How these Heroic Polish Codebreakers set the Foundations for the Allies to Crack Engima

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
  • When the British brainiacs got to work on Enigma, they weren't starting from scratch. They were building on a foundation laid years before, by the often-forgotten codebreakers of Poland. This is their story.
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    🎬Video Credits:
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    Chapters
    0:00 Introduction
    0:53 First Polish-Soviet War
    2:22 Enigma found itself in Poland
    3:32 Polish Cryptologists
    5:38 The French Spy
    8:03 Codebreaking Developments
    9:02 Gifting the British
    9:56 Legacy of the Polish Codebreakers
    10:44 Conclusion

Komentáře • 224

  • @ghost101049
    @ghost101049 Před 2 lety +217

    The poles did much more than they get credit for. They should be remembered.

    • @KellingtonDorkswafer
      @KellingtonDorkswafer Před 2 lety +8

      I'll make a museum once I take over the country again.

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  Před 2 lety +31

      We want to make sure that all people get the recognition that they deserve!

    • @michaelandreipalon359
      @michaelandreipalon359 Před 2 lety +9

      And be given pittances too, especially from the Russians.

    • @wojszach4443
      @wojszach4443 Před 2 lety +11

      @@TheFront Can you make vid on Polish spy claiming planns of Atlantic wall or Polish partisans stealing and sending v missile back to Britian?

    • @antonioacevedo5200
      @antonioacevedo5200 Před měsícem +1

      ABSOLUTELY!! I am 66 years-old and had no clue that the Poles won the war for the allies. Squadron 302 and 303 also made a great contribution toward victory by Britain in the Battle of Britain.

  • @gunsnyper
    @gunsnyper Před 2 lety +268

    I'm glad you're shedding light on an important event in history, many people seem to forget about the Polish Codebreakers. Thank you for covering this.

  • @StratfordWingRider
    @StratfordWingRider Před 2 lety +52

    The more I listen to thing about the Polish through World War 2 - the more in awe I am of these people. Their determination, tenacity and resistance to oppression is incredible.

    • @konradburas9258
      @konradburas9258 Před 2 lety +10

      It's in the blood. We where always stuck between 2 great powers, invaded from time to time, from left and right. When that happens You develop stubbornes to whoever comes at You. I'm speaking as great grandson of cavalry partisan.

  • @sfr7916
    @sfr7916 Před 2 lety +60

    Salute to the Polish mathematicians who kept the secret to their graves. Brave and brainy.

  • @potato8606
    @potato8606 Před 2 lety +82

    FINNALY someone mentions them, everyone else is always talking only about Alan Turing like they didnt exist, thank you

    • @PaulSzkibik
      @PaulSzkibik Před rokem +8

      It's weird. You search youtube for "enigma bomba polska" or anything like it and there's not a lot of (high quality) videos on the topic. Luckily this video was exactly what i was looking for, a very clear, very well presented summary of what they had achieved.
      I'm from Germany. My father even was a soldier in the Wehrmacht back then. But obviously I'm just super impressed by what the polish accomplished and how little credit these brave people get. Though it's not like turing had an awesome life either. He made big contributions to the war effort against the nazis as well and as thanks they treated him like a degenerate for being gay until he took his life at 41.

    • @remigiuszhetman4062
      @remigiuszhetman4062 Před rokem +1

      This was made for securing the family of the genius polish mathematicians

  • @samueldamuel1689
    @samueldamuel1689 Před 2 lety +95

    imo without Poland and their efforts the war would’ve been way longer and harder

    • @alitlweird
      @alitlweird Před 2 lety +16

      Poland kicked arse in the air, on land, at sea, and underground. 💪🇵🇱

    • @56Tyskie
      @56Tyskie Před 2 lety +11

      Not just an opinion but a fact. Poland had the 4th largest army on the allied side throughout the war.

    • @aaroncousins4750
      @aaroncousins4750 Před 2 lety +1

      I mean without poland ww2 wouldnt have started....

