History of the British Empire (in One Take)

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 30. 08. 2022
  • Start your membership today at historybombs.com/ for full access to our video lessons and teaching materials. 💣
    Welcome to the British Empire. This video takes an epic tour through centuries of change, resistance and violence, meeting key figures who played important roles in this turbulent era.
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    👇 Skip to your favourite scene 👇
    0:08 - Introduction
    0:39 - Queen Elizabeth I & Francis Drake
    1:17 - Atlantic slave trade
    1:56 - Pocahontas
    2:36 - Nanny of the Maroons
    3:15 - Cornwallis vs. Washington (American Revolutionary War)
    4:02 - Cornwallis vs. Tipu Sultan (Mysore, India)
    4:22 - Cornwallis vs. Wolfe Tone (Ireland)
    4:56 - Olaudah Equiano
    5:32 - Woollarawarre Bennelong
    6:12 - Queen Victoria
    6:32 - Cecil Rhodes
    6:46 - Gandhi in South Africa
    7:24 - World War One
    8:14 - Gandhi monologue
    Thank you for watching 'History of the British Empire (in One Take)' by History Bombs.
    CAST
    Presenters: Chris Hobbs & Nelufar Hedayat
    British Soldier/George Washington: Barnaby Jago
    Captain/Earl Cornwallis: Guy Kelly
    Queen Elizabeth I: Katy Schutte
    Francis Drake: Tom Tokley
    Pocahontas: Charlie Esquér
    Nanny of the Maroons: Nataylia Roni
    Tipu Sultan/WW1 Soldier: Sam Sharma
    Wolfe Tonne: Louis Ellis
    Olaudah Equiano/WW1 Soldier/Windrush arrival: Jacob Bukasa
    Woollarawarre Bennelong: Tarik Frimpong
    Queen Victoria: Amy Cooke-Hodgson
    Cecil Rhodes: Tom Crowley
    MK Gandhi: Ram Gupta
    CREW
    Script: Dylan Townley & Chris Hobbs
    Historical Consultant: Shalina Patel
    Director: Ellie Rogers
    Assistant Director: Dylan Townley
    Colour Grade: Jack Kibbey Newman
    Steadicam Operator: Yiannis Manolopoulos
    Focus Puller: Matt Farrant
    Production & Casting: Chris Hobbs
    Dresser: Eliandro Monteiro
    Hair & Makeup: Seunghee Yoo
    Unit Stills: Matthew Towers
    BTS Video: Tristan James
    Costumes: History in the Making & Angels
    Location: Cutty Sark, Greenwich, London
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Komentáƙe • 2,5K

  • @lordbonney9779
    @lordbonney9779 Pƙed rokem +1059

    Only critiques are towards the start.
    1) Portugal and England weren’t rivals, they actively aided each other as they both had the common enemies of France and Spain.
    2) British slaves weren’t sold to Spain. We sold them to other African kings and mainly Portugal (when they weren’t taken to the 13 Colonies).

    • @hellothere3693
      @hellothere3693 Pƙed rokem +48

      They were active Allies, and hated fr*nce (a good thing)

    • @Erreipsavah
      @Erreipsavah Pƙed rokem +75

      The video starts in 1581, and the Kingdom of Portugal had lost it's independence by 1580 due to the Portuguese War of Succession. So basically, Portugal was just in a union with Spain (Iberian Union, until 1640). Technically, Portugal was a temporary rival of Britain for 60 years.

    • @ilikemaps9033
      @ilikemaps9033 Pƙed rokem +5

      @@Erreipsavah exactly

    • @kevinlane1219
      @kevinlane1219 Pƙed rokem +3

      Thank you for clarifying.

    • @imilkcows1661
      @imilkcows1661 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@ilikemaps9033 bro you shouldnt play with the philippine flag like that

  • @cdanerz3677
    @cdanerz3677 Pƙed rokem +987

    at the start of the video they said that England's rivals were Portugal and Spain.But at that time Portugal and England had great alliance and I understand that Portugal had started up
    all the trade business and colonialism but England wasn't unfriendly,and France and Spain were more of a rivals.

    • @Xazamas
      @Xazamas Pƙed rokem +56

      They may be covering period when Portugal was ruled by the Spanish king, referred to as "Iberian Union" which was bad time for Portuguese; Netherlands was at war with Spain and used this opportunity to seize many Portuguese colonies in India and Indonesia.

    • @emanuelsousacordeiro9684
      @emanuelsousacordeiro9684 Pƙed rokem +20

      Portugal lost its independence in 1580, with the defeat of D.AntĂłnio Prior do Crato and the victory of D.Filipe's Castilian forces after the disappearance of King D.SebastiĂŁo and the death of Cardinal-King D.Henrique, therefore the Treaty of Alliance of 1373 and the Windsor Treaty or Luso-English friendship treaty of 1386 were inactive until Portugal restored its independence in 1640. The video starts in 1581, so Portugal is just another kingdom of the Spanish Empire in a Personal Union, probably the most important and relevant kingdom at time considering the history of discoveries, conquests, trade, trafficking, exploration, knowledge and etc.

    • @Ok-but
      @Ok-but Pƙed rokem +4

      arent they still allies ?

    • @awildlisty3541
      @awildlisty3541 Pƙed rokem +5

      I agree the Portuguese were allied to England before the end of the Hundred year war between England and France.

    • @emanuelsousacordeiro9684
      @emanuelsousacordeiro9684 Pƙed rokem +3

      @@Ok-but Yes, Portugal and the United Kingdom have the longest alliance in history, it is true that it was interrupted from 1580 to 1640 and that there were episodes of shock between both countries, such as the British occupation of Portugal during the Napoleonic invasions and the obligation of Portugal to open the ports of Brazil for a privileged and exclusive trade with the British and later the British ultimatum in Scramble for Africa, that was one of the motivations for the fall of the Portuguese monarchy... but we were always allies and Portugal always followed British policy very carefully and always tried to do the maximums to help and this continues until now

  • @taxfraud5673
    @taxfraud5673 Pƙed rokem +114

    Noticed several inaccuracies in this one, I'm not an expert so I may be wrong but:
    1) In 1581 England and Portugal weren't rivals but actually their oldest allies.
    2) There's very little evidence of raids carried out by the British into Africa to capture slaves like suggested in the song. In fact the majority of the slaves transported across the Atlantic were purchased from pre-existing African kingdoms
    3) Nanny the Maroon most likely didn't exist and was a folk tale
    4) The Kingdom of Mysore is described as a 'strong and diverse society' which is ironic because by the time of British invasion it was experiencing waves of civil strife and was in fact ruled by a Muslim elite class over a large Hindu population.
    5) Ireland wasn't the first place the English colonised, it was Wales
    6) The industrial revolution was attributed to wealth coming into Britain through the Atlantic slave trade which is inaccurate as industrialisation was mostly caused by population growth and urbanisation. And only began to 'revolutionise' society after the slave trade was abolished in 1829

    • @benr7867
      @benr7867 Pƙed rokem +20

      Yeah, for a group of history teachers they seem rather uneducated on history.

    • @maypex3727
      @maypex3727 Pƙed rokem +5

      most historians would agree that nanny the maroon did exist, however the use of literal supernatural ability's most historians agree didn't happen.

    • @lesscringeymapperdude
      @lesscringeymapperdude Pƙed rokem +1

      U can be rivals with ur allies like France and UK carving up Africa

    • @taxfraud5673
      @taxfraud5673 Pƙed rokem +7

      @@lesscringeymapperdude The UK and France weren’t allies in 1885 during the scramble for Africa. It took up until the beginning of WW1 for Britain and France to ever become allies.

    • @krab1754
      @krab1754 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +1

      True Ireland wasn't the first but the second but at the time a lot of people thought Wales was England

  • @indeedentertainment
    @indeedentertainment Pƙed rokem +624

    Fun fact: This channel has now talked about the atriocities of the British Empire more than the atriocities of the Germans or the Soviets in WW2.

  • @Nucleotide5313
    @Nucleotide5313 Pƙed rokem +245

    Surprised Hong Kong wasn’t mentioned. Some say that’s when the British empire truly ended.

    • @spitfireflyer2205
      @spitfireflyer2205 Pƙed rokem +9

      yeah and now they want back

    • @garmenlin5990
      @garmenlin5990 Pƙed rokem +7

      Yeah probably too embarrassing, having to end the Empire by handing a city back to an autocracy

    • @fod1855
      @fod1855 Pƙed rokem

      @@garmenlin5990 We couldn’t exactly go to war over it could we?

    • @Halcon_Sierreno
      @Halcon_Sierreno Pƙed rokem

      Was waiting for that.

    • @Halcon_Sierreno
      @Halcon_Sierreno Pƙed rokem +1

      @@fod1855 Nah, that's crazy. It's much easier to go to war over drugs.

  • @cormacmcg1232
    @cormacmcg1232 Pƙed rokem +1252

    I appreciate you all for mentioning the 1798 Rebellion, it never gets any attention outside Ireland itself yet its such an important event in our history.

    • @djliottchannel6416
      @djliottchannel6416 Pƙed rokem +26

      We know about it in France, remember Castlebar ?

    • @ruairiodonohoe2533
      @ruairiodonohoe2533 Pƙed rokem +22

      @@djliottchannel6416 and Bantry bay. Its a shame that you lads did'nt reach us in time

    • @djliottchannel6416
      @djliottchannel6416 Pƙed rokem +11

      @@ruairiodonohoe2533 if we had, we might have had them swimming across the irish sea, without even catching breath!

