Video není dostupné.
Omlouváme se.

Biography of Alexander the Great Part 2 - अरस्तू के शागिर्द चक्रवर्ती सिकंदर की जीवनी

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2018
  • Enrol to StudyIQ's Flagship UPSC IAS (Pre + Mains) LIVE Foundation Batch 9.
    Admissions closing on 10 DEC'22 |
    Enrol now - bit.ly/upscbatch9
    A time-tested focused method for clearing Prelims 2023
    1. Live Classes
    2. Static and Current Affairs Booklets
    3. Workbook-based Test Series
    Join our flagship ‘UPSC IAS Live SIP+ 2023 Batch’ to prepare for prelims 2023 exam.
    Batch starting on 19th December, 2022 | Timing - 7:00 PM
    Join Now : bit.ly/SIP_Cle...
    Join our Most Requested NCERT LIVE Batch to start your UPSC Journey.
    Batch Starting on - 05 DEC’22| 07:00 PM
    Join Now - bit.ly/3TPej9r
    UPSC Civil Services Examination is the most prestigious exam in the country. It is important to lay a comprehensive and strong General Studies foundation for the exam. Both Prelims and Mains can’t be cleared without a strong Foundation. Time is running out and seats are limited for the batch.
    Join StudyIQ’s Test Series for various examinations and evaluate your preparation.
    Click on this link to know more : bit.ly/3H13vma
    Optional Papers are an important component of the Mains examination. Without a good score in Optionals, it is difficult to get a good rank. Increase your chances of scoring 300+ in optionals.
    UPSC IAS (Mains) LIVE Optional Batches : bit.ly/3DrHsmw
    UPSC IAS (Mains) LIVE PSIR Optional Batch 3
    Admissions closing on 5th Dec '22 |
    To know more visit : bit.ly/3Nu0mfT
    Sociology Optional Live Foundation Batch 1 by Deepanshu Singh
    Batch Starting On 19 Dec’22|
    To know more visit : bit.ly/3Vwttlf
    UPSC IAS (Mains) LIVE Geography Optional Batch 4
    Starting On 26th December’22 |
    To know more visit - bit.ly/3OBpcuP
    Join UPSC Ethics Module - GS Paper 4 to score higher marks in GS PAPER 4
    Batch Starting on 19 Dec’22| 7PM
    Join Now : bit.ly/3UBO4E9
    UPSC General Studies and Optional Combo batches
    Get extra discount by subscribing to our Combo batches: www.studyiq.co....
    UPSC and State PCS Combo batches
    UPSC + Uttar Pradesh PSC (Pre + Mains) LIVE Foundation Combo Batch 3
    Admissions Closing on 10th December'22
    To Know more visit: bit.ly/3tyOL5X
    UPSC + Bihar PSC (Pre + Mains) LIVE Foundation Combo Batch 3
    Admissions Closing on 10th December'22 |
    To Know more visit: bit.ly/3ExjW7O
    The important course features are -
    1. 1000+ Hours of Live teaching by our faculties
    2. One-to-one mentorship to keep you on track to achieve the target
    3. Handmade and concise Lecture Notes, Handouts on static topics
    4. MCQ based learning for every lecture to enhance retention
    5. Answer writing program guided by our experienced faculties
    6. Daily Current Affairs Programme (CAP) PDF + Videos covering multiple sources
    7. Benchmarking of students through weekly revision tests for students
    8. Prelims Test Series to make you battle ready for Prelims exam
    9. Gyanvani sessions by senior bureaucrats, selected candidates and senior aspirants
    10. CSAT Lectures to help to adapt with changing patterns of examination.
    Gaurav Sir Courses - One-Stop Solution for Current Affairs of all Government Exams.
    Gaurav Sir Current Affairs bit.ly/3jwDRsv
    Complete Static GK by Dr. Gaurav Garg bit.ly/3O0FaxE
    Banking Awareness (Static) by Dr Gaurav Garg bit.ly/36dElAI
    Vipan Sir Courses - Courses to help you gain an edge with MCQs preparation
    10000 MCQs of GA by Vipan Sir bit.ly/367qqMi
    GS - Dr. Vipan Goyal bit.ly/3vbslbn
    StudyIQ is known for its superlative content and UPSC Books. Check the following links to order Books
    Principles of Geography
    Amazon: amzn.to/3Py3o3c
    Flipkart: bit.ly/3yVffAT
    Fundamentals of Geography
    Flipkart: bit.ly/3MCUz6a
    Amazon: amzn.to/3PzEQXy
    Indian Economy
    Amazon : amzn.to/3zS4mls
    Flipkart: bit.ly/3xTdO5m
    Indian Art and Culture
    Amazon : amzn.to/3BhVypR
    Flipkart: bit.ly/3OXyRKN
    Modern Indian History
    Amazon: bit.ly/3AnIC07
    Download the App to Subscribe to the Course - bit.ly/StudyIQAPP
    For More Information regarding the course, Visit: bit.ly/upscbatch9
    For any doubt, Call 080-6897-3353 or Click here for Whatsapp Chat wa.me/917703861353