    • @56Tyskie
      @56Tyskie Před 2 lety +21

      @@aaroncousins4750 because Poland was the first to fight back instead of rolling over like other nations

    • @BHuang92
      @BHuang92 Před 2 lety +6

      @@56Tyskie Their anthem is literally, "Poland Is Not Yet Lost"

  • @a.munroe
    @a.munroe Před 2 lety +8

    It's terrible that Poland was essentially left to the wolves. They contributed so much and fought so adamantly.

  • @piotrjanik93
    @piotrjanik93 Před 2 lety +26

    Finally somebody actually acknowledges the Poles when it comes to the Enigma

  • @kubenjbcz
    @kubenjbcz Před 10 měsíci +14

    I knew that the Poles were basically the first to break the Enigma code as i live in Bydgoszcz, a city which Marian Rejewski was born in. The monument of him sitting next to an Enigma is in Bydgoszcz as well. He was truly a genius who changed the course of history, unfortunately he is often forgotten. All the people that worked on this project, from Poland, France or Great Britain are heroes and deserve recognition.

    • @antonioacevedo5200
      @antonioacevedo5200 Před měsícem +1

      THANK YOU, Poland, for helping to rid the world of Nazism.

  • @jayzandstra1830
    @jayzandstra1830 Před 2 lety +38

    And how were they remembered by the allies? Ah right,40 years of iron curtain..

    • @maciejmanna9246
      @maciejmanna9246 Před 2 lety +11

      It began before the Iron Curtain. Poland, despite its huge involvement on most fronts, was not represented in the 1946 Allied Victory Parade in London, not to upset Uncle Joe, the lucky one of two genocidic monsters of WW2...

    • @duanehorton4680
      @duanehorton4680 Před 6 měsíci

      The Russians were one of the Allies.

  • @bolobalaman
    @bolobalaman Před 2 lety +11

    Heroes indeed
    The Poles was a real badass

  • @timsvea5980
    @timsvea5980 Před 2 lety +80

    Thanks for this enlightening video of the crucial role that Polish mathematicians and code-breakers made to the English decoding the Enigma machine generated messages. I feel that the vital role the Poles had in defeating the Nazis is often underestimated. This is just another example of that. Well done, Poles!

  • @halnywiatr
    @halnywiatr Před 2 lety +54

    That first intercepted Enigma was copied over a weekend. The Germans were told to come back Monday when the supervisor that could authorize the release would be back in the office.

  • @bernmahan1162
    @bernmahan1162 Před 11 měsíci +21

    Good for you doing this. People think it was all Turing's work. He couldn't have got started without these incredibly heroic Poles (and also the telephone engineer Tommy Flowers!)

    • @sylwia1410
      @sylwia1410 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Turing wouldn't be even invited if not for the Poles. Prior to that the Brits had never thought of asking a mathematician for help.

  • @richiecuzzz1
    @richiecuzzz1 Před 2 lety +22

    Thank you for bringing this topic up. No one ever mentions how the Polish were vital to the code breaking effort. I have so much respect for the Polish men and women. They pretty much took the brunt of the attack during WW2. They were so bad ass that they didn’t surrender, just relocated to England to continue the fight. A lot of them joined the RAF and were some of the most determined pilots when going against the Luftwaffe. Even after the war they still had to deal with oppression from the Soviets until their dissolution in the early 90s finally gaining independence.

  • @luishernandezblonde
    @luishernandezblonde Před 2 lety +13

    We have been sidelined so much. Thank you for remembering us 🇵🇱

  • @Remington510
    @Remington510 Před 2 lety +48

    Poland's good at codecracking because the language is like a cypher to begin with xD

    • @joannab7403
      @joannab7403 Před 2 lety +9

      Ha ha no, because they good at maths and intelligent :-)

  • @johnmcmahon13
    @johnmcmahon13 Před 2 lety +34

    Absolutely the best info on enigma ever. Well done!!

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  Před 2 lety +8

      That is really flattering! Especially considering how much content there is out there on Enigma!