    • @chiemelieakunne427
      @chiemelieakunne427 Pƙed rokem +5

      True

    • @ruairiodonohoe2533
      @ruairiodonohoe2533 Pƙed rokem +18

      @@djliottchannel6416 yup it would've been a glorious sight, the amassed armies of green and blue kicking some redcoat arses

  • @thepaleogamer2125
    @thepaleogamer2125 Pƙed rokem +362

    I think a separate video for rebellions and other lesser known stuff would’ve been better than having it be 75% of the video

    • @Brothy
      @Brothy Pƙed rokem +38

      @@arkroyal Legit they spoke about slavery for a huge chunk of the video and left out how the British also put a stop to global slave trade but Britain bad guys

    • @typicalperson6389
      @typicalperson6389 Pƙed rokem +29

      @@Brothy Yeah they definitely put too much “slavery bad” in this video. They didn’t even mention the Napoleonic Wars which was very important to the British Empire because they acquired South Africa and various Dutch colonies

    • @dat_boyz3013
      @dat_boyz3013 Pƙed rokem +5

      I agree but I think this is the "video for rebellions" hence the video being about the British EMPIRE, not Britain. But I definitely felt the same when watching it but then I was like oh I think that's the point.

    • @dat_boyz3013
      @dat_boyz3013 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@arkroyal I wouldn’t disagree that maybe they could have been more specific about what the video is called but I think the point of the video is Empire, including the British Empire, is bad. I agree that this is not really a video about the complete History of the British Empire but this is the video that talks about all the rebellions as the original comment was saying.

    • @firingallcylinders2949
      @firingallcylinders2949 Pƙed rokem

      @@Brothy Welcome to modern day history teaching. Slavery...slavery...west bad...Indigenous people good...West bad...slavery

  • @BLC888
    @BLC888 Pƙed rokem +317

    This is less the history of the British empire and more a highlight on British atrocities and the victims of it. This video is anachronistic. Although i wont argue that these these things didn't happen, they are expressed in a dominating way to the point where British empire building gets completely overshadowed. This feels more like a political message conveyed trough atrocities that were inspected trough a modern-western lens, than it is history.
    Yesterday the history channel OverSimplified also released a new video on the punic wars, which also highlights barbaric elements of the Roman empire which still often gets glorified by our modern times, without making their history just singularly about it. People are cruel, but we now live in a time where cruelty is no longer something we are okay with. And i think its important to educate people on the facts without making history solely about them, which in my opinion, this History Bombs video fails to do.

    • @BLC888
      @BLC888 Pƙed rokem +18

      You cant define a human by every bad thing they have done, so why should that apply to an empire?

    • @zo1o281
      @zo1o281 Pƙed rokem +14

      Because an empire is a fundementally oppressive concept

    • @ShooterBangStudios
      @ShooterBangStudios Pƙed rokem +18

      @@BLC888 Imperial expansion involves the mostly unwilling subjugation of other people. Ignoring it, or brushing over it, does damage to the reality of what it was, and creates a glossy narrative that people like you look at and admire. The British Empire's feelings aren't going to be hurt by leaking all it's skeletons, an empire is just an abstract concept, and it's important to understand the faults of history lest we be doomed to repeat it.

    • @lukedevlin5948
      @lukedevlin5948 Pƙed rokem +28

      @@zo1o281 throughout history it has been rule or be ruled, it’s human nature. The British just did it best

    • @Atamanxxxvii
      @Atamanxxxvii Pƙed rokem

      @@ShooterBangStudios all of society is the subjugation of other people, but none more than the modern society that people like you have constructed on the faux-opposition of traditional societies. Our modern society is all encompassing and removes any ability to exit.
      The idea that 'no-one is hurt' by critiques of empire completely ignore that such ahistorical nonsense is made to beat a people down and facilitate mass movement of wealth from our current regimes rivals, to our current regimes friends.
      Of course, you'll never actually have the humility to attempt to justify any of this, you'll just continue to hide behind your dumb platitudes.

  • @thebrutusmars
    @thebrutusmars Pƙed rokem +882

    So glad to see a new History Bombs In One Take, but damn was this one less fun than usual


    • @thebrutusmars
      @thebrutusmars Pƙed rokem +70

      And rightfully so.

    • @ThebadDrawingGuy
      @ThebadDrawingGuy Pƙed rokem +24

      @@thebrutusmars still a good video to watch tho

    • @hound5948
      @hound5948 Pƙed rokem +123

      @@thebrutusmars there was really no flow like the old ones also no visuals in the background like the past wars they did

    • @JSA-Studios
      @JSA-Studios Pƙed rokem +59

      There other one take videos are better. There ww1, ww2 and Cold War one take videos got me more interested in history. They made ww1 and ww2 have silly characters and actual sets I don’t see why they can’t do it now. They seem to be more focused on pushing political messages then making a entertaining video that will get more people interested in history, so they can form there own opinion on the British empire.

    • @Wheezal578
      @Wheezal578 Pƙed rokem

      @@JSA-Studios then dont the video jesus christ such a cry baby

  • @samuelwee1898
    @samuelwee1898 Pƙed rokem +562

    I have often enjoyed History Bombs' productions and have directed my students in history class to the concise, informative and entertaining videos. However, this one seems an overdo of self-flagellation. Lately, many historians have sought to expose the ills of empire-building (in any case, the history of 'civilizations' has been much the history of empire) so as to present a more objective narrative overall. In my Singapore, once a British colony, we are quite aware of the empire's inadequacies, failings, faults and ills, but we acknowledge that much of what we have now has been constructed on the platform laid out by the British in colonial times - parliamentary system, judiciary, education, housing, sports, even military and policing practices/traditions. Eight min is of course too brief a fit for everything, but it's just too bad that History Bombs have dwelt almost solely on its ills. Is that really the only 'true story'? If the 'Singapore story' was less traumatic than has been made out to be in this rap, then surely it represents aspects of empire history that could have possibly been squeezed into this presentation.

    • @legozen12345678
      @legozen12345678 Pƙed rokem +68

      Exactly my thinking. It really should of been more than just "British Empire bad" and discussed the goods as well as the bad, especially since everywhere else discusses the bad these days.

    • @RationalMindsProductions
      @RationalMindsProductions Pƙed rokem

      FACT OR FICTION Trans-Atlantic slave trade & the opening of I.A.A.M czcams.com/video/W_gCtiptRPU/video.html

    • @ironicallyscreaming
      @ironicallyscreaming Pƙed rokem +23

      @@legozen12345678 "We should remember to mention the good parts of brutal imperialism" mate do you hear yourself?

    • @legozen12345678
      @legozen12345678 Pƙed rokem +40

      @@ironicallyscreaming You can discuss the good of something whilst acknowledging the bad it did as well. You can point out the fact the empire got into huge debt (which only finished being paid off in 2015) to work towards abolishing slavery across the world, whilst also pointing out the fact they profited from said slave trade previously. Both are important parts of history and one shouldn’t be ignored because of the other.

    • @vladutzuli
      @vladutzuli Pƙed rokem +3

      @@ironicallyscreaming People want to talk at length about the good aspects of empires such as the roman empire, the mongol or ottoman empires, China, the aztec empire and so on, but suddenly when it's the british empire it's exclusively bad simply because you said so? Literally every empire in world history has engaged in brutality to further its own agenda, but also contributed good things to human civilisation as well. Britain included. Westerners seriously need to get over this cringe white guilt.

  • @usert6709
    @usert6709 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +7

    Why are the English made out to be villans in our own country it’s crazy

  • @snailslug3838
    @snailslug3838 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +10

    I heard that Hamilton “ Here comes the general” for George Washington 👀

  • @goncanada9286
    @goncanada9286 Pƙed rokem +460

    It is nice to see another in one take, however this one could have been done better. Atriocities seemed to be the videos main focus. There is more to the British Empire than just commiting atriocities.

    • @kingpenguin1580
      @kingpenguin1580 Pƙed rokem +62

      I understand what your saying, but it’s important to know these atrocities. The British empire was for lack of a better word villainous and the vast public is unaware or knows little about it. And after all history bombs is a learning channel

    • @julianmorales-silva160
      @julianmorales-silva160 Pƙed rokem +21

      Hi, American here.
      No there isn’t.

    • @cardozoluciano8362
      @cardozoluciano8362 Pƙed rokem +38

      @@kingpenguin1580 is there someone who doesn't know the atrocities? I could swear lately it's just about guilt rather than learn.

    • @gamingwiththedesertfox5499
      @gamingwiththedesertfox5499 Pƙed rokem +51

      @@kingpenguin1580 it called history of the British Empire tho. Not Atrocities of the British Empire. Sure put some part in there about that but show the good aswell. This just pushes all the bad things of the British Empire too much as they have also done a lot of good.

    • @benlewis2130
      @benlewis2130 Pƙed rokem +1

      Not gonna lie recently I've felt that we've almost washed away the goods that came with colonialism to replace it with all atrocities to fit our modern woke narrative, I understand all that is said in the video is quite informative and true to a good extent but its almost like people just can't except there's so many sides to History and not a sole avenue of pure evil in this case, there's no denying there were atrocities and evils that were committed, but there were triumphs aswell which I can recognise alongside the brutal and horrifying side of The British Empire

  • @Joe2033
    @Joe2033 Pƙed rokem +294

    The video was entertaining, but had a blatant agenda.
    Also interesting that you mentioned Olaudah Equiano, but nothing about Josiah Wedgewood, Thomas Clarkson, John Newton, Granville Sharp, not even William Wilberforce, who was perhaps the most important person in the abolitionist movement.

