The Rise and Fall of the Balts: Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians

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  • čas přidán 18. 12. 2018
  • How did the Balts (Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians) rise and fall in Europe from one of the most powerful empires in history, to the collection of middling post-Soviet states that we see today? Today let's discuss some of the history of the Baltic peoples and others that have inhabited this region, and the evolution of the modern nations into what we see today.
    Be sure to let me know your thoughts on the Baltic nations and their rise, fall and evolution throughout history. Thanks for watching!
    Participate in the channel census here: docs.google.com/forms/d/1Aq7N...
    Also, be sure to subscribe to Pewdiepie: / @pewdiepie
    Sources:
    deepbaltic.com/2016/03/02/the...
    www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplog...
    www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplog...
    www.britannica.com/place/gran...
    www.britannica.com/topic/Balt...
    joshuaproject.net/people_grou...
    joshuaproject.net/people_grou...
    joshuaproject.net/people_grou...

Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @Arthur-nt1gd
    @Arthur-nt1gd Před 5 lety +2278

    Balts do not have mixed feelings about the Soviet occupation. We have undeniably negative feelings! Those who claim otherwise are usually foreigners living in our country who benefitted from immigrating during soviet times and also some native communists who also benefitted from this by exploiting power.

    • @jameslegrand848
      @jameslegrand848 Před 5 lety +196

      Lol IKR, hell I even heard that the the Baltic states communism is treated like Nazism is treated in western Europe. Never looked up if it was true though.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +246

      @@jameslegrand848 I mean, why shouldn't we all treat communism in the same way?

    • @genghiskhan6809
      @genghiskhan6809 Před 5 lety +186

      @@@Vitalis94 Yep. The only good commie is a dead commie.

    • @charlesrb3898
      @charlesrb3898 Před 5 lety +64

      @@bananarama9000 They were all Lutheran, Western leaning and civilized.

    • @ricomuru9486
      @ricomuru9486 Před 5 lety +68

      @@bananarama9000 the only reason in estonia for that is the soviet ocvupation that made us see the real momsters as later german occupiers actually tried to help estonians and so we saw good in them but in estonian war of independence we fought baltic germans for a summer ir less and got the bloodiest battles of the war all because we wanted to revenge for the 700 years of slavery. People ran off from hospitals and reserve units to fight germans

  • @Odinsday
    @Odinsday Před 5 lety +912

    The Baltic region is so criminally underrated. It's sad, because Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania have some of the weirdest, yet awesome cultures in Europe.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +31

      Yeah, why are those cultures weird?

    • @mignas
      @mignas Před 5 lety +49

      Weird in what way? For the longest time i thought that balric culture is distinct for not smiling excessively and being reserved. But later on i found out that scandinavians are like this, and suomi are even more.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +32

      @@mignas Not only Scandinavians, but Germans, Poles, Russians... Most of Europe actually.

    • @greengeck0
      @greengeck0 Před 5 lety +42

      @Roger Philips (I can only talk for lithuanian history) I believe he is referring to the multiculturalism mentioned in the video, like Vilnius being Jerusalem of the north, there being a general acceptance of different religious beliefs in major cities my great grandmother would talk about Rabbi's Priest's and Imam's discussing holy text (But that's just anecdotal evidence with not much to back it).
      Ir the general fights to remain pagan against the crusades, the book smuggling days in the Russian Empire from East Prussia to not let the language die. The "first" constitution in Europe (At least i remember our history teacher saying that, need to look into that) Electing kings since 16 th century (Which in hindsight was not greatest long term plan (*liberum veto)) and as closing thing the freedom fights/guerilla war in europe leading the ww2 occupation that lasted roughly 9 years that then turned into the singing revolution in the baltics with the "Baltic way" maybe being the most famous show of that.
      Well this is what I could shortly say about our history and the culture it shaped, but I believe everyone's history/culture sounds weird and quirky when you learn since I don't know in depth history of lets say France or Spain I can't for sure say we have the weirdest on.
      I Hope that gives some rough idea on the topic

    • @ChristianDoretti
      @ChristianDoretti Před 5 lety +6

      @@JesusRocksTryPrayin What the fuck

  • @klasesalk
    @klasesalk Před 5 lety +821

    There are no mixed feelings about "soviet liberation", only negative!!!

    • @valhallanews5675
      @valhallanews5675 Před 4 lety +4

      Can you elaborate on that? How bad it was under the Soviets?

    • @meganstevefrost7326
      @meganstevefrost7326 Před 4 lety +112

      I can half my family was killed by the Russians trying to resist them ! My father was adopted to America after WW2 from Latvia and my one remaining uncle fled to Germany !My father watched my grandfather and two of my uncles get murdered by russians . Many Latvians have mix feelings who was worse but it seems to be the Russians.Ukraine got the worst of the abuse from Russia thay got slaughtered you dont hear much about it hmmm? For those of you embracing socialism here in America stop you are being incredibly stupid and have no idea wtf your talking about. Remain free and never i mean never give it up.

    • @zawiszaczarny7876
      @zawiszaczarny7876 Před 4 lety +62

      @@valhallanews5675 Watch soviet story documentary, it was same murderous shithole as Nazi Germany. Except soviets killed their own same as others.

    • @vankinobis8049
      @vankinobis8049 Před 4 lety +83

      @@valhallanews5675 Death, starvation, siberia, forced military serve right away after accupation in WWII and Afganistan war (soviets vietnam), no national songs meetings and language, killings rapes gorilla wars. Last partizan died in 1965 Lithuania. Shots in your neighbours house, soldiers draging woman outside to her hair to have a plesure of soviet liberation, while inside house her husband, two childs are shot and baby in fireplace. same and worse stories can tell you most of the local old vileagers. They tell you how soviets bring people from soviet union gave them local land captured from killed and baned locals to siberia. There was no liberation there was only fear death slavery

    • @martinsujavicius936
      @martinsujavicius936 Před 4 lety +17

      My mother when she was really young some of her town people rebelled against the soviets preventing tanks to go through but as soviets are soviets they simply ran them over. The worst part is that a little girl tripped and well guess you can tell what happened next. Personally, I enjoy Soviet Memes but their ways I absolutely hate them

  • @igorserafin015
    @igorserafin015 Před 5 lety +585

    Lithuanians accepted catholicism not because of the influence from the german settlers, whose presence in Lithuania was scarce if not none (unlike in neighbouring Prussia), but because of the alliance and the personal union with the Kingdom of Poland. It makes an huge differance from 14th century politics point of view.

    • @davidrosner6267
      @davidrosner6267 Před 5 lety +29

      Igor serafin01, that’s a good point. The Lithuanians converted to Catholicism because they realized that the Teutonic order would destroy them if they didn’t take matters into their own hands.

    • @FlyBoyKai
      @FlyBoyKai Před 5 lety +48

      @@davidrosner6267 Teutons wouldn't have destroyed them either way, politically it was better as they were one of last pagan countries. They expected Teutons to stop raiding them after conversion which didn't happen until they crushed them with help of the Poles in 1410.

    • @kamilszadkowski8864
      @kamilszadkowski8864 Před 5 lety +28

      ​ Happeleh Or rather until Poles didn't crush Teutons with help of Lithuanians since in battle of Grunwald Poles were the majority in the Allied Army. Not to mention the fact that Order wasn't really broken until the Thirteen Years War in which Lithuania didn't even participate.

    • @Fankas2000
      @Fankas2000 Před 5 lety +8

      @@davidrosner6267 No they accepted Christianity because Jogaila was a greedy bastard who was ready to sell his own faith/people if it meant he got to rule 2 countries via his wife Jadwiga the Queen/King of Poland. One of the conditions of the marriage was the he has to become a Christian.

    • @m.b.54
      @m.b.54 Před 5 lety +2

      Doesn't your hero- as i suppose-, Vytautas, accept the baptism from the Teutonic knights in 1383, and the name Wigand. What do you call it, if accuse Jogaila of betrayal?

  • @slay7584
    @slay7584 Před 5 lety +829

    Cheers to Balts from Poland, especially to Lithuanians. Our common history marks a place in the world, old grudges need to stay in the past, but our legacy must live on.

    • @kletniak
      @kletniak Před 5 lety +11

      @DonVonVideos / LonVonVideos We do it with Belarus, cause they are for us a Grand Duchy of Lithuania, small lithuania is a soviet mixed zone.

