The REAL Reason Europe Took Over the World

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  • čas přidán 1. 11. 2022
  • How Europe Stole the World, Part 2
    To start comparing quotes and simplify insurance-buying, check out Policygenius: policygenius.com/johnnyharris. Thanks to Policygenius for sponsoring this video!
    The modern corporation was invented as a way to fuel imperialism. In Part 2 of our series on European imperialism we explore how Europe created private empires to help spread dominance and resource extraction across the globe.
    Watch Part 1 here: • The Origins of Europea...
    Check out all my sources for this video here: docs.google.com/document/d/1-...
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    Johnny Harris is an Emmy-winning journalist. He currently is based in Washington, DC, reporting on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe. Johnny's visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways.
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Komentáře • 5K

  • @johnnyharris
    @johnnyharris  Před rokem +292

    To start comparing quotes and simplify insurance-buying, check out Policygenius: policygenius.com/johnnyharris. Thanks to Policygenius for sponsoring this video!

    • @ropro9817
      @ropro9817 Před rokem

      Huh, wait a second... it sounds a bit like Christianity was just white supremacy thinly veiled as religion... 🤔

    • @jonesroberto170
      @jonesroberto170 Před rokem

      Yes, Johnny Harris’ sponsors and platform are products European corporations and land theft.

    • @heychuccs
      @heychuccs Před rokem +14

      Hey Johnny I'm watching your videos since vox, can you do videos on "How Europe stole India".

    • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
      @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 Před rokem +7

      Newt Gingrich understands this so well, that he refuses to consider the "evils" done under this paradigm. He prefers to focus on the material culture, wealth and ultimately power that allows him to insist that Christianity is the ultimate goal, that all the evils that put Christendom on top cannot be condemned, b/c in the end - the United States of America came to be. He and his kind came to be.
      For him, that justifies having a persistent underclass of humble, undereducated, working drones - content to earn just enough to eat, reproduce more work drones who eat, reproduce and then die one, having lived a life of drudgery. He resents that the rest of us want to live and work comfortably too. (Does he even know about the Hierarchy of Needs? He's too brilliant not to know). He doesn't care. He thinks the order of things now is as it should be - kind of Confucian.

    • @andreylucass
      @andreylucass Před rokem +1

      Please stop this BS series.

  • @willderitzman
    @willderitzman Před rokem +3863

    As an Indonesian, I can say Johnny's story about VOC (East India Company) is more compelling than what I obtained back in school. Another fact, our history is too embarassed to acknowledge that VOC is the company. We are told that Dutch colonized us for 350 year. In fact the colonialization was begun in 1912 😂

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před rokem +593

      thanks for your perspective

    • @avacadomangobanana2588
      @avacadomangobanana2588 Před rokem +1

      If you had a company colonize you they are still a colonizer

    • @avacadomangobanana2588
      @avacadomangobanana2588 Před rokem

      @@johnnyharris literally go and read something from any leftist ever you’re this close to putting it all together but like u literally have to start advocating for shit like socialism otherwise you’re missing 1/2 of your argument- the call to action

    • @r.a.h7682
      @r.a.h7682 Před rokem +192

      kusjes van nederland

    • @Tezarak
      @Tezarak Před rokem +61

      A heart on a channel this size in the first 40 minutes is really impressive

  • @Pjotrpost
    @Pjotrpost Před rokem +690

    Fun fact: The Dutch had exclusive rights to trade with Japan because other countries tried to introduce christianity into Japan. They helped the uprise of christianity and tried to overthrow government by aiding the rebellion. The Dutch helped the Japanese in this fight which earned them the right to trade exclusively.

    • @AwoudeX
      @AwoudeX Před rokem +28

      let me guess, they sold the Japanese stuff to help with the war effort? They did that too with the rebelling USA colonies, they sold them stuff that supported the rebellion or war for independence. We just love to trade, it is the life blood of a prosperous nation.

    • @lynncheung4189
      @lynncheung4189 Před rokem +35

      Another fun fact: Dutch is the first European nation established trade relationship with China. They did all the humiliating rituals that are too embarrassed for English to do (indeed it is humiliating google "三跪九叩之礼") and presented great gifts, and set up their posts in Canton (Guangdong now) and colonized half island of Taiwan.

    • @panda-crux.165
      @panda-crux.165 Před rokem

      Because Dutch only care about Money and wealth

    • @MrAlehkra
      @MrAlehkra Před rokem

      I'm not sure what fight you're referring to? Or what "uprise of Christianity" tried to overthrow the government? I'm guessing you're referring to the Shimabara Rebellion, but that's....not quite what that was. It's true that certainly a large number of Christians took part in it, but they weren't trying to overthrow the central government. The government later claimed it was a Catholic conspiracy (and the Dutch were successfully able to argue they as Protestants were different enough from Catholics to not be involved), but there's very little evidence to back that up; it was almost certainly a revolt against the harsh rule (including already starting to persecute Christians, well over a decade before the national exclusion orders) and extremely high taxes of the local daimyo. Even the Bakufu had to admit he had monstrously misruled his domain, and he became the only daimyo to be executed during the Edo period.

    • @AwoudeX
      @AwoudeX Před rokem

      @@panda-crux.165 You should come and visit and be cured of your ignorance.

  • @Datadog-1
    @Datadog-1 Před rokem +42

    As a Dutch person I find it very fitting that our country so quickly tossed out religious reasoning and substituted it with practical thinking. So quintessentially Dutch. Im proud that we are still know for this way of doing things, but ashamed that we once used it for such immoral and short-sighted gains.

    • @teddybearroosevelt1847
      @teddybearroosevelt1847 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Well, it also had to do with the fact that we were (predominantly) a Protestant nation. We were much more rational about our religion - in line with the modesty taught by Jesus - than most of the other countries which turned religion into a d*** measuring contest of who could build the most beautiful cathedrals. Instead, in Protestantism it was much more about innerly held beliefs and being true to them.
      In the Dutch golden age of the 16th and the 17th century there was also religious freedom in the Netherlands as long as one was not a catholic (which was still tolerated while being banned by law). This attracted lots of Portuguese Jews, among others, which made us rich.
      So going overseas and trading with people who had a very different religious background wasn’t all that different.

    • @helderduarte213
      @helderduarte213 Před 3 měsíci

      Everybody had to do it or they would fall behind. It’s like an evil that was needed for human kind to evolve and now some giant powers want to disrupt that by creating caos among common people.

  • @mikotagayuna8494
    @mikotagayuna8494 Před rokem +716

    It is known that the easiest way to get Johnny to stumble into your house is to randomly fill a room with maps.

    • @ImaxNZ
      @ImaxNZ Před rokem +15

      It is known.

    • @valishaad
      @valishaad Před rokem +4

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @happyhelen1988
      @happyhelen1988 Před rokem +4

      He would only come over to sell you something... life insurance.. hoover... double glazing... why did he sell out

    • @jimbanks206
      @jimbanks206 Před rokem +4

      can't stop laughing thanks for this he's a great guy lol.

    • @SukacitaYeremia
      @SukacitaYeremia Před rokem +3

      Johnny-summoning ritual

  • @cyrilio
    @cyrilio Před rokem +524

    One of the main reasons the Dutch were so successful is due to the windmill. Specifically the wood cutting windmills and therefore the ability to build massive amounts of ships at scale.

    • @1mailpigeon1
      @1mailpigeon1 Před rokem +39

      common Dutch W

    • @cameronf3343
      @cameronf3343 Před rokem +35

      Wood cutting windmills are seriously among the more fascinating things I’ve ever seen.

