Ribbentrop - Hitler's Foreign Minister Documentary

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  • čas přidán 8. 04. 2022
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Komentáře • 482

  • @PeopleProfiles
    @PeopleProfiles  Před 2 lety +34

    For your chance to win a Tesla Model X Plaid while supporting two great causes, go to www.omaze.com/thepeopleprofiles

  • @chronicmilitarycollector9232

    Nice video!
    In Otto Dietrich's book "The Hitler I Knew," Ribbentrop was given an ornate box as a gift for his birthday. At the party, which Hitler was attending, someone (I can't remember who now, maybe Goering?) stated something along the lines of "that box will make nice storage for all the treaties we will break." Dietrich stated it was the only time that he saw Hitler laugh uncontrollably. eluding to how he saw Ribbentrop's role.
    Please consider doing a video on Alfred Rosenberg. Very little is ever mentioned about him and I feel most people really don't know his roles in the 3rd Reich.

    • @chronicmilitarycollector9232
      @chronicmilitarycollector9232 Před 2 lety +10

      @@matthewwhitton5720 I wouldn't give such a harsh review of Rosenberg as a whole in his role in the 3rd Reich. While it is true Hitler did state that "Myth of the 20th Century" was largely unreadable and did not actually read the book, Rosenberg was the editor of the "Völkischer Beobachter." For those unaware, this was the main newspaper of the 3rd Reich, much like "Pravda" of the Soviet Union. While many did not read his most "popular" book, all of Germany read his newspaper daily. Hitler I think largely viewed Rosenberg's more in depth writings as something necessary for posterity, to have their own philosophic writings, maybe even one day to foster a new religion long after a victory. Hitler being the practical man he was, however, I don't think such things interested him much.
      It is odd that Rosenberg was head of the RMBO, considering he was in favor of making Ukraine an independent Nationalist state and largely saw Slavs as Aryan, where Hitler had the complete opposite view.
      I've read most of Rosenberg's writings, and I have to agree with Hitler, that they are painful to get through. I think Rosenberg was maybe writing for intellectuals well versed in the subjects he writes about, not to the laymen.

    • @seidring9856
      @seidring9856 Před 2 lety +1

      Commovente. Poi giustiziato, impiccato collo rotto, kraut kaputt

    • @raginald7mars408
      @raginald7mars408 Před 2 lety +2

      it was even Worse. " I will brew them a Devil´s Drink" - was his favourite Mantra. He drank it himself - and then we all...

    • @robinhood4911
      @robinhood4911 Před 2 lety +4

      Otto Dietrich's book "The Hitler I Knew," in my opinion is worthless as a source of information. The book was written at the behest of the winners and, in my opinion, is full of lies. If you read his pre-war 1934 book "With Hitler on the Road to Power" it is very interesting.

    • @robinhood4911
      @robinhood4911 Před 2 lety +3

      @@matthewwhitton5720 You wrote:
      Hitler himself was said to have (quite ironically) declared Rosenberg's tome, 'The Myth of the Twentieth Century', as wholly unreadable.
      I wouldn't be so sure about it, this is a post-war opinion, probably dictated by the winners. Also, saying that he has not read this book is in my opinion funny. Hitler read an awful lot and had a memory like a computer. There's even a book called "Hitler's Private Library: The Books That Shaped His Life" by Timothy W. Ryback

  • @antaibhshaglas3737
    @antaibhshaglas3737 Před 2 lety +55

    Enjoyed the documentry.Hard to come across a good documentary on Ribbentropp

  • @BenjiMordino
    @BenjiMordino Před 9 měsíci +7

    It's wild to think how many Ribbentrops we don't know about from the ancient world. Some fascinating people have no history recorded.

  • @noahhess4955
    @noahhess4955 Před 2 lety +37

    This channel is amazing, I just found it today and I’m obsessed! I can’t believe it doesn’t have 5x more subscribers than it does now; the content is pure gold!

  • @fritzs1207
    @fritzs1207 Před rokem +10

    Ribbentrop was right in drawing a real picture for the Fuhrer , he told the Fuhrer finish Britain first . A British guarantee to Poland in-case German invasion BUT not British guarantee to Poland against Russia, the Fuhrer should've seen that ! say what ever you want about Ribbentrop but his way was the right way

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 2 měsíci +2

      And Ribbentrop never wanted to break the non-aggression pact with the Soviets, he was even willing to give Bulgaria to Stalin if it meant avoiding a falling out and war between Germany and Russia.

  • @sweetpeachbellini8245
    @sweetpeachbellini8245 Před rokem +19

    I've been binging your content the past few days and must say that all of the videos are so well-researched that they should be recommended by History/Political Science teachers to their students to write essays. Personally, I've always wondered what became of the children of the high-ranking Nazis. So I checked Google and was surprised to see that Von Ribbentrop's son Rudolf (the only one I could find any info on because of his military status during the war,) had only just passed on in May of 2019. In any case, your biographies are always fascinating no matter what.

    • @TJ-hs1qm
      @TJ-hs1qm Před rokem

      Research the families that funded the Nazis... very interesting

    • @annaczapla4366
      @annaczapla4366 Před rokem +1

      Gerald Posner's in his book "Hitler's children" interviewed sons & daughters of Nazis like Niklas Frank, the only Nazi offspring who condemned his father Hans Frank appointed Governor General of occupied Poland.Rolf Mengele who In 1986 "Today" show was interviewed by host Phil Donahue as son of Joseph Mengele called "Angel of Death" who experimented on Auschwitz camp inmates and who escaped to Argentina after war. He remained in hideout for over 30 years thanks to Rolf's silence. Daughters of Göring & Himmler, Edda and Gudrum stayed devoted to their criminals fathers refusing to acknowledged their crimes. Most of the Nazi offsprings live in USA.