  • @oil3616
    @oil3616 Před 2 lety +12

    Thank you Poland.

  • @CatsEyethePsycho
    @CatsEyethePsycho Před 2 lety +47

    “What’s in the package!?”
    “IT’S PIKACHU!”
    “It’s Commercial Enigma Machine!”
    “F#@K!”

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 Před 2 lety +75

    The Warsaw palace where the Enigma code was broken was demolished after the Warsaw Uprising. The polish government had announced the reconstruction of the palace as of 2021.

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  Před 2 lety +14

      From my understanding, it was blown up by the Germany military during the war, not so much as demolished!

    • @michaelandreipalon359
      @michaelandreipalon359 Před 2 lety +1

      They better not muck up the building with political BS, though, especially when it comes to the suspected Holocaust denials.

    • @OchotaJack
      @OchotaJack Před 2 lety +10

      @@michaelandreipalon359 you are suspected of ignorance full of media bs

    • @xelloskaczor5051
      @xelloskaczor5051 Před 2 lety +22

      @@michaelandreipalon359 every child in polish school learns about holocaust in history, literature, ethics, geography AND culture lessons. trips to auchwitz in some schools are MANDATORY. If anything we low key hated holocaust for being mentioned over and over and over and over every fucking year all the time and that has not changed. Poland has many issues and problems and our government does a lot of fucked up shit but holocaust denial is not one of them. They are too proud of the polish military and clergy involvement in dismantling it to ever deny it.
      Stop believing whatever you hear on opinion nights in CNN

    • @JWbrasser
      @JWbrasser Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheFront Rapid exothermic deconstruction is still deconstruction :P

  • @wasiuuu1
    @wasiuuu1 Před 2 lety +5

    finally a true story and its in English? wow just arrived from other sites where all English speaking people
    arguing about how its code was broken and so on but nothing about polish story , once again BIG thank YOU.

  • @interlo1
    @interlo1 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Polish mathematicians, using the theory of permutation groups, described the Enigma encryption process by system of equations. This made it possible to reconstruct the internal connections in the cipher drums and build faithful copies of the enigma only on the basis of the encrypted and decrypted messages.

  • @tomaszstanislawkowalski7594

    Fun fact: look at the photo at 4:08. These are officers from the Polish Cypher Burreau. Except that the man sitting in the centre is not in Polish uniform, and he does not look Polish. Because he isn't. He is Capt. Masataka Yamawaki, the Japanese military attache to Poland, who started a fruitful collaboration between Japanese and Polish cryptographers directed against USSR. Long story short: the Poles taught the Japanese the basics of modern cryptography.

  • @apacheattackhelicopter8410
    @apacheattackhelicopter8410 Před 2 lety +24

    Let’s go polish geniuses

  • @marekmartin6587
    @marekmartin6587 Před 2 lety +8

    Thank you for these words of truth, this does not often happen in relation to Poland

  • @keithpennock
    @keithpennock Před 2 lety +9

    Absolutely wonderful! I wish the movie “The Imitation Game” had given the Polish Codebreakers the credit they deserve. It does not diminish Turing to rightly give credit where it was deserved and bought with Polish blood. The “Imitation Game” framed it as though Turing invented The Bomba and to me this is a form of stolen valor and akin to plagiarism but worse because few people know that the “based on a true story” of Hollywood movies is really an excuse for lying under the guise of “artistic license” and it perpetuates lies generations later rarely checked and corrected. Just another reminder to never trust Hollywood movies.

  • @56Tyskie
    @56Tyskie Před 2 lety +15

    Thank you for this video. My parents taught me this when I was 5 years old which is 29 years ago

  • @marzenanikiel4288
    @marzenanikiel4288 Před 7 měsíci +1

    For me, apart from breaking the code itself, the most important thing was always keeping secret, even under torture, the information about the ineffectiveness of the German encryption system. We can imagine that someone, in order to avoid suffering or death, informs the Germans that their encryption method has failed. Then the greatest intelligence achievement of the Western Allies fighting against the Germans would be lost forever. Apart from your video, nowhere else have I seen recognition of this enormous dedication to preserving such a valuable source of information. And it would be enough for only one initiated person to break under torture and provide the Germans with information about breaking the code of their coding machine. The Allied countries would be left blind and deaf. This is a huge contribution to the victory of democracy.

