Fascists Built THIS Town | Outsiders NOT Welcome

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
  • German Prisoners of war were used to reconstruct many parts of Russia which they had destroyed in Russia. Today I walk around one such part.
    I recently set up a second channel with a little bit different content, you can check that out also: at this link / @broadrussia
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Komentáře • 420

  • @SamsRussianAdventures
    @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny +25

    Support my channel. By giving me a tip you are helping me to create more content. CZcams pays me peanuts as my channel is under what is known as a shadow ban! Truth doesn’t pay much!
    www.buymeacoffee.com/samhyland3v
    patreon.com/SamsRussianAdventures
    Join my telegram channel page: t.me/samsrussianadventures
    Subscribe to my new youtube channel www.youtube.com/@broadrussia

  • @videoslogmos
    @videoslogmos Před 28 dny +70

    Not exactly. There are many german surnames in Russia because hundreds of thousands of germans lived in Russia since 18th century. They were invited by prussian empress of Russia - Catherine the second.
    In 1941 there lived about 1 million germans in USSR. There even were Soviet Republic of the Volga Germans near Saratov.

  • @BankLawyer
    @BankLawyer Před 28 dny +23

    A tall strange guy with foreign accent dressed in t-shirt with sculls asks babushkas about fascists. What could go wrong?

  • @peterwilliams2152
    @peterwilliams2152 Před 28 dny +8

    I own such a German built apartment in Irbit in Sverdlovsk Oblast. Built in 1948 by German/Austrian POWs, designed by German architects. There are three such micro-raion, each surrounding the war-time factories.
    As you stated, they are very well built. Mine is on the main road in town. The reason that many are in disrepair, is during privatisation, the apartments were privatised, but the buildings weren't, they remained the responsibility of the factory, and were often passed onto the local "council". No provisions were made for a sinking/maintenance fund. Nowadays, local Governments have created Housing Companies to maintain the structures. In my area, ground floor apartments are often converted to shops, and the Housing Company and Local Government require higher contributions to the maintenance fund, and the buildings are well maintained. In less desirable area, apartments are often owned by pensioners, and maintenance fund contributions are minimal.
    As for POWs remaining, during renovations, we found some quite risqué and bawdy graffiti in old German script under the floor. They pertained to a certain young lady who we were sure was a babushka in a neighbouring kruschevka. Sure enough it was, and her daughter took photos of everything before we closed the floor.
    Another POW returned to Germany in 1950 and became a very successful businessman. He returned every year with donations for the hospital, orphanage and children's clubs. He survived Stalingrad, just. He recounted to me, that if the workers hadn't shared their meagre rations with him, he would have died. Most of the POWs from Stalingrad died, as they were already walking dead.

  • @Alyona-ty4pp
    @Alyona-ty4pp Před 28 dny +37

    My dad was a very young boy but he remembers the Japanese prisoners of war in Irkutsk. It was very hard time and not enough food and clothing but russian people would bring food and warm clothes to those prisoners.
    Being companionable to others is what separates human from animals.

    • @user-nx8ii4ef7f
      @user-nx8ii4ef7f Před 28 dny +4

      Such a shame that our 'states' divide us so often!

    • @jfffff14
      @jfffff14 Před 28 dny +2

      We are no different from animals cos we act like animals

    • @Alyona-ty4pp
      @Alyona-ty4pp Před 28 dny +3

      @@jfffff14 some but not everyone. And it's in our power to be humans not animals.

    • @robertholland7558
      @robertholland7558 Před 27 dny +1

      @@Alyona-ty4ppmost!

    • @jfffff14
      @jfffff14 Před 27 dny +1

      @Alyona-ty4pp it's in our power but the animal instincts get us all the time. Don't fool yourself. We are the same as animals

  • @Juan_van_Eeden977
    @Juan_van_Eeden977 Před 28 dny +32

    Thank you,Sam.I enjoyed watching the video and found it fascinating.
    🇿🇦❤🇷🇺

  • @user-hr4qh3bb5r
    @user-hr4qh3bb5r Před 28 dny +10

    Hello, Sam! Thanks for the video! I do not know how it was in Vladimir, but here in St. Petersburg there are also several blocks built after the war by captured Germans. Actually, I live next to one of these blocks, I see it from the window, and my friends live in what they are called here, a "German cottage" (8 apartments). So, the architects of these houses were Soviet, the task of the Germans was only to build them.

    • @user-dz9vt4dg9y
      @user-dz9vt4dg9y Před 18 dny

      Сэм говорит очень много чепухи. Ему нужно быть более осведомлённым.

  • @boris1932
    @boris1932 Před 28 dny +17

    Most people don't know about this. Many German POW's were in America too. Many were in Texas and ended up going into farming and such. Most not returning to Germany. I think Great Britain did the same too using POW labor.

    • @dkrawk8309
      @dkrawk8309 Před 28 dny +3

      West was safe heaven for ss nazis.
      "They are Christians like us who were manipulated by regime" was the sickening explanation.
      "Hunka is a canadian the ukrianian hero who fought for the ukriane against "evil Stalin" during ww2"
      That's justin Truedonnos quote

    • @craiggallup5706
      @craiggallup5706 Před 28 dny +2

      German prisoners of the west were treated humanely unlike the barbarism of Stalin.

    • @dkrawk8309
      @dkrawk8309 Před 28 dny

      @@craiggallup5706 dafaq is wrong with You?
      Stalin saved this planet from fasist hitler

    • @1982vovan
      @1982vovan Před 28 dny +4

      ​@@craiggallup5706 хорошая шутка (нет).

    • @Luton-Mick
      @Luton-Mick Před 28 dny +5

      @@craiggallup5706 They killed 27 million of his people while invading his homeland, I think he treated them like royalty tbh.