  • @Tomatohater64
    @Tomatohater64 Před 2 lety +81

    Thank you for this superb presentation on Joachim Von Ribbentrop. Of all the higher level Nazis, I always found him to be the most interesting and pathetic at the same time. Other Nazi officials referred to him as "Champagne Boy." Ultimately he got what he had coming. Again, many thanks.

    • @NJC5628
      @NJC5628 Před 2 lety +3

      U in jjjj yr

    • @SlinkyBack
      @SlinkyBack Před 2 lety

      Quite possibly the lover of Mrs Wallis Simpson, the wife of Edward the Vlll ... Lately the Duke and Duchess of Windsor ... Both were considered a threat to Britain as they both had Nazi leanings.

    • @Tomatohater64
      @Tomatohater64 Před 2 lety +5

      @@SlinkyBack That would fall in line with his personality, morals, and ethics - or lack thereof.

    • @Eyewonder3210
      @Eyewonder3210 Před 2 lety +3

      One book I read on the last days of the war said he corrected the teasing by Goring and others who refused to use VON and simply said Ribbentrop. "It's VON Ribbentrop!!" Which they laughed at.

    • @Tomatohater64
      @Tomatohater64 Před 2 lety +6

      @@Eyewonder3210 Titanically insufferable were the words Hitler himself used to describe him.

  • @kryts27
    @kryts27 Před 2 lety +74

    Von Ribbentrop was a social climber and oppertunist. It was these combinations or flaws in his character, plus his political naivety and slavish devotion to Hitler, that propelled him down the path of chief Nazi diplomat (and internal enemy of the wily Admiral Canaris of the republican spy agency, the Abwehr, that Ribbentrop constantly fought for control over). Ribbentrop had a choice to stay out of politics and comfortably remain in his wife's business of selling wine, but his amibition drove him into dark places, that he did not have the wisdom or intelligence to back out of (in the early phases). Although, Albert Speer was as politically implicated in his actions as armament minister as Ribbentrop by using slave labour from concentration camps and working them to death, Speer later escaped the hangman's noose by his much better crafted line of defence than Rippentrop. In my opinion, in his capacity as armaments minister using forced labour under dellberate appalling conditions (that Speer would have known about) and his closeness to Hitler, Speer deserved to be hanged as much as Ribbentrop was for his nefarious actions, but justice does not always get her man.

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy Před rokem +7

      I haven't watched this video yet but I read a very interesting book about Fritz Kolbe, a man who worked in Germany's Foreign Office before Hitler came to power and all through WWII. When Hitler and the Nazis took power in Germany, Kolbe took an instant dislike to them that only every grew more intense as time went on. He turned out to be one of the most important spies in WWII. He sure had some words for Ribbentrop, none of them good. The two things I really remember from the book:
      1) Ribbentrop insisted on being called "Herr von Ribbentrop" and woe to the employee who left off the "von". He was known to make an employee stand at attention while he screamed at them for several minutes. A low-level employee was likely to be fired on the spot, an employee of higher standing would keep his/her job but be docked in pay, would find themselves being assigned menial jobs in addition to their regular duties, and was sure to never get a good formal evaluation ever again.
      2) The running joke in the Foreign Office was that Hitler was the only one in the Reich who didn't know that Ribbentrop was a rambling idiot because, in meetings, Hitler always did all the talking.

    • @geraldvaughan5103
      @geraldvaughan5103 Před rokem +2

      Very well expressed - my thoughts all in one but you've left me nothing to write now, but you've probably expressed it better than I might have.

    • @CherylSimser
      @CherylSimser Před rokem +2

      I agree fully. Speer certainly deserved the same fate as Ribbentrop, perhaps even more so. It still baffles me to this day that that did not occur.

    • @ScottPalmer-mp1we
      @ScottPalmer-mp1we Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@Skank_and_Gutterboy I haven't finished William Shirer's "Rise and Fall of the Third Reich" yet, but he calls Ribbentrop "dull-witted" . He also stated, concerning Ribbentrop that he was, "incompetent, vain as a peacock, arrogant, and without humor." Ribbentrop was the worst possible choice for such a post . . ."

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy Před 4 měsíci

      @@ScottPalmer-mp1we
      Yes. I've never seen a good review of him. Pretty much anybody that dealt with him had some level of dislike of the "man".

  • @lesliereissner4711
    @lesliereissner4711 Před 2 lety +20

    Until I read a piece in the Ottawa Citizen in 2018 I had been unaware that RIbbentrop (before acquiring the "von") had cut a rather dashing figure in Canada's capital for several years. It is interesting that in later life so many would find him so repellant. And that even as the war was being lost he pressured countries allied to or under German occupation to deport their Jewish citizens to certain death is indicative of his true nature.

  • @maryt7959
    @maryt7959 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Channel like this one and your extraordinary work … it’s what everyone needs to listen too … learning history and what people do it’s extremely important ! Thank you .