  • @falfill2096
    @falfill2096 Před 2 lety +9

    Another forgotten event which people didn’t know about, great video please make more like this!

  • @silentblackhole
    @silentblackhole Před 2 lety +4

    These silent heroes of the past should be known and revered in the present.

  • @billd.iniowa2263
    @billd.iniowa2263 Před 2 lety +7

    Thankyou Poland.

  • @MyMika2004
    @MyMika2004 Před 2 lety +58

    Finally a video addressing the true code breakers

    • @arrow1414
      @arrow1414 Před 2 lety +5

      The first that is. The British did do some wonderful things breaking advanced enigma codes using the first digital computers created in large part by Allen Turing, but you are right mostly. The Poles were the first and the British owed a lot to them.

    • @MyMika2004
      @MyMika2004 Před 2 lety +9

      @@arrow1414 the code breaking is the least they owe us for, we spent the war defending the isles and at the end they discarded us like trash, they also made us pay to use their equipment

    • @marypetrie930
      @marypetrie930 Před 2 lety

      @@MyMika2004 Churchill did not want to leave the Poles under the Soviets, he had to do what Roosevelt wanted, who thought he could handle "Uncle Joe"

    • @XXXTENTAClON227
      @XXXTENTAClON227 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MyMika2004 gave you 400k citizenships, the largest amount in world history for any country… and you think they should’ve instead invaded the USSR lmaooo

    • @MyMika2004
      @MyMika2004 Před 2 lety

      @@XXXTENTAClON227 seethe commie

  • @frik76
    @frik76 Před 2 lety +7

    For the fight against our allies, Great Britain was billed and taken from the gold and silver stored in English banks, for planes, weapons, food, etc. And finally agreed to hand us over to the soviet union, so we came out miraculously with our allies, russia took our reparations from Germany and it was Russia that oppressed us until the fall of the Berlin Wall.

  • @pdwmr
    @pdwmr Před 7 měsíci +2

    The uniqueness of the device lay in both the concept of mechanical cipher-breaking and the exceptional mathematical ideas. that Polish cryptanalysts employed to crack the supposedly unbreakable encryption mechanism. Award: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers IEEE Milestone:First Breaking of Enigma Code by the Team of Polish Cipher Bureau, 1932-1939

  • @archlich4489
    @archlich4489 Před 2 lety +9

    Viva Poland!!

  • @teslababbage
    @teslababbage Před 2 lety +6

    Wonderful video. Thank goodness for these brilliant people.

  • @jasse803
    @jasse803 Před 2 lety +3

    "Because we do not beg for Freedom. We fight for it!" - Witold Urbanowicz of 303 Kosciuszko Squadron
    Your knowledge is beyond awesome. I am truelly impressed and greatfull for you making these vids. Ps: Although there are some vids allready, I would love your version/thoughts/vid about Polish Thermopyle, the Battle at Wizna 7-10.09.1939.
    Big kudos and thanx!

  • @bladerunner1458
    @bladerunner1458 Před 2 lety +4

    Wow what a great history lesson detailing the Polish contribution for our free world. Poland kept their culture despite being invaded and dominated many times by others. Poland deserves much more recognition than it has received. They stood up for themselves the best they could and finally they are free.

    • @Teapot69
      @Teapot69 Před 6 měsíci

      The polish contribution to the defeat of the nazis was about 0.01% and zero against the japs.

  • @robertgoss4842
    @robertgoss4842 Před měsícem +1

    Three cheers for you, for recognizing the massive, war-winning contributions of the Poles to cracking the now famous Enigma code, years before the Brits got their mitts on it. As reported, the British intelligence leaders were astounded by the groundbreaking work of the Polish mathematicians prior to WWIl.

