American Reacts to Top 10 Most Important Moments in British History!

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  • čas přidán 28. 07. 2024
  • Let's explore the top ten important moments in British history! From royal milestones to revolutionary changes, these events left an indelible mark on the UK!
    Original Video: • Top 10 Most Important ...
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    #BritishHistory #AmericanReacts #HistoricalMoments

Komentáře • 919

  • @TukikoTroy
    @TukikoTroy Před 5 měsíci +304

    American independence was more a great moment in US history. Over here it was just another Thursday, business as usual and making plans for the weekend.

    • @tk9780
      @tk9780 Před 5 měsíci +33

      British Empire was looking East towards India and beyond.
      During the American independence. A high percentage of everyday American farmers who fought the British during the War of Independence were actually Former British, French, and other European Soldiers left in America by their Countries after the end of the 7-year war.

    • @user-fq8rs7rz3i
      @user-fq8rs7rz3i Před 5 měsíci +22

      @@tk9780Yes, we were mostly fighting our own people. Crazy.

    • @user-qj7et4wv3q
      @user-qj7et4wv3q Před 5 měsíci

      It was a hypocritical war, basically not wanting to send taxes to England, but even now Americans abroad are expected to pay taxes to the US treasury, just plain greed.

    • @fredericksaxton3991
      @fredericksaxton3991 Před 5 měsíci +12

      The War of Independence was English gentlemen in the English Colonies fighting a German King on the British throne who was using a lot of Hanoverian soldiers.

    • @gillfox9899
      @gillfox9899 Před 5 měsíci +39

      I wouldn't have added the American war of independence. More important events in British history

  • @helenwood8482
    @helenwood8482 Před 5 měsíci +140

    The King could write. Magna Carta was sealed because seals were used, not signatures, on official documents.

    • @Icanbacktrailers
      @Icanbacktrailers Před 5 měsíci +6

      Yeah he could definitely write

    • @normanwallace7658
      @normanwallace7658 Před 5 měsíci

      King John was Illiterate could neither read or write he was a third son & was never expected to achieve any high position?? I Otherwords he was another Prince Harry that got Lucky??

    • @Trebor74
      @Trebor74 Před 5 měsíci +8

      What's also not really mentioned is that the king petitioned the pope to have the agreement dissolved as it was signed under duress. The pope agreed and it was dissolved. It was only re-ratified by later kings. What is probably more significant is Simon de Montfort's later rebellion against Henry iii and the installation of a constitutional monarchy under a parliament that met regularly.

    • @irenezaleski4989
      @irenezaleski4989 Před 5 měsíci +6

      A signature can easily be forged, but a seal that is unique and different for each king (or pope) and that is destroyed on the moment of their death is far better in security. So having it sealed means it was not a fake one. It was really approved by that person.

    • @paulwilson2651
      @paulwilson2651 Před 5 měsíci +1

      The magna Carta only gave power away from the king to the Barons, Dukes and Lords it actually did very little for the peasants. The real changer was the Declaration of Arbroath which gave the Scottish people the right to get rid of the monarch if he/she didn't serve the people.

  • @noggintube
    @noggintube Před 5 měsíci +278

    What a lot of people don't realise with the voting for women is that about 40% of men didn't have the right either due to not owning property or land etc. The Act gave women the vote, but also extended the vote to include a larger proportion of men and started to become more fair across the population, but still wasn't quite there.

    • @markhutton6055
      @markhutton6055 Před 5 měsíci

      It was closer to 66% of men without the vote. Universal suffrage had little to do with the Suffragettes and more to do with the men who died in the trenches.

    • @user-qj7et4wv3q
      @user-qj7et4wv3q Před 5 měsíci +19

      There were other things established at the same time, like raising the minimum age of marriage from 12 for girls and 14 for boys to 16 for both but with parental consent

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 Před 5 měsíci

      Have a guess at when black women were allowed to vote, in the USA. Then look up to see if you were right...

    • @Spiklething
      @Spiklething Před 5 měsíci +7

      @@user-qj7et4wv3q Except in Scotland. To this day, you can marry at age 16 in Scotland without parental consent

    • @GSD-hd1yh
      @GSD-hd1yh Před 5 měsíci +8

      Another thing that isn't well known is that in 1928, when women over 21 got the vote without previous restrictions, their share of the total number of people allowed to vote shot straight to 48%

  • @martinp8174
    @martinp8174 Před 5 měsíci +69

    What Americans don't get is that the fight was between Britain and other British who moved elsewhere

    • @graveperil2169
      @graveperil2169 Před 5 měsíci +10

      and the french

    • @johndillon5290
      @johndillon5290 Před 5 měsíci +7

      ​@@graveperil2169 and the Spanish and Dutch

    • @flyingfox7854
      @flyingfox7854 Před 3 měsíci +2

      If it wasn’t for the French ships blockading the ports around New Orleans it would’ve been a very different story in the south and probably would’ve influenced the outcome of the conflict and maybe America would be a better place to live these days with the British abolition of slavery ….