    • @HardShooter76
      @HardShooter76 Před rokem +6

      @@1mailpigeon1 And common wind turbine W

    • @aloha6736
      @aloha6736 Před rokem

      Dutch is just interest of dirty Capital by Mayersk.

    • @mdjey2
      @mdjey2 Před rokem +6

      Also Gutenbergs press helped to replicate information about these machines and from that moment it went fast.

  • @anthony212459
    @anthony212459 Před rokem +60

    It's crazy how trading companies would cause a civil war on a land that wasnt claimed yet.

  • @njabulomasina4180
    @njabulomasina4180 Před 2 dny +3

    As a South African, I've never heard this take on the VOC (Dutch East India Company). We were taught (in 4th Grade) about Jan Van Riebek, who was tasked with establishing a "refreshment station," but then decided to overstay his welcome. We weren't given the context of what the VOC was and how and why it came about.

  • @AnotherBadyoga
    @AnotherBadyoga Před rokem +8

    loving this series, makes me wish we’d had good history teachers in high school (coaches taught history at North Surry, I had Triplett, my cousin has Coast Atkins- who showed football films during class

  • @MennoJdeVries
    @MennoJdeVries Před rokem +1101

    As a dutch person, it should be mentioned that 'our' ambitions to capitalise the world was initialy strongly motivated by a need to gain money to fund our war against Spain (1568-1648). The VOC, as you mentioned as the blueprint for capitalism, was founded in 1602 and made all the difference in the war. Fun fact, the reason we were ahead of Britain was because England was in a civil war in those days. When this civil war ended, 'we', the dutch, found it quite hard to compete against a nation with triple/quadruple the size in population. Eventually, in the end (see 1780s), we lost.

    • @patricktjia
      @patricktjia Před rokem +42

      Thank you for your comment Menno. I am an Indonesian and wondering that are the dutch learning about their past colonization in Indonesia? like at school or perhaps as general knowledge in the Netherlands

    • @CMDR_MAJIC
      @CMDR_MAJIC Před rokem +45

      @@patricktjia I recently spoke with a Dutch teacher I met in Vietnam. I asked her how they teach about colonisation in countries like Indonesia. She said they basically teach that it was a dark part of their history and that they were wrong for invading other countries. She was a primary school teacher so it would have been a simple version. I'd also be interested to know how it's taught for older students in secondary or university level. I'm Irish by the way and I have been to Java, you have a fascinating country with so much cultural diversity and historical influences. Amazing place!

    • @patricktjia
      @patricktjia Před rokem +13

      @@CMDR_MAJIC hi thanks for your reply. I have a Dutch friend but I don't know how to bring this topic to him politely or casually haha
      Thanks for the compliment too
      You should visit other islands too to see how diverse Indonesia really is, sometimes it feels surreal even for myself

    • @CMDR_MAJIC
      @CMDR_MAJIC Před rokem +26

      @@patricktjia I would encourage you to be direct with your friend as for Europeans, we generally don't take it personally when asked questions about our history as it was a long time ago and we are not responsible for what happened.
      Thanks, I would be very interested to explore the other islands. I have seen some documentaries about the more bizarre traditions like the preservation of ancestors in Sulawesi and the strange 'food' of the Karo tribe made with cow stomach juice lol. I know regular Indonesian food is delicious, but I don't think I would enjoy their speciality haha. Also, the wild Orangutans in Sumatra and Borneo would be incredible to witness in their natural habitat!

    • @CMDR_MAJIC
      @CMDR_MAJIC Před rokem +17

      @@patricktjia Also, I would love to know how they teach you in Indonesia about East-Timor? 😅

  • @JCGeography
    @JCGeography Před rokem +554

    As a Plymouthian, I don't know much about our local history. Before this video, all I knew was the Battle of Freedom Fields in the English Civil War. But I never knew we supplied these 'private companies' so much. This was so informative, thank you for making this!

    • @ToastieBRRRN
      @ToastieBRRRN Před rokem +15

      Where else do you think these local historical philanthropists earned their wealth from? Strongly recommend looking into the Muscovy Company as it was the architect for future private English companies.

    • @harshvardhan5893
      @harshvardhan5893 Před rokem +4

      Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of eton

    • @Wither5000
      @Wither5000 Před rokem +7

      Plymouthian?

    • @babagandu
      @babagandu Před rokem +8

      Lots of false info in the video

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před rokem +45

      glad you liked it!

  • @jayshah7106
    @jayshah7106 Před rokem +3

    I had no idea on the level of influence of private companies in those days. Always appreciate a well informed video that can teach me new things. Keep up the good work, after this and your Qatar video I'm definitely subscribing

  • @Kellycreator
    @Kellycreator Před 7 měsíci +30

    Love this guy! He’s made me more curious about lots of things in history, never my favourite subject at school but quickly becoming a hobby to research more. Thanks Johnny. ❤

    • @dabrack9350
      @dabrack9350 Před 4 měsíci +2

      He misses one important point (or rather skips over it). The Europeans had no idea the diseases they had survived and immunized themselves against would have the effect they did. Several generations of settlers later infections were used as weapons but not in the beginning. So very quickly the native inhabitants were killed off leaving the land mostly empty.

    • @avagrego3195
      @avagrego3195 Před 7 dny

      @@dabrack9350not in all countries such aschina

    • @dabrack9350
      @dabrack9350 Před 7 dny

      @@avagrego3195 sorry, I don't understand your point. We were discussing the European conquest of North America, at least I was.

  • @The491t
    @The491t Před rokem +523

    By the way, in Indonesia there is an unique and interesting term to call Dutch people who came to Indonesia during the colonial era, that is "Orang Kompeni/Kumpeni" (people from company). This term most likely derives from the word "compagnie" (company), referring to VOC (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie). This term is very popular especially among the elderly and sometimes synonymously with the word "penjajah" (colonizers).

    • @meatpuppet5036
      @meatpuppet5036 Před rokem +7

      And I'm guessing the "oranj" is related to them being Dutch Protestants?

    • @The491t
      @The491t Před rokem +45

      @@meatpuppet5036 unfortunately it's no, "orang" means "person/people" in Malay/Indonesian.

    • @rotua98
      @rotua98 Před rokem +22

      @@meatpuppet5036 orang as in orangutan, means person

    • @kremzle5688
      @kremzle5688 Před rokem +14

      ​@@The491t also, De Oranjes (plural of oranje, lit. "the oranges") is a shorthand term used to refer to the Dutch royal family.

    • @IHScoutII
      @IHScoutII Před rokem +3

      The Van Halen brothers are of Dutch/Indonesian descent

  • @zihanzheng7569
    @zihanzheng7569 Před rokem +752

    I am a first year International Relations student. We have just covered European imperialism, colonialism and companies as a 19th century phenomenon. This video provides excellent context to it and Im glad you've uploaded this video now.

    • @harshvardhan5893
      @harshvardhan5893 Před rokem +10

      From which university?

    • @zihanzheng7569
      @zihanzheng7569 Před rokem +24

      @@harshvardhan5893 Well, it’s in the Netherlands.

    • @babagandu
      @babagandu Před rokem

      @@zihanzheng7569 Great Britain 🇬🇧 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 💪🏻💪🏻

    • @osamabagdadi5789
      @osamabagdadi5789 Před rokem

      @@zihanzheng7569 another Chinese spy in the Netherland

    • @babagandu
      @babagandu Před rokem

      @@harshvardhan5893 Great Britain 🇬🇧 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 💪🏻💪🏻

  • @perkristianleirnes8332
    @perkristianleirnes8332 Před rokem +6

    Would really appreaciate if more context was added to the cited letters: who wrote them and when - I find it very important to know - as a letter from the 1800's isn't necessarily applicable to the 1600's. Also would be nice to look these sources up myself and see what else they contain.
    Thanks for the video! Well done highlighting the importance of private venture in also shaping this period of human history - and it also contrasts nicely with how our current day is also seemingly at the mercy of big corporations, like Nestle, Apple, Google, and so on.