    • @afatpigeon1
      @afatpigeon1 Pƙed rokem +60

      Exactly the slave trade was ended by Christian Englishmen who used the religion to lever the british public into realising it was wrong. It was most definitely not a Nigerian public speaker

    • @XXXTENTAClON227
      @XXXTENTAClON227 Pƙed rokem +12

      Nor the West African Squadron, which historians conclude is the most expensive moral action ever undertaken by a country

    • @jamahiriya7528
      @jamahiriya7528 Pƙed rokem +18

      Saying this video had an "agenda" for condemning the British empire is like saying their video for Nazi Germany had an agenda for condemning their atrocities. The British empire was the most genocidal entity in history, sitting alongside the third reich and imperial Japan.

    • @riceboiii2937
      @riceboiii2937 Pƙed rokem

      @@jamahiriya7528 how? if you look up a list of genocides the uk doesnt even show up and comparing uk to the axis is just not true the japanese during ww2 killed somewhere between 3 million to 10 million in the span of 8 years the german reich killed 20,946,000 and yes on numbers the british have killed more not only was it over 200 years the mongols killed 1/10th of the population of the time. im not defending the british im just saying ur wrong :)

    • @afatpigeon1
      @afatpigeon1 Pƙed rokem

      @@jamahiriya7528 i would say it had an agenda because it makes britain out to be an evil slave empire when the fact is we were never the biggest, only partook in it for 200 years, ended it and then nearly bankrupted ourselves trying to end slavery globally. When the rest of the world partook in slavery for 1000s of years and still continue to.

  • @jacobbaumgardner3406
    @jacobbaumgardner3406 Pƙed rokem +359

    This was a great video on the atrocities and reforms of the British Empire, but a terrible one in relation to the overall history of said Empire.
    History is more than just what’s politically relevant right now.

    • @suclox12yearsago56
      @suclox12yearsago56 Pƙed rokem +14

      This, all of this

    • @fod1855
      @fod1855 Pƙed rokem +50

      The atrocious are hardly even accurate in this, it’s just another “lets shit on Britain” video because it’s easy and cliche. To paint Britain as the “bad guy” simply for being the country with the biggest stick.

    • @Halcon_Sierreno
      @Halcon_Sierreno Pƙed rokem +22

      This video went full woke and it came across cringy as hell. If the people in the video really feel bad about what their country did in the past then they should go out and do charity work instead of rapping about it. 3/10

    • @GraniteStater
      @GraniteStater Pƙed rokem +9

      Nah, British Empire was goatted. May it come again.

    • @panda4109
      @panda4109 Pƙed rokem +2

      Based af

  • @dashiellcapps7903
    @dashiellcapps7903 Pƙed rokem +68

    i wish they could have brought up the war of 1812 and the Zulu war, especially the last stand at roakes drift

    • @Joe2033
      @Joe2033 Pƙed rokem +40

      They couldn't mention Rorke's Drift because it was an example of British victory and bravery. This video is supposed to highlight all the "bad" things we did against non-whites and ignore anything good.

    • @bluegrassbanjo5744
      @bluegrassbanjo5744 Pƙed rokem +6

      @@Joe2033 Yeah, I don't understand why they mainly brought up atrocities and nothing else.

    • @reefconvy7291
      @reefconvy7291 Pƙed rokem +1

      They should have also brought up William Wilberforce, the man who was responsible for bringing Britain out of the slave trade.

    • @RandomAussie-dx9fj
      @RandomAussie-dx9fj Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      @@reefconvy7291 A bit late to reply, but that would be a bit silly to praise him because he was one of the harshest slave traders ever before he started to campaign against slavery.

    • @reefconvy7291
      @reefconvy7291 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      @@RandomAussie-dx9fj Well good thing he changed his mind then.

  • @uncrownedfire5429
    @uncrownedfire5429 Pƙed rokem +616

    Quality video as usual but this one seemed to only focus on the harsh, sometimes obscure negatives and skip over many important events.

    • @stinkypete368
      @stinkypete368 Pƙed rokem

      Self loathing Brits got an agenda to push

    • @ruairiodonohoe2533
      @ruairiodonohoe2533 Pƙed rokem +33

      Yes they should've managed to squeeze in every event that every happened during the British empire

    • @uc5581
      @uc5581 Pƙed rokem +33

      I dont know, if you know that but there werent many good things in the british empire.

    • @lesdodoclips3915
      @lesdodoclips3915 Pƙed rokem +126

      @@uc5581 there were plenty, be it legal reform, technological science ( a Japanese study claims approx 50% of modern times were invented in Britain), medicine, infrastructure etc


    • @dertery8724
      @dertery8724 Pƙed rokem +66

      @@uc5581 Abolishing slavery throughout the world?

  • @sithben5837
    @sithben5837 Pƙed rokem +80

    Seems more like a history of 'British Colonial Exploitation' than the British empire itself, but even then the format doesn't work for it.

    • @The_Honourable_Company
      @The_Honourable_Company Pƙed rokem +4

      Imagine saying this in twitter XD

    • @bigpapa8225
      @bigpapa8225 Pƙed rokem +3

      Are the two not one in the same?

    • @sithben5837
      @sithben5837 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@bigpapa8225 Not really, while it is an aspect of the history of the British Empire, it is not all there is.

  • @mohamedjear8917
    @mohamedjear8917 Pƙed rokem +141

    Thank you for this amusing video, but I want to present my sincere comments out of respect for your work not hatred.
    Firstly, rap-wise, I felt it is a bit inferior than the other history bombs videos, you could have done much better.
    Secondly, I didnt like how you only mentioned the negatives of what the british has done in the past, neglecting, hopefully not purposefully, all the good things they have achieved and done such the industrial revolution, the invention and spread of smallpox vaccines throughout the world, the spread of education and medecine, them being the first to abolish slavery to name a few.
    As a history enthusiat I want us to study and recognize the past both for the good and bad things, not just focusing on one side of the story because then it is propaganda not actual historical inquiry.
    Thank you for your time ❀

    • @dertery8724
      @dertery8724 Pƙed rokem +39

      An excellent comment. Britain not only was amongst the first nations in the world to abolish slavery, it then forced other nations to do so - often risking war such as during the blockade of Brazil in 1850 and the invasion of Zanzibar in 1873.

    • @stealthotrapo9123
      @stealthotrapo9123 Pƙed rokem +24

      yeah this did seem a bit british hate

    • @imadeanaccounttocomment7800
      @imadeanaccounttocomment7800 Pƙed rokem +12

      @@stealthotrapo9123 does feel like a bit of pandering to me kind of feels like they are misdirecting some hate to a nation that bought everyone their current way of life just because what they did in the past that they have already amended for.

    • @andro7862
      @andro7862 Pƙed rokem +5

      Iceland abolished slavery and serfdom in 1117. Britain did in 1833.

    • @imadeanaccounttocomment7800
      @imadeanaccounttocomment7800 Pƙed rokem +12

      @@andro7862 We have to credit the great Icelandic navy and their resolute government on ending the slave trade due to their immense wealth and status in the world at that time, Huzzah for Iceland.

  • @DeerMapping
    @DeerMapping Pƙed rokem +95

    I feel like this focuses way too much on the negative. No empire in history was perfect and golden, but the British Empire definitely had good aspects too.

    • @hafizihilmibinabdulhalim1004
      @hafizihilmibinabdulhalim1004 Pƙed rokem +7

      I challenged them to make a video about Mongol empire

    • @dietwater4980
      @dietwater4980 Pƙed rokem +1

      Let’s be fair, they focus on the negative on all videos.

    • @thepeach03
      @thepeach03 Pƙed rokem +5

      Yeah but the negatives have to be focused on because so far history books have not paid any attention to them

    • @dietwater4980
      @dietwater4980 Pƙed rokem

      @@thepeach03 ^^^^

    • @sahilvaghela1333
      @sahilvaghela1333 Pƙed rokem

      BRITISH EMPIRE MAKE PEOPLE SUFFER

  • @blitzen435
    @blitzen435 Pƙed rokem +99

    I loved the WW1 and WW2 ones but this one honestly seems like more of a political message only focusing on the atrocities committed by the British Empire and none of the positives. Can't say I'm surprised though as everyone loves to bash on Britain nowadays.

    • @RoyalRegimentofScotland
      @RoyalRegimentofScotland Pƙed rokem +1

      I'm not going to sit here and say the colonists were lovable people coming to spread good will because that would be fucking lie but what I'm not also going to say is that the natives were lovable peaceful people because that would also be a fucking lie people like to gloss over the fact that overall britian was hardly a cruel ot evil empire especially compared to others. The british empire took land goods money and valuables of other empires who had acquired said riches the exact same way and its a load of bollocks to think these natives were innocent.

    • @blitzen435
      @blitzen435 Pƙed rokem +20

      @@RoyalRegimentofScotland Agreed a lot of people love to pretend that the natives were peace loving harmless monks. When in reality they were also responsible for massacres of their own.

    • @RoyalRegimentofScotland
      @RoyalRegimentofScotland Pƙed rokem +10

      @@blitzen435 tbh many natives were significantly worst the Britain and committed incredibly inhumane acts

    • @jamahiriya7528
      @jamahiriya7528 Pƙed rokem +10

      There were no positives lmao. That's like saying "but hitler built the autobahn"

    • @RoyalRegimentofScotland
      @RoyalRegimentofScotland Pƙed rokem

      @@jamahiriya7528 this is one of the dumbest comments I've ever seen on a history video if you have no interest in learning history or have no actual clue what your talking about don't comment on history videos

  • @kaylensloan5620
    @kaylensloan5620 Pƙed rokem +76

    I'm all for exploring a nations dark history, but it seemed like this video only focused on the bad parts of the British Empire. I feels like they completely skipped over all the good things that happened during their history and was more of a hit piece than a history piece.

