Understanding Orthodox Civilization.

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  • čas přidán 21. 12. 2021
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Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @markm2092
    @markm2092 Před 2 lety +2937

    Would be interesting if you covered the relatively isolated Orthodox Ethiopian Church, fighting tooth and nail against Islamic expansion as well as European(Italian) Imperialism. They even invaded Yemen at one point to help Byzanitum fight a rogue Jewish kingdom. Their relationship to Ancient civilizations as well as to modern pan Africanist groups such as the Rastas makes it even more unique.

    • @taherbertolinirodrigues9104
      @taherbertolinirodrigues9104 Před 2 lety +207

      The Ethiopians are myaphasite, which although technically orthodox in the eyes of catholics, is different from greek orthodoxy

    • @sinoroman
      @sinoroman Před 2 lety +56

      He probably forgot about them lol

    • @shaggythewriter8185
      @shaggythewriter8185 Před 2 lety +42

      This... we needed this

    • @Bentley7Cruize
      @Bentley7Cruize Před 2 lety +16

      I definitely wanna see this

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 Před 2 lety +87

      From Balkans to Vladivostok is Orthodox Catholic Church,commonly called in the anglosphere Eastern Orthodox, meanwhile the Ethiopians are Oriental Orthodox,like the armenians on what i remember.

  • @nobodyofimprotance7615
    @nobodyofimprotance7615 Před 2 lety +1611

    The middle ages, that wonderful time when Italy was thinking about being like ancient Greece and Greece was thinking about being like ancient Italy.

    • @marcobonesi6794
      @marcobonesi6794 Před 2 lety +91

      in the middle ages here in italy we were thinking about being like ancient rome and ,in genua and venice, how to establish trading outposts in greece and forcing unequal treaties with the byzantines.

    • @thereita1052
      @thereita1052 Před 2 lety +23

      @@marcobonesi6794 that Is more late medieval period he's talking about the communal times.
      Were Barbarossa came to conquer as Serse did in Greece and Italy was, whit it's many comunes governaments, one of the most democratic places in the know world.
      Then the renassance came and It was all China warlords time trying to unite Italy whit brutal force and general expansion outwards.

    • @marcobonesi6794
      @marcobonesi6794 Před 2 lety +7

      @@thereita1052 nah. It was always brutal warlord style fighting until the spanish conquest of most of the peninsula in the 16th century and then the unification in the 19th century. In fact during the middle ages,before of the rise of the "signoria" system in the 14th century, it was a clusterfuck of city against city.

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 Před 2 lety +3

      @@marcobonesi6794 and faction against faction, clan against clan inside the single cities and provinces.

    • @thereita1052
      @thereita1052 Před 2 lety +5

      @@marcobonesi6794 It was Indeed a battle royale but I'd say thanks to the use of mercenarys and the signoria system It was more brutal than ever. The instability brought constant wars and mercenaries were much brutal in pillaging citys.
      Also the signoria was a much brutal governament in general you can read "il principe" of Machiavelli to understand how the pepole were just a mere tool to exploit.
      The communal sistem at least was stable and lasted for much of the early medival times (At least stable compared to the signoria) and was accountable to the voice of the pesantry and lower class Who voted and policed the governament.
      And onestly greek city states fought a lot too.

  • @olbiomoiros
    @olbiomoiros Před 2 lety +812

    Why is it that you never include Cyprus in your orthodox maps, but you include it in your Islamic maps? The island was 80% Orthodox before 1974 and still is a majority Orthodox today.

    • @janki3353
      @janki3353 Před 2 lety +52

      at 2:20 you can see that Cyprus is on the orthodox map

    • @karambiatos
      @karambiatos Před 2 lety +24

      Because.... He's a bit dumb.

    • @davedark27
      @davedark27 Před 2 lety +14

      @@karambiatos I mean, he even posted a screenshot of a PragerU on this video... He's entertaining but just a few braincells above a Trumpie

    • @apreviousseagle836
      @apreviousseagle836 Před 2 lety +58

      @@davedark27 Right, because Biden is a true leader.

    • @robertortiz-wilson1588
      @robertortiz-wilson1588 Před 2 lety +20

      @@davedark27 You trying to start something you ignorant bub?

  • @cowboybeboop9420
    @cowboybeboop9420 Před 2 lety +263

    As a Bulgarian Orthodox person I`m so happy to finally watch this. I though I would have to wait months to see it. Orthodox civilization is puzzling and complex to understand for us also. I could only imagine what it looks like to a foreigner.

    • @jord19100
      @jord19100 Před 2 lety +16

      Orthodoxy is so burried under the communist propaganda that wanted to destroy it .

    • @AntonDDimov
      @AntonDDimov Před 2 lety +4

      @@jord19100 not entirely though

    • @dimakapeev3156
      @dimakapeev3156 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jord19100 Stalin used the Orthodox church as an ally in WW2 and merged the state and the church. czcams.com/video/2mY0y6wnoEE/video.html

    • @const1453
      @const1453 Před 2 lety +25

      Orthodoxy is not difficult to understand. It is the most straightforward system.
      The problem is that we have been on the losing side since the 10th century.
      Moreover, I would call it the Orthodox Faith rather than civilization.
      I am Albanian Orthodox but I acknowledge that Orthodoxy is today relevant mostly by the contributions of the Slavs.
      I disagree with this guy's mindframe. He is a liberal or enlightened guy. This is the impression I get.
      And one thing that I have become entirely assured this year is that democracy is bad.

    • @hungerquest7862
      @hungerquest7862 Před 2 lety +5

      Just a fun fact we have turkish eastern orthodox community in turkey not too big however a small minority we also have turkish orthodox church as well.

  • @MorbSquad420
    @MorbSquad420 Před 2 lety +368

    Orthodox Christianity, the Church that can trace it's roots to Christ and His Apostles

    • @paladinhansen137
      @paladinhansen137 Před 2 lety +16

      Yessir Amen

    • @Downey-2000
      @Downey-2000 Před rokem +47

      The Catholic Church can do the same thing .

    • @bananamen2316
      @bananamen2316 Před rokem +42

      @@Downey-2000 Sure it can, but it has been corrupted along the way.

    • @sonicnarutoTDpg
      @sonicnarutoTDpg Před rokem +23

      @@bananamen2316 funny we say the same about you regarding Communism and National Bolsheviks

    • @bananamen2316
      @bananamen2316 Před rokem +37

      @@sonicnarutoTDpg Which have nothing to do with the religion and have long since died out, maybe you should worry about the communists/socialists emerging in your countries. 🤔

  • @mrremoveyoureyes1924
    @mrremoveyoureyes1924 Před 2 lety +967

    Just a quick correction: Armenia and Georgia are both Orthodox nations. Georgia is solidly Eastern Orthodox, like the Russians. However, the Armenians are Armenian Apostolic, who are technically a seperate sect of Orthodoxy. However, this is largely because of a theological technicality in the 5th century, and is not really seen as a major issue by the vast majority of Orthodox I know, including myself.

    • @Evansdrad8515
      @Evansdrad8515 Před 2 lety +2

      Georgia is Catholic no?

    • @stantorren4400
      @stantorren4400 Před 2 lety +82

      @@Evansdrad8515 No

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 Před 2 lety +83

      @@Evansdrad8515 if by catholic you mean Orthodox Catholic(i.e. Eastern Orthodox) yes,if you mean Roman Catholic or any other kind of papist then no.

    • @Evansdrad8515
      @Evansdrad8515 Před 2 lety +22

      @@alexandrub8786 I hate papacy

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 Před 2 lety +25

      @@Evansdrad8515 that is the common think about protestants and Orthodocs,meanwhile the common thing between catholics and Orthodocs Is the love and respect for Theodokos.

  • @user-xo9ig8kc3u
    @user-xo9ig8kc3u Před 2 lety +111

    A neat summary, and I agree with most of it, but once again there are couple of mistakes, or questionable statements presented as fact. It's frustrating when people confidently say incorrect things about your own part of the world.
    1. Georgia is a full member of the communion of Eastern Orthodox Churches, and always has been, doctrinally, politically, etc. Unlike Armenia, which adopted Christianity long before Rome did and possesses entirely it's own traditions and origins.
    2. Constantine did *not* make Christianity the 'official religion' of the Roman Empire, he simply ended their persecution and took a personal interest in the religion. But Constantine continued the Imperial cult at Rome, did nothing to act against pagans in the Empire (with the big exception of Jerusalum), and seems to have associated Christianity with his own family-cult of Sol Invictus.
    3. Christian sects in the early Byzantine Empire did largely adhere to ethnic lines, but Nestorians were a tiny minority, the main non-Chalcedonian (Melkite) sect was and is Monophysite (Copts & Syriacs). Monophysites were at the doctrinal opposite extreme from Nestorians (Melkites are in the middle), and actually initiated the persecution of Nestorians in the first place. Nestorians were overwhelmingly found east of the Byzantine frontiers, in Persia and Central Asia (they even reached Mongolia and gave them their alphabet).
    4. "socialist measures" lol. People who regularly watch your channel know what you're implying (centralised bureaucratisation of the economy) but come on, you *know* how misleading describing one of the most hierachical and unequal economic systems on earth as 'socialism' sounds.
    5. No major Slavic merchant class *ever*? I think the Republic of Novogorod would be a pretty exception, certainly Jews and Armenians practically didn't exist in Russia then.
    6. Lingual Map. Armenian isn't a Caucasian language, it has no connection to Georgian.
    7. Attributing Russia's government style to the Mongols, or discussing the conquest generally, is *hardly* 'very taboo' in Russia, and never has been. Actually there are dozens of old sayings, books, films, and even popular songs in Russia about this, too the point its practically a cliche.
    8. Belarus/Ukraine weren't seized by a 'Western Christian' Lithuania, when Lithuania conquered these regions it was still an entirely pagan society. Poland also had nothing to do with these wars at this time, it came to share these East Slavic lands much later, with the union.
    9. Most Russian soil is actually fairly poor, the ultra-fertile 'black soil' region is mainly found in Ukraine, Tatarstan and the Caspian-steppe, both regions outside of Muscovite control for much of its history. Actually, America has more prime arable land than any other nation, 99% of which *was never even used before* European colonists arrived.
    10. Again with the American jingoism, of course the geography was easy to 'adapt' to when your opponents were hunter-gatherer tribes and you had railroads. Nearly all Russia goes *under -30* (imagine coping with this in pre-industrial times) *every year*. The USSR took the overwhelming brunt of WWII, whilst not a single American civilian in America was ever killed, gee, I wonder why USA won the Cold War.. Ridiculous comparison.
    11. Communist map. Comments for missing? Well, Indonesia killed about 500'000 people to squash their socialist movement. Also the PKK in Turkey, avowedly Communist but I guess it's Kurdish separatism in practice. Also the MEK and Republic of Mahabad in Iran. And somehow Mongolia is missing.