  • @gustavocavalcantezilli6484

    As a Historian, I must say that this video is very accurate to what I learned at the Uni. I just wanted to highlight that although European powers expanded so rappidly, the Imperial China was still the greatest power in the world, at least until the 18th century. Idk if it was mentioned in the previous video, but just a few decades before Portugal started its maritime expasions, the Chinese were pursuing the very same goal, which was to "discover", spread their faith, and make comerce to other parts of the world. The Chinese boats were bigger and aparently superior to the caravels, and they had already reached the horn of Africa, but then the Emperor ordered that the fleet should be destroyed, because in his views (which makes sense considering the role of China in the world at that time), should be the other nations and civilizations that had to come to China, and not the opposite, since China was the center of the world.

    • @gilligan1350
      @gilligan1350 Před 5 měsíci

      Sounds suspiciously like somebody burned his fleet but he wanted to save face and stay in power.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Před rokem +186

    Fun Fact: The Bengal region was a major Portuguese, Dutch, French and British sphere of influence. The first book in Bengali was published in Lisbon during the late 1600s.

    • @avacadomangobanana2588
      @avacadomangobanana2588 Před rokem

      Damn it’s like white peoples came in and refused to share their educations or learnings and then just oppressed the fuck out of the bengal region cuz they were brown. Logic

    • @itsytyt5192
      @itsytyt5192 Před rokem +2

      שד

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před rokem +63

      thank you for sharing. my favorite is when the comments turn into a place to add additional context, information, local perspective, and new ideas and analysis. so cool.

    • @therealabean
      @therealabean Před rokem +2

      @@itsytyt5192 Agreed

    • @Sid-mj1qf
      @Sid-mj1qf Před rokem +2

      What book it is? I didn't know that as an Indian.

  • @rashiqabdullah8868
    @rashiqabdullah8868 Před rokem +1323

    "In Communism there is an equal distribution of misery. And in Capitalism there is an inequal distribution of blessings" - Winston Churchill

    • @mephisto4618
      @mephisto4618 Před rokem +117

      Ah yes communism when misery

    • @ankur.mahajan
      @ankur.mahajan Před rokem +10

      💯

    • @susfringgaming4018
      @susfringgaming4018 Před rokem +27

      @@mephisto4618 exactly.

    • @gigaazzahrawani6456
      @gigaazzahrawani6456 Před rokem +55

      I just gonna leave a comment here to see a civil discussion between communist and capitalist below...

    • @ShazyShaze
      @ShazyShaze Před rokem +79

      "socialism is when the government does things, and when it does a whole lot of things, that's communism" -Carl Marks

  • @NPC8474
    @NPC8474 Před rokem +2

    This is really amazing work. I would love to see a deep dive series on the French British Spanish and Dutch.

  • @fundermentalist9473
    @fundermentalist9473 Před rokem

    Brilliant stuff love your content especially this series based on European imperialism and all the maps I’m definitely a map nerd too 👍

  • @Immilounge
    @Immilounge Před rokem +472

    This man can post a video on any topic in the world, and I would still watch the whole thing. A great role model in my life. I admire his work ethic and he still manages to travel and spend time with family.

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před rokem +121

      thank you!! very kind comment. totally encourages me to want to make MOREEE

    • @BonnieCassel
      @BonnieCassel Před rokem +3

      same. no matter the topic, I am all eyes and ears. 🤩

    • @christianantony2107
      @christianantony2107 Před rokem +2

      @@johnnyharris and make more you must(tttttt?)

    • @lawrence-yx1ew
      @lawrence-yx1ew Před rokem +5

      tik tok generation discovers watching a video longer than 15 seconds all the way through

    • @profession-allie
      @profession-allie Před rokem +1

      Seriously true statement

  • @cactus_vixen7093
    @cactus_vixen7093 Před rokem +134

    this felt leagues above the first part!!! Really glad you took all the feedback to make something really valuable and interesting, always love some good material analysis to shed better light on history when it's often taught with vague excerpts on something 'too old to analyze'

  • @rishabhm10
    @rishabhm10 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Hey Yoo Nice video man !!! As a History Enthusiast I quite enjoyed the Series .... Great Work .... Keep em coming !

  • @702cody
    @702cody Před 11 měsíci +2

    Great job Johnny. Thank you for navigating this sometimes sticky subject and just telling it to us as straight as possible. 👏

  • @larsomat2
    @larsomat2 Před rokem +341

    As a former geography student I really like old maps, as well. But I have to say: They way you put them into a historic and social context is awesome! Old maps are not just "old and beautiful maps", they say something about the mindset of the time. Thank you for making that accessible for everyone.

    • @Dutch_Uncle
      @Dutch_Uncle Před rokem +2

      It is fascinating to see what their ideas were about the flow of rivers and what was known and speculated about the interiors of the Americas, Australia, and Africa. Before Greenwich was established as the zero meridian, in the US the zero meridian went right down 16th Street in Wahington, DC. There is a Meridan Park reflecting the designation.

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před rokem +1

      Also remember seeing a Nathan King video where he indignantly pulls out an old map with the phrase "Chinese kingdom" written over present-day mainland China to argue that that is proof that Western countries had already recognized China's rule over Tibet as early as in the 19th century. Though I remember that such maps don't draw out where international borders are, which I imagine has also made territorial disputes that persist until today more intractable too

    • @Dutch_Uncle
      @Dutch_Uncle Před rokem +2

      @@lzh4950 The maps and names from the first European contacts frequently reflect attempts to describe the unfamiliar by using familiar European concepts, like "kingdom." the US state of Kansas has a river, town, and county designated "Republican" or "Republic." The French are responsible for this. When they arrived, they asked through a chain of interpreters to be taken to the king of the tribe. The answerer that came back was that the Pawnee tribe did not have kings, they chose their leaders. This prompted the French, who had studied classical Greek and Roman history, to conclude that they had found Plato's Ideal Republic, the land of the "noble savage," uncorrupted by hereditary rulers.
      The French then called them the Republican band of Pawnee, and the name stuck.

  • @tamarrajames3590
    @tamarrajames3590 Před rokem +356

    I remember the map of the world in my classroom in the 1950s. Canada still flew the red ensign as our flag, and sang God Save the Queen at every public event. We were (and are) part of the British Commonwealth.
    My Teacher pointed to the map, and told us, “All the pink bits are British”. That was my first understanding of why the maps were coloured the way they were. There was a LOT of pink on that map as I recall.🖤🇨🇦

    • @zzmmz3789
      @zzmmz3789 Před rokem

      The whole USA alliance countries that attacked Afghanistan are collapsing. Literally the next USSR . That what u get for attacking The Graveyard Of Empires.
      The whole USA and Europe is collapsing. Rekt europe.

    • @tamarrajames3590
      @tamarrajames3590 Před rokem +4

      @@zzmmz3789 unchecked capitalism is destined to fail…it is only a question of when.🖤🇨🇦

    • @fweb3134
      @fweb3134 Před rokem +2

      As a Brit this is so strange to me. When did this die out?

    • @lakhdeepsingh1983
      @lakhdeepsingh1983 Před rokem +1

      Hai Kanedda 💘

    • @tamarrajames3590
      @tamarrajames3590 Před rokem +4

      @@fweb3134 Somewhere in the 60s I think, after we got our own flag and constitution, other parts of the commonwealth were moving to self rule around the same time. The King still has a representative in Canada, but the role is purely ceremonial.🖤🇨🇦

  • @thabangmailula2725
    @thabangmailula2725 Před rokem +1

    Dude, I can't like your video enough. Great production. Props to you and team. Well done

  • @ParallelPenguins
    @ParallelPenguins Před rokem +7

    Don't forget about the Hudson's Bay Company. It's one of those same companies you're talking about and it's still around today. Still very much a live and kicking.