    • @BluePlant
      @BluePlant Pƙed rokem +1

      Because It's more interesting

    • @BluePlant
      @BluePlant Pƙed rokem

      Because It's more interesting

    • @soifon7000
      @soifon7000 Pƙed rokem +3

      Couldn't agree more.
      Why not just balance it out, or keep it subtle?

    • @rome316ae3
      @rome316ae3 Pƙed rokem +6

      Ok then I can also say make video on positive things nazis did . Like you said they skipped good things.

    • @soifon7000
      @soifon7000 Pƙed rokem

      @@rome316ae3 The quality sucks too.
      They weren't even trying.

  • @applebased8936
    @applebased8936 Pƙed rokem +115

    I do appreciate your work, but in my opinion you focused too much on the negative sides of the empire. History is more than brutality and racism

    • @aceattorneyruinedmylife
      @aceattorneyruinedmylife Pƙed rokem +22

      but the british empire did do so many horrific things which still impact the world today, yes there are some positives but history is violent and brutal and we can’t forget that

    • @The_Honourable_Company
      @The_Honourable_Company Pƙed rokem +15

      @@aceattorneyruinedmylife by that definition, every empire or kingdom that existed since the dawn of Mankind, should be given a video like this. Like bruh, the middle Eastern politics were messed up anyways

    • @mid2441
      @mid2441 Pƙed rokem +5

      But that’s all the British did

    • @eliots8990
      @eliots8990 Pƙed rokem

      @@aceattorneyruinedmylife everyone was brutal back then. in fact, after britain got rid of slavery, they helped outlaw slaves in africa over african empires, helping save millions of slaved. bet they didn’t teach you that.

    • @lesscringeymapperdude
      @lesscringeymapperdude Pƙed rokem

      @@The_Honourable_Company ok but Britain did fuck ton of bad

  • @generalryry
    @generalryry Pƙed rokem +20

    2:13 haha amogus

  • @damnthathurts731
    @damnthathurts731 Pƙed rokem +93

    The 1 take videos for WW1/WW2/CW really got me into history, I love it so much now. I can't imagine how much effort these 1 take videos take, but pls, continue

  • @muhammadburhan6948
    @muhammadburhan6948 Pƙed rokem +206

    I don't know if the creators of the video see this but, these videos have helped me develop an eager interest in history and I would like to appreciate everyone who worked in the making of this edition of History Bombs.

    • @HaiLsKuNkY
      @HaiLsKuNkY Pƙed rokem +6

      Please be inspired to learn the truth and don’t rely on the video

    • @freshicles3444
      @freshicles3444 Pƙed rokem +3

      Exactly don’t just listen to the videos especially this one it only paints the bad and one good thing in a bad light

    • @1977ajax
      @1977ajax Pƙed rokem

      Great that you now have an interest in history! Now you can do some proper research and learn just how biased this crap from History Bums really is.

  • @Dan-zc7ut
    @Dan-zc7ut Pƙed rokem +541

    This skipped many important events and only focused on the harsh and negative side of the empire

    • @eoghancarpenter8546
      @eoghancarpenter8546 Pƙed rokem +231

      Because the harsh and negative side is like 95% of the Empire

    • @Nirvana16
      @Nirvana16 Pƙed rokem +26

      @@eoghancarpenter8546 true

    • @guyfromtheplaceshown3690
      @guyfromtheplaceshown3690 Pƙed rokem +109

      @@eoghancarpenter8546 Thats just how life was back then, but Britain did alot of good, Britain was one of the first country to ban slavery and fought tooth and nail to stop it worldwide.
      Obviously it took part in the horrible practice of slavery but so did every other nation at the time, Europeans, Arabs, Africans and Asian countries had the dreaded practice.
      Or how the reason you have democracy today is Britain, while you can point out exemptions, broadly most democracies today are as a result of British influence or outright copying the British system.
      Fact is every empire or historical society is terrible compared to modern standards, and we've talked and brow-beaten Britain enough.

    • @Dan-zc7ut
      @Dan-zc7ut Pƙed rokem +12

      @@eoghancarpenter8546 it’s not as if life in general was easy back then

    • @fod1855
      @fod1855 Pƙed rokem +12

      @@eoghancarpenter8546 yarn, it’s just not though is it. Yes of course there were negative individual events, but that will always happen, it is quite literally human nature. In the grand scheme of things the British empire was a force for good, and if you’re going to whine about indigenous populations the fact is that they don’t truly exist, people move, they fight for land, they survive. It’s happened since the dawn of time.

  • @-Miguelzim-
    @-Miguelzim- Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +3

    Not defending the atrocities of the BI, but this video isn't about the British Empire, but about it's colonies, so here's some BI facts:
    They stopped Napoleon Bonaparte and ended a war of +20 years against him
    They helped defeat the Axis in both World Wars
    It was the biggest Empire in history in army size, land extension and more
    The BI was one of the longest lasting empires, lasting more than 400 years
    If there's more facts, comment here, and remember, i'm just saying the facts, i am not defending or attacking the BI, so there's no need to discussions

  • @brotheralex9226
    @brotheralex9226 Pƙed rokem +60

    When Britain first, at heaven's command
    Arose from out the azure main
    Arose arose from out the azure main
    This was the charter, the charter of the land
    And guardian angels sang this strain
    Rule Britannia, Britannia, rule the waves
    Britons never, never, shall be slaves
    Rule Britannia, Britannia, rule the waves
    Britons never, never, shall be slaves
    Still more majestic shalt thou rise
    More dreadful from each foreign stroke
    More dreadful, dreadful from each foreign stroke
    As the loud blast, the blast that tears the skies
    Serves but to root thy native oak
    Rule Britannia, Britannia, rule the waves
    Britons never, never, shall be slaves
    Rule Britannia, Britannia, rule the waves
    Britons never, never, shall be slaves
    Still more majestic shalt thou rise
    More dreadful from each foreign stroke
    More dreadful, dreadful from each foreign stroke
    As the loud blast, the blast that tears the skies
    Serves but to root thy native oak
    Rule Britannia, Britannia, rule the waves
    Britons never, never, shall be slaves
    Rule Britannia, Britannia, rule the waves
    Britons never, never, shall be slaves
    The Muses, still with freedom found
    Shall to thy happy coasts repair
    Shall to thy happy, happy coasts repair
    Blest isle regardless, with countless beauty places
    And manly hearts to guard the fair
    Rule Britannia, Britannia, rule the waves
    Britons never, never, shall be slaves
    Rule Britannia, Britannia, rule the waves
    Britons never, never, shall be slaves

    • @brotheralex9226
      @brotheralex9226 Pƙed rokem

      @The Styng Irish Rebellion song. Nice

    • @lordbonney9779
      @lordbonney9779 Pƙed rokem

      @@TheStyng 😂 ffs mate

    • @miscellaneoussarnian5282
      @miscellaneoussarnian5282 Pƙed rokem +1

      O say can you see, by the dawn's early light,
      What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming,
      Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight,
      O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming?
      And the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
      Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there;
      O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave
      O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
      On the shore dimly seen through the mists of the deep,
      Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes,
      What is that which the breeze, o'er the towering steep,
      As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?
      Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam,
      In full glory reflected now shines in the stream:
      'Tis the star-spangled banner, O long may it wave
      O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
      O thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
      Between their loved homes and the war's desolation.
      Blest with vict'ry and peace, may the Heav'n rescued land
      Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation!
      Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
      And this be our motto: 'In God is our trust.'
      And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
      O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!
      And still we can see, as the years have gone by,
      There's a dream in our land, like a flame that keeps burning,
      And the lantern of hope, from the harbor still shines,
      Those who seek freedom's dream, to its light are still turning
      Now we look to the skies, and we lift up our eyes
      For we know with the dawn, we will see our flag rise!
      And this is our Star-Spangled Banner yet wave;
      O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!

    • @brotheralex9226
      @brotheralex9226 Pƙed rokem

      @@miscellaneoussarnian5282 AHHHH AMERICA

    • @ruairiodonohoe2533
      @ruairiodonohoe2533 Pƙed rokem +2

      SOLDIERS ARE WE
      WHOSE LIVES ARE PLEDGED TO IRELAND
      SOME HAVE COME
      FROM A LAND BEYOND THE WAVES
      (GOD BLESS THEM)
      SWORN TO BE FREE
      NO MORE OUR ANCIENT SIRELAND
      SHALL SHELTER THE DESPOT OR THE SLAVE
      TONIGHT WE MAN THE GAP OF DEATH
      IN ERIN'S CALL COME WOE OR WEAL
      MID CANNONS ROAR AND RIFLES' PEAL
      WE WIL CHANT A SOLDIERS SONG

  • @centurion7993
    @centurion7993 Pƙed rokem +83

    Note, the European states that did the whole Atlantic slave trade purchased all (or hereabouts) of the slaves from local African states, as they sort of forgot how to enslave people and either the Portuguese or the Dutch actually sent people to research how their trade partners (the local kingdoms) were getting all the slaves they were selling to them, since Europeans usually lasted less than a week on the continent let’s just say it was a bit of a challenge

    • @Halcon_Sierreno
      @Halcon_Sierreno Pƙed rokem

      That's one aspect of the slave trade that often gets overlooked. People forget that Africans themselves contributed a lot to the enslavement of their people.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy Pƙed rokem +4