  • @Shoomer1988
    @Shoomer1988 Před 5 měsíci +163

    Surprised the Industrial Revolution wasn't on the list. That changed the whole world not just Britain.

    • @Shoomer1988
      @Shoomer1988 Před 5 měsíci

      So was Henry the VIII offing his wives.@michaelrogers2080

    • @Salacious-Crumb
      @Salacious-Crumb Před 5 měsíci +7

      Exactly! Changed the world

    • @HarryFlashmanVC
      @HarryFlashmanVC Před 5 měsíci

      It's bollocks, very England and VERY London focused..no Industrial Revolution, no conquest of India, and no Act of Union 1707 which was the event that CREATED BRITAIN FFS.

    • @alanwoodings7519
      @alanwoodings7519 Před 4 měsíci +6

      I think UK had a lucky escape when we lost the war Independence it saved UK from a lot of things

    • @HarryFlashmanVC
      @HarryFlashmanVC Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@alanwoodings7519 yeah.... JOE BIDEN!

  • @Papa_Meow_Meow
    @Papa_Meow_Meow Před 5 měsíci +140

    Defeating the Spanish Armada in 1588 was a pivotale point in our history. We were expected to lose against a much larger and powerful force. It would have been game over without victory.

    • @SarthorS
      @SarthorS Před 5 měsíci +14

      I was going to say the same. It also resulted in England taking over as the worlds strongest sea power, enabling the start of the British Empire.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Před 5 měsíci +7

      The Elizabethan British Navy was also engaged in plundering the Spanish merchant navy, because both were bitter imperial rivals. In the end though it was poor planning and political interference by the King Phillipe and the weather, plus the brilliance of British naval tactics, that did for the Armada. But there was not a military defeat, as painted by Elizabethan propaganda, it was a military climb down by the Spaniards, for which I would as I have written above blame political interference. The Navy simply held off the Armada and disorganised in the Armada and the weather did the rest. In recent years more Armada remains have been found in the Irish Sea.

    • @Mark-Haddow
      @Mark-Haddow Před 5 měsíci

      The Spanish Armada wasn't defeated. Also, who is this we?

    • @wisdomtrue2008
      @wisdomtrue2008 Před 5 měsíci +5

      The weather defeated the Spanish Armada, not Elizabeth's ships. Stop being so jingoistic and study history real instead

    • @somebloke13
      @somebloke13 Před 5 měsíci +7

      @@wisdomtrue2008 OK Juan

  • @atorthefightingeagle9813
    @atorthefightingeagle9813 Před 5 měsíci +117

    The American War Of Independence is actually ranked 2386 in the list of significant events in British history. Sorry JJ, but your biggest day is but a pimple on the behind of our long and varied story.

    • @Rob_Reed
      @Rob_Reed Před 5 měsíci +16

      Like us with the '66 World Cup to be fair. We think the Germans are stewing about it but if you ask one of them who won the WC in '66 they haven't got a clue 😂

    • @katashworth41
      @katashworth41 Před 5 měsíci +8

      @@Rob_ReedIf I remember correctly they prefer beating the Dutch?

    • @althomas3168
      @althomas3168 Před 5 měsíci +1

      They still have their bicycles.

    • @acidpunker1
      @acidpunker1 Před 5 měsíci +9

      Actually at the time it benefitted Britain. The American colonies had never pulled their weight in paying for their own protection from the French, Spanish and Indians. The loss of America was a small backwater of the larger World War that played out after the Seven Years War. It spurred Britain to take over India which was vastly more economically significant than the 13 colonies.

    • @PanglossDr
      @PanglossDr Před 3 měsíci

      British history is all about murder and pillage of other countries across the world.
      The UK owes most of the wealth remaining to it to slavery. That's what everything was built on.

  • @connorparker6461
    @connorparker6461 Před 5 měsíci +49

    There are so many key points of the history of Britain, the Anglo-Saxon migration, Industrial revolution, abolishment of slavery, act of the union.
    Just to name afew.

    • @speleokeir
      @speleokeir Před 5 měsíci +3

      One that few people are aware of is the mass migration of the Scotti tribe from the north of Ireland to the Western isles of Scotland in the 6th century.

