The Mongol Invasion of Europe (As Witnessed By Master Roger, 1241)

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  • čas přidán 29. 04. 2023
  • Play Enlisted for FREE on PC, Xbox Series X|S and PS®5: playen.link/pastvoicesen
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    Extracts taken from Anonymus and Master Roger The Deeds of the Hungarians/Epistle to the Sorrowful Lament upon the Destruction of the Kingdom of Hungary by the Tatars edited by Martyn C. Rady, Laszlo Veszpremy, Janos M. Bak Central European University Press, 1 January 2010
    ceupress.com/book/anonymus-an...
    Edited and Image Curation by Manuel Rubio - check out his amazing channel: @ArtandContext
    Thumbnail Art by Ettore Mazza
    Art by Carlos López
    Art by Alex Stoica
    Stock footage from Storyblocks and Artlist. Music from Epidemic Sound and Artlist.

Komentáře • 2,8K

  • @VoicesofthePast
    @VoicesofthePast  Před rokem +117

    Play Enlisted for FREE on PC, Xbox Series X|S and PS®5: playen.link/pastvoicesen
    Follow the link to download the game and get your exclusive bonus now. See you in battle!

    • @82dorrin
      @82dorrin Před rokem +8

      Terrifying First-Hand Account of The Mongol Invasion of Europe (As Witnessed By Master Roger, 1241)
      At first I read that as "As witnessed by Mister Rogers."
      Made for an interesting mental image...

    • @godschild3640
      @godschild3640 Před rokem

      @@82dorrin. JESUS 💚IS 💚WHITE 💚REVELATION 1:14:15. 💚Please read what I type you for the Nephilim giants offspring, erases what I typed

    • @danamulter
      @danamulter Před rokem +3

      You should vet this sponsor. This is American Propaganda, sir, intentionally so.

    • @AncientRylanor69
      @AncientRylanor69 Před rokem +3

      this would be good story for a survival horror video game.

    • @davesmith7432
      @davesmith7432 Před rokem +2

      Such a unique, brilliant channel. I let the ads roll. TY

  • @dr.peteristvanthernmd2880
    @dr.peteristvanthernmd2880 Před 10 měsíci +469

    In Hungary there are still folk-tales about the mongol invasion after 800 years. It was that horrible, we still have sayings related to it. Some mothers still threaten their children with tatars, if they dont behave.

    • @aykhangurbanli6454
      @aykhangurbanli6454 Před 9 měsíci +30

      as Tatar, this hurts my feelings 😞

    • @dr.peteristvanthernmd2880
      @dr.peteristvanthernmd2880 Před 9 měsíci +69

      @@aykhangurbanli6454 No offense man! Actually Tatars are far relatives of Hungarians... Hungarians used to live like them before the X. century, at that time, the European people used to threaten their children with Hungarians :D

    • @aofg
      @aofg Před 9 měsíci +49

      In Romania too. We had to deal with the Tatars till the 1770s, the last raids, after which Russia finally put an end to them. There are still several expressions, for example when somebody is in a great hurry, people will say, "Take it easy, it's not like the Tatars are coming."

    • @dr.peteristvanthernmd2880
      @dr.peteristvanthernmd2880 Před 9 měsíci +40

      @@aofg Same here man! We say: "Nem hajt a tatár" - means something like this: "Relax, tatars are not after us/chasing us." History is really interesting. :)

    • @andymcrae4661
      @andymcrae4661 Před 8 měsíci +7

      So what
      In Australia we have drop bears

  • @Lorenzo-yw8qd
    @Lorenzo-yw8qd Před 11 měsíci +381

    I can’t help but wonder if the author of these words would have ever imagined that his memories would have survived 800 years later and shared in such a beautiful way. Great work

    • @theNfl_Esq
      @theNfl_Esq Před 8 měsíci +2

      Possibly the diary but not translated into many languages or how we are watching it, listening to it on iPads, computers etc. this would shatter his paradigm, view of reality, and look like magic to him. Imagine 800 years from now someone reading these comments and watching the same story. I wonder how much it will change? Assuming we don’t start over as it seems like we are on the precipice of WW3 or some other RESET

    • @fyfyi6053
      @fyfyi6053 Před 7 měsíci

      What do you mean "survived" ?
      More like intentionally hidden or pushed aside by the radical Ieft in the west busy with white-man-bad cherry picked history lessons.

    • @Dragons_Armory
      @Dragons_Armory Před 7 měsíci +1

      The power of written word my friend.

    • @reinertgregal1130
      @reinertgregal1130 Před 3 měsíci

      @@Dragons_Armory
      In a way it's a form of immortality to be remembered after eons.

    • @Maxscout24
      @Maxscout24 Před 2 měsíci

      I think it’s safe to say the author would not have thought that his diary would one day be made into a video on CZcams

  • @graiant
    @graiant Před rokem +1935

    The saddest part is those alive today for most have no respect nor gratitude for all the sacrifices and suffering of their ancestors.

    • @NelsonDiscovery
      @NelsonDiscovery Před rokem +68

      No. The saddest part is those alive back then and now don't have any respect nor gratitide for all the sacrifices and suffering of people who were born with a psychological disability throughout the ages.

    • @IStevenSeagal
      @IStevenSeagal Před rokem +7

      @@thusspokecyrusThey do the same for the Romans. Cults of personality.

    • @chrisbuesnell3428
      @chrisbuesnell3428 Před rokem +27

      Why should they ? Silly

    • @buzter8135
      @buzter8135 Před rokem +159

      @@NelsonDiscovery please take your meds.

    • @alextoast7536
      @alextoast7536 Před rokem +29

      Kinda strange replies to the original comment here - Whatever people want to say, it is true people have died for all of you to be here. It’s up to you whether you think you owe them a good life, children etc. but all things considered it’s hard to deny it to some extent especially ww2 allies they died so you may live should be applied to that war more than ww1 imo

  • @Battury
    @Battury Před rokem +1687

    How is this not a movie already? This has to be one of the most harrowing tales I've ever heard.

    • @tubba-dg7to
      @tubba-dg7to Před rokem +2

      Because the POC,s are the bad guys and the whites are innocent. That's not allowed anymore.

    • @GleichUmDieEcke
      @GleichUmDieEcke Před rokem +385

      Personally I'm glad it isn't. Hollywood would fuck it up to a cartoonish degree.

    • @Lancer498
      @Lancer498 Před rokem +25

      @Jerry Louis with The Thickness He did? That sounds awesome, what movie was that?

    • @maxzak5310
      @maxzak5310 Před rokem +207

      @@GleichUmDieEcke i kinda want to see a black woman playing genghis khan

    • @gagamba9198
      @gagamba9198 Před rokem

      _Gateway to the West_ , about the invasion of Hungary, is in post production. Bad news: Eric Roberts appears in it.
      There have been a few Russian films about the invasion.