    • @nelsoj11
      @nelsoj11 Před 2 lety +7

      4. Read (or listen to) the essay “State Socialism and Anarchism: How Far They Agree, and Wherein They Differ” by Benjamin Tucker. You and everyone else I’ve seen criticizing Whatif don’t understand socialism.

    • @meri7108
      @meri7108 Před 2 lety +8

      the vast majority of nations indigenous to North America were not hunter-gatherer tribes, the image of them as hunter-gatherer tribes is really due to their population being devastated by the combination of settler aggression and introduced diseases, but your point still stands

    • @andyabram4195
      @andyabram4195 Před 2 lety +3

      He was more political than usual in this video, came off looking pretty ignorant

    • @user-xo9ig8kc3u
      @user-xo9ig8kc3u Před 2 lety +9

      @@andyabram4195 Eh, being political or openly biased is totally fine, just don't make factual errors doing it.

    • @masterspark9880
      @masterspark9880 Před 2 lety +1

      And he mentioned the “how many angels can fit on the head of a pin” myth

  • @Jayako12
    @Jayako12 Před 2 lety +103

    There's a great example in the orthodox civilisation of merchant elites taking control: The Merchant Republic of Novgorod. It became a massive Center of culture and trade that was projected towards the Baltic Sea.

    • @tyryonolofing3405
      @tyryonolofing3405 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah! That's my boy! Neo-Novgorodstvo, that's a future for Russia!
      Btw I visited Novgorod a few years ago. It's magnificent, and it has it's own estetics. Now, being more fond of some ideals of republicanism and, I guess, social-democracy if a kind, I even want to create a group featuring merge of this elements.

    • @Jayako12
      @Jayako12 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tyryonolofing3405 too bad it was burnt down to build Saint Petersburg

    • @tyryonolofing3405
      @tyryonolofing3405 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Jayako12 it was burning down on a regular basis, because it was wooden. And it's demise is a result if Ivan 3 deeds, much earlier, than Peterburg even was imaginated.

    • @arpandey698
      @arpandey698 Před 2 lety

      What Russia needs is a new peter the great who stamps out curroption, and ends the oligarchs control of the Russian economy

    • @tingleblade4274
      @tingleblade4274 Před rokem +1

      @@tyryonolofing3405 I still think the Vladimir Land is like the land of the "royal Scythians" of Russia, the rightful ruler. Here Bogolyubsky saw a vision of the Mother of God, and regiments flocked here to the Battle of Kulikovo. Hence the impulse of power, which already in the 12th century burned Kiev as an old place of squabbles, and an attempt to establish dominance. Novgorod for centuries was dependent on this place, in the time of the Mongols in a large sense, even moral.
      I think these relations have a deeper foundation than all "liberalisms", "autocracies". It's something elusive

  • @thealphasam7350
    @thealphasam7350 Před 2 lety +614

    An interesting fact is that the western Slavs almost became orthodox. In the 9th century a the duke of Moravia invited greek missionaries to stop the growing HRE influence. They actually developed cyrillic, the alphabet that most of the slavic orthodox nations use today. Anyway the duke was eventually overthrown by Svatopluk. This guy was actually pretty competent and expanded Great Moravia and pushed out the german influence. One of the things he did is that he exiled the orthodox archbishop, because he saw him as having too much influence and also an ally of the previous duke(He also exiled all of his scholars). They then moved to neighboring orthodox states in the Balkans and Russia, bringing the alphabet with them. With this, the catholic church returned to Moravia and stayed there. After the death of Svatopluk there was a power struggle between his sons, right in time when the Hungarians arrived and conquered the territory. After that, the Hungarians adopted the dominant religion, so became Catholic. If it weren't for Svatopluk, it is very possible, that we could've seen European civilizations, divided exactly by the lines of the Iron Curtain.

    • @starmaker75
      @starmaker75 Před 2 lety +52

      Yeah the western Slavic(Poland Czech, Slovak, and Croatia) are in this in-between area of western and Eastern European culture. Poland while it is culture similar to other Slavic countries, however it been highly by Germanic culture(granted some of it was because of conquest).

    • @jackyex
      @jackyex Před 2 lety +53

      To be more precise the missionary was Saint Methodius, actually he was so competent that the Pope later appointed him as Bishop of Moravia (the schism hadn't happened yet), but Svatopluk made him prisoner and the Frankish priest Witching was made the Bishop and used the Latin Liturgy, also at the time it wasn't the Cyrillic alphabet that was made for the Moravian liturgy but the Glagolitc.

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety +22

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

    • @kaissersreich
      @kaissersreich Před 2 lety +13

      They weren't Greek. Cyril and Methodius were either Macedonian or Bulgarian, not Greek

    • @jord19100
      @jord19100 Před 2 lety +25

      @@GL-iv4rw don’t compare orthodox with latin america, it is not at all the same. Orthodox is a culture of itself and isn’t descended from westerners at all like latin america.

  • @pedrohenriqueassis7915
    @pedrohenriqueassis7915 Před 2 lety +727

    This civilization videos are the best Christmas gift a CZcamsr has given out, truly amazing content!

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety +5

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 2 lety

      For those interested Lest Darkness Fall/Aphotheosis of Martin Padway
      An Atheist Historian from 1938 ends up in 535 Italy and changes history for the better
      Hindu-Arabic Numerals, Brandy, Printing Press, Paper plus the lessening of slavery is done within a few years
      He is able to rebirth the Western Roman Empire as a more secular/progressive/industrialized nation
      Eastern Roman Empire losses territory to the west but devours Persia. Emperor Justinian lives 20 years past his historical death thanks to modern medicine
      Eventually Humanity has a spacefaring, immortal, time-traveling Atheist Star Trek civilization

    • @ratoimariurs5323
      @ratoimariurs5323 Před 2 lety

      @@christiandauz3742 well this scenario could never ever happen If said atheist did the time travel what would happen is either he would get either locked or even killed and he would not be able to change history în the direction you mentioned even If he wasn,t killed

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 2 lety

      @@ratoimariurs5323
      He gets a loan and makes Brandy to get rich. Being rich and a famous inventor accidentally gets him into politics

    • @ratoimariurs5323
      @ratoimariurs5323 Před 2 lety

      @@christiandauz3742 nope realistically he would still fail even here besides the distillation of alcohol as we know today was invented in 800s in middle east

  • @coldplace4520
    @coldplace4520 Před 2 lety +173

    I think you mostly skip the importance of the Bulgarian Empire, and its conversation to orthodox Christianity. They contributed a LOT to the Eastern World and the Slavs migrating in with the invention of the Cyrillic Alphabet, and giving autonomy to the slavs in its empires.

    • @Scorpio_1991
      @Scorpio_1991 Před 2 lety +27

      Yeah what was up with that? Almost like he did it on purpose.

    • @yoghurtmaster1688
      @yoghurtmaster1688 Před 2 lety +28

      Yes he for some reason barely mentions the bulgar empire infact almost all what he said on the vid about it was wrong

    • @The_Custos
      @The_Custos Před 2 lety +21

      Too often Bulgaria is forgotten.

    • @bananamen2316
      @bananamen2316 Před rokem +5

      The Bulgarian empire did not create the cyrillic alphabet, Cyril and Methodious did.

    • @pinkmann8399
      @pinkmann8399 Před rokem +11

      @@The_Custos balkans are often forgotten because today they're.. honestly very small insignificant nations. its easy to forget that hungary, bulgaria, serbia etc. all had large empires when they're the poorest and smallest and oldest parts of Europe today.
      Though they're also among the tallest and strongest on average Euros. The dinaric blood still runs deep.

  • @scottgoodson1847
    @scottgoodson1847 Před 2 lety +81

    Highly recommend Timothy Ware's "The Orthodox Church" to any interested in Eastern Orthodoxy. Ware is an Englishman who converted to Orthodoxy and has become a Metropolitan (type of bishop). It's very readable for uninitiated Americans, and it gives a lot of this history (and of course some of the theology that undergirds it) in more detail.

    • @PhoebeK
      @PhoebeK Před 2 lety +11

      Also, come and see, there are a lot of Orthodox churches throughout the world, many use the local language and will be happy to answer any questions you may have.

    • @scottgoodson1847
      @scottgoodson1847 Před 2 lety +11

      @@PhoebeK absolutely! I recommended Wares book for the exposition, but must say nothing is quite like directly experiencing the liturgy. I have never lived particularly close to an Orthodox church, but was surprised to recently learn a friend of mine in Evansville IN is in the process of converting to Orthodoxy from Roman Catholicism. Orthodoxy isn't just for ethnic enclaves!

    • @jfo1740
      @jfo1740 Před rokem +3

      Memory eternal, Metropolitan Kallistos Ware, who reposed this August 24.

    • @scottgoodson1847
      @scottgoodson1847 Před rokem

      @Prasanth Thomas true, but the 2015 edition I read still has "Timothy Ware" on the cover--was trying to make it as easy as possible for people new to orthodoxy to find!