  • @PoppysGuitar
    @PoppysGuitar Před rokem +8

    He was against the invasion of the Soviet Union. That alone made him a defeatist in the eyes of Hitler. Thus he was finished as a rising star in the Nazi regime. As a leading nazi figure, it didn't matter whether he knew or didn't know about the death camps. As Speer said at Nuremburg, there was a collective guilt for all the Nazi leaders and all would have to pay. Speer by some quirk of fate was spared but he certainly knew that his war industry was working captive people to death in his factories.

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 3 měsíci

      He was never a rising star. He had no strong support base from within the party or the army. Hitler actually liked Ribbentrop's liasion representative, Walther Hewel, and felt much closer to him than he did to Ribbentrop.

  • @beachcomberbloke462
    @beachcomberbloke462 Před 2 lety +45

    Mind totally blown by the fact he had an ambition to be Lord of Cornwall!!

    • @sharongudkovs3312
      @sharongudkovs3312 Před rokem +3

      Yes Blew My Mind To. Thought it a bit funny myself as I got a good laugh out of it. 😃😅

    • @alexanderlee5669
      @alexanderlee5669 Před rokem +1

      Bizzare. On an unrelated note I used to work for a holiday cottage company. Today Germans love Cornwall for some reason. Apparently there is some TV show set in Cornwall they love.

    • @MrVorpalsword
      @MrVorpalsword Před rokem +1

      why, its a pretty easy job? - King Charles III made a decent fist of it.

  • @johnimsdahl9670
    @johnimsdahl9670 Před 2 lety +33

    Well done. I had the recent pleasure of visiting Nuremberg and float along the Danube River. Germany, Czech Republic, Hungary and Austria have such a vast history that few North Americans know about, or were taught. Changing names, borders, effects of occupations, loss of monarchies and changing governments had such a widespread influence upon their citizens. Nevertheless they are some of the most wonderful, delightful, and engaging people who are prepared to share their history with us, the unknowing. While there are shameful and horrible events in their history, so too are there shameful and horrible events in our USA history and as humans we can recognize these shortcomings.

    • @jasminespencer3992
      @jasminespencer3992 Před rokem +3

      I did the Danube cruise as well, simply wonderful

    • @bavros1998
      @bavros1998 Před rokem +3

      Very well spoken. Great comment.

    • @johnmorrison9758
      @johnmorrison9758 Před rokem

      No other place in the world shares the incredibly horrible history that Europe does. A so called cradle of civilization that has seen non stop wars, including two world wars that killed tens of millions, not to mention the dictatorships and kings of old that slaughtered even more millions. You cannot compare anything in North America with any of that.

  • @charlesmartella
    @charlesmartella Před rokem +2

    Herman Goering is my favourite.

  • @richardshiggins704
    @richardshiggins704 Před 2 lety +11

    Excellent documentary and narration .

  • @gene51231356
    @gene51231356 Před 2 lety +13

    Rudolf Hess next please!

  • @Libertyjack1
    @Libertyjack1 Před 2 lety +50

    Correction about Canada being part of the British Commonwealth. That is its status following the Statute of Westminster, in the '30s, which made all self-governing countries of the British rhelm, functionally independent. During WW1, it was a member of the British Empire. The difference is that Canada's entry in WW2 required a vote of the Canadian Parliament, where by comparison, Canada was de-facto at war, when Britain entered WW1.

    • @reddeercanoe
      @reddeercanoe Před rokem +6

      This is correct, Canada is the only nation in the Western Hemisphere not to gain its independence by revolution against it’s mother country but by defence of that country. The first international treaty signed by Canada was the treaty of Versailles. Canada lost 65,000 died in Ww1.

    • @cabba4585
      @cabba4585 Před rokem +2

      It's still part of the Commonwealth though. Though Canada is an independent country, Britain's Queen Elizabeth remains the nation's head of state. The Queen does not play an active role in Canadian politics, and her powers are mostly symbolic.

    • @Libertyjack1
      @Libertyjack1 Před rokem +1

      @@cabba4585 My point is that at the time Ribbentrop lived in Canada, the Commonwealth didn't even exist.
      The Commonwealth is an organization of nations that were former colonies of Great Britain (an entity that no longer exists, under that title). Countries don't even need to have the Queen as their Head of State. Canada's pretty much constitutionally stuck with the Crown, however, as part of a wheeler-deal some provincial leaders made with Trudeau Sr, to patriate the Constitution. Among them was the staunch monarchist, New Brunswick's Richard 'Disco Dick' Hatfield, whose high British virtue extended to having a stream of quasi-adult male friend visiting his residents for...tea.

    • @cabba4585
      @cabba4585 Před rokem +1

      @@Libertyjack1 I see, the first line of your original post seemed to suggest it wasn't

    • @RoyKoopaling
      @RoyKoopaling Před rokem

      @@Libertyjack1 Why would you not want to have the monarchy? Totally symbolic and ensures you maintain a strong relationship with the UK.

  • @dk560
    @dk560 Před 2 lety +57

    Not only are the Brits masters of secret operations, they also excel in documentaries.