  • @rolandoscar1696
    @rolandoscar1696 Před 2 lety +4

    In the movie starring Benedic Cumberbatch, a eureka moment happened when mention was made of the different styles of typing by the different German morse code operators. It was so blatant to the UK codebreakers. "Ah, Hans is today's transmitter. He's been away for a while."
    Incredible.

    • @paulbabcock2428
      @paulbabcock2428 Před 2 lety +2

      There is a story about some morse (‽) code operater on a sub that committed some major infraction like trasmitting something in the clear. And so, in an attempt to hide him, he was forced to send all subsequent messages w his left hand.

    • @WOTArtyNoobs
      @WOTArtyNoobs Před 2 lety +2

      What the movie 'The Imitation Game' and this video fails to mention is that whilst the Poles were the first to crack Enigma, there were several incidents that enabled Bletchley to continue to break the code. The Kriegsmarine code was the most important as it told the Allies where the U-Boats were. Unfortunately the Kriegsmarine were also changing their machines more often to prevent disclosures. Enigma machines were captured by the Royal Navy more than once when they sank U-Boats and this enabled Bletchley to have a helping hand to see how the machines had been altered. The Americans also had a big hand in unlocking the code as Britain built only a few Bombe machines and these were operating round the clock, but the Americans built over 150 and Britain was sending the Americans the intercepts down the Atlantic cables, so the Americans could use their Bombe to crack the codes and then send the results back to Bletchley. Turing and the other codebrealers spent most of their time trying to discover how the Germans were upgrading the machines so they could devise new ways of cracking them.

  • @alexanderalbul9353
    @alexanderalbul9353 Před rokem +2

    I am making an essay about the Enigma and i could not find information about the Polish bombe anywhere. Thank you for telling me about it, cause i just could have not got an 100/100 for my essay without this video. Thank you 😄. The video was also very interresting, so thanks!

  • @johnryder1713
    @johnryder1713 Před 2 lety +5

    Yet another story of the not truly defeated ever Polish

  • @johnmn3500
    @johnmn3500 Před 2 lety +9

    Hey thanks for all the regular interesting videos.

  • @2serveand2protect
    @2serveand2protect Před 2 lety +3

    As a PROUDLY Polish man - big thanks for the AMERICANS and CANADIAN counterparts! :)

  • @mabmachine
    @mabmachine Před 2 lety +27

    The Polish potentially cut years off the British breaking Enigma. But the British took what they got and bettered it by taking code breaking to a truly industrial scale. They also then broke the holy grail of the day the German Lorenz cypher. A fact that wasn't declassified until 20 years ago.

    • @androidrandom9979
      @androidrandom9979 Před 2 lety +4

      And then Joe Desch and others at NCR in Dayton Ohio took it to a truly EPIC speed and scale -- including handling the 4-rotor Naval Enigma in a crucial phase later in the war that was causing the Brits huge headaches.

  • @LureThosePixels
    @LureThosePixels Před 2 lety +3

    Kings, absolutely based Poles and it's tragic they met such a horrible end

  • @wojtekz9634
    @wojtekz9634 Před 2 lety +6

    Thank you for telling the truth. God bless!

  • @HenrykCzarny
    @HenrykCzarny Před 2 lety +11

    Angry Britans will still say that they cracked Enigma.

  • @jamessatherley2022
    @jamessatherley2022 Před 2 lety +5

    Hey @TheFront thanks for another interesting video, cracking a code like the Enigma must have been incredibly difficult and overwhelming ' I'm glad to see these men get the credit they deserve and I'm not surprised that the Germans did it in Alphabetical order as the in battle were very organised so they would be here too.

  • @rafalzych8031
    @rafalzych8031 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for your work, it's very important. Especially now.

  • @armyofninjas9055
    @armyofninjas9055 Před 2 lety +7

    Great video. Most people think it started with the brits.

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  Před 2 lety +2

      It definitely was not a one-country job!