  • @henriettafinch6057
    @henriettafinch6057 Před 5 měsíci +16

    My grandmother lived in Birmingham during WWII, a place that was heavily bombed, she’d work at the war office during the day and then at night assist with incoming returning and injured troops at the train station, she would usually sleep in a bomb shelter. One morning they came out and their home was gone. I can’t imagine what she went through.

  • @judithhope8970
    @judithhope8970 Před 5 měsíci +89

    The reason the American war of independence means little over here is that it didn't impact our lives. Unlike the Norman invasion, which still wrankles, although the Normans were Norsemen who settled in France, that's Vikings, so forgiven. And the threat of Napoleon was a threat of further invasion, by the actual French. 😅

    • @jasonmcclatchie6877
      @jasonmcclatchie6877 Před 5 měsíci +4

      An invasion in 1815 was not on the cards, France was still battered from the earlier capitulation in 1814. Waterloo was all about finally exorcising the bogeyman. For that reason, I think it still deserves to be top 10 psychologically but not in reality.

    • @sirhoon87
      @sirhoon87 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Fun fact...Anchetil de Greye is my many times great grandfather

    • @judithhope8970
      @judithhope8970 Před 5 měsíci

      @@wadi_dog Yeah, Bloody French! absolutely :)

    • @tomasdawe9379
      @tomasdawe9379 Před 4 měsíci

      It did affect us actually, due to constant illegal westward expansion, and the associated defence costs, the 13 colonies were a money sink.

  • @alanaw27
    @alanaw27 Před 3 měsíci +5

    My mother is 101 years old and when she was six her mother took her with her to a polling station. She was told that this was a very special day for women in Britain , as it was the first time all women over 21 years could vote.
    She has voted all her life and even succeeded in getting changes made in the law for the benefit of partially sighted people.

  • @jasoncallow860
    @jasoncallow860 Před 5 měsíci +118

    Given that 60+ countries celebrate independence from the British empire I'm surprised the American revolution got in the top 10.

    • @tk9780
      @tk9780 Před 5 měsíci +19

      Most countries, mainly those in the Common Wealth, were handed independence in a non-violent manner from the British Empire.

    • @gavinhall6040
      @gavinhall6040 Před 5 měsíci +4

      The richest most powerful country in world history and you are surprised 😮. Okay for 🤨

    • @RickyT15
      @RickyT15 Před 5 měsíci +29

      ​@gavinhall6040 From a British history point it's just not hat important, Those colonies just weren't that important at the time and Britian was focused on Asia and Europe which took precedence.
      From world history and American history it's makes sense just not British.

    • @connorparker6461
      @connorparker6461 Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@RickyT15 Actually it is important, are biggest colonies at the time were in north America, our territory in Asia and Africa at the time and also the Carribbean Islands were not as large.
      After Americas independence did the British start searching elsewhere and start to expand.
      The 2nd British empire after US independence was when it got huge.
      If we hadn't had lost the American colonies we would have probably concentrated on Americans colonisation, the empire could have looked very different.

    • @RickyT15
      @RickyT15 Před 5 měsíci +16

      @connorparker6461 it wasn't about the size of the colonies that mattered, it was what was being exported from them. Americas at that time just was not important. If it was there would of been a bigger response and return later but that never happened cause it didn't matter.
      India was the focus of the Empire not the American colonies and what happened to India would of happened to America if it was.

  • @derekjinks5640
    @derekjinks5640 Před 5 měsíci +91

    after William the Conqueror invaded England he had the entire country inventoried, listing everything that was here.
    it was called "The Domesday Book" and we still have it, a nearly one thousand year old book.

    • @clowncarqingdao
      @clowncarqingdao Před 5 měsíci +14

      Well, in two books. The Domesday (Doomsday) and the Little (or lesser) Domesday books.

    • @StewartMcMutrie
      @StewartMcMutrie Před 5 měsíci

      the whole country of ENGLAND not the whole of Great Britain

    • @rippog1
      @rippog1 Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@StewartMcMutrieare you hard of reading? It says England in the comment.

    • @jankinjuck9484
      @jankinjuck9484 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@StewartMcMutrie And the comment says England and doesn't mention great Britain once, learn to read

    • @StewartMcMutrie
      @StewartMcMutrie Před 5 měsíci

      Sorry @@jankinjuck9484 but I am conditioned by the BBC to believe that "the country" applies to the whole of the UK not just the bottom right hand corner called England and therefore I thought, given the topic is top 10 events in BRITISH history that clarification was necessary.