  • @alecsorensen6101
    @alecsorensen6101 Před rokem +161

    I think an important part of joint stock companies that was glossed over maybe was the sheer risk of these early trading and exploration voyages. Splitting ships into separate shares as opposed to a single owner sigificantly spread risk for investors and incentivized more trading missions.

    • @alexsauce5668
      @alexsauce5668 Před rokem

      Nice portofolio you got there Mr. Van Brockhorst

    • @rogink
      @rogink Před rokem +7

      Quite. All the pictures Johnny showed were of ships that looked like they were at risk. It would be interesting to find out the success rate of ships heading from Europe to the East Indies.

    • @ratsun1723
      @ratsun1723 Před rokem

      @@rogink good question!

    • @aljonserna5598
      @aljonserna5598 Před rokem

      it's like going for a tour but price is high per person and you don't know if you'd like it so you opt for per pax offer

  • @BisiLIFE
    @BisiLIFE Před rokem +211

    As an Afrịkan it's always interesting hearing history from the European point of view
    Chinua Achebe, an Igbo author stated
    Until the tale of the hunt is told by the lion, it will always glorify the hunter.
    It would be interesting to look at the names of some of the places in the old maps of Afrika😊

    • @rob9853
      @rob9853 Před rokem +13

      When did he glorify the European colonisation ?

    • @bernieralexandre1107
      @bernieralexandre1107 Před rokem +4

      @@rob9853 I think he means Africans defended themselves at some places in Africa??? But yeah I think he is wrong even if that’s what he means

    • @Dutch_Uncle
      @Dutch_Uncle Před rokem +4

      Names change. With the end of the USSR there was a wholesale renaming in eastern Europe of streets and places named Lenin, Bolshevik, Kosmokol, Aurora and other reflections of the Soviet years. In the US streets are being changed to add the pre-Columbian names and remove the names of Confederate generals. For US government purposes the highest mountain in North America is no longer Mount McKinley but Denali, the Athabascan Indian term for the big one or the great one. Likewise in Africa in places like the Democratic Republic of the Congo, formerly Zaire, and South Africa, still South Africa.

    • @dlc2479
      @dlc2479 Před rokem +21

      @@rob9853 what an emotional reaction lol. He didn't say that Johnny glorified colonialism?

    • @dlc2479
      @dlc2479 Před rokem +28

      @@bernieralexandre1107 Europeans have dominated the global narrative on African history. I think this is what OP is referring to.

  • @jangelbrich7056
    @jangelbrich7056 Před rokem +49

    Idealism and Greed, the perfect recipe.

    • @Whiterun_Gaurd
      @Whiterun_Gaurd Před rokem +2

      Which gave us what we have today.

    • @MikeWillis-si7lr
      @MikeWillis-si7lr Před měsícem

      @@Whiterun_Gaurdcompared to what it could have been. They destroyed the world point blank period. Their use to be great stuff all over the world. Yoh and see and learn and say wow experience. Lol now nothing is great anymore. Lmao like you realize the people who wanted to do this just wanted to be kings to someone else. Like it’s so easy to see. They hated living under the kings and queens of Europe and decided you know what let’s go be kings somewhere else. It’s sad because they already knew what greed could do they were smart people at around longer than America is until this day so that tells you they were far along in history and knew better. America could have still been made and probably a much better place.

  • @CiaoBello21
    @CiaoBello21 Před 9 měsíci +1

    You and Mr. Ballen are the most amazing dudes on youtube. Terrific journalism and amazing storytelling.

  • @PatarikiTB
    @PatarikiTB Před rokem +177

    As a Dutchie, this series is quite fascinating. I wrote an essay on the Black Legend when I studied history. I'm curious if thats going to be highlighted in the third part, as it is about politics.

    • @thijs6758
      @thijs6758 Před rokem +27

      Toen ie zei van: “The Dutch were like: who cares about Jesus, we want profit”, ik ging stuk😂

    • @AXELVISSERS
      @AXELVISSERS Před rokem

      🇧🇪🇧🇪🇧🇪

    • @likemysnopp
      @likemysnopp Před rokem +4

      Can it be twisted into a leftist ideology and make capitalism look evil? If so then you know he will cover it. If not.. and if oh dear lord forgive the words im about to type but.. if it makes capitalism look good in any way then this dude will never even talk about it.
      Yes im annoyed at his latest videos tbh.

    • @CaveTuumCanem
      @CaveTuumCanem Před rokem +7

      @@likemysnopp what hasn’t he covered that in your opinion makes capitalism “look good”? And why should he cover your topics?

    • @apidas
      @apidas Před rokem +10

      @@likemysnopp it's just what happened, not necessarily either capitalism is just good or evil. that's just what people draw out of conclusions
      and it so happened that in the past, they really use it to exploit every land on earth
      regardless of the economic model they use or to justifies it. and frankly a lot of neighboring european countries follow at the time. so it become trends amongst their elites

  • @insularumc
    @insularumc Před rokem +24

    Everything in this video looks fine, but there is one thing: the dutch east india company (voc) wasnt the first company to privatize voyages to the indies. There were actually a lot of different companies in the netherlands competing with each other but after a while the dutch government fused them all in to one company because they didnt want that the companies were competing with each other but with the other countries, what really emphasizes the government involvement in this.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +6

      Indeed. It wasn’t the first company, but the first modern multinational corporation.

    • @RosesAndIvy
      @RosesAndIvy Před rokem

      @@kaitlyn__L But it was the first publicly traded company

  • @maxsteelMountainLover
    @maxsteelMountainLover Před 5 měsíci

    12:04 wow, this is the level of physical map collection that I aspire now.
    As a suggestion, I will suggest to decipher Doklam issue at Chumbi dagger (Indo - Sino - Tibet) where inconsistencies in British interpretation of peaks like Gipmochi and passes like Batang La is being used by CPC to ingress further and deepen the dagger towards Zompheri ridge; the last line of defence before the Siliguri corridor.
    It is an active conflict zone with multiple skirmishes like Nathu La, Cho La battles and the recent Doklam ones

  • @CG-ro8wo
    @CG-ro8wo Před rokem

    Dude, I dont where you live but I'd love to spend a day(week, month year) nerding out with you over all those maps you have. The amount the you could teach me is beyond measure.

  • @Goma328
    @Goma328 Před rokem +197

    I wish we had videos like these when I was in high school. Would’ve made our history lessons much more interesting - but at the same time much more depressing 😅

    • @ickaruus4909
      @ickaruus4909 Před rokem +3

      if they only were always right...

    • @rustyshackle917
      @rustyshackle917 Před rokem +10

      As an American, my history classes were mostly about American execptionalism.

    • @RobNotANumber
      @RobNotANumber Před rokem

      Hitory is written by the victors... currently the leftists are in power and as such history... ps I am also a leftist but a lot of this is trash

    • @Liorgh
      @Liorgh Před rokem +7

      Nahh fam… you cant appreciate this type of content when you are young hahaha… even if we woulda had that video in high school I would of slept through guaranteed 😩😩😩

    • @vivalamop
      @vivalamop Před rokem +3

      I’m from Scotland, we were taught that the UK did nothing wrong throughout school!

  • @adamhall5298
    @adamhall5298 Před rokem +71

    Loving the economic history content, Johnny! A fascinating academic field with plenty of insights that, imo, are underrated.