Komentáře • 874

  • @studyiqofficial
    @studyiqofficial  Před 6 lety +71

    Follow Dr Gaurav Garg on Facebook - facebook.com/gauravgargeducation
    Follow Prashant Dhawan on Facebook: facebook.com/prashant.dhawan.79
    Follow Dr Gaurav Garg on Instagram - instagram.com/tirelesssoul/
    Follow Dr Gaurav Garg on Twitter - twitter.com/GauravGarg888
    Follow Prashant Mavani on Facebook: facebook.com/PrashantTMavani/
    Follow Prashant Mavani on Twitter: twitter.com/PrashantMavani

    • @arjunpalaniya
      @arjunpalaniya Před 6 lety +2

      Study IQ education sir , PDF yahi description box me attached KR Diya kijiye na please!

    • @TheLegend37906
      @TheLegend37906 Před 6 lety

      1915 to 1916 first world war

    • @AmitKumar-fj2mb
      @AmitKumar-fj2mb Před 6 lety +1

      Study IQ education sikandar mahan aap v mahan

    • @rivantkumar5357
      @rivantkumar5357 Před 5 lety

      Rivant

    • @ajitmeher7722
      @ajitmeher7722 Před 4 lety

      Ek baat bataiye ki alexandar america,england,russia ko kabhi jeeta tha ya nahi?

  • @sayyidadnan6007
    @sayyidadnan6007 Před 6 lety +319

    Main kisi bhi competitive exam ki tayaari nahi kar raha fir bhi Roz apke videos dekhta/sunta hu.
    Kash pehle bhi knowledge itni easily available/accessible hoti to bahot accha hota.
    Napoleon ki Biography zaeda interesting lagi.
    Very Much Thanks Sir.

  • @shaziabhutto5601
    @shaziabhutto5601 Před 4 lety +55

    From Pakistan
    Mashallah excellent
    Khas toor p itny dry subject ko itna hansty hwy light moode mn map k sath bta rahy hain zaberdast.tareqa hai.

  • @hemantbaghel2433
    @hemantbaghel2433 Před 6 lety +47

    बहुत ही शानदार वीडियो।
    आपका बहुत - बहुत आभार सर जी।

  • @dujcomp8645
    @dujcomp8645 Před 4 lety +13

    Battle of Dardanelles started in early 1915 and ended in early 1916. It happened because the Entente powers, Britain, France and Russia tried to weaken the Ottoman Empire which was a central power by taking control over straits that provided a supply route to Russia.
    And yes, Thank you so much sir. Lots of love.

  • @SunilYadav-93
    @SunilYadav-93 Před 6 lety +79

    Battle of Dardanelles : In March 1915 British and France attacked on Turkey to control the vital strait that connects Europe with Asia.

  • @avilashrana4459
    @avilashrana4459 Před 6 lety +96

    Aristotle is the “Father of Western Philosophy “ 🙏🏻Guru Dakshina

  • @ArchitOjha23
    @ArchitOjha23 Před 6 lety +32

    Excellent narration, you are a spellbinding storyteller sir. Thank you!

  • @nirjashaw2410
    @nirjashaw2410 Před 4 lety +1

    Aap ki aawaj bahot hee jayad impressive hai or spar padhne ka samajhne ka jo tarika hai wo bahot hee jayad easy way me aap samjhate hai.kaas ki aap hamare aas paas k teacher hote ham aap se hee CLASSES lete.

  • @vikramsisodiya3479
    @vikramsisodiya3479 Před 4 lety +3

    आपकी हर जानकारी मै देख रहा हुं , पत्रकारिता में आपका यह मार्गदर्शन बहुत काम आता है।

  • @grammarguru6503
    @grammarguru6503 Před 3 lety +2

    गजब, बेमिसाल, interesting

  • @Rockygowda6
    @Rockygowda6 Před 6 lety +36

    After hydaspes war.. Alexander fight with Indian queen wer he dent win and made compromise.. So
    As per Marshal Zhukov, one of the finest generals of Russia ever, Alexander was decisively defeated by Puru and went back because he did not have the heart to fight the Indians
    As per Zhukov, Alexander’s troubles began as soon as he crossed the Indian border. He first faced resistance in the Kunar, Swat, Buner and Peshawar valleys where the Aspasioi and Assakenoi, known in Hindu texts as Ashvayana and Ashvakayana, stopped his advance. Although small by Indian standards they did not submit before Alexander’s killing machine.
    . Alexander made many war in India . Pls make a detail video on that.

  • @UmeshRoutray
    @UmeshRoutray Před 5 lety +6

    seriouly , grt work.. i dont have words to thank you.. i dont prepare for any exams, but you made the story so interesting that ..

  • @SAHILSINGH-qx4ug
    @SAHILSINGH-qx4ug Před 6 lety +108

    Sir if Alexander won battle aganist Porus why he don't go further to Magadh Empire?
    Sir it is very lame argument by greek historians that army was tired. They don't want to admit Alexander lost is last battle vs Porus. ThANX
    PLZ REPLY ..

