The Thirty Years War

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • www.tomrichey.net
    The Thirty Years' War was fought from 1618-1648 (Thirty Years!) in the Holy Roman Empire. It began as a conflict between Catholics and Protestants in Bohemia, but grew to involve Denmark, Sweden, and France. After the French began helping Gustavus Adolphus, the Protestant king of Sweden, the lines became blurry and the war became more about the balance of power in Europe than about religion. The Peace of Westphalia paved the way for France to become the dominant power in Western Europe and for the permanent decline of the Holy Roman Empire as a political institution.
    If you like this lecture, check out my other lectures for AP European History and Western Civilization!

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @kumppi
    @kumppi Před 8 lety +2562

    I never knew Matt Damon was so knowledgeable about history.

    • @mayherrera8539
      @mayherrera8539 Před 8 lety +40

      omg he looks so much like him!

    • @dodec8449
      @dodec8449 Před 8 lety +21

      +kumppi I never knew he was Southern.

    • @TheMapman01
      @TheMapman01 Před 8 lety +7

      +kumppi and he sounds like ernest p worrel

    • @rivsol
      @rivsol Před 8 lety +7

      +kumppi I never knew he was a Martian

    • @yashdeshpande2733
      @yashdeshpande2733 Před 8 lety +15

      He looks like Mark Wahlberg though :o

  • @NikkyElso
    @NikkyElso Před 7 lety +627

    Honestly I'm surprised the 30 years war lasted for 30 years since the 7 years war lasted for 9 and don't even get me started on the 100 years war.

    • @rudde7918
      @rudde7918 Před 7 lety +8

      Elso Wasn't more like 90 years with periods of peace in between the fighting periods?

    • @Weebusaurus
      @Weebusaurus Před 7 lety +27

      1337 to 1453, so actually more than 100 years, but yes, periods of peace separating phases.

    • @snappy452
      @snappy452 Před 7 lety +16

      Well its a good thing all this silliness ended with the War of 1812, which went until 1814, whose most famous battle was fought after a peace was agreed upon, but hey at least it was short.

    • @auspiciouspotato3515
      @auspiciouspotato3515 Před 6 lety +2

      Tom Sanders That's actually interesting I didn't know about that. 🇮🇪

    • @polyarchzealot305
      @polyarchzealot305 Před 6 lety +1

      Tom Sanders Get stuffed, maple midget. Canada has been rightful American clay since the revolutionary war; it only exist now because of the crumpet munchers wanting an easy vantage point to reclaim their former subjects if the opportunity ever presented itself.

  • @quique7764
    @quique7764 Před 6 lety +88

    I love the fact that King Gustav II was one of the few Kings who actually fought along side his soldiers & can certainly see why his solider loved, fought & died for him.

    • @noradora23
      @noradora23 Před 3 lety +3

      oml tsar nicolas ii of russia also ended up fighting alongside his soldiers but no one liked him :///

    • @nategamer9184
      @nategamer9184 Před rokem

      @@noradora23 prior to that he was heavily disliked by his country and he only did that to oversee the war and lost many battles while fighting with them

  • @Grivian
    @Grivian Před 9 lety +72

    Gustavus Adolphus didn't just introduce mobile artillery (although that was very significant). He completely changed the formation of the armies, going away from the tradition spanish squre formation. He introduced platoon fire, and made the soldiers wear lighter armor among many things

    • @Your_President_Kanye_East
      @Your_President_Kanye_East Před 7 měsíci +1

      He and his generals introduced and / or copied many innovations from other militaries creating a unique tactical model. However, I believe the reason why Gustavus Adolphus has been dubbed the father of the modern warfare is the emphasis on cooperation between infantry and artillery and between infantry and cavalry. He was arguably the first commander since Alexander the Greate who implemented the concept of *combined forces* so successfully.

  • @JohnSmith-ee8ni
    @JohnSmith-ee8ni Před 5 lety +102

    I just realized the video is 15:55 long... and it involves the Peace of Augsburg. Coincidence?

  • @SuperCcbby
    @SuperCcbby Před 8 lety +233

    *watches Tom Richey videos at midnight to prepare for a euro test the next day* O-o

  • @N332
    @N332 Před 8 lety +66

    This was literally a months worth of classes perfectly summarized. Thank you! Hopefully the exam goes well

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 8 lety +6

      I hope your exam goes well, too!

  • @johnlainekunkle
    @johnlainekunkle Před 7 lety +91

    I'm a history fan. It was my favorite subject in school, but my father insisted I study a "practical subject" (Economics and Accounting). I'm not sorry I did because a lot of what happens in history is really caused by economic conditions so understanding economics and finance is not a bad thing. However, I've never lost my love of history. I have to congratulate you as being the most succinct, clear, organized presenter of history I've ever heard. If I was your student, I would be worshiping at your feet. As the kids say today, I'm a "fanboy" of yours. I'm going to subscribe to your channel as I would like to hear your dissertations on other parts of history. Thanks so much for taking a so called "boring" subject like history and explaining it in very succinct terms. You're the greatest.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 7 lety +19

      +John Kunkle Thank you very much! I'm grateful to have subscribers who watch these videos for their own edification. Your encouragement is much appreciated! I dabble in economic history here and there - my lecture on mercantilism would be an example.

    • @johnlainekunkle
      @johnlainekunkle Před 7 lety +10

      You do a great job of simplifying the key elements to understanding a complex subject for easy understanding and remembrance. Most historians do just the opposite. They get into the nuances, which is important for an in depth understanding. But it's nice to have an over view of the subject material before you drill down into the details.

