"Great Dictators Of The World", India's Oddest Image | Esoteric Internet

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  • čas přidán 11. 07. 2024
  • What is to be learned from an image? What about a wrong one?
    On the internet, every little. Of all the odd things turned up over the years, the notorious image "Great Dictators of The World" is perhaps the most fascinating. Fascinating and logic destroying. A rogue page from a lost textbook filled to the brim with errors. A piece of bizarre educational material that briefly caught everyone's attention.
    Still, the image is so erroneous to demand investigation. It is a lost product of the world's largest Republic: India. Beyond all reason, the picture does have a definite origin, but it is still nearly impossible to explain. A chart where Abraham Lincoln and Genghis Khan sit side by side. Any attempt to explain the logic behind the inclusions always meets with failure. Until now (hopefully).
    Who crafted this chronological confusion then?
    -----
    Video Sources (Support the creators/uploaders):
    -WHAT ARE YOU DOING ON COMPUTER: bit.ly/2mkC7Ie
    -Windows 95 (Australian ad) 1995: bit.ly/2m27s2t
    -Ocean Man - Spongewave: bit.ly/2kxeVGm
    -Mike and Jay Eat Fried Chicken - Content Aware Scaling Remix Height 50% Width 50%: bit.ly/2m0u3wc
    -Coke & Windows 95 Ad: bit.ly/2kV6mVX
    -coffee coffee productions: bit.ly/2msPS7X
    -Beware the Jabberwocky: bit.ly/2kvykrd
    -Vintage Globe India: bit.ly/2m27xDj
    -Indian Flags Flying in Wind: bit.ly/2lZVne8
    -----
    Music:
    hawk - "insomnia (KRANE X HAWK) (00:00- 02:36)
    Frédéric Chopin - "Galop Marquis", preformed by Aya Higuchi (02:36-02:46)
    Bensound - "Psychedelic" (02:46-05:40)
    Bensound - "The Elevator Bossa Nova" (05:40-13:21)
    Coyote Hearing - "Nobody Calls It San Fran" (13:20-16:15)
    Rondo Brothers - "Electro Dollars" (16:07-19:27)
    Ben Elliott - "Journey To Paris" (19:27-19:51)
    -----
    All copyrighted media, images, and music respective owner(s).
    -----
    Sources:
    -'Great Dictators of the World', India (Date Unknown): bit.ly/2kcpaQ4
    -Datra gaps: Great Dictators of the World/Printed & Published...: bit.ly/2meJBww
    -Fading culture of wall posters in Tamil Nadu: bit.ly/2m2t7HF
    -Modern hand lettering of India: bit.ly/2m6uaWV
    -Gallery: Hand-Drawn Indian Movie Posters Convey 'Passion, Power and Immediacy': bit.ly/2ksqFK6
    -Of Democrats And Dictators by Sadanand Dhume: bit.ly/2kcz2t6
    -Mahesh Arts: bit.ly/2kJwkvk
    -'Mahesh Art's promises to withdraw product after creation of awarness by HJS!: bit.ly/2kIgQIa
    -Mahesh Arts Notebook Company: bit.ly/2kezTcV
    -Mahesh Arts Notebook Company: bit.ly/2kGItBe
    -----
    Thanks For Watching Despite All My Eventual Errors
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Komentáře • 70

  • @GabAssbreaker
    @GabAssbreaker Před 4 lety +44

    Chenkiskhon is my new favorite dictator.
    Great video as always.

  • @kategrant2728
    @kategrant2728 Před 4 lety +59

    Fun Fact: Chenkiskhon is probably a better spelling than Genghis, since the name is more like Chinggis Khaan.

    • @Ferroes
      @Ferroes Před 4 lety +7

      The correct chinese pronounciation would be "Chinggis Khaan" but the anthropologically correct would be "Chinggis Khazaan"

    • @sheller153
      @sheller153 Před 4 lety +3

      Chungus Khaan?

  • @georgewilson7432
    @georgewilson7432 Před 4 lety +45

    Some people in the USA would put Lincoln along with Gengis Khan.

  • @andrew3111
    @andrew3111 Před 4 lety +28

    chenkiskhon was probably a literal spelling of chinggis khann said in an indian accent

  • @gayrozayppeli8431
    @gayrozayppeli8431 Před 4 lety +49

    As someone from the region, I'm assuming they used the term "Dictator" in place of either "Influential Political Figures" or "Rulers". It's not an uncommon mistake to make considering the assumed date of publication.