    • @mayursisode5516
      @mayursisode5516 Před 5 lety +25

      He was unable to fight Chanakyas Chandragupta mourya

    • @honeyrathi100
      @honeyrathi100 Před 5 lety +8

      Absolutely right brother

    • @gaurav4761
      @gaurav4761 Před 5 lety +21

      Bro dont india had philosophers at that time? don't take it on ur ego and just accept the fact

    • @gaurav4761
      @gaurav4761 Před 5 lety +15

      @@mayursisode5516 chandragupta was not the ruler of Maghdha at that time

    • @educationtown3796
      @educationtown3796 Před 5 lety +13

      He was unable to fight dhananand.... Because his army so biggg

  • @ashagoyal7075
    @ashagoyal7075 Před 3 lety +10

    I daily listen to some of your biographies with great interest. Sir, if Alexander went back after his battle with king Porus, how is it that Selucus some military personnel of Alexander married his daughter to Great king Chandragupta? There are many other stories too . I shall be grateful to you if you could kindly explain whether it's a fact.

  • @PriyaGupta-fx9nz
    @PriyaGupta-fx9nz Před 3 lety +10

    Sir ne Chanakya and Chandragupta Maurya ke baare me koi zikr kyo nahi kiya?? Unka bhi bohot main part tha Alexander ki story me🤔🤔

  • @soumyaranjansahoo3583
    @soumyaranjansahoo3583 Před 4 lety +5

    That's why he is the greatest of all time
    ALEXANDER THE GREAT

  • @advvikramsinghmultani8136

    Very nice sir .. I am preparing for higher Judiciary but despite that I daily watch and listen your lecture.. your method to explained deeply is really very much true and genuine.. I love it .. keep it up ..

  • @parulchitrawanshi4729
    @parulchitrawanshi4729 Před 4 lety +3

    Plutarch explains that struggle of Alexander's army with Porus completely blunted their courage and the information about Nanda army had completely changed his course of campaign.

  • @shalurajput2495
    @shalurajput2495 Před 6 lety +40

    Battle of Dardanelles in march 1915 between British and French during first world war to take control of the strategically vital strait separating Europe from Asia.

  • @pratibharajpoot5902
    @pratibharajpoot5902 Před 5 lety +29

    The way of teaching is outstanding.

  • @muhammedreaz3861
    @muhammedreaz3861 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you soo much sir...for this biography of ALEXANDER THE GREAT...for a very long time i want to know about him..💐💐💐

  • @krishavlogs9
    @krishavlogs9 Před 6 lety

    sir me ab student nhi hu fir bhi itihas k jankari k liye apke every lecture ko 1st and 2nd part ko bahut dhyan se sunta hu isse mujhe bahut jankari milti h dil se apko thanks keh rha hu aap isko continue rakhna

  • @kunalvichare8264
    @kunalvichare8264 Před 3 lety +5

    Battle of dardanelles took place when british underestimated the ottomen empire and send naval ships then some were destroyed and they also blocked the supply line of weapons. that was really a battle of two different eras

  • @give619sleep9
    @give619sleep9 Před 6 lety +43

    "Every king should rise and shall FALL!!!!!!"

  • @ustadblike5346
    @ustadblike5346 Před 3 lety +2

    ਦੁਨੀਆ ਜਿੱਤਣ ਆਇਆ ਸਿਕੰਦਰ ਲੈ ਕੇ ਭਾਰੀ ਫੋਰਸ, ਵੜਿਆ ਜਦ ਪੰਜਾਬ ਚ ਮੂਹਰੇ ਟੱਕਰ ਗਿਆ ਜੱਟ ਪੋਰਸ | ਬੱਬੂ ਮਾਨ ਸਾਬ ਜ਼ਿੰਦਾਬਾਦ 🙏

  • @himanshuthagunna3998
    @himanshuthagunna3998 Před 3 lety

    Sir ऐसे इतिहास पढ़ के, इतिहास के दीवाने हो गए है।

  • @kesharkhadkapunwar2029
    @kesharkhadkapunwar2029 Před 3 lety +2

    श्रीमान जी,
    👏🌹🙏 महत्वपूर्ण जानकारीके लिए धन्यवाद !
    🇳🇵जय नेपाल !!!

  • @parveen57kumar80
    @parveen57kumar80 Před 5 lety +4

    Sir Aristotle ki biography ka bhi video bnao plz.
    Your all videos are awesome👏✊👍👍😎

  • @Rudrashiv2507
    @Rudrashiv2507 Před 6 lety +5

    Sir its my humble request to you plzz make a video on cleopatra and julius ceaser.. hope u consider my comment.. thanx sir

  • @chandreshsingh6768
    @chandreshsingh6768 Před 4 lety +2

    12:44 - Ajeeb-o-tareeka. 🙈 Really like your videos sir. Big Thank you from the listener's community.

