Ottoman-Portuguese War - Age of Colonization DOCUMENTARY

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  • čas přidán 4. 05. 2024
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    Kings and Generals animated historical documentary series on the history of the Ottoman Empire, continues with a video on the Ottoman-Portuguese wars, as the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdom of Portugal fight for dominance over the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. In this video, we cover the early Portuguese conquests in India and their clash against the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt at Diu in 1508, as well as the battle of Diu of 1538, Ethiopian-Adal war and the battle of Wayna Daga of 1543, Ottoman-Portuguese conflict over the Arabian peninsula 1552-1554, battle of Diu 1546 and the battle of Ksar-el-Kebir (Alcácer Quibir) of 1578. More videos on the Age of Colonization are on the way!
    Previously in our animated historical documentary series on the Ottoman Wars, we have covered the battles of Kosovo (bit.ly/2JI3F0p), Nicopolis (bit.ly/2zUNRre), Ankara (bit.ly/2uW7r0D), Varna (bit.ly/2JIK2VG), Second Kosovo, Constantinople (bit.ly/2uELWlI), Belgrade, Targoviste and Otlukbeli (bit.ly/2JOBlcQ), Vaslui, Valea Alba (bit.ly/2C9Cm0l), Skanderbeg's rebellion (bit.ly/2BYMYgW), Breadfield, Krbava, Otranto and Chaldiran (bit.ly/2DUa3mJ)the Ottoman-Mamluk War of 1516-1517 (bit.ly/2CxSkyp), siege of Rhodes in 1522 (bit.ly/2GHrRTC), the battle of Mohacs of 1526 (bit.ly/2V1YgeQ), the siege of Vienna of 1529 (bit.ly/2VRujdc), the battle of Preveza (bit.ly/2KR1uwf) and the battles of Gorjani, siege of Castelnuovo (bit.ly/2MoDZMa), sieges of Buda and Eger (bit.ly/2kcVkuK). the siege of Malta (bit.ly/374kXSh), siege of Szigetvar (bit.ly/2Nj6xVW) Famagusta (bit.ly/3b5dXX0) and Lepanto (bit.ly/2SocQcX).
    Support us on Patreon: / kingsandgenerals or Paypal: paypal.me/kingsandgenerals or by joining the youtube membership: / @kingsandgenerals We are grateful to our patrons and sponsors, who made this video possible: docs.google.com/document/d/1o...
    The video was made by our friend MalayArcher ( / mathemedicupdates , while the script was researched and written by Ethan Symons-Ferraro. This video was narrated by Officially Devin ( / @offydgg & czcams.com/channels/79s.html.... Art by Nergiz Isayeva.
    ✔ Merch store ► teespring.com/stores/kingsand...
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    Production Music courtesy of Epidemic Sound: www.epidemicsound.com
    0:00 Intro
    1:57 Battle of Diu
    12:35 The War Begins - Second Battle of Diu
    19:12 Siege of Diu
    29:36 Abyssinian-Adal War
    39:55 Portugal's Intervention - Battle of Wayna Daga
    49:45 The Great Portuguese Offensive
    56:18 Rustem Pasha's Failures
    1:04:55 Moroccan Front and Battle of Ksar El Kebir
    #Documentary #OttomanPortugueseWar #India
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @KingsandGenerals
    @KingsandGenerals  Před 2 lety +2437

    These long videos are fun to make, but are also extremely time-consuming and stressful. Hopefully, you like them :-) This particular video adds 20 minutes of new footage (Diu 1508 and Alcacer Quibir 1578), fixes mistakes, improves graphics, and so on and so forth.

  • @abcdef27669
    @abcdef27669 Před 2 lety +820

    Portuguese vs Ottomans was basically “The Crusades Shippuden”.

    • @AhmedMahmoud-tv9vw
      @AhmedMahmoud-tv9vw Před 2 lety +18

      I couldn't agree more

    • @guilhermebraga9773
      @guilhermebraga9773 Před 2 lety +19

      I dont know nothing about “naruto”, but this subject is old for me. Heard about it in school. Portuguese wars in severeal different continents, from distant far Asia to middle east, from Africa to America, aside from the many battles in Europe.
      Almeida guy showed here was a real hero in search for vengence, brave as they get.

    • @mijanhoque1740
      @mijanhoque1740 Před 2 lety +4

      😂

    • @sidewalks29
      @sidewalks29 Před 2 lety +8

      Ubisoft: And more assassin's creed story to come!

    • @jueviolegrace8827
      @jueviolegrace8827 Před 2 lety +4

      Literally an Narutards

  • @MalayArcher
    @MalayArcher Před 2 lety +2055

    Hello guys, I'm the co-creator of this Ottoman mini-series. I just wanted to say that it is a pleasure to re-work and bring back our Ottoman series from a long hiatus. In this extended version, we’ve added the first battle of Diu and another long extension of the African front which covers the War of the 3 Kings and the decisive battle of Ksar-el-Kebir.
    For those linguists out there and curious about the text at 51:00 , it is actually Osmanlıca and Malay written in Arabic script which roughly translates “Selam arkadaşlarım” and “Salam saudara jauh” which literally means “Greetings my fellow friends/brothers.” Just a tiny bit of easter egg for Turkish and Malaysian/Indonesian viewers out there.
    As usual here are the Attila mods which we used in this video:
    -Medieval MK1212
    -1529-War of Gunpowder
    -reShade
    -Aztec lighting
    -Portuguese mod (Shogun 2)
    Best wishes,
    ڤمنه ملايو

    • @alexandrebenoin40
      @alexandrebenoin40 Před 2 lety +35

      So excited by the comings ottomans Safavids wars !!!

    • @alexandrebenoin40
      @alexandrebenoin40 Před 2 lety +22

      You’re work is incredible

    • @MalayArcher
      @MalayArcher Před 2 lety +34

      Thank you and indeed, the Safavid war is a fun topic to cover!

    • @xer0895
      @xer0895 Před 2 lety +9

      Keep it up, you are a gem for the history community :)

    • @ferdinandfernando1739
      @ferdinandfernando1739 Před 2 lety +13

      I hope you continue the Ottoman series from 1571 onwards.

  • @sandwich2659
    @sandwich2659 Před rokem +206

    "The Portuguese we're outnumbered 3 to 1" Yeah when weren't they

    • @joaoconchilha2231
      @joaoconchilha2231 Před 7 měsíci +9

      However 💪💪💪

    • @darkEagle1977
      @darkEagle1977 Před 2 měsíci

      What? You think there are/were a small number of Portuguese people in the world? Check your numbers, sir - you're wrong...

    • @RunningTurtleTruth
      @RunningTurtleTruth Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@darkEagle1977 In the XVI century the whole Portuguese army from Morrocco to Malacca is estimated to be at most 10,000 men, according to C.R. Boxer. Portuguese may be one of the most spoken languages today, but not at the time of these events.

    • @darkEagle1977
      @darkEagle1977 Před 2 měsíci

      I wasn't commenting on languages, but it's pretty much to the point. And, if Portugal was not populous in the XVI century, which civilization was? Do you know any country that was overwhelmingly populous? Perhaps China and its enourmous fleet that reached America, but I'm not sure about the numbers...@@RunningTurtleTruth

    • @zulth2065
      @zulth2065 Před 2 měsíci +11

      @@darkEagle1977 ???? In 1650 portugal had 1.2 mil pop while ottoman empire had 28mil. almost 28 times as much people. And there were several european kingdoms/empire sitting in 10mil+

  • @SpectruMetaL
    @SpectruMetaL Před 2 lety +941

    Respect for our Portugal friends from Turkey. We fought well, so we are brothers now. We prefer a honorable and brave enemy to coward and dishonest friend. 🇹🇷🇵🇹

    • @jaimeesparza6215
      @jaimeesparza6215 Před 2 lety +29

      💯

    • @pedromedeiros1186
      @pedromedeiros1186 Před 2 lety +65

      🇵🇹❤️🇹🇷

    • @SpectruMetaL
      @SpectruMetaL Před 2 lety +20

      @Dionisios K Was it real?

    • @YourNationalist
      @YourNationalist Před 2 lety +51

      @@SpectruMetaL your People still refuse this serious crime(s) ? Xd People from several nation's never change...

    • @SpectruMetaL
      @SpectruMetaL Před 2 lety +63

      @@YourNationalist Im living with my Armenian neighbour in İstanbul. My rental apartment that I living in now, its owner is Armenian too. Hundred thousands Armenian are still living in Turkey. Even in those "genocide" days, they lived. You don't understand, but during the war, Armenians lived in many parts of Anatolia and they started to gang up with the nationalist movements due to Russian influence. While in the middle of the war with the West, internal turmoil behind the front would destroy the country. That's why "only" Armenians in places where there was no garrison were exiled en masse. The Armenians in other places were not touched. In the Ottoman archive records, there are also name documents for all of them. Even special documents have been prepared for many Armenians. Because reliable Armenians who were in the region of exile and were assigned in the state or registered in the merchant guild were not wanted to be exiled.
      Turkey has always been a multinational structure and Armenians have always been a nation that sees the right in this structure. You cannot understand this because you are very unfamiliar with the Ottoman and Turkish history. If you really want to be objective, please research and read about Armenian Gang activities in Turkey. It was a bitter solution that had to be done to break the Russian influence. But genocide is a completely different claim. Even an insult. Genocide, as the name suggests, means trying to destroy a race. In those days, Armenians were deported to Syria, Iraq, Armenia, but they were also deported to regions in western Turkey. They were even sent to Istanbul. The aim was only to disperse an internal rebellion by sending those in the uncontrolled area in the middle of Anatolia to the controlled areas. Not all Armenians were rebels or gang members, but we are talking about the 1900s. You don't know who is who. Mass exile was the only solution during the war. In addition, the fact that there are still so many Armenians living in the country where a genocide took place, the fact that those deported settled and lived in the deported regions, and the fact that those who were exiled to Armenia went to Armenia, who are those who died? There were also many clashes and attacks during a massive exile. Things like this were normal back then. The disappearances are due to the problems in this exile process and their numbers and the events and losses are recorded in historical documents. Yes, we exiled them to different places and under the conditions of that day we had to. It is unfortunately possible for such painful events to occur while an empire is falling apart and huge world wars have begun. Genocide allegations are taken very seriously in our country, and that's why almost everyone constantly researches, reads and discusses this issue. There are even hundreds of government officials convicted for not performing their duties well enough during exile, and there are court records. Look, these records are not newly produced laundering studies, they are documents recorded during the events in the 1910s. At that time, no one even needed to prepare such documents for an event that no one could even hold accountable for. There was even a real and systematic genocide in the 1940s. In other words, even years later, events such as the genocide were not considered as valuable as they are today. These are not very distant dates. If the places chosen for exile from Turkey after the Ottoman Empire were still within the borders of Turkey, they would not even have been sent out of the country. After the borders changed, those people were deleted from our population and the Armenian diaspora started to describe everyone who came out of the Turkish population as "killed" as an exaggerated number. They're talking about millions. +++

  • @wythore
    @wythore Před 2 lety +2593

    Portuguese in the Age of Discovery: We'll cross the entire world to fight the Ottomans for God and Country!!
    Portuguese today: Why does this game have brazilian flag for the portuguese language :(

  • @OFFcinaRecords
    @OFFcinaRecords Před 2 lety +1300

    "The Portuguese were outnumbered..."
    Yeah when weren't we?