    • @matthewmayer6554
      @matthewmayer6554 Před 2 lety +1

      Europe looks beautiful. I would love to see Germany

    • @geraldvaughan5103
      @geraldvaughan5103 Před rokem

      Indeed, I find these documentaries very clear and comprehensive. I like to interpret History as Human behavioural studies as all that really divides us is the circumstances in which we find ourselves. France created circumstances for the German people in 1918 which could only be a most fertile ground for revolt. But we never seen to learn. When America under Ground W Bush entered into Irac he left behind the perfect incubation for all what was to follow. What do unemployed military forces do only to go underground for a bit and emerge a lethal force. Thus the creation of Isis and all what followed. Remember the human being is the most dangerous animal in the planet and e must organise society in such a way as to make easy the suppression of our darker selves. I see the atrocities of the Natzi as a reflection of myself in similar circumstances. In other words, we are all capable of despicable acts of unfortunate enough to find ourselves surrounded by a catalyst of circumstances to trigger it.
      World War Two is a fascinating insight into human behaviour. Germany 1930's, a find race of modern sophisticated people, highly industrialised and enjoying a standard of living second to none at the time. Yet, it stooped to genocide in an industrialised way. We have seen genocide before but in very primitive societies. What makes this different is that in a perfectly modernized society it could be carried out in an industrialised manner.
      Complacency would be our worst

    • @christopher5361
      @christopher5361 Před rokem

      …and comedies. And classic rock

    • @anthonygreen2100
      @anthonygreen2100 Před rokem

      And music.
      And pageantry.
      And pomp and circumstance.

    • @dk560
      @dk560 Před rokem +2

      @@anthonygreen2100 I have to admit my favorite groups are British.

  • @anthonywalsh785
    @anthonywalsh785 Před 2 lety +8

    excellent and very informative video.
    i wish though you had mentioned the horrific debacle of ribbentrop's execution.

  • @BELCAN57
    @BELCAN57 Před 2 lety +19

    Please consider an episode on Kaiser Friedrich (Wilhelm's Father). Under his rule The Great War might have been avoided.

    • @marianneisaacs8232
      @marianneisaacs8232 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Yes another casualty of tobacco. He died of throat cancer

  • @robinhood4670
    @robinhood4670 Před rokem +3

    Ribbon drop had the right idea with a p a c t with Soviet union. It worked beautifully and it knocked Britain and France on their backs. Maybe if he had just once told Hitler no I think it's a better idea to conquer Britain or just leave well enough alone for a couple years and soak up the riches that they'd already conquered, Germany may have been Victorious overall. But he would have had to stand up to Hitler and apparently he wasn't able to do that.

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 2 měsíci

      With Stalin building up his army in 1940-1941? That would be stupid.

  • @TheAslan1975
    @TheAslan1975 Před 2 lety +4

    I think that the USA was the only country that Hitler officially declared war on. In a book on Ribbentrop by Michael Bloch, it was stated that he converted to Lutherism during his confinement at Nuremberg. Bloch also states that his hanging was not very efficient and took 10-15 minutes to end.

    • @brega6286
      @brega6286 Před rokem

      Somebody goofed in the length of the rope...or not.

  • @jackcade68
    @jackcade68 Před 2 lety +6

    First off, ty for this episode. Very well done sir! This is a fascinating tale, the foreign minister! Who do you select as a foreign minister in 1938 after the die had been cast? A pysedo-intelluctual with nobility aspirations.

  • @Lowbro1351
    @Lowbro1351 Před 2 lety +39

    Been looking forward to this one. Such a fascinating character during WW2.

    • @seidring9856
      @seidring9856 Před 2 lety +8

      Affascinante? Rivoltante ditei. Scusi lei esalta i carnefici?

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 Před rokem +4

      have to wonder how he would have done on the russian front....

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 2 měsíci

      @@frankpienkosky5688 He sought peace with Russia in 1943, he was working with Swedish contacts to make it happen, but he finally got blocked by Hitler.

  • @jantomasjuza7907
    @jantomasjuza7907 Před 2 lety +19

    Great documentary (as many others at the People Profiles). It seems that many atrocities have been made possible by people who just did or said nothing against them. As much as I can understand that everybody can't be a hero who would rather be killed then tolerate any violence against innocent people, I think that "yes"-men and opportunists like Ribbentrop have no excuse whatsoever.

    • @strikerorwell9232
      @strikerorwell9232 Před 2 lety

      People didnt stand up against Hitler and Stalin. But now when the Globalists are on the march with the World Economic Forums Führer- Klaus "You will own nothing and be happy" Schwab, people worldwide must stand up against the Fascist Globalist state, they are pushing for!

    • @JohnSmith-rw2yn
      @JohnSmith-rw2yn Před rokem

      Oh I dunno. this guy seems to have tried to please and even the nazi were like, oh god this guy again. Government didn't want him, Nazi leaders didn't want him, own department bemoaned him. Bit of a useless guy really lol

  • @orarinnsnorrason4614
    @orarinnsnorrason4614 Před 2 lety +4

    Excellent documentary. Great job.

  • @jacobbartram5202
    @jacobbartram5202 Před rokem +1

    Thank you. I'm really enjoying these profiles.

  • @ralphnoyes4366
    @ralphnoyes4366 Před 2 lety +2

    Fine content, well-done. Very informative.

  • @bernhardwall6876
    @bernhardwall6876 Před rokem +3

    I never knew that Ireland had stayed out of the war.

  • @paddyseamair6336
    @paddyseamair6336 Před rokem +3

    Kaunas was not the second main city of Lithuania, but the capital because Vilnius then Wilno,formerly Wilna was in Poland.