  • @dragossh
    @dragossh Před 10 měsíci +555

    As a Romanian watching this from a village along the Mures river, recognizing all locations from oradea to alba iulia, this is bone chilling. We learned of the ottoman terrors in wallachia and transylvania but we only heard mentions of Gesta Hungarorum (for obvious reasons) so this amount of detail of mongol invasion was new to me.

    • @iMajoraGaming
      @iMajoraGaming Před 9 měsíci +14

      the draculetsi got his vengeance a thousand times over, but sadly the trauma of the mongols could never be avenged, it was just that bad

    • @iMajoraGaming
      @iMajoraGaming Před 9 měsíci +61

      the mongol invasions are literally unparalleled tbh, they are on par with the black death, they are an unbridled chain of devastation so severe that it effectively acted as a disease, it culled millions, and when that was done the people were so agonized by their experiences that they just wanted to rebuild.
      the ottomans were a nearer foe, one that could be resisted and not incur the annihilation of your civilization if you did so. the ottomans were, for all their faults as an empire, interested in building people they annexed into subjects.
      if a single lord resisted the mongols, his city would be razed, every soul put to the sword, and whatever lord he owed his fealty to would be rolled into a rug, trampled, and his realm would be burnt to the ground.
      there were survivors of the mongols who lived long enough to see the black death creep in.
      imagine the scale of that. first, a purge by humanity, and then, a purge by disease, and you live through what must feel like hell on earth, as first man, and then seemingly god, culls tens of millions.
      it is a miracle the wallachians, the moldavians, hungary, germany, and the rus even survived what happened to them, two waves of utter human annihilation.
      imagine how many cultures, languages, books, and creeds *didn't* survive these events. there have to be dozens, hundreds even, that we barely remember, if at all, because forces so far from their control wrought untold, incomprehensibly horrible devastation upon them.
      to think that many of us are alive solely because an unbroken chain of people *did* survive these events, or at least had children before succumbing, is depressing.
      so many have suffered to get us here.

    • @Karen677-ld4lm
      @Karen677-ld4lm Před 9 měsíci +11

      @@iMajoraGaming The mongols in their cruelty and lack of empathy seem like totally different humans,. They seem not like the rest of us. They must have descendants. I don't think their descendants are genetically born from them. O wonder if they are related to the Sythians, who also destroyed. Who, I wonder are their modern day descendants? There must be fenetic info on this. Does anyone know?

    • @sahar3820
      @sahar3820 Před 9 měsíci +15

      ​@@iMajoraGamingTrue. Just read any of their terrors like "The Sack of Baghdad". That shows brutality of the Mongols. Destroyed the city in such a manner that it took centuries for agriculture of the region to recover.

    • @antimatteranon
      @antimatteranon Před 8 měsíci +12

      ​@@Karen677-ld4lmthe steppe was cruel, and the mongols fought this way with one another. the american comanche did the same against their fellow natives, the spanish, and finally the yanks who defeated them.

  • @ginoe987
    @ginoe987 Před 11 měsíci +90

    Vikings: we kill to loot
    Tatars: we kill to kill

    • @keteket
      @keteket Před 2 měsíci +6

      No empire kills for the sake of killing. And all these comparisons of Mongols with demons, it's just the helplessness of the people of those times in front of a superior civilization.

    • @ginoe987
      @ginoe987 Před 2 měsíci +8

      @@keteket Wow, it's as if you didn't watch the documentary and went straight for the comments.

    • @wingedhussar1453
      @wingedhussar1453 Před 6 dny

      ​@@keteketexcept they did .it was their way to do it so everyone surrendered early

  • @StormWolf01
    @StormWolf01 Před 11 měsíci +199

    The magnitude of this horror is impressive. Puts a lot of things into perspective. That said, this man was smart and had good instincts as to how to survive.

    • @maaz322
      @maaz322 Před 10 měsíci +21

      It's primary source and a biased account (a guy literally running for his life rather than a neutral party present in the mongol court or Hungarian). Historians don't presume it's all true. How did he know about all these unspeakable cruelties occurring, while he was hiding or busy surviving and finding refuge. Most likely he heard these tales while on the road and running into other survivors who exchanged their tales and rumors. Telling people that people sold their daughters to the mongols for wealth and were killed anyways seems quite foolish, morelike the account attempting to moralize and express disproval towards collaborating with the mongols.

    • @psychobear1290
      @psychobear1290 Před 10 měsíci +7

      @@maaz322 also it seems that he was a scared little rich boy in a time when everyone was in need of their leaders all he did was lead himself away from danger and cared less for others.... That was probably the reason the men he hired rob and left him. I'm sure he told a story about getting reinforcements not just running away but the fact that he said he returned with his head held low says alot

    • @yoeyyoey8937
      @yoeyyoey8937 Před 10 měsíci

      Yeah but also he was kinda cunning and selfish, he literally leveraged royal children to get supplies and support 😂 this dude is more messed up than the mongols in terms of morality

    • @bloodbarage
      @bloodbarage Před 9 měsíci

      @@maaz322most historians are paid to make shit up.

    • @002f4dsw4
      @002f4dsw4 Před 9 měsíci +33

      @@psychobear1290 I wonder how you'd fare in his shoes. His status meant nothing to the mongols, for them he would be one more person to kill, not different from any villager.

  • @daya820
    @daya820 Před rokem +612

    I was transported to that era of horror as an observant, following the master through the villages and forests to safety. Thank you for another marvelous story of the past.

    • @blackpanthar906
      @blackpanthar906 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Muslims and Christians both suffered at hands of Mongols. Muslims a bit more because mongols were relatively more tolerant of Christians, as wife of Gaykhatu(mongol general) was Christian.
      In the end most Mongols reverted to Islam and are peacefully living in central asia.

    • @severusfloki5778
      @severusfloki5778 Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@blackpanthar906 "reverted" lmao

    • @blackpanthar906
      @blackpanthar906 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@severusfloki5778 Excuse me?

    • @chico9805
      @chico9805 Před 11 měsíci +11

      ​@@blackpanthar906 You say "reverted", as if the Mongols were originally muslim. They were pagans, many still are, others converted to christianity and islam.

    • @blackpanthar906
      @blackpanthar906 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@chico9805 We say reverted because we believe Islam to be original religion of every child that is born. Later on they learn to worship created things among creation from their parents or society.
      Originally all humans believe in a higher being according to Oxford University research by Justin Barrett.

  • @MarvelousSeven
    @MarvelousSeven Před rokem +457

    This man's story needs to be made into a full-on movie.