    • @MaximusAugustusOrthodox
      @MaximusAugustusOrthodox Před rokem +2

      @@scottgoodson1847 your friend made a good decision ☝️☦️

  • @skeletonkeysproductionskp
    @skeletonkeysproductionskp Před 2 lety +405

    This is so interesting, ever since you showed that you were going to cover this topic I was like: "What new thing am I going to learn here?" Your channel really is an inspiration @Whatifalthist and although my channel is moving away from Alternative History, my videos will never hold a candle to yours! Keep up the excellent work and stay blessed!

    • @EduardoDiaz-wk7ld
      @EduardoDiaz-wk7ld Před 2 lety +3

      Blessed post

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety +6

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

    • @hadi8699
      @hadi8699 Před 2 lety +7

      @@GL-iv4rw I would separate Latin America from North America. Latin America culturally is very different. Not to sure on orthodox but I agree with Whatifalthist on Latin America.

    • @skeletonkeysproductionskp
      @skeletonkeysproductionskp Před 2 lety +2

      @@EduardoDiaz-wk7ld So good I watched it twice!

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety +2

      @@hadi8699 the modern West, Latin America and Orthodox are like sister worlds, this is why they get along so well. All was developed by the centum branch of the Indo-Europeans. The Western world (lead by USA) all have a common enemy, the Eastern world lead by China.

  • @Remembrance1776
    @Remembrance1776 Před 2 lety +482

    Idea: do Native American civilizations before European contact and how they changed in the process. In particular, I’m interested how advanced they really were compared to Europe. It’s hard to get a clear answer today due to biases on both sides.

    • @sinoroman
      @sinoroman Před 2 lety +56

      They had interesting systems. If given the right weapons for defense, they would have developed sophisticated societies IMO. Similar to Japan or East Indies countries

    • @rafa_bra7105
      @rafa_bra7105 Před 2 lety +31

      Hope he mentions the Latin American(excluding the Inca, Mayan, and Astecs cause they are pretty popular). Especially the Brazilian tribes, since I'm Brazilian.

    • @solarsailor1534
      @solarsailor1534 Před 2 lety +42

      I’d love to see a Native American civilization video, especially one that goes up to the present day. To often they are ignored in history, and truthfully even more so in the present.

    • @hanahsbsjshcsh5356
      @hanahsbsjshcsh5356 Před 2 lety +3

      @@rafa_bra7105 Is that Johnny joestar⁉️⁉️⁉️⁉️⁉️⁉️

    • @boaoftheboaians
      @boaoftheboaians Před 2 lety +8

      @@rafa_bra7105 He already did a video on Latin America, unless you're specifically referring to Native Americans in that area

  • @sepic13
    @sepic13 Před 2 lety +71

    Proud to be orthodox Slav 💪🏻👍🏻😊

  • @purelieuvis6377
    @purelieuvis6377 Před 2 lety +52

    This video was basically "What if Byzantium survived " combined with "What if Soviet Union didnt exist"

  • @Carmiel_Balfont
    @Carmiel_Balfont Před 2 lety +349

    The main difference în orthodox civilisations is that, while they all are based on rural people, their lives and troubles, along with their movement to the city, in the Balkans it was more of a fight of the people against the foreign powers and their influence, corrupting their institutions
    For the russians, their institutions became foreign and started to fight to enslave their own people, using themselves of the old facade of religious grace that enveloped the emperor. The Balkans were far more liberal(when not exploited by the ottomans), and often driven by bodies of smaller nobles leading peasants, or, in the best of times, for states like those in România or Serbia, by a ruler that managed to mobilize the church, the nobles and peasants under themselves

    • @nxibba
      @nxibba Před 2 lety +16

      truer words have never been spoken before

    • @nicklibby3784
      @nicklibby3784 Před 2 lety +12

      Wow, i had no idea Serbia had history so cool! Serbia and Romania sound like amazing countries with deep histories, more than many other European civilizations.

    • @Carmiel_Balfont
      @Carmiel_Balfont Před 2 lety +15

      @@nicklibby3784 idk if you're ironical or not, but in case you are serious, yes, Serbia and Romania do în fact, both have quite some history. I personally would say that România has a longer one, but I might not be the best source, you can go search for yourself, the balkans are full of history just as much, if not more than maybe any other place in Europe

    • @bevbevan6189
      @bevbevan6189 Před 2 lety +15

      @@Carmiel_Balfont Just be sure to read for multiple sources since there are many lies told by all sides.

    • @Carmiel_Balfont
      @Carmiel_Balfont Před 2 lety +4

      @@bevbevan6189 indeed

  • @georgios_5342
    @georgios_5342 Před 2 lety +70

    YES oh my god thanks, made my day. Classic Civilization yesterday, Orthodox Civilization today. It's a miracle my Greek mind finds too good to believe

    • @sarantis1995
      @sarantis1995 Před 2 lety +4

      Dod it help you understand our modern Greek identity and legacy better? To be honest I found the video a bit overwhelming, maybe I haven't been as knowledgeable to swallow it easier despite I have been interested in history since forever.

  • @GregMayo213
    @GregMayo213 Před 2 lety +46

    Man just drew a straight line from Ancient Rome to modern Russia, mind blowing how good this channel is

    • @0brens
      @0brens Před rokem +16

      Moscow is sometimes referred to as the Third Rome. As in Rome->Constantinople->Moscow.

    • @tzeentchvonsheo9868
      @tzeentchvonsheo9868 Před rokem

      This channel is stupid american bullshit, if you are amazed you know nothing about history
      Also Russia is literally Third Rome, as someone already mentioned

  • @fullm3taljacket
    @fullm3taljacket Před 2 lety +51

    As a catechumen to the Orthodox church, I really appreciate the lengths that you went through to highlight this very misunderstood culture. I might have some slight differences in opinion on one thing or another, but so what...overall a bang up job!

    • @CHURCHISAWESUM
      @CHURCHISAWESUM Před rokem +4

      The most critical misunderstanding is his statement that Orthodox has a manichean metaphysic

  • @siddxartxa
    @siddxartxa Před 2 lety +91

    yo russian here, actually expected more from you (knowing how deeply goes your research) tho it is hard since historical/social science wasn't doing much during communist regime to explore our history thorouly. anyway it is nice to witness your culture being explained on such a great channel. peace!

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 Před 2 lety +15

      You must also consider how many translation are in languages that he knows.

  • @gustavoritter7321
    @gustavoritter7321 Před 2 lety +40

    Byzantine Empire to its children: Vodka? Real Orthodox drink wine, amateurs.

    • @kosa9662
      @kosa9662 Před 2 lety +1

      Actually vodka was invented in late MiddleAges in Poland or Russia( there is dispute who created it first)

    • @user-rq2ly4bf1w
      @user-rq2ly4bf1w Před 2 lety +11

      There was never a Byzantine Empire. It was the Roman Empire and it lasted from 27 BC with Augustus Caesar to about 1453 AD with Constantine XI. Namely, 1500 years of continuous statehood. Constantinople or New Rome as it was named officially was the only nominal capital of the Roman Empire after the other western emperor was deposed by Odoacer in 476 A.D.

    • @drago939393
      @drago939393 Před 2 lety

      @@user-rq2ly4bf1w "Byzantium" and "Byzantine Empire" sounds cool AF tho. Aesthetically it makes sense to talk about it that way instead of "Roman Empire".

  • @themutant2816
    @themutant2816 Před 2 lety +26

    As a member of the Orthodox community I'm happy to see a CZcamsr making this type of video. I have always wanted to learn more about the fate and its history.

  • @lawrencerose256
    @lawrencerose256 Před 2 lety +130

    I’m Orthodox. Best decision of my life was to become Orthodox.

    • @MaximusAugustusOrthodox
      @MaximusAugustusOrthodox Před rokem +13

      Amin Brother 🙏☝️☦️

    • @antonteodor6305
      @antonteodor6305 Před rokem +11

      Í was born Orthodox, and took it philosophically very serious fór á long time. One of the best decisions of my life was giving up Orthodoxy and Christianity in general. Please reconsider, good sir.

    • @lawrencerose256
      @lawrencerose256 Před rokem +15

      @@antonteodor6305 with all respect, may I ask why.

    • @brazosrio2850
      @brazosrio2850 Před rokem

      ​@@lawrencerose256 I mean, there's so many full of shit protestants converting to orthodoxy and bringing their self righteous holier than thou point of view into leadership positions.

    • @antonteodor6305
      @antonteodor6305 Před rokem

      @@lawrencerose256 Christianity has many components: clergy, ritual, myth, moral code, philosophy - in order of importance, from superficial to essential. I will tell you what I feel and think about each of these.
      The Romanian Orthodox Church is very corrupt. High-ranking prelates are notorious for their wealth and ostentation. Of course, there are great priests everywhere, but the institution as a whole is rather doubtful. And it's not just in Romania - look at the Russian Orthodox Church and how it readily allies with Putin, instead of denouncing his fratricidal madness.
      Christian rituals are beautiful, and I've been appreciating them more and more. I enjoy visiting churches and listening to sacred chants of all denominations (Orthodox, Catholic, Lutheran). Easter is the most sacred and beautiful time of the year for me. Yet these are only symbols, and they are nothing without the essence behind them.
      Christian myth is just that to me. I have not taken the story of the flood or of Jesus' resurrection literally, ever since I was a schoolboy. They were always just stories, useful for expressing the moral code and the philosophical outlook of the religion.
      And so we come to the important stuff.
      I am split about Christian morality. On one hand, I have a poor opinion about the distinctly secondary role ascribed to women - shown as companions to men, who are the primary actors; also, about the strong opposition to homosexuality. Additionally, there's the contradiction of YHWH being shown as merciful and loving, but acting cruelly to humans and even to his own son, incarnated. On the other hand, I truly appreciate the teachings of Jesus. Compassion is one of the most important lessons we must learn, it is invaluable for building a healthy society.
      Lastly, the Christian Cosmos doesn't stand up to logic or to modern scientific fact. There is no trace of evidence for anything resembling the soul. The notions of an all-powerful or an all-knowing being create logical paradoxes. And if these aren't true, then the very essence of Christian faith (and of many other faiths, I might add) is gone.
      Giving up on Christianity helped me clear out internal contradiction and guilt, and helped me open my mind and learn new things.
      But I won't deny that Jesus and Koukouzelis are awesome :)

  • @monarchblue4280
    @monarchblue4280 Před 2 lety +192

    One problem I'm seeing with this video is that even though you've included Armenias Apostolic Church in "Orthodox Civilization" even though they are technically oriental orthodox (very similar to eastern orthodox), you have not included similar oriental churches I.e. the Coptic and Ethiopian churches. These are very interesting and ancient parts of the orthodox and thereby Christian world that you have neglected to include.

