- Watch my latest history documentary:- ua-cam.com/video/c3Hq6UaFQqk/v-deo.html So that's it- The last video made on my crappy laptop microphone. From now on the sound should be significantly better with my new Mic ! This video has been a long time coming, please like and subscribe if you like what you see, and let me know in the comments what you'd like to see covered in the future as we finally move towards the Second Crusade and beyond.
The loss of Edessa stunned Europe. A very interesting story indicates the impact of this victory. The King of Sicily, Roger II, in the tradition of his land, had Muslims in his court, one of them an old sage. One day, looking at the sea, he saw a ship that brought news of the expedition. Roger had sent to Tripoli. It had been victorious. Roger turned to the Muslim sage who was dozing nearby and teased him: " Do you hear what they said? " " No " replied the sage. " They told me that we have defeated the Muslims in Tripoli. What use of Muhammed now to his land and his people?" " He was not there " answered the old man. " He was at Edessa, which the Muslims have just taken " The other courtiers laughed but Roger reminded them that sage always spoke the truth. A few days later the loss of Edessa was officially confirmed. The clergy picked up the currents of that shock and spread it across Europe.
0:00 Crusader states 4:04 *Jikirmish* takes control of Mosul following the death of Kerbogha Artuqids Battle of Harran (1104) *one of the first crusader defeat* & Edessa's effective fall 8:24 *Rise of Imad ad-Din Zengi* 10:13 Context 15:24 Imad ad-Din Zengi becomes Atabeg of Mosul & later Aleppo under Mahmud II (Seljuk Sultan, grandson of Malik Shah) Attacks on crusaders 19:30 Zengi's empire effectively becomes independent 20:58 Najm ad-Din Ayyub (father of Salauddin Ayyubi) Zengi takes Edessa after John Komnenos & Fulk's (king of Jerusalem) death in 1143 28:37 Second Crusade Al-Mustarshid (Abbasid caliph from 1118-1135)
Just what I was looking for, a proper, detailed narrative/accounting of the slow disintegration of the Crusader States. Praise the gods! I feel you had me specifically in mind with this series. Keep up the good work.
@@harisahmed8009 Ignore these triggered snowflakes they often act very similarly to the SJWs they claim to hate, they obsess over identity politics and immigration.
Descendants of pagan vikings take up the cross and face off against descendants of shamanist nomadic horsemen who took up the crescent. Real history is epic.
Dr.Bright , Many forget that Proto Europeans also come from the steppes of Eurasia and mountains if Afghanistan. That is close to the birthplace of the Turkic people too. There is many similarities between the Tengrist religion of the Turkic Nomads and the belief system if those same early Proto Europeans too. ps I hope that one day both will leave those Abrahamic Semitic religions and just come back to our own roots and beliefs.
The Atabeg of Mosul and Aleppo at that time was Imad ad Din Zengi, dark,with a bristly beard, one of the many claimants of fragile power. But he was also different. He slept with his soldiers and enforced such exemplary disciplines that it was said his troops marched between two ropes so they would not destroy cultivated fields. This was the leader called, by Ibn al Athir, " the gift of divine providence to Muslims " who would launch the counteroffensive against the Christian kingdoms of Palestine that reached apex in fifty-two years, thanks to Yusuf, known to the world as Salah ad Din Ayyubi, or Saladdin. Zengi gave notice of his abilities in the year Saladin was born, with the conquest of Strong Crusader fortress of Mont Ferrand(or Barrin, in Arabic) in which King Fulk of Jerusalem and his barons were defeated and trapped till they paid a ransom of 50,000 dinar for their freedom. In 1144 Zengi changed the geopolitics of the Region. He took Edassa, the first of the four kingdoms established in the first Crusade. Zengi gave a call for Jihad. Eager troops came from the Turkish tribes, specialist sappers arrived from Khurasan and Aleppo. His army first devastated the countryside around the fortified city until it was said not a bird dared to fly near Edassa. The sappers, working through tunnels, reached under the towers of the city walls. Wooden supports were set on fire directly under the towers, weakening the walls until they crumbled, and Zengi took Edessa by storm at dawn two days before Christmas in 1144. The Franj outsiders were stripped, looted, chained. But Zengi treated the eastern local, Christians, Syrians and Armenians, well saying that they were of the land unlike Franks from Europe.
Zengids created saladin. Most turks were still pagan at the time and it was zengi who united them under jihad. Though, i have to say that he was forced to in order to fight crusaders back.
Unfortunately, his act of kindness towards the Eastern Christians wouldn't be of much help in the end, because after Zengi died Nur Al-Din succeeded him. Thus, after a Latin attempt to re-take the city was defeated, he slaughtered all male Christians in the city and sent the women and children off in chains, reducing Edessa to rubble.
@@ahmedhashmi3584 We covered his son, Nur ad-din Zengi here: ua-cam.com/video/-TuYFz86Bs4/v-deo.html And we mentioned him in the top 6 Muslim generals in the Crusade era here: ua-cam.com/video/llIKBf7VgVw/v-deo.html&t
I remember reading a story about an old Jewish man approaching Zengi and complaining that one of his lieutenants had kicked the old man out of his house and taken it for his own. Zengi simply turned to look at the man meaningfully, and the lieutenant quickly vacated the elderly man's home, camping in the mud like everyone else. I'm not sure of the validity of the story, but I hope it's true.
