Destruction of Kievan Rus - Mongol Conquest DOCUMENTARY

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  • čas přidán 23. 12. 2020
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    Kings and Generals' historical animated documentary series on the history of Kievan Rus continues with an episode on the Mongol Invasion of Rus and the destruction that it brought. First by Jebe and Subutai, and the battle of Kalka and then Batu Khan and the wholesale destruction of the Rus cities.
    Slavs and Vikings: Medieval Russia and the Origins of the Kievan Rus: • Slavs and Vikings: Med...
    Early Rus Conquests: Viking Princes in Eastern Rome: • Early Rus Conquests: V...
    How Rus became Christian: • How the Rus Became Chr...
    Golden Age of Rus: • Golden Age of the Rus:...
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    The video was made by our friend Michael Merc bit.ly/340tcO2 while the script was researched and written by Leo Stone, while Jack Wilson helped with the research. 2d art - John Lavrinenko ( / li.comics ) Animation - Vlad Krivokonev
    This video was narrated by Officially Devin ( / @offydgg & / @gameworldnarratives )
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    Production Music courtesy of Epidemic Sound: www.epidemicsound.com
    #Documentary #KievanRus #Mongols

Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @KingsandGenerals
    @KingsandGenerals  Před 3 lety +1825

    More Mongols? Yes.

  • @Alorand
    @Alorand Před 3 lety +876

    "Boss, that guy is so annoying everyone wants to kill him."
    "Fine, promote him to Envoy..."

    • @ManiaGin
      @ManiaGin Před 3 lety +26

      It was always a easy way to get rid of your politcial enemy

    • @mheekkim2901
      @mheekkim2901 Před 3 lety +42

      Mongolian: "Mother! I have been promoted!"
      His mother "Already? I knew they would recognize your talents! What are you now? Zuu>?Mingghan?"
      Mongolian : " Envoy! I get to represent the Khan!"
      His family : RIP (T~T)

    • @brendangallagher1124
      @brendangallagher1124 Před 3 lety +18

      This makes sense though. I mean if Marco Polo had crossed a line somewhere along the line, Kublai could have sent him as an envoy to Vietnam or Japan.

    • @jrewing6836
      @jrewing6836 Před 3 lety +4

      @@mheekkim2901 Oh man, U killed me lmao. Too funny but very true. Poor envoys, but I supposed they serve their purpose according to the great Khan lol.😅😂

    • @jus_sanguinis
      @jus_sanguinis Před 3 lety +5

      This guy is right about weak fortification (wooden walls) of Rus cities. But another Rus city weakness was it size: only few cities like Kiev and Novgorod had big population (about 30 thousands), while population of the rest towns was like 5 or 7 thousands or even smaller. So 30-50 thousand Mongol army outnumbered city defenders in every single battle. Compared with huge stone cities of East, Central and West Asia small wooden Russian cities were not a big problem for Mongol army. P.S. As I know, Kulkan was the only son of Genghis, who was killed (siege of Kolomna in North-East Rus, modern day Russia) during Mongol invasion of Europe.

  • @KofteG61
    @KofteG61 Před 3 lety +1396

    How horrifying it must have been to realize that after the Mongols crushed your life long rivals in just a month, they would come after you.

    • @lyonvensa
      @lyonvensa Před 3 lety +171

      Rus Princes: "Haha yes, die noobs!"
      Mongols: "There's more to plunder?"
      Rus Princes: _Surprised Pikachu face_

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety

      They didn't crushed the Ukrainian life.

    • @lyonvensa
      @lyonvensa Před 3 lety +61

      @@vladimirthegreen6097 Y'all both are right. Mongols uses their envoys to learn about their 'targets', but if they comply and did not rebel or fight, usually they're spared.

    • @imay3610
      @imay3610 Před 3 lety +15

      smartest thing was to submit, but who knew
      also dont touch their envoys...ever

    • @user-ms4cm4qf5j
      @user-ms4cm4qf5j Před 3 lety +1

      In fact, in the case of Kievan Rus, this was not perceived so, Kievan Rus did not even try to maintain complete control over the steppes, nomads constantly resorted from them, some hordes squeezed others out, and they constantly fought with them, it was a common thing. The princes would have treated this with due responsibility, and everything could have been different.

  • @fsul8536
    @fsul8536 Před 3 lety +1493

    The most dangerous job in history award goes to the Mongol envoys.

    • @eviln00b69
      @eviln00b69 Před 3 lety +173

      At least they knew they'd be avenged lol

    • @nhlanhlashamase3453
      @nhlanhlashamase3453 Před 3 lety +48

      @@eviln00b69 but still you don't come back

    • @madaranotsoanonymousnowuch1539
      @madaranotsoanonymousnowuch1539 Před 3 lety +32

      @@MegaDuckmonster Mamelukes are the exception that did that to the Mongol envoy and survived

    • @nasygorenh5639
      @nasygorenh5639 Před 3 lety +8

      Tbh from what i see, they be killed everywhere, in Japan too

    • @geletoz
      @geletoz Před 3 lety +17

      @@nasygorenh5639 do you know why? Because every kingdom they deliver message to, they were instructed to be very offensive, insult everyone throw fit, bluff, curse and make threats and personal name calling of the "king"..lmao..basically, make them submit at the spot or don't come back mission

  • @chucksfeedandseed
    @chucksfeedandseed Před 4 měsíci +38

    "I'm Batu Khan!"
    - Batu's last words

  • @mark76533
    @mark76533 Před 3 lety +1464

    “Irrelevant little town known as Moscow”. I haven’t expected to hear that, at all

    • @TheR00k
      @TheR00k Před 3 lety +254

      Founded in 1147, Moscow was but one of small cites dotting the Slavic territories. Its Kremlin - a small wooden fort on a hill, its Red Square - a market in front of it.
      But that would not be for long.

    • @DarkSideChess
      @DarkSideChess Před 3 lety +99

      @@TheR00k the rise of Muscovy will lead the rebirth of Russia 300 years later.

    • @paulopettoruti7030
      @paulopettoruti7030 Před 3 lety +52

      Vladimir was the great city of that region

    • @victorconway444
      @victorconway444 Před 3 lety +148

      Rome wasn't built in a day. Every great city has humble beginnings.

    • @TeyvillDost
      @TeyvillDost Před 3 lety +14

      At the time, yes, it was)

  • @LeoWarrior14
    @LeoWarrior14 Před 3 lety +2946

    Chinese siege engineers at the gates of Kiev... in the 1230s. The Mongols really had a way of bringing cultures together :)

  • @eumemo4814
    @eumemo4814 Před 3 lety +1086

    Mongol emissary: *Dies
    Mongol warrior #1: *Sighs
    Mongol warrior #2: *Mounts on horse
    Mongol warrior #3: Aw shit, here we go again!