    • @monarchblue4280
      @monarchblue4280 Před 2 lety +27

      @Norman This isn't a video about how interconnected the Orthodox world was. This is a video on the orthodox world itself. It's like if you made a video on economically important parts of the U.S. and neglected New York and Florida.

    • @TheWazzoGames
      @TheWazzoGames Před 2 lety +14

      This is speculation, and I can’t speak for the Ethiopian church, but the Coptic church of Egypt played little to no role in the development of Egyptian civilization since the Arab conquests. Of course, there were fringe sizable minorities which had clung onto Christianity over the centuries, but on a civilizational scale, It meant very little.

    • @xiroh1369
      @xiroh1369 Před 2 lety +6

      @@monarchblue4280 naaah ...
      1st of all ur comparison is lacking cuz New York and Florida are like huuuge parts of the whole thing and African Orthodoxy is not
      2. Egypt has been Islam dominated for most of its time (See ottomans in this Vid and even if they were not there was only a minority of Christians and even smaller numberso of othodox ppl) // Same with Ethiopia only 44% are orthodox there
      3. African/ Arabian civilisation is (he alluded to it in the vid) very clan and culture based so they would be waaaay different even if they were a bigger part of the whole civ

    • @danielwest6095
      @danielwest6095 Před 2 lety +19

      Despite some theological similarities, I think it's a huge stretch to say that Ethiopia and Russia are part of the same civilization. Ethiopia is sort of the center of its own, smaller civilization.

    • @emilv.3693
      @emilv.3693 Před 2 lety +3

      The problem is that we are not looking at Africa in this video, we are looking at Eurasia

  • @watchingwitcher3653
    @watchingwitcher3653 Před 2 lety +131

    The problem with this “Civilizations” concept is that they are even more vague than nations. For example, Russia isn’t considered European mostly because of USSR formed and cut off the ends with the rest of the Europe and then US tried to unite Western Europe and to finally be a respected nation among other major European powers. Before WWI Russia would be considered as much or even more European than American due to a fact that America was too much about economy instead of culture and because it was very internal and isolationist. And yes, I know Western doesn’t = European. But that’s the point. Some minor changes in history and voila: Modern Southern Europe is now also considered as a unique civilization. They are very connected to Romans and Greeks, they have Catholicism instead of Protestantism which is actually closer to Orthodoxy in many ways than to Protestantism, they have unique and different climate zone etc.
    Edit: Here are some thoughts about the video. 1. The ruling class that doesn't eat the civilization is not entirely true. Soviet elite's descendants are in many cases already eaten Russia, which lead to 2. No, there was no wide Communist support among peasants even after they seized power. Only poor peasants of northern Russia supported them. And even they would prefer another political group, which was socialist but non-marxist and ethnocentric, namely, SRs. 3. Question: if you look on the faces of Russian aristocracy in 19 century do you see that influence of wide inter-marriages with Mongols? No. That's because there is no one. There is no mongolic influence on aristocracy, because Mongols are far away. But there is relatively large turkic influence since they are Russia's eastern neighbors. And even this influence is diminished by population pressure of core-ethnos. 4. Bad peasants-elites relations have a long story with more dark and more light ages and many reasons. It is also well-explained by thinking about Russian institutions as an older version of European. For example, German peasants lived in pretty harsh conditions too. In fact, they lived badly even in 18 century. And the worst time for Russian peasants was during the rule of Catherine II because she purposefully changed some laws, which means she thought what she's been doing is okay. And she was originally german princess. I don't think this is a coincidence.
    Edit 2: I don' want my critique to make me seem that I dislike video, it is still very good and sharp. For example, parts about colonization of Southern Ukraine as more important than Siberia and Russia before Revolution developing rapidly and many other parts are good and correlate with what I know.
    Edit 3: If a civilization is something that linked with patterns, here is a pattern to you: there are cycles of more liberal and conservative rulers (or times, without link to persons) since early 19 century. For example, Alexander I almost gave Russia constitution, Nicolas I was conservative, then Alexander II came, but then he was killed and Alexander III started counter-reforms. It was broken a bit when Nicolas II wasn't liberal by his own desire. I think it would be better if he was liberal by desire (in such case reforms would be better) or if he was fully conservative (Revolution wouldn't happen). Anyway, he was too weak for such a hard time. In modern Russia this cycles are more liberal Yeltzin, early Putin and Medvedev, then more conservative anti-West Putin. So there is probably a high chance for more friendly Russia in decade or two I guess.

    • @yep9817
      @yep9817 Před 2 lety +23

      Considering Russia as a non european nation started way before the forming of USSR

    • @TheWazzoGames
      @TheWazzoGames Před 2 lety +2

      @UCA_LCGVdRz4lfTcsMShbtrw Russia? Progressive in the 18th and the 19th century? How, if I may ask? During the latter era, the Tsars started implementing Russification policies to homogenize the Empire culturally and ethnically. And on top of this, the Tsars never in their tenure as rulers ever ceded power to the people for their empire to be considered “progressive.” Say for the Duma which was forced in the wake of being humiliated by an Asian power.

    • @jeanssold2131
      @jeanssold2131 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheWazzoGames well yes, but this Duma worked pretty well and it was the plot of the Duma that led to the abdication of Nicholas II, had they been more competent they could have made Russia a republic quite easily given the low popularity of the Tsar

    • @mam0lechinookclan607
      @mam0lechinookclan607 Před 2 lety +11

      It comes to who you ask, i only know it for germany (especially for the east), no matter who you ask, almost everyone will tell you, russia is european.

    • @basedmongoloid2278
      @basedmongoloid2278 Před 2 lety

      Civilization should be considered as something which surrounds a core identity shared between its people, regardless of the differences within. Even if Catholics and Protestants are different religions, each shares a similar underlying mentality and approach to the world. But yes, it is a complex subject.

  • @heathhall-muir8416
    @heathhall-muir8416 Před 2 lety +234

    As an Australian, it’s always funny you don’t include Queensland in your map painting of the west

    • @Terminatorricky
      @Terminatorricky Před 2 lety +42

      LMAO noticed that too. What is he saying? all of Queensland is uninhabited or something?

    • @normanclatcher
      @normanclatcher Před 2 lety +12

      Australian Labrador

    • @bradley8575
      @bradley8575 Před 2 lety +20

      He puts some parts of Alaska and Canada as not Western.

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Před 2 lety +26

      That's because the map is based on EU4 provinces. Only some of them are colonisable.

    • @bradley8575
      @bradley8575 Před 2 lety +6

      He puts northern Canada as blank but Hawaii as western.

  • @Maxipadtriplesix
    @Maxipadtriplesix Před 2 lety +27

    I just love how the map at 22:15 is describing how countries conquered by the mongols inherited authoritarianism, and the only one that isn’t included in this rule is mongolia

    • @andrejkolarik8323
      @andrejkolarik8323 Před 2 lety +9

      Being the ruling class, they didn't really have to face the horrors caused by their conquests

    • @Yirayol
      @Yirayol Před rokem +4

      They didn't inherit autocracy as Mongol Empire was not an autocratic society itself (they had khan elections), on the contrary the autocracy was an answer to the nomadic threat in order to consolidate all the resources of the state to confront Mongols. Moreover, autocracy has more to do with the orthodoxy, where the Church was almost always loyal to the government and demanded the same from the people, so Mongolian invasion just proved this concept true in the eyes of our leaders but wasn't a focal point.

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 Před rokem

      "It's all because of the Mongols" misses the fact just how rare were actual direct interactions between the conquered populace and the actual nomadic invaders. The same applied to Muscovy. The idea of some Mongol slave driver whipping authoritarianism into the sore back of a Ruthenian laborer is a myth.

  • @amerigo88
    @amerigo88 Před 2 lety +179

    This explanation is so badly needed after centuries of Western European centered misinformation and misunderstanding.

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety +12

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

    • @G0TIMAN
      @G0TIMAN Před 2 lety +6

      but its still western european centered. Better than usual but...

    • @G0TIMAN
      @G0TIMAN Před 2 lety +9

      This dude literally said that there was socialism in early medieval eastern rome.

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 2 lety +4

      @@G0TIMAN
      Not ever social program is Socialism

    • @G0TIMAN
      @G0TIMAN Před 2 lety +9

      @@christiandauz3742 For him state bureaucracy is socialism apparently.

  • @SuperAntichicken
    @SuperAntichicken Před 2 lety +184

    This channel radicalized me. Oh and thanks for cranking out another exceptional series. merry christmas to all who enjoy whatifalthist!

    • @bigboineptune9567
      @bigboineptune9567 Před 2 lety +65

      Radicalized you into what, classical liberalism?

    • @SuperAntichicken
      @SuperAntichicken Před 2 lety +81

      @@bigboineptune9567 nah I just think it's rad

    • @freddy4603
      @freddy4603 Před 2 lety +106

      @@bigboineptune9567 this channel has radicalized me into believing societies need a powerful narrative (religion, ideology, whatever it can make) that gives them the drive to succeed and keep moving forward under pressure. Look at the west today - a military humiliation and everyone immediately looses all hope, these people have no story in their minds they wish to fulfill.
      I have yet to find a way to integrate this belief into the rest of my opinions.