  • @michaelmichael8538
    @michaelmichael8538 Před 28 dny +34

    All those prisoners of war had been captured after 1 of the most successful war operations called 'Bagration' in Belarus and Lithuania in 1944. And long afterwards in 70s when I was at school in Dobroye district(you must know about Sam) the builders from East Germany continued building houses in our city and those builder's children studied with us Russians in the same classes

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny +4

      Interesting. Do you know which areas of Dobriy they built? Perhaps on the right of dobroselsckaya

    • @michaelmichael8538
      @michaelmichael8538 Před 28 dny +5

      @@SamsRussianAdventures they built the very end of dobroselskaya

    • @michaelmichael8538
      @michaelmichael8538 Před 28 dny +7

      @@SamsRussianAdventures I still remember the beautiful German girl named Anti who sat next to me at our desk

    • @michaelmichael8538
      @michaelmichael8538 Před 28 dny +7

      @@SamsRussianAdventures it was school #28 which exists up to now

    • @Gobs-oh4bm
      @Gobs-oh4bm Před 27 dny +1

      From everywhere. Only in Stalingrad there were up to 200+ k. captured.

  • @francegrenier3865
    @francegrenier3865 Před 28 dny +16

    very interesting, thank you from Québec francophone!

  • @user-sf3fe4bh2q
    @user-sf3fe4bh2q Před 28 dny +24

    In Magnitogorsk there is also a handsome street built by Germans.

    • @olegzaytsev5997
      @olegzaytsev5997 Před 28 dny +6

      in Lugansk as well - they built a hotel in the old city center after the war.

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny +8

      The quality of of the houses are very good

    • @olegzaytsev5997
      @olegzaytsev5997 Před 28 dny +5

      @@SamsRussianAdventures I agree.

    • @olgabayne5247
      @olgabayne5247 Před 28 dny +2

      Привет Магнитогорск. Я жила на Лобачевского. Я думаю, что это немецкая постройка. Не была на родине 40 лет.

    • @user-sf3fe4bh2q
      @user-sf3fe4bh2q Před 27 dny

      @@olgabayne5247 ул. Горького- точно немцы!

  • @moetocafe
    @moetocafe Před 28 dny +3

    Excellent video as almost always. I can easily imagine the whole place back in time, brand new, grass cut, full of children, people, full of life. Thank you.

  • @IrishPartizan
    @IrishPartizan Před 28 dny +13

    It's a pity to see all these lovely houses and courtyards being left to decay. In Belarus, the local authorities constantly maintain the buildings and courtyards. The local residents even plant their own flowers in the allotments.

    • @s1ncaster
      @s1ncaster Před 28 dny +5

      Belarus 207,595 km2 and 9kk people
      Russia over 17,098,246 km2 and 150kk+ people
      think about numbers

  • @frederickmoller
    @frederickmoller Před 28 dny +15

    My 97 yo Dad German Luftwaffe gunner was a POW, I don't know exactly where, but he told me that he was treated very well by the Russians, even learning the Russian language, so I was told. BTW we are Canadian citizens, I was born here, and my Dad was born in Poland....

    • @AndreiBerezin
      @AndreiBerezin Před 28 dny

      Чёртов фашист

    • @ironfist768
      @ironfist768 Před 28 dny +1

      Wow. I guess he doesn't speak that much about these experiences, like most people that went through such situations. It must be shocking for him seeing such changes in the world. He was very young during WW2.

    • @frederickmoller
      @frederickmoller Před 27 dny

      @@ironfist768 yes he doesn't talk about it much, and yes he was young....he regretted coming to Canada, but nowadays I think that he changed his mind in regards what is happening in Europe and Germany...

  • @user-lx3kw9du9u
    @user-lx3kw9du9u Před 28 dny +25

    Сэм, почему ты называешь себя "foreigner"? Ты же гражданин России + прекрасно знаешь русский язык и культуру. Ты 50/50 англичанин и русский!

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny +4

      Для Русские я всегда буду иностранец

    • @user-lx3kw9du9u
      @user-lx3kw9du9u Před 28 dny +12

      @@SamsRussianAdventures Это какая-то ошибка. Человек, который вставляет в аутро "Коня" не может быть иностранцем!)))

    • @damonmelendez856
      @damonmelendez856 Před 28 dny +4

      @@MaryJones-fs4wfthere’s nothing wrong with being a ‘foreigner’, accept who you are and people will respect you for that.

    • @someperson1829
      @someperson1829 Před 28 dny +5

      ​@@MaryJones-fs4wf He always be considered a foreigner, because he wasn't born in Russia and not of Russian origin. That being said, it's just that and nothing more, it doesn't imply that you're some kind less of a man.

    • @dkrawk8309
      @dkrawk8309 Před 28 dny +2

      Согласен на все 100%

  • @USER.1990-U9
    @USER.1990-U9 Před 28 dny +15

    Good evening dear Sam , nice and wonderful to see a new video , I really enjoyed the video thank you Sam for your nice work.

  • @Nakaru.Hikamura
    @Nakaru.Hikamura Před 28 dny +10

    Бабушки скорее всего общаются исключительно только с давно знакомыми им соседями да с продавцами в ближайшем магазине. Для них вежливо заговоривший с ними на улице незнакомец с акцентом очень необычен и выглядит подозрительно. Они думают, что незнакомец возможно несёт какую-то опасность, может хочет их как-то обмануть, отсюда и такая реакция.
    То же самое со съёмкой видео, это очень для них необычно, вот и придумывают причины избежать такой ситуации.
    Снимай больше и разговаривай с ними больше, пусть привыкают!

    • @catsapp
      @catsapp Před 28 dny +4

      Я тоже бы не отвечал на камеру. Это от характера зависит

    • @user-zz3ju2ly5e
      @user-zz3ju2ly5e Před 26 dny +1

      Зачем им к этому привыкать?