    • @faatehhyat3251
      @faatehhyat3251 Před 3 lety +21

      always the case in their history. hehehehe

    • @ivokantarski6220
      @ivokantarski6220 Před 3 lety +7

      Probadly they came in and rightfully with high af ego they acted like they were the local boss so the actual local boss gets annoyed and kills them in a way to offend the master of these emissaries.

    • @netiturtle
      @netiturtle Před 3 lety +7

      They killed either all or almost all citizens either way, fate of emissaries had no influence on outcome. And in Kiev, spared the leader who had ordered execution of messengers

    • @nazmakhan178
      @nazmakhan178 Před 3 lety +3

      Russian warriors : uurraaa.....

    • @motti6569
      @motti6569 Před 3 lety +25

      @@netiturtle Not if a city or town surrendered. Plenty of instances of a town/city surrendering to the Mongol envoys and their populace being spared as a result.
      Thats where the saying, don't kill the messenger comes from

  • @gobanito
    @gobanito Před 3 lety +197

    "I want to be an envoy when I grow up." Said no Mongol child, ever.

    • @TheColombianSpartan
      @TheColombianSpartan Před 3 lety +20

      Mongol Khan: You're my new envoy
      Mongol man: ah fuck...

    • @rays8521
      @rays8521 Před 2 lety +10

      @@TheColombianSpartan
      Every civilisation from the 13th: shit these mongol guys massacre everybody lol
      The same civilisations when they see a Mongol envoy at their gates : *peace was never an option*

    • @harithdanial141
      @harithdanial141 Před rokem

      @@rays8521 and the very few state who not kill envoy and treat them nicely not get massacred. Make me wonder why so hard to did that. Maybe because most people underestimate mongol at that time and doesn't know how

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti Před 24 dny

      ​@@harithdanial141 Most countries saw the Mongol culture as backwards

  • @marcobergamaschi3356
    @marcobergamaschi3356 Před 3 lety +395

    "Become an envoy they said, you'll see the world, they said!"

  • @sisyphus4468
    @sisyphus4468 Před 3 lety +256

    "... the disunited principalities of the Rus were living on borrowed time."
    What a terrifying sentence!

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety

      The word "principality" is not present, as I recall, in the Ruthenian chronicles.

    • @sholahverassa8582
      @sholahverassa8582 Před 3 lety +11

      Well, it's true. Bickering small realms are a perfect prey for a large warlike nation.

    • @snowmoon7385
      @snowmoon7385 Před rokem +1

      Hmm

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem +1

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

    • @nicholasherr6166
      @nicholasherr6166 Před rokem

      @@vredacted3125 die tdzsave for another time

  • @stepanpytlik4021
    @stepanpytlik4021 Před 3 lety +439

    Christians:Christmas is a time of peace and happines
    Kings and General's christmas:

    • @DreadDeimos
      @DreadDeimos Před 3 lety +17

      Fun fact: Orthodox Christians celebrate Christmas on Jan 7th because of Julian calendar.

    • @dilioification
      @dilioification Před 3 lety +5

      @@DreadDeimos no all

    • @DreadDeimos
      @DreadDeimos Před 3 lety +1

      @adam all Orthodox, simply put, means "traditional". There are Orthodox Jews (hasids), for example.

    • @DreadDeimos
      @DreadDeimos Před 3 lety +1

      @@dilioification Yes, I probably should've say "many Orthodox Christians" instead.

    • @bill3d577
      @bill3d577 Před 3 lety +4

      @@DreadDeimos greek Orthodox Christians celebrate 25 december

  • @VirtualnomadVirtualnomad
    @VirtualnomadVirtualnomad Před 3 lety +222

    13th Century basically:
    You get Mongols! ... and you get some Mongols, you too get more Mongols!!!

    • @Ty-ie2mi
      @Ty-ie2mi Před 3 lety

      Oprah needs to do that right away!

    • @Alaryk111
      @Alaryk111 Před 3 lety +14

      And everyone gets Plauge!

    • @beorntwit711
      @beorntwit711 Před 3 lety +2

      Really puts 2020 in perspective.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem +3

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @gnawstic1682
    @gnawstic1682 Před 3 lety +588

    “Genghis Khan, a man that needs no introduction.” Couldn’t be more true!! 😂

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety +2

      Unfortunately, false )

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Před 3 lety +57

      @@Daniel_Poirot he is literally most popular conquerers of middle ages.

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety +1

      @@QWERTY-gp8fd , it depends on what you pick up as important things about him.

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Před 3 lety +32

      @@Daniel_Poirot name conqueror that conquered more land than him. u cant. hence he is most popular

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety

      @@QWERTY-gp8fd , I have no sick idea to name someone great just because he occupied someone's territory.

  • @VirtualnomadVirtualnomad
    @VirtualnomadVirtualnomad Před 3 lety +508

    For Mongolians wooden walls at that time probably looked like some practical joke someone put for them

    • @ray101892
      @ray101892 Před 3 lety +92

      Mongolians: "wtf you mean we dragged these trebuchets all this way when we could have just thrown fire arrows and flammable oil at them?"

    • @civilengineer3349
      @civilengineer3349 Před 3 lety +10

      @@ray101892 fire arrows would likely not be effective.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 3 lety +9

      @@ray101892 There is a simple countermeasure to this. Water. Throw buckets of water on the walls, it wouldn't catch the fire so quickly.

    • @1020Lester
      @1020Lester Před 3 lety +33

      @@Vitalis94 More like sand. Water is much more vital when it comes to siege warfare. Even the dirty water.

    • @lyonvensa
      @lyonvensa Před 3 lety +13

      Not to mention the Rus don't have forts or anything that's easily defensible. Their towns are usually built in open, flat plains. Even the Mongol horsemen is useful in besieging Rus towns because of it.

  • @byrdqamar36
    @byrdqamar36 Před 3 lety +454

    Land: exists outside of the Mongol Empire
    Mongols: I took that personally

  • @Romaboo680
    @Romaboo680 Před 3 lety +354

    Mongol envoys: Exist
    Rus: And I took that personally

    • @zoranmancic4340
      @zoranmancic4340 Před 3 lety +10

      Even though they are Dissunified they keep killing Envoys

    • @yougetonthathorseyougottar6126
      @yougetonthathorseyougottar6126 Před 3 lety +4

      Ok, fine. That's all I needed.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @NUSensei
    @NUSensei Před 3 lety +478

    "Irrelevant little town" sounds like a description by the same real estate agent as the one who passed over the fishing village of Edo.

  • @DOMDZ90911
    @DOMDZ90911 Před 3 lety +604

    The mongols weren't racist! They killed everyone equally

    • @arda213
      @arda213 Před 3 lety +91

      Alternative:
      Mongols were secular! They killed men of all religion equally.