    • @BaldPolishBiotechnol
      @BaldPolishBiotechnol Před 2 lety +9

      Merry Christmas!

    • @M_Dun
      @M_Dun Před 2 lety +8

      Have a merry Christmas 👍

  • @herculeskoutalidis1369
    @herculeskoutalidis1369 Před 2 lety +38

    I am greek, and I must say this was an amazing story-telling of a 1500 (or even more) year long story. Keep up the good work 👌🏻

    • @stratos8
      @stratos8 Před 2 lety +2

      Αν μπορουσε να μας πει γιατι σχετικα μετα το 1940 επικρατει η κλεπτοκρατια στην ελλαδαν θα ηταν ακομα καλυτερο

    • @playerxz6485
      @playerxz6485 Před 2 lety +1

      Orthodox cultures by far were hit the worst of every christian civilization you guys are losing so much land to Muslim invasion pretty depressing not gonna lie

    • @00fgytduydrtu
      @00fgytduydrtu Před 2 lety +1

      @@stratos8 Oy vey

    • @GA-od1fv
      @GA-od1fv Před 2 lety +3

      @𝕻𝖆𝖑𝖆𝖉𝖎𝖓 𝖁𝕴 yeah christ is in control like in 1453 and 1923

    • @NoName-xc6cg
      @NoName-xc6cg Před rokem

      @@stratos8 γιατί πριν το 40 είχαμε υγιές πολιτικό σύστημα;
      Συν ότι τις δεκαετίες 50 και 60 είχαμε τεράστια οικονομική ανάπτυξη

  • @rawka_7929
    @rawka_7929 Před 2 lety +17

    I think you could've covered the Bulgarians more as they were quite influential at the time, at their golden age being the first Slavic cultural hub and being responsible for spreading Orthodoxy to a lot of Slavs and the Cyrillic Alphabet, the successes of leaders like Boris I and Simeon The Great shouldn't really be ignored

  • @timurermolenko2013
    @timurermolenko2013 Před 2 lety +55

    There іs a huge mistake associating everything Eastern European with Russian and vice versa

    • @gustavoritter7321
      @gustavoritter7321 Před 2 lety +14

      It makes sense actually, Russia is the big boy there and it has probably more than half of said region's population. It is the trend maker.

    • @timurermolenko2013
      @timurermolenko2013 Před 2 lety +4

      @@gustavoritter7321 kinda, but if you subtract non-muscovite people and take only European part, which is also largely exaggerated, then you see that it's even less then half population

    • @innosam123
      @innosam123 Před 2 lety +9

      @@timurermolenko2013 Subtracting ‘non-Muscovites’ is like removing the Great Plains from the US. Now you have a massive gaping hole.

    • @gustavoritter7321
      @gustavoritter7321 Před 2 lety +2

      @@timurermolenko2013 But why would you do that? lol

    • @gustavoritter7321
      @gustavoritter7321 Před 2 lety +6

      @@innosam123 Exactly, subtracting non-Muscovites would be like subtracting non-Anglo Saxons from the US, the country would just fall apart and it wouldn't be the same thing.

  • @Rabid_Nationalist
    @Rabid_Nationalist Před 2 lety +28

    Orthodox here! Hope you do a good job!

  • @SimpleReally
    @SimpleReally Před 2 lety +8

    The Arabs used to call tedious, overly philosophical and unhelpful conversations "byzantine conversations".

    • @DavidChristosAlexandros
      @DavidChristosAlexandros Před 2 lety +7

      That’s very funny because the Romans used to say the Greeks were blabber mouths who think too much also. It seems the Greeks got this reaction from many peoples. Lol

  • @astrobullivant5908
    @astrobullivant5908 Před 2 lety +18

    @5:42,
    The question of "How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?" was referenced by Thomas Aquinas when he was criticizing the traditional Medieval Scholasticism found in authors such as Duns Scotus, but there is no evidence that anyone in the Eastern Roman Empire or Western Europe ever actually extensively explored such a topic. Aquinas raised the question ironically to criticize the Scholastics' academic methods.

    • @TheEvolver311
      @TheEvolver311 Před 2 lety +9

      Its because his research is poor and more focused on glorifying northern European protestant culture as the "objectively superior" culture. He even went on a tirade to rationalize how the top down communist state capitalism of China actually not socialism because he knows that the clear reality of their economy rising to eclipse the free-trade western economic model doesn't actually fit in his very narrow world view.

    • @laststand6420
      @laststand6420 Před rokem +1

      ​@@TheEvolver311 How else should you view a culture that has literally a globe spanning reach? Orthodoxy has certainly showed its staying power, and is formidable... But to pretend it is on an equal footing with the British and American empires requires quite a stretch of the imagination.

  • @gheorghitaalsunculitei9146
    @gheorghitaalsunculitei9146 Před 2 lety +38

    30:00 Gdp per capita (nominal),2021 according to IMF
    Hungary: 18,075$
    Poland: 16,930$
    Romania: 14,968$
    Ukraine: 3,984$
    Putting Romania in the same boat with Ukraine is a bit disingenious
    I know that Romanians usually talk bad about their country but it must be understand that we are the kind of people that tend to see the glass half-empty

    • @fgkuv5232
      @fgkuv5232 Před 2 lety +6

      I would make an arguement that commies fucked up all the soviet republics. Even the baltic ones got horrible suicide rate from ussr, and they got the best deal.

    • @jeanssold2131
      @jeanssold2131 Před 2 lety

      @@fgkuv5232 and after all of that you still have the people who defend communist regimes...

    • @fgkuv5232
      @fgkuv5232 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jeanssold2131 sadly a lot of russians are defending commies

    • @lolnoobus
      @lolnoobus Před 2 lety +2

      @@fgkuv5232 Who fuck who? Baltics grow under USSR. After indepentence they dying off 30 years non stop. And after all of that you still have the people...

    • @lolnoobus
      @lolnoobus Před 2 lety +2

      @Frigidlava yep, BEFORE ww2. WW2 hits Baltics harder. Much harder.
      I can agree that WarPact trade politics was not the best, but that help to rebild economics of mostly annigilated contries and make them grow.
      You cant look, for example, on nowdays Ukrain and say, that all problems that this country have Now, after 30 years of capitalism, 30 years of stealing, selling off all that they have of UkrSSR, making corrupt deals with West, lost of Crimea and civil war - look guys, their economy suck, haha, commi-commi hur-dur.

  • @aliksanon6491
    @aliksanon6491 Před 2 lety +125

    11:55 i am guessing you just made a mapping mistake, but putting the georgian church under thr Armenian can be considered pretty offensive. There are some similarities but both operate under seperate doctrines and even branches of orthodoxy with georgian being more alike byzantine with armenian going more or less its own way

    • @fgkuv5232
      @fgkuv5232 Před 2 lety +16

      He said in the video that the churches are separate, so it is just a coloring mistake

    • @jackyex
      @jackyex Před 2 lety +7

      Armenia is much closer to Coptic and Ethiopian Orthodox.

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

    • @whitefox8376
      @whitefox8376 Před 2 lety +5

      ​@@GL-iv4rw
      The ability of people to co-exist includes all races, the problem stems in the ability to find any reason to hate one another.
      Putting things like race, ethnic background as a reason for most things is pretty narrow minded. if people wanted to unite themselves it would take breaking communication barriers, settling major cultural clashes (norse human sacrifice vs christian all life matters, a religious example but you get the point) and a bit of open mindness which by a bit i mean not branding an entire group of people by one's actions. Anyway it's not ethnic background that unites people
      Here in the UK we are pretty united and ethnically diverse, using race, ethnicity for anything outside medicine (there are biological differences and they shouldn't be ignored, black people have more melanin and are less likely to get skin cancer) and other niche occasions, is looking at the world in a dumb way, which only encourages other people to do the same and make poor decisions. If you view race as a reason to love someone, someone will view race as a reason to hate someone because you made race a reason to do anything.
      Naturally speaking, nature sucks, if you like the idea of being an animal and having to kill to survive, letting the weak die and so on, good for you but i don't.
      The comment was talking about a religious divide which had nothing to do with ethnicity and race so your reply wasn't only malicious for afore-mentioned reasons, it was literally uncalled for.

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety

      @@whitefox8376 Theres a limit to the level of difference you can tolerate, until you can find a higher common denominator. Ethnics in the UK are still white, are still Indo-Europeans and still part of the Western civilization - hallmark of democracy. Easterners such as China are much too different for you to co-exist with, you guys are just not ready to reconcile with such vast difference of a world. Them being yellow, Sino-Tibetans and part of the Eastern civilization - hallmark of meritocracy. Total polar opposite

  • @lucaspaul8478
    @lucaspaul8478 Před 2 lety +2

    broski, I've watched your channel grow and grow and I've seen your content develop into one of my personal favorite channels on youtube. keep it up my man

  • @gabrielbartlett5558
    @gabrielbartlett5558 Před 2 lety +50

    Great video.
    However a quick correction:
    Constantine simply made Christianity legal.
    Theodosious 1 made it the official religion in 380.

  • @AbrahamLincoln4
    @AbrahamLincoln4 Před 2 lety +4

    30:30 That cheeky whisper when he stops talking though lol.

  • @timur849
    @timur849 Před 2 lety +4

    Byzantines did NOT debate on how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. It arose as a XVII century critique of medieval scholastics. Even when it is claimed that this discussion took place, this question is attributed to Thomas Aquinas, who in no way was Byzantine.