    • @dudermcdudeface3674
      @dudermcdudeface3674 Před rokem +37

      The minute anyone tried to make this a movie, it would be rewritten into a PG-13 romantic comedy set in Paris and filmed in Vancouver.

    • @sabrinatscha2554
      @sabrinatscha2554 Před rokem +1

      Yes. A spaghetti-Western.

    • @SetuwoKecik
      @SetuwoKecik Před 11 měsíci +3

      Might be good story except the audiences will probably hate it because the Tartar "devils" still goes unpunished at the end (at least not yet historically).
      Except maybe if they wrote it in similar way like Dunkirk movie.

    • @godrilla5549
      @godrilla5549 Před 11 měsíci

      No

    • @SetuwoKecik
      @SetuwoKecik Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@godrilla5549 yes

  • @spzhun
    @spzhun Před rokem +442

    The Mongol invasion of Hungary is probably our single biggest national tragedy. Recent years have unearthed some heart-breaking details, such as a skull of a dog next to executed children. The dog's head was was hit by a mace and pierced by a sword as it tried to protect the children, or two little kids, a boy and a girl hidden in a furnace, a boy held a wafer iron in his hands for defence. Their mother died in front of the furnace and their house was torched by the Mongols. We now see more damage - and more resistance - than we have seen ever before. Such a heart-breaking period with opportunities and families lost forever.

    • @russpeters560
      @russpeters560 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Much like today, then.

    • @gaygachad8305
      @gaygachad8305 Před 11 měsíci +41

      Given what Europeans and Romans have done , i have no sympathy.

    • @yoeyyoey8937
      @yoeyyoey8937 Před 10 měsíci +7

      If only they weren’t greedy and just became a tributary and had the mongols leave them alone

    • @rml4289
      @rml4289 Před 10 měsíci +68

      ​@gaygachad8305 this happened years before colonialism...

    • @spzhun
      @spzhun Před 10 měsíci +122

      @@gaygachad8305 Man, we literally never had one single colony. You should open up a book or two before commenting...

  • @magnushorus5670
    @magnushorus5670 Před rokem +274

    Makes me appreciate living today

    • @_--Reaper--_
      @_--Reaper--_ Před rokem

      U think stuff like this can't happen today? Look at what ISIS did to the middle east

    • @NelsonDiscovery
      @NelsonDiscovery Před rokem +15

      You should appreciate being normal and healthy more.

    • @joekrebs964
      @joekrebs964 Před rokem +1

      👍🏻

    • @_--Reaper--_
      @_--Reaper--_ Před rokem

      @@joekrebs964 How's Burgdorf?

    • @greenpulseeducation5002
      @greenpulseeducation5002 Před rokem

      Its worse to live in the Future. Unoversal Noahide law (UN) beheading and Islamic sea beast is a sleeping giants. Plus global AI dictator is in horizone. In this technology you will note hide in caved and forest. The future is terrifying.

  • @user-tr5zr8mp4n
    @user-tr5zr8mp4n Před 8 měsíci +31

    This man's story needs to be made into a full-on movie.. This man's writing and story telling is exceptional.

  • @jmchez
    @jmchez Před rokem +773

    We do know that JRR Tolkien knew his history. Instead of retelling a true story, he made it into a fantasy.

    • @brokeneyes6615
      @brokeneyes6615 Před rokem +35

      I thought it was loosely based on his experiences in his youth and the First World War.

    • @eldariskenderfranke4284
      @eldariskenderfranke4284 Před rokem +15

      @@brokeneyes6615 obviously not, even if he says it just watch his movies and think fora bit

    • @jmchez
      @jmchez Před rokem +50

      @@brokeneyes6615 That was his inspiration but, of course, trench warfare is nowhere near to the battles of Lotr, while the Mongol attacks against walled cities, as described here, are almost exactly like in his book.

    • @porteroffinland
      @porteroffinland Před rokem +108

      ​@@brokeneyes6615 Let's keep in mind that tolkien hated allegory, and he thought you shouldn't try digging into hidden meanings associated with the real world. His world is his own.

    • @digitalbrentable
      @digitalbrentable Před rokem +7

      orientalism

  • @hibbiteejibbitee
    @hibbiteejibbitee Před rokem +366

    These horrors are baked in to human civilization. It doesn’t take much to resurrect such cruelty.

    • @BudoReflex
      @BudoReflex Před rokem +13

      Unfortunately.

    • @BudoReflex
      @BudoReflex Před rokem +6

      @@CliveofEngland everyone with ears and eyes.

    • @smackskurd
      @smackskurd Před rokem +5

      Well people back then were more savage by nature, they ate flesh all day, especially the tribal ones, lived outside, and were naturally more violent cuz of that.

    • @VindensSaga
      @VindensSaga Před 11 měsíci +79

      @@smackskurd sweet, sweet, naive summer child.

    • @jahirgonzalez3615
      @jahirgonzalez3615 Před 11 měsíci +47

      @@smackskurd Sure, kid.

  • @TofusRevenge
    @TofusRevenge Před rokem +463

    It’s crazy to think that if Ogedai Khan didn’t die and Tsubodai could’ve kept going how much history would have changed.

    • @johnfraire6931
      @johnfraire6931 Před rokem +23

      Wizards and Warriors has a whole series on that what if

    • @triplehernan5155
      @triplehernan5155 Před rokem +145

      They would've hit a brick wall. They choked on Poland and Hungary the second time round because they faced what they would've faced in far vaster quantities the deeper they went into Europe. That being proper stone fortifications, crossbowmen and heavily armoured knights.

    • @sodadrinker89
      @sodadrinker89 Před rokem +126

      ​@@triplehernan5155 I mean the Chinese had those, it took them about 100 years to conquer the whole of China.

    • @willsimp1273
      @willsimp1273 Před rokem +172

      @@triplehernan5155 you’re bragging about Poland and medieval Europe shows a complete twisted idea of history, which is to blame on watching too much Hollywood movies and playing medieval pc games

    • @legaldinho
      @legaldinho Před rokem +8

      Wrath of the Khans

  • @Jcaeser187
    @Jcaeser187 Před rokem +183

    Please do something about the Taiping or Boxer rebellion, the Taiping heavenly kingdom is one of the most fascinating movements of the 1800s

  • @dorusicoe4431
    @dorusicoe4431 Před 5 měsíci +16

    It is about Carmen Miserabile by Italian Roger or Rogerius. He was in Oradea în that time (1241-1242), but the name of that catholic town was "Varadinum", in Latin, from Hungarian "Varad". Master Roger was appointed archbishop of Split, in 1249, by Pope Innocente IV. We are grateful to him for writing about the event he witnessed. A unique book!