    • @ongkhuongduy3498
      @ongkhuongduy3498 Před 3 lety +40

      hey, How do you know they didn’t? A hole is a hole once the city fells.

    • @arda213
      @arda213 Před 3 lety +22

      @@scintillam_dei
      Dont tell me, I am Turkish. We learn Huns in school as a Turkic group. Turks were also Tengrists before conversion to islam.

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Před 3 lety +5

      @@scintillam_dei huns were athiest. and mongols are also athiest. literally 50% of modern mongolia is athiest and athiesm was more dominant in the mongol empire era

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Před 3 lety +3

      @@scintillam_dei no elite mongols converted to buddhism post 44 era. ur typical arat didnt had any religion.
      mongoliin nuuts tovchoo clearly states esuhei chingis father was athiest.
      till this day mongolia dont have "god" as word.
      calling "tengri" religion lmao. tengri literally means sky. closest thing we have mongolian folk religion is boo morgol

  • @TheSamuraijim87
    @TheSamuraijim87 Před 3 lety +447

    The Mongols absolutely arrived at the best time for an assault on the Rus. There was no true Grand Prince, dozens and dozens of Rurikid branches. The Rus were at odds with their nearest slavic neighbours, the Poles, who were expanding into Galicia. The Scandinavian relatives of the Rus were consumed in their own rivalries. Nor was there any true Byzantine Emperor, nor a true Ecumenical Patriarch to be an external voice of reason and unity.
    The whole situation was deeply tragic, but considering the sociopolitical climate and the brilliance of Batu and Subudei, it seems inevitable. It all makes the Mongol Invasion seem as much a force of nature that really did, as Jenghiz Khan claimed, emerge as divine punishment, as much as mere human beings.
    All utterly tragic. Amazing video.

    • @ElBandito
      @ElBandito Před 3 lety +50

      Mongols had spies all over their potential targets, so it was not a big surprise why the Mongols invaded the Rus principalities when they did.

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Před 3 lety +48

      I'm pretty sure the Mongols were aware of most of the situation.😅

    • @fungunsun1
      @fungunsun1 Před 3 lety +31

      If there was one Rus prince and Byzantine Emperor, it would not save them though. How did that work out for Kwarezm, Poland; Hungary, Qing, etc...

    • @drakonos79
      @drakonos79 Před 3 lety +11

      @@fungunsun1 regarding the Romans (byz), it was the Mongols that calmed the Seljuq/Roman frontier during that time. Envoys between the two were not killed. something about "enemy of my enemy is my friend" or something. By 1300, the Romans and Mongols (via both il-khanids and Golden Horde) were allied through marriage, no need to bring more carnage. Though.. there were reports of Mongol raids in the Balkans in the 1320s. only an envoy prevented an Mongol assault on C'nople. makes ya wonder what could have been.

    • @thomaschinyere-ezeh8645
      @thomaschinyere-ezeh8645 Před 3 lety +20

      Im not sure that would have made a difference... just ask the Chinese and Khwarazmians...both were fully led and powerful civilisations

  • @Caesar88888
    @Caesar88888 Před 3 lety +329

    I am from Kiev, we still have ruins of church where last defenders hid and died, and there is a hill where Batu khan had his camp

    • @TheOlgaSasha
      @TheOlgaSasha Před 3 lety +37

      Yes. There is stil the Batu hill (Batyieva hora) in Kyiv (Kiev) and remains of the cathedral near the National historical museum.

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Před 3 lety +11

      @@scourgeofgodattila3827 was mongolian then later turkified then became russian.

    • @Desh282
      @Desh282 Před 3 lety +2

      I kind of wish my parents didn’t immigrate from ukraine
      I would love to see that

    • @waynedombrowski7568
      @waynedombrowski7568 Před 3 lety +8

      I'm in the U.S.A.,and am regularly disappointed by my country folk and their poor sense of history and time. Oh,to grow up in the Afro-Eurasian Old World.
      In "Europe:A History" by Norman Davies,he mentions a trumpet tune called the Hajnal which is played daily from a tower in Cracow,Poland. The piece stops suddenly in mid-phrase,to commemorate when a Mongol arrow went through the Sentries' throat.

    • @Caesar88888
      @Caesar88888 Před 3 lety +8

      @@waynedombrowski7568 in Europe too not many people are into history

  • @TheR00k
    @TheR00k Před 3 lety +299

    Fun fact about Moscow: one of the parts of the city was (and still is) called Kitay-gorod, which take roots from the words "kita" - a type of wall in Russia - and "gorod" - town.
    China in Russian is also called Kitay. So Moscow had a Chinatown before it was cool.

    • @daco9464
      @daco9464 Před 3 lety +40

      Yes, a Chinatown that has nothing to do with China.

    • @safuwanfauzi5014
      @safuwanfauzi5014 Před 3 lety +9

      root in my language ""kota"(in Malay and INdonesian) mean fort or walled settlement. but later it become word for city yes, in ancient and medieval time. most the city have wall surround it. today city dont have that wall except in old city we can see in Europe, North Africa like Morocco, Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Levant like Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan, India, China, Japan and Russia(kremlin is one of example)

    • @kenh758
      @kenh758 Před 3 lety +3

      Khitan people’s empire (“kita” in your reference or Cathay on early European maps) or Liao dynasty (Chinese chronology) in northern China, which preceded the Jin (a Manchu dynasty, not to be confused with an earlier unified Chinese Jin dynasty) that Chingghis attacked, was not recognized as “Chinese” under the strict one-China policy. At the time, only the concurrent Song Dynasty was officially recognized as “Chinese.”

    • @branimirradosevic528
      @branimirradosevic528 Před 3 lety +6

      in Croatian kita is a slang for dick hahha

    • @TheR00k
      @TheR00k Před 3 lety

      @@branimirradosevic528 even better

  • @lunarphoenix1011
    @lunarphoenix1011 Před 3 lety +410

    Cites exist:
    Mongols: anyway I started blasting

  • @omathanis2143
    @omathanis2143 Před 3 lety +273

    As a person from Russia, I deeply appreciate that you create such high-quality content on early Russian history and raise awareness on in among the English-speaking (and international, too, I guess) audience. These parts of the history of Russia are so often overlooked and everyone is so focused on the 20th century that it makes me sad sometimes. Thank you very much!

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety +16

      I can suggest you learning the history of Finno-Ugric tribes while the RF keep its citizens uneducated. Or you can visit the channel История Руси.

    • @omathanis2143
      @omathanis2143 Před 3 lety +67

      @@Daniel_Poirot you must be trolling

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety +3

      @@omathanis2143 , no.