    • @DM-dy9bq
      @DM-dy9bq Před 2 lety +171

      Baddass portuguese

    • @roque87
      @roque87 Před 2 lety +89

      You always were amigo, abraços.

    • @noone7692
      @noone7692 Před 2 lety +43

      Proud of Portuguese conquistadors who ended the nestorian church of kerala

    • @dreamhunter8716
      @dreamhunter8716 Před 2 lety +9

      @@noone7692 മലയാളി ആണോ?

    • @FreaKCSGOHacker
      @FreaKCSGOHacker Před 2 lety +3

      Sempre estivemos lmao

  • @ULTRAKB1997
    @ULTRAKB1997 Před 5 měsíci +45

    The most impressive thing about this battle is the fact that Portugal sended an official letter announcing the day they would arrive to fight

  • @erikraphael5552
    @erikraphael5552 Před 2 lety +286

    As a brazilian who has a portuguese grandfather it makes me proud how the portuguese were always the outcasts but still managed to prevail in lots of times.
    Heróis do mar, nobre povo...

    • @brixcosmo6849
      @brixcosmo6849 Před 10 měsíci +18

      Até tremem Mano! 😂🇵🇹❤🇧🇷

    • @bconni2
      @bconni2 Před 8 měsíci +15

      the Portuguese empire always showed up ready to fight. they where aggressive and ruthless . resorting to extreme acts of violence in order to achieve their objectives was their natural default setting. diplomacy was never their first option.

    • @maisinscritosbrasil
      @maisinscritosbrasil Před 7 měsíci +1

      É nois

    • @renoldsnumber6569
      @renoldsnumber6569 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@bconni2who were the most advanced people that Portuguese went war against them?

    • @vickomen3697
      @vickomen3697 Před 6 měsíci +2

      thieves? Yeah

  • @SandRhomanHistory
    @SandRhomanHistory Před 2 lety +2058

    A topic that is certainly not covered very often, glad you guys do! Let's go!
    Edit: looove the ship animations!

    • @hokkigamer5170
      @hokkigamer5170 Před 2 lety +14

      I think it's from total war napoleon

    • @aleksapetrovic6519
      @aleksapetrovic6519 Před 2 lety +32

      @@hokkigamer5170 probably Empire Total War because of Indians.

    • @arnaldogangana355
      @arnaldogangana355 Před 2 lety +2

      So... this is a I tip my hat to you, one legend to another o.o

    • @syn_2529
      @syn_2529 Před 2 lety +2

      @Fan of Deng Xiaoping Adolphus!? Sussy baka uwu

    • @karlmuller3690
      @karlmuller3690 Před 2 lety

      @@syn_2529 - Adolphus Fan, perhaps?

  • @salahddinebensebane8429
    @salahddinebensebane8429 Před 2 lety +1388

    The ottoman and the Portuguese did a cold war before it was cool

    • @anaraschulz9814
      @anaraschulz9814 Před 2 lety +52

      *before it was hot

    • @garybrawt9794
      @garybrawt9794 Před 2 lety +17

      *cool

    • @matthewmcguire224
      @matthewmcguire224 Před 2 lety +45

      I see what you did there 😏
      Although I feel like this was a much warmer war than the Cold War lol, what with all the direct fighting.

    • @Ingeb91
      @Ingeb91 Před 2 lety +16

      Actually using the before it was cool joke format about the cold war is extra punny. Well done.

    • @Trapligo
      @Trapligo Před 2 lety +1

      I didn't know it

  • @miguelinacio7705
    @miguelinacio7705 Před 2 lety +163

    ''Não tiveste para teu enterro nem uma tocha, filho! Aqui te acendo uma cidade!'' Almeida, Francisco

    • @1ifemare
      @1ifemare Před 2 lety +30

      "You had nary a candle at your burial, son. Here I light a city for you." - Almeida, Francisco.
      Worth translating for the benefit of all readers.

    • @brunofaustino5470
      @brunofaustino5470 Před 14 dny +1

      " quem o frango comeu , vai agora ter de comer o galo ou pagá-lo "

  • @cletusdalglish-schommer1573
    @cletusdalglish-schommer1573 Před 2 lety +625

    In the USA we have a massive blind spot for history relating to the Portuguese and Ottomans, so this history of their contest in the Indian Ocean was a great introduction. The history of the Spanish in the Americas is much more familiar, yet this points to how contingent and interconnected these histories are. Somewhat ironic, I think, that the walls of Constantinople stood unassailable for 1,000 years until the Ottoman's arrived with new and superior artillery, taking the City and disrupting the trading routes of the silk road. The fall of Constantinople not only forced Europe to catch up in cannon tech, but led Portugal to seek sea routes to the spice trade of the Indies. This lead to new sailing ships equipped with new cannons, causing havoc for the Ottomans. And the Portuguese dominance of the route around Africa caused Spain to seek a different route to the East by sailing West, resulting in the accidental "discovery" of the Americas.

    • @joaoconchilha2231
      @joaoconchilha2231 Před 2 lety +38

      Never to late to learn world history, congrats.

    • @alexanderryan1176
      @alexanderryan1176 Před 2 lety +37

      Americans sort of fought against ottoman proxy states in the barbary pirate wars.

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson Před 2 lety +30

      It seems there were different approaches. The Portuguese concentrated on gaining fortified trading posts (or "factories") and perhaps some of their hinterland. While the Spaniards (and later the British), preferred to conquer huge areas and hold them as giant colonies.
      Of course there were exceptions such as Brazil, but some of the trading posts remained Portuguese until India annexed Goa in 1975, Indonesia took East Timor in the same year and China got Macau in 1999.

    • @abelsoo5465
      @abelsoo5465 Před 2 lety +37

      The Ottomans, by expanding the frontier of their empire, also expanded the list of enemies they have to fight. The List of Enemies outside their Empire: Habsburg monarchy, Portugal, Russia, Safavid Persia, Wahabi from central Arabia and then finally Britain and France during WW1. The List of Enemies within their Empire : Greek, Slavic, Bulgarian, Armenian , Macedonian, Arab and even Turkish rebels. Due to military threats from within and without , coupled with political intrigue at court, it's no wonder why some Ottoman sultans just absconded their stressful governing responsibilities to their Grand Viziers and retreat into a life in the harem with all kinds of vices as a form of escapism.

    • @aloisschicklgruber9807
      @aloisschicklgruber9807 Před 2 lety +39

      The USA is afflicted with a a British-centric view of history. If it didn't involve the British, it just didn't happen. Or matter.
      And as to Constantinople the "unassailable" It was very much assailed, and sacked, by participants of the Fourth Crusade in 1204 - about 2 centuries before the Ottomans closed the Byzantines down for good.

  • @jrangel118
    @jrangel118 Před 2 lety +517

    So basically it goes like this:
    Portugal with superiority = loss
    Portugal overwhelmed = win
    Go figure....

    • @NeoZeta
      @NeoZeta Před 2 lety +12

      To be fair, commanders' abilities went down throughout time.

    • @NeoZeta
      @NeoZeta Před 2 lety +27

      @Aq Qoyunlu I mean, yes, but actually yes. Doesn't mean they went to all to become crap. But ruling over the overseas territories just became totally mismanaged, and even internal conflicts and family rivalries were getting in the way of who was being appointed, etc. The early birds' success couldn't just be replicated anymore. Of course, there were still successes, but not with the same drive.

    • @marcocavaco3150
      @marcocavaco3150 Před 2 lety +31

      That is because we have the tendency to "desenrascar" when we have our butts tight.

    • @MFPRego
      @MFPRego Před 2 lety +30

      Typical... Portugal only fights greatly when outnumbered, overwhelmed and with odds against it. Even today...

    • @azorian888
      @azorian888 Před 2 lety +3

      yeah cocky cr7 fcks up
      scared cr7 eins evrything

  • @dinistomas5228
    @dinistomas5228 Před 2 lety +574

    This is not very much explored in Portuguese history classes.
    As a Portuguese, I thank kindly for this video. Cheers!

    • @alptekinergin5561
      @alptekinergin5561 Před 2 lety +18

      neither in the turkish bruh

    • @X-AEA-12
      @X-AEA-12 Před 2 lety +3

      So sad. Brainwashed 🧠

    • @X-AEA-12
      @X-AEA-12 Před 2 lety

      @@jeebus6263 I’m your brain on drugs 💊

    • @oldwine2401
      @oldwine2401 Před 2 lety +1

      the comunists want to clean history of all countries

    • @nholmes86
      @nholmes86 Před 2 lety

      @@oldwine2401 NO...the next in this history was the end of the ottoman empire and agreements wish lead to the republic of turkey that is today.

  • @ljlj8155
    @ljlj8155 Před 2 lety +243

    Great content.
    As a proud portuguese 🇵🇹my honor to the Otommans, and kind regards to my close Turkish 🇹🇷 friends!!

    • @arkeologokur
      @arkeologokur Před 2 lety +60

      Kind regards to you too from Turkey. 😊🇹🇷

    • @bandeirante8597
      @bandeirante8597 Před 2 lety +9

      "Afonso de Albuquerque" é um nome bem forte

    • @monikadcosta5375
      @monikadcosta5375 Před 2 lety +5

      Turkey😂😂😂

    • @khatijahabubakar7073
      @khatijahabubakar7073 Před 2 lety +17

      I am from Malaysia living in capital city kuala lumpur and Malacca is not that far away from KL.. My husband is from Lisboa, Portugal . I have been to.Portugal few times for holiday and visited some of historical sites, palaces, Forts and castles. (Sintra etc ) Its awesome.

    • @oldwine2401
      @oldwine2401 Před rokem +2

      @@khatijahabubakar7073 Obrigado ;).