  • @vozdelibrepensante
    @vozdelibrepensante Před rokem +11

    I would like to make some complementary remarks regarding the Spanish Empire and the US:
    - Regarding the Spanish Empire, it had some differences in comparison with the other Empires. Firstly, there was no private companies ruling the colonies and this Empire didn´t just remain in the coasts (such as Portuguese and Dutch one), but it went inland as well. And the reason was because they were interested in "save souls" and "educate people" as much as possible. Beware this was XVI century mentality. The last will of Isabella I of Castile in 1504 said "it was my intention to try to get, induce and attract the people who populate them to the Catholic faith, and to send to the Islands and Mainland prelates and religious people and priests and other learned persons... in order to instruct the inhabitants of those lands in the Catholic faith, and to teach them good customs. As well, I beg the King my lord very lovingly, and I charge and order the Princess, my daughter, and the Prince, her husband, that they do it thus and that they carry it out, and that this is its main purpose and that they should put much diligence into it, and not consent to nor allow the Indians, neighbours and inhabitants of the Indias and Mainland, won and to be won, to receive any injury to their persons or possessions, rather to the contrary, that they should be well and fairly treated, and if they have received any injury that it should be remedied and provided for so that in nothing does it go beyond what was ordered and established in the apostolic letters of the said concession." Unfortunately, "encomenderos" (people who had to educate the "Indians") took advantage of their power and exploit them. This bad treatment to the Indians was denounced by Fray Bartolomé de las Casas, and firstly he achieved that Emperor Charles I of Spain (grandson of Isabella I of Castile) signed the "New Laws" in 1542 where "encomenderos" were suppressed and secondly in the Valladolid debate in 1550, considered the first humans right debate in the world, Fray Bartolomé de las Casas defended that Indians were equal in rights as the rest of Spanish people. No other Empire in the world considered these topics in XVI century and this different consideration made that Spanish and Indians mixed whereas in other Empires such as British or even the US, white, Indians and blacks remained unmixed.
    - Regarding the US when it became independent from Britain, it kept doing the exact same thing. US took land from Indians (indeed there are a lot of American films with good white guys shooting bad Indians in the West), enclosing them in Indian reservations until today. US also took land from independent Mexico (almost half of the country), the entire Kingdom of Hawaii, and from Spain Puerto Rico and Guam, remaining nowadays as "unincorporated colonies", a fancy name for US colonies which don´t have a say in the Parliament. Other "unincorporated territories" are American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, and the US Virgin Islands. Then, are you sure that Empires were only European? Or maybe US is a non-European Empire currently in operation? Indeed, quite recently US also tried to educate some Muslim countries with Western democracy while getting oil from them, isn´t it familiar?

  • @PlayNowWorkLater
    @PlayNowWorkLater Před dnem

    As a musician I can say with certainty that the background music to this episode definitely helped move the storytelling along. I guess I learned some history, or something too.

  • @syls3198
    @syls3198 Před rokem +141

    hey man, I am completely addicted to your documentaries! you doing such good journalism!

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před rokem +24

      wow thank you. very kind of you

    • @arta.xshaca
      @arta.xshaca Před rokem +1

      @@johnnyharris irrelevant to all this, but mind if I ask about where your ancestors came from? England? Germany? Mixed?

    • @Cryingwhore
      @Cryingwhore Před rokem

      @@arta.xshaca Africa

    • @JoseChavez-ob2wj
      @JoseChavez-ob2wj Před rokem

      @@johnnyharris whats the title of part one of the series??

    • @matpk
      @matpk Před rokem +1

      @@johnnyharris How about evil Chi Na?🎉

  • @ahoraya1047
    @ahoraya1047 Před rokem +6

    You forget that the Aztec and Inca nobility became part of the Spanish nobikity. The King of Spain was called the Inca. Cortes married to a daughter of Moctezuma, and their dayghter was called Isabel Cortes Moctezums. Oñate, founder of El Paso was marrued to a grand daughter of Moctezuma. Pizarro arrived with just 180 soldiers, and the Inca Empire had one million soldiers.

    • @auzzieauzzieauzzieayayay
      @auzzieauzzieauzzieayayay Před rokem +4

      Exactamente, too much Generalizing here in The US. No one can compare the genocide of the English with Spain. Lima is the city of Kings and Perú had a mighty empire BEFORE Pizarro arrived. Spain recognized this immediately. Queen Isabella of Spain put Columbus in Jail for abusing the Taínos. Too many people want to generalize our communities experience with their own and that’s unacceptable

    • @ahoraya1047
      @ahoraya1047 Před rokem

      @Michelle it was not in any law. According to the law natives and spaniards had the same rights. That is why natives supported the Spanish Crown during the Independence Wars.

    • @jonayz8655
      @jonayz8655 Před rokem +1

      @Michelle That's anglo saxon propaganda promoted by US universities and used by nationalists in the hispanic countries to gain their own political means. A caste system would be one in which you would never be able to ascend in society and would never abandon the caste you're born at. That didn't exist in the Hispanic America. Money and nobility were sometimes important limiting factors but interratial marriages were promoted by queen Isabel I in her will and by Spanish laws since 1514. A great achievement if you compare that to the US legalizing interratial marriages in 1962.
      I recommend you a documentary that is available on the youtube called: "Una arteria del Imperio". It deals with the finding by archeologists of several black women buried in a preferential zone inside the old cathedral of Panama.

  • @CaptainGameEngine
    @CaptainGameEngine Před rokem +1

    So glad that this video has been much more correct than the first one. HUGE congrats on the research. Going to see the third one now!

  • @Razordreamz
    @Razordreamz Před 11 měsíci

    Good video! Didn't ever think of how incorporation got started, so that part was extremely interesting to me.

  • @JustinJ802
    @JustinJ802 Před rokem +15

    Johnny Harris is the best in the business at making informative and accuratly historical videos.
    I love your content. Keep up the hard work and amazing videos!

  • @alvarrodriguez9345
    @alvarrodriguez9345 Před rokem +85

    As a half Haitian (who his ancestors were brought to this island Hispaniola to be slaves) and half Spanish guy ( who probably some ancestors had to do with slavery) it destroys me the thought of how humans can treat other humans so poorly (even thought still 80 million of us humans live in slavery) it’s a shame that we aren’t doing anything to help them even though we can

    • @zzmmz3789
      @zzmmz3789 Před rokem

      The whole USA alliance countries that attacked Afghanistan are collapsing. Literally the next USSR . That what u get for attacking The Graveyard Of Empires.
      The whole USA and Europe is collapsing. Rekt europe.

    • @ThePandafriend
      @ThePandafriend Před rokem +12

      I mean that was the case since pretty much forever. Slavery and exploitation like that was already a thing in the stone ages. Less industrialized, but morally seen on pretty much the same level. Of course that doesn't make it any better.

    • @mennio100
      @mennio100 Před rokem +4

      I think that, from a certain point of view, societies, civilizations , countries can be compared to a single human being: they take some time to grown up, to get used to certain human tendencies, to refine the way to live together .
      They can still make big mistakes and act as animals, but I hope time will bring some wiseness

    • @randyross5630
      @randyross5630 Před rokem

      Stuff It Colonizer

    • @Mal_uim
      @Mal_uim Před rokem

      African slavery is a lie. Please go watch actual videos of it. Irish were more enslaved then blacks. Please don’t spread disinformation not cool.

  • @Ivanfbi
    @Ivanfbi Před rokem

    Holy crap. Subscribed to this channel because this is simply... Fantastic content! Thank you!