    • @Pseudiom
      @Pseudiom  Před 4 lety +10

      Thanks for the info. So I guess my suspicion was probably correct then. I don't know a lot about India so I hope it seems right then.

    • @gayrozayppeli8431
      @gayrozayppeli8431 Před 4 lety +5

      @@Pseudiom Eyyyyyyyyy don't worry about it my dude. I don't expect you to know every nitty gritty of non english speaking countries.

  • @georgewilson7432
    @georgewilson7432 Před 4 lety +20

    I guess the confusion comes from the fact many of these characters were autocrats regardless of official title.

  • @zainiikhwan9405
    @zainiikhwan9405 Před 4 lety +14

    Imo, 80s and 90s textbook from Asia is a treasure trove waiting to be discovered by the modern internet......

    • @Pseudiom
      @Pseudiom  Před 4 lety +3

      I wait what wonders we will find in them.

  • @Pseudiom
    @Pseudiom  Před 4 lety +19

    As to preempt most comments, I just want to note this video was produced on shorter notice then most of my others (about a week and a half instead of two). There then are probably a few errors/oversights. Such as I had no idea what to consider Garibaldi. I was originally working on a far different video but that got put on the back-burner due to some new information and contacts. So I went with talking about this. Enjoy! Or don't... I'm not here to decide for you.

  • @matzmilan7780
    @matzmilan7780 Před 4 lety +13

    Maybe it is an error of translation and they wanted to write something like "important leaders of the world".

  • @leelubell9080
    @leelubell9080 Před 4 lety +6

    I remember a “Guess Who” game with this style of graphics

  • @diegodankquixote-wry3242
    @diegodankquixote-wry3242 Před 4 lety +10

    According to this poster, Caligula was not a dictator (at least not one worth mentioning). I Approve!

  • @MrElbowsmash
    @MrElbowsmash Před 4 lety +9

    I want this as a poster.

  • @georgewilson7432
    @georgewilson7432 Před 4 lety +8

    Regarding the princes and rulers of this world, I make mine Borges' hope: "As time goes by, we will deserve no governments".

  • @theartistformidablyknownas3807

    Forgotten implies it was remembered in the first place

  • @mouser7
    @mouser7 Před 4 lety +6

    Man, these are some real interesting vidyas. While it may not important in the grand scheme, I can always these saying I learnt something. Keep up the great work dude.

    • @Pseudiom
      @Pseudiom  Před 4 lety +1

      I like to do things I think nobody else will. That's why my channel is full of such random things. Hope you continue to enjoy my disparate subject matter.

  • @Bajun94
    @Bajun94 Před 4 lety +5

    Hen(t)ry VIII truly was one of the big lads of History, along with Taft, Göring and Churchill.

  • @Ryan-ob6dp
    @Ryan-ob6dp Před 4 lety +3

    I think this makes more sense if you assume they meant “great (i.e. powerful) leaders” rather than explicit “dictators.”

  • @katamattyon
    @katamattyon Před 4 lety +5

    You said Garibaldi wasn't ever a politician, but wasn't he a member of the Piedmontese parliament for Nice, and started his military campaign after Piedmont gave Nice to France?

    • @Pseudiom
      @Pseudiom  Před 4 lety +3

      Yeah. I probably messed up on a few of them. I should have said something more like "Leader of an Independent Nation". When I said politician I meant something like "Leader of a Nation". Politician was the wrong word to use. You can still be a politician and not be a president/prime minister/etc. That's on me.

