round blyat

    • @jole0000
      @jole0000 5 років тому +235

      @@para_magnus2200 rather dead than red

    • @para_magnus2200
      @para_magnus2200 5 років тому +41

      jole000 rather red than dead

  • @Swineminator
    @Swineminator 5 років тому +33

    A very recent siege to cover should be Deir ez-Zor, took more than 1100 days. Of course the scale of the battle can't be compared to Leningrad but a really heroic defence against IS at the middle of the desert.

    • @firepower7017
      @firepower7017 5 років тому +2

      Swineminator What is with modern countries being bested by the equivalent to a poor man with some decent skill of ambushes wielding an AK, I mean I'd fear countries like Japan can just be beaten by such a laughably feeble power.

    • @laterceraguerramundial1433
      @laterceraguerramundial1433 5 років тому +2

      @@firepower7017 Because Guerilla Warfare. Look it up.

    • @firepower7017
      @firepower7017 5 років тому +1

      @@laterceraguerramundial1433 I'm Cambodian, you don't gotta tell me. If my people pushed back America with such tactics. I'd be well aware

    • @XSDX3R0
      @XSDX3R0 5 років тому +5

      @@firepower7017 Usually has to do with preservation of one's own life. A freedom fighter will gladly give his/her life for the cause to defend their country and belief. A soldier from a modern country given orders to fight in the middle of no where just wants to go home alive. Acceptable casualties differ. Vietnamese guerilla fighters and their allies had 3x as many military deaths as their enemies. 50,000+ deaths for US is wholly unacceptable by US standards whereas the NVA were willing to keep going regardless.

    • @firepower7017
      @firepower7017 5 років тому

      @@XSDX3R0 The NVA was also combating the Khmer Rouge but America stepped up and saved them. America is evil for letting such regime survive. Same goes to the many dictatorships in South America

  • @ThatOneMan830
    @ThatOneMan830 3 роки тому +9

    Hey, can I say thank you for mentioning Generalplan OST was a thing? I honestly think a video on that would be good- it’d help weed out the Wehrbs.

    • @glebb..3416
      @glebb..3416 3 роки тому +6

      Yes many seem to think that Germans came to the soviet union to hand out candy or something. People tend to overlook they killed 15 million citizens. Not soldiers.... Citizens of my country. My great grandmother was put into a concentration camp because her husband was a soldier. She was there with her child. Others of my family lost their homes due to Germans burning their villages.

  • @tunnelrat5804
    @tunnelrat5804 5 років тому +38

    How did you not mention Zinovy Kolobanov’s last stand?

  • @chufa6553
    @chufa6553 5 років тому +189

    0:30 I thought that was Kim Jong Un for a second

    • @sviatoslavs.1305
      @sviatoslavs.1305 5 років тому +6

      Joseph Kim
      A proof that Kim Jong Un is just another Hitler.

    • @MemestiffGaming
      @MemestiffGaming 5 років тому +3

      A man of culture I see, I love titanfall

    • @Crackmonkey2110
      @Crackmonkey2110 5 років тому

      @@MemestiffGaming I love it too, hyped at TF3

    • @bigazzun3472
      @bigazzun3472 5 років тому

      @@MemestiffGaming not gonna happen kid dont get your hopes up

    • @ninalitz1076
      @ninalitz1076 5 років тому

      I thought it too

  • @swamptruck2536
    @swamptruck2536 5 років тому +119

    Do one about Spanish Civil War In Iberia please

  • @user-leshiy99rus
    @user-leshiy99rus 4 роки тому +27

    "Road of Life" - during the Great Patriotic War the only transport route through Lake Ladoga. During periods of navigation - on water, in winter - on ice. Connected from September 12, 1941 to March 1943, the besieged Leningrad with the country. The road laid on ice is often called the Ice Road of Life (officially - Military Highway No. 101 (No. 102)). At the Osinovets lighthouse, there is also the Road of Life Museum.
    Few people know, but at the cost of their lives, hydrologists and geographers checked the calculations of their predecessors from tsarist Russia, manually checking ice thickness under the constant raids of German aviation!

  • @PRMihanya
    @PRMihanya 4 роки тому +40

    I'm from St.Petersburg (Leningrad nowdays), and i want say thank you for this video. Yes you observe only main part of the siege (as a citizen of Leningrad, of course i know much more of this), but still big thanks for this)
    Also, you mispronounce lake Ladoga, it's not a ladOga but lAdoga. Now you know more.

    • @user-wv7jj3xk8w
      @user-wv7jj3xk8w 3 роки тому +1

      Эээ, наоборот, Питер был Ленинградом при СССР.

    • @PRMihanya
      @PRMihanya 3 роки тому

      @@user-wv7jj3xk8wЯ знаю что не очень понятно написал, но имелось ввиду что "... Санкт-Петербург (название Ленинграда в наше время)..."

  • @timer3770
    @timer3770 5 років тому +60

    Abandon your posts abandon your homes abandon all hope

    • @stormraider5400
      @stormraider5400 5 років тому +1

      Fortnite reference... right?
      Lol

    • @joshuahuntington5467
      @joshuahuntington5467 5 років тому +22

      “Sorry I detect fortnite in this comment section”
      “Please step on the train and you will be fixed”

    • @bobsemple07
      @bobsemple07 5 років тому +11

      Call if duty waw was th best

    • @IrkenExile
      @IrkenExile 5 років тому +3

      URA!!!!!