  • @uigyeomjeon8042
    @uigyeomjeon8042 Před 4 lety +16

    thanks I am an Korean student. I was looking for information about 30 years war. you really did organized it well you talk slow so foreign people can understand thanks so much

    • @TheReMorseCode
      @TheReMorseCode Před 3 lety

      영어로 역사에 대해서 배우는거 정말 대단하시네요! 영어 잘 하셔나 봐요

  • @kathrynmoore524
    @kathrynmoore524 Před 3 lety +51

    y'all this is actually really helpful. since we started doing online school it's not as fun and engaging and class is an hour long, but this dude explains so much in just 15 minutes, it's literally saving my grade in ap euro lmaooo

  • @citronvand
    @citronvand Před 8 lety +307

    I was never really interested in history until I started playing Europa Universalis IV. I love discovering historical events that happens in-game and later read up upon what really happened. I just lead the Protestant league to victory as Sweden and gained the Lion of the North achievement. After that I knew I had research this which is why I'm watching this video, very interesting topic to say the least. I just wish your video was longer, I could have easily watched 2 hours.

    • @valrossenOliver
      @valrossenOliver Před 8 lety +4

      Indeed, for some reason that game makes things very intereting. First i just wanted to rule the world... but the game made a complete turn of thinking.

    • @Marius2Rocker
      @Marius2Rocker Před 8 lety +7

      +valrossenOliver Yeah. After a while you end up prefering to release nations as part of a peace deal, rather than taking land, simply for more political intrigue.

    • @ThejollyFrenchman
      @ThejollyFrenchman Před 8 lety +49

      As a former employee of Paradox and a developer of EUIV, I can't explain to you just how glad it makes me feel to hear that we helped you gain an interest in history. I hope you follow this pursuit, it really is a great subject.

    • @Rayechel
      @Rayechel Před 8 lety +11

      +ThejollyFrenchman Oh my gawd EUIV is life but history is even more life. Thank you for developing the greatest game of all time in terms of grand strategy history.

    • @SANTI--ez9nw
      @SANTI--ez9nw Před 8 lety

      Same here!

  • @michaelacanete47
    @michaelacanete47 Před 9 lety +11

    Sir, where have you been my whole life. You saved me from the AP European test.

  • @milasquid3130
    @milasquid3130 Před 6 lety +194

    rip to all the people who came across this in their DBQ

  • @mosquitobight
    @mosquitobight Před 7 lety +232

    Sweden's invention of mobile artillery was the IKEA of modern war.

    • @chrisnoname4808
      @chrisnoname4808 Před 5 lety +3

      The need for firepower .....when fighting the polish winged husars, it was important to kill them Before they could reach the Swedish forces

    • @chrisnoname4808
      @chrisnoname4808 Před 5 lety +7

      Sweden in the 1600s was the fathers of modern warfare .......we could kick ass everywhere ....Poland, Russia, Germany, Denmak ...we could take them on all, at the same time

    • @Citroen_2cv
      @Citroen_2cv Před 4 lety +1

      You win the internet for this comment.

    • @jothompson8362
      @jothompson8362 Před 4 lety +1

      Such an apt description😅

    • @amponbayan
      @amponbayan Před 3 lety +1

      @@chrisnoname4808 Did they have instructions for the artillery in diagrams? I am sure this was the start of IKEA.

  • @annakisker3301
    @annakisker3301 Před 9 lety +79

    finally after spending the entire school year trying to figure out this war, i finally get it :D
    good luck to everyone else cramming for the AP euro exam tomorrow!

    • @HerrReinhard
      @HerrReinhard Před 3 lety +1

      It's simple, Doctor Luther with his patron wanted to steal Pope's property and then it all started.

    • @HansDunkelberg1
      @HansDunkelberg1 Před 2 lety

      ​@@HerrReinhard No, it's much more complicated. After all, you basically have two Catholic superpowers fighting each other. The leader of one of these powers (Ferdinand II of Austria) tries to restore a religious intolerance that recently has been given up through a predecessor. The leader of the other power (the Frenchman Richelieu) with a certain success exploits an unwillingness of the suppressed ones to reconcile themselves to that restoration of intolerance. That's pretty pale a constellation, for a child. Already the beginning, with the Letter of Majesty of 1609 that had allowed protestant worship in Bohemia being revoked by Ferdinand II, isn't simple. A pupil won't care much about an edict of 1609 which only has relaxed matters of worship in Bohemia having been revoked, a few years later. Then, another problem: into this apparently religious war there is mingled a confusing question of the geopolitical equilibrium of secular powers. The Catholic France appears as a helper of the Protestant Sweden (see 8:19), because a cardinal de facto reigning it feels that his country begins to be surrounded by regions controlled from Vienna, too much (9:40). To entangle things even more, Gustavus Adolphus has to die in battle, with the consequence of a Swedish military pullback and an inversion of the constellation that France has paid and Sweden fought.
      You could summarize: "The Catholic France exploited a suppression of Protestants in the Hapsburg empire for an adjustment of the European balance of power, by supporting military resistance of those Protestants, after the Protestant countries Denmark and Sweden had been doing the latter before. It has achieved a certain, but altogether only an insignificant success. The ideological gist has been that a dawning of religious tolerance was battled by the Austrian leaders within their territories, while the French have supported it, from outside." Quite an amount of complexity for a pupil of an age at which you typically will hear about the Thirty Years' War, at school! The insignificance of the outcome of the whole thing will have to render moot most hopes for an average pupil to keep in mind much of the reasons.