    • @kletniak
      @kletniak Před 5 lety +8

      ​@DonVonVideos / LonVonVideos Belarus with flag of Pogoń is a succesor of Grand Duchy Lithuania, small lithuania is a "Żmudzini", not a old lithuanians like Piłsudski or Mickiewicz.

    • @kletniak
      @kletniak Před 5 lety +14

      ​ DonVonVideos / LonVonVideos My grandfather was a old lithuanian, mixed polish/belarus,/lithuanian in culture, today small lithuania is a product of "Żmudzini" not a fathers of Grand Duchy Lithuania. Józef Piłsudski and Adam Mickiewicz was born on Lithuania and Belarus, and they speaking in polish language, so where is now Grand Duchy of Lithuania? in Belarus, small lithuania is a product of soviet politic against returned of Republica of two nations.

    • @fidenemini111
      @fidenemini111 Před 5 lety +68

      @@kletniak Funny Slavic tuzik with his "special history" nobody recognizes and nobody cares of :D

    • @kletniak
      @kletniak Před 5 lety +2

      JS Gaming CS:GO and more :P you learn to school cause you dont know elementary things .

  • @domant26
    @domant26 Před 5 lety +225

    Finally someone mentioned our lands... Peace and love from Latvia!

    • @alefthandedwhocantaffordle413
      @alefthandedwhocantaffordle413 Před 4 lety +2

      domant 912 lithuanians are less mentioned than latvians.

    • @tomasvods8348
      @tomasvods8348 Před 4 lety +2

      @@alefthandedwhocantaffordle413 hmmmm

    • @OptieEm
      @OptieEm Před 4 lety +1

      But it happend 900 years ago.

    • @Olterior
      @Olterior Před 4 lety +2

      Love you Braliuks. Only state union Id get behind.

    • @LukasSRR
      @LukasSRR Před 3 lety +1

      It's okay that lithuania are less mentioned because we have bigger history than latvia and estonia combined . They also should be heard more often.

  • @ki-adi-mundi6421
    @ki-adi-mundi6421 Před 5 lety +342

    I always liked the Baltic’s. They’ve never really upset Italians or Greeks.
    Love to Baltic countries
    🇱🇻 🇪🇪 🇱🇹

    • @beltuna9
      @beltuna9 Před 5 lety +19

      Lol

    • @cluncherp5891
      @cluncherp5891 Před 5 lety

      @I Stole your Cookie while you read my username oh that video

    • @fidenemini111
      @fidenemini111 Před 5 lety

      @I Stole your Cookie while you read my username :D:D:D

    • @aivisabele
      @aivisabele Před 5 lety +6

      Two latvia words that will upset every italian - Valdis Dombrovskis!

    • @mohammedaljaberi2366
      @mohammedaljaberi2366 Před 5 lety

      man I wonder who is in your profile picture. Too much people on the youtube have this picture on their profile!

  • @terryboyer1342
    @terryboyer1342 Před 5 lety +85

    I went to high school in the 70s with many 1st gen Latvians. They all spoke fluent Latvian were very intelligent and many joined the military as interpreters as they hated the USSR.

    • @tymanung6382
      @tymanung6382 Před rokem

      Many volunteers joined der Heeer,
      ("Wermacht") in WW II after local
      rightwing gov s disbanded own
      armies to let people join, Heer.
      (("Wermacht"). Neutrality was, not
      possible or desired.by.some, who
      targeted local Jews. partisans.
      & Soviet Red Army. who.whatever.else
      ?liberated some concentration or
      death camps. Did local.volunteers aid
      in destruction of Vilnius Ghetto?Let us
      hope not!

  • @beltuna9
    @beltuna9 Před 5 lety +170

    I visited my Lithuanian 'homelands' a few years ago along with Latvia and Estonia. The young kids thought I was nuts when I suggested how much potential I saw there. Loved the natural environment and medieval city centers. Like to go again. Riga and Kaunas in particular.

    • @waltanmaran9931
      @waltanmaran9931 Před 5 lety +11

      I would suggest you to visit Vilnius, since it has second the biggest old town in Europe, after Prague

    • @beltuna9
      @beltuna9 Před 5 lety +3

      @@waltanmaran9931 I did visit Vilnius. Very pretty

    • @Fankas2000
      @Fankas2000 Před 5 lety +10

      @@beltuna9 Very pretty and full of westernized hipsters who ruin the landscape...

    • @rds7516
      @rds7516 Před 5 lety +4

      @@Fankas2000 Ruin the landscape? Sorry, how?

    • @Fankas2000
      @Fankas2000 Před 5 lety +6

      @@rds7516 Giant beards and the lumberjack look in the 21 century is a sign of femininity as the vast majority of hipsters grow giant beards to compensate for their lack of masculinity. And there is nothing more ugly then a feminine man.

  • @Vitalis94
    @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +338

    I don't know where you got the info about Germanic influences in Lithuania. Latvia is a different matter, of course, as it was conquered and settled by German monastic order, but Christianity in Lithuania wasn't either adopted from or influenced by the Germans in any way, the conversion happened due to Poland. And the same Poland influenced Lithuania far more than Germans ever did - and Germans weren't so easy to find in Lithuania. Most of the current Lithuanian lands hardly saw any German migration outside few cities (besides Klaipeda/Memel, but it's solely because it was part of Prussia before).

    • @mantasmisevicius3758
      @mantasmisevicius3758 Před 5 lety +29

      Germanic influence happen in Lithuanian Minor, which was the place of Lithuanians intermingled with German culture and education who provided skeleton to literature, and was crucial aid for Lithuanian identity in tough times under ''russification''. There is nice Wikipedia reads on Lithuania Minor, for someone interested.

    • @NeblogaiLT
      @NeblogaiLT Před 5 lety +20

      There certainly were a lot of Germanic influence to Lithuania. First- there were a lot of trading, and German merchants/manufacturers were always living in our towns in large numbers. Second- our grand dukes not only fought against Crusaders, but also used them in power struggles (like Vytautas did, by making deals with Teutons); they even did a Crusade against Golden Horde together. Third: Germanic HRE was important back then, so for example, GDL sued for the right of ruling Žemaitija in HRE courts. Fourth- areas of current Lithuania lived under German rule, so were definitely affected: not only Memel-Klaipėda region, but also all left bank of Nemunas (Sūduva and part of Dainava) were part of Prussian state during the 19th century.

    • @SimonsDiscoveries
      @SimonsDiscoveries Před 5 lety +17

      Yeah, but @Vitalis compares it to Polish influence, and from that perspective, whatever came from Germany must seem a bit less significant.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +16

      @@SimonsDiscoveries Exactly. I don't deny German influences as there are obviously some. But they pale in comparison compared with Polish ones. On the other hand, Latvia has much more German influence, hell, their sole outside influence, besides Russian and Swedish are obviously the Germans.
      While there were some Germans in Lithuanian cities they weren't that numerous.
      And as for XIX century Lithuanian revival, as most of Lithuanian literature was produced and smuggled from Lithuania minor in East Prussia (region around Tilsit), there are bound to be some German influence, of course. But Lithuanian-Polish relations are centuries old, many customs traveled from one culture to another, not to mention linguistic loans etc.

    • @Simi822
      @Simi822 Před 5 lety +6

      @@Vitalis94 maybe not in Lithuania but look at Latvia and Estonia - there the nobility was German, and the Germans build up Reval, Narva or Riga...and the Germans influenced even Ingria...

  • @pacthug4life
    @pacthug4life Před 5 lety +106

    4:00 Teutonic Order was a independent state only allied with empire, not part of it. That's a false oversimplification
    4:20 Lithuania became catholic due to Polish not German influence.
    5:55 Lithuanian did not conquer Ruthenian land from local population, they pushed the Tatars out of Rus. So, Lithuanians fought mostly against Mongols not Slavs. The hostilities between Lithuania and Moscow started much later.
    6:50 Courland was more of a German than Baltic state. It was somewhat a continuation of Livonian Order's rule in the region. Most of its higher class was German, German was also the official language of the duchy. What it more, it was never a vassal of Lithuania. The Inflants (Livonia) was under both Polish and Lithuanian administration, when Courland itself was a vassal of the Polish king.
    7:20 I do not recall Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth ever being in a war with France. Quite the opposite, those nations had pretty warm relations, they even been in a union for a very short time.
    8:50 As far as I know, reading extensively on the topic, Baltic People have very negative feelings about the Soviet Occupation.