    • @omathanis2143
      @omathanis2143 Před 3 lety +20

      @@Daniel_Poirot um... then, please, be so kind to explain your comment above because it sounds like utter nonsense to me and, judging by the amount of likes left under my reply to it, the majority of other people. If you like, of course

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety +3

      @@omathanis2143 , the majority of people is not always smart. If you think it's a nonsense, it's not always the non-sense and can be a matter of your education or self-learning. What I'm saying is known by anybody who reads primary sources.

  • @civilizedrevolt6707
    @civilizedrevolt6707 Před 3 lety +520

    “The men of this city rallied outside the walls to bravely face the Mongols in pitched battle.”
    “Predictably, they were slaughtered.” 😂😂

    • @Caesar88888
      @Caesar88888 Před 3 lety +72

      they died like men

    • @lesROKnoobz
      @lesROKnoobz Před 3 lety +71

      @@Caesar88888 and left their families behind to be raped and slaughtered

    • @Volnas97
      @Volnas97 Před 3 lety +45

      Not a great plan

    • @DerHammerSpricht
      @DerHammerSpricht Před 3 lety +36

      @@Caesar88888 they died because of toxic masculinity

    • @davothefirst9371
      @davothefirst9371 Před 3 lety +11

      Bet they did not socially distance or wear masks ! Idiots !

  • @burhanuddin959
    @burhanuddin959 Před 3 lety +298

    That Kalinka tune accompanied by the sight of the burning cities brought tears to my eyes.
    While the Mongols were great conquerers, the people who resisted their invasions deserve an applause.
    The people of the Rus, Iraq, Iran, and Georgia were quite brave to fight till their last breaths.

    • @Manuel-gu9ls
      @Manuel-gu9ls Před 3 lety +4

      A superb tune good choice for this video

    • @GalicianGranddaughter666
      @GalicianGranddaughter666 Před 3 lety +12

      I personally didn't think it was appropriate. I grew up with the Kalinka tune as one that represents joy and happiness. I feel like the tune was only used because it's a commonly recognized Russian tune.

    • @therensdns31415
      @therensdns31415 Před 3 lety +3

      @@GalicianGranddaughter666 same goes with their series on China and the melody Jasmin flower. So weird. Although in the very broad sense, culture and music should be left for everyone to interpret on his or her own, be it an over the top romanticized quixotic gallantry as perceived by this thread, or an orgasm out of very normal life of unknown cultures, there are downsides with such out of context emotionality, and this is i dare say how many became extreme left / right.

    • @burhanuddin959
      @burhanuddin959 Před 3 lety +18

      @@GalicianGranddaughter666 Imo happy tunes when played during sad times evoke a greater emotional response than any sad tune.
      The Kalinka music keeps reminding you about Russian pride, glory and culture while you see the cities burning. I dunno, to a foreigner like me it gives off kind of a "wounded tiger" vibe.

    • @user-td6mu6uu2h
      @user-td6mu6uu2h Před 2 lety +3

      @@therensdns31415 Kalinka is a Russian folk song. Kievan Rus is the Eastern Slavs. from which Ukrainians, Belarusians and Ukrainians will come.
      this melody looks out of place

  • @werw6808
    @werw6808 Před 3 lety +269

    Imagine having an army so brutal that your enemies start thinking its an punishment from God

    • @mijanhoque1740
      @mijanhoque1740 Před 3 lety +53

      Pretty much what the Anglo-Saxons felt from the Vikings

    • @radziwill7193
      @radziwill7193 Před 3 lety +7

      This is the propaganda of the Orthodox Church which obeyed the Mongols.
      And this tradition about the people of Gogs and Magogs in the Roman Empire was about Attila.

    • @hevnervals
      @hevnervals Před 3 lety +11

      @@mijanhoque1740 Vikings didn't commit genocide.

    • @mijanhoque1740
      @mijanhoque1740 Před 3 lety +27

      @@hevnervals They kinda/almost did when they destroyed and took over the 7 Anglo Saxon kingdoms except Wessex

    • @googane7755
      @googane7755 Před 3 lety +18

      The rus were utterly hopeless against such a massive invasion. The cuman who they fought for decades, fell within weeks, their walled cities fell within days and every battle resulted in a massacre. Cities razed and their population erased. You can't really blame them.

  • @LORDMEHMOODPASHA
    @LORDMEHMOODPASHA Před 3 lety +393

    *CENTRAL ASIAN THROAT SINGING AND HORSE-ARCHERY INTENSIFIES*

    • @marseldagistani1989
      @marseldagistani1989 Před 3 lety

      Imagine if the modern Russian army was there

    • @thetwoceasar9883
      @thetwoceasar9883 Před 3 lety +9

      @@marseldagistani1989 imagin if any modern army was there

    • @Trapsarentgay133
      @Trapsarentgay133 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thetwoceasar9883 imagine 1 a10 doing a few passes

    • @rays8521
      @rays8521 Před 2 lety +2

      @@marseldagistani1989 Imagine Smaug from the Hobbit was fighting a sheep

    • @blockraven22
      @blockraven22 Před 2 lety

      @@marseldagistani1989 modern Russian army probably has a good percentage of mongol blood

  • @JoseTorres-in4fs
    @JoseTorres-in4fs Před 2 měsíci +10

    STEVEN I'M BATU KHAN -Prince Evpaty of Ryazan

  • @112steinway
    @112steinway Před 3 lety +79

    "Sir! They've killed another envoy!"
    Mongolian commander calmly restocking his quiver...
    "Shame."

  • @thisguy8973
    @thisguy8973 Před 3 lety +376

    This year, the Mongols are bringing a great Christmas present

    • @ongkhuongduy3498
      @ongkhuongduy3498 Před 3 lety +54

      St. Genghis is coming to town.

    • @tedrow70
      @tedrow70 Před 3 lety +12

      The bubonic plague would be a real 2020 gift

    • @christopherg2347
      @christopherg2347 Před 3 lety +6

      @@tedrow70 Eh, we can deal with it. Modern Sewer and Water systems really makes it hard for a rat/Human transmission to thrive.

    • @christopherg2347
      @christopherg2347 Před 3 lety +26

      "Oh look, they lighted 24 candles!"
      "Those are not candles, those are our neighbouring cities!"

    • @davelait9710
      @davelait9710 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes..... The Hu's take on Metallica's Sad But True 🤘

  • @fikriakmal6459
    @fikriakmal6459 Před 3 lety +85

    Cities: *Exists*
    Mongol: so anyway I start pillaging

  • @richardmalcolm1457
    @richardmalcolm1457 Před 3 lety +348

    "Predictably, they were slaughtered." This might be a summary of the entire Mongol Campaign in Russia.

    • @royalstag3795
      @royalstag3795 Před 3 lety +8

      Why are you limiting the fact they were slaughtering ploicy to their Russian campagin

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety +17

      No Russia didn't exist in those days. And Rus' is Ukraine. I would suggest reading primary sources instead of quoting drivel from Internet pages.