  • @jigneshvasava8897
    @jigneshvasava8897 Před 6 lety +3

    Myth of Alexander Victory in India
    Scholars say alexander never won instead he lost to porus
    by Kamesh Aiyer
    Many years ago I came across a comment in a Usenet posting (to those who don’t remember Usenet, it was the blog of the pre-web world), that said that there was no proof that Alexander won any victories in India and that it might be more appropriate to call him “Alexander the Merely Mediocre”.The comment amused and intrigued me and much later I had an opportunity to read Alexander’s biography by Plutarch. I was surprised to find out that Plutarch wrote his biography over two hundred years after Alexander’s death using oral legends as his source. It is possible that he may also have had access to a personal diary kept by Alexander’s physician, but that is about it. Plutarch wrote the biography of Alexander as part of a series of biographies that contrasted the different styles of great Greek leaders, and in his view, Alexander was possibly the greatest of the greats, flawed only by youthful indiscretions. But otherwise, the tale came from legends spread by Alexander’s friends after he came back from India and died.So the story of how Alexander met and defeated the Puru king (“Porus” to the Greeks) and released him because Puru asked to be “treated like a king” in defeat did not come from any documented source. It was a legend.
    The story, then, of Alexander’s triumphant march into India, finally only giving up at the urging of his soldiers who were tired after years of fighting and who wanted to return to their loved ones (in Persia?); the odyssey down the Indus, defeating various kingdoms but sustaining a deadly wound; and, finally splitting his army in two so that they would have a better chance of returning with the news in case of further conflicts; returning with a fraction of his army to the seat of his empire in Persepolis and his death from his wounds; all based on legend. No documents, no sources, just myth.So did Alexander really venture successfully into India and turn back at the urging of his men? Or was it all spin?
    I’ve searched what I can access of Usenet now and looked elsewhere for any follow-up to the original comment. I did not find any, so I thought I should follow up, if only with a comment on Boloji!
    Alexander’s defeat of the Persian empire and his victory over Egypt are well documented by non-Greek sources. So, I am not saying anything about these. After Alexander’s death the empire was divided into three, corresponding roughly to Greater Greece, Egypt, and Greater Persia, with tributaries to the east commanded by generals, such as Seleucus. No lands east of the Indus were part of this division; and subsequently, under the Mauryas, an Indian empire extended all the way into modern Afghanistan (ancient Gandhara) and modern Baluchistan (ancient Gedrosia). So Alexander did not even leave behind successors who would acknowledge his rule.
    So what exactly happened to Alexander in India?Supposedly, Alexander first met some resistance from minor kingdoms in the Northwest, possibly from around Swat. He defeated these rulers. Then he met Ambi of Taxila who welcomed him as a fellow ruler, agreed to be his vassal, and offered him safe transit to the east. Then Alexander laid siege to a city and commited a crime against Athena by promising a safe conduct to mercenaries defending the city and massacring them after they left the city - Plutarch believes that the withdrawal of Athena’s blessing was the reason why he could not complete his victories in India. Then Alexander crosses the Indus into the Punjab and somewhere near modern-day Delhi, perhaps even in the historic battlefields of Panipat or Kurukshetra, he fought Porus and Porus lost. There is a story about how the Indian elephant brigade was winning the day when by cleverly attacking Porus’ elephant, the Greeks managed to un-elephant Porus, and the elephants in disarry retreated rough-shod over their own troops.Porus is captured and brought to Alexander in chains. Alexander looks at the tall (supposedly 6 cubits) Porus and asks him how he wanted to be treated. Porus replied, “Like a king” - his arrogance and pride aroused Alexander’s admiration.Promptly, Alexander released Porus, agreed to be his friend, restored his lost kingdom to him, and added to it lands that were part of Ambi’s Taxila.Huh?
    Let’s have that again.Ambi, who fought on Alexander’s side, lost lands to Porus as a result of Porus’s defeat. Some defeat.Then, having established himself as a magnanimous victor, Alexander asked Porus what it would take to win the rest of India. He made the mistake, I guess, of asking this in public with all his generals listening in, and Porus described the entire rest of the Gangetic valley with its multiple kingdoms, and the Magadhan empire downstream. Porus described these in terms of how much bigger they were than his own little kingdom.As a result, there was no more stomach among Alexander’s generals for continuing. They had almost lost to Porus. How could they successfully confront even larger forces?And so Plutarch’s story goes that the army revolted against continuing. And Alexander decides to retreat, but he asks Porus what the best way to return would be. He is told that he should go down the Indus in boats and then go along the Makran coast in boats and ships to Arabia and thence to Persia. And Alexander does something like that - at the Indus delta he splits his force into two and sends one by sea and the other by land and they both return safely after three years.
    But, uh-ho?Why couldn’t he just retreat? He had just defeated Porus and obtained his eternal friendship. He had defeated the kingdoms along the way and set up his own warlords to rule them. Ambi was his friend (well, maybe). He knew the way back.There is a simpler explanation that does not require one to strain one’s intelligence. Alexander lost to Puru. Puru imposed a separate peace on Ambi that included the surrender of some Taxilan land to Puru and a withdrawal of support for the Greeks. Alexander negotiated a safe-conduct for his own troops, provided they went down the Indus, and did not trouble Taxila or Puru again.So there’s Alexander, having suffered his first major defeat, set adrift down the Indus with a much reduced army. To get food and supplies, they have to negotiate or fight with the cities they pass. They even pick up some “philosophers” from a city populated and defended by “philosophers”, i.e., Brahmins. Plutarch has some stories about these Brahmins, some of which remind one of prescriptions in Kautilya’s Arthashastra.Along the way, Alexander suffers a wound to the side.They reach the delta of the Indus and make a decision to split - I’d like to imagine that the idea of splitting his force came from his Indian philosopher friends. It was wise advice. Alexander’s most urgent concern would have been for his family and his empire if any Persian enemies or even some fair-weather friends received the news of his defeat. The two halves of his army would be tied by bonds of friendship (and hostages in all but name retained by Alexander in his force). Whichever half returned first, it would serve to spread a different story, a story of the victory and the magnanimity of Alexander the Great.
    What was left back in the Gangetic plain? Two “small” kingdoms, Taxila and Puru, that were to be swallowed up by the expanding Magadhan empire. Twenty years later, Chandragupta Maurya would take over the Magadhan empire and the true details of the encounter between these Indian kingdoms and Alexander would be lost to history for ever.Instead, Alexander’s physician and friend who had taken care of him on his deathbed had a journal to write. And his other friends had a story to tell, that would ensure that the myth of Alexander Megalos (the Great) would keep his enemies from attacking him as he lay dying.
    Centuries later, Plutarch makes Alexander immortal.Why do I call the legend of Alexander “spin”. Because that is what it is. Alexander could not afford to look like a loser. His successors could not afford to look like losers. Years later, Plutarch could not afford to deflate the Alexandrian bubble.If we took the inhabited portions of all of Alexander’s verified conquests, and excluded the “Indian” provinces of Gandhara and Gedrosia, the resulting empire, “Alexander’s empire”, would be a little bit smaller than the inhabited portions of the Gangetic plain. Yes, Alexander may have been a great warrior and he was surely a lucky one when he defeated the weakened Persian empire, but it would be silly of us to accept without question the thesis that Alexander was all set to conquer the kingdoms of North India. But such is the influence of the “West” on us Indians - and by the “West” I mean the Persians, the Egyptians, the Greeks, the Arabs, the Europeans, the English, the Americans, and so on, that we accept without question that some tin-pot megalomaniac was about to do just that.
    www.hinduwebsite.com/history/alexander.asp
    www.drgeorgepc.com/Tsunami325BCIndiaAlexander.html