  • @diegovillarroel8222
    @diegovillarroel8222 Před 5 lety +173

    Blue Bohemian
    Dank Danish
    Shrek Swedish
    Fries French

    • @muhammadahmed3588
      @muhammadahmed3588 Před 4 lety +16

      Diego Villarroel
      Big
      Dick
      Small
      Feet

    • @ikepaul4536
      @ikepaul4536 Před 4 lety +3

      BDSF

    • @sebastiaandewit159
      @sebastiaandewit159 Před 4 lety +21

      BDSM. With the M for Mongloid French.

    • @henrybarreras5505
      @henrybarreras5505 Před 4 lety +8

      Balls
      Deep in a
      Sissy's
      Fanny

    • @djmills2040
      @djmills2040 Před 3 lety +1

      Whatever, basically in plain English the black nobility was overrun by the-new coming albinos who didn’t want to be ruled by the black kingdoms. The start of racism and white supremacy.

  • @karolanethibault587
    @karolanethibault587 Před 8 lety +11

    I am taking a class about the modern Europe and to be honest, history is really not my cup of tea. I'm more into art, philosophy and litterature, and this class is killing me. I have an exam tomorrow morning, and even if I did study about 50 hours, and I do not exagerate at all, I don't understand a single thing. Don't know why, to me it's so vague and complicated and god knows why I suck at this, but I do.
    And then I listened to your video. This war is not the main subject of my exam, but you vid' do help me a lot. Maybe it's too soon to scream hallelujah but for now, I'm really grateful.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 8 lety +1

      It's never too soon to scream hallelujah. Good luck on your exam!

  • @bhuikjh987
    @bhuikjh987 Před 9 lety +4

    THANK GOODNESS FOR YOU! It's thanks to teachers like you that help kids with teachers who don't teach, pass their exams!

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 9 lety

      bhuikjh987 I'm glad these videos I'm making in my spare time are making you feel like you're heading toward success on your exam! WOO!

  • @Tabbytututheawesome
    @Tabbytututheawesome Před 8 lety +159

    Thought you were great in The Martian! You deserved that Oscar

    • @easonchen6267
      @easonchen6267 Před 6 lety +4

      Tabia Schmidt honestly most clever thing I've heard all day. I didn't notice till I saw this comment lolol

  • @teaves8251
    @teaves8251 Před rokem +3

    You are more like a story teller with humor than a history teacher. I enjoy learning something new/old from your special delivery and charm. Thanks for making history fun.

    • @Philtopy
      @Philtopy Před rokem

      exactly how a techer should do it: Spark interest and give the tools so people can learn more for themselves.

  • @Dennan
    @Dennan Před 8 lety +419

    i feel like i wanna play eu 4 now

    • @yashdeshpande2733
      @yashdeshpande2733 Před 8 lety +26

      Lol I was searching the whole comments section for someone to say this! XD

    • @albertobombardelli6971
      @albertobombardelli6971 Před 7 lety +2

      me too

    • @bronynexgen
      @bronynexgen Před 7 lety +3

      In my game, Austria kind of dominated the HRE and there was no America. England mostly ruled the Old World and Africa, and the Spanish were being crushed by the Portuguese, the British and the Dutch.

    • @gerryj313
      @gerryj313 Před 6 lety +1

      I just watched this and were like "fuck this imma play an eu4 campaign where the good ol Catholics will win"

    • @triplesharigan
      @triplesharigan Před 6 lety +1

      In my game Bohemia dominates the HRE and is Austria is praying 24/7 that i won't have to fight bohemia, france, ottomans and russia at the same time.

  • @SpiderkillersInc
    @SpiderkillersInc Před 8 lety +102

    Switzerland is also really hard to invade. It's a very mountainous country, with a population of skilled riflemen. Basically, it's guerrilla warfare country.

    • @adventureinc1568
      @adventureinc1568 Před 8 lety +8

      Plus every adult over 18 must have a gun permit.

    • @itsjohnnyboi3214
      @itsjohnnyboi3214 Před 8 lety +3

      *must have a gun or two, or three... And be extremely proficient with it

    • @SpiderkillersInc
      @SpiderkillersInc Před 8 lety +2

      itsjohnnyboi dear lord. It's like a gun supporters wet dream.

    • @tomashize
      @tomashize Před 8 lety +4

      +Spiderkillers, Inc
      They rigged all the routs into the country to explode in case of invasion plus the roads can turn into runways and they have bunkers everywhere!

    • @asdewrt
      @asdewrt Před 8 lety +7

      Fun Fact: Switzerland is gettimg smaller by a few millimeters every year because of continental drift

  • @omarelhosseni695
    @omarelhosseni695 Před 7 lety

    Mr.Richey, I have just discovered your channel and am feeling I will be indebted to you over the next few years. It's like finding a gold mine of studying information.

  • @logster99
    @logster99 Před 8 lety

    This really helped me with my studying for our first historical period test. Thank you, Tom Richey!! This was one of the few topics that I didn't fully grasp due to all the content it contained. Thanks again!

  • @fredrikemilsson4848
    @fredrikemilsson4848 Před 9 lety +14

    First of all, this is a wonderful video that is very educating and at the same time hilarious. A big thanks for you Tom Richey for producing this content.
    The one thing I would criticize, and I don't know if its been said before, is that you did not point out the massive loss of life that the war caused. Of course always assume wars cost lives but one third of the german population perished in this conflict, 8 million people. Perhaps they deserve a mention.