      This is not fully accurate of all the European powers involved in the Slave Trade; the English had completely abolished slavery centuries before their involvement, so they had indeed completely forgotten how to enslave people (and in fact the first enslaved Africans they purchased were given Indenture contracts and released after a set term, as that was the closest model they had to slavery in the early 17th century). The Portuguese, meanwhile, were simply not very good at slave raiding; they had a continual practice of slavery (including purchasing slaves both from Italian and Islamic merchants), and attempted to engage in slave raiding themselves, with it being common practice for Mediterranean merchants (whose ships were typically well armed to slave off pirates) to besiege cities and capture their citizens as slaves if they were found to lack defenses, but it was very risky as the cities were often better defended than they realized. As they began to navigate along the Western coast of Africa, they also attempted slave raids, thinking the weaker bows of the locals were no threat, but the common use of poisoned arrows made local archers harder to fight than they expected. It wasn't that they'd forgotten how to enslave people, they just kept losing when they tried to do so militarily (though they were able to enslave their own Jewish populations more easily, which helped to build the early slave plantation system, and also had some success in capturing Canary Islanders). These early failures did prompt them to start respectfully engaging with African leaders in order to buy slaves from them instead of kidnapping (though they would also return to slave raiding later, famously capturing enough people from their ally the Kingdom of Kongo that the King of Kongo wrote to the King of Portugal asking him to reign in his people). The Spanish, meanwhile, had a great deal of success enslaving people in the Canary Islands and Caribbean, though they ultimately stopped doing so because of a combination of legal restrictions on who they were allowed to enslave and the high death rate among the groups they targeted; still, the early enslavement of Canary Islanders was an important early step in building up the Spanish plantation system. I'm not sure about the Dutch, as I haven't read about the development of their slavery specifically.

    • @achilles9448
      @achilles9448 Pƙed rokem

      ​@@SomasAcademy... I agree but also that Africa was involved the slave trade even before the Europeans got there... Also you had the Ottoman empire that took out lower blacks at Africa than any other group and enslaved 20,000 million white people and it was considered the most brutal slave trade.... So history tell us that pretty much everybody was involved in the slave trade and when the Europeans did go to Africa.. Kings of tribes and countries sold their own sons and daughters for exchange for golden weapons to attack other tribes and countries... And here's a fun fact but not really a fun fact.... Slavery is abolished around the world but you still have 700,000 slaves in Africa today and here in the western continent... The central countries have the most sex trafficking slaves around the world... I get nobody says anything about it why it's because they're not white....

    • @nip3004
      @nip3004 Pƙed rokem

      I'm not sure why this needed to be noted. This is one of the few things in modern times that deliberately stated the slaves were bought rather than saying captured.

  • @infernochicken7501
    @infernochicken7501 Pƙed rokem +20

    You know the video is going to be misleading when they say Portugal and England where rivals

    • @simonstaysnclr
      @simonstaysnclr Pƙed rokem +2

      There are such things as friendly rivalries i'd say, but yeah, spain and portugal where nowhere near the same when it came to english diplomacy.

  • @baileybutler9477
    @baileybutler9477 Pƙed rokem +3

    he will always be good at making these vids. they also teach me alot, thanks history bombs!

  • @jakeh799
    @jakeh799 Pƙed rokem +21

    8:19 I don’t understand how Britain is blamed for the deaths after the partition. they were made by the people of the British raj themselves and that was the partitioning they wanted

    • @amaadshah91
      @amaadshah91 Pƙed rokem +6

      They could have drawn the betters better than by a man who never even visited the raj

    • @AndrewArminRyan
      @AndrewArminRyan Pƙed rokem +8

      @@amaadshah91 It isn't like you were all happy clappy before the Europeans arrived; further partitions were necessary, in my opinion.
      India is effectively a Hindu-nationalist state that examples the rights of its minority groups.

    • @lordbonney9779
      @lordbonney9779 Pƙed rokem

      @@amaadshah91 the Indians voted on the borders. The partition was something the UK didn’t want to touch with a ten foot long pole.
      We drew no borders there when we were leaving.

    • @Anglophile777
      @Anglophile777 Pƙed rokem

      @@amaadshah91 Britain tried their best to not do partition such as the cabinet mission India of 1945

    • @Anglophile777
      @Anglophile777 Pƙed rokem

      1946

  • @tomaslynford4050
    @tomaslynford4050 Pƙed rokem +28

    They only talked about discovery, atrocities and only bad things. The British did far more then that. Also, the British had 4 ppl act them, all the independence activists git way more. The also glossed over napoleon and a number of important things.

  • @rufuskennedy9260
    @rufuskennedy9260 Pƙed rokem +10

    6:45 The Boers were much more racist and oppressive of the African people than their British counterparts, and the concentration camps the British used were not like the ones we think of today [horrific places like Auschwitz] rather just a settlement to keep the Boers in the same place so that they wouldn't run off and kill innocent civilians for the independence of their racist state. Furthermore, when the British left South Africa [this is where the Boer War happened], this kind of people took power and established the apartheid system [a kind of racial segregation, where non-white citizens and white citizens were split apart, with non-white citizens living in worse conditions, lower pay, and being forced from the cities for whites to live in], showing that the Boer war was justified in some way.

    • @Tony-lj5lr
      @Tony-lj5lr Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

      under the briish rule, there was racial segregation in south africa
      apartheid was just a harsher continuation of what the briish had already established
      the briish also had segregation in zimbabwe, india, kenya not to mention in austarlia, nz and canada when these countries were under the briish rule
      briish empire was an incredibly racst empire.

  • @THE_ORTHODOX_WARRIOR
    @THE_ORTHODOX_WARRIOR Pƙed rokem +2

    They finally uploaded another video!! Please make more often!

  • @philipforinton5804
    @philipforinton5804 Pƙed rokem +11

    Probably the least informative video - everybody knows slavery happened and the atrocities committed by white rulers in colonies. No context to the Napoleonic Wars or the Seven Years' War, just all about the colonies. And while Olaudah Equiano's book was influential, William Wilberforce was the real architect of the end of slavery in the British Empire.

  • @flerkan2802
    @flerkan2802 Pƙed rokem +25

    Ireland being Englands first colony? What a Wales of a time that was

    • @SWTORROLEPLAY1998
      @SWTORROLEPLAY1998 Pƙed rokem +1

      Well colony means implanting a invading force into another peoples land so like what England did with the plantations, they didn’t do that with wales they were more of a protectorate(puppet state)

    • @flerkan2802
      @flerkan2802 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@SWTORROLEPLAY1998 No they took Wales and extracted the resources from the land, almost wiped out their language and Anglofied the population. Its the same as with Ireland just much earlier

    • @SWTORROLEPLAY1998
      @SWTORROLEPLAY1998 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@flerkan2802 again, not colonisation that’s fucked up but not colonisation for colonisation to happen their needs to be a foreign force occupying land which could be argued happened back in 450AD. Unless your a ethnic nationalist I consider everyone white in Britain native, considering were all mixed together I’m not one of those celts and anglosaxons idiots.

    • @rome316ae3
      @rome316ae3 Pƙed rokem +1

      Is wales a state of USA (

    • @tempejkl
      @tempejkl Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      Does it count as a colony if it isnt overseas though?

  • @matt5979
    @matt5979 Pƙed rokem +6

    I love how the accurate 1500's map had a full world knowledge and had timetravelled into 2022 and changed it's bordrs and returned

  • @wrathofkorven
    @wrathofkorven Pƙed rokem +23

    It's a solid video but the lyrics fall a bit flat for me and the scenery is not up to snuff compared to your older videos. You are also only showing negatives about the Empire. Yes it is right up bring it up and even focus on the negatives imperialism but one must also showcase some positives that came out of it. For instance industrial development, communication and a more interconnected world.
    Glad to see you guys are back and I'm interested to see what you will be bringing us in the future.

    • @andro7862
      @andro7862 Pƙed rokem +1

      *Industrial development for the UK and its settlers.

    • @pieterveenders9793
      @pieterveenders9793 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@andro7862 The UK kickstarted the industrial revolution, which from there on spread to the rest of Europe, and the fruits of which then spread out across the whole world, colonies included. Vaccination programs and other disease eradication programs were brought to the colonies by most European powers. And when decolonisation happened, those countries were left with a vast network of modern infrastructure.

    • @Dan-zc7ut
      @Dan-zc7ut Pƙed rokem +1

      @@andro7862 wrong, industrial development throughout the world

  • @TheAussieHistorian2022
    @TheAussieHistorian2022 Pƙed rokem +14

    i like how george washington has an american accent even though he was british

    • @orangeairsoft7292
      @orangeairsoft7292 Pƙed rokem +4

      Because obviously he started talking like that the second he declared himself 'American' (well, part of the new USA).

  • @owenlee3825
    @owenlee3825 Pƙed rokem +10

    Was kind of hopeing there would be more about Napoleon or Crimea but still very good. Would love to see the German Empire next

  • @FGPR01BrunoCauz
    @FGPR01BrunoCauz Pƙed rokem +2

    Some fun facts about UK:
    The Opium Wars is an under appreciated part of British history that plays a greatly understated role in current events in regards to how China handles itself. Now USA and Europe say that G0D created heaven and earth and the rest is made in China.
    Latin America is the best kept secret of the British Empire and Venezuela the real jewel of the Crown
    England is like the baseball team New York Yankees . You either love or hate, but either way, you appreciate its greatness.

  • @ammarkhan6992
    @ammarkhan6992 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +3

    the fact that the British caused the India-Pakistan partition killing over 2 million people was absolutely heart breaking and i'm rlly happy that you guys ended it with that fact. love from a Pakistani

  • @OliveM-yn2ib
    @OliveM-yn2ib Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +3

    I love how you made a Hamilton reference!!