    • @Hadar1991
      @Hadar1991 Před 9 měsíci

      Yeah, this video has a ton of factual error. Although Courland was co-vassal of Crown of Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania, not vassal of any of them individually, while Duchy of Prussia was direct vassal of Crown of Poland

    • @Raiaramis24
      @Raiaramis24 Před 8 měsíci

      Soviet occupation was very negative to us, that is for sure. You cant do anything, You have to live with it, but everyone wanted to get free again.

  • @habermanmusic
    @habermanmusic Před 5 lety +158

    I am Latvian and we still celebrate many pagan holidays to this day!

    • @ShantyTowniekKMm
      @ShantyTowniekKMm Před 4 lety +11

      DanYeet that goes for us Estonian as well.

    • @sami_te29
      @sami_te29 Před 4 lety +6

      DEUS VULT INFIDEL

    • @sami_te29
      @sami_te29 Před 4 lety +1

      DEUS VULT

    • @Eisvydas
      @Eisvydas Před 4 lety +3

      Same thing as Lithuania . Many people going to burial mounds and barrows to light up the fire and to enjoy nice meathy food or something sweet if dont and then drink beer and gradually get to vodka or just beer . 2020/06/20 by 21:45 !!!! Saturday !!!

    • @Olterior
      @Olterior Před 4 lety +4

      Janis day(Jonines) best holiday ever

  • @Gaming4Justice
    @Gaming4Justice Před 5 lety +160

    Big oof in the WWII thing. Baltics got their independance in 1918 and then in the 1940 were occupied by the Soviets. Then Germany came and liberated us from under the communists and then the USSR pushed the Germans back and retook the Baltic region. And there are no mixed feelings about the USSR, nobody wants it back. Even during the war, most Estonians atleast who decied to pick a side to fight on, chose the German side because nobody wants communist slavs to rule their country especially when they were the previous rulers.

    • @Ridddigg
      @Ridddigg Před 5 lety +9

      For the Germans, you (Balts) were third-class people. In the Soviet Union, all citizens had the same rights from Estonia to Kyrgyzstan.

    • @Gaming4Justice
      @Gaming4Justice Před 5 lety +55

      @@Ridddigg Well looking at the deportation to Siberia of 10000 people and sending people to GULAG and literally being all the time in the danger of being targeted, then nobody wanted to live in the Soviet Union. We didn't suffer under the German rule like we did under the Russian one.

    • @Ridddigg
      @Ridddigg Před 5 lety +3

      @@Gaming4Justice But there was no discrimination on nationality. Unlike the modern EU. However, all Europeans are racists and Nazis in their spirit (this is normal for Europe).

    • @Gaming4Justice
      @Gaming4Justice Před 5 lety +45

      @@Ridddigg Except the discrimination that you had to learn Russian and were banned from speaking Estonian or doing anything that is of your culture. You couldn't even sing national songs. There was a certain russianising at the time.

    • @htresty6442
      @htresty6442 Před 5 lety +31

      @@Ridddigg No discrimination? Mate, the Russians were basically "superior" to any other nation's citizens in the USSR. The government was mostly on ethnic Russians' side.
      But true, there wasn't THAT much discrimination. Stalin's government still killed and wrongfully imprisoned both ethnic russians and other countries' people.

  • @ontuonssmetuona8016
    @ontuonssmetuona8016 Před 5 lety +179

    Bunda jau Baltija! Atmuostas Baltija!

    • @patriotiskaslietuvis5631
      @patriotiskaslietuvis5631 Před 5 lety +15

      Šaunuolis Žėmaitis, kad saugai savo kalbą. ;) Pagarba. Vieninteliai žemaičiai saugo savo unikalumą, visom kitom tarmėm žmonės sarmatijas šnekėt, o gaila, juk reikia saugoti savo unikalumą.

    • @ontuonssmetuona8016
      @ontuonssmetuona8016 Před 5 lety +14

      Pilietis Gaila kad Lietuvos valdžia trugdo mums “vystiti” mūsu unikalumą. Anot, politikų mokyklose Žemaitijoj yra svarbiau kad vaikai mokytusi rusų nei žemaičių kalba...

    • @patriotiskaslietuvis5631
      @patriotiskaslietuvis5631 Před 5 lety +9

      Arba anglų. Bet viskas žmonių rankose, tėvai turi mokyti vaikus, ir suteikti didžiavimosi jausmą, dėl kalbos, o ne smerkti ar menkinti. Juk Žemaičių kalbą, tiek pat sena, kiek ir Lietuvių, ir turinti savo unikalius žodžius, tai ne visai tik tarmė. O apie skaičius mokslininkai spėja, kad Lietuvių kalbai apie 5500metų, taip, kad gaunasi, kad ir Žemaičių kalbai yra panašus amžius. Tikrai yra kuo didžiuotis.

    • @obsessed5078
      @obsessed5078 Před 5 lety +17

      Mēs esam brāļi un māsas, lai atmostas Baltija!

    • @lilnaxan6402
      @lilnaxan6402 Před 5 lety

      @@obsessed5078 English please.

  • @paulsoaresjr12345678
    @paulsoaresjr12345678 Před 5 lety +184

    Latvia and Lithuania are brothers yes some times we fight and get in argues but we are brothers and we will stand strong with one another !
    And Estonia is like our younger brother that was adopted but still is part of the family :)

    • @mdjey2
      @mdjey2 Před 4 lety +4

      It would be more fitting for Estonia to be in the middle, if you know what I mean, but he is quite strong. I'm all for the Baltic Renaissance!

    • @nolader28
      @nolader28 Před 4 lety +1

      bruh

    • @ddskgaming1312
      @ddskgaming1312 Před 4 lety +3

      Estonia is best nation. Never doubt the people of Estonia

    • @CitsVariants
      @CitsVariants Před 4 lety +2

      ❤️

    • @circeismyspirit
      @circeismyspirit Před 4 lety +6

      They are referred to as sisters not Brothers

  • @pwnbag
    @pwnbag Před 5 lety +138

    8:41 We were already occupied before the Germans came, our countries were forced ultimatums by the Soviet regime as well as mass deportations of our intelligentsia to Siberia, not sure about the other countries, but a shady "election" took place in Latvia which made us part of the USSR.
    When the Germans came it was a relief for our countries, my grand father passed down a story of Germans coming in and giving candies to children while the Soviets went about and looted people.

    • @kajus1402
      @kajus1402 Před 5 lety +19

      Yeah i got plenty of family stories of Germans helping them.

    • @raitiC1
      @raitiC1 Před 5 lety +20

      @ita-eng subber With German Support!
      Maybe Germans weren't as bad as movies show them?

    • @clemensblum5946
      @clemensblum5946 Před 5 lety +4

      @@raitiC1 tell that to the slavs.

    • @raitiC1
      @raitiC1 Před 5 lety +18

      @@clemensblum5946 Many Ukrainians supported Germans too! And Slovaks, Croats...

    • @nosferatu5
      @nosferatu5 Před 5 lety +18

      @@raitiC1They were pretty bad. I mean the soviets were worse as the primary occupants, but Lithuania has both Nazi mass murder sites and Soviet mass murder sites littering the countrysides. Basically Nazis/Soviets shooting/burning entire villages/people for one reason or another.

  • @jan4insight
    @jan4insight Před 5 lety +25

    I've been waiting for this! Thank you :) I'm a second-generation American with Lithuanian ancestry on my mother's side (German from my father's). The Lithuanian identity has been with me since childhood, yet I know very little about Lithuanian history and culture. I do remember my mother proudly saying that at one time Lithuania was the largest country in Europe, and that goes with what you reported in the video. I also remember on family trips to my mom's family home in Maine, where she grew up, there were several elders of the Lithuanian community still living there. I remember going on visits to some of these old folks, and my mom conversing with them in the Lithuanian language. Although it was my mother's first language, she never spoke it at home, so I never learned the language, not a single word. I think that's sad, but the drive in those days was for assimilation, I suppose.

    • @anonymoususer8895
      @anonymoususer8895 Před 6 měsíci

      No. You’re Canadian. And your mom’s family home is in New Brunswick. Nice try.

