You've ticked all the boxes sir! Thank you for this simply incredible explanation that contains all of the primary points of the development of Great Britain from feudal times to the lights of the industrial Revolution
Soil health is such an important yet overlooked aspect of food production and is VERY MUCH a modern crisis in farming and Especially in nutrition... bad soil means poor nutrients and less land for Crops other than the parasitic bleechlike corn and wheat.
Having just done some work on King Ranch in Texas, at 825,000 Acres, I was amazed the average Farm in England is 100 acres.... also, excellent informative video, you get a like and subscribe!!!
Hello ! Thank you so much for this very informative video. I did not really understand the conclusion of the video, how the agricultural revolution lead to the industrial revolution? Maybe is it because I am not a native English speaker, so I didn't really understand what you said about this point
@@HistoryHub goes to show that innovation is more powerful than government intervention. Leave the landlords to experiment on private land and they can create techniques to make production go up. Communal land is inefficient, just like Jamestown in early America
I don’t really understand. Your accent is strong I love it but I don’t understand. How did land management parliamentary enclosure lead to English farming become more productive? How did agriculture innovation lead to English farming becoming more productive? What was the social, environmental, and/or economic impact of the agriculture revolution on GB?
Thanks for this video, I’m a french student and this video help me a lot to learn the britain history in English I would like to give some money for this excellent work but I can’t because watch the size of rat 😂
😂 no, people who owned the land in common and survived on self subsistence were forced into wage labor and then that land was given to others for private ownership. Property relations were not the same because this is the era of the transition from Feudalism to Capitalism. Really what this was largely about is setting up a mass of labor for a system which took the fruits of others labors, the extraction of surplus value to aggrandize the upper class and class hierarchy. Capitalism is built on theft.
😂 no, people who owned the land in common and survived on self subsistence were forced into wage labor and then that land was given to others for private ownership. Property relations were not the same because this is the era of the transition from Feudalism to Capitalism. Really what this was largely about is setting up a mass of labor for a system which took the fruits of others labors, the extraction of surplus value to aggrandize the upper class and class hierarchy. Capitalism is built on theft.
@@whatabouttheearthso it's a problem that the standard of living for everyone went up while some had a massive increase? The desire to make everything equal is why humanity hasn't colonized another world yet
The Agricultural Revolution was the unprecedented increase in agricultural production in Britain due to increases in labor and land productivity between the mid-17th and late 19th centuries. However, historians continue to dispute whether the developments leading to the unprecedented agricultural growth can be seen as “a revolution,” since the growth was, in fact, a result of a series of significant changes that took place over a long period of time.
english farming became farmore productive accidental or not that is a pun and its significance is pequeno so why am i writing this comment i have no clue back to the video
The beginning of the end. This was the beginning of slow-death for human beings via carbohydrate toxicity. Oops! Boy did we humans ever take a wrong turn! Do you want to know why we misbehave? We're all neurotic... Here's why...Diet. For our human form, ketosis is our natural state of physical being. Fat/ketones is our natural fuel, NOT CARBOHYDRATES. (Our bodies make all the carbohydrates it needs, we should not be consuming more of them) It has become normal for humans to begin to suffer from diseases at 30, 40, 50 years of age. Diabetes is now common. Anxiety, depression, mood disorders, anger, heart disease, cancer, high blood pressure, dementia, kidney disease, and many more diseases have all become "Oh well, I'm getting old...it's normal". Yes, it's "normal" now but it's not natural. Find out what happens to people's physical, and mental, and psychological, and spiritual health when they begin to cut carbs from their daily diet. They get healthier! It will make you wonder; How on earth did this happen to us? How did we humans stray so far from our natural selves? I don't have the answer, (maybe we became too many and ran out of animals to feed everyone), but it did happen. And during the past upwards of 100 years was when carb consumption REALLY accelerated. Research 'People on a low-carb high-fat or Carnivore diet' and see for yourself.