  • @MrAlen6e
    @MrAlen6e Před rokem +32

    I hope the next chapter dives more on how private empires really drove the independence movement in the Americas, this series has been incredible

  • @wyatt2137
    @wyatt2137 Před rokem +10

    You’ve been pushing out so much great content lately and I’m here for it

  • @hannahjong4531
    @hannahjong4531 Před rokem +7

    As a Dutch person, I learned a lot about the VOC and trades between Europe and other continents. Not a part of our history to be proud of, ethically seen. I would have loved your video's when I was a student, just as an overview. Using normal language to explain the reactions of al sorts of parties after certain events in this trade industry.

    • @Nata-rp6pf
      @Nata-rp6pf Před 11 měsíci +2

      Don't worry! soon all these uncomfortable parts of European history will be rewritten or forgotten. As Chancellor Scholz said this year about WW2 that Germany was liberated from the Nazis. lool.

    • @DustinStich-iy8eo
      @DustinStich-iy8eo Před 5 měsíci +2

      So what country has a history to be proud of? The Ottomans? I find it interesting only Europeans focus on the bad parts of their past.
      Turks are like "the Armenian genocide didn't happen"

  • @ishaan1234ful
    @ishaan1234ful Před rokem

    Johnny Harris- I have been following you from the days at VOX and i must say that your storytelling and facts are so good and amazing it gives a very good insight on things.
    Really great job

  • @pudyastomo
    @pudyastomo Před rokem +21

    I add another comment as an Indonesian. This is a fresh perspective about how imperialism work and affect globally. We as Indonesian blinded in school education that Dutch (in overall, not only Dutch Indies Company or VOC) is the biggest problem in the nation (and even the world) without thinking of European imperialism as a bigger scene. Thank you Johnny!

    • @EricvanDorp007
      @EricvanDorp007 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Indonesia wasn't such a huge country if the Dutch didn't got al those islands together. Dutch history in Indonesia is a kind of dark and not right but we did also many good things thats is very positive in this period of history for Indonesia. I have been from Jakarta to Bali in one hell of a nice trip in Indonesia, people are very nice to Dutch people so History is History and go on...Have a great 2024 Bother!

  • @LumenP1023
    @LumenP1023 Před rokem +188

    this video gives much more accurate information, and doesn’t misinform as much as the first video did. thank you Mr. Harris for improving yourself and your videos, for not misleading your audiences with embellishments and vagary.

    • @ericp.7769
      @ericp.7769 Před rokem +3

      if someone wants to learn something start read books, and do not blame youtuber! be responsible for yourself..

    • @Neuroguy100
      @Neuroguy100 Před rokem +33

      @ERIC P. Books can mislead people and be factually incorrect. There is nothing wrong with criticizing a CZcamsr, who is trying to inform a general audience, about making errors in their video. Hopefully, the youtuber will read/understand these criticisms (if the criticisms are valid) and try to improve their videos.

    • @89Djm
      @89Djm Před rokem +2

      He’s still applying ahistorical intentionality to events though & he places the origins of racism before race theory which is obviously an embellishment.

    • @zzmmz3789
      @zzmmz3789 Před rokem

      The whole USA alliance countries that attacked Afghanistan are collapsing. Literally the next USSR . That what u get for attacking The Graveyard Of Empires.
      The whole USA and Europe is collapsing. Rekt europe.

    • @ericw712
      @ericw712 Před rokem +1

      @@89Djm The addition of music, graphics, transitions, and other video editing are all embellishments.

  • @DecemberNames
    @DecemberNames Před rokem

    I enjoyed every second. Please keep it coming.Thank you for another great video brother

  • @TheQuantumGemini
    @TheQuantumGemini Před rokem +1

    This whole channel is quality stuff. Well done.

  • @harryzain
    @harryzain Před rokem +14

    As a Malaysian, we were colonised by the Portuguese then Dutch then English then occupied by the Japanese then back to English again. What I like is your explanation on the reasons and the company perspective in the early 16th century. Thats something not talked about much. We fell to the Portuguese in 1511 and it would take us another 446 years before wee were independent. Imagine that time frame…

    • @truthismycause2800
      @truthismycause2800 Před rokem

      The Iberians (Portugal and Spain) were under the Roman boot for 600 years, then 500 years under visigoth boot, than 400 years under Saracen boot. That's a lot of boots on our neck and still we overcame.
      Stop bitching and moaning about how the world works.
      That's the same as bitching about old age, diseases and death.

  • @Jamach92
    @Jamach92 Před rokem +60

    Really great video, Johnny. I can see you have put so much thought and effort into these enriching and entertaining videos. Thank you for making this wonderful series, I can’t wait for the final part! 😊

  • @timhaug6900
    @timhaug6900 Před rokem +2

    It was not just the corporation but in fact the invention of double entry accounting that made the corporation possible. Invented by the Medici bankers during the renaissance, double entry accounting allowed investors to know what percentage of a company one owned and of course how much of the profits were due each owner.

  • @tievlogs
    @tievlogs Před 3 měsíci

    I loved this! I was born and raised in Brasil and it so fascinating to obtain these deep knowledges about my country’s history. Thank you for this! What a wonderful class ✨🧡

  • @benjaminlessard8710
    @benjaminlessard8710 Před rokem +26

    Absolutely fascinating. Thank you for this insightful video!

  • @KingdomOfStars
    @KingdomOfStars Před rokem +29

    Really great video, Johnny! A lot of details compressed into 15 minutes of knowledge + your own style on it. Perfect 😀

  • @catemoana
    @catemoana Před rokem

    This was so enlightening to me!!! I'm so grateful for your vision, work.... This is gold!

  • @Inkandfa6le
    @Inkandfa6le Před 10 měsíci

    Bro i would love a behind the scenes footage of these investigations. your work is amazing.

  • @DarViajar
    @DarViajar Před rokem +64

    I can't even watch Johnny's videos for entertainment anymore because my brain goes into full on analysis mode, poring over every frame and just wondering how they did that. Another incredible video!

    • @UmarAftab-eb8zf
      @UmarAftab-eb8zf Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah, it is more analytical and you start thinking how and why, really, why. They are really thought provoking, rather than entertaining.

  • @gogobrasil7185
    @gogobrasil7185 Před rokem +46

    Shows how society really takes off when people have the freedom to form their own organizations and invest in their growth, with advancements in science, medicine, technology, etc, but at the same time, it shows how letting that go unattended and unregulated can result in people coming up with some horrific solutions. As always, we should strive for a middle ground.

    • @my_pronoun_is_your_excellency
      @my_pronoun_is_your_excellency Před rokem +4

      well said, and that's why rights to free speech and press are so important, without them, one would not hear and see program like this video, and therefore, no chance to reflect on mistakes in the past

  • @kennethcorpuz8863
    @kennethcorpuz8863 Před rokem +9

    In the case of Spain in the Philippines, the companies were the religious orders.

  • @mrmacho41
    @mrmacho41 Před 5 měsíci

    This is a very interesting series. I see so many people that want to defend or add context to somethings that were brought up, but there is no need.

  • @kat616
    @kat616 Před rokem +3

    G’day Johnny! I’m a big fan of your work. I’m a map lover too. Would you consider packaging up some of your maps into a product that can be purchased and used as screen savers? Some are very beautiful, I’d be sweet to display them on my TV. When not watching your videos of course haha. No stress if not I’m sure you’re busy enough. Keep up the good work. Your video on the dingo fence was great too btw!

  • @kimjohnson8471
    @kimjohnson8471 Před rokem +4

    Your content has always been par excellent. Lately, it's been 🔥! Extremely well researched, impactful, and relevant.

  • @SanderBuitelaar
    @SanderBuitelaar Před rokem

    This series is incredible. Amazing job!