  • @joshlewis575
    @joshlewis575 Před rokem +212

    So amazing that there are records/scripts of these events. To think what the world was like for these people in 1241 is wild. Always baffling that people were capable of holding these territories so far from their homes

    • @zakkyummms
      @zakkyummms Před rokem +10

      Pack animals are crazy.

    • @ahmadphon4908
      @ahmadphon4908 Před rokem +16

      1240 AD is not old, it is 720 years. Most of the royal families in Europe today rule in that time.

    • @tifapanties25
      @tifapanties25 Před 11 měsíci

      Queen of england

    • @rabbitazteca23
      @rabbitazteca23 Před 11 měsíci

      @@zakkyummms you mean awesome?

    • @unselliecontinents3338
      @unselliecontinents3338 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@ahmadphon4908 I mean it is, every country in the world today was very different or even non-existent 700+ years ago. However if you meant ancient then I agree, I think a time or object would have to be at least 1000 years old to be considered ancient.

  • @strongback6550
    @strongback6550 Před rokem +302

    When your leader is so incredulous in matters of defense, it is not very surprising to me that not only would they be disorganized, but also poor of morale.
    Who would stand to protect the complacent and obey them who displayed poor judgment when they command you to die for them?

    • @DevinDTV
      @DevinDTV Před rokem +7

      why are you writing like that?

    • @Arcaryon
      @Arcaryon Před rokem +46

      @@DevinDTVFor in times as our own, rare is the opportunity to display one’s command of the written word in long tested fashions and as such, gladly taken up by those who possess the wit to do so, since it is their joy.

    • @wesallstar9273
      @wesallstar9273 Před rokem +1

      @@DevinDTVlol I’m with you!

    • @wolfgangkranek376
      @wolfgangkranek376 Před rokem +4

      Luckily once the Hungarians and Poles had adapted to the military danger the Mongols caused, they were defeated and never "felt the need" to return.
      czcams.com/video/t-022t9VbFU/video.html

    • @josefkun7466
      @josefkun7466 Před rokem +6

      ​@@DevinDTV they watched too many videos from this Channel xd

  • @jmchez
    @jmchez Před rokem +862

    It's just a fact that the Mongols and Turks considered European women as valuable as gold. As late as the 1600s, the Turks, unable to further attack Western Europe, hired pirates to go all the way to Iceland. There, since Demark was doing a half-assed job of protecting its island possession, the pirates kidnapped women to bring back to Constantinople. Icelanders are taught that part of history, which is not taught at all, properly, anywhere else.

    • @TheHadMatters
      @TheHadMatters Před rokem +58

      What's your point? What substantial part of history is being left out?

    • @hap48
      @hap48 Před rokem +598

      @@TheHadMatters his point is icelandic women are hot

    • @daidai8760
      @daidai8760 Před rokem +194

      Thus the vikings got vikinged

    • @onlyfacts4999
      @onlyfacts4999 Před rokem +2

      Mongols got white fever

    • @vielplaysdagames2298
      @vielplaysdagames2298 Před rokem +53

      Ya they liked raiding the uk and America as well early America right before the war of 1812 went to war with the Barbary pirates because of them enslaving American sailors in the med

  • @alastairbrewster4274
    @alastairbrewster4274 Před rokem +29

    This is sheer just incredible , thank you to your channel for bringing this story . And so well narrated too

  • @SECRETORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR

    I absolutely love these *"THESE VOICES FROM THE PAST"* we are all having a sneaky peak back in our human history..

  • @MyYTaccountName
    @MyYTaccountName Před rokem +20

    Awesome! Thanks for the new video. I watched everything you made thus far and love it.

  • @A-S-T-R-A-L.
    @A-S-T-R-A-L. Před 11 měsíci +18

    I’ve just come across this channel and I’m so happy. I have misophonia and sadly many peoples voices make my skin but yours is like music to my ears. Subscribed. Binge watching ❤️

  • @everlastinglife5978
    @everlastinglife5978 Před rokem +64

    This man's writing and story telling is exceptional

  • @shymebc
    @shymebc Před rokem +252

    A few years ago the Mongol conquest of Persia left such an impression on me when i was younger i wrote a poem and this video got me looking for it AND I FOUND IT FINALLY! (Fate of 40 million)
    The horizon kicks up something savage.
    A sky once fair and blue; Forced red with dust and chaos, a horrid crimson slowly ascending into the heavens. Only to crash down as hell.
    The horizon begins to speak in a foreign tongue, with intent made clear with decoration of scalp and skulls.
    Beasts of war are the least of concern as a man dismounts at your sight. The spear speaks for itself so you run, as do your kin in defiance; Unforgivable.
    Homes and husbands fuel the fires, kicking something savage in the air ascending into the heavens, children found trembling are of no use to the horde.
    The wagon is presented, all taller are butchered to the wails of wives, only to be cut short. Dragged to horses by beasts.

  • @leheltejfalusi5226
    @leheltejfalusi5226 Před rokem +236

    Later, in 1285, the hungarian king, Leslie IV, "the Cuman" from the House of Árpád (de genere Tugrul) completely destroyed Genghis Khan's great-grandson Kara Nogai (Black Nogai) Khan's huge, 40000 men mongol-tartar army in Hungary and in 1345, Andrew Lackfi the supreme commander of the hungarian king Louis the Great from the Angevin dynasty, beatened the Golden Horde in them own territory called Cumania (now Republic of Moldova), in a fierce three days fighting as the last big battle between the hungarians and the mongols. As an example, the name of a hero of these years was BUZÁD BÁNFI . He was a Hungarian nobleman and soldier (The Bánfi family is one of the greatest nobel family in Hungary). He later gave up his position in society and entered the Dominican Order. Buzád was killed during a Mongol invasion of his homeland, in 1241, and is now honored as a martyr by the Catholic Church, for which he has been beatified and is also known as BLESSED BUZÁD (Hungarian: Boldog Buzád). A production "1242 - At the Gates of the West” is being filmed in the hungarian Visegrád citadel takes us back to the time when the Kingdom of Hungary was on the brink of destruction due to the invasion of the Mongol Empire. Eric Roberts, who plays the role of the fortress captain Ákos, and András Stohl, who portrays the fierce warrior Kangar, said that after the defeat at Muhi, the only obstacle to the Tatar invasion of Europe was the fortress of Esztergom. The gap-filling historical adventure film, which will be released at the end of the year in cooperation with the Institute of Hungarian Research, presents the final days of the military campaign, which was a decisive historical moment for Béla IV from the House of Árpád (de genere Tugrul), considered to be the second founder of the Hungarian nation, and Batu Khan, the founder of the Golden Horde. mki.gov.hu/en/hirek-en/minden-hir-en/1242-at-the-gates-of-the-west-gap-filling-historical-adventure-film-about-the-era-of-bela-iv-and-batu-khan

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Před rokem +6

      That is very interesting information, Lehei, thank you.