    • @iangarrett741
      @iangarrett741 Před 2 lety +2

      I’m pleased to say all the British histories I have read acknowledge the groundbreaking work of the Poles. The “bombe “ and the handing over of an Enigma machine and associated documents are well known. The French input and the German agent is new to me though. Also, not in the least bit surprised that The Polish decryption team wouldn’t talk!
      Learning point: great minds from many countries working together can save the world.

  • @sharonprice42
    @sharonprice42 Před 26 dny

    About time the Polish got recognition for breaking the Enigma code

  • @slawomirzgrabczynski1937

    I'm a Polish from Poznań I live in England and I spotted lots off English people still believe the Alan Turning is the only person who created the enigma code .
    I don't know?
    it is aware deliberate disregard or ignorance .
    Thanks for this documentry🇵🇱💪👏👏

    • @ejmproductions8198
      @ejmproductions8198 Před rokem +2

      That is because the English don't let facts get in the way of writing their own history. Everyone on earth thinks that Waterloo was a British victory, but only 20 % of the soldiers were British. The Propaganda began just after the battle when Wellington insisted that the battlefield be called by the English sounding name 'Waterloo'. I think Churchhill described this English habit the best: 'History will be kind to me for I intend to write it'.

    • @Teapot69
      @Teapot69 Před 6 měsíci

      Similar to 303 squadron, I remember 35 years ago a truck painted with 303 pieces and claiming 141 kills, down from the original 200+ during the battle, then reduced to 126, now thought to be 58.8, of which 38.8 kills were by poles.
      Ignorance is indeed bliss for some.

  • @markgendala5689
    @markgendala5689 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Let's not forget that half a century later Poles also did something no Western armies could have
    done - in 1989 they single-handedly strangled Soviet communism...

  • @kaushiksheshnagraj7176
    @kaushiksheshnagraj7176 Před 2 lety +5

    Wow this video is fantastic. Every line is a point. Your channel deserve more subscriber. According to my account your channel is the best channel on CZcams I liked your channel very much. Your channel is my favourite .I liked your all videos. Please keep up this type of work in future please. Your all videos are stunning. I am your old subscriber from 2k subs
    But can you please make a video on Skanderbeg? I previously commented you but I did not get any clear answer. But your videos are mind-blowing.

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Před 2 lety +3

    Nicely informative video. Glad to know more about what these people did prior to WWII starting in Europe.

  • @kcharles8857
    @kcharles8857 Před 2 lety +3

    A lot here I did not know. Thankyou.

  • @bialapodlaska1000
    @bialapodlaska1000 Před 18 dny

    Excellent video and compelling account. As you’ve correctly indicated, this technology transfer by the Poles shortened the war and saved thousands of lives.

  • @lloydster9000
    @lloydster9000 Před 2 lety +1

    The memes throughout this episode made me laugh so damn hard. Well done!

  • @letteropener3119
    @letteropener3119 Před 2 lety +3

    5:38, If this video had been sponsored, you could've used the line as a transition.

  • @ryantravis242
    @ryantravis242 Před 2 lety +5

    Hey just watched the video about the enigma and Lorenz machine

  • @MrPat1953
    @MrPat1953 Před 29 dny

    Thank you excellent video

  • @seicgames4587
    @seicgames4587 Před 10 měsíci

    Beautifully put together, great job mate! That thing about Germans and alphabetical order cracked me up xD

  • @indianajones4321
    @indianajones4321 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  Před 2 lety +1

      Always a joy seeing your comments!

  • @vaidyasantosh8559
    @vaidyasantosh8559 Před 2 lety +1

    Thks 4 info

  • @spiffywolf2850
    @spiffywolf2850 Před 2 lety +4

    Man in the thumbnail looks like grown up Harry Potter.

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  Před 2 lety

      James Potter!

    • @spiffywolf2850
      @spiffywolf2850 Před 2 lety

      @@TheFront Yes! Next episode will be on the Wizarding wars lmao

  • @chrisst8922
    @chrisst8922 Před 2 lety +2

    The best TV programme on the subject is the 1977 BBC programme The Secret War, episode 6: Still Secret. The contribution of BS4 is described and the three of them, Rejewski, Rozycki and Zygalski named. Zygalski gets described as the plodder; patiently trying again and again.
    I have it on VHS, purchased at Bletchley and the episode may be available on YT in those regions beyond the reach of the BBC's lawyers.