  • @tfraenckel
    @tfraenckel Před 2 lety

    I hate how unknown your channel is. Your content is fantastic. Idk why I chose to say this on one of your older videos, but you make good videos

  • @govardhanposina17
    @govardhanposina17 Před 4 lety +1

    Not even a minute in and this sparks so much nostalgia for me looking at that image
    To provide so context,primary schools in India usually hand out summer projects where students are supposed to write about everything under the sun in scrapbooks pasting colorful images of them,sometimes these are animals,sometimes these are trees,sometimes they are types of religion and other times they are world leaders.
    Owing to this several stationary outlets started to print out these charts with the pictures and names of these things since:
    a)India is a fairly poor country and not everyone could print out their own unique pictures from the internet
    b)these were very popular in India at a time where the internet was still a far dream for most Indian households
    Like several people have pointed out correctly,the dictator part is probably an erroneous translation of the word "Leader" or worse yet this was just a stationery outlet trying to present themselves as more "Informative" then the others and chose to pick this particular synonym for leader without giving much thought

    • @the_Fisher_King
      @the_Fisher_King Před 2 měsíci

      Yes also Indian here, these bring back so much nostalgia. And most schools not being English medium explains these misspellings

  • @apollyon6705
    @apollyon6705 Před 4 lety +1

    Bro ur going well ur gonna blow up soon, u deserve so many more subs, keep it up my g🔥🔥

  • @kreegercast7943
    @kreegercast7943 Před 4 lety +1

    This was a fantastic video. I had no idea that this image existed and have now shared it with a bunch of my friends. Sadly most had seen it before but for the few that had not getting to see their shock turn to confusion turn to anger was wonderful.

  • @omarcosprovavelmente
    @omarcosprovavelmente Před 4 lety +6

    about Lenin: dictatorship of proletariat don't mean a dictatorship in the hand of one leader, but one class (the proletarian), in other means the discussion about Lenin or Stalin as dictators are more complex than that. anyway great video.

    • @j.2512
      @j.2512 Před 4 lety

      in reality though it still is totalitarian shit

    • @coryneform
      @coryneform Před 3 lety

      @@j.2512 ehhh not really

    • @krism.6598
      @krism.6598 Před 3 lety

      @@coryneform
      Even communists don’t dispute that the NKVD and the Cheka killed thousands of people, either through direct execution or gradually through forced labor camps.

    • @ixian_technocrat
      @ixian_technocrat Před 2 lety +1

      @@j.2512 Many Russians would be as offended to calling Lenin a dictator as Americans would be for calling Washington one. He is pretty much the father of the modern Russian state (and the other ex-Soviet states). Also, saying Lenin was a dictator and Ivan the Terrible wasn't, just because the latter was a king, is ridiculously pedantic. The Russian Tzars were as autocratic as one can get.

  • @wordart_guian
    @wordart_guian Před 2 lety +1

    The way you pronounce giuseppe as gusepi is terrifying
    Also duce as dusse

  • @rockcliff1930
    @rockcliff1930 Před 2 lety +2

    That's just a picture chart. Picture charts were used in the old times for school children to cut the pictures out to use in their project files. The needed part of the chart is the image, not the name, that is just a placeholder added by the printer. The lower right edge mentions the company, Mahesh Arts, they sold picture charts. That is not a book page but a series of picture charts. Clueless Americans on the internet made a huge deal out of it rather than just doing a single google search on the name of at the lower edge.

  • @FlipWarBucks
    @FlipWarBucks Před 4 lety +2

    Have been living in Egypt for the past 250 years and can confirm, Nazar was definitely a dictator.

  • @the_Fisher_King
    @the_Fisher_King Před 2 měsíci

    Indian here !!! I know this, this is not a chart. Back in the day these sheets with photos were made to be cut out and then stick them on 'projects'. Projects were like info to be submitted by schoolkids for passing a grade. I remember doing them always at the last minute lol and getting scolded for it. Btw these are likely to be misspelled as most kids don't go to English language schools and 'projects' were made in whatever language the kids learnt in.
    These bring back so many memories, i used to buy paper and glue and these sheets and collect whatever rudimentary info i could find to make these projects about world wars or a countries geography

  • @mannperson
    @mannperson Před 4 lety +1

    All I can think is that it was a part of a test, and had fake answers of non-dictators to throw you off.

  • @LaPeppercorn
    @LaPeppercorn Před 4 lety +1

    Nice going, Chenkis

  • @georgewilson7432
    @georgewilson7432 Před 4 lety +1

    Since FDR was mentioned, I must recommend reading Roosevelt After Inauguration by William Burroughs, perhaps our Tamil artist read it before.