  • @wonderwiseS2
    @wonderwiseS2 Před 11 měsíci +70

    How did such a small country face the Ottoman Empire like this? Massive Respect.

    • @darkz1563
      @darkz1563 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Navy?

    • @goncalonunes3203
      @goncalonunes3203 Před 8 měsíci +32

      In that time the portuguese empire had land in every continent, they were the first global empire and at that time had one if not the best navys of europe

    • @pedrogoncalves4585
      @pedrogoncalves4585 Před 8 měsíci +24

      Portugal was allways like this, they fought out numebered and most of the Times won. They were insanly good

    • @bconni2
      @bconni2 Před 8 měsíci +4

      the Portuguese empire always came to fight. they where very aggressive and ruthless . resorting to extreme acts of violence in order to achieve their objectives was their natural default setting. diplomacy was never their first option.

    • @christophermesquita1147
      @christophermesquita1147 Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@goncalonunes3203 a big part as to why the portuguese managed to maintain those colonies was because portugal rarely conquered in land they would hold islands or cities on the coasts. They used politics and commerce with the surrounding nations that were friendly to their colonies and would viciously snuff out any opposed or create instability in their enemy's with spys. A difference between portugal and other Colonial powers was the difference in views of race. In the portugese empire any man could be noble or a slave.

  • @darthvenator2487
    @darthvenator2487 Před 2 lety +259

    Next episode of the Portuguese-Ottoman war will be the Battle for Endor.

    • @abcdef27669
      @abcdef27669 Před 2 lety +52

      Darth Suleiman: “Lucas Andarilho das Nuvens, I am your father!”

    • @miguelpadeiro762
      @miguelpadeiro762 Před 2 lety +14

      @@abcdef27669 Andarilho lmao

    • @fidelklckap1821
      @fidelklckap1821 Před 2 lety +46

      Have you ever heard of the tragedy of Darth Suleiman the Wise? It's not a story the Catholics will tell you.

    • @darthvenator2487
      @darthvenator2487 Před 2 lety +17

      @@abcdef27669 Lucas Andarilho: "That's not true! That's impossible!"

    • @sargentocapitao9668
      @sargentocapitao9668 Před 2 lety +8

      @@miguelpadeiro762 bro nem gozes, eu tenho um livro do Phantom Menace (ya eu sei) onde dizem Luke Andarilho das Estrelas.... WHAT. THE. FUCK.

  • @kayvan671
    @kayvan671 Před 2 lety +146

    I was always amazed about Portugals history.
    Such a beautiful Country.

    • @alexm7627
      @alexm7627 Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks

    • @user-wg5oz4bf5w
      @user-wg5oz4bf5w Před 2 lety +8

      Beautiful women too 😍

    • @samrc8408
      @samrc8408 Před rokem +4

      I am Portuguese and proud of this video. Portugal has a problem. Was governed by a dictator during 1930's to mid 70's and got a big bit stepped back on economy and imdustry. Still trying to overcome post dictatorship freedom corruption problems. Many thanks for the content.

    • @oldwine2401
      @oldwine2401 Před rokem

      where are you from

    • @brixcosmo6849
      @brixcosmo6849 Před 10 měsíci

      Thanks! ❤🇵🇹

  • @northernlegolas
    @northernlegolas Před 2 lety +339

    You guys are turning light to an era even not explained in Turkish History lessons, I also doubt whether the history teachers in Turkey have this kind of an overview over the Portugese situation in 16th century. Thank you

    • @alihandemiral7049
      @alihandemiral7049 Před 2 lety +34

      You are correct that especially mainstream history portrayals of the ottoman empire's indian expeditions are only briefly mentioned with some key events, and in school textbooks , the failure against the portuguese is depicted as an indirect win, since the red sea fell in ottoman control. And the cause of the failure of the expeditions are simply seen as a shipwrighting error, the ships were not adequate in design for ocean warfare. Which is a very lazy way of justifying the failure. But as years pass, more and more historians lean to the details of the subject, much like Ottoman expeditions to Italy.

    • @gomes7066
      @gomes7066 Před rokem +43

      Not even in portugal do they teach this to us, they just give a generalised, stereotypical and boring summary. Wheres the tention? The drama? The pain and the gain? The school system is absolutely dreadful.

    • @brixcosmo6849
      @brixcosmo6849 Před 11 měsíci +12

      Exactly! These videos are much better than what we're taught in School in Portugal! 😂 Those must have been Epic Battles! Respect! ❤🇵🇹🇹🇷
      PS: Can you tell Orkun Kökçü that we'd love to have him at SL Benfica!? Thanks in advance! 😂🤝

    • @mariahenriques6053
      @mariahenriques6053 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Unfortunately it is not acurate.🥺

    • @richbob9155
      @richbob9155 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@mariahenriques6053 Yeah sadly channels lie this will always go for sensationalism over facts. School is boring because its just facts without the opinions (well it should be anyway). I have noticed Kings and Generals making up entire parts to stories to make them more interesting and just lying about other things because the truth was too boring. Take CZcams as entertainment with some facts but any video like this should be taken with a handful of salt.

  • @omardilery415
    @omardilery415 Před 2 lety +334

    News just in: The Mars Rover has captured images of what appears to be an ancient Portugese-Ottoman battle on the far-side of Mars.

    • @leeboy26
      @leeboy26 Před 2 lety +47

      Those martian spices shall finally grace the markets of Lisbon!

    • @lief3414
      @lief3414 Před 2 lety +5

      What a delicate summary.

    • @danielt.8573
      @danielt.8573 Před 2 lety +29

      The spice must flow.

    • @makynarrow1484
      @makynarrow1484 Před 2 lety +6

      Yes! feitorias have been build by the base of Olympus Mons!

    • @jimtaggert42
      @jimtaggert42 Před 2 lety +3

      there aint no far side of mars, but ok

  • @clarencecorbeil1061
    @clarencecorbeil1061 Před 2 lety +586

    I thought adding some timestamps might help, so here they are. Another great video, K&G!
    00:00:00 Intro
    00:01:57 Portuguese's first Interventions in the Indian Ocean
    00:06:44 1509 Battle of Diu
    00:12:20 Post Battle of Diu - Ottoman Empire’s Intervention
    00:17:11 1525 Battle of Diu
    00:20:31 1538 Battle of Diu
    00:30:43 Ethiopian-Adal War - Intro
    00:35:17 Ethiopian-Adal War - Beginning
    00:39:56 Ethiopian-Adal War - Portuguese Intervention
    00:44:19 Ethiopian-Adal War - Battle of Wayna Daga
    00:47:56 Ethiopian-Adal War - Epilogue
    00:49:47 After the 1538 Battle of Diu
    00:53:15 Suez Expedition
    00:56:31 1546 Battle of Diu
    01:00:14 Yemeni Revolt-Attack on Hormuz
    01:04:55 1565-68 Ottoman expeditions
    01:07:05 North African front - Intro
    01:10:19 Portuguese Intervention in Morocco - Battle of Ksar El Kebir
    01:19:33 Conclusion

    • @edilcris
      @edilcris Před 2 lety +9

      Thanks for the useful timestamps!

    • @tallenta6071
      @tallenta6071 Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you, it certainty helpful

    • @paul1780
      @paul1780 Před 2 lety +6

      A hero of the history community. 🍻

    • @box5319
      @box5319 Před 2 lety +14

      38:59 General Ahmed Ibrahim destroyed the church of Merry in Axum as a revenge for the action of the Ethiopian Orthodox who burnt Masjid Qiblatayn in zeila city when they earlier toppled the sultanate of ifat prior to the emergence of Adal empire and never as punishment for their resistance of the siege.this account is indeed well captured in the book "Futu Al Habash" Authored by Moroccan scholar.

    • @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542
      @hauntologicalwittgensteini2542 Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you

  • @gcircle
    @gcircle Před 2 lety +87

    To make Alcácer-Quibir even more devastating, I want to add that King Sebastian was very young. He ascended to power at age 14 and died at age 24 without an heir - or, well, presumed dead, his body never turned up, leading to the myth that he would return to Portugal, in a day of heavy fog, at the nation's greatest time of need. What was left of the royal family failed to secure a clear sucession, and when the next claimant was the King of Spain, well... It took a while for us to break free, I believe it was already the Thirty Years War.

    • @renatogomescosta1687
      @renatogomescosta1687 Před rokem +4

      O jovem acreditou que poderia estar no nível dos velhos guerreiros. Ele só não não sabia o motivo deles estarem velhos e ainda lutando.

    • @whitemountain_
      @whitemountain_ Před rokem +13

      The thing is the body did turn up. It was returned by the Sultan of Morocco to king Philip I of Portugal, but at that time the legend about Sebastian had already grown too strong for people to believe the body was his. He is buried in the Jerónimos Monastery.

    • @vascodagama7223
      @vascodagama7223 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@whitemountain_I didn't know about this, but apparently there is a lack of evidence surrounding the true identity of the body and many believe it was a plan of King Philip to ensure that people saw him as the one and only king and not as a place holder until the return of D. Sebastião.

    • @danielmonterobarrientos1808
      @danielmonterobarrientos1808 Před 4 dny

      Ok but The King of Castile, not "the King of Spain"

  • @kirimhani1877
    @kirimhani1877 Před 2 lety +75

    From turkey,respect portugal ❤

    • @pedrogamboa568
      @pedrogamboa568 Před rokem +12

      Same feelings from Portugal to Turkey.
      Greetings.

  • @beirakeiser1039
    @beirakeiser1039 Před 2 lety +194

    Portuguese and Ottomans are friends now.
    Love from Portugal 🇵🇹 to Turkey 🇹🇷 :)

    • @yrlikng5767
      @yrlikng5767 Před 2 lety +8

      🔙❤

    • @user-hr9jy8ru1g
      @user-hr9jy8ru1g Před 2 lety +26

      Thx mate. But we are not Ottomans. We are Turks.

    • @beirakeiser1039
      @beirakeiser1039 Před 2 lety +17

      @@user-hr9jy8ru1g Yhea you are right, but i also wanted to include all the people that are from former ottoman empire's lands.

    • @beirakeiser1039
      @beirakeiser1039 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jeebus6263 Understandable we portuguese are just like that with the Spanish

    • @bagcilarlilancelot
      @bagcilarlilancelot Před 2 lety

      @@zen2557 The name of the empire was "Devlet-i Ali Osman" so That means ottomans is true

  • @danielconde13
    @danielconde13 Před 2 lety +137

    Never put yourself between a Portuguese and his spices.
    _Pastéis de Nata_ gotta have their cinnamon, whatever the cost!