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 Před 2 lety +2

    l think never and that is a very....Scary thing.....Thanks awesome video my friend.....!

  • @flashcar60
    @flashcar60 Před 2 lety +1

    No; I'm not surprised that the Germans wired their Enigma machine in alphabetical order. They also helped to give the game away when operators began messages with standard greetings, and ended them with "Heil Hitler". German punctuality also hurt their efforts when they made regular raids on a certain area. Defensive forces would know when to be ready for them.

  • @DianaKazimiera-
    @DianaKazimiera- Před rokem +2

    Great respect to outstanding skills "🔌"...
    Great material
    Memory for great human 🥀🕯️🕊️
    Great respect from 🇵🇱
    BOWS!
    #FacePoland 🇵🇱

  • @mathewhills8807
    @mathewhills8807 Před 2 lety +15

    Honestly it is about time that Turing is credited with breaking the code. It was a multi-year multi- national gring. Turing was just one person who made a contribution

    • @mathewhills8807
      @mathewhills8807 Před 2 lety +6

      Sorry, overcredited

    • @gooner_duke2756
      @gooner_duke2756 Před 2 lety

      yes, absolutely it was a multiple contribution. But what you can't "over-credit" Turing for is the whole new level of decoding, on an industrial scale level with the development of his machine and his contribution to computation theory/ai/modern computer science.

    • @potato8606
      @potato8606 Před 2 lety +3

      @@gooner_duke2756 but also if not poles he probabbly would achieve nothing, so yea

    • @gooner_duke2756
      @gooner_duke2756 Před 2 lety

      @@potato8606 but without Turing, it would be inviduals sat at their desks trying to decipher the code ! Can you imagine !? Turing's contribution was huge. Yes, the work already done by the Polish mathematicians obviously cut a lot of time out and layed the foundations. Like I said it was a multiple contribution. But you cannot underestimate Turing's achievement either.

    • @potato8606
      @potato8606 Před 2 lety +1

      @@gooner_duke2756 I didnt say that he did nothing, i just meant that people always talk about Turing and forget about polish contrivution

  • @1globe
    @1globe Před 9 měsíci +1

    Very informative. Steals a bit of thunder from Bletchley Park.

  • @MarkGaliciaholland
    @MarkGaliciaholland Před 5 měsíci +1

    Marian Rejewskin is the guy you're looking for.

  • @artud2g
    @artud2g Před 2 lety +3

    More detailed info regarding the subject: czcams.com/video/yk3w9btOSZI/video.html
    (English subtitles)

  • @michaelandreipalon359
    @michaelandreipalon359 Před 2 lety +2

    4:43: And a whole lot of other languages... see, I made eight in English.

  • @michaelandreipalon359
    @michaelandreipalon359 Před 2 lety +4

    10:54: Not surprised. Every code cipher has a pattern. Heck, even our passwords have connections with our own personalities, lives, and favorites.
    No.
    Very long, if not downright impossible to find out all of it... wonder what happened to that greedy traitor though?
    ...In basic terms, the Allies deservedly won WW2 (shame the Reds also won), Poland is currently free despite some problematic situations involving the Russians and the Holocaust, Nazism is now an outlawed form of belief system, even though neo-remnants still lurk around in the open, Communism is still around, but is a bit fragile in case things turn south against it (especially with media portrayals), and, of course, this video and many other sources praising not only the rest of "Ultra", but also these lesser know heroes of the world as we know it, and this is just my basic rundown of how much things have changed because of this confounding codework.