    • @Nakaru.Hikamura
      @Nakaru.Hikamura Před 26 dny

      @@user-zz3ju2ly5e чтобы не быть такими нелюдимыми

    • @8523251
      @8523251 Před 25 dny

      ​@@user-zz3ju2ly5eчтобы потом отвыкать

  • @mariaangelicabrunellsolar7086

    Very beautiful, thanks for showing it to us!

  • @themanfromdystopia807
    @themanfromdystopia807 Před 28 dny +7

    Thanks Sam, nice to look around an area and learn a bit of it's history.

  • @cfinstr
    @cfinstr Před 25 dny +2

    Thank you, Sam. A very balanced look of a small town and the refurbishment and the decay pending refurbishment of 1945 - 1950 built by German (Fascists) Prisoners of The Great Patriotic War.

  • @phaioncirrus3818
    @phaioncirrus3818 Před 28 dny +6

    top video mate. keep up the good work. i prefer channels like yours which cover the less glamorous stuff rather than the same old tours of Arbat street in moscow or the canals of St. Pete etc...

  • @knopkaplay0507
    @knopkaplay0507 Před 28 dny +26

    Indont think it was millions that walked through Moscow :-)
    Also, not all of them returned (even apart from those who decided to stay). A la guerre comme a la guerre.
    My grandma told me stories about German POWs. And yes, german-built districts look the same all over Russia (almost invariably in scientific and industrial towns). Good build quality for sure.

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny +5

      I realised after that it wasn’t millions but I’d already recorded the video!!! This area is now looking bad because the factory looked after the area and it’s now closed.

    • @knopkaplay0507
      @knopkaplay0507 Před 28 dny +3

      @@SamsRussianAdventures yup. Good to see at least some of the houses partially restored. The apartment layouts are usually somewhat awkward, but the ceilings.are higher than in khruchevkas, and the gas-run water heater (no central hot water supply) can actually be seen as a benefit (no hot water disruptions due to maintenance over the summer). Wouldn't mind living in one of these, frankly - but maybe in a bit more lively neighborhood.

    • @brianwesley28
      @brianwesley28 Před 28 dny +2

      Germans tend to be good engineers.

    • @michaelv8633
      @michaelv8633 Před 28 dny +1

      There were about 60 thousand Germans escorted while marching on Moscow Garden Ring in 1944/

    • @maxxbuchin1566
      @maxxbuchin1566 Před 28 dny

      В марше побежленных по Москве шло 60000 пленных. Это было летом 44, после операции "багратион". А вообще, после войны пленных были миллионы

  • @comrade916
    @comrade916 Před 28 dny +18

    An uncle of mine was drafted to work for Germany during WWII. He was sent from The Netherlands via Berlin to Lithuania. He lived with a Lithuania farmer who was pro German and most days were spent spanning barbed wire, etc, etc. The Russians eventually took over the area and my uncle was arrested.. He explained to the Russians that he did not volunteer to work for the Germans but, was forced.. In the end, it didn't matter.. He was sent to a stone quarry where he labored for 7 years.. Most of his fellow prisoners died of malnutrition, exhaustion, freezing temperatures.. Finally, he was released and sent on a train via Hungry back to the Netherlands..He never complained about his treatment, but he was certainly scarred for life...

    • @aizhongwen
      @aizhongwen Před 28 dny +2

      Your uncle is a brave courageous man.

    • @alexmashkin863
      @alexmashkin863 Před 28 dny +15

      They all were saying it wasn't their fault, they were forced, "followed orders", nowadays they do the same...

    • @damonmelendez856
      @damonmelendez856 Před 28 dny

      @@alexmashkin863communism is the biggest evil known to mankind, the number of its victims dwarf anything in history previously.

    • @Larazhuk
      @Larazhuk Před 28 dny

      Вас никто не звал в Россию, но вы пришли и убили 27 миллионов граждан. И мы не стали убивать вас всех за это. А теперь вы еще смеете возмущаться и снова бомбить Россию. Ну, не нойте потом так же, если вас заставят восстанавливать Белгород, который вы бомбите ежедневно. Вы сейчас сидите и не замечанте этого. Не обижайтесь потом вот так же.

    • @miriam2909
      @miriam2909 Před 28 dny +3

      They were scarred. My Dutch dad was sent to Germany to work because he was a pacifist. Never spoke about that either

  • @De5O54
    @De5O54 Před 27 dny +1

    I really like the architecture of the buildings - regardless and irregardless of the upkeep.
    Brilliant walk around video.

  • @AshleyMcIntosh-zz7kr
    @AshleyMcIntosh-zz7kr Před 28 dny +29

    The Germans were lucky they got to live after what they did to Russia.Great intetesting video.maybe make a new one when the Germans come back to repair the flats since theve destroyed their economy!.

  • @ChrisCasseroles
    @ChrisCasseroles Před 27 dny +1

    In Cape Town, South Africa, there is a major road between the mountain and the sea built by Italian POWs during or just after WW2.

  • @max.t.channel
    @max.t.channel Před 28 dny +4

    Wish you a lot of patience with the people who do not want to be filmed...)) Interesting fact is that a lot of Germans were not working from camps, but were allocated to families who lost their heads of the household to the war. There were a lot of families consisting only of elderlies, women and children after the war and they needed water brought from the well and wood cut for heating and cooking. German prisoners were often assigned to those families, They were living in those foster families, and being construction workers during the day. It was sort of a karmic situation - you sort of feeling the responsibility for the family whose provider you probably helped killing during the war. It was one of the biggest reasons they assimilated so easily and stayed behind. those guys were young and for them everything was anew. Another fact is most of the Russians who recall those days usually characterize assigned Germans as hard working, always polite and good with children, many young kids started calling them "papa" eventually

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny

      Oh wow! Thanks for sharing. I didn’t know that.