    • @thenewfire
      @thenewfire Před rokem

      Probably closer to 2/3rds. I agree, that should have gotten a line or 2. The war was basically all fought within German grounds and it brutalized the land and dehumanized/demoralized a huge part of the peasant class.

  • @brianrice3065
    @brianrice3065 Před 8 lety +6

    Haven't fully grasped the concept of the thirty years war all year until I saw this video. AP Exam is tomorrow and this video helped me extremely, thank you for helping me understand!

  • @Marina-lo3hp
    @Marina-lo3hp Před 5 měsíci +2

    Wow. I loved this video. It really does provide a brief and clear summary of the events leading to the 30-year war, how it unfolded and its relevance. Outstanding summary. Thank you for posting this.

  • @laila6812
    @laila6812 Před 6 lety +1

    you don't even understand how much this video SAVED ME on the AP Euro dbq on friday!! i remember so many details from this video THANK YOU SO MUCH TOM💓💓

  • @calebjohnson4128
    @calebjohnson4128 Před 7 lety +297

    Wow, Martin Luther not only reforms Christianity itself, but then went on to help end awful racial problems in America, all in the span of 500 years!

  • @bencornell8300
    @bencornell8300 Před 7 lety +24

    Tom Richey what a fucking savage.

    • @shmrnt5996
      @shmrnt5996 Před 7 lety +1

      Ben Cornell Matt. Not Tom Richey, or Tom Damon . Matt Damon !

  • @seanbaz1423
    @seanbaz1423 Před 4 lety

    Your videos are fantastic. You make clear connections between historical events that make following along a simple exercise. Thank you.

  • @steveblevins8793
    @steveblevins8793 Před rokem

    Thank you for making this complicated subject comprehensible!

  • @lolasogm
    @lolasogm Před 8 lety +26

    Nice, I don't even study history, but I like to learn history as a hobby. Glad to have found this

  • @tmsantos_
    @tmsantos_ Před 9 lety +4

    Currently taking up a Christian civilization history class and I find this video super helpful. :D Makes me understand the wars better thanks to the language you use and the mnemonics (?) to help remember the phases. Thank you so much!

  • @user-nw3cn3gm1c
    @user-nw3cn3gm1c Před 9 lety +1

    Explaining such a complex war simply and thoroughly. Good review for AP Exam.

  • @vasilikichaintini722
    @vasilikichaintini722 Před 7 lety

    Sir, you are an amazing teacher! You can make a complicated topic seem not so complicated. It is obvious that you have a talent in explaining and trasmiting information. Thank you for the video and keep up the good work!

  • @andreluisguzman123
    @andreluisguzman123 Před 7 lety +26

    Really helped me and my understanding of the thirty years war thank you !

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 7 lety +1

      +Andre Andre You're welcome!

    • @mariocassina90
      @mariocassina90 Před 7 lety

      Why don't you take the single parts of it analyzing them one by one? It is impossible to find anything about the Thirty Years War

  • @mikesnel1013
    @mikesnel1013 Před 9 lety +3

    Thanks for this, i have to write a 3 argument essay on the 30 years war, this video helped me alot.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 9 lety

      Bonecrusher1997 Glad I could help you get started!

  • @jimivey6462
    @jimivey6462 Před 6 lety

    Great research, analysis, and presentation! Thanks for doing this!

  • @mariaeduardamazza9025

    thank you SO MUCH for that video. i'm on my first period of IR and extensive lectures are tiring and often not engaging. this helped me so much in understanding major concepts in a quick and dynamic way, and i will definetly reccomend your channel to my classmates. keep up the great work! beyong thankful!

  • @yorkieandthecat
    @yorkieandthecat Před 7 lety +130

    Awesome lecture! Thank you, Tom!

  • @brandonbennett944
    @brandonbennett944 Před 9 lety +10

    Your students are extremely lucky to have a teacher (Professor?) like you. Your ability to relate history within modern times, using phrases such as "riding thirty", is absolutely amazing; a feat that can be difficult at times, to say the least. I'm currently a college student, majoring in history and minoring in secondary education, hoping to be a 10th grade history teacher on day. This video enlightened me to some fun and new ideas on how to relate historical information to my future students. I really appreciate that and thank you so much for this informative video!

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 9 lety +3

      Brandon Bennett Thanks a bunch for the kind words! I'm a high school teacher by day and a part-time adjunct professor by night, so both are correct. You may want to think about going ahead and doing a double major in history and education so you can qualify for a teaching certificate. I had to get a M.Ed. in order to get certified because I didn't do an education major the first time around. Of course, grad school is always an option!

    • @lawrencebrannan4197
      @lawrencebrannan4197 Před 9 lety

      Tom Richey
      Hi Tom. I really love your video's. Larry Brannan here. I'am adjunct history professor at the College of Southern Md. teaching Western Civilization and US. history. Use them all the time for my classes. I also taught high school history before starting at CSM 6 years ago, Keep them coming. lbrannan@csmd.edu

  • @klokanmacho5571
    @klokanmacho5571 Před 8 lety +1

    Great lecture, this really helped me to put this war in a larger perspective. Props to you for taking the time to put the pictures as well.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 8 lety +1

      Thanks! It takes a lot of extra time and effort to create the slides and include them in the video production so I'm glad to hear it's appreciated!