  • @dannybeun948
    @dannybeun948 Před 2 lety +7

    Fantastic documentary 👌

  • @bobbyantrobus1805
    @bobbyantrobus1805 Před 2 lety +31

    The GOAT historical biography channel currently

    • @benjaminrees6665
      @benjaminrees6665 Před 2 lety +7

      Agreed! The best
      Simon Whistler has carved out a decent biography channel. But no where near these guys

    • @benjaminrees6665
      @benjaminrees6665 Před 2 lety

      @Big Bazza no. He said what he meant and I agree. There are many very in depth history channels on CZcams

    • @benjaminrees6665
      @benjaminrees6665 Před 2 lety

      @Big Bazza biographics doesn't hold a candle to the people's profiles. It's more of a familiarization than a biography

  • @josesiliezar1758
    @josesiliezar1758 Před 2 lety +30

    "Even with all I know, if in this cell Hitler should come to me and say 'do this!', I would still do it."
    --Joachim von Ribbentrop

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Před 2 lety +9

      now THAT is fanaticism!

    • @josesiliezar1758
      @josesiliezar1758 Před 2 lety +4

      @@harrietharlow9929 Yes, it is.

    • @AirForceFalcons_9922
      @AirForceFalcons_9922 Před 2 lety

      No different than Trump loyalist. Treason, insurgency, attempted coup, ...Yeah, they would still do what Trump tells them to. In America's case, no one in Trump's SS Squad is getting punished or having to answer for the crimes and other criminal activities they plotted, damn near carried out and is plotting for the next mid-term and presidential elections.

    • @die1mayer
      @die1mayer Před 2 lety +9

      @@harrietharlow9929 loyalty...

    • @robinhood4911
      @robinhood4911 Před 2 lety +5

      @@harrietharlow9929 You do not understand what he said. To understand this first you have to understand who Hitler was and what he wanted.
      Start your education (and forget everything earlier in your head) from these items:
      "The Myth of German Villainy" by Benton L. Bradberry
      "Hitler's Revolution: ideology, Social Programs, Foreign Affairs"
      by Tedor Richard
      "Les Responsables de la Deuxième Guerre Mondial" Paul Rassinier
      "Germany`s war" by John Wear
      "Hitler Democrat" by Leon Degrell
      "Hitler's Table Talk: 1941-1944" by Hugh Roper

  • @IDBTitanosaurus
    @IDBTitanosaurus Před rokem +2

    The saddest thing about Von Ribbentrop, had Hitler not invaded Russia, Joey might still be alive.

  • @Bigsky1991
    @Bigsky1991 Před rokem +1

    Ribbentrop's son was a Hauptsturmführer and Panzer Kompanie Führer in the LSSAH (Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler) aka the 1st SS Panzer Division. He was also a Knights Cross holder.

  • @limehousechappy7400
    @limehousechappy7400 Před rokem +2

    Read the book "How we squandered the Reich" by Reinhard Spitzy, who was Secretary of the German Ambassador in London. Then you will know, what a tragic miscast Ribbentrop was.

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 2 měsíci

      Read the book "Hitler and the English" by Fritz Hesse, who was the German Foreign Office advisor on British affairs. He tells how Ribbentrop tried 4 different times from 1942-1945 to work on peace negotiations with both the British and Soviets, and he was blocked by the Fuehrer whenever he was advancing on the project.

  • @jamescarel5520
    @jamescarel5520 Před rokem +2

    This contrasts very much with American styles presentations which are Hollywoodian at best and usually paint the perfect vilain or hero out of the individuals.

  • @dreamcast3607
    @dreamcast3607 Před 2 lety +10

    I would like to ask a question. If you say Germany's former colonies in Africa were unimportant to Hitler, why did he not agree to let them go to Franco as part of the agreement to declare war on the allies?

    • @realniggashit3
      @realniggashit3 Před 2 lety +3

      @@balabanasireti Franco was smart. He was playing both sides.

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 3 měsíci +1

      Franco didn't want German colonies in Africa, he wanted the French ones.

  • @anthonymcguire8478
    @anthonymcguire8478 Před rokem

    Very good video ribbentrop is a interesting character I have a suggestion for a few videos how about the 19th century mexican generals santa anna ampudia bravo woll etc

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke Před rokem +2

    RIH
    Joachim von Ribbentrop
    (1893-1946)

  • @markmeyer4664
    @markmeyer4664 Před 2 lety +11

    I love History

  • @Wenchework
    @Wenchework Před rokem +1

    Theres a saying «To kill a monster you have to become the monster»I think that about sums up Hitler and Stalin

  • @dreamingflurry2729
    @dreamingflurry2729 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Nobility is not "upper middle class" - Seriously, no way! That is solidly upper class!

  • @erichall465
    @erichall465 Před měsícem

    Excellent doc! I've always thought he was just a passive foreign minister

  • @The123rasputin
    @The123rasputin Před 9 měsíci +1

    Great video generally in terms of telling the story of the man. But why do people say he was dim-witted when, from a Nazi perspective, he had the best strategy: defeat Britain and stay allied to Russia.

  • @joehart7260
    @joehart7260 Před 2 lety +3

    Anyone who believed power in Britain lay in the monarchy and not the government could not have been very bright.

  • @kylemendoza8860
    @kylemendoza8860 Před rokem +3

    Hiller didn't scrap the agreement. Stalin who broke the agreement by innovating Bukovina in 1940.

  • @morganmcgeoy4250
    @morganmcgeoy4250 Před rokem +3

    This stuff gets complicated in a way when his entire life history is analyzed. But in no way is he guiltless but there's many more than him who were much more complicit.