  • @sonicjihad7
    @sonicjihad7 Před rokem +21

    The majority of slaves were captured by fellow Africans of larger more powerful tribes and sold to the Europeans. Very significant distinction

    • @infinitekaister
      @infinitekaister Před rokem +4

      Your ideology is entirely different of African tribe leaders. African tribe leaders were simply warring with each other throughout history- nothing ever notable enough. But nobody thought of each other as "subhuman" until European ideology came around. Slaves have never been treated so horrifically until Europeans started acquiring those people. "Races" is a false concept made up by Europeans to justify a cruel history of treating human beings as second rate animals and playthings.

    • @BasicNoobs
      @BasicNoobs Před 7 měsíci +7

      ​@@infinitekaisterracism has begin pretty much when human variations was a thing it wasn't made by a European plus slaves in Africa own by African are treated like shit as in burned alive, dismemberment, or even impalement. I'm black btw

    • @paulm2467
      @paulm2467 Před 6 měsíci +4

      ⁠@@infinitekaisterbs, slavery was how the powerful tribes gained and retained their power, they enslaved and sold the tribes they defeated, the slave trade was primarily to Arab countries originally, the North Atlantic slave trade was a late development that many African rulers exploited for their own benefit. Europeans didn’t go far from the sea, (how could a few hundred seamen capture thousands of slaves?), they relied on buying slaves from established African slave markets. You need to study some history, the Romans had slaves, the word slave comes from Slav (Europeans that were enslaved by Turks and Arabs), North Africans enslaved Southern Europeans for the Barbary coast slave trade, slavery goes back to ancient times and every society. England is the reason that the slave trade was massively reduced although it’s still going on in the Middle East.

    • @atlanticrf
      @atlanticrf Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@infinitekaister I lived in Africa (Ghana), and believe me, many tribes think of the other tribes as inferior and subhuman.

    • @lancelittrell369
      @lancelittrell369 Před 5 měsíci

      The indigenous tribes themselves believed that land could not be "owned" in the sense that other cultures owned land.
      Humans, throughout all of history, claimed and fought wars over land. A technological advantage usually meant victory.
      Europeans from approx 1600 on fled to other lands to escape religious persecution, not with the intent to spread it.
      Slavery has already been adequately addressed by other commenters.
      Just to cover a few points.
      The fool that made this video takes his "progressive influenced education" and spins a tale filled with misleading half truths, outright lies,and assumptions, and the weak of mind fall for it.

  • @c.rutherford
    @c.rutherford Před rokem +4

    I always found it somewhat touching that Queen Isabella of Spain, who was the reason Columbus ever came to America...though she had the audacity to declare Native Americans her subjects.... then went to her deathbed refusing to allow them to be slaves or even to be abused, since she considered them her citizens. Says this in "A Plea for Isabella", Lucas Barron:
    "Isabella insisted that the Indians be counted as her “vassals” and potential Christians, not as the Portuguese had classed the Africans. When the first shipment of enslaved Taínos arrived in Spain, she upbraided Columbus for defying her command to treat them well and ordered the captives freed and returned home. Few of them made it. As reports came back to her of Columbus’s continued abuses of both natives and colonists, Isabella had him arrested, brought back to Spain in chains for investigation, and definitively stripped of his governorship."
    But it doesn't stop there:
    "On her deathbed, Isabella dictated a codicil to her will, enjoining her heirs “that they not consent or allow that the Indians […] receive any injury in their persons or effects, but I command that they be well and justly treated. And if they have received any injury, that you should remedy it.”
    Sadly Californians still toppled her statue in 2020 from their state legislature, since it also had Columbus. "A Beaux-Arts showpiece by the American master Larkin Goldsmith Mead entitled Columbus’ Last Appeal to Queen Isabella. It depict(ed) three figures, Columbus, Queen Isabella and an attentive young page, at a moment of singular consequence for world history (when she approved the first voyage to America)."
    Eh well. Maybe its a fitting confused ending for a statue of a woman who demanded confused mercy for millions.

    • @jonayz8655
      @jonayz8655 Před rokem

      Americans have being promoting Postmodernism and postcolonialism ideologies but now they have realised that they could be confronted with the reality of having erased from earth millions of native americans in the US territories, Hawaians and Philipines. So they decided they will accuse and put the blame on Spain, Spaniards old or modern and at the same time will use the same shot to shut Latin Americans since they are a growing force within US society that they fear and want to demonize. The attemps by US polititians like Trump and others are more than obvious. They want Hispanics to feel ashamed of who they are while they get away and shovel upon us their own shit.

    • @DanielHerrera-rl1vw
      @DanielHerrera-rl1vw Před rokem

      Isabel

    • @c.rutherford
      @c.rutherford Před rokem

      Is the 'la' at the end optional?
      She was the one who backed Columbus. Her husband just sort of went along with it.
      He really was ordered to be brought back in chains too. A bit of a "how do you like it yourself." But when he arrived in Spain, he was told he could take them off at the port, and he refused. Instead he made a big production of walking through the streets wearing them and went to court that way. So then he kneels in front of the court and says, "This is my reward for your most loyal subject bringing you all the gold and realms" etc etc.
      Of course then she was almost apologetic.
      He knew how to schmooze the lady!
      She was having none of the slavery though.
      Or so the account I read goes.

  • @DiskoNixon.
    @DiskoNixon. Před rokem +55

    I honestly thought he gave up this mini-series. I'm so glad he didn't

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před rokem +63

      nope. i learned from the feedback on the missteps of the last steps. but I still believe in the need to tell this story

    • @PeriodicallyRational
      @PeriodicallyRational Před rokem +3

      @@johnnyharris You're doing an amazing job. You just keep getting more nuanced and better each time. Honestly thank you for that.

  • @kmakiable
    @kmakiable Před 8 dny

    Mr Harris its my first time watching your channel. I'm impressed with what I see here. You tell the truth as you see it and without compromising, something that's rare to find in today's media

  • @1234nicklim
    @1234nicklim Před měsícem

    Your vids are so good and well designed with music image and story telling

  • @chrisnchips
    @chrisnchips Před rokem +22

    Love your videos! Editing is spot on! Look forward to the next one.

  • @privaterizk4936
    @privaterizk4936 Před rokem +4

    15:11 right...
    I was never a fan of history and only knew the one of my country that made by its people. I started to have interest in it when _accidentally_ watch CZcams videos about history of other countries, either made by their own people or by people from other country. And now this.
    It's really mind-blowing to see each perspectives, each story, each history.

  • @shaneanderson1229
    @shaneanderson1229 Před rokem +5

    I appreciate your willingness to dig out the uncomfortable history and say it the way it is on both sides of the coin. Well done.

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland Před rokem +1

    The reason the Dutch VOC was one of the first and most succesful 'multinational' corporations:
    1. it was founded to fund the Dutch Eighty Years' War in the first place (getting rich was just a welcome add-on)
    2. in contrast with the other private companies in the rest of Europe, the Dutch had a single, United (Verenigde) East India (Oost-Indische) Company (hence: VOC). English companies were competing against each other *and* the foreign companies while the Dutch VOC had no competitors.
    And if they found any English in 'their region' they would take swift action, sometimes even waging a short but brutal war while at home both the Dutch Republic and the United Kingdom could still be at peace.
    In a Canadian or New Zealand documentary (so sorry, it's no longer on YT), the narrator/presenter stated that the British Empire could never have become so succesful if it wasn't for the Dutch VOC that showed it how it was done. Also, invading England and putting the Dutch Stadtholder on the British throne also helped a lot (Glorious Invasion I mean Revolution of 1688).

  • @Ale-tq2co
    @Ale-tq2co Před rokem +22

    Johnny, I am a big fan of these topics, world, history, maps and borders! I always love your videos, great job!

  • @thomasbale9945
    @thomasbale9945 Před rokem +46

    I'm also a map nerd. Always been. That's why I love your videos!