@@HistoryTime you' re gearing up to be one of my favorite history channels on UA-cam, along with EpicHistorytv, Kings and Generals, Historia Civilis etc. Out of all those, yours are the only videos i have to have a wikipedia tab open to keep track of the new things i learn! I specifically like the one about Shamshi-Adad&Old Assyria he seems to have been a real life Conan the cimmerian. A barbarian turned mercenary then becoming king in a foreign land and forging an empire...Great stuff, would love to see you post even more, cheers from Greece!
@@HistoryTime Just wondering if you have a true passion for history , judging by your tone . As I have said earlier , your Queen's English is music to the ears .
Nice video. *Little correction: by 1104 Harran, the Turks had already recovered their image. In 1101, Kilij Arslan (Rum) already defeated 3 Crusader expeditions (Mersivan + 2x Heraclea of Iconium).
Imad al-Din Zengi continued his attempts to take Damascus in 1145, but he was assassinated by a Frankish slave named Yarankash in 1146. Zengi was the founder of the eponymous Zengid dynasty. In Mosul he was succeeded by his eldest son Saif ad-Din Ghazi I, and in Aleppo he was succeeded by his second son Nur ad-Din. According to Crusader legend, Zengi's mother was Ida of Austria (mother of Leopold III of Austria), who had supposedly been captured during the Crusade of 1101 and placed in a harem. She was 46 in 1101, Zengi was born in 1085, and his father died in 1094 so this is not feasible. Zengi was courageous, strong in leadership and a very skilled warrior according to all of the Muslim chroniclers of his day. Unlike Saladin at Jerusalem in 1187, Zengi did not keep his word to protect his captives at Baalbek in 1139. According to Ibn al-‘Adim, Zengi "had sworn to the people of the citadel with strong oaths and on the Qur’an and divorcing (his wives). When they came down from the citadel he betrayed them, flayed its governor and hanged the rest.” According to Ibn 'al-Adim: The atebeg was violent, powerful, awe-inspiring and liable to attack suddenly… When he rode, the troops use to walk behind him as if they were between two threads, out of fear they would trample over crops, and nobody out of fear dared to trample on a single stem (of them) nor march his horse on them… If anyone transgressed, he was crucified. He (Zengi) used to say: "It does not happen that there is more than one tyrant (meaning himself) at one time."
I was particularly struck by the excellent and seamless sound editing skills you've developed. Especially at 27 min, where the sad cello riff perfectly captures the mood after the fall of the city. Still, while it doesn't need more cowbell, I could definitely use more d'Hauteville.
@Yung Prodigy Lol... What a cripple idea. There is millions of non-religious or Christian that identify themselves as a Turk. Turk identity is older than Islam and Turks were already great before and without Islam either.
Most of people think Seljuks were good warriors which make them success. The real success was education. Seljuk generals very highly educated in both sciences,religion, literature and most important army school. Selahaddin Eyyubi got this education because of father was wassal of Zengis. What make him different to other Arab leader was Seljuk education. Battle of Harran was old trick of steppe nomad tactic called wolf trap. Light horse archers first forward to attack then false retreat being chased by enemy was lost their contact with backup forces. Then all forces attack isolated enemy and defeat them. Which same tactic used since BC 209 by East Hun Khagan Mete Khan to Manzikert 1071 to Hitting Battle.
One of the most impressive portraits is that of Nur-ad-Din, emir of Aleppo and Damascus. William credited him with foresight and circumspec tion, with wisdom and restraint in his judgment, and with prudence. He con sidered Nur-ad-Din to be a just, godfearing, religious, and hence happy, blessed man (justus, timens Deum, religiosus, felix). These traits, comple mented by intelligence, imaginativeness and vigor, qualified him as both an excellent leader of the Muslims and a dangerous opponent of the Christians. William was very much aware of this discrepancy. However, he did not pres ent the two sides separately; rather, he integrated these qualities in a rounded portrait. Thus, in what amounts to an obituary, William noted on the death of the prince: "Nur-ad-Din (is dead), the greatest persecutor of the Christian name and faith, yet a just, shrewd and provident man, and religious accord ing to his people's tradition." It seems to me that William of Tyre has thus acknowledged the Muslim leader as a religious person. One is reminded of St. Peter's speech in the house of the Roman centurion Cornelius in Cae sarea, who is said in the Acts to be a vir religiosus, timens Deum (Acts, 10:2) and justus (Acts, 10:22): "But in every nation he that fears him, and works righteousness, is accepted with him" (Acts, 10:35)". This idea has not ex actly had a great influence on the Christian's external relationships. It is all the more remarkable to find one of its advocates on the scene during the Crusades.
I saw that History Time posted a video, I didn't even check what it was about but the first thing I did was like it. You sir are a genius. BTW you should try this game called Crusader Kings 2!
Love your vids, always educational and well made. But, it's as if you refuse to pronounce names how you spell them. Obviously you're not expected to pronounce them correctly as you don't speak Turkish/Arabic/Frankish and so on. E.g. when you write Mahmud and then keep saying Mehmet, it can be quite jarring. I would suggest reading the names through again before pronouncing them. Otherwise, great vids mate.
I just found out there are two different Zengi(s). One is the father who was violent, hot tempered who at times massacred and then his Son who was as brave and just skilled but much more religious
so every other crusade gets carried away and attacks the wrong city? No wonder the first and third are the best remembered. They actually did what they more or less set out to do. Although, the byzantines might disagree.
Out of all the history channels on youtube this one stands out as one of the best ones! Love the time and effort you put into these, also wish more people did such lenghty videos like yours, keep up the fantastic work!