  • @zerogo40
    @zerogo40 Před 5 měsíci +97

    Talking about the end of ww2 and how Americans prospered whilst back in the UK the people remained on rations for years and it took until 1999 to pay back American loans from ww2.

    • @pesmerga182
      @pesmerga182 Před 5 měsíci +22

      We were also paying the money we borrowed to free all the slaves at the same time

    • @tk9780
      @tk9780 Před 5 měsíci +17

      Britain was also paying for and helping rebuild former Axis countries and those countries occupied during the War. The Allies pumped a lot of help and money to rebuild the West German economy when Stalin became a threat to the West.

    • @margaretflounders8510
      @margaretflounders8510 Před 5 měsíci

      I remember the planes dropping food into East Germany 1948? @@tk9780

    • @sharonkay8638
      @sharonkay8638 Před 5 měsíci +23

      We didn’t finish paying the US under the Lend Lease Act until 2006. The war greatly impoverished Great Britain and enriched the US.

    • @ianjardine7324
      @ianjardine7324 Před 5 měsíci +19

      @@sharonkay8638 and thus began the tradition of American defence contractors making bank in the name of "freedom"

  • @easybigun7825
    @easybigun7825 Před 5 měsíci +16

    "Keep blinking Harold, it'll work it's way out."

  • @honker3282
    @honker3282 Před 5 měsíci +11

    As King Harold said--"Watch out for that mad bugger--he'll have someone's eye out in a moment !"

  • @zaftra
    @zaftra Před 5 měsíci +45

    What you never hear, is King Harold had been in the north fighting and beating the Vikings, the Vikings never invaded England again, he then had to go all the way down south.

    • @SophiaPangloss
      @SophiaPangloss Před 5 měsíci +16

      Whoever made up the fixtures list for that period should be hauled before a committee, giving Harold 2 matches on the same weekend was dreadful, even if they were both at the Home ground...

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 Před 5 měsíci +9

      The Normans were also Vikings - Norsemen.

    • @speleokeir
      @speleokeir Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@SophiaPangloss Probably due to TV schedules. Bloody Sky!😁

    • @ianbeddowes5362
      @ianbeddowes5362 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Harold was the last English king, apart from the Tudors who were Welsh and the Stuarts who were Scots, the rest were foreigners.

    • @SophiaPangloss
      @SophiaPangloss Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@ianbeddowes5362 The Tudors and the Stuarts were foreigners too, if you are talking about the English crown, Wales and Scotland aren't part of England.
      French, Welsh, Scottish, Dutch, German, in that order. It's enough to make anyone almost feel sorry for the English, ruled by 'foreigners' for almost an entire millenium now, and no sign of an English Restoration on the horizon...

  • @colinpearce5856
    @colinpearce5856 Před 5 měsíci +53

    Although WW2 was mentioned in general I think September 15th 1940 was pivotal in the survival of Britain. The success of the RAF in winning air superiority over the English Channel delayed the Nazi invasion pending. This was the Nazi’s first major defeat & demonstrated they could be beaten. I am convinced this was by no small means a beacon of resistance & resolve that shone into occupied Europe and the Americans.

    • @zaftra
      @zaftra Před 5 měsíci +7

      It also resulted in Hitler turning east.

    • @jerry2357
      @jerry2357 Před 5 měsíci +5

      The Germans couldn't have taken Britain even if they won the Battle of Britain. This has been wargamed by various serious organisations, and the Germans always lose heavily. The Germans just didn't have the naval resources to maintain a campaign in Britain. They might have landed a few divisions in Britain, but they didn't have the maritime logistics to keep them supplied.

    • @colinpearce5856
      @colinpearce5856 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@jerry2357 If the Nazis has air superiority then that would allow their navy unfettered access across the channel and/or air drop supplies to a landed invasion force. The exact opposite of D-Day in my opinion. In any case eliminating the invasion threat real or not was vital.

    • @jerry2357
      @jerry2357 Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@colinpearce5856 Yes, but the Kriegsmarine had lost over half their ships, including most of their destroyers, in the Norway campaign.
      By 26 May 1940, Admiral Raeder’s chief of staff had to admit that the Kriegsmarine was unable to prevent the Dunkirk evacuation of the BEF.
      By September, the British defenders had 4 cruisers and 70 destroyers in home waters and could call upon the battleships of the Home Fleet at Rosyth. The Germans were down to eight destroyers with no heavy ships immediately available for support.
      At this stage of the war, the Luftwaffe were not very effective at attacking shipping.
      The Royal Navy made a series of raids on enemy invasion ports in a variety of weather conditions. Entering Dunkirk, Boulogne, Calais and Ostend, RN ships destroyed invasion barges with gunfire, night after night. On 11 September, every port between Antwerp and Cherbourg was entered and shelled.
      The Germans did not have the naval capability to sustain an invasion of Great Britain or resist the Royal Navy, no matter what happened to the RAF.