  • @grammarguru6503
    @grammarguru6503 Před rokem

    Seen again, superb, grateful to you

  • @manashkamalbarman9981
    @manashkamalbarman9981 Před 5 lety +12

    The Gallipoli Campaign, also known as the Dardanelles Campaign, the Battle of Gallipolior the Battle of Çanakkale (Turkish: Çanakkale Savaşı), was a campaign of the First World War that took place on the Gallipoli peninsula (Gelibolu in modern Turkey). The Ententepowers, Britain, France and the Russian Empire, sought to weaken the Ottoman Empire, one of the Central Powers, by taking control of the straits that provided a supply route to Russia. The invaders launched a naval attack followed by an amphibious landing on the peninsula, to capture the Ottoman capital of Constantinople (Istanbul).[12] The naval attack was repelled and after eight months' fighting, with many casualties on both sides, the land campaign was abandoned and the invasion force was withdrawn. It was a costly and humiliating defeat for the Allies and for the sponsors, especially Winston Churchill.
    Copy from Wikipedia🙏🙏

  • @aayushigupta7145
    @aayushigupta7145 Před 3 lety +1

    U r the best teacher for history......thank u sir🙏

  • @worldwide5828
    @worldwide5828 Před 3 lety +1

    Battle of dadinels -: 17 February 1915 to 9 January 1916. In first world war to take control of the Turkey (ottoman empire)

  • @bhagirathgarg7545
    @bhagirathgarg7545 Před 2 lety

    यह कहानी भारतीयों ने लिखा होता तो वास्तव में अलेक्जेंडर हारा होगा .
    कोई जीत कर नही लोटता ओर रस्ते में नही मरता.
    पोरस से रिश्ता कोई जीत कर नही जोडता हार कर सजा से बचने के लिए रिश्ता जोड़ते हैं

  • @King-gc8zd
    @King-gc8zd Před 3 lety +4

    Alexander and Xerxes are my two favorite kings. Alexander invades Persia. Xerxes invades Greek.