    • @stephenbyrneireland
      @stephenbyrneireland Před rokem +4

      Just checked out the movies website. Very interesting. Cheers for the heads-up

    • @gigikontra7023
      @gigikontra7023 Před rokem +7

      ​​@@farmdude2020 the information is probably wrong. Hungarian nationalism Moldova already existed at that time. There was no "Cumania"

    • @CliveofEngland
      @CliveofEngland Před rokem

      Astonishing that these battles and others, which saved Christian Europe from the merciless - actually genocidal - Muslim/Mongol/Tartar/Ottoman hordes are barely known in Europe beyond a few academics. The same is true of the Battle of Tours (732) and both sieges of Vienna (1529 & 1683). Westerners are more likely to know about sideshow campaigns of the Second World War than these crucial ones.

    • @samernattifi3883
      @samernattifi3883 Před rokem +18

      The Mongols were decisively defeated in Palestine 🇵🇸

  • @philsoro491
    @philsoro491 Před rokem +8

    These uploads are so good! The 1 of disastrous 1st encounters of the past was great. Your voice is really cool 2 :)

  • @SerCrumb
    @SerCrumb Před 11 měsíci +13

    I like how he kidnaps a couple of kids to ensure they'll send him food while he's in hiding. Catholic clergy always seem to enroll the best humans

  • @abe.vs.ape.
    @abe.vs.ape. Před 6 měsíci +3

    Great video, the imagery and maps made it very immersive, crazy what those people's must've gone through

  • @dev-pj9vi
    @dev-pj9vi Před rokem +15

    Great video, thank you for posting. I have heard so much about them but always from the historical context. All of them, abstract, large and as a society what they were doing. This personal first hand account of barely surviving and witnessing them is harrowing.

  • @assassinscat9618
    @assassinscat9618 Před 11 měsíci +35

    This man experienced a real life eclipse like in Berserk. I cannot imagine how this must have been. Sometimes I doubt that the past really was like this

    • @Anonymous-ld7je
      @Anonymous-ld7je Před 2 měsíci

      There's people alive today that had similar or even worse experiences in WWII. As terrifying as the Mongols were, they could never conceive of a weapon like an atom bomb annihilating an entire city and everyone in it in an instant.
      That happened twice, within living memory. On top of the many, many millions of others who died...

  • @alejandroperez6100
    @alejandroperez6100 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Exelent content. The art of transporting a person back in time with words has no price. 👌👌👌👌👌

  • @jonesyrugbychapelhill69
    @jonesyrugbychapelhill69 Před rokem +10

    2:24
    I believe "The Gate" is the "Iron Gates" on the Danube River. A defensible river gorge.

  • @col.cottonhill6655
    @col.cottonhill6655 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for bringing us these wonderful videos.

  • @STANDINGCarabao
    @STANDINGCarabao Před rokem +8

    Hope you'd have a Spotify version. The voice of the narration sounds so great.

  • @thirstbasket
    @thirstbasket Před 10 měsíci +8

    I really thought it said The Mongolian Invasion of Europe as witnessed by Mister Rogers. Now that's a must see episode.

  • @Godsglory777
    @Godsglory777 Před rokem +5

    Wonderful content. Thanks for sharing. ❤

  • @noobnaab4647
    @noobnaab4647 Před rokem +2

    Thanks so much , for such super content

  • @dabs4602
    @dabs4602 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Great story and vey interesting. I knew some of the bigger picture of the Mongol invasions but nothing with this detail.

  • @ACPritchard
    @ACPritchard Před rokem +4

    Never stop making these

  • @nightshine84
    @nightshine84 Před 11 měsíci +12

    Amazing work, as always. It's like living in those herendous times. Have you thought of making a podcast of these?

  • @ashharkausar413
    @ashharkausar413 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Brilliant narration!

  • @gabrielgonzales5907
    @gabrielgonzales5907 Před rokem +2

    A very vivid account you have shared. This is a good reminder of how the worst in people can come out it times of chaos. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @0O00O00O
    @0O00O00O Před 11 měsíci +3

    The first ever recorded chess game was recorded as a poem in 1475. I’d love to hear that poem played over the game, it’s currently not available like that on CZcams

  • @lukamesic626
    @lukamesic626 Před 11 měsíci +18

    It was not only Hungary, it was Kingdoms of Hungary and Croatia, a Personal union of two kingdoms with the same king. Bela IV was reinforced with Croatian Kingdom and Frankopani, one of the greatest Croatian family in that time and also long after.

  • @elvenkind6072
    @elvenkind6072 Před rokem +29

    Yet another masterwork! I had almost given up hope that more such marvelous accounts would be retold here, as a poor soul fleeing from the Tartars.

    • @kararfadialkadwy8838
      @kararfadialkadwy8838 Před 11 měsíci +6

      The most painful and funny thing at the same time..when I watch videos reporting on the Mongol invasion of the Middle East..I see the amount of gloating and humiliating psychopathic comments that glorify and love what the Mongols did of extermination and killing of the inhabitants of the Middle East...and now they themselves are sad and crying by what the Mongols did to Europe with hypocrisy The best of his suit....i wonder bewildered, should I gloat and mock and be happy for what the Mongols did to Europe?

    • @elvenkind6072
      @elvenkind6072 Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@kararfadialkadwy8838 Your tongue obviously talk the things already on your heart. So just have a good time, if hatred is what you enjoy.

    • @fadyal-qaisy5213
      @fadyal-qaisy5213 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@elvenkind6072 what the Mongols did in Europe was great, otherwise the crusades would’ve continued forever. Although we defeated the Mongols here in Palestine, and we are 100% free of mongol blood, i still find the mongols cool

    • @theotheagendashill818
      @theotheagendashill818 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@kararfadialkadwy8838Thats nothing compared to all the muslims on the internet celebrating the Armenian genocide and saying how its good that it happened

  • @athiefinthenight6894
    @athiefinthenight6894 Před 11 měsíci +7

    What I learned:
    ✅Tartars are evil
    ✅Hiding in the forests are the best way not to die

  • @ntheg
    @ntheg Před rokem +10

    Love your channel !! Please consider doing Josephus's account of the Judean revolt 🙏

  • @FearlessP4P1
    @FearlessP4P1 Před rokem +30

    One thing that makes me sad is the thought of beautiful or brilliant people that were killed by the Mongols

    • @breakfast917
      @breakfast917 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Oh well.