  • @antivalidisme5669
    @antivalidisme5669 Před 6 lety +1

    "Let's see how many people we can hang in this tree over here". Asking myself the same thing every morning.
    More seriously GREAT content, you manage to match efficiency, History and humour,and as an History aficionado I truly appreciate. Thank you!

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 6 lety

      +Raphaël Dordeins Thanks for the kind words! Such a wonderful comment!

  • @1945joshuaruiz
    @1945joshuaruiz Před 7 lety +12

    This helped me 2 years ago when I was in AP euro . Thank you so much! :) class of 2015!

    • @rookas6274
      @rookas6274 Před 7 lety

      I'm taking this as a freshman of the class of 2020, any advice?

    • @TheAznSnakeTAS
      @TheAznSnakeTAS Před 7 lety +1

      read the book

    • @rookas6274
      @rookas6274 Před 7 lety

      Thanks for that

    • @TheAznSnakeTAS
      @TheAznSnakeTAS Před 7 lety

      im taking that right now, that was my teachers advice

    • @rookas6274
      @rookas6274 Před 7 lety

      My teachers advice was go to the counselor if you cry when you see your grade.

  • @kevindevoe7338
    @kevindevoe7338 Před 8 lety +5

    I watched this and need to blast Sabaton now!

  • @yerlinb5843
    @yerlinb5843 Před 9 lety

    Truly appreciate your videos Professeur. Keepem' coming. You do a great job. Short simple understanding and plus, my favorite factor, quite humourous.

  • @jahnneycantrell1247
    @jahnneycantrell1247 Před 6 lety

    I was cramming for the apeuro test the night before and I came across this video. Honestly best decision I've had to watch it. You actually saved my LEQ. Thank you so much.

  • @NapoleonBonaparti
    @NapoleonBonaparti Před 9 lety +74

    Tthe swedes actualy never stoped fighting . The war was led by diffrent generals but in 1648 they invaded parts of Prag. Sweden also got alot of north german land in this war leading to their rise as a great power.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 9 lety +19

      Albin Rudal Good to know! I should have talked to you before I recorded.

    • @linkola2930
      @linkola2930 Před 9 lety +3

      Do you mean the Finns never stopped fighting? Sweden just led the war, the warriors were mostly Finnish Hakkapeliitas.

    • @NapoleonBonaparti
      @NapoleonBonaparti Před 9 lety +12

      Tha_Be£a$t0011​ Well there were hakkapelitas but they where not that meny and since we where at war with poland aswell some where there. Most of our army towords the end where mercenarys ftom Scotland and Germany anyway. Hakkapelitas are only cavalry aswell so groundtropes where onother thing and conscription where evenly in the kingdom. I did not mention Finland anyway since it was a part of Sweden and I ment them aswell.

    • @linkola2930
      @linkola2930 Před 9 lety +2

      Yeah but even though Finland was a part of Sweden geographically, the people have always concidered themselves as Finns, not Swedes, and spoken Finnish language, not Swedish. So I'd just like people to give some respect to the brave warriors from Finland, at least by calling them Finns, not Swedes. But yes i know, there were also many warriors from Sweden.

    • @NapoleonBonaparti
      @NapoleonBonaparti Před 9 lety +7

      Tha_Be£a$t0011​ Yes of course Finland dhould get alot of glory and they did consoder themselfs qs ethnic finnns but finnish nationqlism did not exist and they also conciderd them self as swedish citisens snd did not have the decire for an independent Finland. But as I said the finns are worth mentioning and they play a huge role in the kingdom of swedens rise as a great power.

  • @alexanderreynolds9053
    @alexanderreynolds9053 Před 6 lety +4

    Just happened to watch this video before the exam. God bless Tom Richey.

  • @daiwiksahoo92
    @daiwiksahoo92 Před 6 lety

    This was a very good video to help students prepare for the exam! Love the content and plan on watching more of your videos. Before watching this, every other video/article I looked at did not give me as solid of an explanation as you did. Thank you!!!

  • @atbundros
    @atbundros Před 5 lety +1

    Great video, thank you!
    I'm a history freak.
    Got here because I've started Simplicissimus.
    You're a great historian. I wish I could sit down with you over coffee and have conversation about history!

  • @kev3d
    @kev3d Před 9 lety +18

    Fun! I learned a lot!

  • @zoatheperson3012
    @zoatheperson3012 Před 7 lety +4

    History has been my least favorite subject for a while, but my parents made me take AP Euro this year. It's been really difficult and I've been worried because of the midterm coming up, but thanks to you I think I have a chance to do well on it. Thanks for making history more fun and interesting :)

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 7 lety +3

      +Zoa ThePerson Glad I can help!

  • @dalerupert9019
    @dalerupert9019 Před 9 lety

    Tom, great explanation of this protracted conflict that was very complex on different levels. Thanks!

  • @LeenMar08
    @LeenMar08 Před 3 lety

    you explain everything so well. I was able to understand and grasp the importance of this period. thank you!

  • @sofiamazari
    @sofiamazari Před 8 lety +3

    I've learned more in 15 min watching this than a full semester with my witch of a prof

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 8 lety

      Glad I could help!

    • @stratant.8722
      @stratant.8722 Před 3 lety

      Teachers know a lot about history but they don't know how to teach the students in a way that they can understand.

  • @andrewlain6092
    @andrewlain6092 Před 7 lety +6

    Thank you for making these videos!
    They are very detailed and informative, which are different from what I've learned from school in Taiwan.
    They really help, thank you!