  • @voxaliqui4279
    @voxaliqui4279 Před 2 lety +17

    You have to take in consideration that Russia suffered the most from the two world wars... they also had two revolutions in the 20th centary and also catastrophic market economy transition in the 90s. Considering all of this... they still remaind a country with 5th economy in terms of PPP and very high human developent index, and also 2nd most powerful army and very lowe debt. Now compare this to the "civilized" catholic world of America and Southern Europe

    • @edgarratsep3631
      @edgarratsep3631 Před 2 lety +2

      I doubt anybody from the west cares about that. They are to biased to consider this

    • @lollllolll.
      @lollllolll. Před 2 lety

      Yeah, you can cut Russias head and 4 come back.
      This is why i think Russia won't collapse in the coming centuries

  • @gwho
    @gwho Před 2 lety +2

    YES! i love this deep dive analysis that frame things on a grand scale, and leaves you with the underlying thread of insight.

  • @danielwest6095
    @danielwest6095 Před 2 lety +16

    Never clicked faster in my life

  • @krunkle5136
    @krunkle5136 Před 2 lety +3

    Love all these careful summaries of so many different civilizations.

  • @Fantabiscuit
    @Fantabiscuit Před 2 lety +7

    You keep missing the 25 million Orthodox Copts in Egypt. And your old maps ignore the north African Orthodox church as the majority. Also in Lebanon Syria Palestine had some majorities too

    • @user-dl5ln3wd6f
      @user-dl5ln3wd6f Před rokem

      They are much more less than 25 million.

    • @avoider707
      @avoider707 Před 3 měsíci +1

      this is eastern orthodoxy not oriental orthodoxy

    • @Fantabiscuit
      @Fantabiscuit Před 3 měsíci

      @@avoider707 just add the bretheren. Geez

  • @sechernbiw3321
    @sechernbiw3321 Před 2 lety +19

    5:37 The West was able to get a lot of knowledge about the Greek and Roman classics from Muslims during the Crusades, its just that the Muslims got their knowledge from trade and as part of peace treaties with the Byzantine Empire. The West also got a lot of knowledge directly from trade with the Byzantines, or from Byzantine scholars fleeing the Byzantium for the West as the Empire weakened. Both statements are true. There isn't any contradiction.
    The Arab world also got much of their knowledge from Syriac language texts written by Oriental Orthodox Christians and Christians of the Church of the East, both living and writing within the Arab empire.

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 Před rokem +1

      One of the reasons why it didn't take long for Arabs to capture Syria, Egypt and other Eastern Roman lands inhabited by Miaphysite Christians is because of just how much Constantinople despised and persecuted them while they were within its reach. Ironically, that's also how a thousand years later the Reformation survived in Hungary while it was eradicated by the Habsburgs in Bohemia-because most of Hungary was at this point ruled by the Ottomans who didn't care one bit about Christian sectarian divisions.

  • @quentinnorris2591
    @quentinnorris2591 Před 2 lety +5

    More please. Awesome content. I dig the upload schedule.

  • @henrykurniadi4805
    @henrykurniadi4805 Před 2 lety +40

    No. Orthodoxy is not Manichean. Orthodox is indeed highly ascetical, a quality which Western civilization now lacks albeit share same Christian heritage. The Early Church has spent centuries fighting heresies, and among them, Gnosticism ranks as the first heresies (with Simon Magus in Acts 8 as the first heresiarch). The main differences here is that Orthodox believe that the material world and the body are inherently good, but due to the Fall, it needs to be glorified through emptying ourselves from sinful tendencies so that Grace can enter and return it to the original state. This is diametrically opposed by the Gnostics which believe materials are inherently evil and need to be destroyed in order for the soul to be free. The latter, strongly exhibit Platonism and Neo-Platonism tendencies. In fact, Neo-Platonism has been disturbing the Church for centuries as it is technically root of all heresies, like: It is impossible for Christ who is God to become truly Man at same time (Arians, Apollinarian, Docetist, Euthycians), or it is impossible for the Icons to convey God's Grace and can be venerated since those things are mundane (Iconoclast), or it is impossible for Baptism and Eucharist to bring Regeneration and truly be Body and Blood of Christ (like modern Protestantism which also has roots on Bogomils and Tondrakians). Anti-material tendency is strongly associated with Far Eastern religions, who fell to extreme destructive path to attain salvation (like burning themselves in a pyre) or fell to the equally opposite destructive extreme by falsely believed that fleshly desires can be used to attain salvation "if properly used" (like Tantras or Daoist sexual practices). Those have nothing to do with Orthodox, Christian teachings.

    • @mrwtfwhy
      @mrwtfwhy Před 2 lety +4

      While it is true that Orthodox Christianity is non-dual Orthodox history is very, very messy (just think of the Hesychast controversy) and I can forgive whatifalthist for being confused on that front. The differences between Western and Eastern Christianity are deceptively subtle and people used to Western brands of Christianity will naturally be confused as they miss just how many worlds apart the Orthodox faith really is from modern Western Christianity.

    • @user-zv9do2cd4j
      @user-zv9do2cd4j Před 2 lety +5

      I was thinking about writing specifically about that issue, when your comment appeared. It is sad to hear about Orthodoxy being manichean, when there are so many orthodox writings against them, as well as depiction of our teaching that spiritual equals good and flesh equals bad, when as you've rightfully said that Orthodoxy is non-dual and spiritual things as well as spirits themselves can be bad.
      And in the video, while displaying a Western outlook on the morality, author showed a more manichean picture which doesn't show real catholic struggle against different issues just after the split as well as not showing richness of Orthodox thought, when several things could coexist in theological sphere creating possibility of theologumena. Thank you for your comment! It's good to see a true statement about our faith.
      On the other issue, describing russian or eastern roman economical policy as socialistic is a misleading method. This and other things like this create a very distorted picture of Orthodox world and it's worldview.

  • @balkanharry1755
    @balkanharry1755 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Eastern Orthodoxy wasn't entirely opposed to classical philosophy. It holds Socrates, Plato and Aristotle to a very high regard, especially compared to other philosophical schools of thought and that's mostly because orthodox theology was greatly influenced by their ideas since the early church fathers had studied under schools that followed their way of thinking. It opposed philosophies before and after "the great Hellenes", with neoplatonism as their most hated enemy.

  • @armwrestling-like-the-vide6030

    This is a brilliant video, thanks. Just what we needed!

  • @eldenparker5379
    @eldenparker5379 Před 2 lety +23

    I'm loving this understanding civilizations onslaught

  • @andrewborah5928
    @andrewborah5928 Před 2 lety +3

    Nice to see 3 videos in the span of a week. Love your videos!

  • @elvisfifo
    @elvisfifo Před 2 lety +17

    Dude your content is absolutely incredible! I've learned so much about the history of the world cuz of you.

    • @louvendran7273
      @louvendran7273 Před 2 lety

      The comments suggest a hint of fascist rhetoric. It's not communism that was the issue, it was state autocracy. There is a major difference between the two. Moreover capitalism is failing in the west. In another 50 years, the pro US/western comments will be a joke to a dominant autocratic China and emerging India. Russia is capitalistic today but autocratic. It is still plagued by the same problem. Open your eyes and think critically.

    • @louvendran7273
      @louvendran7273 Před 2 lety

      @Frigidlava Agreed about the regimes but remember the proletariat will always be the majority thereby implying democracy, neither is capitalism as it is even more autocratic as its aim is monopoly. That is the reason that elites pump a whole load of cash into promoting minimum government services, worker rights and minimum wages. As pointed above at least communism implies collectivism which was ignored by these regimes that followed them. I think the ultimate capitalist state is China by being both autocratic and capitalist at the same time. It will come to dominate the world in the next 3 decades, guaranteed. Second best is the US which is a duopolistic party system that is capitalistic. I would rather live in western or northern Europe or Oceania which is more socialistic and multi party.

    • @matenagy9244
      @matenagy9244 Před 2 lety

      @@louvendran7273 Now it's good living in Western or Northern Europe because they sacrifice the far future for today's well-being.

  • @franklinhadick2866
    @franklinhadick2866 Před 2 lety +2

    I dont know how you keep putting out such high quality on a consistent basis...very interesting and well presented as is your norm.

    • @tzeentchvonsheo9868
      @tzeentchvonsheo9868 Před rokem

      these videos are bullshit made by a stupid american, you really should read&think more if you find this satisfactory

  • @scholaroftheworldalternatehist

    Let me summarize Orthodox civilization in 1 sentence: "And then things got worse."

    • @guhr9007
      @guhr9007 Před 2 lety +16

      Nah, thats Africa and Latin America for you.

    • @markm2092
      @markm2092 Před 2 lety +32

      @@guhr9007 right now Africa is doing better than the decolonization period, and arguably for the natives in places such as Congo and Kenya, better than the colonization period. I'm not as educated on Latin America though.

    • @henrykurniadi4805
      @henrykurniadi4805 Před 2 lety +20

      Nope. It's about up and downs. As he said in the end, "pull themselves up from the jaws of death"

    • @fritoss3437
      @fritoss3437 Před 2 lety +2

      Actually no

    • @DiMacky24
      @DiMacky24 Před 2 lety +25

      As it stands now, Orthodox civilization is the weakest of the major civilizations (outside of nukes), but it's perk is that Orthodoxy is growing rapidly in the west, and religiousity is seeing a rebound growth in the east. Orthodox society is more immune to decadence than any of the other civilizations so when the similar demographic collapses caused by decadence hit all other civilizations simultaneously, the Orthodox civilization will possibly be seeing a birth rate recovery. Also, global warming is going to disproportionally benefit Russia with expansion of vast agricultural lands, ice free ports along the arctic, and Russia's long history of being effectively land locked will end.

  • @purpledevilr7463
    @purpledevilr7463 Před 2 lety +33

    Eventually I’d like a video about how to make a civilisation.
    Break down all the elements and what certain features cause and what happens when combined with others.