    • @anymongus
      @anymongus Před 4 měsíci

      Tons of complicit people who got away with murder.

  • @thesunrising4982
    @thesunrising4982 Před 2 lety +4

    Quite interesting, thank you.

  • @rockgodoftheuniverse
    @rockgodoftheuniverse Před rokem +1

    There is a free PDF version of a small book called This Man Ribbentrop that I found some years ago.

  • @dry5555
    @dry5555 Před rokem +7

    Before watching this video I thought Ribbentrop was more intelligent than he actually was. More of a mediocre yes man.

  • @markmeyer4664
    @markmeyer4664 Před 2 lety +3

    Great documentary

  • @coltentackett892
    @coltentackett892 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Glad to know Volkswagen sponsored this video 😂😂😂

  • @michaelpisani5962
    @michaelpisani5962 Před rokem

    Excellent presentation and a few surprising facts.

  • @paulbrower4265
    @paulbrower4265 Před 2 lety +2

    Charm that one uses to get away with bad stuff is one mark of a sociopath.

  • @jerhurricane
    @jerhurricane Před 2 lety +3

    Have you thought about doing one on joanna of castile?

  • @johnrose4572
    @johnrose4572 Před rokem

    Hitler was actually quite annoyed with Mussolini over the Munich conference. The Fuhrer did not really want the Sudetenland - he wanted to conquer Czechoslovakia; manufacturing the Sudeten crisis was only a pretext. But the summit had been the Duce's initiative; and Hitler could not afford a direct snub to his own chief ally.

  • @eleanorkett1129
    @eleanorkett1129 Před 2 lety +11

    My answer to the question is both. He was a sycophant of Hitler and, as such, was very much complicit in the crimes of the regime. In order to gain favor he was willing to involve himself in murder. He might not have been too bright, but stupidity is not a good defense.
    Very fine presentation.

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 2 měsíci

      Major nations don't consider their leaders killing civilians to be murder, otherwise most recent US presidents are guilty of murder.

  • @CanHistory2012
    @CanHistory2012 Před 2 lety +2

    Minor correction: Joachim was born in 1893 not 83

  • @shmoothfba1470
    @shmoothfba1470 Před 2 lety +5

    This documentary channel is the truth

  • @hjyjlkpoijnfgtr
    @hjyjlkpoijnfgtr Před rokem +1

    Could you guys invite Mark Felton for a collab one of these days? That’ll be cool

  • @eduardomalveiropereiraleit4705

    Thank you Very much! Your content is precioous!

  • @petecapper8399
    @petecapper8399 Před 9 měsíci

    don't forget, his sidekick, Ron Von Ribbentrop almost won the Minehead Bye election in the 1980s

  • @balrog322
    @balrog322 Před 2 lety +8

    Probably the only champagne salesman to become foreign minister of a major nation.

  • @shutup2751
    @shutup2751 Před 2 lety +10

    at the time of the pact with the soviet union he could be considered the de facto deputy leader of germany though as the war progressed he was basically relegated to a not so useful yes man

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 3 měsíci

      He was never the deputy leader of Germany, he had a weak power base and he had too many regime enemies especially Goebbels and Goering.

    • @user-wj6dt5bq3w
      @user-wj6dt5bq3w Před 2 měsíci

      Deputy leader of Germany was Goering, third was Hess.

  • @BanderaMafia
    @BanderaMafia Před 2 lety +2

    Now we have the pact 2.0

  • @spencerpollock5688
    @spencerpollock5688 Před 2 lety +10

    Can you do the story of leaders of Germany World War 1 such as Paul Von Hindenburg and was he a great general or the man riding the coattails of others or Kaiser Wilhelm ll a Noble leader or a Madman keep up the amazing work

  • @mikebailey9566
    @mikebailey9566 Před rokem +4

    Ribbentrop was known in diplomatic circles as a sort of dim witted fellow.

  • @stephenhirsch8521
    @stephenhirsch8521 Před 2 lety

    Will you be doing one on Hess?

  • @catherinecoales4392
    @catherinecoales4392 Před rokem

    The force of evil whether through ideology or pursuit of power for its own sake leads to the same outcome. To try to understand either mindset fills me with horror and some how leaves me so doomladen that I wonder if these evil forces are still winning today as they try to exhaust the goodness in the world. God help the people to whom their mindsets caused unimaginable fear and misery. A very good documentary. I abhore the lot of them regardless of their motive.

  • @jennyleishman9617
    @jennyleishman9617 Před rokem +1

    He played golf in my hometown of Donaghadee Co Down Northern Ireland... Just b4 the 2nd WW...

  • @elapaszczynski495
    @elapaszczynski495 Před 2 lety +1

    Very interesting documentary

  • @cobusprinsloo
    @cobusprinsloo Před rokem +3

    Was von Ribbentrop’s direct involvement with the holocaust proven beyond a doubt? Besides this, I fail to understand why he received the death penalty.

    • @StoneInMySandal
      @StoneInMySandal Před rokem +2

      His sentence was based on the totality of his crimes, not any particular crime. His involvement was demonstrated definitively in correspondence where he directly intervened to accelerate the removal of Jews from Axis satellites with the express intent of extermination.
      The crimes against peace charge was a major contributor. Documentation exposing the fact he had negotiated with foreign governments in bad faith. He also engaged in manipulation of the plebiscite in Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland and he tried to get Japan to invade Russia.
      Any of the individual charges qualified for capital punishment, but all of them together made a custodial sentence impossible.