    • @xyiux
      @xyiux Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +1

      Here comes the general

    • @OliveM-yn2ib
      @OliveM-yn2ib Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +1

      RISE UP@@xyiux

  • @thepanman2024
    @thepanman2024 Pƙed rokem +8

    Well the last monarch of the empire is gone. Rest In Peace Queen Elizabeth And Long Live The King

  • @walmartdoomguy783
    @walmartdoomguy783 Pƙed rokem +2

    Love it! Would like to see the Napoleonic Wars next!

  • @retyboi
    @retyboi Pƙed rokem +36

    You should do this for ottoman empire and talk about the enslavement, displacement, and genocide of the balkans.

    • @stealthotrapo9123
      @stealthotrapo9123 Pƙed rokem +14

      yes, but they should also add the good things about the ottoman empire and not list just all the bad things and make the ottomans look like villains like they did in this video

    • @andro7862
      @andro7862 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@stealthotrapo9123 What good things?

    • @stealthotrapo9123
      @stealthotrapo9123 Pƙed rokem +15

      @@andro7862 Ottomans had contributed to the development of hospitals and healthcare, and witnessed advances in medicine, mining and military technology. To say what good things implying that in the over 600 years of the ottoman empires existence they did nothing good is preposterous.

    • @dranflame_1236
      @dranflame_1236 Pƙed rokem +5

      And also talk about all the Muslims expelled from and killed in the Balkans, Caucasus and Crimea as well

    • @guyfromtheplaceshown3690
      @guyfromtheplaceshown3690 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@stealthotrapo9123 I reread this and I think your saying this video is not inaccurate but unfair and I think we can agree.
      They only list the bad, and they should also list lots of the good things that empires did in history, obviously lots of awful stuff aswell but history is history and we need to know about both.

  • @jacktapman5293
    @jacktapman5293 Pƙed rokem +5

    First one take in 3 years! Wow!
    Great video, keep it up.

    • @irenaveksler1935
      @irenaveksler1935 Pƙed rokem +2

      Two years actually

    • @V1nce_man
      @V1nce_man Pƙed rokem

      And it wasn’t a great video- only focused on British Atrocities but they didn’t explain the Empire’s turn around on slavery, their involvement in the Napoleonic wars, they just focused on all the BAD and no GOOD.

    • @Waltyworld
      @Waltyworld Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

      I know right wow

  • @the501stbros
    @the501stbros Pƙed rokem +12

    Lets go a new One Take episode can't wait for more!

    • @stealthotrapo9123
      @stealthotrapo9123 Pƙed rokem +7

      bro they legit only pointed out negatives

    • @uc5581
      @uc5581 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@stealthotrapo9123 can you please tell me the positive.

    • @irenaveksler1935
      @irenaveksler1935 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@uc5581 ending slavery and the industrial revolution

    • @myhonestreaction6217
      @myhonestreaction6217 Pƙed rokem

      @@uc5581 basically mostly everything you're using now

    • @firingallcylinders2949
      @firingallcylinders2949 Pƙed rokem

      @@uc5581 When the British outlawed slavery the Royal Navy used to patrol the coast capturing slave traders and punishing them.

  • @artificialanimeuniverse5063

    Wow!
    That's a creative way of sharing knowledge!

  • @daflington187
    @daflington187 Pƙed rokem +3

    Great video tbh however I feel like it didn't have the same energy as the usual History Bomb again still good

  • @ae3464
    @ae3464 Pƙed rokem +41

    *_"Oh no we lost america, oh im fine, time to fight another war"_*
    British empire in a nutshell

    • @CMO_-id1mj
      @CMO_-id1mj Pƙed rokem +2

      AHAHAHA. Finaly found some comment that made my day ahaha.

  • @skibsteds
    @skibsteds Pƙed rokem +8

    Yay, you are back! - Thank you for all the great work you put into your fantastic videos!

  • @Makkas31
    @Makkas31 Pƙed rokem

    I have waited this for so long thank you guys:)

  • @MS-jx2rh
    @MS-jx2rh Pƙed rokem +2

    i have waited for so long! and was worth it!

  • @chadgrenadier6713
    @chadgrenadier6713 Pƙed rokem +64

    The only main issue I have is that with the American revolution it’s acting more like the British we’re defeated but over looks issues like Spain and other countries assisting America as well as Britain giving up due to it being inefficient for money but could have sent more armies furthermore this focuses very little on the rise and fall of the empire as well as ignoring benefits it has had and seems more to focus on the downsides

    • @Nemo-ew2hd
      @Nemo-ew2hd Pƙed rokem +3

      britain was also being helped and money is something that is managed on both sides of war

    • @d-boi9785
      @d-boi9785 Pƙed rokem +3

      The British had to deal with like 5 countries up their ass while fighting America lol

    • @Nemo-ew2hd
      @Nemo-ew2hd Pƙed rokem +2

      @@d-boi9785 which 5? there was quite literally only the dutch and spanish in which the spanish provided 1 fleet and the dutch were pretty much doing their own thing

    • @elconcaro8031
      @elconcaro8031 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@Nemo-ew2hd France Also Joined on the American Side

    • @Nemo-ew2hd
      @Nemo-ew2hd Pƙed rokem +2

      @@elconcaro8031 yeah I was referring to the countries who were mainly fighting off of the continent, mainly naval powers, spanish and dutch, cause i was just calling out that BS about 5 countries being dealt with independently of the war

  • @redhausser7492
    @redhausser7492 Pƙed rokem +5

    This is as well made as previous ones, but "History of the British Empire" is misleading. More like "Atrocities of the British Empire", since it mostly goes about the horrible things commited instead of it's general history (which you would expect from the title).

    • @5267w
      @5267w Pƙed rokem

      the general history is largely atrocities the british empire overall did a lot more bad than good but they did mention abolition which most would consider good done by them

  • @Runaway991
    @Runaway991 Pƙed rokem +1

    I LOVE YOUR WORK!

  • @emrekocak7931
    @emrekocak7931 Pƙed rokem +1

    I apreciate u for making history videos

  • @sealstorm1935
    @sealstorm1935 Pƙed rokem +195

    I would be willing to bet my right arm, if history bombs were to do a video on the Chinese Empire, Mongolian Empire, Japanese Empire, Ottoman Empire, Aztec Empire, Mayan Empire, Zulu Empire it wouldn't be nearly as negative or so focused on atrocities, slavery and opression. No one in the right mind today is denying the British Empire is responsible for its fair share of crimes against humanity but to brow beat the viewer over the head with not but a entire nation's worst crimes without acknowledging is great achievemnts is misleading at best and bigoted at worst.

    • @TurtleFist3556
      @TurtleFist3556 Pƙed rokem +23

      I wouldn’t bet on the Japanese one because there’s is pretty undefendable , But as for the others yeah you’re probably right.

    • @sealstorm1935
      @sealstorm1935 Pƙed rokem +9

      @@TurtleFist3556 Well yes your right. When it comes to WW2 it's pretty undefendable. Still if it were to cover the entire history of Japan it wouldn't be nearly as negative.

    • @TurtleFist3556
      @TurtleFist3556 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@sealstorm1935 I agree

    • @erozionzeall6371
      @erozionzeall6371 Pƙed rokem +4

      None of those empire actions still have grave consequences in the present.

    • @kartoffelkaiser322
      @kartoffelkaiser322 Pƙed rokem +13

      @@erozionzeall6371 the mongol empire left large parts of asia uninhabited because they slaughtered the entire population that lived there.

  • @Halcon_Sierreno
    @Halcon_Sierreno Pƙed rokem +358

    This one felt more controversial than fun. It felt really "woke".

    • @tamarinds
      @tamarinds Pƙed rokem +1

      Because it is. This was absolutely hate propaganda. It's evil.

    • @zuesmaya8167
      @zuesmaya8167 Pƙed rokem +1

      It’s not woke, you people just have a massive victim complex so whenever someone talks about the British empire you think it’s an attack because all the British empire did was bad

    • @domocracydestroyer8219
      @domocracydestroyer8219 Pƙed rokem +46

      Yeah. I mean it really listed more bad than good something that many people across the globe seem to focus on these days.

    • @The_Honourable_Company
      @The_Honourable_Company Pƙed rokem +14

      Absolutely

    • @d-boi9785
      @d-boi9785 Pƙed rokem +2

      That’s the thing: it ISNT controversial. It’s easy to hate on the English because they were just better then pretty much everyone. Despite all the good, people will bitch about the bad solely. Mongolians raping, burning and murdering LITERAL BILLIONS? Great tacticians! Romans slaving millions INCLUDING the British? Wow, what a great empire! So mighty! Like, what the fuck?