  • @Jonnybravo589
    @Jonnybravo589 Před 2 lety +6

    Proud Orthodox here. Great video, come to our local Greek festivals. There’s good one in Elkins park, Broomall, Upper Darby- I remember correct you live near Philly

  • @staymad2792
    @staymad2792 Před 2 lety +6

    My go-to channel for revising historical facts and arbitrarily bending definitions! I look forward to more videos! 👍

  • @reecev2087
    @reecev2087 Před 2 lety +42

    As much as I'm loving the posts every other day now, I would prefer one every week or two over waiting as long as we did lol. thanks Rudyard

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety +2

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

    • @reecev2087
      @reecev2087 Před 2 lety +3

      @@GL-iv4rw Cool take dude. Has nothing to do with my comment though

    • @ivangrozny496
      @ivangrozny496 Před 2 lety +2

      Agree, I'd rather he had a consistent update schedule than have no videos for a month or 2 and then have 2 or 3 within a week of each other

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety

      @Frigidlava they migrated to Asia and became part of the Eastern world

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety

      @@reecev2087 its naturally easier for white ppl to reconcile themselves due to most having the same Indo-European root, from the same continent and solely developed Western civilization. Unlike Asia which is much more diverse. This is why whites are the dominant race. Future historians will look back at modern history and rename it the 'Western era' or the 'period of the West' or the 'White/European age' while their time period will become the new modern history.

  • @awesomemangoes8072
    @awesomemangoes8072 Před 2 lety +5

    I love these back to back uploads!

  • @LiArrowMaster
    @LiArrowMaster Před 2 lety +1

    The best half hour I have spent in years. Genius! Thank you!

  • @arbendit4348
    @arbendit4348 Před 2 lety +16

    Illyrians weren't as large as you make them out to be. For example Thracians were in modern day Bulgaria and Romania, not Illyrians.

    • @beadsman13
      @beadsman13 Před 2 lety +7

      This chanel is not an official history channel. So this guy speak what he think it is right. He barely mentioned First Bulgarian empire. It is like it (First Bulgarian empire) didn't played role in christionizing Rus and give it the Cyrillic alphabet.
      Curently I read a book "History as a test for intelligence". Somehow couple of people come to Balkans and decided to make Bulgaria and surprisingly Bulgaria is at the same place till this day. Don't forget that Bulgaria was neghbouring with the greatest empire at that time East Roman empire.

    • @deacudaniel1635
      @deacudaniel1635 Před rokem

      Yes.Also, Illirians, Thracians and Dacians were closely related and were a part of a greater Paleo-Balkanic branch of Indo-Europeans.

  • @olbiomoiros
    @olbiomoiros Před 2 lety +11

    By the way, Georgians are actually part of the Eastern Orthodox Church. It’s the Armenians that are Oriental Orthodox. Both are orthodox though.

    • @geoberaia6007
      @geoberaia6007 Před rokem

      In the Orthodox world, Georgia is considered the lot of the Mother of God

    • @HellenicLegend7
      @HellenicLegend7 Před 27 dny

      How are they BOTH Orthodox?! Does the 4th Ecumenical Council not matter to you?!

  • @Indubb
    @Indubb Před 2 lety +47

    I'd be interested in future videos on the Byzantines, you talked about several interesting topics that could be future videos from religion to culture. The part about the Balkans developing into a country like France seems like an interesting alternate history too.

    • @mastersafari5349
      @mastersafari5349 Před 2 lety +1

      Mountainous regions in the center of a map rarely develop in their own separate states. Imagine if Alps, Pyrenees or Caucasus united as a single entity.
      Though I might be missing something here. If you have any counterexamples I'd be glad if you showed them to me.

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety +3

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

    • @user-xo9ig8kc3u
      @user-xo9ig8kc3u Před 2 lety +2

      That was some pretty dubious speculation, France had nearly a quarter of Europe's population at points, I doubt the Balkans with it's rugged geography would ever produce a long-term state. I mean SW slavs even all speak the same language and look at their unity.
      Toynbee did write in "A Study of History" that Orthodox civilisation dealt a mortal blow to itself in the Byzantine-Bulgar wars, perhaps there's something to that.
      Also, do you want to imagine a world of 60 million Albanians?

    • @yoghurtmaster1688
      @yoghurtmaster1688 Před 2 lety +1

      what do you mean "developing into country like france seem like interesting alternate history"?

    • @yoghurtmaster1688
      @yoghurtmaster1688 Před 2 lety +3

      the byzantines did have the largest and most populated cities during the early medieval ages and the bulgarian empire was medieval hub to slavic culture you can't say a super power can't come out atleast one of those 2

  • @MerkhVision
    @MerkhVision Před 2 lety +8

    0:36 he really said “mystery inside the nigga” lmfaoo

    • @lunalingo4461
      @lunalingo4461 Před 3 měsíci

      That's what I'm saying

    • @spexae
      @spexae Před měsícem

      😂😂😂😂

    • @spexae
      @spexae Před měsícem

      Or it could be “enigma” 0:36

  • @01FNG
    @01FNG Před 2 lety +1

    Kudos for pumping this quality content so fast

  • @MegaTang1234
    @MegaTang1234 Před 2 lety +35

    I've been listening to the "History of Byzantium podcast" and hearing you say things that happen in the Narrative or are said in the end of the century episodes is really satisfying.

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

  • @KamperG
    @KamperG Před 2 lety +5

    Damn man you are blowing up with content. Keep it up!

  • @nikosnikos5082
    @nikosnikos5082 Před 2 lety +5

    as a greek who is intrested in history this is an amazing video where you definitely understand the situation

  • @devils6196
    @devils6196 Před 2 lety +7

    As historian to historian I don't tend to offend you with my comment, so sorry in advance for my language, but English is not my mother tongue.
    Ignoring the Bulgarian factor in contributing to orthodox Christianity, also spreading of it, is fairly incompetent. It is well known fact that thanks to the bulgarian church and language (Cyrillic) during the cultural golden period of Tsar Simeon. A lot of emissaries/priests were infact sent to russia to give them a language in which to write and read thus spreading orthodox christianity to the north, and to all slavic tribes and groups. One of the reason why to this day in russian churches priests still sing and read text in old slavonic (or old bulgarian scripture and language)and use the cyrilic language not latin. A lot of books written during the reign of the 1st and 2nd Bulgarian empire were transfered to Russia, while bulgaria was falling under Ottoman rule. One more, there was a period of time when Bulgars had complete orthodox domination and is not something to be taken with light heart. Nowadays Bulgaria find itself in weak period of time, one of the reason its history to this day is not so good familiar to many historians, so as historian to historian I wish that you take a deeper and meaningful look at it. I hope for understanding.

  • @kendraduli6806
    @kendraduli6806 Před 2 lety +4

    AWSOME VIDEO! I agree with everything you said!

  • @Marquinhos1901
    @Marquinhos1901 Před 2 lety +11

    9:13 thank you for this point. Those who have read Eastern Roman and Byzantine history in depth know that the Romans of the East face existential crisis after crisis in late antiquity and the middle ages year after year.

  • @jstantongood5474
    @jstantongood5474 Před 2 lety +7

    On the patriarchy map at 11:31 you missed Antioch. Historically far more important than Jerusalem.

  • @rekindlefitness
    @rekindlefitness Před 2 lety +3

    This is an amazing account of Orthodox and Russian beginnings, your channel is gold.

  • @erejnion
    @erejnion Před 2 lety +4

    The youth of Eastern Europe have started coming back to Eastern Europe to raise their kids. That's what we've always been taught: when your country is in a crisis, go abroad to learn, then bring back what you learned. You can read this outlook on the world in books since the times of the Ottomans.

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 Před 2 lety

      Yeah is just that now is not only the kids from the elits but everyone so it was felt harder.

    • @erejnion
      @erejnion Před 2 lety

      @@alexandrub8786 It certainly wasn't only the elites in the past too - before communism, I mean. Just only a few of the kids in a family could go abroad because leaving the old parents alone was often a death sentence for them.

  • @emilv.3693
    @emilv.3693 Před 2 lety +5

    2 uploads in a week?!?!
    You're amazing

  • @pharaoh9588
    @pharaoh9588 Před 2 lety +7

    Actually Nestorian Christianity was only dominant in mesopotamia,The rest of the middle East was split between The Dyophysite Eastern Orthodox Church and The Miaphysite Oriental Orthodox Church

  • @airbound1779
    @airbound1779 Před 2 lety

    Honestly this deserves a rewatch!

  • @jamesbuchanan3145
    @jamesbuchanan3145 Před 2 lety +4

    Orthodoxy is the Way

    • @JustinianG
      @JustinianG Před 2 lety

      I agree. I'm orthodox, and I make similar (but better) vids to Whatifalthist

  • @stefanpfeiffermerino7633
    @stefanpfeiffermerino7633 Před 2 lety +27

    What a great birthday gift :)
    Don't spoil us too much XD
    A merry Christmas to you Rudyard.
    Keep up the good work and keep living that awesome life of yours👍

    • @IvorMektin1701
      @IvorMektin1701 Před 2 lety +2

      Happy birthday

    • @stefanpfeiffermerino7633
      @stefanpfeiffermerino7633 Před 2 lety +1

      @@IvorMektin1701 Thank you 😁

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw Před 2 lety +1

      Orthodox, together with Latin America is marginally part of the West, having both descended from the classical West. All harkens backs to the Indo-Europeans (particularly the centum branch) being the ones who developed the Western world. This is why white people are naturally able to unite themselves so easily, with most being part of the Indo-European macro-race all in a relatively same area and take on the world.

  • @Dunarcarn
    @Dunarcarn Před 2 lety +1

    This is an amazing video but honestly there's souch information packed in it's hard for me to keep up. BUT that's a good thing because these are topics and situations I've had no idea about before. So thank you!