  • @cashkromsupernerd1193
    @cashkromsupernerd1193 Před 3 lety

    The second paragraph at 15:35 makes me think this was a reference-packed joke image, kinda like all the parodies of famous paintings, album covers, etc we have in the west. They took each historical figure and dressed them up as famous actors of the day is what that seems to be saying. That doesn't explain the spelling or any other issue, but no one else in the comments seems to have mentioned this little tidbit, so I'm running with it

  • @DolanOk
    @DolanOk Před 4 lety +4

    lmao that hurt my brain

  • @HundreadD
    @HundreadD Před 3 lety +1

    "GOOSEPPEE" Mazzini ohnononono

  • @josephmillsii6943
    @josephmillsii6943 Před 4 lety +1

    Don't ever change, my golden boy

  • @Ughbees
    @Ughbees Před 4 lety

    Maybe it’s in a book of movie prop examples for kids bc the art reminds me of old movie posters and it was never ment to be taken seriously since it would have been in the background of a movie set. Just a thought

  • @dharmadarlinqx8793
    @dharmadarlinqx8793 Před 4 lety +1

    why isn't reagan on there?

  • @horrorhabit8421
    @horrorhabit8421 Před 2 lety

    Mahesh means great ruler in Sanskrit. It originates in the longer phrase "Maha [great] Ishvara [leader.]"

  • @bobSeigar
    @bobSeigar Před rokem

    Imagine criticizing the spelling on a word, when it is correct.

  • @zoidsfan12
    @zoidsfan12 Před 4 lety

    Many of these are blatant errors but Ghengis Khan is kind of understandable. As it is pronounced more like Chingis Haan. This looks like someone knew what the names sounded like and attempted to spell them phonetically. Though Johan and Hentry and just fuck ups.

  • @rzeka
    @rzeka Před 4 lety +1

    3:49 ... come on dude. If you're criticizing somebody's spelling, you shouldn't be mispronouncing things like that.

    • @rzeka
      @rzeka Před 4 lety

      Also shoutouts to jay eating chicken

  • @rosesprog1722
    @rosesprog1722 Před 4 lety

    Catherine could very well be Catherine of Aragon, daughter of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain who financed Columbus' expeditions and initiated the bloody Spanish Inquisition. She ended up in Britain as the first wife of Henry VIII so she was actually Queen from 1509 to 1533 and it is because of the Roman church's refusal to grant him a divorce from her that Henry VIII broke from Catholicism and declared himself leader of the new church of England... a rather uneventful life!!!!

  • @venyogo2
    @venyogo2 Před 4 lety +1

    faltó Perón

    • @Pseudiom
      @Pseudiom  Před 4 lety +1

      A very obvious exclusion. Wonder why he didn't make the cut? South America is completely absent from the line up.

    • @venyogo2
      @venyogo2 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Pseudiom no one really cares about South America, maybe Brazil but that's it

    • @venyogo2
      @venyogo2 Před 4 lety

      @Jack Frostler aka Cow Pee yeah but started with a military coup

  • @philipmorris9928
    @philipmorris9928 Před 4 lety +2

    Hitler was Austrian not German 13:35

    • @Pseudiom
      @Pseudiom  Před 4 lety +2

      I know. That's why I put the disclaimer in the left corner. Hitler was Austrian, Napoleon was technically Italian/Corsican, Catherine the Great was German, Genghis Khan and Charlemagne existed before the idea of modern nationality/nation-states, then Washington could arguably be called British. I categorized them by what nation they were most associated with/lead. Not where they were from. (Even calling Charlemagne French is a stretch in all reality).

    • @philipmorris9928
      @philipmorris9928 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Pseudiom Sorry, I didn't notice the disclaimer.
      Great video as always
      Best regards

    • @Pseudiom
      @Pseudiom  Před 4 lety +1

      @@philipmorris9928 No problem. Always glad when someone points something out to me.

    • @philipmorris9928
      @philipmorris9928 Před 4 lety

      @Paul Tello Yes, but saying that Austrians and Germans are one and the same is like saying that Englishmen and Irishmen are the same; They have their similarities but also have their differences.
      Austria is also shaped by Celtic and Slavic elements that predate the arrival of Germanic peoples.

    • @philipmorris9928
      @philipmorris9928 Před 4 lety

      @Paul Tello As a Pangermanist he saw Austria as part of the German Reich, but he didn't deny his Austrian origin.
      This quote is from the Anschluss:
      "I, myself, as Führer and Chancellor, will be happy to walk on the soil of the country that is my home as a free German citizen."