  • @kapilmehra1101
    @kapilmehra1101 Před 2 lety

    Yeh saari baatein thee - excellent

  • @sudhakarkale2365
    @sudhakarkale2365 Před rokem

    BEST SIR, EXCEPT HANDWRITING

  • @mdzaid6574
    @mdzaid6574 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks a lot guru G..😘

  • @arjunsinghshanyou5759
    @arjunsinghshanyou5759 Před 4 lety +2

    Nephew of Aristotle :-callisthenes
    Name of shivaji horse :-moti vishwas
    Gordian knot is a know extremely difficult to solve

  • @dr.sunitasinghrai5531
    @dr.sunitasinghrai5531 Před 2 lety

    Very impressively said history.....That skipped in school....Now remind....In detailed

  • @opgamers1254
    @opgamers1254 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks sir

  • @devharpal5911
    @devharpal5911 Před 2 lety

    U r the best explainer

  • @AbhishekSingh-cr8jq
    @AbhishekSingh-cr8jq Před 6 lety +13

    Battle of Dardanelles happened during ww1

  • @sandeepsinghhindu7233
    @sandeepsinghhindu7233 Před 3 lety

    जब इतिहासकार ही युनानी थे तो जाहिर सी बात है कि वो सब अपने राजा का ही गुणगान करेंगे. लिहाजा उन सब ने सिकंदर को ही महान बताया है. लेकिन अब बहुत से आधुनिक इतिहास कार मानते है की अपने आखिरी युध्द मे सिकंदर की हार हुई थी और राजा पोरस की विजय. लेकिन ये भारतीय इतिहास कार पता नही कब इसको समझेगे.

  • @kundansarkar6465
    @kundansarkar6465 Před 6 lety +2

    Thanks sir providing this video for us, this is very helpful for students, like me

  • @sukhvindersingh6954
    @sukhvindersingh6954 Před 5 lety

    After confronting King Porus Alexander went further to Magadh Empire but his army was astonished when they saw massive 3,50,000 army which outnumbered Alexander army by approximately 10 times. His army demoralised by the unity of all Indian kings and their gigantic size of army hence they surrendered & refuse to fight the suicide mission that led Alexander to step back from the great India kingdom.
    "But Thanks for so informative videos it really enhances the knowledge" !!!!!!!!!

  • @simransudan9497
    @simransudan9497 Před 4 lety

    Teaching way is best

  • @spritual_playboy
    @spritual_playboy Před 6 lety +9

    Battle of dardenalles : 19 Feb - 18 march 1915

  • @nazmeenshaikh1573
    @nazmeenshaikh1573 Před 5 lety +2

    Kamal hai itne Mahan yodha porosh ko India ne history koi Stan nhi Diya jisko Alexander b man the the...

    • @abhijeetdhopte5911
      @abhijeetdhopte5911 Před 4 lety +1

      This history was written by Greek historians, there is no susbtance of Porus in indiansl scriptures strange

    • @nazmeenshaikh1573
      @nazmeenshaikh1573 Před 4 lety

      @@abhijeetdhopte5911 it's really strange aur hum faltu bat par ladte hai.India Ko bekr ki chizo me jyada intrest h.

  • @maneendrasingh5183
    @maneendrasingh5183 Před 6 lety +8

    Sir I want to know 1 thing.
    From where u got this much information because FOR battle of hydespaas India didnt have any documnts.

  • @ramashempire1275
    @ramashempire1275 Před 4 lety +13

    Kukhyaat samraat Ashok aur Alexander the great. Wah kya kehna kya thumbnail use krte hai shriman. 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔

    • @neekk9462
      @neekk9462 Před 4 lety +2

      Ye agnihotri bramhan hey jo... Baki rajako hamesha low level pe rakhta hey.... Ashoka was great always....

    • @gurugamingmaster
      @gurugamingmaster Před 4 lety

      Ashoka पहले पढ, बिना दक्षिणपंथी विचारधारा के, अशोका महान था हैं रहेगा
      चूतिया इतिहासकार इसे बदल नहीं सकते,

    • @pankajpaliwal3405
      @pankajpaliwal3405 Před 4 lety +1

      बाबा साहिब की बायोग्राफी तो इसने एक पार्ट मे कर दी ।बाबा साहिब 10 पार्ट मे भी पूरे नही पढाये जा सकते ।

  • @FaisalKhan-jc2hy
    @FaisalKhan-jc2hy Před 4 lety

    Mr s.agnihotri you are a very fair and brilliant speaker and i really enjoy your talks. Thanks

  • @MrNASIMKHAN1
    @MrNASIMKHAN1 Před 3 lety +1

    I am from Pakistan and I really appreciated all of ur videos and when ever I get time I must watching ur videos

  • @strikersoccer9535
    @strikersoccer9535 Před 4 lety +2

    *A movie should be made on Battle of Hydaspes ⚔️⚔️*

  • @fatimalatif1673
    @fatimalatif1673 Před 2 lety

    Sir you are very good tutor I love you sir

  • @rajveersisodiya6639
    @rajveersisodiya6639 Před 5 lety

    bahut hi shaandar padhate ho aap

  • @mansimransingh_19
    @mansimransingh_19 Před rokem

    Your way to explain 👍

  • @Avinash-ki4si
    @Avinash-ki4si Před 4 lety +2

    Battle of dardenelles was held in 19 february 1915 to 9 january during the world war 1 because it is very important due to military point of view as it has a major access to the sea and many different countries.