    • @danielconde13
      @danielconde13 Před 2 lety +7

      @Aq Qoyunlu funny, but innacurate.
      Portugal does have its sins throughout History: stealing in trade is not one of them.

    • @5thMilitia
      @5thMilitia Před 2 lety +4

      Luckily the Dutch can't read

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 2 lety +1

      I actually like them better without cinnamon...

    • @danielconde13
      @danielconde13 Před 2 lety +5

      @@diogorodrigues747 to be completely honest with you... me too. _Arroz doce_ , however...

    • @seven2178
      @seven2178 Před 2 lety +1

      Damn all this fore spice jesus

  • @friedrichnietzsche2557
    @friedrichnietzsche2557 Před 2 lety +26

    If you Know how many wars Portugal fought you will lose your mind Portugal is small country but a huge history.
    Portugal Karalho!

    • @friedrichnietzsche2557
      @friedrichnietzsche2557 Před 2 lety +11

      @8 ball pool champs lol we beats the arabs we beat the spanish we beat the french how we lost ?

    • @filipesugden1982
      @filipesugden1982 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @Saad Naveed ok musIim kid

    • @quoideneuv
      @quoideneuv Před 7 měsíci

      @@friedrichnietzsche2557 le Maroc vous a remis a votre place de pécheurs de Morues

    • @user-bf8iy9zu2s
      @user-bf8iy9zu2s Před 13 dny

      ​@saadnaveed1643 "lost every", do you live in another dimension?

  • @tj-co9go
    @tj-co9go Před 2 lety +41

    This made me look at history differently. We were taught at school briefly about Henry the Navigator, Vasco da Gama's travels to India and Portugal's involvement in spice trade, but that was it. Now I can finally see what the sentence in the history book about the Ottomans having seized the spice trade previously meant. And now I can see that the Ottoman Empire was not only a passive observer of the European colonial powers in the mainland, but also participated in the power struggles with them in the Indian Ocean too.
    Considering their geographical position, it is natural that the Ottomans didn't join the colonisation of the Americas. It would have made more sense to colonise in the Indian Ocean, especially along East Africa and India. However, the Portuguese resistance and other factors prevented them from doing so. Controlling the Mediterranean was probably another important factor, as the Ottomans had to conquer the Eastern parts of Mediterranean and the northern regions of Africa. As the straits of Gibraltar were surrounded by Portugal, Spain and Morocco, all potentially hostile powers, the Ottomans could not partake in the colonisation of the Americas. The conquest of Morocco could have served that goal, which might have been one of the attractions for trying to do so, alongside control of the Mediterranean, weakening their enemies and restoring the Umayyad caliphate's former borders.
    The Ottoman Empire was also primarily a land-based empire, not a naval colonial project, and administrated in this manner. Portugal, Spain, France and England, major powers surrounded by sea used their colonial empires to project their power in internal struggles when it was hard to expand their empire in the mainland. They had fewer enemies to fight along their land borders. Their access to the sea was unhinged by any intermediate power and thus they were more free to dominate the oceans.

    • @maragolihistory2118
      @maragolihistory2118 Před 2 lety

      The thing is, all these wars to date started when the Ottomans aka Abassyd caliphate established a rulership in East Africa and Iraq to Yemen with headquarters in Oman.
      The problem started when the Ottomans begun to attack Abbysinians Lalibela and Aksum for Biblical artifacts and then selling them as their own in Byzantine and at Constantinople.
      By 1300 Abbysinians from Aksum sent it's ambassador to Spain and Portugal to establish political friendship. They taught them about Biblical history of East Africa and invite them to visit and confirm everything. At the time European were also fighting against Islam and were blocked by the Islamic traders from coming into East.
      The European didn't take them seriously so they didn't come to East until Ethiopians sent a long letter commonly known as "Prester Juan" Juan is a Germanic name for John.
      In the letter, they described that they're the oldest Church in the world and housing ancient Artifacts of the 12 tribes who were pushed further South by Somalis and Turks, that they themselves rule over the 12 tribes from a far distance, the 12 tribes who are just below their lands in Forests. They requested Germanic rulers to come to their aide as Ottomans had established a treaty with Ajuran Somalis to steal Biblical manuscript and the two were actively involved in selling the twelve tribes into slavery. Mainly selling them to Southern india and Iraq's Basra.
      The Germans would quietly send mercineries and top spies from Spain and Portugal. the first four fleet never made it through the cape of Good Hope (South Africa) but Vasco Da Gama successfully made it in 1400s.
      After reaching Goa, Vasco Da Gama established treaties and had left spies in all his stops along the East African coast.
      On his return, he picked up his spies back on board although some didn't survive. Those who made it via Malindi, Sofala told Vasco Da Gama that they were able to spy East Africa and saw no white Jews in Africa but Black people like West Africans.
      Vasco Da Gama went back and told European that the Indians told him that the only Jews they knew were very dark skin and came from East Africa.
      The Romans Catholic and Germans heard these News, they were very disappointed. Because they were expecting to find "White Jews."
      But discovery of more black people especially below Abbysinians frightened Germans because they were already teaching about "white Jews" and white Jesus through out Europe.
      After Vasco Da Gama conquest,more spies were sent like Kraft In the 1800s when Germans and Britain would again sent missionaries spies to find the white lost Jews below Abbysinians. But no white Jews were ever found but black Africans who claim to have migrated from Senna,Misri and Aksum.
      Things would became even ugliar when Abbysinians would begun showing ancient Biblical artifacts that showed ancient Hebrew's as Negus.
      From that, British Royal Geography Society would sent a spie by the name John Hannington Speke and his commander Mr Burton, and John Speke would again reaffirm And confirm from the Indians Puranas Sanskrit books and Hindu historians and from Arabs and Cushites that the only religious tribes known to have migrated from Yemen to interior of Africa were indeed black, majority had become savage's Walked around naked and established important trade hubs in Zimbabwe, Uganda, Western Kenya and elsewhere.
      John Hannington Speke would return to Britain to expose these only to be assassinated before he could provide his evidence before The British Geography Society commission. Burton his counterpart would be paid to go back alone and change history to what you know today of East Africa.
      Germans, Brits, Greeks and Ethiopians would then dig Suez canal to block Turks from ever reaching or migrating again to Africa. And from that the ottomans and Islamic power came to and end.
      Germans bombed the Oman's sultan in East Africa, chased away all Arabs back to Middle East and British created countries with Nilotes and Cushites as the Armies that protect and hide everything for good.
      Now you know!!!!.

    • @user-cf1pr8jy3i
      @user-cf1pr8jy3i Před 9 měsíci +5

      The portuguese were the first global empire because we understood the importance of the dominance of the seas. What was the greatest power in the empire that followed, the British? Mastery of the seas, globally. What was the greatest power of the next, the American? Mastery of the seas, globally. For this reason alone in World War II the Nazis could never stand shoulder to shoulder with the traditional and the new maritime powers.

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@user-cf1pr8jy3i Indeed, exactly what I meant. And this can be applied to modern dat. Why does Russia want to control Crimea and Ukraine? To control the Black Sea. Why is China so keen on expanding their influence in Western Pacific, and seeking to conquer Taiwan? For the same reason, to oppose US hegemony. (If they could, they'd like to control Straits of Malacca and Indonesia too). And for this same reason, USA maintains naval bases and allies South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Australia in the Pacific Sphere. This is also why Somali pirates were seen as a huge threat to global shipping. The Japenese tried become a new naval empire just like Britain, replicating it in every way possible, and succeeded in conquering huge areas of the Pacific, but lost to more powerful American empire.

  • @husseinalsharaa202
    @husseinalsharaa202 Před 2 lety +155

    You forgot the ottoman-Portuguese war over Mars.

    • @LaddRusso91
      @LaddRusso91 Před 2 lety +1

      What's that?

    • @srikrishnak196
      @srikrishnak196 Před 2 lety +2

      Maybe pun😂

    • @joaodimas6150
      @joaodimas6150 Před 2 lety +4

      is there any spicies there? if so we will dominate that stuff

    • @librainvictus5660
      @librainvictus5660 Před 2 lety +7

      2023 otto-portugese martian empire insaAllah

    • @laithalmasri6985
      @laithalmasri6985 Před 2 lety +1

      @@librainvictus5660 space ship battle between neo Portuguese empire and neo ottoman empire

  • @ferdinandfernando1739
    @ferdinandfernando1739 Před 2 lety +106

    When you think about the Ottomans and the Portuguese, then you get this one immediately from Kings and Generals.
    I call it Sunday night magic. 🎩 ✨

  • @PedroSilva-vs1lh
    @PedroSilva-vs1lh Před 2 lety +71

    Great work with this video! As a Portuguese I learned a lot about this crucial period of the Portuguese history. I loved the detail you went into and the nice animations 👍
    Respect for the Ottomans!

    • @iranazadi7
      @iranazadi7 Před 4 měsíci

      as someone who was victim to your warmongering i f a lot of your women now as revenge.

  • @Ur_random_kurd
    @Ur_random_kurd Před 2 lety +23

    46:47 That must be the most heroic act i have ever heard during that time, What a brave man

    • @marcosalexandre6613
      @marcosalexandre6613 Před 2 lety +4

      "my king, they killed a man named my son... " (battle of Chaul) stories tell that he was impaled and some mamluks cuted all the skin off his face.
      "son, they didn't light a candle at your funeral, today I burn a whole city for you"
      Francisco de Almeida - battle of dio.

  • @youxkio
    @youxkio Před 2 lety +88

    An excellent account of Portuguese and Ottoman deeds. Greetings from a Portuguese living in Taiwan - Formosa!

    • @xavierrealmadrid7420
      @xavierrealmadrid7420 Před 2 lety +3

      in that age Formosa was a colony of Spain,, because Portugal was defeated in 1580 by the Spanish empire of king Felipe ii,, nobody forget 60 years of spanish dominion

    • @youxkio
      @youxkio Před 2 lety

      @@xavierrealmadrid7420 True. In that same period, the Spanish Crown wanted to defeat the British Crown in their seas. Some accounts say that the Portuguese in the Spanish Armada was very reluctant in fighting against the British because of the long-time Treaty of Windsor (1386). But, I guess, we all had to join forces later to battle Napoleon. Time to bury our axes after that. Now, we enjoy each others' beaches, food, language, and friendship. :)

    • @xavierrealmadrid7420
      @xavierrealmadrid7420 Před 2 lety +2

      @@youxkio the Spanish Armada was a tragedy thanks to the bad weather,, the real winner was the weather, without the advantage of the natural disaster spain had many successes like the English Armada or the Battle of Cartagena de Indias... on many occasions the climate makes other sides more favorable like "general winter" of Russia.