  • @Nah08
    @Nah08 Před 2 lety +1

    You need to profile Oswald cobblepot

  • @jacquesmertens3369
    @jacquesmertens3369 Před 2 lety +17

    Wonderful documentary about a less known Nazi figure.
    It does surprise me that some people keep referring to the Nazi's as right wing, when Hitler himself made it very clear the Nazi's were socialists. His voters were mainly factory workers, impoverished by the Versailles treaty and by the 1929 financial crash. In ideological terms the communists weren't his adversary, but he competed with them during the elections, therefore he wanted them out. After WW II the Nazi ideology and many of its traditions and institutions were perpetuated in the DDR. But this time they called themselves socialists. Compare the Hitlerjugend to the FDJ and you will hardly find any difference. An inconvenient truth perhaps.

    • @Nah08
      @Nah08 Před 2 lety

      Right wing left wing don't matter hopefully there all rotting in hell

    • @mikesilverton2309
      @mikesilverton2309 Před 2 lety +1

      As a "socialist" regime the Nazis operated within a capitalist system at least as regards armaments.

    • @jacquesmertens3369
      @jacquesmertens3369 Před 2 lety

      @@mikesilverton2309 The nazi government plundered private savings accounts. Private companies were forced to hire workers, paid with promissory notes (Öffa bills).
      In theory private companies still existed, but in reality they were puppets of the regime. Nearly all imports were forbidden. And just like in any communist/socialist state everyone had a job, at least on paper. The Nazi regime was socialist/communist in nearly every aspect.

    • @realniggashit3
      @realniggashit3 Před 2 lety

      @@mikesilverton2309 The current CCP regime in China isn't any different lol

    • @destubae3271
      @destubae3271 Před rokem +1

      @@mikesilverton2309 If they were capitalist, the ideology and policies would make no sense. Lenin wasn't socialist by that definition

  • @jong2001
    @jong2001 Před 2 lety +1

    Another amazing vid!
    Always been facinated by the aztecs since I was a kid for some reason, would be very gool to see a video on the conquistador who slayed them down, Fernando Cortez

  • @hectorkeezy1633
    @hectorkeezy1633 Před rokem +1

    I will do it when i get home

  • @raymondreaney6988
    @raymondreaney6988 Před rokem +1

    Hitler's choice to attack Russia and leave the UK undefeated was because by 1940 Germany was suffering from both an oil and food shortage. This gave Hitler 2 options, the first being to invade the UK which has little food and no oil, or invade Russia which had tons of food and oil. Certain officials knew that by 1941 Germany would have ran out of oil and food, hence why Hitler attacked Russia and tried to capture the food and oil fields in the South of Russia.
    I don't think this was Hitler being mad or going against his diplomats, this was a strategic plan to capture the food and oil Germany would have needed in 1942 / 43.

  • @robertrobinson3788
    @robertrobinson3788 Před 2 lety +2

    He had his own special insignia a eagle standing on a globe.

  • @iwatchDVDsonXbox360
    @iwatchDVDsonXbox360 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks. Would be cool to see a video about Molotov, but to be honest it's not a high priority for me right now.

    • @joehart7260
      @joehart7260 Před 2 lety +1

      That would be fascinating, especially his meeting with Ribbentrop in Berlin in 1940 when Ribbentrop tried to convince Molotov that Britain was finished while British bombs were falling overhead.

  • @skandababy
    @skandababy Před 2 lety

    Why didn't you write his full name? It's not even in the description.

  • @juliemerritt5144
    @juliemerritt5144 Před 2 lety

    Good Documentary

  • @silviosaditesche1556
    @silviosaditesche1556 Před rokem +1

    Henkell, ein ausserordentlicher guter Wein!

  • @saurannuraliyev1695
    @saurannuraliyev1695 Před rokem +1

    5:20 Kaiser Wilhelm II

  • @robwebster7406
    @robwebster7406 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the great vid, if I win that battery car can I swap it for a Ford 🤔

  • @yourdad329
    @yourdad329 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you

  • @RobertJonesWightpaint
    @RobertJonesWightpaint Před 2 lety +4

    Reichstag is pronounced Rikestag - more or less: the 'chs' is hard, 'ks'. And while we're in tedious pedant's corner, your illustration of Ribbentrop shows him wearing a Waffen SS shoulder strap on an Allgemeine SS black uniform. Otherwise, an excellent video making sense of a complex period: it's just that the repeated mis-pronunciation of 'Reichstag' triggered me as it featured so often.

    • @johnrogan9420
      @johnrogan9420 Před 2 lety

      Mispronounced Joaquin tambien...auch

    • @philmatthews5523
      @philmatthews5523 Před 2 lety

      I am writing this mail

    • @bavros1998
      @bavros1998 Před rokem

      „Rikestag“??? Where did you get that nonsense from? The „ch“ is just pronounced as a simple „H“ like in „Harry“.

  • @Travisjoe31
    @Travisjoe31 Před rokem +1

    It's strange that this guy got executed, but Albert Speer and Von Braun didn't.

    • @benwilliam9415
      @benwilliam9415 Před 3 měsíci

      It was very difficult to escape justice in Nuremberg 1946 , infact it was rocketscience

  • @MrVorpalsword
    @MrVorpalsword Před rokem +1

    What do you think of von Ribbentrop - " I think he's been a very naughty boy" .... Terry Jones - is that the right answer?