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 7 lety +3

      +Andrew Lain Always glad to help and I'm very thankful to have an international audience!

    • @aleattorium
      @aleattorium Před 7 lety

      I'm just a late-night student from Brazil :) and liked this video too. Keep 'em coming

  • @vallagunas655
    @vallagunas655 Před 9 lety

    Hello from Chicago, Illinois.I can't tell you how much YOU make history so much easier to understand :)Thanks for all your awesome help.

  • @FrostyFeet2018
    @FrostyFeet2018 Před 8 lety +1

    You.... are the reason I have an A+ in my AP Euro class. THANK YOU SO MUCH!!

  • @ImmaterialDigression
    @ImmaterialDigression Před 7 lety +4

    Freaking great lecture! Subbed. Genuine humour combined with knowledge and images = awesome

  • @eliasmontesdeoca9945
    @eliasmontesdeoca9945 Před 9 lety +5

    It's so much to remember to it was a really good video and I like how the slides show on screen cuz I just screenshot and study the pics tomorrow before the live stream. Plus, now I know where all those things came from, like the war with Spain and the Dutch or the evolution of the HRE

  • @masfuentes8541
    @masfuentes8541 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks, Tom! Enriching knowledge. ..

  • @xdippyx
    @xdippyx Před 7 měsíci

    honestly have been dreading history because my grades really count this year and there's just so much to memorize but this video actually was super helpful. I'm always glad when videos like this have some sort of personality and aren't just monotone renderings of boring shit. Thanks for making this!

  • @eabn87
    @eabn87 Před 7 lety +4

    Excellent, I have just learned A LOT of interesting stuff. I learned more about Western Europe's history in 15min than in my high school (considering my country basically teaches almost no European history whatsoever).
    Thank you for the lecture. I've just subscribed. It's the first time I see any of your videos. Keep it up! ;-)

  • @Lalalanddddd
    @Lalalanddddd Před 8 lety +56

    dream came true! finally have a teacher who looks like mat damon ! hahaha

  • @c-beam3670
    @c-beam3670 Před 7 měsíci

    Brilliant!!! this is probably the best "In a Nutshell" video of any topic, I've had the pleasure of viewing on CZcams.

  • @powerblo5019
    @powerblo5019 Před 7 lety

    I don't know if you get this often, but I watch to study history as a hobby. You don't know how many places I've searched for an informative and detailed series like your AP euro. Personally, it was a little weird hearing you talk about so much religion, but it was an interesting viewpoint of European history for an Asian like me. Thanks for you hard work; I hope you're still making this stuff these days.

  • @Gaheku
    @Gaheku Před 7 lety +3

    The ancestor who began to document my family tree fought - and died - in this war as a mercenary not unlike the famous Landsknechts. He was a mercenary pikeman from the Netherlands who died in battle in 1630. Through the money he was making as a mercenary, he was able to pay for my family tree registration, enabling his descendants to document their family history through the ages.

  • @mycabbages-pr7rr
    @mycabbages-pr7rr Před 8 lety +11

    Wow, thank you so much for this video! You made the content engaging and easy to understand... Saved me from reading a ton of readings!

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 8 lety +2

      That's what I like to hear!

    • @lichking3711
      @lichking3711 Před 8 lety

      +Tom Richey too bad you left out a bunch of excellent army commanders. Like Raymond Montekukulle.

  • @javeriajezzydrjavitalpur
    @javeriajezzydrjavitalpur Před 7 lety +6

    i will always pray for u,bcz u made things easy for me 😊 from pakistan

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 7 lety +3

      +javeria jazzy Thank you! 😃🙏🏼

    • @sarmad00
      @sarmad00 Před 7 lety +1

      CSS makes you find shortcuts to understanding things easy :D

    • @sarmad00
      @sarmad00 Před 7 lety

      Btw i liked ur game score analogy bro :D

  • @amnesiacwyo
    @amnesiacwyo Před 9 lety

    I also appreciated this condensed version. Thanks. You do a nice job!

  • @warlord95Sweden
    @warlord95Sweden Před 8 lety +8

    May Gustavus The great rest in peace as the brilliant king and warrior he was. Loved by his people and respected by his enemies.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 8 lety

      Indeed!

    • @NikkoYM
      @NikkoYM Před 8 lety +1

      +William .Thorén I don't want to be a buzz kill, but I think there are some people who see warfare as sentimental patriotism. I don't. OK, I get that he was ahead of his time with terrestrial tactics, and so in this sense his greatness;. But, knowing just a little bit about the history of this war, it was still hell. I would never sugar-coat war or soldiers or how they participated in warfare. The consequence of the Swedish incursion into the German arena was pillaging, and depriving peasant farmers of their harvest and foodstuffs. During this time Germany had a plague… people were no longer strong enough (malnourished) to fight off disease and infection.
      So, I have no issue with Sweden in and of itself, so pls. don't take this personally. I prefer to take a non-romantic look at war, battles, and the consequences.
      @Tom Richey

    • @warlord95Sweden
      @warlord95Sweden Před 8 lety +1

      i don't take a romantic look to war either. but when millions of people are being killed because they don't follow the catholic faith. and then a man risk it all to save innocent people, for me that's someone to be grateful for.and he was not just a man that wanted power, if he was he wouldn't have died with his men in battle
      And he was not only a warrior, he was the founder of Gothenburg (My home) and he was modern for his time. but i totally understand and respect your point..