  • @zarian0014
    @zarian0014 Před 5 lety +178

    Ok video, but seriously you could make better research. Lithuania was christianized, not because of german settlers and german influence but because of marriage betwen king (yes king not queen) of poland Jadwiga and grand prince of lithuania Jogaila (Jagiello), actually there was another earlier attempt to christianize lithuania but it was short period (kingdom of lithuania, reign of mindagauas (mendog)). Teutonic crusaders were not sent by pope but invited by polish prince konrad to help him with baltic prussian raids. And france dont have anything to do with fall of polish-lithuanian commonwealth (well maybe that shitty electional king could count as anything close to agression from france to polish lithuanian commonwealth) . And there is interesting thing, there are actually people today that try to revitalize baltic prussian language (and they even have some results, atleast in polish part of former prussia i heard, anyone know about simillar attempts in kaliningrad and lithuanian part?). Im sorry for my english grammar and interpunction but im just too lazy to fix that (and im not native speaker anyway).

    • @greengeck0
      @greengeck0 Před 5 lety +7

      About the Lithuanianpart, I believe some lithuanian linguists are helping with the project due to the nature of lithuanian being "relatively" not changed in a very major way since the disappearance of prussian. But due tot he fact that east lithuania Klaipeda/Memel region with was heavily prussian is now heavily russian due to the deportations of germans and scandinavians in the USSR period and the fact that Klaipeda being a port town made reallocation easy is now heavily russian/slavic in general (not even mentioning the plague of 1708? i believe but that mostly prussian lithuanians and are believed to be primarily lithuanian), there are not really any prussians that are known or still live there as such no popular movement is happening in lithuania regarding the prussian language, to the best of my knowledge.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +10

      It is mostly linguists who try to revive Prussian. But among them are just common people, like this Lithuanian couple who speak Prussian at home. They even raised their daughter with Prussian as her native language:
      czcams.com/channels/qhLH_SLh3apNZjSruEXZMg.html

    • @kamilszadkowski8864
      @kamilszadkowski8864 Před 5 lety +4

      ​ Donatas Skirius Lithuanian was actually greatly influenced and changed over the years especially by the Polish language it's only that Lithuanians "cleansed" their language from Slavic influences in XIX century.

    • @firstone3289
      @firstone3289 Před 5 lety

      This dude is germanic supermacist.

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 Před 5 lety +3

      I used to follow Masaman's videos quite regularly but over time it became more and more obvious that, much like an overwhelming majority of YT channels that deal in this geography/history/culture stuff, he simply doesn't do enough research before posting a new video, although he is still much better at this than Cody from AlternateHistory- and KnowledgeHub (whose preparation most of the time seems to limit itself to casting a brief glance over the top paragraph in the Wikipedia entry on the subject). It does prove that the factual quality of your material isn't inversely proportional to the quality of the editing, as I used to believe (with VisualPolitcs and Infographics being prime examples of appealing looks vs. biased and unreliable content). So I kind of trusted that Masaman put a little bit more effort into the information department, seeing as his editing is minimalistic and up until recently he didn't even have a proper microphone. Alas though.
      _Always_ look at the comments before accepting whatever's said in videos like this at face value.

  • @wilsondaily826
    @wilsondaily826 Před 5 lety +79

    Lithuania for me; I've met several wonderful lithuanians and have begun learning the language as well. It's fascinating!

    • @beltuna9
      @beltuna9 Před 5 lety +3

      I tried for about two seconds. Impossible!

    • @gunarsmiezis9321
      @gunarsmiezis9321 Před 5 lety +8

      I living in Lietuva for a week I could understand 1 in every 100 words. Still unintelligible to me. Im a latvietis BTW. It is a interesting experience tho going to a counry where everything seems the same but you cant understand what people are saying even tho the language seems familiar and not strange at all. (Thank God you use the same numbers)

    • @sielvagys
      @sielvagys Před 5 lety +3

      Hi, Wilson. I can help you with that. I am lithuanian.

    • @kerstas10
      @kerstas10 Před 5 lety +3

      @@gunarsmiezis9321 living in the wrong city then, i'm from Šiauliai, went to Latvia just a few hours ago (main destination was Estonia..) From my experience i can understand every 7 or fifth word that latvians say. it all comes from dialect.

    • @gunarsmiezis9321
      @gunarsmiezis9321 Před 5 lety +3

      @@kerstas10 But of course it depends on the dialect there are dialects that are hard to understand for people who can speak the literary language even harder for people who cant.
      I was in Kauņa 5 days and 2 days in Viļņa

  • @JediBunny
    @JediBunny Před 5 lety +90

    Labas, Masaman! Ačiū for covering Lithuanians!
    I love your channel, and have been hoping for a video like this from you one day- my grandparents are from Lithuania 🇱🇹

    • @modisp
      @modisp Před 5 lety +6

      Hi from Lithuania too :)

  • @Meistras
    @Meistras Před 5 lety +28

    Peace for all Estonians, Latvians and Lithuanians people :)

  • @rickoidas
    @rickoidas Před 5 lety +34

    Im proud of my Lithuanian origin :)

  • @konfunable
    @konfunable Před 5 lety +119

    To be honest, all the talk about empire it is not the Balts but only Lithuanian.

    • @atis7
      @atis7 Před 5 lety +4

      Lietuvieši un Latvieši netikai leiši

    • @gausts
      @gausts Před 5 lety +20

      Dude, the proto-balts dominated most of north-west europe. It's not about countries. It's about balts - tribes and linguistic groups.

    • @Greenlandshark77
      @Greenlandshark77 Před 5 lety +4

      I agree. @masaman was very disingenuous toward Latvians, Estonians and Livonians alongside older Baltic Tribes like the Old Prussians, Latgalians, Semgalians, and more.

    • @UgnineLape
      @UgnineLape Před 4 lety +4

      The empire in 13-15 centuries Mindaugas was talking about was specifically Lithuanian, it was called the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. No Estonians or Latvians involved (maybe some people from Latvian tribes but they were taken over by the Teutonic order at that time).

  • @ericcarlson3746
    @ericcarlson3746 Před 5 lety +43

    Merry Christmas to the awesome Balts / Estonians / Liths / Courlanders / Latvians / Letts !

    • @rds7516
      @rds7516 Před 5 lety

      Thanks, you too!

    • @realcarnelianfan5935
      @realcarnelianfan5935 Před 5 lety

      Lithuanians*

    • @eksiarvamus
      @eksiarvamus Před 5 lety +2

      Estonians are not Balts.

    • @jaan-mattisaul8934
      @jaan-mattisaul8934 Před 5 lety +2

      Yes, Estonians are not Balts. We really need to do something about this common misunderstanding. That's why the "Baltic states" identity / word is not liked in Estonia. It forces us into the wrong ethnic group. After 20 years of seeing these errors, it gets extremely annoying.

    • @underedenxx
      @underedenxx Před 4 lety

      Christmas is for the *Middle East* not for Europe

  • @KohaAlbert
    @KohaAlbert Před 3 lety +14

    No mixed feelings about Soviet. In our eyes no better than Nazy Germany.

  • @Vonriga
    @Vonriga Před rokem +9

    As a "Latvian Australian", I am somewhat biased. The Baltic states are beautiful - I have visited them all and studied in Riga for a brief period.
    Perhaps consider doing a video of the German expansion into Latvia. Bishop Albertus in Riga, then the Sword Brothers and their collapse, followed by the Teutonic order. The Baltic Germans stayed there until their expulsion at the end of WW2 and no longer exist as a racial grouping. That might also be interesting.
    Thank you for this video - it was well done.

  • @thecandlemaker1329
    @thecandlemaker1329 Před 5 lety +68

    Speaking of Balts, I think you should at least mention the Eastern Balts. In particular, East Galindians used to live in the region where Moscow is now located.

    • @huskyfaninmass1042
      @huskyfaninmass1042 Před 5 lety +1

      Where did they go?

    • @thecandlemaker1329
      @thecandlemaker1329 Před 5 lety +13

      @@huskyfaninmass1042 Assimilated by the Russians.

    • @raitiC1
      @raitiC1 Před 5 lety +27

      That's right! Most Russian nationalists who hate on Baltic states doesn't even know that, they might be partly Baltic

    • @bentos117
      @bentos117 Před 5 lety +5

      @Sem Let well, there are differences in DNA between Slavs themselves... notably, eastern (Russians) and western (Ukrainians, Poles, etc.)... secondly, it is entirely possible quite opposite - Slavs originating from Baltic tribes, as Latvian and especially Lithuanian languages have been recognized to be most closest to Indo-European proto language... not to mention that Baltic tribes are located in the middle between Eastern and Western Slavs :D

    • @bentos117
      @bentos117 Před 5 lety +1

      @Sem Let if Balts have same DNA as Slavs (as you state), why do you think it is not possible that Slavs came from Balts? note, that Balts themselves migrated to their current place, and there are different proofs that they have been living in much broader area than today, especially in Eastern direction... also, western and eastern Slavs indeed have different DNA (R1b, N3)

  • @darthguilder1923
    @darthguilder1923 Před 5 lety +68

    Baltic Gang roll up

    • @TommyTarhun
      @TommyTarhun Před 5 lety +17

      Rolling up with a great locally brewed beer in one hand and a mild depression in the other.