    • @alexseinik3275
      @alexseinik3275 Před 28 dny +1

      Вполне возможно.
      Также и на территории Германии в 1941-1945 годах некоторое количество военнопленных из СССР жили в немецких семьях.Это я знаю совершенно точно.

    • @alexseinik3275
      @alexseinik3275 Před 28 dny

      @@SamsRussianAdventures Вполне возможно.
      Также и на территории Германии в 1941-1945 годах некоторое количество военнопленных из СССР жили в немецких семьях.Это я знаю совершенно точно.

  • @samaipata4756
    @samaipata4756 Před 27 dny +2

    I had an uncle who was a POW in Russia during WW2, he always told us how well they were treated! He said they were driven by trucks to harvest cabbage’s. When they drove back to unload the cabbages, starving Russians run behind their trucks begging for cabbages. He said they threw cabbages of their loads to the kids, feeling terrible because as POW’s they were fed and they didn’t have to starve, where those Russian kids and their families had to suffer from hunger. ❤🇷🇺❤🇷🇺❤🫶

  • @elionorlagerholm5016
    @elionorlagerholm5016 Před 28 dny +1

    Thank you Sam for showing us this. I didn't know this history. I find it so nice that these buildings not just were built like boxes so people had roof over their heads. They are really nice and I can imagine how nice it must have been to live there.

  • @user-lg9qw1mc7s
    @user-lg9qw1mc7s Před 28 dny +1

    Very interesting. Thanks!

  • @user-jm2tn8jv4y
    @user-jm2tn8jv4y Před 28 dny +6

    В Петербурге тоже есть целые микрорайоны, построенные немцами. Дома красивые, 2-3-х этажные, необычной архитектуры. Но я много раз слышала, что эти дома только внешне красивые. Немцы ненавидели нас, хотели поскорее уехать домой. Поэтому главным было чтобы картинка была, а как внутри -не важно.

    • @knopkaplay0507
      @knopkaplay0507 Před 28 dny +1

      Я их много видел в Подмосковье - хорошие, качественные дома, которые стоят как стояли, в отличие от рассыпающихся панельных хрущёвок.

    • @ag250380
      @ag250380 Před 28 dny +1

      Город Озерск Челябинской области. Люди очень любят эти дома. Меня психологически смущают некоторые комнаты, похожие на куб, т.к там высокие потолки, а в остальном - отлично. И буквально лет 10 назад, меняя окна, обнаружили, что внутри все целое, даже гвозди не заржавели.
      Но это закрытый атомный город, там пленных сурово сторожили, хоть ненавидь, хоть нет, а строить будешь хорошо, если домой хочешь когда-нибудь попасть.
      Разумеется, с трубами и электропроводкой уже давно проблемы, поэтому во многих домах делается капремонт.

    • @knopkaplay0507
      @knopkaplay0507 Před 28 dny +3

      @@ag250380 угу. В основном так и есть - все послевоенные научные и военные закрытые города, весь старый фонд - эти дома. Хорошие они. Фасад подлатать-утеплить - и только в путь!

    • @user-hr4qh3bb5r
      @user-hr4qh3bb5r Před 28 dny +1

      Архитекторы-то наши были, так что все претензии по устройству квартир надо им адресовать. Кухни зачастую в этих коттеджах крошечные (я не во всех типах бывала), меньше, чем в хрущевках. Но люди делают под себя перепланировки.

    • @veravera4825
      @veravera4825 Před 28 dny +2

      много где есть эти немецкие домики. 2-3 этажа. К сожалению, их считают ветхим жильем и потому их очень любят "реноваторы" и строители 30-этажек. Там обычно большие дворы, мало жителей. Очень удобно снести и построить на месте домика 30-этажку

  • @olegzaytsev5997
    @olegzaytsev5997 Před 28 dny +1

    Interesting topic. Thanks, Sam!

  • @rosemariesmith349
    @rosemariesmith349 Před 28 dny +5

    The people might feel embarrassed about who built then , it's so sad every country in the world told lies to fight each other , even the German people believed the propergander. Now the overlords are doing it again on a larger scale ❤

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny

      Everyone in the town knows that this entire area was built by German prisoners of war. But I expected the people in this area to be difficult.

    • @Gobs-oh4bm
      @Gobs-oh4bm Před 27 dny

      Embarassed? What are you even talking about

  • @Billy-USA
    @Billy-USA Před 28 dny +1

    Great video Thanks

  • @karinmurry90
    @karinmurry90 Před 28 dny

    That's was a fascinating history lesson. I really enjoyed the tour of that area.

  • @jmartin4364
    @jmartin4364 Před 28 dny +3

    Very interesting, Sam. Maybe you could do some WW2 battlefield sites. Or Napoleon.

  • @theshowmanuk
    @theshowmanuk Před 28 dny +1

    Very interesting video Sam !

  • @plunkervillerr1529
    @plunkervillerr1529 Před 28 dny +4

    Sam; that T--short is scary, no wonder people are frightened of you. Well-built structures are worth restoring. Why are there so many old Fiats parked on the streets?

    • @user-mg3ee9qk6m
      @user-mg3ee9qk6m Před 28 dny

      It's Jiguli ! ...Fiat's twix brother clone from Soviet Autoprom.

    • @1982vovan
      @1982vovan Před 28 dny

      В 70-х годах СССР купил лицензию на Фиат 104. Внёс некоторые изменения и стал производить ВАЗ 2101 он же Лада. И потом из него выросло целое семейство автомибилей:
      2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107.