A interesting video. And the fact that you also had placed Khazaria on the map make it deserve a thumb up. :) (We should still ask our self where all the information about Khazaria have taken the way in Western countries, it was just as great and interesting empire as the Roman empire after all.)
I like your videos much. At 6:30 about you use the term "decimate" which many cite as the most misused word in English. It means you lose ten percent and does not describe a serious loss in a major battle, the proper term is "devastate" thank you.
I was under the impression that these are primary source readings, not just narratives. So, I wonder how much detail is available. This should be interesting. It was to be my dissertation topic (Islamic expansion, specifically into Africa) should I decide to do a PhD in History.
12:00 That painting is not one of the crusades in the narrower sense and especially not of the First Crusade, but of the Spanish Reconquista, which is arguably not a part of the crusades. It shows the capitulation of the last Emir of Granada to the Castilian Queen Isabella I and the Aragonese King Ferdinand II.
Yok herkes öyle zan ediyor ama bu bilgi çok yanlış aslinda selcuklu Türkmenleri Anadolu’ya Kafkaslar’a (Azerbaijan) ve iraka göç Etiler ve irak Türkmenleri irak göç eden Selçuklu Türkmenlerinle ama maalesef şimdi onlar Kurdleşiyorlar mesela telaferin hepsi irak türkmeniydi ama çoğu kurdleştiler oysaki irak Türkmenleri vaktinde zengi devletini kurdular ve haçlilara kan kusturdular ve o yüzden bence Türkiye misakı mili kurup bütün irak turkmen topraklarını götürmek yerini onların bir devlet kurmalarına yardim etmeli
Why not be honest & refer them as the Zanj? Why not refer to Zanji by his name? What is it about the word Zanj that bothers you so much? Does the thought of the Zanj controlling the holy land really drive you crusadingly mad? 😂🤣😂
Hey great video. I have a question (sorry if already answered). You’ve previously stated that Imad Zenghi was adopted by Kerbogah, and now you stated by Jikirmisj. Could you please clarify. Also how did he get the title of Zenghi as I am Not aware his father (killed by Turush) had that title. Thanks!
Zengi was adopted by kerbogha. Jkirmish was kerbogha's closest general. After kerbogha's death, jkirmish treated imad the same way kerbogha did. Thus, he himself was a father of sorts to zengi.
Why did the First Crusade go to Edessa, rather than Jerusalem? Answer: Because the biblical family came from Edessa. All the gospel secrets were in Edessa, …which is why the Templars became so powerful. See book ‘Jesus, King of Edessa’. Ralph.
21:10 I beg your pardon for a little detail. Necmeddin Eyyub Shadhi ibn Marwan(Najm ad-din eyyub) was not Kurdish, he was an Arab. "Ibn Merwan" means "son of Merwan" and Merwan is an Arabic name. Necmeddin Eyyub is Salahaddin's(Saladin) father. Their root its origins are based in yemen but after they move to Syria they became Kurdified. Both Saladin's Mother and wife were Turk. In short, Salahaddin Eyyubi(Saladin) were half Turk and half Arab but culturally they were Kurdish because of their neighbors. İn addition they were all a citizen of a Turkic state.
history time make after you have time to make some pubilcs historyes of ghaznavids in north india becouse the moore 100 hundred prisoners of ghaznavids in korasan was our soldiers of roma indo iranians the children of avars hunns from rajput north india and as we was ksatrya warrior rajput against ghaznavids to know every turks from anatolia the prisoners from korasan elibereted by khazar warriors jews was our soldier of roma from europe as we come with ottomans in 1531 agains bizantin becouse we lose against babur gun power in panipat 1500 to know everybody the roma ksatrya in the past we take prisoners moore than 150 soldiers of ghaznavids even they sultan of ghaznavids in defendors of somnat temple gold of indians temple and we release them even they sultan big mistake they come again in rajput the ghaznavids and take much soldier prisoners in korasn that is truth the turks prisoners was our soldiers of roma from europe descendents of huns avars directly the children of huns avars in rajput north india becouse the huns avars they establised in rajput in 500 ad
Frank thouth they win And chase turk light archer cavalry but it was a trap of old steppe called wolf trap.First send fastest horseman's after they rapidly fall back and lure the franks. After turk take shape of twilight surround the enemy and crush with fierce.
I think your work is really bias but then again these are the same crusaders that snuffed out continents like the Americas and Australia and NZ. Your work has a long of holes, maybe on purpose.
Wow, some this movement by people by droughts. Could looked at what is going on currently with Central America and the migration into the USA. The fear of being ran over is real then.
@@nicatkerimzade041 azerbaycan gerçekten güzel bir tarihe sahip ildenizliler-karakoyunlular-akkoyunlular saten persler tarafından bile azerbaycan devleti olarak kabul edilir persler safevilere iran desede osmanlı kaynaklarında kızılbaş devleti olarak geçer bayrağında aslan olan bayrakta sonradan kullanılmıştır afşar imparatorluğu ise azerbaycan ve iranın mirasıdır ordu ve hanedan dili azerbaycan türkçesiydi nadir şahın ölümüyle persler ve azeriler ayrıldı ve azerbaycan hanlıkları dönemiş başladı (1747) ama zengilerin gerçekten azerilerle bir alakası yok belki bazı azeriler suriye ve ırağa göç etmiş olabilir
Sultan Zengi .. He is Turkish.. State Its management is Turks. Just ; Very Talented and Loyal to Their State, They have come to an important position.. For example ; Turkish Father / Kurdish Mother's Child, Saladin Ayyubi.. The Zengi State gained the trust of the Sultan and became the Chief Commander of the State's Army. When this state disappears.. With the Army of which more than half of the army is Turkish.. He established the Ayyubid State..!!