    • @raitiC1
      @raitiC1 Před 5 lety +5

      @@TommyTarhun Depression is huge among all "white" populations around the world! Just look how many "white" people die from opioids in USA!
      We just don't have any minorities that prop up population growth statistics and other stuff...

    • @JediBunny
      @JediBunny Před 5 lety +1

      Hahaha labas! 🇱🇹

    • @Spreiunderscore
      @Spreiunderscore Před 5 lety +2

      KOIT. KUNINGLIK KOIT.
      VALGUSE VÕIT.

    • @Olterior
      @Olterior Před 4 lety +1

      Russia is all gloat until the Baltic Brothers roll up.

  • @nesbistrampol
    @nesbistrampol Před 3 lety +10

    there are no mixed feelings, we hate the soviets, only some old people still like the "stable" feeling of ussr

  • @oyrihl
    @oyrihl Před 5 lety +4

    I just took the survey, I was extremely impressed by how many options you made available to choose from. Good job.

  • @xyg6543
    @xyg6543 Před 5 lety +17

    I've visited all three countries and I cannot recommend them enough. Interesting on so many levels and the people are awesome

  • @wach9191
    @wach9191 Před 5 lety +10

    At last! Great job!

  • @KeyManDan
    @KeyManDan Před 5 lety +92

    Good exposure but a lot of stuff was very simplified or wasn't elaborated on to show a wider or fuller picture, which may lead to people being misinformed. But I get it, short video.

  • @generalmichaelconstantine4598

    Guys, show some respect. The dude uploaded this from Starbucks wifi.

  • @sunglassshinpan1352
    @sunglassshinpan1352 Před 5 lety +3

    So fascinating, as usual! The results of that survey are gonna be high!

  • @Vitalis94
    @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +77

    For a video talking about the Balts, having the Commonwealth in a thumbnail is a weird choice.

    • @bartpepe3664
      @bartpepe3664 Před 5 lety +10

      Mayby because partially was Baltic (Lithuanian). ;) Of course elites of commonwealths Lithuania speak Polish or Rusyn more than Lithuanian language but that's was still Balts.
      But I agree, better choice was by map of Baltic states or flags of baltics regions.

    • @justas6235
      @justas6235 Před 5 lety +5

      Should've been grand duchy of Lithuania

    • @WhiteZorin
      @WhiteZorin Před 5 lety +4

      True (Pole here) - it could be better off with Grand Duchy at its height, before union, but, you have to agree, it looks BIGGER and better with more territories covered sprouting from the Baltic region :) Cheers to Lithuania and the rest up there! :)

    • @thev3131
      @thev3131 Před 4 lety

      This. But this is the kind of stuff that worries me about this channel. Some of this stuff seems very face-value and poorly researched.

  • @edvinasva4914
    @edvinasva4914 Před 5 lety +11

    Thank You! It was really good! Only one fact wasn't mentioned how Baltic countries were fighting against all occupants in period of WWII and even more than 10 years post WWII.
    Thank You again and greetings from Lithuania!

  • @dams6829
    @dams6829 Před 5 lety +7

    I never thought you would make video about this. It is dream come true. Greetings from Latvia.

  • @rt6692
    @rt6692 Před 5 lety +37

    I am proud to say I’ve participated in your census for this year Masaman!

  • @oolykeegaming81
    @oolykeegaming81 Před 5 lety +4

    Really good videos! One of the best channels!! Thanks Mason!

  • @mercuryCS
    @mercuryCS Před rokem +6

    Lithuanian language - around 5,000 years old
    Slavic Language - over 3000 years
    So how is Baltic language slavic?

    • @Suksass
      @Suksass Před 11 měsíci +2

      It isn't but we share the same ancestor language with slavs.

    • @Lithowave
      @Lithowave Před 10 měsíci

      How do we share 💀💀💀

    • @1qmik
      @1qmik Před 2 měsíci

      @@Lithowave look at old english and english nowadays they don't look similar even on 2%

  • @martso9288
    @martso9288 Před 5 lety +14

    Poland-Lithuania is like the Highschool Jock, that was the captain of the school's rugby/football team. After school/uni/collage working a retail job in his 40's as he had no real skills other than playing football.

  • @shimkonise357
    @shimkonise357 Před 3 lety +1

    Very informative. Thanks!

  • @donstoddard8458
    @donstoddard8458 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you very much. I always find you very entertaining and more very informative

  • @chrisrus1965
    @chrisrus1965 Před 5 lety +134

    Lithuanians are good at basketball.

    • @sherk3286
      @sherk3286 Před 5 lety +5

      Indeed

    • @sandernista6499
      @sandernista6499 Před 5 lety +8

      Probably the only thing they are good at...

    • @chrisrus1965
      @chrisrus1965 Před 5 lety

      @@gerhardschulzy
      A long time ago I worked on the Wikipedia article about the world's strongest man champions and I don't remember about Baltic people, but what stood out of my mind was how many Icelanders there were, given the tiny percentage of the population that's Icelandic.

    • @user-sv1sw9ev3w
      @user-sv1sw9ev3w Před 5 lety +2

      @@sandernista6499 take a look at charles bronson or robertas zemeckis biography...

    • @chrisrus1965
      @chrisrus1965 Před 5 lety

      @@gerhardschulzy
      Yes I understood that. I was just changing the subject.

  • @JohnSmith-kd6ip
    @JohnSmith-kd6ip Před 5 lety +7

    Thank you for the video!! I requested a video on the Baltic states a while back. Let me pretend my request work, even though you might have made the video anyway.

    • @JediBunny
      @JediBunny Před 5 lety

      John Smith hahaha I was thinking the same thing... I asked him to do one on the Baltic States including Lithuania years ago lol!

  • @infectioushobo
    @infectioushobo Před 5 lety +23

    I'm half polish, quarter german and a quarter lithuanian. Folks met in back of the yards, chicago. My grandpa, if I'm not mistaken, was "forced" (I'm not sure of the details) to fight with the nazis in ww2 with a patch denoting his lithuanian ethnicity. Had a piece of russian grenade shrapnel in his leg! My pa just made a good patch of kugelis.

    • @nepamirskuzkameskovojomeli2396
      @nepamirskuzkameskovojomeli2396 Před 5 lety +5

      Your grandfather was probably part of the Vietinė Rinktinė "National Volunteer Army". It was a Lithuanian military organisation created in co-operation between Lithuanians and Nazi Germans led by Lithuanian general Povilas Plechavičius, They used to wear a patch with the Lithuanian flag on it on their arm. Interesting to know that your grandfather was a part of it.

    • @RosinGoblin
      @RosinGoblin Před 5 lety +3

      I'm 25% Lithuanian too. My grandpa left because I think Russia was forcing some Lithuanians to join their army and more than likely die. He also moved to Chicago and married my grandma who is Ukrainian. And now here I am lol. Such a fucking mutt. I'm a quarter of Lithuanian Ukrainian Dutch and German.

    • @nepamirskuzkameskovojomeli2396
      @nepamirskuzkameskovojomeli2396 Před 5 lety +1

      @@IhaveBigFeet I'm not glamorizing anything, The only way he would have worn that badge is if he volunteered for the Vietinė Rinktinė, There is no other way he would have worn that badge, Lithuanians in the Werhmacht or SS did not wear Lithuanian badges, They wore the exact same badges as Non-Lithuanians in the Werhmacht or SS.

    • @infectioushobo
      @infectioushobo Před 5 lety

      @@nepamirskuzkameskovojomeli2396 interesting. I believe after the war he was a cop in east germany before moving to the states.

    • @infectioushobo
      @infectioushobo Před 5 lety +2

      @@RosinGoblin Being a mutt is the most interesting part of the American identity, imo. Still %100 American. Forging your own path despite pulling from multiple cultures. Most folks are mutts anyway, depending on how deep you go tracking ethnic roots.