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety +1

      @@royalstag3795 , "Ruthenian". And Rus'/Ruthenia was not destroyed.

    • @richardmalcolm1457
      @richardmalcolm1457 Před 3 lety +37

      @@Daniel_Poirot There's no need to be pedantic - I was refrring to the land by its later historic name. But if you like, fine: "in the lands of the Rus."

    • @MrKakibuy
      @MrKakibuy Před 3 lety +40

      @@Daniel_Poirot Its the same Rus, in all history there was always one Rus, "Kievan Rus" is only the name of the period when Kiev was the centre of the state, later it became Moscow.

  • @blackmoon2128
    @blackmoon2128 Před 3 lety +37

    Meanwhile, Novgorod Republic just chilled there for a while.

  • @VirtualnomadVirtualnomad
    @VirtualnomadVirtualnomad Před 3 lety +53

    Imagine 13th century version of a Group Therapy of those who got attacked by Mongols

    • @drakonos79
      @drakonos79 Před 3 lety +7

      priest - "I'm sorry, we don't have an answer for this, my child. We have never seen such devas..*looks outside window. mongol silhouettes moving in the snowy fog* ... omg, we have to get out of here! *leaves newly orphaned children behind*

    • @Bellasrius
      @Bellasrius Před 3 lety +2

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem +1

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @explosivereactionstv7414
    @explosivereactionstv7414 Před 3 lety +444

    THATS WHY YOU DONT KILL THE ENVOYS. But they never listen

    • @Flavius_Claudius_Julianus
      @Flavius_Claudius_Julianus Před 3 lety +88

      The "killing" of envoys is a nice excuse that the Mongols used countless times to justify war. If you were to believe the Mongγol-un niγuča tobčiyan (Secret history of the Mongols), the Mongols were peacefull people only forced to war by foreigners who killed their envoys, lol.

    • @aleksapetrovic6519
      @aleksapetrovic6519 Před 3 lety +2

      Sultan Selim killed envoys and conquered entire kingdom.

    • @furioussherman7265
      @furioussherman7265 Před 3 lety +9

      Don't shoot the messenger.

    • @christermi
      @christermi Před 3 lety +1

      "Dig it out by yourselves !"

    • @explosivereactionstv7414
      @explosivereactionstv7414 Před 3 lety

      @@aleksapetrovic6519 when you’re one of the strongest empires of the late Middle Ages you could do anything really e.g. subjugating the balkans and taking Christian boys to be a slave army

  • @fatalshore5068
    @fatalshore5068 Před 3 lety +8

    This channel is truly amazing, I very much appreciate all the hard work you guys do. :)

  • @rj5848
    @rj5848 Před 3 lety +138

    Literally any land in Asia and Eurasia exist
    Mongols: Mine

    • @ThelostPenguin0
      @ThelostPenguin0 Před 3 lety +11

      Literally any land in Asia and Eurasia exist
      Mongols: Burn

    • @johnl.7754
      @johnl.7754 Před 3 lety +3

      @quotetheraven90 they only survived because of long distance travel the harder & less motivated it becomes...especially that long ago

    • @jaipreetsingh6566
      @jaipreetsingh6566 Před 3 lety +7

      India : laughs in victory

    • @Bellasrius
      @Bellasrius Před 3 lety +1

      @quotetheraven90 but then they got smoked by the Seljuks

    • @jaipreetsingh6566
      @jaipreetsingh6566 Před 3 lety +1

      @quotetheraven90 what u mean? Mongols are mughals ancestors,this?

  • @denzh6980
    @denzh6980 Před 3 lety +18

    Thank you for the great episode as always! As a kid I used to read great historical novels about mongol invasion by Vasily Yan (Василий Ян 1874 - 1954). When he had worked for Tzar administration in central Asia, and when he traveled in Civil War he learned a lot about history and countinued searching in archives later, so his novels (most of them written in 30s 20century) are very interesting and I recommend them all!

    • @fungunsun1
      @fungunsun1 Před 3 lety +2

      I finished whole trilogy. What a great one it was!

    • @denzh6980
      @denzh6980 Před 3 lety

      @@fungunsun1 It is and always be!!! Yan novels from ancient times are also great. Did you read his Spartacus?

    • @fungunsun1
      @fungunsun1 Před 3 lety

      Yes I also finished Spartacus, but tbh was not impressed as much. It felt fairly basic compared to Mongols trilogy.

    • @denzh6980
      @denzh6980 Před 3 lety

      @@rob6927 Yes but it is not big novel, it is short story (повесть "Огни на курганах") but if i am not mistaken it is about resistance of central asia native tribes to invading Alexander army...

  • @minisaiju7699
    @minisaiju7699 Před 3 lety +77

    Eveyone is early until they refresh...

  • @stalliontv465
    @stalliontv465 Před 3 lety +176

    It makes me think the mongol envoys were really insulting and over the top if they kept getting killed like this. Must be outrageous demands to warrant that most of the time.

    • @CritKhan
      @CritKhan Před 3 lety +57

      The Mongols wanted the Pope and the European kings to travel to Mongolia and prostate themselves

    • @ElBandito
      @ElBandito Před 3 lety +36

      Envoys simply passed on their rulers' words. It was the Mongols rulers who were arrogant, and were justifiably so.

    • @ElBandito
      @ElBandito Před 3 lety +20

      @@user-ox1bh3vh2t Back then the Mongols were still busy with the conquest of the Jin Empire so it was highly unlikely for the Mongols to deliberately insult the Shah.The envoys arrived first and relayed the Khan's words of friendship to the Shah. The Mongol merchants who came months after had nothing to do with the Shah, and they were killed by a greedy governor of Otrar, who took the goods for himself. (TBF there were Mongol spies likely inside the merchant caravan, but that did not warrant a slaughter)

    • @ElBandito
      @ElBandito Před 3 lety +23

      @@user-ox1bh3vh2t What is your source then? According to Persian historians, the Mongol envoys first contacted the Shah for a mutual non-aggression/trade pact, and later sent the merchants, who were then unjustly killed. Chingis sent another batch of envoys to ask for reparations but they were executed by the Shah--which kicked off the war.

    • @arda213
      @arda213 Před 3 lety +25

      @@user-ox1bh3vh2t
      This is the modern neo-liberal western kind of mentality. That you ''matter''. This has never been so much the case in any other part of the humanity timeline. Of course humans always had a sense of ''selfness'' but it was never this strong. In previous ages or in eastern nations even today society comes before selfness. Those who attended to Genghis Khan's funeral knew that they were going to be killed but they did it anyway because they considered it the most respectable of deaths.
      This answer also applies to people that ask why would anyone be the first to climb the ladder? I mean first ones will obviously die! They did it anyway because they were ordered to and yeah they could avoid death by not following the order and running away but this would mark their name in the society as coward and traitor and this was way more important than dying. Because there was also a family that they left behind. If they died heroically on duty, their families would gain much prestige and if they died as cowards and of treason then their families would be treated as ''of spoiled blood''.
      In modern neoliberal societies you dont even know who lives next door so...