  • @user-kg8pm4xz7n
    @user-kg8pm4xz7n Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    The subtle hamilton reference with “Here comes the general” 😂

  • @devamjani8041
    @devamjani8041 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci +2

    India's contribution to world GDP before brits arrived : 25 % ( also the India was the richest country of the world for 1600 years by then, the longest for ANY country ever, the record still stands ).
    After brits left : 2%
    Famines in India in the 2000 years before brits arrived : 17
    Famines that occurred under british rule of 200 years : around 25
    Here's a list of some of them : The British era is significant because during this period a very large number of famines struck India.[2][3] There is a vast literature on the famines in colonial British India.[4] The mortality in these famines was excessively high and in many cases it has been increased by British policies.[5] The mortality in the Great Bengal famine of 1770 was between one and 10 million;[6] the Chalisa famine of 1783-1784, 11 million; Doji bara famine of 1791-1792, 11 million; and Agra famine of 1837-1838, 800,000.[7] In the second half of the 19th-century large-scale excess mortality was caused by: Upper Doab famine of 1860-1861, 2 million; Great Famine of 1876-1878, 5.5 million; Indian famine of 1896-1897, 5 million; and Indian famine of 1899-1900, 1 million.[8] The first major famine of the 20th century was the Bengal famine of 1943, which affected the Bengal region during wartime; it was one of the major South Asian famines in which anywhere between 1.5 million and 3 million people died.[9]
    The total number of people who died because of this Famines alone and in India alone goes over tens of millions of people. If you add to this the total number of people who died by any cause that was a result of brits or their policies in all of their colonies then the number easily crosses hundreds of millions. Hence, the lady is correct on this point. Infact, the last great famine under british ruled India was the great Bengal famine of 1943, of which multiple photos and videos you can find in the internet including on CZcams. When multiple concerned british officials wrote to churchil how his actions have created the most devastating famine of the world in the 20th centuary, he replied, " why hasn't Gandhi died yet ".
    India's contributions to the world : The Hindu numerical system, also known as the decimal base system which forms the basis of mathematics and is the system we use today, and which may as well be the greatest invention ever in the history of humanity, Madhava, an Indian mathematician who founded the Kerala school of Mathematics almost discovered calculus over 200 years before newton or leibnitz were even born, and a LOTS AND LOTS of other fundamental contributions to maths, physics, logic, philosophy, biology, etc. India is one of the 3 earliest, oldest civilization, namely, the Harrappan civilization (India), the Masopotamian civilization ( modern day iraq) , the Egyptian civilization. Which one of these is the oldest is highly debatable and a topic of ongoing research, but India was the most extensive and widespread civilization of these all. Ancient Indians invented/ discovered many things some of which are, soap, shampoo, buttons, diamonds, steel, city planning, drainage systems, underground drainiage systems, the world's first port, the game of chess, etc. The first language in the world is also an Indian language ( one of these, Sanskrit or Tamil, both Indian languages). India has also made tremendous contributions in the modern times in STEM and almost every field. On top of it all, the brits committed littoral atrocities in India and other colonies, the most famous of this is the Jaliawalla bagh massacre, whose committer was later treated as a hero, and when an Indian, named Sardar Udham Singh, shot dead him in London as a revenge, he was tried as a terrorist and hanged, his testimony before the court was recorded and I encourage you to read it. In short, if you have studied history from british or european textbooks, I suggest you to for once try different sources like the internet or history books from other countries, manly former colonies.

  • @vortex5924
    @vortex5924 Pƙed rokem +3

    how weird
    almost mentioned all colonies yet left the the middle east and the hejaz war against ottomans in ww1?
    i think it was the most important one because it led to the colonize of egypt and sudan and palestine and jordan and iraq and kuwait and yemen and oman and dubai and qatar in mean time

  • @DiegoGonzalez-kg2xl
    @DiegoGonzalez-kg2xl Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +7

    Extremely bias video, you chose to only focus on the atrocities, rather of focusing on both the good and the bad.

    • @tempejkl
      @tempejkl Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      They didnt even get all the atrocities in. Instead focusing on some books from random black dudes that didnt have an effect

  • @T3TomTomAwesomeYTchannel
    @T3TomTomAwesomeYTchannel Pƙed rokem +2

    I just got recommended this and its been over 2 or 1 year not watching u guys. My first watch of your videos was the WW1 that one was bangar.

  • @hulking_abc1233
    @hulking_abc1233 Pƙed rokem +1

    Well happy you’re back

  • @thanos9447
    @thanos9447 Pƙed rokem +30

    I wonder how they’re gonna talk about the Napoleonic wars. A defining moment in British history which led to the start of the pax Britannica

 aaaaaaand nothing. Also you can’t just put the blame solely on the United Kingdom for the partition of India. The partition was solely due because the Hindus and Muslims couldn’t get along and when discussing a united India neither side could agree on anything. Even Gandhi saw that it was next to impossible to satisfy all parties involved. They chose to partition India. Could the British have done more? Probably, but in the end it was up to the two groups to decide. Also, if you’re gonna talk about the slave trade then you should also talk about how Britain took an active role in stopping the slave trade in the 19th and 20th century’s. A nice mention of the African squadron would’ve been nice. As for the First Nations yes we had our ups and downs, but so does every other nation. When they first met there were problems on both sides. English slavers would kidnap First Nations people well at the same time the first nations would kidnap English settlers. However both sides managed to put away their differences and come to terms with each other and even form alliances. In the seven years war, the revolutionary war and the war of 1812 the first nations were valued allies of the British. In fact one of the big reasons for the American revolutionary war was because the British band the expansion westward into First Nation territory in order to keep the peace between Britain and the first nations. Also in 1812 if it wasn’t for Tecumseh and his people British North America would’ve fallen into American hands. Unfortunately the first nations did suffer from diseases spread by Europeans but so too did Europeans suffer from diseases from the New World. Medicine and medical knowledge at the time were less than stellar.

    • @marksonner3162
      @marksonner3162 Pƙed rokem +4

      "blame solely on the United Kingdom for the partition of India. The partition was solely due because the Hindus and Muslims couldn’t get along and when discussing a united India neither side could agree on anything. "
      So you're saying its okay they exploited this and conquered and systematically starved millions? Neat.
      "As for the First Nations yes we had our ups and downs, but so does every other nation. When they first met there were problems on both sides."
      "Ups and downs"? Really you call genocide ups and downs? Thats so ignorant its not even funny. It doesn't;t matter if they fought with the English, in the end the English we're in a land that wasn't theirs to conquer, and to try and blame natives for the reason why they got conquered is so incredibly ignorant, literally. Look in the mirror, stop sticking up for empires, when they are inherently oppressive.

    • @danielharrison9237
      @danielharrison9237 Pƙed rokem +6

      @@marksonner3162 most of them died from disease. lets not act like the Sioux wouldnt completley wipe out the Crows if they could. People were savage back then and war was a normal state for almost every nation that existed

    • @marksonner3162
      @marksonner3162 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@danielharrison9237 theres a distinct difference between two people, from the same continent warring with eachother than that of the British coming to a new one, and conquering it. They died mostly from disease yet if I may pose a question
where did that come from? Definitely not them.

    • @SafavidAfsharid3197
      @SafavidAfsharid3197 Pƙed rokem +3

      You forgot that both hindus and muslims fought in sepoy mutiny though. The british to combat this divided india by martial race theory and even supported a Maulana who seeked to further two nation theory.

    • @danielharrison9237
      @danielharrison9237 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@marksonner3162 again you're describing events that are completely normal in human history. People have been invading other continents and spreading disease for thousands of years

  • @fot6771
    @fot6771 Pƙed rokem +42

    You could make a similar video about the Roman empire and mention every genocide, crime and all the violence, but you don't admit that the Romans were ultimately responsible for forging West, North and Central Europe into the best, most free and most progressive regions to live in the world in the 21st century.
    Understanding the benefits does not mean you have to forgive the crimes. Let's not forget the bloodshed but we musn't forget the progress, Common law, democratic and industrial achievements either.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Pƙed rokem +9

      They prefer a racial and denunciation approach. unsubbed

    • @generalkurt6033
      @generalkurt6033 Pƙed rokem +3

      @@DaveSCameron What should`ve they done instead? Praise that they built up India, Australia and the USA and not mention the fact that they left africa in rubbish (Not to say that it wasnt in rubbish before, but back then it maybe would`ve worked out different.)

    • @cantripleplays
      @cantripleplays Pƙed rokem +3

      @@generalkurt6033 they didn't build up the usa, the usa built up the usa, now you forgot canada

    • @generalkurt6033
      @generalkurt6033 Pƙed rokem

      @@cantripleplays The US came out from many different nation and still, the spark originated from the british colonies.
      And yeah, Canada. Sorry Canada.

    • @Drace90
      @Drace90 Pƙed rokem +1

      Well, I would argue british colonialism didn't exactly do that for its colonies and that "we make you better by making you like us!" is never a good reason to take anyones land away.
      That said, I also think this video does not really work as even a summary of the British Empire. It only talks about colonialism. Which is totally fine, but then why not just call it "History of british colonialism" then? Seems way more fitting.

  • @johnnagatihe7376
    @johnnagatihe7376 Pƙed rokem +1

    20 mins is also fine ,ur videos are so interesting

  • @jaedenb3795
    @jaedenb3795 Pƙed rokem +1

    Finally your back History Bomb

  • @harryholden795
    @harryholden795 Pƙed rokem +5

    Really enjoyed this video, and as an Aboriginal Australian myself it was nice to see that a Blackfulla was used appropriately :D

  • @simonstaysnclr
    @simonstaysnclr Pƙed rokem +3

    Not a fan of talking about the most influential empire in modern history and then only talking about atrocities. I mean really? The british weren't even actively responsible for the smallpox epidemic, so why mention it in the same line as active killing?

    • @simonstaysnclr
      @simonstaysnclr Pƙed rokem +1

      Also giving more time to people that fruitlessly opposed the empire then those who represent the empire itself is weird to me.

  • @natieboi
    @natieboi Pƙed rokem +1

    AND THE LEGEND IS BACK

  • @SorieMiya
    @SorieMiya Pƙed rokem +1

    Nice to see another one

  • @niceone9443
    @niceone9443 Pƙed rokem +3

    History bombs and oversimplified take so long for a video but at the end it’s amazing and with a few videos from both of them you will pass history

  • @diegomarquez4340
    @diegomarquez4340 Pƙed rokem +5

    Btw if ya'll wanna read a book on the Jamestown colony I would highly recommend "Pocohantas and the Powhatan Dilemma"

  • @full_3nglish
    @full_3nglish Pƙed rokem +2

    Well done for not dwelling too long on all the many cultural and industrial innovations but instead focusing on the atrocities.