    • @kararfadialkadwy8838
      @kararfadialkadwy8838 Před 11 měsíci +6

      The most painful and funny thing at the same time..when I watch videos reporting on the Mongol invasion of the Middle East..I see the amount of gloating and humiliating psychopathic comments that glorify and love what the Mongols did of extermination and killing of the inhabitants of the Middle East...and now they themselves are sad and crying by what the Mongols did to Europe with hypocrisy The best of his suit....i wonder bewildered, should I gloat and mock and be happy for what the Mongols did to Europe?

    • @ragemauger
      @ragemauger Před 11 měsíci +15

      @@kararfadialkadwy8838 Sounds like you are focusing on a minority of ignorant evil people and using your reaction of disgust and anger to what they say to justify you doing the same things, instead of trying to be a part of the people who are more understanding, who together from both sides unify to create more positive growth between the mentioned people

    • @kararfadialkadwy8838
      @kararfadialkadwy8838 Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@ragemauger Your are correct..but the problem is that I am very in pain. I am an Iraqi from the city of Baghdad and you know very well what the Mongols did to my city...when I go and watch the report on the Mongol invasion of Baghdad..I see the amount of terrifying, sadistic and very brutal comments...to the point that I feel depression and suffocate and collapse nervously And emotionally of glorified and glorification of what the Mongols did to my people in Baghdad or the Middle Eastern peoples....Thank you very much for your comment and your understanding for My sad and broken feelings..🌷🌻🌼🌹

    • @phillipholland6795
      @phillipholland6795 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@kararfadialkadwy8838Your point is totally valid, don't worry. I pray that one day Iraq sees freedom and peace.

  • @ttvmortemoni1495
    @ttvmortemoni1495 Před 3 měsíci

    So happy I found this channel

  • @kamilla1960
    @kamilla1960 Před rokem +1

    Thank you!

  • @parthadebbarma9143
    @parthadebbarma9143 Před 11 měsíci +26

    My god
    I felt the fear
    I felt the cruelty
    Not some of man, a freaking village gone in a day.
    How cruel a dynasty wants to achieve the un achievable , the 💀 death !!!
    💐🙏🏻🌺❤️ To all those souls

  • @IsmailAbdulMusic
    @IsmailAbdulMusic Před rokem +5

    I visited some of the areas mentioned in this video. I also visited the volga River during a trip to Russia

  • @sloaiza81
    @sloaiza81 Před 7 měsíci +1

    love these vids!!

  • @TheArcturusProject
    @TheArcturusProject Před 9 měsíci

    So important to us as humans to hear these first hand accounts.

  • @129jasper1
    @129jasper1 Před 11 měsíci +12

    Sucks that all the warnings of doom are sounding today, and now we are the incredulous twits, being overrun by savagery.

  • @marccan3267
    @marccan3267 Před 10 měsíci +8

    Most of the accounts of Mongol invasions comes from "Historia Salonitana".
    Can you do some stories from "Historia Salonitana"?
    There was interesting naval battle description between Tragerans and Spalatians, also realistic battle between Spalatians and Cetinians in 1222, a brutal first-hand account how medieval battle looked.

    • @Mihael-kw5ie
      @Mihael-kw5ie Před 7 měsíci +1

      Hey, just wanted to say thank you for giving that interesting source I haven't heard from before. Do you perhaps know of any other interesting medieval primary sources from that area?

    • @marccan3267
      @marccan3267 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@Mihael-kw5iethere is also "Obsidio Iadrensis", siege of Zara 1345-46, first-hand description of medieval siege with naval battles, culminanting in the large battle on July 01 1346.

    • @Mihael-kw5ie
      @Mihael-kw5ie Před 5 měsíci

      @@marccan3267 Thanks, that looks really interesting! Btw, do you know of any way of accessing full work either in English or Croatian for free? I can find just one translation, and that one is paywalled. Much appreciated!

    • @marccan3267
      @marccan3267 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Mihael-kw5ie Unfortunately, I don't have access anymore, I have "Salonitana" but I can't publish it here

    • @Mihael-kw5ie
      @Mihael-kw5ie Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@marccan3267 ah well, thanks anyways. I also found salonitana, and from what little I read so far it is very interesting, so that is great

  • @PrelaE
    @PrelaE Před 7 měsíci +5

    I read sometime ago that Hungary lost about 25-30% of its population due to the devastation perpetrated by the Mongols. It must have been horrible to be on the receiving end of such carnage.

  • @spreddyreds9408
    @spreddyreds9408 Před 7 měsíci +4

    It was a crusade, but this time the gods were different.

  • @guzimirHR
    @guzimirHR Před rokem +70

    Before I get to the relevant part of your video- when Bela IV came fleeing to my neck of woods he made my hometown a seat of archbishopry and a free town (and in furure, a capital of my homeland) he established a whole group of nobles (on account of feeding him and hiis troops with plums- so we sort of called them 'plum nobles'). Love your videos, love your narration- keep up the good work (c'mon... a video on chinese women pirates- pure gold... noone but you could have done it so beatifully).

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem

      Plums? Dried ones I presume. Was it custom of your town to eat nothing but dried plums or was there some weird reason why itwas the only food available?

    • @googane7755
      @googane7755 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Zagreb?

    • @quincy189
      @quincy189 Před 11 měsíci

      king bela got killed by the mongols

    • @rejubarchgliasis1830
      @rejubarchgliasis1830 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@googane7755Yes, Zagreb

    • @kresimirzex2720
      @kresimirzex2720 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@quincy189no he killed them.

  • @LOLERXP
    @LOLERXP Před rokem +96

    The Mongols were basically acting like they're in a video game.

    • @sassysaddles9981
      @sassysaddles9981 Před rokem +20

      looting everything and farming kills lol

    • @Kilen_BE
      @Kilen_BE Před rokem +4

      the strategy games took example I guess… probably the most easy and straight forward behaviour to implement, AI diplomacy in the other hand, it’s much less potent.

    • @_--Reaper--_
      @_--Reaper--_ Před rokem +10

      The things people do in video games are an extension of what they would do in real life if they could get away with it

    • @jake-rg3fd
      @jake-rg3fd Před rokem +7

      ​@@_--Reaper--_ Obviously not true. What if it's chess? Lots of people prefer the computer version to chessboards.

    • @maverick9409
      @maverick9409 Před rokem +2

      Who knows maybe we are NPCs

  • @CrazyInternetTales
    @CrazyInternetTales Před 11 měsíci

    Your video really stands out. I've been working on crafting such distinctive content on my channel.

  • @herrent
    @herrent Před rokem +1

    Thank you

  • @ReynaSingh
    @ReynaSingh Před rokem +127

    Fascinating account of Mongol history. This channel is one of the best

    • @zakariamattu8613
      @zakariamattu8613 Před rokem +15

      Every civilization that encountered the mongols were simply amazed by the hardiness and versatility of the Mongols

    • @82dorrin
      @82dorrin Před rokem +2

      At first, I read the title as "As witnessed by Mister Rogers, 1241."