  • @NeoTemplar
    @NeoTemplar Před 28 dny +1

    Everything is so green now. I quite like it.

  • @gabriellagirardi4741
    @gabriellagirardi4741 Před 28 dny

    Hello Sam! I didn't know this fact. It is very interesting to explore these places which indeed are full of history. In fact these houses have a different style! Thanks a lot. Your videos are always great💕🪻⚘️🌷

  • @34outdoor
    @34outdoor Před 28 dny

    Thanks for the video Sam

  • @rainhazelton5164
    @rainhazelton5164 Před 21 dnem +1

    Super interesting! So glad I started following you! Thank you!!!❤

  • @bobekvelky4129
    @bobekvelky4129 Před 28 dny

    super interesting

  • @masongilligan2856
    @masongilligan2856 Před 10 dny

    Nice look into some intriguing history Sam + I love me some good shots of Lada's in the wild, those things are super sick.

  • @Doublertbs
    @Doublertbs Před 27 dny +1

    Love the history thank you...

  • @airstrike716
    @airstrike716 Před 28 dny +1

    wouldnt take much to restore to former glory, colorful paint, plant shrubs, trees, flowers, mow lawns, pave roads ... lots of potential there, some lovely styles

    • @Gobs-oh4bm
      @Gobs-oh4bm Před 27 dny

      "the former glory" means cold (in summers - hot like ovens), nonsensical, clumsy garbage without anything modern ever be possible to instal in there (if it is not supposed to cost like a medieval castle or simply fold like a pile of bricks), who and why would even need that stone age

  • @Pawe-mu1kw
    @Pawe-mu1kw Před 26 dny +1

    Wystarczy odnowić te domy,będą wtedy naprawdę ciekawe i ładne budynki.👍🇵🇱

  • @ThePlasticRussian
    @ThePlasticRussian Před 28 dny

    Brilliant video Sam , loved it

  • @noname-sz4br
    @noname-sz4br Před 28 dny +3

    great video, Sam.

  • @catrielcontreras2930
    @catrielcontreras2930 Před 28 dny

    Interesting 😮

  • @willieschannel8546
    @willieschannel8546 Před 28 dny +3

    very nice

  • @al200858
    @al200858 Před 28 dny

    Спасибо за видео. Заинтересовали меня историей своего города. Полез в интернет и прочитал записки краеведов о тех временах. Немцы строили ВТЗ и некоторые дома. И не только в районе Тракторного завода, но и в центре города.

  • @abadaba2812
    @abadaba2812 Před 27 dny

    These street pipes above ground a re not so rare in Russia and I saw them first there. Thing is that it is actually as good sign, as ground is full of underground water/streams and they could freeze during winter, while above ground is still hotter. You will notice that most cities that has such plumbing don't have metro/underground transport, for same reason. Btw, It is similar in Belarus, where German war prisoners rebuilt most of what they destroyed, especially in Minsk, that was almost completely destroyed, but is now beautiful.

  • @E.P.1
    @E.P.1 Před 28 dny +1

    Thank you for the video. I would to get my hands on a GAZ 13 Chaika and customize it. That car is nice!

  • @sonali_alyona
    @sonali_alyona Před 5 dny

    В городе Уфа в районе Черниковка есть дома, которые строили немецкие военнопленнные, хорошие дома: от кинотеатра Победа до Нефтяного университета, район "восьмиэтажка", площадь перед домом культуры им. С. Орджоникидзе.

  • @De5O54
    @De5O54 Před 27 dny +1

    13:00 _’Renovation’_

  • @tanyoivanov-personal
    @tanyoivanov-personal Před 28 dny +1

    My Gradnfather was born in 1945 and he does not know anything about the war too. His father fought in Second World War and the 1-th and 2-nd Balkan wars, but looks like the parents wanted the kids to be unaware about the horrors back then.

  • @Donaldperson7
    @Donaldperson7 Před 28 dny

    I like the design of the lada’s and 4x4 vans! You need a 4x4 in the villages!

  • @astridsmeds8630
    @astridsmeds8630 Před 24 dny

    What a wonderful area I would like to live there, open spaces no tall houses, maybe a possibility to have a small vegetable garden. I really hope they decide not to tear these buildings down. These belong to a historical epoch and need to be saved and restored.

  • @SteveMuncaster-ji9dw
    @SteveMuncaster-ji9dw Před 28 dny +3

    Thanks again Sam good content in blog 👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @JaneJannie
    @JaneJannie Před 28 dny

    Beautiful area

  • @AquariumRuss
    @AquariumRuss Před 28 dny +1

    It's just a joke. when the foundation of an old house cracks, we lazily wave our hand - "Ah! the captured Germans built!". That explains a lot.😁

  • @lpuig73
    @lpuig73 Před 28 dny +2

    Hi Sam.. what I see there in that area is that no one has a mower.. it's quite the contrast to where I live where every parcel is maintained by its owner and meticulously maintained and mowed. If those areas were properly mowed, it would look a lot nicer. Right now, a lot of the areas you showed look abandoned.

    • @StoneField-nj6sw
      @StoneField-nj6sw Před 28 dny +1

      People are not allowed to mow lawns. They might own apartments but not the property that belongs to the city. So special city services are supposed to mow but they never do at least I never saw when I lived in Russia. Sometimes they used scythes to cut grass. It looked terrible but good as fire prevention.

    • @droopstone6594
      @droopstone6594 Před 28 dny

      @@StoneField-nj6sw Looks like you lived in Russia many years ago.

    • @lpuig73
      @lpuig73 Před 28 dny

      @@StoneField-nj6sw very good information, thanks..

  • @andrewhart6377
    @andrewhart6377 Před 28 dny +1

    Sam, there maybe photos of the City in its heyday at the local archives. Maybe you could include a, 'Then and Now', comparison for viewers. Cheers.