    • @timer3770
      @timer3770 5 років тому +1

      I have crippling depression what do you mean

  • @gamingjoe9649
    @gamingjoe9649 5 років тому +155

    3:52 when your undersiege but you see a hot comrade

    • @choochoomawpoker3125
      @choochoomawpoker3125 5 років тому +9

      We don't understand it that's why we look for other comments in your comment for an answer

    • @gamingjoe9649
      @gamingjoe9649 5 років тому +17

      @@choochoomawpoker3125 the guy in the back his hand is going back and forth really fast and he look like he's beating his meat (probably should have clarified it😂😂)

    • @choochoomawpoker3125
      @choochoomawpoker3125 5 років тому +10

      @@gamingjoe9649 r/whooosh
      Thanks I don't really know it xD

    • @seanvillaflor6030
      @seanvillaflor6030 5 років тому +1

      @@gamingjoe9649 ok

    • @petergriffin1446
      @petergriffin1446 5 років тому +1

      not really

  • @JuCarlos-ex8ip
    @JuCarlos-ex8ip 3 роки тому

    I 💕 the graphics, of course the content too.. thanks for sharing the video.

  • @aestheticzea
    @aestheticzea 5 років тому

    Great video as always, please do a video of Vasily Zaytsev!

  • @stevan546
    @stevan546 5 років тому +4

    You always make amazing videos, keep it up
    Поштовање за све храбре људе који су тамо били
    (Respect for all brave men who were there)

  • @God-he7xp
    @God-he7xp 5 років тому +89

    My grandfather was in leningrad and when he caught a rat to eat, it was not his rat, but THEIR rat

  • @luckyboy_4161
    @luckyboy_4161 5 років тому +501

    Спасибо, что не очернили историю моей страны, заслуженный лайк

    • @zvavie--msmsmsms2933
      @zvavie--msmsmsms2933 5 років тому +5

      LuckyBoy _ nein blyat

    • @mrnoname9086
      @mrnoname9086 5 років тому +1

      Blyat

    • @SuperNgin
      @SuperNgin 4 роки тому +30

      не слушай этих ублюдков. Мне тоже было приятно смотреть это видео. Жаль наши редко балуют нас подобными рассказами.

    • @user-jh4kp9lz4b
      @user-jh4kp9lz4b 4 роки тому +25

      @@SuperNgin есть куча хороших каналов: Тактик Медиа, у Гоблина/Пучкова регулярно выступают историки на тему. Simple History - это для амерских даунов, которые более объёмные материалы не способны воспринять. Нам такой обрезанный формат не нужен, у нас даже в школе дают больший объём знаний

    • @homierami7196
      @homierami7196 4 роки тому +6

      Дмитрий Левыкин ты прав потому что они не знают через что наш народ прошёл

  • @dakotamcavoy2278
    @dakotamcavoy2278 5 років тому

    This is my absolute favorite channel period. I wish we had this throughout Grade School. I might have actually learned something it’s actually amazing the amount of false information that we learned.

  • @jazzadieu
    @jazzadieu 5 років тому +7

    Hi Legendary Voice Actor Guy! Please never leave this channel!
    You are the best!

  • @chimnchom7493
    @chimnchom7493 5 років тому +162

    Do a video on South Africa like the
    -1st boer war
    -2nd boer war

    • @erich.2550
      @erich.2550 5 років тому +1

      That would be AWESOME ! 😉👌🏽

    • @annieo1985
      @annieo1985 5 років тому

      YES!!!!!

    • @Patrick.Weightman
      @Patrick.Weightman 5 років тому

      I would say Rhodesia too, but it'd be impossible without starting arguments left and right in the comments.

    • @chimnchom7493
      @chimnchom7493 5 років тому

      Thurnis Haley yeah

    • @nottoday3817
      @nottoday3817 5 років тому

      Wasn't Zulu Wars, Boer War 1 and Boer War 2?

  • @zxcrazy1o663
    @zxcrazy1o663 5 років тому +1

    what animation software do you use? and great vids I've been watching them for awhile.

  • @tj9508
    @tj9508 3 роки тому +1

    I love these moments of silence at the end of your videos. idk if it's intended for showing respect, but I will take it as is.

  • @DeathcastGaming
    @DeathcastGaming 5 років тому +93

    What a terrible period.
    I came to know some of the people that endured this. In russian they are known as "Дети Ленинграда" (children of Leningrad) They are wonderful people , but now few of them remain.