Nur al-Din al-Zanki and his father Imad al-Din and Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi were Muslims and Islam for them was above any nationality, and they did not even care about nationalities..... Their culture was Arabic and the language of their state was Arabic
No. It was a big mess, with everyone fighting each other. After barkyaruk, it was his son. His uncle tapar overthrew him and became sultan. After his death, his son became sultan. His uncle sencer then fought him and became the great selzuk sultan, and many other claimants to the sultanate rose and fell. Eventually, the selzuks collapsed entirely, the kara khitay taking lots of territory and the khwarezmians and ghurids grabbing the rest.
who is john komnin??? you can maybe use hes greek version of the name but his name is jovan komnin. there is also no manuel it is manojlo komnin or use the greek version of his name. but dont use modern usa names for byzanite emperor
- Watch my latest history documentary:-
ua-cam.com/video/c3Hq6UaFQqk/v-deo.html
So that's it- The last video made on my crappy laptop microphone. From now on the sound should be significantly better with my new Mic ! This video has been a long time coming, please like and subscribe if you like what you see, and let me know in the comments what you'd like to see covered in the future as we finally move towards the Second Crusade and beyond.
mic hype
Not a bad mic on the laptop sir. Wish mine was half as good.
History Time I’m gonna miss that mike
You should really work on the editing. You have the habit on a lot of your videos repeating yourself a lot.
Your full of shit. This is Ewen McGregor narrating
a great way to start my weekend , with History Time
Glad you like the channel!
The loss of Edessa stunned Europe. A very interesting story indicates the impact of this victory. The King of Sicily, Roger II, in the tradition of his land, had Muslims in his court, one of them an old sage. One day, looking at the sea, he saw a ship that brought news of the expedition. Roger had sent to Tripoli. It had been victorious. Roger turned to the Muslim sage who was dozing nearby and teased him:
" Do you hear what they said? "
" No " replied the sage. " They told me that we have defeated the Muslims in Tripoli. What use of Muhammed now to his land and his people?"
" He was not there " answered the old man. " He was at Edessa, which the Muslims have just taken "
The other courtiers laughed but Roger reminded them that sage always spoke the truth. A few days later the loss of Edessa was officially confirmed. The clergy picked up the currents of that shock and spread it across Europe.
0:00 Crusader states
4:04 *Jikirmish* takes control of Mosul following the death of Kerbogha
Artuqids
Battle of Harran (1104) *one of the first crusader defeat* & Edessa's effective fall
8:24 *Rise of Imad ad-Din Zengi*
10:13 Context
15:24 Imad ad-Din Zengi becomes Atabeg of Mosul & later Aleppo under Mahmud II (Seljuk Sultan, grandson of Malik Shah)
Attacks on crusaders
19:30 Zengi's empire effectively becomes independent
20:58 Najm ad-Din Ayyub (father of Salauddin Ayyubi)
Zengi takes Edessa after John Komnenos & Fulk's (king of Jerusalem) death in 1143
28:37 Second Crusade
Al-Mustarshid (Abbasid caliph from 1118-1135)
Just what I was looking for, a proper, detailed narrative/accounting of the slow disintegration of the Crusader States. Praise the gods! I feel you had me specifically in mind with this series. Keep up the good work.
Overconfidence of Harran - maybe it should be renamed??😸
HOW LONG THIS IS WITH NO GRAPHICS I DID NOT LIKE IT
Nor aldeen, is more important than Salah aldeen.
Our ancestors:
THESE SAVAGES MUST BE STOPPED AT ALL COSTS!
Our leaders today:
Come on in!
Funny the «savages» didnt have many Wars as them..
ArchEnema 67 4th crusade is an example, triggered
@@harisahmed8009 Ignore these triggered snowflakes they often act very similarly to the SJWs they claim to hate, they obsess over identity politics and immigration.
Yes, we are coming to your lands and we'll do to you what your ancestors did to native Americans. We'll civilize you!
@@harisahmed8009 There were hundreds of Islamic invasions, how many crusades?
Descendants of pagan vikings take up the cross and face off against descendants of shamanist nomadic horsemen who took up the crescent. Real history is epic.
Crescent isn't an Islamic symbol. But was one popularised by the Ottoman empire.
@@AdamNoizer crescent was Berber pagan symbol, it symbolize the goddess TANIT, lately adopted by medieval islamuc Berber dynasties
Two groups who shat on the traditions of their ancestors murdering each other in the name of Gods not their own. Real history is sad.
Juba Numidia crescent is a symbol of the Tengriism of the Eastern Turks of the early ages, which was firmly adopted by Islamic Turks later
Dr.Bright , Many forget that Proto Europeans also come from the steppes of Eurasia and mountains if Afghanistan. That is close to the birthplace of the Turkic people too. There is many similarities between the Tengrist religion of the Turkic Nomads and the belief system if those same early Proto Europeans too.
ps I hope that one day both will leave those Abrahamic Semitic religions and just come back to our own roots and beliefs.
Turks have always been the defenders of what is right and for this reason they will always continue to be the sword of Islam. 🇹🇷🌍
Many soldiers, generals and leaders will continue to emerge.