  • @janote641
    @janote641 Před 25 dny +1

    Great video Sam......

  • @mattamiller
    @mattamiller Před 28 dny +1

    No Sam, buildings do not have an expiration date if the people admire and appreciate the buildings. That is why the first step to building for "sustainability" is to build beautiful, that way no one will think to tear down the building. If this were not the case there would be no buildings in the world older than 100 years.

    • @erich5265
      @erich5265 Před 28 dny

      I live in the America southwest in a west city. So old here is a youngster there. But even our old if not maintained fall apart. Decades ago I was doing work in an old building and outside was very nice and great design. Inside hadnt been taken of. A few decades later had a heart doctor take over that building. Gutted and remodeled inside to his needs. But outside kept the same just cleaned up and painted redid some rock work etc. New windows but same opening. OMG never would think it was a doctor's office. Sure gutted inside to his needs but nothing interior wise was really salvageable at that point.

    • @MsMelkus
      @MsMelkus Před 28 dny

      unfortanetuly no, every build material has expiration. For soviet buildings it is 50-100 years. I saw several old houses which a literally fall apart and people had to go away.

    • @mattamiller
      @mattamiller Před 27 dny

      @@MsMelkusYou are conflating materials for the buildings themselves. Countless examples of buildings from many centuries old.

    • @MsMelkus
      @MsMelkus Před 27 dny

      @@mattamiller I saw several houses in Russia where material itself is collapsing. In old good times all materials were strong, but in 20th centure people invented a lot relatively cheap and not so strong for time materials.

    • @mattamiller
      @mattamiller Před 27 dny

      @@MsMelkus Yes I agree with what you are saying. That is why I say there does not need to be an expiration to buildings. Tell me when the granite column of Alexander falls down.

  • @elijahheyes9061
    @elijahheyes9061 Před 22 dny

    Another great video Sam.

  • @nino71
    @nino71 Před 28 dny

    imagine the enthusiasm and attention to detail of those prisoners!?! Imagine the quality of these buildings......

    • @peterwilliams2152
      @peterwilliams2152 Před 28 dny

      The quality is excellent! They may have been POWs, but they took pride in their work. I'm renovating such an apartment, and the walls are more square than in any Australian house that I've ever lived in, and they're triple brick.

  • @compphysgeek
    @compphysgeek Před 28 dny +1

    9:00 unlike the old Ladas, that foil is truly horrible

  • @miriam2909
    @miriam2909 Před 28 dny +1

    Nothings maintained these days eh. Beautiful buildings going to ruins in every country. Heartbreaking

  • @edytan.932
    @edytan.932 Před 28 dny

    Thank you Sam.

  • @DavidNelsonO
    @DavidNelsonO Před 25 dny +1

    At 12:28, the poster says "ДЕМОНТАЖ", which, if you sound it out, says "démontage" - the French word for "de-construction" (or "demolition" I guess). Having lots of fun trying to interpret the signs in your videos! 🤭

  • @aizhongwen
    @aizhongwen Před 28 dny

    Thanks Sam for these historical memories of Vladimir during German occupation. The buildings are strong long lasting best quality. It is sad that they are not well maintained, Sam knows the reason maybe. God bless your excellent works.

    • @alexmashkin863
      @alexmashkin863 Před 28 dny +1

      They're not well maintained because no one cares enough to do it. Mostly older people live in those and it's extremely hard to convince them to pay extra for renovations even if you're taking it upon yourself to organise everything. If the house is managed by a company it runs into similar problem. There are some state programmes, or just very active and insistent citizens, so some get renovated. Many of those are marked to be knocked down in a few years too. So yeah, no one cares enough for them, least of all people who live there :-)

  • @user-jm4zp4up2m
    @user-jm4zp4up2m Před 28 dny +3

    Выражение схватили архитекторов и заставили работать, мы в Берлине их схватили или же все таки на нашей земле, куда мы их не приглашали.
    Правильнее было бы начать с хроники городов после бомбардировки немцами, тогда молодому поколению станет более ясно, почему немцы строили, то что разрушили.
    А вообще сходите в городской музей ,там всегда есть на , что посмотреть и о чем послушать.
    Удачи в развитии канала.

    • @crazyivan2356
      @crazyivan2356 Před 28 dny

      Ну ты в курсе, кто будет отстраивать Украину, да историк?

    • @Chaldon-hl6yk
      @Chaldon-hl6yk Před 28 dny +1

      @@crazyivan2356 Таджики

    • @user-jm4zp4up2m
      @user-jm4zp4up2m Před 28 dny +1

      @@crazyivan2356 не на того, батон крошите, я ролики не выкладываю в сеть, я пишу своё мнение и меня нууу очень удивили слова автора , схватили архитекторов.
      Как то так

    • @VasilisaPremudray64
      @VasilisaPremudray64 Před 28 dny +1

      ​@@crazyivan2356Мы восстановим всё, что Вы за последние 30 лет угробили, для себя, граждан России и тех кто пройдёт ч/з Шереметьево. А Вы оставайтесь в чудной Европе.

    • @crazyivan2356
      @crazyivan2356 Před 28 dny

      @@VasilisaPremudray64 Валек, вы за все заплатите нам и все нам остроите.

  • @markcrowther2355
    @markcrowther2355 Před 28 dny +5

    Sam can you do a video on the hot water pipes and system russia has...thats very unusual.

    • @alexmashkin863
      @alexmashkin863 Před 28 dny

      What are you talking about? Those are very common in more rustic and older neighbourhoods, what is unusual?

    • @sojourn6697
      @sojourn6697 Před 28 dny

      @@alexmashkin863 settle down Alex. I find it unusual too.