  • @TheBishop12
    @TheBishop12 Před 2 lety +1

    13:05 sounds like right now in the US

  • @nishantray3207
    @nishantray3207 Před rokem

    Is there a transcript for this video?

  • @standalon3308
    @standalon3308 Před 2 lety +1

    Why show modern day footage of Germany while speaking of nearly 100 year old historical events? I find this interesting.

  • @ericmoore571
    @ericmoore571 Před 2 lety

    Very interesting

  • @Kyanzes
    @Kyanzes Před 3 měsíci +1

    This guy did not deserve to be hanged. They only removed him to keep him from talking. Obviously, he knew a lot of unsavory things about the UK/Soviet Union.

  • @castlerock58
    @castlerock58 Před rokem +1

    I was a little disappointed that it skipped over the substance of the case for hanging a foreign minister. He had input into Germany's diplomatic policy until 1941 but did not commit or order any war crimes. Of all the Nazis executed, the case against him seems the weakest. It is difficult to see how diplomacy, even by an evil country, can be a war crime since there is no command responsibility. You are communicating messages from your government to other governments. If a foreign minister has input into a decision to commit a war crime as part of a cabinet, they would be guilty. Hitler was a dictator. It would be worth knowing whether Ribbentrop advised Hitler to commit a war crime. Did he advise Hitler to invade Poland which was considered the crime of aggressive war?

    • @StoneInMySandal
      @StoneInMySandal Před rokem

      Ribbentrop was found to have negotiated with foreign nations in bad faith. That’s a major crime (crimes against peace) that by itself qualifies for capital punishment.
      But when combined with his direct personal intervention in accelerating the removal of Jews from Axis satellite countries with the express intention of their extermination there was no other possible for sentencing.

  • @slovell920
    @slovell920 Před 11 měsíci

    Id like to learn more about AR ad well

  • @standalon3308
    @standalon3308 Před 2 lety +8

    This is not primarily about Ribbentrop. Though I wish it were. I became a brother of his on the day of his execution, when he said on the way to the gallows "I put my trust in the Lamb of God who bears the sins of the world". This 'documentary' is designed to reconvince people that Communist Soviet Union and Nazi Germany were political opposites. They were not. At best they were diagonal opposites with a very tight angle of deflection. How can anyone miss this when both were (are, but not specific nation states) Socialist?

    • @robinhood4911
      @robinhood4911 Před 2 lety +3

      Joseph Goebbels explains the differences of these two systems very well from the theoretical and practical point of view.
      Quite close to each other in theory, but in practice the opposition to reality.

  • @patriciaramsey5294
    @patriciaramsey5294 Před rokem +3

    I spent the summer of 2019 studying WWII, but I don't remember this man. Plus. I never knew or read about the Russian-German pact. Hard to believe those 2 countries were allies. Stalin must have felt betrayed. Thank you for these videos. Every one brings out new details I never knew or possibly had forgotten.

  • @Mamaki1987
    @Mamaki1987 Před 2 lety +26

    Great docomentary. Hitler broke the agreement with Stalin yes. But even if he had decided not to attack Russia, who knows if Stalin wouldn't have attacked Hitler instead at some point. And if so, at what point in history. They didn't see eye to eye after all when it comes down to it. No matter what, the war was lost for Germany from the getgo.

    • @marennicholson5444
      @marennicholson5444 Před 2 lety +7

      I read once that Stalin was sure Hitler would eventually invade but not until after he managed to take over in the west and by then Russia would be read and Stalin would then absorb German controlled territories. What he didn’t count on was Hitler’s “dreamer” like personally being dominate over his practicality to wage a war on both fronts and ignored every warning that he was about to do just that. So when Hitler did invade Stalin had a boarder line nervous breakdown.

    • @Mamaki1987
      @Mamaki1987 Před 2 lety +3

      @@marennicholson5444 Yes, that is what I was taught as well

    • @robinhood4911
      @robinhood4911 Před 2 lety +1

      @@balabanasireti Contrary to what is said, I do not think Hitler wanted hegemony over Europe, it was superfluous. He would conquer the whole world economically and those "conquered" would also benefit from it.

    • @robinhood4911
      @robinhood4911 Před 2 lety +5

      You wrote: "Hitler broke the agreement with Stalin" ..
      In fact, it was Stalin who broke the treaty. The entire Soviet army stood at the border ready to attack (including airports close to the border). For those interested, I recommend looking for Hitler's speech on the beginning of the war with the USSR, the book "Icebreaker Who Started the Second World War?" by Viktor Suvorov (once was on YT), and a video on YT (if censorship didn't cancel it) "The March of the Liberators".

    • @realniggashit3
      @realniggashit3 Před 2 lety

      Sure, they were always destined to fight, but if Hitler had taken Ribbentrop's advice and focused on destroying the British Empire first rather than fight 2 fronts at once, the Americans might eventually decide that Germany was the lesser of two evils and help Germany destroy the Soviet Union. At the very least, Germany wouldn't need to fight 2 fronts at once and Americans would've been bogged down for years in the Pacific fighting the Japanese anyway. Heck, there were right-wing anti-communist elements within the US such as General Patton and MacArthur, who were itching for war against the Soviet Union, and old right isolationists like Robert Taft who didn't want to get involved in Europe at all.