    • @Timxd95401
      @Timxd95401 4 роки тому +5

      dedkernel my grandma is one of them

    • @user-ql8wu1sr9r
      @user-ql8wu1sr9r 4 роки тому +2

      thank you very much
      I live in St. Petersburg (Leningrad)
      My grandfather is one of the children of Leningrad

  • @alexandersnorrason2080
    @alexandersnorrason2080 5 років тому +48

    What about Kursk or Brody? both on the eastern front and are the largest tank battles in history

    • @stefanSS1480
      @stefanSS1480 5 років тому

      Largest tank battle was America againts Iraq durin Operation Desert Storm

    • @arcticengineer174
      @arcticengineer174 5 років тому +2

      Kursk was not the battle. It was the front the were fighting on. The actual battle was the battle of Prokhorovka

    • @ee93
      @ee93 5 років тому

      Stefan that was the biggest american one, and you shoud be proud you share the same first name as Stefan karl stefanson

    • @fancygirl3792
      @fancygirl3792 5 років тому +3

      Stefan sorry false
      In history the largest tank battle was the Battle of broody Russia 1941

  • @troyc7726
    @troyc7726 5 років тому

    Love this channel

  • @Desh282
    @Desh282 5 років тому

    Thank you for bringing the spot light to my people...

  • @rodrigogarcia4053
    @rodrigogarcia4053 5 років тому +35

    Excellent video Simple History! I would like to learn about the Mexican Revolution of 1917, please.

  • @jasminastancheva23
    @jasminastancheva23 5 років тому +3

    the video is awsome!! i have ideas for future vids
    -Bulgaria in WW2
    -Warsaw uprising
    -Battle at Kursk
    -Battle for Berlin
    These are just ideas. Much love!

  • @Zenkis88
    @Zenkis88 2 роки тому +2

    One of my grandfather's died in Leningrad he was only a young man. RIP

  • @fjjt5897
    @fjjt5897 4 роки тому +3

    This video is great! I came here because I'm doing a research for a presentation of Shostakovich's 7th Symphony (Subtitled "Leningrad"). I mean, most artworks (any art) have to have a historical and/or emotional context, which is clearly represented in DSCH 7. Shostakovich was born in St. Petersburg in 1906, city which would later become Leningrad, after the Russian Revolution. He lived there all his life until the siege, when he had to flee in order to survive. He had already started composing the symphony in Leningrad, so he finished composing it out of there in a little amount of time. He finally finished it and it was premiered in Kuybyshev (now Samara), then in America, with Arturo Toscanini, and then, decided to perform the symphony in the sieged city of Leningrad. This was not an easy task, since most of the musicians were missing or dead. Karl Eliasberg was the conductor in charge of the premier in Leningrad. He was very demanding. Musicians were payed with a little loaf of bread, courtesy of the melomaniacs who still lived there. If any musician missed a rehearsal (only excuse if they were dead or in a life-or-death situation), Eliasberg wouldn't give them the bread.
    This symphony is really hard to perform, it requires a little bit more than 100 musicians, yet less than 30 musicians (amateurs involved) played in the Leningrad premier. Many musicians died during the rehearsals (mostly woodwinds and brass). The concert arrived, and they played it with amplifier so that people would hear the symphony. And that drove the Nazis attention. They tried to bomb the hall, so part of the Russian army defended it. In the end, the concert was a success, being taken as a symbol of resistance.
    I recommend everyone to listen to this piece, specially the 1st and 4th movements, and listen to Bernstein/Chicago, Mata/Dallas, Svetlanov/USSRSO, Currentzis/SWRSO (I highly recommend this one) and Eliasberg. This last recording is very special, since it was made around 20 years later to commemorate the victims of the siege, and many of the musicians who participated in the Leningrad premier.

  • @WASRGP
    @WASRGP 5 років тому +5

    Also mad props to you guys for everything you do! Absolutely love how you mentioned Finland during this period...no one ever talks about Finland after the winter war. 😁👍🏻

  • @markoap91
    @markoap91 5 років тому +90

    I can't even imagine being in those conditions for 872 days, but that is not even the longest siege. Maybe do a video on siege of Sarajevo next? It was the longest siege of a capital city in modern warfare and it was much more recent. It lasted unimaginable 1425 days (almost 4 years), from 5th of April 1992. to 29th of February 1996. There is even a really good video game that was inspired by the event, called This War of Mine.

    • @GModBMXer
      @GModBMXer 5 років тому +2

      That would be so cool

    • @adamhoff4370
      @adamhoff4370 4 роки тому

      Was it easier to get supplies in Sarajevo than it was in Leningrad.

  • @middleman3165
    @middleman3165 4 роки тому +3

    There’s an amazing blockade museum in St Petersburg, if anyone gets the pleasure of visiting. Utterly heartbreaking but inspirational at the same time. The people of Leningrad were resilient and many heroes emerged from the devastation.

  • @Jafes2011
    @Jafes2011 3 роки тому +10

    There was an absolutely terrible incident several days before the siege of Leningrad. The Soviets were desperately trying to evacuate as many kids as possible from the city. So there was a train with 2 thousand children, it stopped at Lychkovo station not far from Leningrad to collect several dozen kids from a nearby village. Then a German plane appeared and suddenly dropped 25 bombs directly on the train without any reason. Like it was not a warehouse, or an aerodrome, or a military base, it was just a civilian train with little kids. And I guess you understand what happened to them. The Soviest at that time knew about Hitler, but they still thought Germans were civilised and humane. It was hard for them to believe something like that could actually happen.