  • @fullmetalalchemist9126
    @fullmetalalchemist9126 Před 3 lety +35

    Kings and Generals not saying " we will catch you on the next one" 😵😵

  • @Nly737
    @Nly737 Před 3 lety +26

    The perfect Christmas gift! Merry Christmas everyone!

  • @markuhler2664
    @markuhler2664 Před 3 lety +23

    "You earned our respect. We'll let you live. The 15 thousand around you? They die.

    • @MrJumpingson
      @MrJumpingson Před 2 lety +2

      i have a feeling that was more like another type of cruel punishment to have the prince live and see his entire subject being massacred and his city completly destroyed

  • @mejlaification
    @mejlaification Před 3 lety +2

    Brilliant. Your commentary is becoming more and more poetic. I love it. Particularly the ending words. Thank you. Keep up the good work.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @vasileioskannes723
    @vasileioskannes723 Před 3 lety +3

    The visuals of this video are incredible. Every video outdoes the previous one! Great work!

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @michaelsinger4638
    @michaelsinger4638 Před 3 lety +28

    The Mongols had like 5-6 of the best military commanders of all time with them at one point.
    Truly impressive.

    • @mnemonicpie
      @mnemonicpie Před 4 měsíci

      @@vredacted3125 oh my god dude nobody except Ukrainians cares

  • @kohterg3713
    @kohterg3713 Před 3 lety +54

    Merry Christmas Kings&Generals and to everyone! 🎄🇦🇱

    • @christermi
      @christermi Před 3 lety +6

      Merry Christmas from neighbouring Hellas 🇬🇷🤝🇦🇱 .

    • @josiplisica93
      @josiplisica93 Před 3 lety +1

      Sretan bozic shqiperia 💪

    • @kohterg3713
      @kohterg3713 Před 3 lety +2

      @@christermi Wish you the best pal! 🇦🇱🤝🏻🇬🇷

  • @JonnyChapelow
    @JonnyChapelow Před 3 lety +5

    Kings and Generals animations are just getting better and better every video!! I really enjoyed the visuals in this video.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @tirtharajsarkar6888
    @tirtharajsarkar6888 Před 3 lety +37

    Every damn civilisation had to do one sensible thing: not kill the envoy.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @Freebooter20
    @Freebooter20 Před 3 lety +11

    Great video as always, was pleasantly surprised that you mentioned the "evil town". Can't wait for the epic video on Alexander Nevskiy and some knights from the west ;)

  • @ftwallday3112
    @ftwallday3112 Před 3 lety +5

    Nice. Been waiting for this one

  • @rakibrahman2719
    @rakibrahman2719 Před 3 lety +2

    Really liked the background sound effects of this video. Made the story more engaging

  • @hopeindarktimes9535
    @hopeindarktimes9535 Před 3 lety +2

    Man, what a story and animation! This was one of first history channells on youtube and definetly the best!

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @heloo7773
    @heloo7773 Před 3 lety +41

    The Mongol conquests were probably the most devastating series of Wars outside of the world wars

    • @cameronbrady8465
      @cameronbrady8465 Před 3 lety +18

      They were probably more brutal than the world wars. Genghis Khan was so destructive that he killed more than Hitler and Stalin combined

    • @ThelostPenguin0
      @ThelostPenguin0 Před 3 lety +13

      The mongol Empire is truly the most destructive empire to date. Surpasing both World wars combined

    • @tobago3679
      @tobago3679 Před 3 lety +1

      Timur entered the chat

    • @zuboy4272
      @zuboy4272 Před 3 lety +2

      @@cameronbrady8465 Are you stup*d , Chiggis died years before the invasion of literally many lands

    • @ahmadrahman456
      @ahmadrahman456 Před 3 lety

      @@ktheterkuceder6825 well that is recently estimated meaning the death toll far larger.

  • @Caesar88888
    @Caesar88888 Před 3 lety +56

    fun fact: few years ago Ukrainian government absolutely seriously demanded reparations from Mongolia for this 11 century invasion. Mongols in reply asked if Ukrainians were able to list names of victims

    • @tseegiidavaakhuu7697
      @tseegiidavaakhuu7697 Před 2 lety +17

      @@himalayas1647 indeed we mongols made Russia and China bigger

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem +8

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

    • @Caesar88888
      @Caesar88888 Před rokem +1

      @@vredacted3125 absolutely right russians stole everything including even name. by the way russian leaders were very close with their mongol masters, many russian mongol marriages happenned and even now russian culture has alot from mongol despoty.

    • @MyroslawJartur
      @MyroslawJartur Před rokem +2

      It's a fake fact

    • @sashaaa_27
      @sashaaa_27 Před rokem +1

      @@vredacted3125 dogshit. norse people from Sweden came to Saint Petersburg, thus rus began.

  • @mahadlodhi
    @mahadlodhi Před 3 lety

    Great video as always, the intro was chilling

  • @cesareborgia2034
    @cesareborgia2034 Před 3 lety

    One of the best gifts for Christmas. I love you guys, You are the best in Universe !

  • @lorenzonerantzis6204
    @lorenzonerantzis6204 Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent introduction K&G!!

  • @radziwill7193
    @radziwill7193 Před 3 lety +87

    I am Russian and I cannot watch it without tears.

    • @radziwill7193
      @radziwill7193 Před 2 lety +14

      @@user-gk1ck4bm6x If allies helped Russia in the civil war. Or at least they did not interfere and betray Russia as Czechoslovakians or Poles.

    • @albvscommesincastello6346
      @albvscommesincastello6346 Před 2 lety +12

      Не надо быть Русским. Я Словак и у меня глаза в слезах после просмотра :(

    • @radziwill7193
      @radziwill7193 Před 2 lety +5

      @@StandTallFortress In fact, the Russian Empire planned to colonize Mongolia with Manchuria and Uyguria. And the Soviet Union used Mongolia as a platform for the war in China. Mongolia has no choice but to hope for Russian support, but Mongolia will become part of the PRC, it's only a matter of time. When mining in Mongolia will be profitable.
      Russians do not like Mongols and they do not need anything from Mongolia.

    • @nishhnishh1088
      @nishhnishh1088 Před 2 lety +1

      More Russians got killed in WW2 than the Mongol invasion. If that lightens up

    • @radziwill7193
      @radziwill7193 Před 2 lety +6

      @@nishhnishh1088 In percentage terms, it was worse. In the Second World War, mostly soldiers perished, during the Mongol invasion they destroyed everyone and everything, and not always by their own actions.