  • @sumantadas46
    @sumantadas46 Před 6 lety +1

    Gordian Knot =
    The Gordian Knot is a legend of Phrygian Gordium associated with Alexander the Great. It is often used as a metaphor for an intractable problem (disentangling an "impossible" knot) solved easily by finding a loophole or thinking creatively ("cutting the Gordian knot")

  • @sagars8968
    @sagars8968 Před 4 lety

    आप भयंकर और जबरदस्त बहुत बोलते हैं

  • @joybiswas8794
    @joybiswas8794 Před 6 lety +1

    Battle of the Dardanelles may refer to:
    During the Ottoman-Venetian War of 1645-1669:
    This is the first one and the last war story is as following
    The Naval Operations in the Dardanelles Campaign (17 February 1915 - 9 January 1916) took place against the Ottoman Empire during the First World War. Ships of the Royal Navy, French Marine nationale, Imperial Russian Navy and the Royal Australian Navy, attempted to force the defences of the Dardanelles Straits.

  • @saleemahmedkhan8496
    @saleemahmedkhan8496 Před 3 lety +1

    Very good 👌

  • @sumitkumar-sn4qd
    @sumitkumar-sn4qd Před rokem

    You are so great sir

  • @kamalkumar-qo3uc
    @kamalkumar-qo3uc Před 4 lety +5

    Such a great knowledge .. THANKS U SIR.. AP ESE Hi video bnate rahe.. malik apko khush rakhe bahut bahut from mr kamal PB india.✔✔✔✔

  • @pankajagarwal8337
    @pankajagarwal8337 Před 5 lety +4

    Sir please make a video on Australian history

  • @bhupendrasinghchandrawat5285

    बहुत शानदार

  • @poonamtiwari8722
    @poonamtiwari8722 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you so much Sir for these important information 🙏

  • @SunilYadav-93
    @SunilYadav-93 Před 6 lety +2

    When Alexander arrived, at Phrygia it had been reduced to a province of the Persian Empire . An oracle had declared that any man who could unravel its elaborate knots was destined to become ruler of all of Asia. Alexander wanted to untie the knot but struggled to do so without success. He then drew his sword and sliced it in half with a single stroke.

  • @Rao_Indrajeet_Singh
    @Rao_Indrajeet_Singh Před 3 lety +1

    Very nice ☺️......

  • @barsharanisahu4438
    @barsharanisahu4438 Před 5 lety +2

    thank you so........much

  • @ramjivyas3596
    @ramjivyas3596 Před 5 lety

    श्रद्धा लभते ज्ञानम । ज्ञानम लभते परम शांति

  • @iamrohit045
    @iamrohit045 Před 2 lety +1

    I watched 300 movie both parts and movie was just awesome usme Alexander ka role gajab k tha and fight bhi lekin 1 baat to hain the era was brutal for humans.💭😶

  • @immallick7398
    @immallick7398 Před 6 lety +4

    sir bohat badhia bolten hain aap or good info

  • @chandrachelani3135
    @chandrachelani3135 Před 6 lety +8

    One correction please - there is many historians including a Russian general who don't agree with the fact that the Alexander won the battle of hydaspes they argue that the behaviour of Alexander was not of victors. Like giving back land, changing the return route to Greece etc. They argue that either he lost or compromised with porus.

    • @samardipsingh919
      @samardipsingh919 Před 6 lety

      Chandra Chelani Same here

    • @2244UnknownPerson
      @2244UnknownPerson Před 2 lety

      He returned all land back to Athens too , same with hundreds of different kings including porus .
      Changing the route proves he won

  • @srikrishnagraphics4769

    im impressed by golden mean table of human happy life....

  • @shubhrajyotilaha7980
    @shubhrajyotilaha7980 Před 6 lety +33

    According many historian that conversation never happened between Alexander and Porus.

  • @tejaspoojari1436
    @tejaspoojari1436 Před 6 lety +3

    16 may 1654.....Venice and sometimes the other Christian forces attempted to hold the Turks back from their invasion of Crete by attacking them early