  • @Brian013100
    @Brian013100 Před rokem +2

    David Mitchell has a brilliant novel in part about the voc called The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zodt

  • @laurenh19
    @laurenh19 Před rokem +9

    So interesting! I love the way you explain things, Johnny. It’s crazy how the love and pursuit of more money can change the face of the earth and make people completely inhumane. As a Christian, it infuriates me to see people do things in the name of Jesus that Jesus Himself would abhor. Humans sure have a knack for twisting good into evil.

  • @bmdo6870
    @bmdo6870 Před rokem +6

    Johnny, your content is always informative and well presented.

  • @eldisonvrapi2934
    @eldisonvrapi2934 Před rokem +4

    This is great journalism right here !
    Really informative and with lots of visual and audio cues.
    It helps a lot ! Otherwise i would get bored like in school.
    Thank you Mr. Harris ! 👍

    • @unlimitedpower978
      @unlimitedpower978 Před rokem

      This isn’t journalism. It’s a polemical video essay. Doesn’t make it bad, but it’s not journalism

  • @Cemanahuac-NicanTlaca
    @Cemanahuac-NicanTlaca Před 8 měsíci +2

    Thank you for explaining our indigenous first nations genocide and European illegal occupation of our continent with such accuracy, this video is one of many that I will watch, please keep up the good work on working to properly educate the general population on true history.

    • @nonono9194
      @nonono9194 Před 3 dny

      Thanks now that I've read this I stopped the video, thought it was informative and not a racist rewrite of history, how disgusting this is allowed to occur.

  • @DJShaiGuy
    @DJShaiGuy Před 4 měsíci

    Fascinating stuff. Great work!

  • @kyxz018
    @kyxz018 Před rokem +5

    Another really good video. I hope this will lead to a creation of a video about pirate age since its quite vague to a lot of people what the real story about pirates is because of several movies and anime, who are the famous ones who leads them and their territories and what influence they had that affect to this day if there is any.

  • @ayeaayush
    @ayeaayush Před rokem +4

    Johnny's storytelling skills are so compelling that people probably don't care when he glosses over gaint factual inaccuracies to generalize his ideas, for example (when it comes to India and the east india company, it wasn't a bunch of unclaimed land whose people were just some hunter gatherers and didn't know a word about agriculture, it already had bigger and much modern kingdoms than most European countries at the time and unsurprisingly the EIC had to admit it. Yet how india still ended up getting colonized(how many kings joined hands with EIC or lost to them) is where we must get into the details. I don't think an accurate display of history can happen w/o going into these details, millions of such truths.

    • @ayeaayush
      @ayeaayush Před rokem

      Before i get any hate comments, I know it's youtube, that I might be on the wrong platform to get the knowledge I wanted. And goes without saying that I just love these videos, been a fan of Mr. Harris since he was a producer on Vox!

    • @nyashovna
      @nyashovna Před rokem +1

      So disappointed and honestly a bit angry at how poorly various things were presented, explained and interpreted in this video...

  • @DanDiaz5445
    @DanDiaz5445 Před 4 měsíci

    “They had access to so much stuff” and I look behind him when he said that and than I looked around where I’m living and it was than I realized we’re all living like kings at this point. Just enough to think we’re free.

  • @Conan_1997
    @Conan_1997 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Subscribing to this channel was one of the easiest decisions I’ve ever made

  • @ArmchairAuthorities
    @ArmchairAuthorities Před rokem +4

    Hey Johnny! I watched your first video on this topic and was really disappointed with how far you pushed storytelling/entertainment over the facts. But I saw that you responded to The Present Pasts criticism to heart and even included him in the creation of this video. I think that’s commendable and not something most content creators would do! Really excited that you will be citing sources and focusing more on facts without loosing your unique visuals and storytelling techniques!

    • @fgsaramago
      @fgsaramago Před rokem

      Well, it continues to be amateurish ti refer to Spain instead of Castille but then refer to England as such and not as the United Kingdom. That way its neither accurate nor consistent

  • @fishman235
    @fishman235 Před rokem +4

    I've learned more history from your videos than I have from school. Keep it up!

  • @mikamika6371
    @mikamika6371 Před 4 měsíci

    I like Your canals knowledge & competition 😂❤😅 Marry Christmas ⛄🎁 mika ny

  • @jersonclavio2449
    @jersonclavio2449 Před rokem

    Hi man I really enjoy your videos good work

  • @caydcrow5161
    @caydcrow5161 Před rokem +3

    Always a freaking treat when you upload! Keep it up Johnny!!!

  • @Isinlor
    @Isinlor Před rokem +9

    Also, big simplification - it's Western Europe that's doing all of that. In the east, in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth we were establishing things like Nobles' Democracy, freedom of religion etc. until we got crashed with traditional imperialism by Sweden, Russia, Austria and Prussia.

    • @KevinJohnson-cv2no
      @KevinJohnson-cv2no Před rokem +2

      "noble democracy" LMAO

    • @joaquincimas1707
      @joaquincimas1707 Před rokem +2

      Yeah.
      You guys were flying in cars and have liberal democracies while Spain, France, UK, Netherlands and Portugal were in colonial mode.
      100% true, not a lie.

    • @Isinlor
      @Isinlor Před rokem +1

      @@KevinJohnson-cv2no Sorry for my English - it should be "Nobles' Democracy" or "Golden Freedom". Poland was electing kings according to the Henrician Articles (1573). We were also the second after USA to write down modern constitution, so called Constitution of 3rd May 1791. Unfortunately, final partitions of Poland happened in 1795.

    • @Isinlor
      @Isinlor Před rokem +1

      @@joaquincimas1707 Sorry for my English - it should be "Nobles' Democracy" or "Golden Freedom". Poland was electing kings according to the Henrician Articles (1573). We were also the second after USA to write down modern constitution, so called Constitution of 3rd May 1791. Unfortunately, final partitions of Poland happened in 1795.

    • @joaquincimas1707
      @joaquincimas1707 Před rokem

      @@Isinlor But it have nothing to share with democracy.
      And i know, Eastern Europe dont take part in colonials affairs.
      But the comment looks a little bit off in the first read.
      Nothing against Poland or your comment 👍

  • @barbaratimmons5510
    @barbaratimmons5510 Před rokem

    Interesting work and well presented. Thank you. But I have to say NO HISTORIC ACCOUNT is absolutely 100% accurate. This could never be so - because our accepted written records have always been distorted to present certain personal views. Your interpretations are, I think, much more open and explicit regarding the true facts and I look forward to viewing the full unbiased revelations. I am working on an much earlier development of Europe, from the earliest age of 5000 BCE to the era of the Mediterranean cultural collapse of the Iron Age. The same theme of TRADE is at the core of my introduction to the subject.

  • @AjayKumarMumbai
    @AjayKumarMumbai Před rokem +1

    The first company was not the Dutch East India Company. The first one was an English Company called "The Marchants Adventurers of England for the Discovery of Lands, Territories, Iles, Dominions and Seigniories Unknowen, and Not before that Late Adventure or Enterprise by Sea or Navigation Commonly Frequented" ( Muscovy Company) incorporated in 1555.

    • @marcjeee5380
      @marcjeee5380 Před rokem +1

      Well, it's a matter of defenition really... The first "recorded" company ever, was a company in Japan called Kongō Gumi (578). If you want to name the first documented joint-stock company, that was the Bazacle Milling Company (around 1250) in France. The Merchants Adventurers of England for the Discovery of Lands was the earliest joint-stock company recognized in England, The Dutch East India Company was the first publically traded company, meaning shares could be bought by anyone and subsequently bought and sold in open-air secondary markets.