The Atabeg of Mosul and Aleppo at that time was Imad ad Din Zengi, dark,with a bristly beard, one of the many claimants of fragile power. But he was also different. He slept with his soldiers and enforced such exemplary disciplines that it was said his troops marched between two ropes so they would not destroy cultivated fields. This was the leader called, by Ibn al Athir, " the gift of divine providence to Muslims " who would launch the counteroffensive against the Christian kingdoms of Palestine that reached apex in fifty-two years, thanks to Yusuf, known to the world as Salah ad Din Ayyubi, or Saladdin. Zengi gave notice of his abilities in the year Saladin was born, with the conquest of Strong Crusader fortress of Mont Ferrand(or Barrin, in Arabic) in which King Fulk of Jerusalem and his barons were defeated and trapped till they paid a ransom of 50,000 dinar for their freedom.
In 1144 Zengi changed the geopolitics of the Region. He took Edassa, the first of the four kingdoms established in the first Crusade.
Zengi gave a call for Jihad. Eager troops came from the Turkish tribes, specialist sappers arrived from Khurasan and Aleppo. His army first devastated the countryside around the fortified city until it was said not a bird dared to fly near Edassa. The sappers, working through tunnels, reached under the towers of the city walls. Wooden supports were set on fire directly under the towers, weakening the walls until they crumbled, and Zengi took Edessa by storm at dawn two days before Christmas in 1144. The Franj outsiders were stripped, looted, chained. But Zengi treated the eastern local, Christians, Syrians and Armenians, well saying that they were of the land unlike Franks from Europe.
Zengids created saladin. Most turks were still pagan at the time and it was zengi who united them under jihad. Though, i have to say that he was forced to in order to fight crusaders back.
Sounds like a good guy
Allah Hu Akbar
Unfortunately, his act of kindness towards the Eastern Christians wouldn't be of much help in the end, because after Zengi died Nur Al-Din succeeded him. Thus, after a Latin attempt to re-take the city was defeated, he slaughtered all male Christians in the city and sent the women and children off in chains, reducing Edessa to rubble.
One of the most forgotten generals of the Middle Ages. Zengi was badass.
I’m trying to learn about zengi, but no luck, where can I learn about him here?
@@ahmedhashmi3584
We covered his son, Nur ad-din Zengi here:
ua-cam.com/video/-TuYFz86Bs4/v-deo.html
And we mentioned him in the top 6 Muslim generals in the Crusade era here:
ua-cam.com/video/llIKBf7VgVw/v-deo.html&t
@@HistoryoftheUmmah may Allah reward you
him, Baibars and Almanzor
I remember reading a story about an old Jewish man approaching Zengi and complaining that one of his lieutenants had kicked the old man out of his house and taken it for his own. Zengi simply turned to look at the man meaningfully, and the lieutenant quickly vacated the elderly man's home, camping in the mud like everyone else. I'm not sure of the validity of the story, but I hope it's true.
Great work! i love your channel's narrative style of history-telling!
Glad you like it. Thanks very much.
@@HistoryTime you' re gearing up to be one of my favorite history channels on UA-cam, along with EpicHistorytv, Kings and Generals, Historia Civilis etc. Out of all those, yours are the only videos i have to have a wikipedia tab open to keep track of the new things i learn! I specifically like the one about Shamshi-Adad&Old Assyria he seems to have been a real life Conan the cimmerian. A barbarian turned mercenary then becoming king in a foreign land and forging an empire...Great stuff, would love to see you post even more, cheers from Greece!
History Time - You spoil us sir.
Thanks for watching! :)
@@HistoryTime Just wondering if you have a true passion for history , judging by your tone . As I have said earlier , your Queen's English is music to the ears .
Nice video.
*Little correction: by 1104 Harran, the Turks had already recovered their image.
In 1101, Kilij Arslan (Rum) already defeated 3 Crusader expeditions (Mersivan + 2x Heraclea of Iconium).
Thats true, by the way is this channel middle eastern?
@@justgamesaaron7968 No this channel is somewhat biased by White narrator.
Kilj arslan defend his territory in asia minor
Main crusade forces are in middle east thats why they did not mention about that
@@samiulhassan3640 yeah
Zengi was a Turcoman from Avshar tribe which is one of the 24 branches of Oghuz Turks
my boyyyyyy
Okay
No asshole
Any chance for a more educated answer?
Deniz where is the Avshar tribe in our modern time !!! Was he from Kazakistan or Kirgzistan
Any chance of a video about Mahmud of Ghazni?
Yep! Hopefully this year. If not- early next year. Fascinating subject.
@@HistoryTime Oh cool! Cheers!
@@HistoryTime ya still waiting for that!
@@HistoryTime ya still waiting for that!
Jacob Black I’m only human. Takes a disgusting amount of time to research, write and make these.
Imad al-Din Zengi continued his attempts to take Damascus in 1145, but he was assassinated by a Frankish slave named Yarankash in 1146. Zengi was the founder of the eponymous Zengid dynasty. In Mosul he was succeeded by his eldest son Saif ad-Din Ghazi I, and in Aleppo he was succeeded by his second son Nur ad-Din.
According to Crusader legend, Zengi's mother was Ida of Austria (mother of Leopold III of Austria), who had supposedly been captured during the Crusade of 1101 and placed in a harem. She was 46 in 1101, Zengi was born in 1085, and his father died in 1094 so this is not feasible.
Zengi was courageous, strong in leadership and a very skilled warrior according to all of the Muslim chroniclers of his day.