    • @youxkio
      @youxkio Před 2 lety +3

      @@xavierrealmadrid7420 Yes, the bad weather was also against the British navy. Could it be more like a failure in the maritime strategy and preparation?

    • @rogerioparalta3916
      @rogerioparalta3916 Před 2 lety +3

      @@xavierrealmadrid7420 Not defeated, inherited

  • @truthseeker7100
    @truthseeker7100 Před 2 lety +73

    Portuguese gave a tough fight considering the odds against it. Respect.

  • @geanmaf
    @geanmaf Před 2 lety +76

    Congratulations on this excellent documentary about the "Golden Age of the Portuguese Empire" (of which Brazil is one of the consequences and which we Brazilians know so little about). A suggestion: if possible, make subtitles available in Portuguese, Turkish, Greek and Indi (it would be of great help for people influenced by the Portuguese and Ottoman Empires to learn more about this important and decisive conflict, as well as its consequences). Just for a brief example: in Brazil, the death of Don Sebastião de Avis in the Battle of Alcacer Quibir is seen as a mad adventure by a foolish young monarch in Moroccan lands (and not as a consequence of the geopolitical dispute between rival empires).

    • @1193joao
      @1193joao Před rokem +7

      to be fair, here in Portugal that situation is portrayed, and even taught in schools, in the exact same way: a stupid adventurous mistake that led to the fall of that dinasty of kings. there is, however, like you say much more to be said about it

    • @geanmaf
      @geanmaf Před rokem +3

      @@1193joao Thank you for the information. 😊🤜🤛

    • @hamzasat
      @hamzasat Před 10 měsíci +1

      Because it was like that. That battle was between a Moroccan King and a Portuguese one. It has nothing to do with ottomans.

    • @shiroufanfics2440
      @shiroufanfics2440 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@hamzasatOttomans aided Marooco

    • @user-bk9ls2se7f
      @user-bk9ls2se7f Před 5 měsíci

      His uncle the king of Spain told him do not go to Maroc.

  • @goodoldbunny149
    @goodoldbunny149 Před 2 lety +114

    I'm from sri Lanka and when Portuguese came to sri Lanka I can't exactly remember the year but definitely 1500's when Portuguese ships accidentally came to sri Lanka due to a storm and ottoman businessmen and tradesman who spotted Portuguese flags immediately started firing and Portuguese started firing back with their big cannons(first time sri lankan people ever saw guns or cannons in history) Wich resulted ottomans being defeated and colonized the shores of sri Lanka.

    • @hotman_pt_
      @hotman_pt_ Před 2 lety +14

      Yes, unfortunately some time after the Dutch took over it, to be taken again by the British.

    • @oldwine2401
      @oldwine2401 Před rokem +5

      @@hotman_pt_ but sometimes the dutch falied/lost, like Macau and others. it was impossible for Portugal to control so much area, in so long time

    • @furkanozturk3545
      @furkanozturk3545 Před rokem

      Never heard about that before, very interesting (from Turkiye)

    • @ugetuget8864
      @ugetuget8864 Před rokem

      dutch came to my nation in 1596..they began to collect our lands,mines etc by colonization for 350 years.. 😔😔😔 they are rich country by killing another,,what a cruelty acts from the most "human-rights country"...

    • @renatogomescosta1687
      @renatogomescosta1687 Před rokem +1

      ​@@oldwine2401 Sou Brasileiro e aqui os Holandeses também foram destruídos. Apesar um Holandês ter feitos boas coisas pela cidade onde moro. O Conde Maurício de Nassau.
      A WIC o expulsou pois estava tentando desenvolver a região.
      Recife, estado de Pernambuco a mais antiga das capitanias.

  • @Sirxchrish
    @Sirxchrish Před 2 lety +462

    I can't believe the Portuguese held that fort off against the ottomans with only 40 fighters remaining. That is insane.

    • @rvrv7021
      @rvrv7021 Před 2 lety +30

      The womans made the Diference , King and general say...

    • @Sirxchrish
      @Sirxchrish Před 2 lety +87

      @@rvrv7021 they secretly won because they had a naked scotsman with bagpipes on their team

    • @whitechocolateman1088
      @whitechocolateman1088 Před 2 lety +31

      @@rvrv7021 They never said that, they included the information that some sources say a group of women joined in on the frontline to show how hard pressed the defenders were.

    • @Luso515PorTuoGraal
      @Luso515PorTuoGraal Před 2 lety +45

      @@whitechocolateman1088 Yes, but its true. In the first siege Catarina Lopes, Isabel Madeira (Captain of abattalion of female combatants), Garcia Rodrigues, Isabel Fernandes, and Isabel Dias. Isabel Madeira formed a group of female combatants who fought in front of the battle against the Turks again in the the second siege of 1542 aiding the men with some of the former.

    • @rvrv7021
      @rvrv7021 Před 2 lety +52

      If you born in a portuguese family like me , you Also Will respect the portuguese womans.
      They are strong personality , specialy the nort Portugal womans

  • @galerinha
    @galerinha Před 2 lety +435

    As a brazilian I wish this were more studied in our schools. We were part of the empire at this time, it is part of our history.

    • @luismarques9280
      @luismarques9280 Před 2 lety +57

      your ancestors were incredible warriors

    • @neovis0
      @neovis0 Před 2 lety +42

      Muito bem dito, abraço Luso.

    • @SnarkyJohnny
      @SnarkyJohnny Před 2 lety +21

      Do you think it’s a politically motivated omission? Since Portugal colonized Brazil maybe they wouldn’t want to acknowledge too much. What are your thoughts on this?

    • @darthvenator2487
      @darthvenator2487 Před 2 lety +17

      @@SnarkyJohnny one word: Proud.

    • @boom1538
      @boom1538 Před 2 lety +23

      @@SnarkyJohnny it is not taught at school in Portugal as well.

  • @jorge6207
    @jorge6207 Před 2 lety +10

    I was amazed at Portugal being talked about in these kind of channels, where they are thouroughly ignored (save BazBattles with Aljubarrota a few years back), but then I understood this is part of an Ottoman series, so, yeah, it makes sense now. Portugal just got in the way.

    • @jorge6207
      @jorge6207 Před 2 lety +5

      Still figuring out if it's lack of interest, ignorance (or both) or just remnants of the Black legend sprinled in the feeble minds of many anglos.

  • @ruisilva2623
    @ruisilva2623 Před 2 lety +47

    First Global empire in History...so much the Portuguese give to the world and so underrated...

    • @refaathassan8595
      @refaathassan8595 Před 2 lety +1

      Underrated yes, first global empire this i doubt

    • @ruisilva2623
      @ruisilva2623 Před 2 lety +5

      @@refaathassan8595 Dear friend,when James Cook born,the Portuguese have been all around the world 170 years at least before...
      James Cook born in 1728,Portuguese have been in canadá (Newfoundland and Labrador)in 1492, India in 1497,island of são lourenço know today as Madagascar in 1500, Brazil in 1500, Ceilâo know today as Sry lanka in 1505, Mauritius in 1502, Comores islands in 1505,Tristâo da Cunha island in 1506,Santa Helena Island in 1501,Ascension Island in 1501, Papua New Guinea in 1511,Molucas in Indonesia in 1511,China (Macau)in 1535,malasia (malacca)1511,east timor not far from Australia in 1515,(Australia in 1523 but to hard to admit that) Japan in 1543 (Nagasaki was founded by the Portuguese) Formosa island today know as Taiwan in 1544,Maldives island in 1558,Magalhaes first circumnavigation to the world in 1521, Espiritu Santo and Vanatu in the Pacific in 1606 and much more
      Just have a look to the Portuguese empire between 1500/1600 and you will be suprise.
      GIL EANES,DIOGO GOMES,FERNÃO GOMES,LOPO GONÇALVES,DIOGO CÃO,
      BARTOLOMEU DIAS,PÊRO DA COVILHÃ,
      JOÃO FERNANDES LAVRADOR,VASCO DA GAMA,GASPAR CORTE-REAL,PEDRO ÁLVARES CABRAL,DIOGO ZEIMOTO,FRANCISCO JOSÉ DE LACERDA E ALMEIDA that some of the great Portuguese explorers.

    • @CagataySahin1
      @CagataySahin1 Před 2 lety +2

      No, first global empire is spanish empire.

    • @ruisilva2623
      @ruisilva2623 Před 2 lety +8

      @@CagataySahin1 have a look in the Portuguese empire in 1500s Vs Spanish and see the difference.

    • @ruisilva2623
      @ruisilva2623 Před 2 lety +9

      @@CagataySahin1 have a look in the tordesilhas treaty between Portugal and Spain and you will understand why Portugal was the first global empire.

  • @zako9396
    @zako9396 Před 2 lety +274

    Ottoman Empire: Noo! you must pay our taxes to get good quality spices from India
    Portuguese Empire: Haa ha ship go around Africa

    • @thenutella8846
      @thenutella8846 Před 2 lety +18

      Actually, the Venetians were the ones who's taxes the Portuguese wanted to avoid considering they were the middlemen in the eastern Mediterranean trade.

    • @DaviRenania
      @DaviRenania Před 2 lety +1

      @@thenutella8846 they also sponsored Portugal. Brazil literally woundn't have been discovered without Venice's money

    • @masada2828
      @masada2828 Před 2 lety

      The Ottoman Empire had a end, in 1917.

    • @xavierrealmadrid7420
      @xavierrealmadrid7420 Před 2 lety +3

      @Aq Qoyunlu in this moment portugal is just portugal... but turkey have a lot of puppet states, like north cyprus or azerbaijan. their "empire" still alive

    • @mohammedyassine9263
      @mohammedyassine9263 Před 2 lety

      The empirethatgotoblitoratedbymorrocanssayswhat??

  • @manuellopes6913
    @manuellopes6913 Před 2 lety +377

    Ah yes, king Sebastian, such a powerful king he single handedly nearly ended one of the most dominant nations of the world of his time. Shame it was the nation he ruled

    • @Hitmannzz
      @Hitmannzz Před 2 lety +65

      Portugal being so perfectly located geographically managed to just wither away without any major wars with European powers I mean they even had the fucking Pope give them half the (known) world with Spain with that Treaty of Tordesillas... surely both Kingdoms literally made the Papal States for that. So glad this channel exists and such a fitting documentary to display their world wars with the Ottomans. Always a huge fan of history and hate when the ENTIRE history of a kingdom, nation or empire (whatever you prefer ;) gets jammed into a 10 min video...