@@songkim117 Perhaps. But, personally, I don't care how long I live since it's always only now. But after 57 years of up & down health, I very much prefer the way I feel now. Chronic cough gone. Back problems gone. Anxiety and depression and mood swings gone. I sleep well. Steady energy all day. Cutting carbs from my diet was the second best thing that ever happened to me. Of course, everyone has to work it all out for themselves. We are each on our own personal journey. 🙌
As a teacher I appreciate the time and energy you put into your work.
Thank you!
Okay Mr white
my teacher told me to watch this video
Same
@@irishpotato9298 same
Same lol rn I’m watching it bc we have an assessment on it
Dude this is my hw
Dropzzzz?
You've ticked all the boxes sir! Thank you for this simply incredible explanation that contains all of the primary points of the development of Great Britain from feudal times to the lights of the industrial Revolution
I didn't get it
Can u explain for me
been sent here for homework check!!!!!!
A fascinating and underappreciated topic.
who ever made this video is the best editor I've ever seen
Me watching this over and over because it was my quarantine history work
Hiiii🤣🤣
Weronika Hellooooooooo, this work is dead
This is cool! Stumbled upon this for my agriculture unit. Cheers!
You have really high quality edits and a very great narration voice. When exams roll around you’ll gain tons of views. Good luck.
Soil health is such an important yet overlooked aspect of food production and is VERY MUCH a modern crisis in farming and Especially in nutrition... bad soil means poor nutrients and less land for Crops other than the parasitic bleechlike corn and wheat.
Here in 2024, love this video and you just got a new subscriber!!!!!!!!
The video was really interesting and comprehensive !!! Could you please share the title of the song?
Waiting for UA-cam algorithm to make this channel famous.
Same here. :)
ya got any sources you used can't find any in the description im looking for a time line where i can see progress is made
Your editing is incredible!
Having just done some work on King Ranch in Texas, at 825,000 Acres, I was amazed the average Farm in England is 100 acres.... also, excellent informative video, you get a like and subscribe!!!
Is there anyway to reach the person who made this video? The editor?
U are better than my teacher
Thanks for the answers for my homework
Thank you for this high quality video! Helped me with my anthropology class.
Very helpful!
i think we were better off as farmers and having rights to common land to forage,graze,fish and hunt.
Hello ! Thank you so much for this very informative video.
I did not really understand the conclusion of the video, how the agricultural revolution lead to the industrial revolution?
Maybe is it because I am not a native English speaker, so I didn't really understand what you said about this point
The agricultural revolution made the industrial revolution possible by allowing for a greater number of labourers to live in the cities.
@@HistoryHub goes to show that innovation is more powerful than government intervention. Leave the landlords to experiment on private land and they can create techniques to make production go up. Communal land is inefficient, just like Jamestown in early America
Fewer people producing more food meant more people "free" to work in mines, mills and factories
The overcoming of Malthus is on of the greatest achievements of mankind
i need a dang transcript
Wow this was amazing I understood everything.
This is my homework it is currently 2 am
You still got jt
I don’t really understand.
Your accent is strong I love it but I don’t understand.
How did land management parliamentary enclosure lead to English farming become more productive?
How did agriculture innovation lead to English farming becoming more productive?
What was the social, environmental, and/or economic impact of the agriculture revolution on GB?
How do you edit your vids?
A mix of Adobe After Effects, Premiere Pro and Powtoon mostly.
@@HistoryHub THANKS
Thanks for this video, I’m a french student and this video help me a lot to learn the britain history in English
I would like to give some money for this excellent work but I can’t because watch the size of rat 😂
So the government decided to let private landowners do their own thing. The result, productivity increases.
😂 no, people who owned the land in common and survived on self subsistence were forced into wage labor and then that land was given to others for private ownership. Property relations were not the same because this is the era of the transition from Feudalism to Capitalism. Really what this was largely about is setting up a mass of labor for a system which took the fruits of others labors, the extraction of surplus value to aggrandize the upper class and class hierarchy. Capitalism is built on theft.