Unlike Saladin at Jerusalem in 1187, Zengi did not keep his word to protect his captives at Baalbek in 1139. According to Ibn al-‘Adim, Zengi "had sworn to the people of the citadel with strong oaths and on the Qur’an and divorcing (his wives). When they came down from the citadel he betrayed them, flayed its governor and hanged the rest.”
According to Ibn 'al-Adim:
The atebeg was violent, powerful, awe-inspiring and liable to attack suddenly… When he rode, the troops use to walk behind him as if they were between two threads, out of fear they would trample over crops, and nobody out of fear dared to trample on a single stem (of them) nor march his horse on them… If anyone transgressed, he was crucified. He (Zengi) used to say: "It does not happen that there is more than one tyrant (meaning himself) at one time."
Where his from originally the legend Neruddin zengi??
I was particularly struck by the excellent and seamless sound editing skills you've developed. Especially at 27 min, where the sad cello riff perfectly captures the mood after the fall of the city. Still, while it doesn't need more cowbell, I could definitely use more d'Hauteville.
Thanks so much. Really appreciate that. Oh there are many many many Normans videos on the way.
The battlefields of Badr?
Turcopoles(That mentioned in video): Turks who choosed to serve Byzantine and Crusader army as mercenary or because of christian beliefs.
@Yung Prodigy Lol... What a cripple idea. There is millions of non-religious or Christian that identify themselves as a Turk.
Turk identity is older than Islam and Turks were already great before and without Islam either.
@Yung Prodigy you are a real stupid a real turk is not musluman
Türkish history is awesome😍🇹🇷
This has nothing to do with Turkey.
@@ulverup Zengids ruled part of Turkey
@Yzdjan Ali muslim
Majority of turks were pagan
House of Zangi were the servants of allah
@ALP ER TUNGA So???
@@ulverup Zengi was a Turkish commander and belongs to Turkish history. Turkish history is not just about Turkey.
Most of people think Seljuks were good warriors which make them success. The real success was education. Seljuk generals very highly educated in both sciences,religion, literature and most important army school. Selahaddin Eyyubi got this education because of father was wassal of Zengis. What make him different to other Arab leader was Seljuk education. Battle of Harran was old trick of steppe nomad tactic called wolf trap. Light horse archers first forward to attack then false retreat being chased by enemy was lost their contact with backup forces. Then all forces attack isolated enemy and defeat them. Which same tactic used since BC 209 by East Hun Khagan Mete Khan to Manzikert 1071 to Hitting Battle.
One of the most impressive portraits is that of Nur-ad-Din, emir of Aleppo and Damascus. William credited him with foresight and circumspec tion, with wisdom and restraint in his judgment, and with prudence. He con sidered Nur-ad-Din to be a just, godfearing, religious, and hence happy, blessed man (justus, timens Deum, religiosus, felix). These traits, comple mented by intelligence, imaginativeness and vigor, qualified him as both an excellent leader of the Muslims and a dangerous opponent of the Christians. William was very much aware of this discrepancy. However, he did not pres ent the two sides separately; rather, he integrated these qualities in a rounded portrait. Thus, in what amounts to an obituary, William noted on the death of the prince: "Nur-ad-Din (is dead), the greatest persecutor of the Christian name and faith, yet a just, shrewd and provident man, and religious accord ing to his people's tradition." It seems to me that William of Tyre has thus acknowledged the Muslim leader as a religious person. One is reminded of St. Peter's speech in the house of the Roman centurion Cornelius in Cae sarea, who is said in the Acts to be a vir religiosus, timens Deum (Acts, 10:2) and justus (Acts, 10:22): "But in every nation he that fears him, and works righteousness, is accepted with him" (Acts, 10:35)". This idea has not ex actly had a great influence on the Christian's external relationships. It is all the more remarkable to find one of its advocates on the scene during the Crusades.
I saw that History Time posted a video, I didn't even check what it was about but the first thing I did was like it. You sir are a genius. BTW you should try this game called Crusader Kings 2!
Thanks so much for watching!
The 2nd crusade - you had only one job.
Haha yep
Nicely done!
Thanks for watching!
I watch both of you
Love your vids, always educational and well made. But, it's as if you refuse to pronounce names how you spell them. Obviously you're not expected to pronounce them correctly as you don't speak Turkish/Arabic/Frankish and so on. E.g. when you write Mahmud and then keep saying Mehmet, it can be quite jarring. I would suggest reading the names through again before pronouncing them. Otherwise, great vids mate.
Christmas allover again 😉
Enjoy!
@Son of Mountain no.. he was oghuz turkmen
your pronounciation of toghtekin hurt my ears but the rest of the vid is great
Great Video and well documented. By now everybody understood this guy is my hero ;-)
Pete, I love how you use the videos uploaded on "Voices of the past". They're the preview of what you're planning to upload on this channel, right?
I just found out there are two different Zengi(s). One is the father who was violent, hot tempered who at times massacred and then his Son who was as brave and just skilled but much more religious
Why are you showing images of the tapestry depicting the Battle of Hastings 1066, as this has absolutely nothing to do with your content?
Because Normans.
Very good research and well done. Maps are very good. Please continue exploring this era, it's fascinating.
so every other crusade gets carried away and attacks the wrong city? No wonder the first and third are the best remembered. They actually did what they more or less set out to do. Although, the byzantines might disagree.
Out of all the history channels on youtube this one stands out as one of the best ones! Love the time and effort you put into these, also wish more people did such lenghty videos like yours, keep up the fantastic work!