    • @manuellopes6913
      @manuellopes6913 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Hitmannzz forget the last comment, my English is limited and completely misunderstood what you had written. My bad

    • @nunoalmeida2646
      @nunoalmeida2646 Před 2 lety +52

      @@Hitmannzz The first part of your comment is overly simplistic. If you take into consideration the demographics of Portugal, the fact that the treaty was never recognized by the remaining Christian Nations (or enforced by the pope), and that a huge chunk of the Portuguese navy and army was in the Grand Armada, including the Armada's flagship. The command of said Armada, was not. It was a Spanish command. Not to mention that after the end of the Iberian Union, in 1640, Portugal was at war with France, the Netherlands, Spain, the Ottomans, the Indian Sultanates, and Rajas. Ah, and the Portuguese and Spain wars, (including Castille, Galicia, Leon, and the subsequent unions and alliances ), spanned well over 600 years. Portugal went to war with whom Nations normally go to war with - Their neighbors. And the strategic position that you mention looks good now, when you know the whole world and how to get to other lands. At the time, Portugal was literally in the end of the world, on the edge of the Mediterranean and Atlantic trade. It was a rural and impoverished nation. That necessity resulted in the traveling and conquests that followed in the 15th century. It was the same necessity that drove the Norseman to the same end. The Portuguese Empire did wither away, but the reasons, my friend are stronger than the advantages/challenges that you point out. And the main one is very likely, a succecion of terrible leadership from a Monarchy that grew very accustomed to having extended land overseas and fail to look within to realize that the country was not just the King's Court and Lisbon and the rest of the Kingdom, simply a ground for recruiting troops, settlers and growing their food. Portugal withered because it failed to invest in its people and infrastructure. No country can live of churches and shipbuilding alone. And when the shipbuilding ends, you're left with only churches.

    • @tubarao1143
      @tubarao1143 Před 2 lety +33

      @@nunoalmeida2646 The problem was our "allies and friends" - the British. Methuen treaty was the reason for all of this... With friends like the brits who needs enemies?

    • @Hitmannzz
      @Hitmannzz Před 2 lety +7

      @@nunoalmeida2646 Awesome comment. I was being jokingly simplistic and tbh I don't know half as much about Portuguese history as I do with German or British history (Hence why I love channels such as this) Your comment however I really do appreciate every point you made is valid beyond belief. In you honest opinion do you think if the Iberian union with those inbred fools the (Spanish) Hapsburgs would she (Portugal) have been able to maintain its world wide prestige for a couple more centuries?

  • @brixcosmo6849
    @brixcosmo6849 Před rokem +7

    Thanks! Best Regards from Portugal! ❤🇵🇹

  • @user-bk9ls2se7f
    @user-bk9ls2se7f Před 5 měsíci +8

    Como español licenciado en Geografia e Historia nunca se nos enseños sobre las disputas entre otomanos y portugueses en el Índico. Muy agradecido.

    • @joaoconchilha2231
      @joaoconchilha2231 Před 4 měsíci

      Por outro lado Lepanto está em todos os nosso livros, um enorme feito de "nuestros hermanos".

  • @tonyagos1172
    @tonyagos1172 Před 2 lety +190

    I absolutely love when a video is done on the Portuguese. Can’t thank you enough for doing these. Please continue doing more on the Portuguese. It’s a nation full of great history and discovery throughout the world.

    • @indiancowpeedrinker9241
      @indiancowpeedrinker9241 Před rokem +2

      Turks ane europeans fighting for the ownership of indians

    • @adelesr4965
      @adelesr4965 Před rokem

      Quem decobriu o mundo todo foi Portugal e Portugal ensinou os Castelhanos a navegarem a espanha não descobriu nada foi castela o nome de espanha não existia há 500 anos atraz.

    • @tomdreler6528
      @tomdreler6528 Před měsícem

      I absolutely agree with you about the History of the Portuguese. But man, did they behave in India. It Always brings me this sweet cognitive dissonance: i Love These Guys...that destroyed Ships with helpless civilians in cold blood 😅

  • @anachronisticon
    @anachronisticon Před 2 lety +68

    Literally just finished an audiobook on Portugals maritime empire yesterday. What a pleasant surprise to see this today.

    • @lightningboltpt
      @lightningboltpt Před 2 lety +2

      which one ?

    • @anachronisticon
      @anachronisticon Před 2 lety +11

      @@lightningboltpt "Conquerors: How Portugal Forged the First Global Empire"

    • @xavierrealmadrid7420
      @xavierrealmadrid7420 Před 2 lety +1

      @@anachronisticon that is debatable, because africa was a colony of rome since year 0 , the first empire in america was spain, they has built the first european city in america, the first american church, the first american universities, the first american bank, the first global currency (the spanish dollar) , and the first international language,, and Spain was the creator of the pacific atlantic trade. Manila...Acapulco\Panama...Sevilla.

    • @anachronisticon
      @anachronisticon Před 2 lety +12

      @@xavierrealmadrid7420 I think you're confusing the title of a book I read with my opinion.

    • @oldwine2401
      @oldwine2401 Před rokem +5

      ​@@xavierrealmadrid7420 portugal was the first to reach japan on the other side of the world 100 years before any european, say the japanese themselves. this is already proof that he was the first to create a global empire, global empire is not just a continent.

  • @ljlj8155
    @ljlj8155 Před 2 lety +83

    What we are absolutely sure is that in the west Mainstream media and mainstream historical holiwood movies never presents heroically Portuguese or Turkish impacts in human history belong centuries!
    Portugal history is underrated by mainstream!
    Not in this channel .Even being pro Ottomans, but that’s ok. In any case was respectful to Portugal. Thank you 🙏

    • @leeboy26
      @leeboy26 Před 2 lety +10

      Well tell Protugal to get off it's ass and contribute to western meainstream media rather than rely on others to do it for them. I'm sure there's lots of great stories to tell.

    • @NeoZeta
      @NeoZeta Před 2 lety +17

      Yeah, sometimes it's weird when they are portraying this era in movies/series, and have captains, pirates, etc. from other countries (like Spain, France, Netherlands, etc.), but usually have no mention of Portugal or Portuguese sailors, which were basically everywhere. Very neglected.

    • @salazarway
      @salazarway Před 2 lety +1

      @@leeboy26 And be itself mainstream instead of unique? Nah, you can sell the arss of your country instead.
      Nop, not here, seu boi.

    • @metesever6546
      @metesever6546 Před 2 lety +12

      Man when it come to sea battle u don't want to mess with Portuguese they really did impossible with very little resources & manpower, when it came to land battles well you really don't want to mess with Ottomans at those times.Ottomans was merely rented the indian ocean, portuguese owned it. Much respect the portuguese history definetely deserves a good series.

    • @salazarway
      @salazarway Před 2 lety +1

      @@metesever6546 Agree with you.

  • @mirzinho8721
    @mirzinho8721 Před 2 lety +55

    Ahh this makes me want to start a EU4 Portugal campaign again. It's so chill lol

    • @alptekinergin5561
      @alptekinergin5561 Před 2 lety +3

      in eu4 both of them arrives to india too late or never but i would like to rush and compete with the other too:(
      also its impossible to annex the mamluks as historicaly happened

    • @mirzinho8721
      @mirzinho8721 Před 2 lety +6

      @@alptekinergin5561 Yeah, I colonized half of the Americas before I got to India lol.

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Před 2 lety

      My thoughts exactly lol. I did some Portugal campaigns in EU2 colonising the Americas (yeah Portuguese USA and Brazil) but haven't done that yet in EU4

    • @CzarnySamael
      @CzarnySamael Před 2 lety

      +thew music at around 1h from EU4 only boosts it :-D

    • @CzarnySamael
      @CzarnySamael Před 2 lety +2

      @@alptekinergin5561 It is most ignorated part of history in EI4 IMO.
      There should be events for Portugese that would give Mamluks bankruptcy and this should give subjugation cb to Ottomans on Mams.

  • @MRYIMEN
    @MRYIMEN Před 2 lety +110

    Something worth mentioning
    Is that after Francisco de Almeida won the battle of Diu he ordered dozens of mameluk leaders to be executed by being tied to the mouth of cannons which were then fired, like human cannonballs. And this was the letter he sent to the enemy commander, Malik Ayyaz, before the battle.
    “I the Viceroy say to you, honored Meliqueaz captain of Diu, that I go with my men to this city of yours, taking the people who were welcomed there, that in Chaul fought my people, and killed a man who was called my son, and I come with hope in God of Heaven to take revenge on them and on those who assist them, and if I don't find them I will take your city, to pay for everything, and you, for the help you have done at Chaul, this I tell you, so that you are well aware that I go, as I am now on this island of Bombay, as it will tell you the one who this letter brings”.

    • @Cobalt1520
      @Cobalt1520 Před 2 lety +28

      BALLS, Something that is lacking in today´s western leaders.

    • @luistheserrano4785
      @luistheserrano4785 Před rokem +13

      the Portuguese at the time had steel balls (due mostly to its geographic location, on its back constantly fighting the spaniards, on its coast constantly fighting pirates, corsairs, invasions, etc., and all this after 700 years of Reconquista). Portuguese leaders also had a penchant to write "nice" letters to their opponents, it's a shame most of this stuff was lost

    • @Thesandchief
      @Thesandchief Před rokem +2

      The Mamluk he wanted dead for killing his son is Amir Hussain al-Kurdi, the governor of Jeddah, who also built the walls of Jeddah to repel the Portuguese and he survived the war along with only 22 other Mamluks. Him and Salman Rais defended Jeddah from the Portuguese in 1517.

    • @MRYIMEN
      @MRYIMEN Před rokem

      @@Thesandchief no, it was Malik Ayaz

    • @Thesandchief
      @Thesandchief Před rokem

      @EM the letter was addressed to Malik ayazz but the men who killed his son he mentions are Hussein al-kurdi's men. He was enraged that of the 22 mamluks who survived and escaped Hussein al-kurdi was among them.

  • @antemaric98
    @antemaric98 Před 2 lety +53

    Love Portugal from Croatia ❤️

    • @latinEU
      @latinEU Před 2 lety +3

      And we thank the Nordic and Eastern Kingdoms for their service during the Reconquista. Stay strong 💪

    • @thalesbernardomendes8949
      @thalesbernardomendes8949 Před 2 lety

      @@BisseleWixxele de graça?

  • @dinosertanejo222
    @dinosertanejo222 Před 2 lety +34

    Saudações a nossos amigos e irmãos portugueses!
    Greetings to our portuguese friends and brothers!