  • @rafaelcarvalho3928
    @rafaelcarvalho3928 Před 3 lety +2

    Very nice vídeo. Loved the new features and the art in general! You guys are the best channel!

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @jahwadey
    @jahwadey Před 3 lety +2

    This is great Christmas present. Thanks Kings and Generals😁😁😁

  • @RDA000
    @RDA000 Před 3 lety +34

    "There were no eyes left to weep"

  • @olgathehandmaid
    @olgathehandmaid Před 2 lety +6

    I've learned more from your amazing videos by binge watching in a single day than I ever did in any college course.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

    • @olgathehandmaid
      @olgathehandmaid Před rokem

      @@vredacted3125 Just like the Holy Roman Empire was German?.. ok

  • @johnromeopascual4677
    @johnromeopascual4677 Před 3 lety

    Merry Christmas KingsAndGenerals and to ALL i've been watching all your vids in the pass 4years always watching thank you 4 your history and educational videos

  • @Atomik91400
    @Atomik91400 Před 3 lety +2

    I gotta admit: I do enjoy the fact that the melody of Kalinka was added to the (end of the) video!
    Very interesting and informative content, as usual.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @denniscleary7580
    @denniscleary7580 Před 3 lety +5

    Happy holidays kings and generals and everyone here ✌️

  • @ivanodvajati3967
    @ivanodvajati3967 Před 3 lety +120

    Hungary is the next on the raiding list.

    • @trihermawan9553
      @trihermawan9553 Před 3 lety +1

      @adam all you dont get it, do you?

    • @caniblmolstr452
      @caniblmolstr452 Před 3 lety +4

      @adam all Tatars are considered Mongolic by many. Tatars were the ones who continued to Hungary btw.
      Timur was a Tatar and he had Genghis on his maternal side

    • @caniblmolstr452
      @caniblmolstr452 Před 3 lety +4

      @adam all Timur's grandson was a sultan in India and he called himself a Mughal. Which is Hindi/Urdu/Persian for Mongol.
      Yes we don't consider them Mongol but that is not what they thought of themselves.
      And that issue of Uralic/Siberian.... Subotai was from a Siberian tribe not Mongolian. So there were lots of Siberians in the force that invaded Hungary.
      Further a last point, it is oft noted that when a barbarian tribe conquers a civilized one, the conqueror adopts the culture of the civilized one. We saw tge same happen with the Mughals and Afghan Lodi/Khilji/Tuqhluq dynasties(adopted Indian culture) , Jurchens (adopted Han culture), Rurikids (adopted Slav culture), Bulgars (adopted Slav culture), Mamluks (adopted Egyptian culture).

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Před 3 lety +1

      @@caniblmolstr452 south siberians are mongols. buryats,urainhas etc. even the name lake baikal means "nature lake" in mongolian.
      also subutai was born in west of the upper Onon River. and onon river is in dornod aimag of modern mongolia.

    • @caniblmolstr452
      @caniblmolstr452 Před 3 lety

      @@QWERTY-gp8fd Nope. Uriankhai and other Siberians were forest dwellers while Mongolian are steppe dwellers.
      Just don't comment anything

  • @andreasleonardo6793
    @andreasleonardo6793 Před 3 lety

    Nice historical video with clear explaining of events thanks for sending

  • @UpcycleElectronics
    @UpcycleElectronics Před 3 lety +1

    Nice musical crescendo in the finale. Well written, edited, and composed for strong unexpected investment in your total emotional composition. Well done. You guys are Masters of The *Art* of History
    Thanks for the upload.
    -Jake

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @FRESSY22
    @FRESSY22 Před 2 lety +11

    Maybe someone already commented on this matters:
    Actually, "the falling" of the Church of the Holy Virgin (the so called "Desyatynna Church") is a later legend. Apparently it was destroyed either by the fire or siege engines. It is already proved by historians and archeologists that Mongols have not actually destroyed so much important structures in Kyiv. Most of them that are now lost, were destroyed later because of falling into disrepair in an almost empty conquered city, or were deliberately dismantled for building materials later in middle ages.

  • @wilhelm7450
    @wilhelm7450 Před 4 měsíci +14

    Batu Khan 😩😩😩

  • @NoMoreCrumbs
    @NoMoreCrumbs Před 3 lety +34

    Don't shoot the messenger must be a phrase that exists in all of Eastern Europe and Asia as a result of the Mongol invasions

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem +1

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @Strider181
    @Strider181 Před 2 lety +1

    Damn this is a great channel, cheers for the great simple vids, they have easy to digest info and are well narrated. Top notch

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @monchochp
    @monchochp Před 3 lety +2

    Happy Holidays, I really love the portraits btw.

  • @cirbam2747
    @cirbam2747 Před 3 lety +72

    Mongols be like: Hippy hoppity, your people and land are my property

    • @kingofdragonsgameplay1369
      @kingofdragonsgameplay1369 Před 3 lety +9

      Hippity hoppity, your lands are my property....
      The people are dead.

    • @zuboy4272
      @zuboy4272 Před 3 lety +1

      *starts massacring their own properties*

    • @Righteous1ist
      @Righteous1ist Před 3 lety +1

      LOL. But Mongols and Russians intermixing made the prettiest women tbh

    • @Righteous1ist
      @Righteous1ist Před 2 lety

      @@sosososososo4148 Some are some aren't. You can actually tell which ones are mixed.

    • @albvscommesincastello6346
      @albvscommesincastello6346 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Righteous1ist that is sad.

  • @Emperroroffire
    @Emperroroffire Před 3 lety +17

    Is it a sad version of "kalinka-malinka" since 16:35? :))

  • @Mechinwisdom
    @Mechinwisdom Před 3 lety +1

    Great video! Love your work!

  • @mikedi7850
    @mikedi7850 Před 3 lety

    Merry Christmas Kings and.... 1 of the best youtube channels

  • @yajurka
    @yajurka Před 3 lety +26

    Being Mongol emissary was strange.
    It was certain you'd die, but it was also certain your killers would soon follow.

    • @sholahverassa8582
      @sholahverassa8582 Před 3 lety +5

      I feel like the emissaries should have ditched all the official letters and protocols and say: "Okay, tough guys, you can kill me, I know, I've heard of it happening countless times, but you know what - none of those who had done it it lived to tell the tale. So why don't you be nice and just give the heck up? I have 5 more antions to visit after this one"

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @michaelriddick4059
    @michaelriddick4059 Před 3 lety +5

    Awesome, The coverage of the Mongols just keeps getting better! Have a Merry and safe Christmas, Thanks

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @tommydesetka9495
    @tommydesetka9495 Před 3 lety +2

    Great video! This is my favorite youtube channel by far! You guys do everything to a high quality but can you guys do the history of the west and south slavs as well?