    • @alexmashkin863
      @alexmashkin863 Před 28 dny

      @@sojourn6697 What are you talking about? Why would I settle down? 😂

    • @markcrowther2355
      @markcrowther2355 Před 28 dny

      @@alexmashkin863 The big hot water pipes that run outside, thats unusual as i haven't seem that in any other part of the world...that must be a massive boiler somewhere!

    • @alexmashkin863
      @alexmashkin863 Před 28 dny +1

      @@markcrowther2355 Yes, heating is central, usually it's a huge electrical plant, gas or coal powered, that heats all the water alongside with generating electricity. Hot water comes from that as well, but those pipes are for central heating. In newer neighborhoods all pipes are underground

  • @teresamc7630
    @teresamc7630 Před 27 dny

    Great video, interesting information. Elegant architecture and nice to live neighborhoods back at the time... and now if rearranged. One thing I love in Russia is the many gardens and parks everywhere. Russian can enjoy much more nature than I living in so-called sunny Lisbon.

    • @Gobs-oh4bm
      @Gobs-oh4bm Před 27 dny

      Well, one can definitely not "park everywhere" in Moscow. And if comparing this to something in Portugal, it's clearly not Lisboa (by the factors affecting "where one can park", i.e. population density, police density, CCTVs density, etc.)

  • @wetukman
    @wetukman Před 28 dny +1

    Thanks

  • @user-pl7mo4vo5c
    @user-pl7mo4vo5c Před 28 dny

    Hey I finally seen a flash in the back part of your video why the people are suspicious and cranky.
    Well even in the west wearing coloured shorts and socks like that would probably make people suspicious and then have to go home and wash their eyes,haha!
    As I mentioned in another post you should do a story visiting Patriki dressed like that as it may be quite funny.

  • @emilylightfoot8994
    @emilylightfoot8994 Před 27 dny

    The cat told you to get lost as well! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @annablackburn5474
    @annablackburn5474 Před 28 dny +1

    Sam, a friendly t-shirt would maybe help?

  • @johnori6740
    @johnori6740 Před 28 dny

    Do they have a classic car museum anywhere close to where you live? That would make an interesting video.

  • @user-nx8ii4ef7f
    @user-nx8ii4ef7f Před 28 dny +2

    Could it be that some people know that the Soviet times have gone and they need to do more for themselves, and others still wait for the state to tell them what to do?

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny +1

      Yes, this is exactly right. In villages we see many people who are waiting for the collective farm to re-open, the farm that closed 35 years ago.

    • @Gobs-oh4bm
      @Gobs-oh4bm Před 27 dny

      The state in Russia, luckily, still "tells a lot". As for the people, have you seen anyone "not doing for themselves" and / or what are they doing?

  • @tommyflorida9204
    @tommyflorida9204 Před 27 dny

    It must be hard to live in a community where people are suspicious of each others and constantly in a state of fear.

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 27 dny

      It’s in this area. I went to the UK and nobody would answer my question on the street.

    • @Gobs-oh4bm
      @Gobs-oh4bm Před 27 dny

      It depends on psychotype, upbringing, etc. Definitely it's much easier than in the open borders all happiness and welcomeness Florida and stuff

  • @gsd2085
    @gsd2085 Před 27 dny

    This is like calling Beeston in Leeds as romantic..

  • @simonmcowan6874
    @simonmcowan6874 Před 28 dny +5

    Once again Sam, so much like the Silesian area of Poland I know so well, Silesia was after all German for many years. There are so many rubbish areas, it used to be all socialist, sadly socialist meant no one looked after anything because it didn't belong to them personally.

  • @creole-qy2om
    @creole-qy2om Před 28 dny

    Hi, Sam. Outstanding video based on history. I am curious about the song at the end. Could you or someone tell me the name of it? I looked in the links and didn't see it. When I teach about our case study countries -- Russian Federation being one of several -- I like to use music from those countries in class, if possible. Thank you. Blessings.

  • @ivovigor5668
    @ivovigor5668 Před 28 dny

    Тетка вредная))) Спасибо Сэм за репортаж Пленные немцы много чего строили например в моем подмосковном городе мост через реку

  • @paulparoma
    @paulparoma Před 27 dny

    There is nothing romantic about neglect and lack of maintenance, and looking at a place that has seen better days. FYI, most German last names in Russia date back to the reign of Catherine the Great, not WW2.

  • @norbertrissling6158
    @norbertrissling6158 Před 28 dny

    The pipes you have seen ate heating pipes for the winter!

  • @user-dk7ik2cl9r
    @user-dk7ik2cl9r Před 26 dny +1

    Amazing, you talk about my home town and I didn’t know about it. I moved 18 years ago to UK and you from UK to Vladimir, was it citizens swap?

  • @roberts.3712
    @roberts.3712 Před 28 dny +5

    That one lady was really nasty.

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny +1

      There were a few nasty ones but I couldn’t be bothered to blur there faces and it made the video even more negative

    • @michaelmichael8538
      @michaelmichael8538 Před 28 dny +5

      @@SamsRussianAdventures when they ask you who gave you the right to film there say-The Russian Law did! In all public places you're free to film, it's your camera, that's what you purchased it for, by the way Vladimir is my hometown

    • @knopkaplay0507
      @knopkaplay0507 Před 28 dny +1

      ​@@michaelmichael8538 perhaps, but why antagonize people when you can just say "okay, if it's not okay with you, I'll stop". You are after meaningful people interactions, after all - and sometimes what happens off camera is no less interesting than what makes it to the final cut.

    • @damonmelendez856
      @damonmelendez856 Před 28 dny +2

      Old people are grumpy in general, everywhere

    • @ag250380
      @ag250380 Před 28 dny

      ​@@michaelmichael8538ну и зачем создавать на ровном месте конфронтацию со старушкой? Это просто глупо и недостойно.