    • @Hexiad
      @Hexiad Před rokem +48

      @@zakariamattu8613 And disgusted by their evil.

    • @Alkaloid-Odin
      @Alkaloid-Odin Před rokem +6

      ​@@Hexiad not to impose morals on history, but this is quite true

    • @luvrofbacon
      @luvrofbacon Před rokem

      My favorite channel.

  • @SSB_Its_Me_SB
    @SSB_Its_Me_SB Před rokem +6

    This channel is second to none.

  • @nelle8348
    @nelle8348 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Amazing video, would love to se more medieval content

  • @everytimeterry9886
    @everytimeterry9886 Před 9 měsíci +2

    holy smokes this is good

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Před rokem +199

    There were 4 nations which have managed to defeat the 1200's Mongols in war ; Javanese (Majapahit), Turks (Khalji & Bahri Mamluks), Japanese, Vietnamese (Dai Viet). Mongols of the first half of the 13th century however were unstoppable
    Major nations destroyed by the Mongols ;
    -Jin(Tungusic)
    -Khwarezmids(Turkic)
    -Souther Song(Sinitic)
    -Kara Khitais(Khitanic)
    -Cumania(Turkic)
    -Kievan Rus(Germanic and Slavic)
    -Seljuk Rum(Turkic)
    -Abbasids(Arabic)
    -Western Xia(Qiangic)
    -Volga Bulgaria(Turkic)

    • @joebombero1
      @joebombero1 Před rokem +92

      The destruction of Baghdad was a terrible loss for humanity.

    • @Osvath97
      @Osvath97 Před rokem +82

      This is incomplete. Hungary, all though losing its first war in 1241 - 1242, won quite spectucularly during its second war in 1285 - 1286. Hungary was so utterly well prepared to face the Mongol invasion that the forces of local Hungarian lords defeated most of the Mongol force before Hungary even had time to muster its royal army.

    • @someperson7
      @someperson7 Před rokem +2

      ​@@joebombero1 could you expand on that?

    • @paulodelima5705
      @paulodelima5705 Před rokem +6

      Where is India?

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 Před rokem +48

      @@Osvath97 Egyptian Mamulks were the first to defeat them thankfully just imagine Cairo being destroyed like Baghdad

  • @brianshissler3263
    @brianshissler3263 Před 4 měsíci

    Aw man! At first glance i thought this video was from the perspective of Mister Rogers!

  • @joakinzz
    @joakinzz Před 7 měsíci

    man this gave me an urgent need of re playing kingdom come deliverance

  • @walkandcamera
    @walkandcamera Před 11 měsíci +7

    Fun fact, I just did a video on Oradea, Roger's city. And next week I will do a video about a neighbourhood of Oradea that is called Rogerius. Named after non other than the medieval cleric, Roger.

  • @peterrusso9123
    @peterrusso9123 Před 11 měsíci +15

    "ok guys the tatars are definitely gone now! lets go look for food" The tatars- "surprise motherfucker"

  • @audrey000
    @audrey000 Před 11 měsíci

    Exceeded expectation…So great

  • @LuyandzaBavukileDlamini
    @LuyandzaBavukileDlamini Před 5 měsíci +5

    Damn this man not only lived through the most horrible period to be alive with the Mongol invasion but actually managed to survive and told his magnificent tales

  • @Horus160181
    @Horus160181 Před rokem +9

    This is a truly harrowing account as told by someone who lived through it. No wonder Christian Europe regarded the Mongols as God's wrath.

    • @petrospetromixos6962
      @petrospetromixos6962 Před 6 měsíci

      They were bend on doing genocide.Why? I mean they stayed in a place just to kill the survivors?Like, why?

  • @JayS64
    @JayS64 Před rokem +2

    Wow. What an horrific experience.

  • @jonathaneffemey944
    @jonathaneffemey944 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for posting

  • @starcapture3040
    @starcapture3040 Před rokem +47

    The loss of Of Baghdad and its Great house of Wisdom was Missive loss for humanity.

    • @NelsonDiscovery
      @NelsonDiscovery Před rokem +4

      It really wasn't. You don't need religion.

    • @jonathancharles3719
      @jonathancharles3719 Před rokem +18

      @@NelsonDiscovery yes u do europe wouldnt get this far without it

    • @MarvelousSeven
      @MarvelousSeven Před rokem +11

      ​@@NelsonDiscoveryyes you do, but you'll likely learn the hard way on your judgement day.

    • @recklessgeneration2361
      @recklessgeneration2361 Před rokem +21

      @@NelsonDiscovery The house of wisdom was about natural science such as physics,alchemy and mathematics, just because polymaths have faith doesn't mean we should discredit them in knowledge department.

    • @rrp7983
      @rrp7983 Před rokem +1

      @@MarvelousSevenNo we won’t.

  • @RasheedKhan-he6xx
    @RasheedKhan-he6xx Před rokem +45

    I've read several academic books and papers on this fascinating epoch and most seem to conclude that the Mongols were indeed merciless and implacable but also extremely disciplined. They were not wild, lawless hordes as many seem to think but a trained and battle hardened expeditionary army. They would usually first offer terms of surrender which if accepted would lead to the city being spared the sword but heavily taxed. If the offer was refused or the terms broken the punishment was swift and terrible. No stone could be left standing atop another, no man woman or child left alive beyond those who could be relied upon to carry the tale with them wherever they fled. Occasionally, just to shake things up and stay unpredictable they wouldn't offer terms and proceed straight to annihilation. Thus was done usually after calculating that the town's economic value was low enough to be sacrificed to cement their own terrifying reputation. It was often said that even the news that the Mongol ruler had turned to look in your direction from however many leagues away was enough to turn livers to water, for soldiers to desert and princes to despair. In other words this was psychological warfare and through it half the battle was usually won before it had even started. There was also another practical reason for depopulating an enemy land, to reduce the number of people who might consume its resources, leaving alive only enough to till the land or dig the mines and so continue to pay tributes. Loyal and obedient vassals were cared for and rewarded. To the Mongol, mindless savagery was not an end but a means towards conquest and wealth. Frankly they were not the first and certainly nor were they the last to act on such motivation.

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Před rokem +12

      Actually, they delighted in doing the worst to people, and rarely kept their word about terms of surrender.

    • @-HughJass-
      @-HughJass- Před 11 měsíci +6

      ​@@earlysdai was thinking the same thing. I've read that they didn't spare those who surrendered.

    • @vinrusso821
      @vinrusso821 Před 8 měsíci

      No Rasheed. Surrender usually meant death. They didn't care about getting a tax, they took what they wanted and then killed.