  • @gabrielleite6936
    @gabrielleite6936 Před 2 lety +294

    Orgulho da historia de nossos pais portugueses. Saudações do Brasil.

    • @ljlj8155
      @ljlj8155 Před 2 lety +20

      ❤️🇵🇹

    • @lightningboltpt
      @lightningboltpt Před 2 lety +17

      obrigado |!!

    • @latinEU
      @latinEU Před 2 lety +15

      🇵🇹 ❤🇧🇷

    • @jackmcnally9237
      @jackmcnally9237 Před 2 lety +11

      Muito melhor das ambitioences dos Ingleses. Sou Escoces pelos os meus tomates!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @redking8585
      @redking8585 Před 2 lety +7

      @@diamonia Mas tu sabes qual e a ascendencia do Gabriel? Nao, entao cala-te palhaco.

  • @AMINOMMA
    @AMINOMMA Před 2 lety +121

    Would you guys consider doing a Dutch-Portuguese war video next, maybe even as a part of an eighty years war series?

    • @tubarao1143
      @tubarao1143 Před 2 lety +6

      That would be interesting.

    • @pauloabreu2367
      @pauloabreu2367 Před 2 lety +20

      Good idea, the Dutch Portuguese war was the first global war , deserves a well studied work, and you are the right man to do that job!
      I hope that you accept this challenge.

    • @xavierrealmadrid7420
      @xavierrealmadrid7420 Před 2 lety +3

      make a video about the complete defeat of portugal by the spanish empire of felipe ii, 60 years of spanish rule

    • @huuugetomatoes4885
      @huuugetomatoes4885 Před 2 lety +29

      @@xavierrealmadrid7420 which defeat? He inherted the Thrones of Portugal because Sebastião had no heirs🤣. And you still managed to lose alot of portuguese colonies 😬

    • @tonybee8598
      @tonybee8598 Před 2 lety +1

      @@xavierrealmadrid7420 True!......in Portugal it was know as the 60 years of shame..

  • @walx274
    @walx274 Před 2 lety +37

    i love how they still use Total War clips and images haha it makes it feel almost wholesome lmao

  • @paulomartins1008
    @paulomartins1008 Před 2 lety +92

    Not often that I see the deeds of my Country's past shown with such rigor and care.
    Far superior exposition than any History teacher I've ever had.
    And as is needed every time we take stage in international affairs here is our battlecry:
    PORTUGAL CARALHO 🇵🇹

  • @dabibibibibi455
    @dabibibibibi455 Před 2 lety +34

    The battle of Diu in 1538 was crazy, the Portuguese are so scrappy, their history is full of wins against all odds

  • @ennui9745
    @ennui9745 Před 2 lety +44

    The Ottomans and Portuguese were playing AoE2 multiplayer for real.

  • @SayedI313
    @SayedI313 Před 2 lety +181

    Legend has it that during one of these campaigns, a portugese sailor would kill Montoya Beg. Years later, his son Indigo would exact revenge for this atrocity by saying, "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die" as he would kill the sailor

    • @jaydaytoday3548
      @jaydaytoday3548 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm pretty sure he's Spanish not Portuguese

    • @TheDevilsDIVISION
      @TheDevilsDIVISION Před 2 lety +6

      I couldn’t help but read that line in his accent. Great movie!

  • @douglasribeiro1790
    @douglasribeiro1790 Před 2 lety +98

    Congratulations for the detailed research and the video itself, a comprehensive work on the subject. Portuguese ventures into India was the cornerstone of the discovery of Brazil. The portuguese colonies in South America, India, Malacca, Africa, China, Timor formed a vast Empire of which Brazil eventually emerged to be the Crown Jewel. I salute my portuguese heritage, my mother language (última flor do Lácio..) and all lusophonic brothers around the World, siblings and cultural heirs of Portuguese influence into our own diverse and rich cultures. Honra e Glória aos bravos do passado, Ó Mar Salgado, quanto de teu sal são lágrimas de Portugal?

  • @arkhammemery4712
    @arkhammemery4712 Před 2 lety +10

    The virgin ww2 Battle of the Alantic vs the chad Ottoman-Portuguese trade war
    Virgin:
    - Lasted only like a couple years
    - Used uboats because resemble basement the most
    - No spices
    Chad:
    - Spanned literal decades
    - Thicc ship building
    - Has long range cannons. Still boards just to fk with them
    - Curry

  • @icysaracen3054
    @icysaracen3054 Před 2 lety +378

    The war was one of the very first capitalist war. Venetian merchants vouching for the Ottoman Muslim to beat catholic Portugal to ensure venice did not get kicked out of the trade monopoly. Money 💵 💵💵 talks.

    • @fede98k54
      @fede98k54 Před 2 lety +53

      @ana sheee As if any other nation was different. The Venetians just saw an opportunity in the weak and civil war ridded Roman Empire and took it: everyone wanted the cake, they just were the one to get it first.

    • @PhatCunt
      @PhatCunt Před 2 lety +34

      The Malmuks and Ottomans intervention in india. to secure their own trade. Are all trade wars capatalist?

    • @mrpopo-sf3ke
      @mrpopo-sf3ke Před 2 lety +13

      Praise God Portugal held their own 💪💪💪

    • @giorgiociaravolol1998
      @giorgiociaravolol1998 Před 2 lety +2

      @@fede98k54 venetians and genoese do everything for money, even now 😂 there's something about being from a maritime republic

    • @ziggytheassassin5835
      @ziggytheassassin5835 Před 2 lety +15

      What war isnt a capitalist war? Every war is fought to gain resources of some kind.

  • @Lazer-bp9lf
    @Lazer-bp9lf Před 2 lety +71

    I'm amazed just how mang times these two guys fought over the spice trade and how the Portuguese won most of these despite being being far away from their country. Innovation is really important indeed something which the Ottomans didn't consider doing until it was too late.

    • @egesisli5694
      @egesisli5694 Před 2 lety +28

      its more like ottomans asking themselves "can we go colonial and compete with portugese while competing asutria holy roman empire poland lithuania and venice at the same time?" and they wisely concluded "no" and didnt wasted resources on a negligible frontier

    • @NeoZeta
      @NeoZeta Před 2 lety +20

      @@egesisli5694 well, you can't have it all, can you? Do you realize how long it took the Portuguese to send an armada around Africa to get there? You guys were basically fighting at home. You were just unmatched in naval power.

    • @normmacdonaldliveseason3ep866
      @normmacdonaldliveseason3ep866 Před 2 lety +1

      @@egesisli5694 Cope! Portuguese pwn u.

    • @egesisli5694
      @egesisli5694 Před rokem

      @kamil s ok, kamil

    • @porothashawarma2339
      @porothashawarma2339 Před rokem +2

      @@NeoZeta *Outmatched

  • @torian5995
    @torian5995 Před 6 měsíci +14

    There is no other nation in the world that has done so much with so little population.

    • @josephrego2527
      @josephrego2527 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Herois do mar...Nobre povo...Nacao valente, imortal!

    • @user-fl5mq9kp7g
      @user-fl5mq9kp7g Před 2 měsíci

      ​@josephrego252Her mother is a pirate 😂😂😂😂😂😂7

  • @roddbroward9876
    @roddbroward9876 Před 2 lety +12

    King Sebastian’s death and the subsequent Hapsburg takeover was so tragic to Portugal that many still held to the belief that he had survived and would one day return to reclaim the throne and make the kingdom independent from Spain once again, as his corpse was never found.
    This whole idea at some point ended up getting some mythical status and mingling up with common old folk tales of dormant kings that await to return to their land in a time of hardship, such as King Arthur in Avalon. Some really clinged to this idea, and this legend was even evoked when the time came for the Portuguese to fight to break away from the Spanish Crown.
    Oddly enough, as late as the early 20th century there was this notion in Brazil among certain provincial anti-republic movements that King Sebastian would return to restore the then recently abolished monarchy in Brazil.

    • @PTPisco
      @PTPisco Před 2 lety

      To this day, we still say it as a joke that he will return to fix our country ahah

    • @furkanozturk3545
      @furkanozturk3545 Před rokem

      Wow 😮

  • @IbrahimDayax
    @IbrahimDayax Před 2 lety +21

    As a Somali I'm very grateful you guys decided to cover this topic!

    • @hassanmohamud3096
      @hassanmohamud3096 Před 2 lety +5

      Yep, glad we’re in history. When people look at Africa only slavery and colonization comes up but to have actual history is amazing, proud to be Somali

  • @joaoantunes4548
    @joaoantunes4548 Před 2 lety +38

    The portuguese started colonization 50 years before the spanish, managed to almost secure a monopoly on spices trade, went heads on the Ottoman which at the time was considered the biggest threat to the western world. To put it into perspective, imagine if the USA started space exploration 50 years before Russia and somehow achieved the monopoly of Oil in doing so, all while defeating some hazardous allien civilization and keeping it all a secret. I'm exaggerating, ofc, still goes to illustrate how big this feat was.

    • @mamba101
      @mamba101 Před 2 lety +2

      Being first in colonisation/exploitation is not an accolade to celebrate.

    • @joaoantunes4548
      @joaoantunes4548 Před 2 lety +13

      @@comradekenobi6908 It wasn't me that compared it. It was Professor Richard Unger from University of British Columbia at Vancouver who said that the first Caravela was cutting edge technology and compared it to a Space Shuttle.

    • @ricardogomes2576
      @ricardogomes2576 Před 2 lety +12

      @@comradekenobi6908 So you compare a giraffe with being able to control an ocean thousands of miles away from home through the use of technology? Well probably if this was done by the British would be recognized as a great feat. Always the same history cherry picking....

    • @ImperatorRom
      @ImperatorRom Před 2 lety +6

      @@comradekenobi6908 Indeed it isn't, in the XVth century it took almost 1 year to reach the Indias by the Cape of Good Hope route, the moon took 3 days... :P

    • @jomo3564
      @jomo3564 Před 2 lety

      @ComradeMoron
      Except, what Portugueses did at this time was a technological achievement.
      I'm not portuguese by the way

  • @zombierider2794
    @zombierider2794 Před 2 lety +29

    I’ve been watching historical documentaries since the 90’s, this channel is better than 99% of them. Keep up the good work!

  • @Erik_123
    @Erik_123 Před 2 lety +9

    Wow, I had no idea the Ottomans fought and held territories so far away from home! And all this warring with Portugal! Great video!