  • @motan7864
    @motan7864 Před 28 dny

    very interesting video once again Sam, I didn't know they used POWs to build parts of the city. Those soviet pipes running everywhere are crazy😅

    • @peterwilliams2152
      @peterwilliams2152 Před 28 dny

      You may think that they are crazy, but central heating in Winter is both nice and necessary.

  • @adamholmes91
    @adamholmes91 Před 27 dny +1

    Honestly an old rusty Lada looks 100x better than that 'magpie edition' Infiniti. 🤢🤣

  • @StoneField-nj6sw
    @StoneField-nj6sw Před 28 dny

    There were two Germanies, East and West. Did you know that? They broke the Berlin Wall not too long ago. The buildings you are showing are called Stalinist architecture that later evolved into Khrushchev architecture (Khrushchevka) which was a simplified Stalinist architecture. In those times this kind of buildings were built throughout the USSR not necessarily by the Germans. You can find them in any Russian city or town even in Vladovostok where were Japanese prisoners of war. And then there happened a very interesting situation when Stalinist building were occupied by members of the communist party while common workers were allowed to settle in Khrushchev buildings. Just check Wikipedia.

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny

      The typical Stalinka has high ceilings. I can show perhaps in another video. Kruchevka was a panel house design allowing for quick construction. Of course I’m aware of East and West Germany and the Berlin Wall 😀 The area I filmed was built by German prisoners of war.

    • @StoneField-nj6sw
      @StoneField-nj6sw Před 28 dny +1

      @@SamsRussianAdventures Kruchevka is not just panel. It was brick, block, panel and other modifications. When I was a kid I lived in a Kruchevka built from slag concrete blocks. It was a rural kind of architecture with a wood fired water heater in the bathroom. The difference was a low ceiling but principle was the same. The main feature was a tiny kitchen. Later original Kruchevkas evolved into better Kruchevkas which were not too bad actually. In Canada where I live now apartments can be much worse.

  • @wetukman
    @wetukman Před 28 dny

    Well I must admit your content is getting better, well done I did not like you at first because you reminded off me of someone in the past, keep up the work, well done

  • @justinian420
    @justinian420 Před 27 dny

    that masonry construction would be prohibitively expensive today. shame to knock them down when all they need is new windows and a some patching and painting, maybe some AC units.

    • @Gobs-oh4bm
      @Gobs-oh4bm Před 27 dny

      They are archaic. 90+%, if not all, of these "old houses" make no sense in modern world's needs and even the most basic necessities. Ceiling 5-7 meters high, absent or archaic venting, electricity hubs, installing the heating systems, fire and other alarms through a “three-layer double-brick” (once "installed", that house will fold like a pile of bricks). It's temperature and everything inefficient, and simply absurd in too many cases.

  • @al200858
    @al200858 Před 28 dny +1

    Знаю пару домов, построенныъх немцами сразу после войны. Это на улице Усти на Лабе. Дома 29 и 32 То, что вы показываете никакие "фашисты" не строили. Это обычные хрущёвки, построеннвые нашими строителями для работников Владимирского Тракторного Завода ВТЗ. Я коренной житель Владимира.

    • @crazyivan2356
      @crazyivan2356 Před 28 dny

      "Кореенной", ты хрущевок в своей жизни никогда не видел значит ))

    • @al200858
      @al200858 Před 28 dny +1

      @@crazyivan2356 Ну может быть это и сталинки. Вообще реально плохо знаю историю своего города. Полез в интернет и прочитал записки краеведов о тех временах. Немцы строили ВТЗ и некоторые дома. И не только в районе Тракторного завода, но и в центре города. Так что Сэму спасибо за пробуждение интереса к своей истории.

  • @TatyanaAndreewa
    @TatyanaAndreewa Před 28 dny +1

    У вас маленький город. Поэтому люди более замкнуты и осторожны. Я живу в более большом городе и люди вокруг меня другие. Их не беспокоят такие вещи, как человек, снимающий видео.

    • @dennazarenkov8494
      @dennazarenkov8494 Před 28 dny

      идешь по улице, занят своими мыслями и тут к тебе странный мужик с камерой подбегает и с акцентом спрашивает "а вы в курсе, что ваш город построили фашисты?"😳

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny

      Или, привет 👋 меня Сэм, я живу во Владимире 20 лет и я гражданин России. Я снимаю видео о вашем районе. Как вы знаете, все домов строили немцы. Вы можете немного рассказать про это?

  • @user-rj8dp3tb8k
    @user-rj8dp3tb8k Před 27 dny +1

    Некоторые дома пора сносить и строить новые. В Москве есть программа реновация, сносят хрущевки, а тут дома сталинских времен. Я сама из Владимира.

    • @user-zz3ju2ly5e
      @user-zz3ju2ly5e Před 26 dny

      Безусловно. Важно не то, что они времен Сталина, а их качество. Большинство таких домов это фактически бараки. Во многих внутри все прогнило.

  • @catsapp
    @catsapp Před 28 dny +2

    Архитектура по проекту сталинские вроде все, ничего не видел типа немецких проектов

    • @SamsRussianAdventures
      @SamsRussianAdventures  Před 28 dny

      Строили немцы.

    • @aestas6994
      @aestas6994 Před 27 dny +1

      @@SamsRussianAdventures Вы сказали что среди пленных были архитекторы которые и проектировали здания. Это не так. Военнопленным не доверяли ничего кроме простой работы. Строили немцы, но не только они. Один и тот же объект строили и военнопленные и советские строители, в частности комсомольские бригады. По поводу немецких имен - никто бы не стал называть детей немецкими именами в то время. Такое возможно только если это были русские немцы, которые живут в России со времен Петра I или Екатерины II