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @Guildelin
    @Guildelin Před 3 lety

    Great video, because of this series I’ve been inspired to start playing a mongol empire in crusader kings 3

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @tatsumakidrex4208
    @tatsumakidrex4208 Před 3 lety +17

    genghis khan a man that no need introduction indeed

  • @redghettosun9785
    @redghettosun9785 Před 3 lety +26

    Who starts a campaign in the depths of winter in Mother Russia. The Rus should have realized these were Badasses on a different level.

    • @Askhat08
      @Askhat08 Před 2 lety

      Mongolian horde originates from Siberia which is much colder in winter than European part of Russia.

    • @ForageGardener
      @ForageGardener Před 2 lety +1

      @@Askhat08 not quite, a bit south of siberia, but cold yes

  • @haroldasbutkus5235
    @haroldasbutkus5235 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Kings n Generals for an Upgrade to Already good Xmas Eve, god bless you guys and have a great Xmas season, Merry Xmas and a Happy New year fellas! 😎

  • @ZoobieDoodie
    @ZoobieDoodie Před 3 lety

    Loving these mini docs! Merry Christmas!

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @TheSturgian
    @TheSturgian Před 10 měsíci +15

    Ambatacausethefalloftherus 😩

  • @alexv3357
    @alexv3357 Před 3 lety +6

    2:43 "...Genghis Khan, a man who needs no introduction..." but also a man who will make _absolutely sure_ you receive one

  • @TheTerranscout
    @TheTerranscout Před 3 lety

    An awesome video as always

  • @bowenc24
    @bowenc24 Před 3 lety

    Can’t wait for the next episode, this is one of my favorite series!

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

  • @dominikbradvica9406
    @dominikbradvica9406 Před 3 lety +60

    Loved it, more Slavic histories

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety +2

      Do you find the history of Slavs interesting?

    • @dominikbradvica9406
      @dominikbradvica9406 Před 3 lety +1

      @@scourgeofgodattila3827 or Croatian Kingdom history, we really dont know much about early historical events suronding Croatia or Serbia

    • @Daniel_Poirot
      @Daniel_Poirot Před 3 lety

      @@dominikbradvica9406 , you can visit my channel.

    • @ForageGardener
      @ForageGardener Před 2 lety

      @@dominikbradvica9406 south slavs come from the sorbs of what is modern day eastern germany, they have called themselves serbs. And yes, serbians, croatians, and bosnians are all the same people whoms distinction only occured from being split under different empires for so long.

  • @nikolajohn6764
    @nikolajohn6764 Před 3 lety +4

    Unbelievable. I was today thinking how good iz would be if u make video about Kievan Russ fall, and u added video today.. Hahha great, thank you so much.
    I love history, now Im all into Russian history tbh, last few months.

  • @thefeudallord3149
    @thefeudallord3149 Před 3 lety

    Great video as always.

  • @RealSaintB
    @RealSaintB Před 3 lety +2

    Your presentation improves with every new video.

  • @user-cp3ju4zs8c
    @user-cp3ju4zs8c Před 2 lety +11

    I grew up in Eastern Europe, the cultural impact of this event is still felt. I was told stories about the "Tatars" from folk legends and folk histories.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.

    • @user-cp3ju4zs8c
      @user-cp3ju4zs8c Před rokem +1

      @@vredacted3125 I never said Russia - so I don't understand your purpose in saying that. I grew up in Ukraine, but felt like saying Eastern Europe at the time...

    • @afdalridwan3813
      @afdalridwan3813 Před rokem

      @@user-cp3ju4zs8c we shared story as well, there's folk story about Mongols from Great Yuan part who want to make Java island as their vassal
      But our ancestor sucessfully vanished them off of the islands

  • @animeyahallo3887
    @animeyahallo3887 Před 3 lety +193

    Napoleon and Hitler : man I wish I could do that.

    • @AngryHistorian87
      @AngryHistorian87 Před 3 lety +32

      @@rj5848 in the winter, no less.

    • @fatalshore5068
      @fatalshore5068 Před 3 lety +44

      Trick is to invade from the east not the west I guess.

    • @johnl.7754
      @johnl.7754 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah most places that they were defeated were very far away from their homeland like Vietnam, Central Asia, Middle East....

    • @johnl.7754
      @johnl.7754 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kimun2059 sorry meant Central Asia

    • @nebsam7137
      @nebsam7137 Před 3 lety +6

      Charles the 12th of Sweden agrees

  • @caesarhimself5296
    @caesarhimself5296 Před 3 lety

    Great content. Well done

  • @huseyincobanoglu531
    @huseyincobanoglu531 Před 3 lety

    Thank you!

  • @michaeldunne338
    @michaeldunne338 Před 3 lety +6

    Nice video on a topic that doesn't get covered much. Maybe this is covered in another video but would have liked to have heard more about why the Mongols were so successful against the various kingdoms/tribes in modern day Ukraine/Western Russia. It was interesting to hear of the contribution of Chinese siege engineers in quickly taking fortified town. Additional insights on how the contingents of Mongols were able to journey deep into "unknown" territory and succeed in fighting on the homegrown of others would be interesting to hear.

    • @vredacted3125
      @vredacted3125 Před rokem

      Rus’
      *not to be confused with “Russia”, which derives its name from the Rus’ but historically is a completely different state, which almost all its existence was at war with the Rus’.
      Just like the Holy Roman Empire was actually Germany, Russia is actually Muscovy, despite their best attempts to convince everybody otherwise.
      Its name “Russia" received only in 1721, when Peter I passed a decree to change Tsardom of Muscovy’s name into the “Russian” Empire (“Russia” originates from Rosia, name used by the Greek Orthodox Clergy in regards to Kyivan Rus')
      Under the reign of Cathrine II Muscovites where even pushed for continuing to identify as Muscovites, and where forced to call themselves “Russian”.
      Lands that “Russia” claims were part of the original Rus’, but actually weren't, are Novgorod, Suzdal, and Ryazan, since in historical texts of XI-XII centuries they are mentioned as separate entities from Rus’. They can be considered parts of extended Rus’, although their culture was distinct from main Rus’.
      In 1493 Moscow prince Ivan III appointed himself to be the Great Ruler of All Rus’. No other kings acknowledged that. From that point on Muscovy started to make false claims on Rus’ ownership.
      “Russia” is an offshoot of Ukraine and not the other way round, despite what Soviet and “Russian” historians have been trying to say for years. Kiev was a developed cultured capital when Moscow was just another swamp village.
      Germany used to call itself the Holy Roman Empire, that didn’t mean they became the Romans, and all of a sudden had a right to claim whole of Italy and its history, but yet, that’s exactly what “Russia” did in regards to Rus’-Ukraine.