    • @tempejkl
      @tempejkl Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      Every country has them. No country has ever committed so many atrocities against foreign peoples’. And the ones that have, apologised (excluding Japan and the USA.)

  • @PingyBuri
    @PingyBuri Pƙed rokem +2

    OMG UR BACK!

  • @panda4109
    @panda4109 Pƙed rokem +52

    You can tell this video is made in 2022

    • @clarencehemphill3403
      @clarencehemphill3403 Pƙed rokem

      How so

    • @chrisigoeb
      @chrisigoeb Pƙed rokem +6

      Sadly yes

    • @joshuachin1850
      @joshuachin1850 Pƙed rokem

      Lol

    • @pieterveenders9793
      @pieterveenders9793 Pƙed rokem +19

      @@clarencehemphill3403 All of the "white man bad" rhetoric.

    • @soifon7000
      @soifon7000 Pƙed rokem +9

      @@clarencehemphill3403 Because it does nothing but preaching about how bad and bad the British Empire was.
      While slavery is still going on in this world.

  • @Duckguy327
    @Duckguy327 Pƙed rokem +5

    I really like this I think making more History bombs on Empires would be cool Like Spain or the Ottomans

  • @TheTrainiac377
    @TheTrainiac377 Pƙed rokem +1

    you guys are back with history!!!!

  • @adamlegoking
    @adamlegoking Pƙed rokem

    UR BACKK

  • @TopHatRat
    @TopHatRat Pƙed rokem +6

    wait england and portugal were never rivals they have had an alliance sence 1386

    • @tempejkl
      @tempejkl Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      I think it means friendly rivalry

  • @Norridon
    @Norridon Pƙed rokem +10

    This is honestly less of the history of the empire and more of just the attrocities and bad parts of it. Although we cannae deny that these events happened, this video is not doing the actual history of the British Empire any good.
    If anything this video should be titled "Failures and attrocities of the British Empire (in One Take)

    • @erozionzeall6371
      @erozionzeall6371 Pƙed rokem

      As it should be. Britain has screwed the world over.

    • @Norridon
      @Norridon Pƙed rokem

      @@erozionzeall6371
      And you have a profile picture with both the flag of the Soviet Union, and Guuci. Don't try to lecture me about screwing over the world. 💀
      The British Empire was a colonial empire, what did you expect from it? "Oopsie poopsie, I just did a stinky within my colonies, I guess I need to give it independence because the 18th century version of woke should have been more advanced!"
      And the video is supposed to be about the actual history and some of the good as well, not just the bad things to demomize the entire thing.

    • @erozionzeall6371
      @erozionzeall6371 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@Norridon All the British empire deserves now is blame

    • @disneymore7941
      @disneymore7941 Pƙed rokem +1

      "the actual history" except this is still the actual history. Gonna cry, like you do for Her Majesty who's now in a box?

    • @Norridon
      @Norridon Pƙed rokem

      @@disneymore7941
      The disrespect I do not appreciate.
      I will not deny this is *part* of the history, but it's not the entire thing.

  • @braverbird60
    @braverbird60 Pƙed 24 dny +1

    this video was explosive for sure

  • @willistoneheart5799
    @willistoneheart5799 Pƙed rokem

    Just another awesome Video by History Bomb

  • @hadiazam7051
    @hadiazam7051 Pƙed rokem +4

    You Should Do A History Of Queen Elizabeth II One Take

  • @Yes-pd3cb
    @Yes-pd3cb Pƙed rokem +21

    "The Real Story" - completely ignoring the leading democracy that Britain is today and everything they have brought to the world that has improved it. Not to mention a lot of the civil wars that broke out after the British left were just a continuation of fighting that had existed before the British arrived.

    • @disneymore7941
      @disneymore7941 Pƙed rokem +1

      "leading democracy" that treats the Queen's death like how North Korea reacted to Kim Jong-il's and Kim Il-sung's deaths. Nationalist apologist much?

    • @disneymore7941
      @disneymore7941 Pƙed rokem +2

      If the screaming in the House of Commons is a "leading democracy" then this society is screwed

    • @Yes-pd3cb
      @Yes-pd3cb Pƙed rokem +2

      @@disneymore7941 Would you rather live under a dictatorship like that of China, Russia, NK or most of the third world?

  • @Nicholas_schryvers2367
    @Nicholas_schryvers2367 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +2

    When George Washington said here comes the general i thought of Hamilton

  • @jacobmilner1099
    @jacobmilner1099 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    It turns out 8 minutes is in fact long enough to shit on the British.
    Seriously if you want a still critical but fair video on the British Empire see History Summarized: The British Empire by Overly Sarcastic Productions, it's only 4 minutes longer, and significantly more balanced and informative.

  • @I_GAMER-
    @I_GAMER- Pƙed rokem +10

    3:22
    Ladies and gentleman!

  • @TrnazizzT
    @TrnazizzT Pƙed rokem +4

    Elizabeth II HAS PASSED AWAY

  • @BoleVad
    @BoleVad Pƙed rokem +2

    might not be my favourite history bomb but god did you nail that ending.

  • @emrekocak7931
    @emrekocak7931 Pƙed rokem +1

    Nice video

  • @arakami8547
    @arakami8547 Pƙed rokem +11

    There's more than a couple of critiques I can make of this video; however you just can't compress the historiography of the British Empire into a 9 minute video -- in other words, something is better than nothing I suppose. As a brief summary of the British Empire for teenagers wanting to pass history class, it's certainly not bad. That said, it is still incredibly lacking in information which can mislead people, specifically those searching for greater understanding of the British Empire, and is certainly very opinionated.
    To list a couple omissions that would have been beneficial in displaying impartiality and accuracy (though of course would lengthen said summary, very possibly resulting in a 20~ minute long video with just the inclusion of information listed):
    - It would have been good to mention the general split between the early and late colonial periods, a simple sentence of reference would have sufficed.
    - Slavery was very much the norm back then; the merchants themselves were typically African slave kingdoms selling to the Ottomans or the Europeans. It would actually have been nice to make mention of Britain's role in the global abolition of the slave trade. Regarding its abolition, the slave trade itself was abolished throughout the British Empire in 1807, whilst the remaining 10,000-15,000 slaves present within the empire by 1833 were freed. For reference, it would have been good to make mention of the 4 million slaves present in the US by 1860.
    - Whilst the 13 colonies were taxed more in 1775 than they were 1760, taxes were still much lower than in continental Europe or back at the home isles.
    - It would have been good to mention the technological state of Australia prior to its colonisation; prior to 1788, our continent was pre-historic with technology paramount to Afro-Eurasian technology found during the neo-lithic and had yet to invent written language.
    - By extension, it would have been good to make mention of both the state of living in both India and Africa prior to colonisation, and also to answer the question as to why they were colonised then. Specifically for Africa, the sub-sahara was relatively easily colonised due to a lack of indigenous empire or developed nation -- whilst colonisation itself was spurred largely by the invention of the train which helped bring coastal resources inland. For India meanwhile, there is little mention to the warring and declining state of the Mughal Empire which permitted European settlements to pop up on the sub-continent.
    - Regarding the empire's decline, you seemingly exaggerate it into being a rather bloody affair when it largely was not; the Mau Mau Rebellion which was the bloodiest rebellion that led to independence from the British, resulted in a mere 15,000~ thousand dead. Comparably, the Americans inflicted unto the Philippino's 200,000~ dead and the French unto the Algerians 400,000 to 1 million dead.
    - Also, you make mention of the remaining borders... much of British Africa was first made into federations for the natives to later decide whether to remain united or devolve and leave said federations; following said splintering is when you start to see much of Africa's post-independence strife. It would be good to make mention of historical ethnic tensions and wars, the latter seeing a revival upon widespread independence. To note is Sudan's independent revival of slavery during their civil war, the practice having been abolished more than a century prior by the British.
    - Regarding the remaining borders for the Indian Subcontinent, omitted was the ethnic tensions between the Hindus and Muslims, the latter wanting an independent Muslim state in fear of persecution under Hindu Indian rule -- a fear not unfounded as evident with the Ottomans actions during WW1, the Germans actions during WW2, and the Indians' actions following the proclamation of Independence for Hyderabad. Also, it would have been nice to mention the state of the sub-continents borders and operations prior to colonisation.
    - Whilst Gandhi is well used to depict India's struggle for independence, it should also be noted in passing that he himself thought Indians superior to native Africans -- though omission of that is fine, he is more symbolic than true.
    - Lastly, it would have been good to make greater mention of Britain's role in the Industrial Revolution and the various technological and medical advancements that helped Europe, Britain, and various parts of the empire prosper. Also to mention would have been its role in the sciences.
    All that aside, you name a number of very influential figures such as Cecil Rhodes which is praiseworthy. I also rarely hear mention of the Golden Hinde being that I'm from Australia, so I was somewhat surprised when it was mentioned here.

    • @hiddentreasure2161
      @hiddentreasure2161 Pƙed rokem

      The main issue I found is that it seemed like the video blamed its length for the lack of content when they could have made it longer, but took the conscious decision not to.

  • @Georgios1821
    @Georgios1821 Pƙed rokem +8

    All the people insult Britain and they live and work in Britain in any other nation they would be exiled for this

    • @kyzantia8884
      @kyzantia8884 Pƙed rokem +4

      Honestly if they hate the country so much, they should just leave, but they never will due to the much higher standard of living.

  • @emrekocak7931
    @emrekocak7931 Pƙed rokem +2

    Pls do more of these history of empires

  • @bluecrusade9538
    @bluecrusade9538 Pƙed rokem +2

    This hit different now