  • @devinchandler3000
    @devinchandler3000 Před 4 lety +5

    I know I'm late by like 4 years, but I'm 95% sure he said " Swedish Swords French Fists" when he was supposed to say Swedish Stacks French Fists...

  • @ray-raywilliams9377
    @ray-raywilliams9377 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for making this video...you helped me write a large portion of my research paper by understanding European history

  • @morganyuen4231
    @morganyuen4231 Před 4 lety

    I am in my first year at uni and doing Bachelor of classical music performance course. We are learning Baroque music and our teacher made us learn 30 years war, the vid she let us watch is so fast and it's confusing. So I watched yours. Yours is so much better and I understand it. Thanks so much!!

  • @dv5873
    @dv5873 Před 6 lety +4

    Thank the lord for this video, I watched this last night and the DBQ today was over it

    • @aj0e419
      @aj0e419 Před 6 lety +1

      Willow I wish that I watched this video 😭

  • @britneynguyen724
    @britneynguyen724 Před 8 lety +36

    less than 24 hours left..

  • @LasseSrnes
    @LasseSrnes Před 6 lety

    Brilliant lectrue:) Did not knew a lot about the 3 year war before this. Thanks!

  • @paulnavara7127
    @paulnavara7127 Před 3 lety +1

    Have to say, very nice video on this subject! Informative without being frenetic, like those trying to present a crash course in a few minutes. I'm researching some genealogy that might show the possibility of a Spaniard soldier getting together with a Bohemian woman during this time frame. Your video shows there could be such a connection during the 30 years war. Thank you Tom!

  • @samk1491
    @samk1491 Před 5 lety +8

    This video, my friends, got me a 5 on the AP test

  • @1931Tre
    @1931Tre Před 8 lety +10

    I would like to know where are you from Tom Richey, USA? And it's really interesting to watch these historical youtube videos because I can learn a lot more extra about them, while learning about these things in college too. In Finland we have really good education and we are going a lot trough these things which involves Sweden in them, because Finland was part of Sweden in those times, but these videos are always littlebit more extra to that, so thanks for making these.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 8 lety +16

      I am from the USA. Sweden is one of my top ten countries in terms of viewership soI hope to study up on Swedish history a bit more at some point and make a few more lectures about it!

    • @jason41a
      @jason41a Před 8 lety +1

      +Tom Richey clearly from the south! Your videos are really great and you're an amazing teacher. Kinda wiped out my preconceptions of the south. I've lived in New England and New York so that's why!

    • @garretphegley8796
      @garretphegley8796 Před 8 lety +1

      +N/A N/A No place in the USA is better than the Midwest

    • @bubbstube8309
      @bubbstube8309 Před 6 lety

      Garret Phegley meeeh😂😂

    • @oussematrabelsi9429
      @oussematrabelsi9429 Před 5 lety

      This is an american high school course

  • @vkorchnoifan
    @vkorchnoifan Před 4 lety

    At last another video series of historian lectures with presentations. Kenneth Clark and Eugene Weber were the pioneers in this genre, I am happy to see these introductions of history continues today.

  • @gvillemarcie
    @gvillemarcie Před 9 lety

    Great lecture, *****! Wish I would have heard the Gustavus Adolphus -"Ridin' Thirty" jingle back in my prehistoric days at Lutheran high school. What a hoot!

  • @AwoudeX
    @AwoudeX Před 8 lety +19

    The Dutch war of independance started 50 years before that against the Spanish Catholic totalitarianism that wouldn't allow the 'heretics' that protestants were labelled as. Unreasonalbe high taxes that stifled free trade, intolerance of non-catholics that stifled free trade and all the benefits that came with it were put on the Dutch after the new Spanish king ascended the throne. His predecessor was somewhat lenient and turned a blind eye, but Philip 2 repressed any and all other views, implemented high taxations and summary executions of protestants. This led to the revolt and the start of an 80 years war of which the last 30 years coincided with the 30 years war. People discuss the 2 as if they are separate, but they are tied in many ways.

    • @Drumsgoon
      @Drumsgoon Před 8 lety +3

      +AwoudeX Dutch pride:)

    • @andreascovano7742
      @andreascovano7742 Před 8 lety +1

      +AwoudeX He was also trying to centralize the nation so that alienated the nobles

    • @andreascovano7742
      @andreascovano7742 Před 8 lety +2

      +AwoudeX Altough he would have won with Alexander Farnese if he didn't want him to do EVERYTHING(defeat the rebels, help the french, defeat the french, prepare to invade england...) all at the same time

    • @RichardRenes
      @RichardRenes Před 7 lety +1

      Indeed, officially, the Netherlands was still part of the HRE before the peace of Westphalia (which we Dutchies call 'de vrede van Münster' ). But to say the HRE controlled the Netherlands at that time.. er.. no.. they didn't. By that time the republic of the seven provinces was controling itself.. if not outright being controlled by the VOC already

    • @robertcuminale1212
      @robertcuminale1212 Před 7 lety +1

      Charles V was the Holy Roman Emperor and the king of Spain. He was born in the Netherlands (Low Country) and was very disheartened over the revolution there. He finally abdicated in favor of his son Philippe II who fashioned himself (Most Catholic King of Spain) Charles retired to a monastery. Philippe was married to Queen Mary of England. Had she not died childless shortly after her marriage the Dutch revolution would have ended long before it did. Like Philippe Mary was an ultra-Catholic. She was succeeded by Elizabeth I who was a Protestant.
      Philippe turned the Dutch revolution into a holy war and sent in the Inquisition. An estimated 80,000 Dutch were executed for heresy mostly by burning. The Catholic nobles tried to get France to fight for them and rule over them. A substantial number of Huguenots were living there in exile and refused to agree with that plan. Finally Protestants from the northern States General take over the war. Dutch Catholics by now are sick of the religious persecution and join their countrymen in defeating Spain. A significant amount of aid was provided by Elizabeth I of England who had also been sheltering Huguenots in Norwich.
      A lot of this comes from a chronicle by my Huguenot ancestors who first went to England in 1567, returned to France after Henri IV Bourbon became king, left after he was assassinated, went to Mannheim Germany where as Calvinists they were persecuted by both the Catholics and the Lutherans during the Thirty Years War. They escaped to the Netherlands and finally came to America.