A great video 💯 can you make more videos about zengi and a video about salahadin
To learn such a complex part of history you need to read 100s of boring and thick books. Thx!
A interesting video.
And the fact that you also had placed Khazaria on the map make it deserve a thumb up. :)
(We should still ask our self where all the information about Khazaria have taken the way in Western countries,
it was just as great and interesting empire as the Roman empire after all.)
32 minutes of bliss like always!!! very nice work again......... i'm getting repetitive lol
I like your videos much. At 6:30 about you use the term "decimate" which many cite as the most misused word in English. It means you lose ten percent and does not describe a serious loss in a major battle, the proper term is "devastate" thank you.
More info about zengi push back the byzantines is needed...what years,battles and etc
Many more videos on the way about these wars specifically. The Komnenian Restoration is an awesome piece of history
I was under the impression that these are primary source readings, not just narratives. So, I wonder how much detail is available. This should be interesting. It was to be my dissertation topic (Islamic expansion, specifically into Africa) should I decide to do a PhD in History.
12:00 That painting is not one of the crusades in the narrower sense and especially not of the First Crusade, but of the Spanish Reconquista, which is arguably not a part of the crusades. It shows the capitulation of the last Emir of Granada to the Castilian Queen Isabella I and the Aragonese King Ferdinand II.
The amazing history of Iraqi Turkmens thank you for the amazing documentary
Iraklı değil aslında, direkt doğu anadoludan bu adamlar.
@@papazataklaattiranimam yok imameddin zengi Mosul da doğulmuş ve örda büyümüş o yüzden irak Türkmen tarihidir
@@Iraqi_baathist2009 Irak Türkleri de aslında Anadolu Türkü zaten
Yok herkes öyle zan ediyor ama bu bilgi çok yanlış aslinda selcuklu Türkmenleri Anadolu’ya Kafkaslar’a (Azerbaijan) ve iraka göç Etiler ve irak Türkmenleri irak göç eden Selçuklu Türkmenlerinle ama maalesef şimdi onlar Kurdleşiyorlar mesela telaferin hepsi irak türkmeniydi ama çoğu kurdleştiler oysaki irak Türkmenleri vaktinde zengi devletini kurdular ve haçlilara kan kusturdular ve o yüzden bence Türkiye misakı mili kurup bütün irak turkmen topraklarını götürmek yerini onların bir devlet kurmalarına yardim etmeli
@@Iraqi_baathist2009The white sheep and Timur say: Are you alive, you little eyes? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
thank u for this amazing video :)
Thanks very much!
Why not be honest & refer them as the Zanj? Why not refer to Zanji by his name? What is it about the word Zanj that bothers you so much? Does the thought of the Zanj controlling the holy land really drive you crusadingly mad? 😂🤣😂
That was the wrong picture of Bohemond. Real Crusades History did a great video on him. I think it is actually Robert of Flanders.
it was time when turkish and kurdish were brothers and united for islam
I quite enjoy the videos on the crusader states. Thank you for making another!
Really great content
But which program you use to make this awesome maps
Bro I’m deadass related to him
Hey great video. I have a question (sorry if already answered).
You’ve previously stated that Imad Zenghi was adopted by Kerbogah, and now you stated by Jikirmisj. Could you please clarify.
Also how did he get the title of Zenghi as I am
Not aware his father (killed by Turush) had that title.
Thanks!
Zengi was adopted by kerbogha. Jkirmish was kerbogha's closest general. After kerbogha's death, jkirmish treated imad the same way kerbogha did. Thus, he himself was a father of sorts to zengi.
another great documentary !!!
another great video ✔@ Coronavirus lockdown👍✋🔔thanks🇸🇴
Thanks for this great informative documentary. It will help me a lot in my history subject :-)
Thank you for another beautiful and exquisitely informative lesson. The lores of history and of men have so many wonderful stories to tell.
The First crusade took longer than ww2, wouldn't call that blitzkrieg.
Still gud
Have really enjoyed following your series of great videos. Looking forward to future updates 👍🏼
its eeeeedas not odeass odessa is in the ukraine.
Zengids are created the Sallahaddin.
I don't think the first portrate you show of behemond of taranto is of him but of robert of flanders
Why did the First Crusade go to Edessa, rather than Jerusalem?
Answer: Because the biblical family came from Edessa.
All the gospel secrets were in Edessa,
…which is why the Templars became so powerful.
See book ‘Jesus, King of Edessa’.
Ralph.
Love the longer form videos. Very relaxing way to wind down at the end of the day. thank you.
@history time your videos are amazingly detailed and informative ..keep it up man
Love your videos covering Islamic history and empires ❤️
16:10 Mahmud II. Mehmed II was another dude.
I'd love to see a video on the Second Crusade however who is the video about the last vikings coming out?
Last Vikings is coming soon. Second Crusade won’t be for a while .
if my history class sees this: hi
21:10 I beg your pardon for a little detail. Necmeddin Eyyub Shadhi ibn Marwan(Najm ad-din eyyub) was not Kurdish, he was an Arab. "Ibn Merwan" means "son of Merwan" and Merwan is an Arabic name. Necmeddin Eyyub is Salahaddin's(Saladin) father. Their root its origins are based in yemen but after they move to Syria they became Kurdified. Both Saladin's Mother and wife were Turk. In short, Salahaddin Eyyubi(Saladin) were half Turk and half Arab but culturally they were Kurdish because of their neighbors. İn addition they were all a citizen of a Turkic state.