  • @datdumbass6633
    @datdumbass6633 Před 5 lety

    Thank you SO much for this video, very cool

  • @topcatseriosblack8396
    @topcatseriosblack8396 Před 5 lety +3

    Good video massaman
    Much needed attention

  • @valdasnetavo8746
    @valdasnetavo8746 Před 4 lety +7

    First of all, Lithuanian is a very old language. It is related to Sanskrit (a classical language of India) Latin and Ancient Greek. It is the oldest surviving Indo-European language, which has preserved the most phonetical and morphological aspects of the proto-language which many other European languages come from. It is very important to the field of Indo-European language studies, which carries out research on the origin, development, similarities and differences of Indo-European languages. Scientists of different nationalities in this field use Lithuanian as their language of communication at their conferences!

  • @havokscene
    @havokscene Před 5 lety

    Great video! I find myself binge watching your stuff all of the time(especially while playing Civilization). Thank you for the education!

  • @7thDesertRat
    @7thDesertRat Před 5 lety +1

    Great vlogs, keep up the good work!

  • @JR-gp2zk
    @JR-gp2zk Před 5 lety +23

    Thank you for doing this video. My dna test came back 70% Lithuanians.

    • @nepamirskuzkameskovojomeli2396
      @nepamirskuzkameskovojomeli2396 Před 5 lety +3

      Greetings Brother 😉

    • @aaakliuciami
      @aaakliuciami Před 5 lety +2

      Which DNA test did you do? I'm just curious, because the ones I've seen don't distinguish between Latvians and Lithuanians

    • @noway2434
      @noway2434 Před 4 lety

      Congratulations

    • @JR-gp2zk
      @JR-gp2zk Před 4 lety

      @@aaakliuciami 23 and me

    • @rinyc9100
      @rinyc9100 Před 3 lety

      @@aaakliuciami in the end ur the same bullshit

  • @love_x_love6619
    @love_x_love6619 Před 5 lety +234

    Refuse to sign the UN migration pact.

    • @raitiC1
      @raitiC1 Před 5 lety +12

      All people that need to come here already can! ;)

    • @ilya_rusin
      @ilya_rusin Před 5 lety

      You're beautiful

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 Před 5 lety +3

      They are not going to let normal people like me make that decision

    • @JesusRocksTryPrayin
      @JesusRocksTryPrayin Před 5 lety +58

      Culture is beautiful, and wanting to preserve one's culture isn't racist or hate-based
      I wish people would all embrace their nations, and work to make them a better place. Migration tends to just spread crime, like assholes who don't clean the butter knife and leave crumbs in the jam

    • @redcapetimetraveler7688
      @redcapetimetraveler7688 Před 5 lety +9

      @@JesusRocksTryPrayin i love your jokes, i hate your ideas: building borders and walls never worked to save collapsing governments and cultures....china's great wall, romans' limes, berlin's wall, trump's wall..and all other walls you would desire or imagine won't help to make your language strong...confront it with the world's peoples , spread its fame, its messages and the others will want to learn more..isolationism is just a slow death into oblivion...

  • @tetsuookami
    @tetsuookami Před 5 lety

    Thank you for the video, It's nice to get some recognition.

  • @Sxda157
    @Sxda157 Před 5 lety

    Awesome video! Love it !

  • @circaetusgallicus2312
    @circaetusgallicus2312 Před 5 lety +57

    Your thumbnail shows the *Polish-Lithuanian* Commonwealth, not *Baltic* Commonwealth!
    After watching this video I have the impression that the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth belonged to the Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania), but thats wrong!
    It belonged to Poland and Lithuania, so this picture (11:08) is misleading... as it shows the Baltic States as origin of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +28

      That's my thought exactly. Weird choice for a thumbnail. Having the Grand Duchy of Lithuania would be better, although not perfect, as it would exclude Latvia and Estonia.

    • @raitiC1
      @raitiC1 Před 5 lety +5

      @@Vitalis94 Part of Latvia was part of Polish-Lithuania at one point, Curland, that part that did colonize!
      And Latvia and Estonia was part of LIVONIA very interesting region and political system!

    • @mp1335
      @mp1335 Před 5 lety +5

      @Pudzian Nice troll bait account

    • @CrazyLeiFeng
      @CrazyLeiFeng Před 5 lety +3

      @@raitiC1 The whole Latvia and even a bit of Estonia used to be under Poland-Lithuania.

    • @js9869
      @js9869 Před 5 lety

      @Pudzian There is no glory to a nation that enslaves their "allies", tries to annex their ally for a few hundred years, changes their ally's culture, language and destroys their empire.

  • @DVladas
    @DVladas Před 3 lety +6

    In the definition of "Northern Europe", the following countries are included:
    Estonia.
    Latvia.
    Lithuania.
    Denmark.
    Finland.
    Iceland.
    Norway.
    Sweden.
    Northern Europe - Wikipedia
    Northern Europe - Wikipedia

    • @Andreigher
      @Andreigher Před 10 měsíci

      Culturally , genetically and lingvistically balts have much in common to slavs (estern and western etnic slavs because southern are not real slavs , are paleo balkanic peoples lingvistically slavized , they come from balto slavic grup and lingvistically baltics are closer to russians like are germans to icelanders, balts are much north estern europe and Finland have much in common to finnic peoples from Russia like udmurts , veps etc than skandinavians ( skandinavian germanics are closer culturally to dutch and germans ) , historically balts were part of polish lithuanian commonwelth and russian empire, not everything say wikipedia is real, be nordic is a estonian dream because even estonians are not nordic cultually because they speak a uralic languages and have mixed genes betwwen balto slavic peoples and finnic(only 34%finnic)

  • @bwatever
    @bwatever Před 4 lety

    God I love this video! Thank you so much for an informative video!

  • @leotrnt
    @leotrnt Před 5 lety +2

    Hey, really like your videos; I’ve been following your channel for quite some time now. May I ask what is your major? Greetings from Nancy in France 🇫🇷

  • @sidimightbe3246
    @sidimightbe3246 Před 5 lety +7

    Is the census video coming? Those are some of the best

  • @msshoeka5573
    @msshoeka5573 Před 5 lety +12

    My DNA test says i have some Baltic heritage. Thanks Manson for the lesson. ..be blessed

  • @Wheedlinglemur
    @Wheedlinglemur Před 5 lety

    Participated in the census my good sir!

  • @randomperson6988
    @randomperson6988 Před 5 lety +2

    Nice link in the description

  • @antiantifa886
    @antiantifa886 Před 5 lety +40

    Actually the Soviets invaded the Baltic states and Ukraine first before ww2........

    • @fredthegreat7215
      @fredthegreat7215 Před 5 lety

      Actually the soviets defended the Baltic states from the filthy Nazis

    • @sirjemalmet849
      @sirjemalmet849 Před 5 lety +16

      @@fredthegreat7215 Really, why these "liberators" killed people and deported people to Siberia. And why they took factories and small companies from owners. When German army came it was real relief for Estonians because Soviets have done really bad things.

    • @antiantifa886
      @antiantifa886 Před 5 lety +10

      Fred The Great! The commies invaded first moron and the Germans were liberators.

    • @user-dx2sk4fe1k
      @user-dx2sk4fe1k Před 5 lety +4

      Ukraine was a part of Russian Empire and became part of USSR from the beginning

    • @antiantifa886
      @antiantifa886 Před 5 lety +5

      Махмуд Талибов it was independent after ww1. The Bolsheviks invaded it in the 1920s.

  • @lifeimprovementknowhow3822
    @lifeimprovementknowhow3822 Před 5 lety +16

    Actually, Baltic countries are Northern, not Eastern Europe. Northern Europe is the general term for the geographical region in Europe that is approximately north of the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. Nations usually included within this region are Denmark, Estonia, the Faroe Islands, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway and Sweden.

    • @robertbaron8721
      @robertbaron8721 Před 5 lety +3

      In the cultural sense, it is Central Europe (Catholicism, Protestantism)

    • @aneesh2115
      @aneesh2115 Před 5 lety +1

      Baltic is in eastern europe . Northern europe is the Nordic land and fennoscandia

    • @lifeimprovementknowhow3822
      @lifeimprovementknowhow3822 Před 5 lety

      @@aneesh2115 Oh really, do you think you know better than official sources and UN whose official classification of Baltic countries is Northern Europe?