😂 no, people who owned the land in common and survived on self subsistence were forced into wage labor and then that land was given to others for private ownership. Property relations were not the same because this is the era of the transition from Feudalism to Capitalism. Really what this was largely about is setting up a mass of labor for a system which took the fruits of others labors, the extraction of surplus value to aggrandize the upper class and class hierarchy. Capitalism is built on theft.
@@whatabouttheearthso it's a problem that the standard of living for everyone went up while some had a massive increase? The desire to make everything equal is why humanity hasn't colonized another world yet
nice work
My history teacher said we should watch this so you know you’re professional
How to explain the Agricultural Revolution??
translation has serious problem
Interesting
Thanks :)
Simultaneously we had a growing empire which was producing an abundance of sugar from slave plantations.
ooo its great:D
I just love how the subtitles are nonsense. Great work, British accent guy!
I know! Autogenerated subtitles are still so far off being reliable. We'll manually get those fixed when we have time. Thanks for watching!
The Agricultural Revolution was the unprecedented increase in agricultural production in Britain due to increases in labor and land productivity between the mid-17th and late 19th centuries. However, historians continue to dispute whether the developments leading to the unprecedented agricultural growth can be seen as “a revolution,” since the growth was, in fact, a result of a series of significant changes that took place over a long period of time.
very revolutionary indeed
www.youtube.com/@HistorywithMissSmith
Say hi If you’re here from ms larkhams class
Almost all the comments are for kids History class, Yup same thing here
He’s got an asmr voice
Love your voice
All goes to turnip
Wòw
english farming became farmore productive accidental or not that is a pun and its significance is pequeno so why am i writing this comment i have no clue back to the video
Jan Jansen approves
DrAhmed AdamAli +Crop Protection+Somali Land
a
do you know 2+2=4?
Most surprising fact I got from this video
but a great video otherwise ;)
Turnip in Bahasa Indonesia is LOBAK CINA.
Propaganda for the elitists
The beginning of the end. This was the beginning of slow-death for human beings via carbohydrate toxicity. Oops! Boy did we humans ever take a wrong turn!
Do you want to know why we misbehave? We're all neurotic...
Here's why...Diet. For our human form, ketosis is our natural state of physical being. Fat/ketones is our natural fuel, NOT CARBOHYDRATES. (Our bodies make all the carbohydrates it needs, we should not be consuming more of them) It has become normal for humans to begin to suffer from diseases at 30, 40, 50 years of age. Diabetes is now common. Anxiety, depression, mood disorders, anger, heart disease, cancer, high blood pressure, dementia, kidney disease, and many more diseases have all become "Oh well, I'm getting old...it's normal". Yes, it's "normal" now but it's not natural. Find out what happens to people's physical, and mental, and psychological, and spiritual health when they begin to cut carbs from their daily diet. They get healthier! It will make you wonder; How on earth did this happen to us? How did we humans stray so far from our natural selves? I don't have the answer, (maybe we became too many and ran out of animals to feed everyone), but it did happen. And during the past upwards of 100 years was when carb consumption REALLY accelerated. Research 'People on a low-carb high-fat or Carnivore diet' and see for yourself.
Well, with all Tue diseases and the "not to meant diet for humans" we live longer on average than the home sapiens 12000 to 44000 years ago.
@@songkim117 Perhaps. But, personally, I don't care how long I live since it's always only now. But after 57 years of up & down health, I very much prefer the way I feel now. Chronic cough gone. Back problems gone. Anxiety and depression and mood swings gone. I sleep well. Steady energy all day. Cutting carbs from my diet was the second best thing that ever happened to me. Of course, everyone has to work it all out for themselves. We are each on our own personal journey. 🙌
anyone here from collage