  • @rhythmocean6771
    @rhythmocean6771 Před 2 lety +6

    Notifications squad is here

  • @killme943
    @killme943 Před rokem +2

    Germans had a hard time making engima code that got broken anyway. Because Poles need to learn a language that is much harder than that lmao

  • @johnryder1713
    @johnryder1713 Před 2 lety

    That machine was commercially available til the following year of its arrival in Warsaw

  • @krukpolny8505
    @krukpolny8505 Před rokem +3

    Enigma Poland 1932. You Tube.

  • @piotrjannek1754
    @piotrjannek1754 Před 2 lety

    Its my understanding that the first Enigma code was broken at the A.V.A. Radio Co. In Warsaw.

  • @emericdion
    @emericdion Před 2 lety +4

    Proud polish

  • @janjanczyk1326
    @janjanczyk1326 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Hollywood will never make movie film about a POLISH #WW2 Hero like Sendlerowa, Rejewski or Pilecki. How do you think? Why?

    • @markgarrett3647
      @markgarrett3647 Před 7 měsíci

      It's got a lot of white heterosexual men and women bro.

  • @mareczek00713
    @mareczek00713 Před 2 lety +19

    Bruh, they didn't "set the foundations", they broke the enigma, Touring wasn't as much breaking Enigma as developing a way to do it quicker as germans adding complexity while still operating under the same rule meant available method would take too long to be viable.

  • @leannevandekew1996
    @leannevandekew1996 Před měsícem

    Great men.

  • @lordjim3109
    @lordjim3109 Před 3 měsíci

    Using secrecy as an excuse, the British intelligence claimed they broke the code, while in reality they were given a ready solution by the Poles. This wasn`t the first or last way Britan screwed Poland over during WWII.

  • @cmassarini3308
    @cmassarini3308 Před 2 lety +1

    Wonder what geetslys up to currently

  • @josephwarra5043
    @josephwarra5043 Před 4 měsíci +2

    "And for all their bravery and all their sacrifice, the "Allies" would sell Poland and it's people to the communists for 30 pieces of silver. May God forgive us." -- MR

  • @TheDazzler420
    @TheDazzler420 Před 5 měsíci +1

    The toilet cleaners of England did it again

  • @mrmaje1
    @mrmaje1 Před 2 lety

    What!!!!!! And I thought the yanks broke the code after capturing an enigma machine, I've seen the film and everything.

    • @potato8606
      @potato8606 Před 2 lety +3

      Yankees literally did nothing to break the enigma. What film did you watch if i may ask?

  • @grazynazambeanie5963
    @grazynazambeanie5963 Před 8 měsíci

    Heroic ??? Dodging bullets were they ? Oh hell. I never noticed all those sevens before . Good job avoiding those sevens guys

  • @TB-bb6kb
    @TB-bb6kb Před 13 dny

    Only truth can set us free - thanks

  • @dariusznowak4158
    @dariusznowak4158 Před 2 lety +1

    👍

  • @cyna76
    @cyna76 Před rokem

    great , but why cant in space ?

  • @silentblackhole
    @silentblackhole Před 2 lety

    Are you Australian? If so, what area are you from?

  • @kevinpeng8295
    @kevinpeng8295 Před 2 lety

    Hi

  • @Godzilla0936
    @Godzilla0936 Před 2 lety +1

    Ok

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason3740 Před 2 lety

    Can't Touch Hans.

  • @dominatv.multilingual7264

    Confirmation comes from five scholars in the world of UNIVERSAL DYNASTIC LAW: Benedict XVI imported the fundamental dichotomy Munus/Ministerium into Canon Law, drawing it from the DYNASTIC GERMAN PRINCES (The so-called Fürstenrecht). An excellent anti-usurpation system.
    Since 1983, Card. Ratzinger and Pope Wojtyla brought a strange change to Canon Law: the Papal office was divided into two entities, the Munus (Divine title) and the Ministerium (exercise of power).
    If the pope renounces the Munus, there is his ABDICATION (Canon 332-2). If he renounces the Ministerium deferred and not ratified (as Benedict XVI did), he falls back to the IMPEDITED SEE (Canon 412), where the Pope is a prisoner, confined, not free to express himself, but remains Pope in all respects ✝️