    • @aneesh2115
      @aneesh2115 Před 5 lety +1

      @@lifeimprovementknowhow3822 well they also classify czeckia as eastern europe . I'm not sure un classification as a good source

    • @adrianpotocki9799
      @adrianpotocki9799 Před 4 lety

      1 Balts is northern geographical location Europe 2 cold climate 3 fair complexion of people 4 northern DNA haplo N ,I , R1a 5 northern vegetation , Balts 100% northern Europe .

  • @M3talhead2
    @M3talhead2 Před 8 měsíci

    Great video

  • @lilahdog568
    @lilahdog568 Před 5 lety +1

    Was excited when I saw this in my feed after a week of no videos from Mason

  • @toosas
    @toosas Před 3 lety +4

    Lithuanian language is one of the least changed "most conservative" languages of the Indo-european group. So much so that all the core words like "son", "daughter", "honey", etc are 90% matching sanskrit. There is a lithuanian phrase that was also used in sanskrit and latin - "god gave teeth, god will provide bread" and the similarities of actual words and the structure of the sentence are insane, the fact that lithuanian is a living language and it is so similar to oldest known extinct proto-languages from 3000 years ago is mind blowing. We are an old old nation with old language and they've been trying to exterminate us and our language for the last few centuries, but here we are - still kicking arse.
    Obviously we had little to do with romans and even less with India, but the fact that the languages were so similar begs the question where was the common proto-culture situated on the continent.
    It has been said that our language is a gem to linguists studying proto-indoeuropean. Don't quote me on this but I've read somewhere that Old Prussian was even closer to Sanskrit than Lithuanian is. We dont want to end up like Prussians did. Thanks to EU and thanks to NATO our chances of surviving are quite good (for now).
    Having said all this, i.e. Serbian (slavic) also seems to have some amazingly similar words to the ones that crop up in sanskrit (yet not necessarily related to baltic), and some that crop up in persian(!) - I could not say for sure which words were from the same origin and which ones were borrowed later, so the whole picture is clearly much bigger and much more complex.

    • @Lee-jh6cr
      @Lee-jh6cr Před 7 měsíci +1

      Not all Old Prussians ended up too badly! My mother's family is from the Mazuren Lakes area of East Prussia. We are Old Prussian/Mazovian, not German. Our surnames are Mazovian, some with the root names of Old Prussian tribes, & their 1st language was Mazovian with Old Prussian vocabulary. Some consider it a language, some a dialect. There's a large settlement in central MN, USA - many lakes & forests like home. But people are forgetting their history. Many think their family is from Poland, because that's where this part of East Prussia is now. But some of us carry & try to pass the torch. I only wish more of Old Prussian language had survived. And yes, in Slavic the word for God is the same/similar to Iranian. The reason the Baltic languages & Sanskrit have more similarities is because they remained on the far flung fringes of Proto Indo-European so therefore changed less through time.

  • @jaycollins7783
    @jaycollins7783 Před 5 lety +8

    Very interesting and once again very well researched and therefore accurate. Thanks Masaman. 👍

    • @beltuna9
      @beltuna9 Před 5 lety +2

      Not bad, but a bit light on the influence of the Poles.

    • @Brenmcgu
      @Brenmcgu Před 5 lety +1

      @@beltuna9 You are right, he quite strongly misrepresented Poland/Lithuania. Poland was the main reason Lithuania converted to Christianity and Poland was the dominant cultural/political force within the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. He should research "Polonization" and how that impacted surrounding Ruthenian/Baltic peoples. Poles were the source of power and influence in this arrangement, not the Balts.

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 Před 5 lety

      Honestly, this was quite possibly the most poorly researched video Masaman ever put out. Because I'm sorry but mixing up which nation was baptized by whom is a *huge* blunder.

  • @user-te4eb2nw4w
    @user-te4eb2nw4w Před 2 měsíci

    Best channel of its kinds. dense but everything I want

  • @lightofchicagoproductionz9012
    @lightofchicagoproductionz9012 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Im doing a little research on Latvia ... i im sketchy on which video to pic and then i spot your video ,its ur channel even better , and plus the title is envitingThnx brother for your hard work and research ,love and dedication ... Expertise...

  • @ashrafalsaadoon6120
    @ashrafalsaadoon6120 Před 5 lety +90

    Do video on pre-islamic arab history

    • @onbekendetelefoon2045
      @onbekendetelefoon2045 Před 5 lety +9

      Great idea that would be awesome!
      Their genes were way different back then. Much closer to modern day whites. I will get kicked by yt saying why their genes deteriorated but I think we all know it. Anyway, it also wasn't done in a century or two and we must not forget the enormous addition they gave the world in their development

    • @LionKing-ew9rm
      @LionKing-ew9rm Před 5 lety +2

      @* E F * Bringer of Light
      Lol, rounding the Kaaba was a preIslamic Arab tradition!

    • @ChristianDoretti
      @ChristianDoretti Před 5 lety +1

      @ita-eng subber Same with Greeks and Albanians...

    • @ChristianDoretti
      @ChristianDoretti Před 5 lety

      @ita-eng subber NO, gli antichi greci non avevano il DNA tanto turco quanto in passato, quando l'impero ottomano invase l'Alabania e la Grecia la demografia di questi paesi cambiò radicalmente, la stessa cosa è accaduta con l'Italia e la regione iberica quando gli islamisti li hanno invasi e si sono stabiliti per 8 secoli...

    • @davidrosner6267
      @davidrosner6267 Před 5 lety +2

      The Arabs did not have a very significant impact on world history before the advent of Islam but this would nonetheless be an interesting topic. The Nabatean city of Petra in Jordan is a good example of the caravan trading culture that dominated pre-Islamic Arabia. The main temple in that city was the site of the final scene in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
      The Roman and later Byzantine and Persian Empires fought proxy wars through the tribes and kingdoms of the Arabian peninsula in the beginning of the first millennium AD up until the rise of Muhammed.

  • @romasandmo
    @romasandmo Před 5 lety +13

    My grandmother and I make Lithuanian food and not so Lithuanian food ;D We would appreciate, if you could check them out. They are really funny ;D

  • @halldorfannarsigurgeirsson7741

    Already in the first two minutes, I gotta suggest an edit, Mason. Samogitian has serious merits to be considered its own Baltic language. Keep up the good work, bro. You're solid on most things that matter and constantly growing. I admire your dedication and your work!

  • @jay5467
    @jay5467 Před 5 lety +2

    Hey Masaman, what is your ethnic background? Keep up the good work!

  • @brandonrichardson8681
    @brandonrichardson8681 Před 3 lety +4

    This is awesome thank you. My DNA results recently came in and said I was 3% Baltic. Iv been trying to learn everything I can on my ancestry. Thank you for having this here for me to get introduced into my past

  • @N0rdman
    @N0rdman Před 5 lety +12

    I have a HUGE respect for the Baltic countries, not the least for their "singing revolution" and they gained independence again, but also for their legacy and you always keep your fingers crossed for the "underdog".
    I have visited all these countries briefly in 1998, just a few years after their independence, and after interacting and speaking with them and (not to pat my own back) trained parts of their new naval forces I respect them and wish their nations the best.
    I need to travel back and see what has happened in the past two decades.
    In general I also love to see the multitude of ethnicity Europe have and be back on the map, I think it is a shame that Königsberg and the rest of what was East Prussia is gone today, I rather see it back in the proper hands again.
    As a matter of fact I think Nöteborg and Nyens (St. Petersburg) should be back in Swedish hands too , but we'll never see that happen again.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +1

      Proper hands? So what, suddenly Russians aren't allowed to own St. Petersburg because Swedes are somehow superior?

    • @N0rdman
      @N0rdman Před 5 lety +2

      @@Vitalis94 You have mixed the sentences together; I said "be back in Swedish hands", but we were there first. Swedish vikings actually founded the Novgorod kingdom too.

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety

      @@N0rdman Hahahhahah. Don't get me wrong, I don't deny the Norse what they founded or not, but wanting them back because of it is just wrong.

    • @N0rdman
      @N0rdman Před 5 lety

      @@Vitalis94 I guess then Russia is just wrong to claim the Crimea "just because they want it" back?

    • @Vitalis94
      @Vitalis94 Před 5 lety +2

      @@N0rdman Of course. On the other hand, Russians are present in Crimea, while Swedes are nowhere to find in Ingria. I guess if the referendum was done in another way, no one would ever protest the takeover.
      But what you are proposing is just stupid. The last time Swedes were in Ingria was centuries ago, why would you want it now?