    • @andrejkolarik8323
      @andrejkolarik8323 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, when watching these videos with my Dad, we usually pause and unpause a lot of times, sometimes discussing the points mentioned، other times just replaying certain parts. Thumbs up for condensing information into such videos

  • @anb4351
    @anb4351 Před 2 lety +3

    Loving these civilization videos, cover more of them

  • @archerdark7524
    @archerdark7524 Před 2 lety +15

    28:57 This map is wrong: Hungary never choosed communism. After ww1 it happened as a silent coup of the communists, when they forced the incompetent Karolyi to resign. After ww2 it happened because of the soviet occupation.

    • @dougjaffray-StMoP-
      @dougjaffray-StMoP- Před 2 lety

      Hungary during that time were more fascist than the nazis. The communists did the right thing.

    • @dougjaffray-StMoP-
      @dougjaffray-StMoP- Před 2 lety

      @Fact: Islam is wrong tell that to the almost 40000 jews murdered by them in 3 months and then the following 80000 jews deported and enslaved. Or the sick jewish hospital patients they shot as soon as they started to lose grip of power.

    • @catmonarchist8920
      @catmonarchist8920 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dougjaffray-StMoP- sure you aren't thinking of Croatia?

    • @dougjaffray-StMoP-
      @dougjaffray-StMoP- Před 2 lety

      @@catmonarchist8920 100%

    • @atlas5653
      @atlas5653 Před 2 lety

      @@dougjaffray-StMoP- "Let's destroy multiple entire countries, for decades, because muh notzees."
      Neo-socialists are a disease.

  • @spencerbuck1074
    @spencerbuck1074 Před rokem +3

    12:41 I was raised as a Christian and later left when I grew up. Later on out of interest I spent a few months studying and annotating scripture unique to the faith I was raised in as well as some background to it. I have to say that the second interpretation presented as the Orthodox one seems much more apparent to me, and it surprises me sometimes to talk to my Christian friends and learn they hold the first view and reject the second. Plenty of times in scripture, Christians are called upon to endure their suffering and take no care for their own sake, giving all to God, for their just reward will be in heaven. You're almost meant to take an oath of poverty. It seems that the people identifying themselves as Christian around me believe that one can be as rich or as poor, caring for their own as much as they can, and that what unites them ultimately is whether they believe or not. I suppose that allows for a variety of social classes and strata and a culture more prone to run away from suffering. Without being an expert, I can't really say which is the "correct" interpretation, I just find the second one here to be more compelling from a scriptural standpoint.

  • @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156

    Very good content. Thank you.

  • @lizlosee7433
    @lizlosee7433 Před 2 lety +6

    I’m from Ukraine, I was brought up orthodox but I don’t know much about it. Thank you for this video

  • @Hlord-be4xx
    @Hlord-be4xx Před 2 lety +10

    4:40
    That’s not true, Constantine merely ended the persecution of Christians, he did not make Christianity the official religion, Emperor Theodosius did that

  • @thekingdedede
    @thekingdedede Před 2 lety +3

    Speaking of Orthodox civilizations, could you please do a video on the Tigray War? You're one of my favorite geo/history CZcamsrs and it'd be really cool to see your perspective on the situation!

  • @georgewilliams8448
    @georgewilliams8448 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for a very interesting video!

  • @generalalcazar41442
    @generalalcazar41442 Před 2 lety

    thank you so much for this video!!

  • @Martin-eu2ke
    @Martin-eu2ke Před 2 lety +10

    Im Czech orhodox because orthodoxy is based.

    • @in5minutes556
      @in5minutes556 Před 2 lety

      Do you have Moravian origins?

    • @Martin-eu2ke
      @Martin-eu2ke Před 2 lety

      ​@@in5minutes556 Moravian-Silesian and my father is from poland who is surprisingly Silesian Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession.

    • @in5minutes556
      @in5minutes556 Před 2 lety +1

      I see, posted earlier but there a few waves of Orthodox migration across the Carpathians from Romania that settled in what is now called the Wallachian Moravia and they kept their Orthodoxy until the 30 year war when the Austrians essentially gave them 2 options: conversion to Catholicism or death

    • @andrejkolarik8323
      @andrejkolarik8323 Před 2 lety

      Was there a sizeable movement of Orthodox revival in Czechia with a Panslavic undertone?

  • @michaelthayer5351
    @michaelthayer5351 Před 2 lety +30

    Having lived in Russia for 5 years and having a wife from there I'd like to add a couple things.
    The point you make about the government and church working together is spot on, in fact if I remember correctly the two headed eagle of the Byzantine and later Russian Empires is actually representative of this, one head for the state, the other for the church.
    Also while the modern era might not be best for them, the one thing I notice though about all the ordinary Russians I met there is they all have a strong sense of identity and patriotism, even if they despise the corruption and incompetence of their leaders they are all proud to be Russian and highly defensive of this. They are a people proud of their past, but they lack faith and belief in their system and future.
    Many want families but lack the means for it, hence the low birthrates, and the government seems unable to raise living standards to allow family formation/expansion.
    In Russia the saying goes that the price of everything rises, but wages stay the same.
    This is likely due to the fact that government and internal stability is reliant on the goodwill of the oligarchs who in exchange for near monopolies, either due to being given state-owned firms or horrifying amounts of red tape that prevents competitions, support the state. This drives down efficiency and productivity that are needed to raise living standards, so Russia is caught in an economic rut.
    Breaking the Oligarchs' power would seem to be the obvious solution, until you realize they'll leave, take their money with them, and leave Russia without capital to develop and throw the country back into economic turmoil.
    So it's a conundrum, how to fix the modern Orthodox Civilization. I don't know, the only thing I can think of is hope the next generation is raised to be honorable. Perhaps they can fix it.

    • @vyktorehon5995
      @vyktorehon5995 Před 2 lety +2

      Yep or simply replace them with actually competent ppl

    • @DerDop
      @DerDop Před 2 lety

      Well, Russia is Russia. USA's neighbors want to emulate USA, while Russia's neighborhood wants to be anything except Russia.
      Russia is basically Moscow's colony. The average wage in Moscow is somewhere near 1500 USD, while the rest of Russia lives with wages near 200 300 USD.

    • @vyktorehon5995
      @vyktorehon5995 Před 2 lety

      @@DerDop is it wage by month?

    • @vyktorehon5995
      @vyktorehon5995 Před 2 lety

      @@DerDop the irony and sadness of the statement

    • @DerDop
      @DerDop Před 2 lety +1

      @@vyktorehon5995 monthly. The poorest European citizens ( by European I mean EU) has the purchasing power of an average Russian, but the reality is worse, since the mathematics are being distorted by Moscow's wages.
      Russians are nice people, but Russian elites are acting like they're serf owners. Use Google Streets, navigate in Moscow, center and periferies, and then choose another city.
      Also, keep in mind that Russia is the richest country when it comes to resources and that Russians are smart and hard working people, yet they live like...

  • @johndurham6172
    @johndurham6172 Před 2 lety

    I love your maps, that's why I clicked on your videos and you don't disappoint.

  • @Grubman141
    @Grubman141 Před 2 lety

    Good stuff! Thanks for this

  • @azlyri
    @azlyri Před 2 lety +42

    "They were respectful for local religious rights". This is the funniest joke ever.

    • @jeanssold2131
      @jeanssold2131 Před 2 lety +15

      well tatar muslims lived in russia for hundreds of years, as did various pagan animist tribes. crimean tatars did too, before stalin and his shenanigans. caucasus was a different story of course, but large exterminations only happened in the 19th century because the government just could not understand how it can make some tribes loyal to them (those that submitted did not suffer the same fate afaik)

    • @Lazer-bp9lf
      @Lazer-bp9lf Před 2 lety +2

      @@jeanssold2131 Yeah Stalin was a genocidal maniac, not to the level of poeple like Hitler or Mao but still close enough.

    • @user-xo9ig8kc3u
      @user-xo9ig8kc3u Před 2 lety +4

      @@Lazer-bp9lf That was in reference to Tsarist Russia though

    • @hurhursjarf4527
      @hurhursjarf4527 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Lazer-bp9lf Understatement of the century, Stalin was right up there with Hitler and Mao, in fact his deathtoll is often estimated considerably higher then Hitlers.
      The core difference was that Stalins brutality was primarily aimed towards his own people and the Europeans he conquered(Doesnt mean he was nice to the Caucasian people and Asians) when we look at pre war atrocities we see mass killings, man made famines, gulags, political killings etc. When we look at during and after the war we start firstly seeing an army that goes on a complete rampage, mass rape, mass killings, mass pillagjng and not just to Germans but also to the Poles, Balts etc. We see the mass executions of Inteligentsia, Officers, Soldiers anyone who could even conceivably be a threat.
      Stalins entire reign can best be described as one long and terrifying Red Terror, even those loyal to him werent safe.

    • @shaydowsith348
      @shaydowsith348 Před 2 lety +3

      As a Jew I can assure you that the Byzantines did NOT respect OUR religious rights.

  • @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja
    @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja Před 2 lety +13

    I've read a Finnish version of Katherine the Great. It was wonderful.

  • @ratiounkn3210
    @ratiounkn3210 Před 9 měsíci

    Can’t tell you how happy I am I found your channel. Great information and insight my friend. If I could only get my children to be as interested as myself, the knowledge they would gain.

  • @DelijeSerbia
    @DelijeSerbia Před 2 lety +2

    Serbian identity is rooted in Orthodoxy so much that it is shown even today.
    Starting with what is usually considered as a state that created Serbia we know today, the state ruled by Nemanjic dynasty even though that wasnt the only state ruled by Serbs or even the first dynasty. Serbs had converted to Christianity soon after settling in the Balkans and had many states including a powerful kingdom before Nemanjic dynasty even existed. But the fact that Stefan Nemanja a Grand Prince of Rascia(Serbia) had a son Sava that became a priest and managed to get an autonomy of Serbian church from the Constantinople pretty much shaped the history of Serbia.
    That became so important that not being Orthodox pretty much meant you cant be a Serb, so you had a lot of ethnic Serbs become Croats, Bosniaks, Albanians, Turks etc.