  • @navratansharma4726
    @navratansharma4726 Před 5 lety

    बहुत ही जानकारी वाला विडियो है गुरूजी

  • @DivySaraf
    @DivySaraf Před 5 lety

    भयंकर तरीके से मज़े गए video देखने में।

  • @sunitajallandhara4753
    @sunitajallandhara4753 Před 5 lety +1

    Ur great sir and great video,lovly voice,Thkuu so much👍👍

  • @dvalyrian
    @dvalyrian Před 6 lety +31

    Hi Mr. Siddhant Agnihotri, i dont know what made to be such a big fan of Alexander because through out your video you just keep on praising him as an extra ordinary human, polite, kind and gentle. he might be great war general but he was not at all kind and polite. He was equally brutal as any other conquerer. A person who was not satisfied with his own kingdom, killed his own father and brothers can't be a kind person. I don't know what is your reference for this video most probably from Greek Historians. The would never accept the failure of their great war king Alexander, I know it would be tough to believe for you but understand why the battle between Alexander and Porus was only named as battle of Hydespass not as battle of Jhelum. Hydes was neither the name of that place nor River so why its Hydespass because its wa so terrifying for them, they where not able to cross it so easily. Hydes is name of their underworld God brother of Zues, so crossing the River Jhelum is as equal as passing Hydes. Just think any conquerer who willing to conquer the whole world will leave everything after winning such a tidious war which cause so many lives if their own army. Paurav rashtra was never accepted to be the vessel state of Alexander neither before battle nor after it by the way theere were no chance of it afterwards. I can't say whether Alexander lost in the battle of Hydespass but he neither won it, by noticing such a collateral damage he and his army decided to march back where he died midway, there are several speculation how he died by Greek Historians not made any clear views on it because they wanted to make him immortal or at least dont want to record his normal death as other human being.

    • @samardipsingh919
      @samardipsingh919 Před 6 lety +2

      Deepak Rangari True

    • @sowmya7423
      @sowmya7423 Před 5 lety +1

      i too agree with ur views.

    • @priyankakumari1655
      @priyankakumari1655 Před 5 lety +4

      What do you think about ashoka, according to our history he is great and magnificent, I just want to know your opinion.

    • @mukeshprajapati-jd4gl
      @mukeshprajapati-jd4gl Před 4 lety

      Somewhere i heard tht purus n sikander's mom had relationship so the battle was happen. Is tht true? ?

    • @shubh_21
      @shubh_21 Před 4 lety +1

      @@mukeshprajapati-jd4gl 😂😂😂😂 ye kaha suna bhai

  • @rakeshpatnaik7127
    @rakeshpatnaik7127 Před 4 lety +3

    Naval operation in Dardnells takes place against Ottoman's empire during world war

  • @lokeshbora4658
    @lokeshbora4658 Před 3 lety

    The best Explainer I ever heard

  • @ashishparashar4160
    @ashishparashar4160 Před 5 lety +1

    Hello Mr. Siddhant, i think you took this through European historian. You must read Persian and Chinese historians. These historian said that King Puru defeated Alexander brutely. European Historian couldn't accept, Alexander lost the battle. That's why they wrote this and our mindset is that Europeans are always right. This thing apply in today's world also.

  • @INSANE_N
    @INSANE_N Před 2 lety

    Oo bhai bhot bariya bolai bhai love u big fan sir 😍😍😍😍

  • @mohitsinha9116
    @mohitsinha9116 Před rokem

    Thanks 🙏

  • @COMEFLYHIGH
    @COMEFLYHIGH Před 6 lety +6

    One of the best.....Sir, keep.going

  • @fardeenkhan4662
    @fardeenkhan4662 Před 6 lety +1

    The Battle of the Granicus River in May 334 BC was fought in Northwestern Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey), near the site of Troy.

  • @kavyakavyasharma5248
    @kavyakavyasharma5248 Před 6 lety +30

    Raja porus par bhi ek video banaiye sir plzzzz plzzz plzzz plzzzz plzzzzz plzzzz plzzzz plzzzzz plzzzzz plzzzz plzzzzz plzzzz plzzzzz plzzzzz plzzzzz plzzzzz plzzzzz plzzzzz😢😢😢😢😢😢

  • @mayankaggarwal5882
    @mayankaggarwal5882 Před 4 lety +6

    Hi sir
    It's jhelum river or beas
    Plzz confirm
    As in kbc this question is answered as beas

  • @narendrasingh-fn4cg
    @narendrasingh-fn4cg Před 5 lety +1

    सर हमें एक सवाल का जवाब चाहिए वह संभवतः आप से मिल सकता है
    प्रश्न यह था कि अरस्तु ने सिकंदर से क्या वेद और गीता की मांग की थी क्या उस समय वेद को सिकंदर ले गया था या कहने का तात्पर्य यह था कि उस समय क्या वेद और गीता भारत में उपलब्ध था?

  • @nishaidreesi1527
    @nishaidreesi1527 Před 5 lety

    Very nice video sir thank you ap jab teach karte he to ESA lagta he sach me movie chal rahi he

  • @sambhavsaini9756
    @sambhavsaini9756 Před 6 lety

    Sir bhut aache se smjhaya aapne... Aaise hi.. ancient history .. cover kr digiye

  • @vinnucreations165
    @vinnucreations165 Před 2 lety

    Nice information 👍🎉🙏

  • @sonukgupta646
    @sonukgupta646 Před 3 lety +1

    अब हमसे ना हो पाई
    वाह सर जी क्या बात है

  • @akshayadash9834
    @akshayadash9834 Před 3 lety

    Good analysis.

  • @rishavthakur9696
    @rishavthakur9696 Před 6 lety

    Thank You So Much Sir Ji.... Apne bahut hi deeply samjaya hai... Thanks sir Ji...