Yes
Saladin WAS Arab from Rawadid
And Ayyubid empire( arab - turk) state
Like zengi and memluk
history time make after you have time to make some pubilcs historyes of ghaznavids in north india becouse the moore 100 hundred prisoners of ghaznavids in korasan was our soldiers of roma indo iranians the children of avars hunns from rajput north india and as we was ksatrya warrior rajput against ghaznavids to know every turks from anatolia the prisoners from korasan elibereted by khazar warriors jews was our soldier of roma from europe as we come with ottomans in 1531 agains bizantin becouse we lose against babur gun power in panipat 1500 to know everybody the roma ksatrya in the past we take prisoners moore than 150 soldiers of ghaznavids even they sultan of ghaznavids in defendors of somnat temple gold of indians temple and we release them even they sultan big mistake they come again in rajput the ghaznavids and take much soldier prisoners in korasn that is truth the turks prisoners was our soldiers of roma from europe descendents of huns avars directly the children of huns avars in rajput north india becouse the huns avars they establised in rajput in 500 ad
Frank thouth they win And chase turk light archer cavalry but it was a trap of old steppe called wolf trap.First send fastest horseman's after they rapidly fall back and lure the franks. After turk take shape of twilight surround the enemy and crush with fierce.
I think your work is really bias but then again these are the same crusaders that snuffed out continents like the Americas and Australia and NZ. Your work has a long of holes, maybe on purpose.
Good content you get my subscribe
Thanks very much!
Wow, some this movement by people by droughts. Could looked at what is going on currently with Central America and the migration into the USA. The fear of being ran over is real then.
Wow, so I guess everybody doesn't love Raymond huh?
A pagan who loves killing Greek, Roman and Armenian Christians
I live here and I can help whoever wants to come.
The feign retreat never seems to fail
Got an exam today. I feel like by watching all these videos in realising how bad the teaching system is at my college. 🤦♀️
I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS...EXCELLENT
Can you do a video about illirians or ibirians?
Eventually I’d like to
Saladin ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
could u continue this playlist up to founder of ottoman empire? u dont need to be so detailed like in this video...
You apparently leave out what John Komnenus did there in Syria etc. That counts.
Best History Channel online Four Non gun related stuff.
I'd like to know...who the eff thumbsdown learning about history...
Jesus’s birth 1111?
I mean blitzkrieg is by definition organised not just brutal..
Thats why i enjoy listening to history time always fully detailed
Zengids 🇦🇿🇹🇷💪🏻
Azerbaycan ne alaka knk ? Irak ve suriye türkmenlerinin devleti ve şuan onlar türkiye türkü etniğinde sayılıyor
@@KaanMapping26 ırak türkmenlerinin hepsi bayandırlıdır ve azerbaycanca konuşur. onlarda kendilerini azerbaycanlı sayılıyor
@@nicatkerimzade041 ama etnik olarak türkler ve hiç ben azeriyim diyen bir ırak türkü görmedim
@@KaanMapping26 ben gördüm kekrukde
@@nicatkerimzade041 azerbaycan gerçekten güzel bir tarihe sahip ildenizliler-karakoyunlular-akkoyunlular saten persler tarafından bile azerbaycan devleti olarak kabul edilir persler safevilere iran desede osmanlı kaynaklarında kızılbaş devleti olarak geçer bayrağında aslan olan bayrakta sonradan kullanılmıştır afşar imparatorluğu ise azerbaycan ve iranın mirasıdır ordu ve hanedan dili azerbaycan türkçesiydi nadir şahın ölümüyle persler ve azeriler ayrıldı ve azerbaycan hanlıkları dönemiş başladı (1747) ama zengilerin gerçekten azerilerle bir alakası yok belki bazı azeriler suriye ve ırağa göç etmiş olabilir
Sultan Zengi ..
He is Turkish..
State
Its management is Turks.
Just ;
Very Talented and Loyal to Their State,
They have come to an important position..
For example ;
Turkish Father / Kurdish Mother's Child,
Saladin Ayyubi..
The Zengi State gained the trust of the Sultan and became the Chief Commander of the State's Army.
When this state disappears..
With the Army of which more than half of the army is Turkish..
He established the Ayyubid State..!!
Nur al-Din al-Zanki and his father Imad al-Din and Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi were Muslims and Islam for them was above any nationality, and they did not even care about nationalities..... Their culture was Arabic and the language of their state was Arabic
@@J1_FGCC4474 not.Turkish Narddin Zengi
correct me if im wrong but in pretty sure the seljuk sultan next to barkuyraq was ahmed senjer?
No. It was a big mess, with everyone fighting each other. After barkyaruk, it was his son. His uncle tapar overthrew him and became sultan. After his death, his son became sultan. His uncle sencer then fought him and became the great selzuk sultan, and many other claimants to the sultanate rose and fell. Eventually, the selzuks collapsed entirely, the kara khitay taking lots of territory and the khwarezmians and ghurids grabbing the rest.
Awesome!
You sound remarkably like Ewen Macgregor. Or maybe it's just the microphone.
You got me. Mans gotta make ends meet.
The 294
Their descendants live in the Beqaa Valley in Lebanon
You forgot to add "and rise again" to the title
Dang I didn’t know the first king of Jerusalem was British lol 😂
English
who is john komnin??? you can maybe use hes greek version of the name but his name is jovan komnin. there is also no manuel it is manojlo komnin or use the greek version of his name. but dont use modern usa names for byzanite emperor