  • @bvthebalkananarchistmapper5642

    What a coincidence. I have been thinking of re-watching your Ottoman-Portuguese War series some of these days when I find the time, and here you go upload a movie encompassing everything said there and more. Even went on to download it

  • @ColdDrone13
    @ColdDrone13 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for putting together another long video! I appreciate the time and work that goes into these and love what you guys do. Keep up the great work!

  • @BilgemasterBill
    @BilgemasterBill Před 2 lety +12

    Thanks for putting this up here. Having only recently read Roger Crowley's excellent 'Empires of the Sea' about the Spanish and Ottoman conflicts of the same period in the Mediterranean, I very much enjoyed this look at the Portuguese-Ottoman struggles in the Indian Ocean, the peripheral but related events in the Horn of Africa, and the aftermath of Portugal's misadventure in North Africa. Thanks again!

    • @cg8397
      @cg8397 Před 2 lety +3

      Read Roger Crowley's "Conquerors" also, it deals with the Portuguese voyages to India.

  • @strategos2219
    @strategos2219 Před 2 lety +19

    Portugal:when you put all of yours points into naval skills

  • @ptlemon1101
    @ptlemon1101 Před 2 lety +164

    Props for my Turkish brothers. This was a legendary rivalry

    • @latinEU
      @latinEU Před 2 lety +9

      @Boş İşler Müdürü Respect Suliman, strategic genius and true warrior. It took us centuries of war to learn what true respect for others is.

    • @user-hr9jy8ru1g
      @user-hr9jy8ru1g Před 2 lety +11

      @@latinEU Thx mate. Also Spanish and Portuguese are great sailors.Respect.

    • @xavierrealmadrid7420
      @xavierrealmadrid7420 Před 2 lety +3

      @@user-hr9jy8ru1g the spanish was superior... nobody forget 1580!,, the complete defeat of the portuguese empire against the spanish empire of king felipe II,, Alvaro de Bazan was the best catholic sailor of all times and the Duke of Alba has taken Lisboa so easy.

    • @therealtruth460
      @therealtruth460 Před 2 lety +1

      @Boş İşler Müdürü but the turks harmed jews albanians serbians croatians romanians greeks for 400 years

    • @nezahuall
      @nezahuall Před 2 lety +13

      @@xavierrealmadrid7420 Que tristes comentarios escribes, no te dieron cariño en casa pobrecito?

  • @pastaconcurso6371
    @pastaconcurso6371 Před 2 lety +156

    Heróis do Mar, Nobre povo! Nação Valente, Imortal!

    • @abcdef27669
      @abcdef27669 Před 2 lety +13

      Levantai hoje de novo o esplendor de Portugal…

    • @pastaconcurso6371
      @pastaconcurso6371 Před 2 lety +11

      @@abcdef27669 Dentre as brumas da Vitória, ...

    • @mmmab1000
      @mmmab1000 Před 2 lety +11

      @@pastaconcurso6371 tá mal, a continuação é esta "Entre as brumas da memória
      Oh, Pátria, sente-se a voz..."

    • @pastaconcurso6371
      @pastaconcurso6371 Před 2 lety +12

      @@mmmab1000 desculpa-me. Não sou português.

    • @mmmab1000
      @mmmab1000 Před 2 lety +5

      @@pastaconcurso6371 Sem problema :)

  • @SuperDaveOkie
    @SuperDaveOkie Před rokem

    Wonderful video. Thanks for the longer format. I don't think I could have held as much information as you gave in its proper contexts had this video been done as piecemeal stories.

  • @nunolp9067
    @nunolp9067 Před 2 lety +2

    Great piece of history blended with epic battles and adventures. Amazing job!

  • @chrom3b00k8
    @chrom3b00k8 Před 2 lety +7

    Man these videos are always so educational yet entertaining at the same time, props to this channel for making history fun and accessible

  • @ulfeliasson5413
    @ulfeliasson5413 Před 2 lety +4

    As always, a stellar job. And of a topic I know very little. Will digest this with great interest. Thank you.

  • @thebeanymac
    @thebeanymac Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this! Much enjoyed. I was distracted a few times, but recall a fair bit I'd never heard before. Good job.

  • @darrellwade9448
    @darrellwade9448 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow! Simply wow! Masterful lesson on direct and collateral history that fully explains the stated subject. I complement your team.

  • @DirtyMardi
    @DirtyMardi Před 2 lety +40

    I really want a Sabaton song about some of these battles. These have been left too much in the shadow of what happened in Mediterranean and the Americas at the time. Magnificent video!

  • @memejirosano3350
    @memejirosano3350 Před 2 lety +20

    SIGAAA PESSOAL. VIVA PORTUGAL!
    A great "Obrigado" to Kings and Generals and everyone involved in this project.

  • @dfunk1866
    @dfunk1866 Před rokem +1

    Love this channel! It delivers the story in such depth without complicating the details.
    Keep it up guys!!!

  • @geordiejones5618
    @geordiejones5618 Před 2 lety +34

    Was not expecting 20 minutes of very very rarely covered Ethiopian history! That country has resisted foreign interference since the first Pharaohs and its awesome to see one of their most understudied conflicts covered here.

    • @kony12356
      @kony12356 Před 2 lety +1

      europe: we bring you christianity, ethiopia: oh great catholics thats exactly wath we orthodox christians needed

    • @powervr
      @powervr Před 2 lety

      @@kony12356 if it was not because of portuguese... ethiopia that muslim country... :D

    • @carlosmarcelino7
      @carlosmarcelino7 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Resistiram á interferencia estrangeira porque correm mais do outros.

    • @diinomaaxi
      @diinomaaxi Před 6 měsíci

      They couldn’t resist Somali and adel empire destroying them tho

  • @sergiomoreno119
    @sergiomoreno119 Před 2 lety +3

    Love your animations, it makes this fun to learn and simple to understand for people who don’t know strategies plans very well.💯

  • @171Mirza
    @171Mirza Před 2 lety +14

    These videos should be kept in some kind of video library. Pure gold made with huge effort. All respect and support!

  • @roncornelius8339
    @roncornelius8339 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent video!!! Really enjoy hearing Your information. Thank You 😊

  • @d.e.b.b5788
    @d.e.b.b5788 Před 2 lety

    Thank you again for putting up such a interesting history video. I learn more from you and history guy than I ever did in school. Great work!

  • @Lusitani74
    @Lusitani74 Před 2 lety +30

    Bear in mind that when a portuguese fleet of 400 ships is mentioned 95% of those were small oar powered vessels, smaller than galleys and only a few of the ships were of european construction...

    • @aliartk9155
      @aliartk9155 Před 2 lety +3

      Ottoman ones too

    • @monke6475
      @monke6475 Před 2 lety +8

      idk why but
      I think this channel tries to sugar-coat everytime muslim forces lose
      and villainize christians

    • @76456
      @76456 Před rokem

      @@monke6475 some of the creators are muslim

    • @76456
      @76456 Před rokem

      They were logistical boats certeinly, Or fishing boats of local working whit Portugal

    • @Lusitani74
      @Lusitani74 Před rokem

      @@76456 Not simply logistical boats. I don't know the name in english but we call them "fusta". Pretty much a small galley very common in India back then and used for everything from piracy to trading and fishing. Some were equipped for war and were sturdier.

  • @user-sk3mb1wt4g
    @user-sk3mb1wt4g Před rokem +7

    I am an Arab, and I was looking for an interesting detail in a video clip, not in books, but I was amazed by the neutrality in recounting the strength of both sides, and the respect for the content creator made me like this video. Indeed, the Mamluks were weak, and the Ottomans’ control over Egypt was a clever leap, and Spain’s preoccupation with the Americas was a wonderful opportunity. Precious, these centuries were interesting events, and the cold war, thank you, I am from Saudi Arabia in the heart of the Islamic capital

    • @mikidias
      @mikidias Před rokem +1

      Antha Saudi!??!?? 😯 😮
      Wallah??!! 🤩
      Min wen!??? 😁

    • @user-sk3mb1wt4g
      @user-sk3mb1wt4g Před rokem

      @@mikidias From Riyadh, and you?

  • @alexanderwaite9403
    @alexanderwaite9403 Před 2 lety

    What a great presentation!! Loads of information that I relearned is astounding. Where we you guys when I was doing my master's degree! I love your work and keep up the great work!!

  • @qaidikramuddin
    @qaidikramuddin Před rokem

    Wow! Your animations are legendary. It's like one is in one of those ships. I love how the pans, making the scene even more realistic.

  • @kokologix9834
    @kokologix9834 Před 2 lety +45

    Ahhh!! The good old Universal war Between the Ottomans and the Portuguese.

  • @sergioluz546
    @sergioluz546 Před 2 lety +58

    Could you do a video about the Portuguese history in Asia, please? I mean, the influence the portuguese had on Japan with firearms (and gastronomy) or even the deal with China about Macau

    • @76456
      @76456 Před 2 lety +8

      Portuguese words also influencied the Japanese Language.
      Portugal had a Feituria in Nagasaki

    • @reddog5031
      @reddog5031 Před 2 lety +5

      Apparently the Portuguese introduced playing cards to Japan and apparently the Japanese word for gangster Yakuza means a losing hand in cards.

    • @turalf.9039
      @turalf.9039 Před 2 lety +6

      Safavid-Portugal Wars are also very interesting and long lasting. Shame there ain't quite enough information about it on internet.

    • @jorge6207
      @jorge6207 Před 2 lety +1

      These channels don't do Portugal, unless Portugal stumbles into whatever crap they are covering.

  • @alexwall7204
    @alexwall7204 Před 2 lety

    Really enjoyed this video, thank you for creating it!

  • @zyadel.a4587
    @zyadel.a4587 Před 2 lety

    Great video!!! Learned a lot from this!!! Really helpfull and well narrated! Keep up the good work 💪👍

  • @MegaKapo12
    @MegaKapo12 Před 2 lety +43

    Learned more about the battle of Alcácer-Quibir in this segment than when I was in school. Didn't learn why Sebastião went to war only that he went and the people were still waiting for him back on a foggy day.

    • @divineriper
      @divineriper Před 2 lety +6

      Considering how significant that loss was we barely know anything about it, in school you are asked to know the year it ocurred and that's it, not a single thing about what motivated that incursion to Morocco.

  • @kubat552
    @kubat552 Před 2 lety +23

    Ahhh chaddest Portuguese-Ottoman rivalry

  • @Raven-dv7yb
    @Raven-dv7yb Před 2 lety +1

    I can't remember the last time I've watched regular programed television. K's and G's, great job, please keep up the good works!

  • @AdrYeah
    @AdrYeah Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing content as always, thank you!