    • @brianhoang2312
      @brianhoang2312 Před 8 měsíci

      It may also be based on the nobles/warband leaders discretion as well. I would assume the higher ranking nobles who mightve profited from taxation or land grants would have a more vested interest than the lower ranking lords to make as much wealth as possible.
      I remember hearing/reading kf a Mongol tactic where they purposely caused refugees to flood cities- causing strained food supplies and misinformation

    • @vladtheimaplertepes
      @vladtheimaplertepes Před 8 měsíci +1

      Sounds like a band of Germans we know

  • @druidia9
    @druidia9 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Apparently Bela and his Holy Hand Grenade were of no help.

  • @justpowerghanacompanyltd6706
    @justpowerghanacompanyltd6706 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I was 7 years at that time.remember it very well

  • @loetzcollector466
    @loetzcollector466 Před 11 měsíci +2

    If you are interested in this story, Hardcore History Podcast did a fantastic series on it.

  • @user-gy5er6wh2j
    @user-gy5er6wh2j Před 9 měsíci +4

    It's a good documentary the only issue I had was that you used the Romanian name "Oradea" instead of the Hungarian "Nagyvárad" which was the name at the time, and the original name before renamed..
    Or at least mention it's Hungarian name.

  • @hintixmotivation5852
    @hintixmotivation5852 Před 5 měsíci +4

    How can a person be so evil, those soldiers were extremely evil!!!

  • @Plethoring
    @Plethoring Před 11 měsíci +1

    Awesome reading!

  • @skraskraa._.5371
    @skraskraa._.5371 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Mongols: It was just a prank bro, chillllll
    the prank in question:

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Před 10 měsíci +18

    Popularly called The Golden Horde, the domains of the heirs of Jochi were not known by that name. The term ‘Golden Horde’ does not enter the sources until the sixteenth century, when Russian chroniclers referred to the domains as Zolotaia Orda, the Golden Camp or Palace.¹ During the Mongol era, they were known as the Kipchak Ulus or Khanate or the Jochid Ulus or Khanate. The Kipchak Khanate appellation came later and was a substitution for the Dasht-i Kipchak, or the Kipchak Steppes.

  • @happylostsouls3327
    @happylostsouls3327 Před rokem +23

    Cracks me up when people say...I wish I could've lived back in the day...nope it was actually pretty terrifying back in the ancient times no thanks

    • @russpeters560
      @russpeters560 Před 11 měsíci +1

      The Roman's tried, and they failed to defeat the Cornish in the 1st century. Upon the Roman's arrival they initially recorded the Dumnonii but later reported on the Cornovii of Dumnonii. The Romans colonized much of central and southern Britain, but Dumnonia was virtually unaffected by the conquest. Roman rule had little to no impact on the region, meaning it could flourish as a fully independent kingdom, which evidence shows was sometimes under the dominion of the kings of the Britons, and sometimes to have been governed by its own Dumnonian monarchy, either by the title of duke or king. This kingdom shared strong linguistic, political and cultural links with Brittany.
      The Saxons also tried and also failed to defeat the Cornish. When the Kingdom of Wessex were expanding their territory westwards towards Cornwall. The Cornish were frequently embattled with the West Saxons who used their Germanic word "walha", meaning stranger or foreigner to describe their opponents, (later specifying them as Cornwalas, the Cornish). Conflict continued until King Athelstan of England determined that the River Tamar be the formal boundary between the West Saxons and the Cornish in the year 936, making Cornwall one of the very last retreats of the true Britons.

    • @pht9317
      @pht9317 Před 11 měsíci

      I’m sure they meant 50 yers ago not 500

    • @higgolini
      @higgolini Před 10 měsíci

      Depends which side you were on. If you were the ones doing the raping and pillaging, well...

  • @cozumel5608
    @cozumel5608 Před 2 měsíci

    "You should not to astonished by me or the events but give thanks to the king of kings who forgetful of his mercy did not spare the oppressed but wetted his sword as a lightning"

  • @RedDesertRoz
    @RedDesertRoz Před 7 měsíci +1

    It is so sad to listen to this story of such cruelty and destruction.

  • @theNfl_Esq
    @theNfl_Esq Před 8 měsíci +16

    It’s a brushed over part of history in the West. At least in the United States. Maybe Eastern Europe and those places razed by Genghis and others teach about it, otherwise it would be a college course for a history major…fascinating content. Definitely brutal and an example of the dark side of the human race. Nothing like this has happened since ww2. I am afraid the worst is coming soon. We are definitely due

    • @dixoncider3933
      @dixoncider3933 Před 8 měsíci

      Genghis Khan was already dead ,when the mongols attack Eastern Europe

    • @thikifo395
      @thikifo395 Před 6 měsíci +1

      you're not gonna believe this...

    • @agapitoliria
      @agapitoliria Před 6 měsíci +4

      There was also the colonisation of america, plenty of brutality and cleansing there.

    • @countdooku75
      @countdooku75 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@agapitoliriafake and gay, not at all comparable

    • @Gobrech
      @Gobrech Před 4 měsíci +3

      ​@@agapitoliriatry reading, and don't bring up irrelevant whataboutisms just because you're provoked.

  • @thibs2837
    @thibs2837 Před 11 měsíci +8

    They must have been very complexed about themselves to be that evil.
    If hell or something equivalent exists, we all know where they have been since

    • @unodos.4557
      @unodos.4557 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Us mongolians didn’t believe in hell or heaven. Our traditional religion tengri (until it mixed with tibetan buddhism) had no concept of good or evil. In the steppes, survival is survival and killing is another way of the harsh life.

    • @thibs2837
      @thibs2837 Před 11 měsíci

      @@unodos.4557 I see

    • @battulga91
      @battulga91 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@unodos.4557 It is also said that buddhism was introduced in Mongolia to control us.

  • @Righteous1ist
    @Righteous1ist Před 11 měsíci +2

    Smart of him to run away from the city of Oradea, Hungary and into the forest to hide.

  • @teamrocketjoe1621
    @teamrocketjoe1621 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Now we need "The Mongol Invasion of Europe" as told by Uncle Roger

  • @harrisonshone7769
    @harrisonshone7769 Před rokem +38

    The Hungarian Nobblemen in the first half of the story are like the politicians and businessmen who ignore the scientists in a disaster movie.

    • @marlarki5280
      @marlarki5280 Před 11 měsíci

      These politicians and businessman are really just reflections of most people. No one wants to do any work or pay any taxes.

  • @watch-Dominion-2018
    @watch-Dominion-2018 Před rokem +3

    Superb video 👏

  • @goksir5845
    @goksir5845 Před 11 měsíci

    this should be a movie

  • @driedmang0es
    @driedmang0es Před rokem +2

    Great work thank you