  • @AndroidNerd
    @AndroidNerd Před 7 lety +77

    Lmao some people here because of ap euro, but I'm here because eu4.

  • @PeteJones81
    @PeteJones81 Před 7 lety

    Great job Tom! I have a bachelor's in history and a master's in polysci but I didnt know much about the 30 years war and learned a lot from this! Very concise and informative, thanks a lot!

  • @joshrussell4242
    @joshrussell4242 Před 8 lety +3

    It's weird how few people study the Thirty Years War... I've been studying it as a "free choice" topic in high school and I've been hard pressed to find historians' views on it!
    Great video, I'd love to chat to you about this some time :D

  • @Nerddough
    @Nerddough Před 7 lety +4

    I hate that one Voltaire quote that talks about the "Not Holy, Not Roman, and Not Imperial: Holy Roman Empire".
    If the leader of your country lives in Spain, and you live in Argentina, you live in an empire. And, for a great chunk of time, the hapsburgs controled Rome, thus making it Roman.
    You can debate wether it was holy or not all day long, but it was certainly an empire.

    • @sventibaldo
      @sventibaldo Před 7 lety +5

      It wasn't called "Roman" because they controlled Rome....in fact they didn't, i don't know what you mean by that. Perhaps the influence they had over the Papacy? That can't be defined as "controlling Rome", or you mean the fact that Rome was nominally part of the Empire? That meant basically nothing in terms of actual control. That's why it was more an empire in name than in facts, as Voltaire noted.
      So it wasn't Holy (what does that even mean in concrete?), it wasn't Roman (not even a little bit, it was Germanic) and it wasn't an Empire since, at the time of Voltaire, the imperial authority was very weak in general and in some of its parts it was merely nominal. Austria had even been defeated by her imperial subject Prussia. So it was an empire only in the name, just like the holy and the roman part.

  • @Sara866873
    @Sara866873 Před 7 lety

    Thanks you very much for sharing this video, it was super helpful! Love your style of presenting information in an interesting and humorous way, as well as providing some images ;)

  • @kit_kat_hi
    @kit_kat_hi Před 6 lety +3

    I FREAKIN SKIPPED OVER THIS VIDEO THINKING I WOULDN'T NEED IT FOR THE AP EXAM BUT HERE WE ARE IN 2018 AND THE FREAKING DBQ WAS ON THIS

  • @jarjr2229
    @jarjr2229 Před 6 lety +4

    Thank you for the 5

  • @scytale6
    @scytale6 Před 3 měsíci

    A great summary of this significant event.

  • @andre31601
    @andre31601 Před 7 lety

    Thank you so much, I wrote notes on your lecture and using it as a study guide for a timed essay. Thank you so much!!

  • @beansbaby1501
    @beansbaby1501 Před 6 lety +3

    I WATCHED THIS RIGHT BEFORE THE EXAM BLESS

  • @philkelly6210
    @philkelly6210 Před 7 lety +4

    This was fun to watch ... Ridin' Thirty ... bahahah ... reminds me of my own awkward moments in class.

  • @summerzavalza4089
    @summerzavalza4089 Před 6 lety

    one of the areas I spent the most time understanding, your videos really help, thank you!!!

  • @bronxer78
    @bronxer78 Před 9 lety +2

    Having read Geoffrey Parker, and now Peter H. Wilson, this video definitely does a great job chronicling the war's salient points. One vital point left unstressed (or unmentioned) is that Spain fought with the Catholics, and the war irreparably bankrupted the country, which prior had been regarded as Europe's greatest power, fielding to date the largest army after the Ottomans.

    • @tomrichey
      @tomrichey  Před 9 lety

      I'm glad that someone who has read on this subject more than I have! This is an interesting piece of information. Spain kind of disappears from the main historical narrative after the defeat of the Spanish Armada and only makes token appearances after that and a lot of their contributions remain unnoticed. Also, some Swedes have pointed out that Sweden continued to fight after the death of Gustavus Adolphus, which isn't mentioned in survey-level textbooks.

    • @zamirroa
      @zamirroa Před 2 lety

      @@tomrichey the problem is that it depends a lot of historians and most of people that write history that is show in documentals, series, films and books are from British.
      For examples the intervention of Spain to support a catholic king in France costed a lot more than the armada.

  • @laurengwyn3322
    @laurengwyn3322 Před 6 lety +5

    THANK YOU!!!😭😭😭

  • @jozo496
    @jozo496 Před 7 lety +46

    Has anyone ever told you, you kinda look like Matt Damon.

    • @jozo496
      @jozo496 Před 7 lety +7

      Maybe a little like Mark Wahlberg. A little bit of both, I suppose.

    • @dagmarvandoren9364
      @dagmarvandoren9364 Před 2 měsíci

      Who is matt damin?