  • @Imantos
    @Imantos Před 5 lety +1

    Nice video! To me as a Latvian living in Latvia it seems pretty much bang on in terms of the general impression conveyed. Some new facts for me as well. Thanks!

  • @mrgoat8007
    @mrgoat8007 Před 5 lety

    Nice video

  • @BeatGrounds
    @BeatGrounds Před 5 lety +191

    I'm from Latvia 😛

    • @cluncherp5891
      @cluncherp5891 Před 5 lety +7

      Im also from Latvia

    • @cluncherp5891
      @cluncherp5891 Před 5 lety +1

      @شالح الزيزوم نازي عربي 505 i dont have sisters also im an Alien (just kidding)

    • @cluncherp5891
      @cluncherp5891 Před 5 lety

      @شالح الزيزوم نازي عربي 505 lol

    • @ChristianDoretti
      @ChristianDoretti Před 5 lety +4

      It's rare to see a baltic on internet

    • @user-sv1sw9ev3w
      @user-sv1sw9ev3w Před 5 lety

      @@ChristianDoretti fuck off

  • @TheWorldHasGoneNuts
    @TheWorldHasGoneNuts Před 5 lety +15

    Good job Mas. That suggestion of a neo-paganist revival in Eastern Europe for your next video is a good idea. Thanks as always 👏👏👏

  • @MartinUToob
    @MartinUToob Před 5 lety

    Howdy Masaman. Love your stuff.
    Anyway, you should do an episode on Midlanders and Okies for no particular reason.

  • @michaelaxwilhelm3176
    @michaelaxwilhelm3176 Před 5 lety

    WOW!!! THE BEST EXPLICATION!!!

  • @voxxxy9457
    @voxxxy9457 Před 5 lety +7

    Dude I really like your videos, but if other topics are also as badly researched as old Prussians and christianisation of Lithuania then I don't think we'll get along any longer :C

  • @bizbite2
    @bizbite2 Před 5 lety +10

    We used to be the biggest country in Europe for about 4 centuries 😅👍🏼 also Lithuania was the last Pagan country in Europe!!! 🤨✊🏻 anyway thanks @masaman I will do you survey too to increase Lithuanian representation!! 🤗🏀

    • @rds7516
      @rds7516 Před 5 lety

      Nesikelk uodegos ir tiesiog like'ink video.

  • @Mendogology
    @Mendogology Před 9 měsíci +2

    I appreciate the fact of you doing a video about the Baltics... but it has so many mistakes, I don't even know where to begin.

  • @rihardsgeidans3752
    @rihardsgeidans3752 Před 5 lety +2

    Hi masaman ive been whatching your videos for a while and its awesome to see you making a video about us :D (im a latvian)
    This was most;y a simple history lesson but i guess most people wouldnt know it and hence your video, but i would love to see you talking about some of the crazy origin theories of us balts (like us maybe being the thracians).
    I think its really unfair to group us together with the slavis mostly because of how similar the slavic languages are.I mean they can almost sort of understand each other while for latvians slavic languages sound about as alien(or as similar) as german.

  • @evaldasjanulevicius5701
    @evaldasjanulevicius5701 Před 3 lety +4

    Lithuania and Latvia does not have any slavic in their language, just slang

    • @user-kp6qe5vi8w
      @user-kp6qe5vi8w Před 3 lety

      i mean theres quite a few words that sound like polish (ranka comes to mind) and polish is a slavic language

    • @LuDux
      @LuDux Před 2 lety

      @@user-kp6qe5vi8w "From Proto-Balto-Slavic *ránkāˀ. Cognate with Proto-Slavic *rǫka, Latvian roka."

  • @kyskakyska
    @kyskakyska Před 5 lety +6

    ❤️ from Lithuania:)

  • @michellevangrol673
    @michellevangrol673 Před 5 lety

    Great video! If you can, a video on Cape Coloureds would be great!!!

  • @Makem12
    @Makem12 Před 5 lety

    @Masaman I took the census for your channel. I saw that 4% identified politically with "Other" and that got me really thinking. Is there any chance we could get to read the other responses at some point in the future?

  • @darkfool2000
    @darkfool2000 Před 5 lety +9

    The Estonians are totally unrelated to the Latvians and Lithuanians. Estonia is closer to Finland than Latvia or Lithuania. Even though the latvians are related to the lithuanians, they were not involved at all in ruling of the grand duchy of lithuania. So only Lithuania can have been said to rise and fall as an empire.

    • @fidenemini111
      @fidenemini111 Před 5 lety +3

      They're not related only linguistically. Genetically they are very simillar.

    • @jaan-mattisaul8934
      @jaan-mattisaul8934 Před 5 lety

      ​@@fidenemini111 Estonians are Finnic people and Estonia is a Finnic country. I don't care about who's Nordic and who isn't. Estonia can easily be defined as a Finnic country and that's it. The "Baltic states" word disregards everything that is holy in Estonian culture, that word is almost like a cultural genocide towards Estonia - because it makes people assume that Estonia has a "Baltic" culture, not a "Finnic" culture. We will never accept being called "Baltic". Genetically Estonians are the closest people to Finns. It's only that Latvians are genetically closer to Southern Estonians than the "average" Estonian genepool is to the Finnish genepool.

    • @raceris7309
      @raceris7309 Před 5 lety +3

      @@jaan-mattisaul8934 Estonia is regarded as Baltic because of geographical reasons. Linguistically, you cannot be considered as balts. After all, Estonia (and parts of latvia) belonged to Sweden at some point, until 1710, when it was all taken by Russia.

    • @jaan-mattisaul8934
      @jaan-mattisaul8934 Před 5 lety

      Raceris Looking forward to seeing a better categorization appear than the current “baltic states” definition

  • @pan-europeanmovement3078
    @pan-europeanmovement3078 Před 5 lety +12

    Thanks for yet another great video! I find the northern two Baltic states interesting with regards to their religion, simply because protestantism is rare in Eastern Europe. However, linguistically I find Lithuania the most interesting because Lithuanian is said to be the closest living language to the original proto-Indo-European.

  • @filipmerksa1426
    @filipmerksa1426 Před 5 lety +1

    Mas, it'd be awesome if you compared, once the census is done, your census with the actual world census :D

  • @Nordisk11
    @Nordisk11 Před 5 lety +2

    You should do a video discussing the disputes involving Hungarian being either Turkic or Uralic.This fight has lasted for a long time and is still going on.

  • @bcbconklin
    @bcbconklin Před 4 lety +3

    I'm about 90% Lithuanian according to DNA, but my ancestors left that area probably about 400 years ago. They became citizens of Russia, but didn't want to fight for the Czar, so joined the pacifist group, Doukhobors. They lived insulated in their own villages and mostly just married among themselves. About the year 1900, half of them moved to Canada where my immediate family now lives.

  • @lexus_offroad_adventures
    @lexus_offroad_adventures Před 5 lety +64

    Proud of my Lithuanian heritage 😤💪🏼. Thanks for the video! Definitely going to participate in the census, but I will not be subscribing to Pewdie Pie 😂

    • @beltuna9
      @beltuna9 Před 5 lety +4

      Me neither because fuck racism.
      Even the Balts came from somewhere else. And all human ancestors came from Africa.
      Africa has more genetic diversity today than the rest of the world combined.

    • @KILLAGORILLA7000
      @KILLAGORILLA7000 Před 5 lety +14

      Joseph Milan are you insane? How is he racist in any way?

    • @roadtonever
      @roadtonever Před 5 lety +4

      ​@@beltuna9 So you like Africa because of the diversity. Then you must also like when Bantus hunt the Pygmes for fun? Or the Rwandan genocide?

    • @lesfreresbogdanoff7863
      @lesfreresbogdanoff7863 Před 5 lety +13

      @@beltuna9
      *Rubs hands subversively*
      Or maybe legit NPC

    • @screamingbrick7706
      @screamingbrick7706 Před 5 lety +4

      @@beltuna9 omg, i am tired of seeing NPC libtards like you, theres quite a few things wrong with your comment, Mainly PEWDIEPIE ISNT RACIST and the most oldest human remains were found in europe (Bulgaria and Greece)

  • @LordBruuh
    @LordBruuh Před 5 lety +2

    Wow this guy makes anthropology seems really interesting

  • @imantsliepins8664
    @imantsliepins8664 Před 5 lety +1

    10:51 cheeky :D. Also greetings from 🇱🇻!