    • @ethelmini
      @ethelmini Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@colinpearce5856 What navy? It was sent to the bottom of the sea at the end of WW1, under where the Royal Navy was waiting in case an invasion was attempted.

  • @user-ky6vw5up9m
    @user-ky6vw5up9m Před 5 měsíci +25

    UK had austerity long after WW2. Rationing of goods ended in 1954. The UK’s baby boom peaked some years later than USA. I recall a shortage of school space in 1970s.
    There was a saying that “ Germany won the peace” as the postwar German economy was doing so well.

    • @mogznwaz
      @mogznwaz Před 5 měsíci

      Paid for by us. Britain sacrificed EVERYTHING to defeat Hitler and sometimes I think we shouldn’t have bothered and we’d have had 2 generations of men still here and not screwed up by war.

  • @MrPagan777
    @MrPagan777 Před 5 měsíci +99

    USA charged the UK for their assistance in WW2, amounting to the equivalent of $50bn, in fact we paid our final installment a few months ago (in December) of $83mn. We had to continue rationing for a number of years after WW2, as the US was taking advantage of this wealth.

    • @Dave.Thatcher1
      @Dave.Thatcher1 Před 5 měsíci +15

      QUOTE.......Seventy five years ago, an agreement was signed in Washington for a US loan to the UK government of $3.75 billion repayable over 50 years. [1] The UK's final payments on this, and a loan from Canada agreed in March 1946, would not be made until December 2006

    • @rosemarielee7775
      @rosemarielee7775 Před 5 měsíci +22

      US prosperity grew at a time when every other major industrial power was in ruins.

    • @Mk1Male
      @Mk1Male Před 5 měsíci

      @@rosemarielee7775 Because they profiteered from WW2 and still think they came in at the last minute to win it. Deluded, greedy people, just like today.

    • @BoingBB
      @BoingBB Před 5 měsíci +6

      The last thing to come off rationing was sweets, in 1950 I believe. The Daily Mirror's front page was a huge photo of a kid with an enormous bar of chocolate. My dad had a shop at the time and he said rationing was really difficult for most people.

    • @Mk1Male
      @Mk1Male Před 5 měsíci

      @@rosemarielee7775 The US profiteered from both world wars. Fact. Most self centered country on the planet beyond doubt.
      All Americans are taught that any country outside of the USA is third world. That they are the most important people that have ever existed. From a country with virtually no history that's very telling.
      To Americans out there let me tell you a simple fact. Never mind what you are led to believe, without Europe as allies you are nothing.

  • @NGT-eb2oy
    @NGT-eb2oy Před 3 měsíci +5

    Whoever told you that Magna Carta was sealed instead of being signed because King John couldn't write, is very badly mistaken.
    Growing up as a Prince of England, John received the education of a Prince, i.e. the very best education in the land.
    He was also taught matters of government by Ranulf de Glanvill, The King's Justiciar (roughly equivalent to a modern Prime Minister).
    Seals were (and still are) used to authenticate or validate a document in place of, or alongside, a signature.

  • @barrygentry5364
    @barrygentry5364 Před 5 měsíci +43

    Number 1 should be the introduction of the National Health Service (NHS).

    • @lindabennett6597
      @lindabennett6597 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Totally agree❤

    • @sirjock67
      @sirjock67 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Followed by the almost complete destruction of it a mere 76 years later

    • @andrewtadd4373
      @andrewtadd4373 Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@sirjock67i would say it has been in a slow decline from the off, incompetent self serving management and constant government interference.

    • @vernongoodey5096
      @vernongoodey5096 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Bloody money sink 1.5 million staff, what’s that all about

    • @sirjock67
      @sirjock67 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@vernongoodey5096 maybe you could afford to live without it but millions couldn’t. If it was ran properly it would be the envy of the world, at the moment it’s a joke as it’s been run into the ground

  • @mrgreenfingaz1
    @mrgreenfingaz1 Před 5 měsíci +14

    About the war of independence. British troops got no medals even if deserved as it was considered a civil war. I learnt this at 19 while visiting the blackwatch museum in Perth Scotland.

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 Před 5 měsíci +21

    To be honest, I'm surprised the American War of Independance made the top ten. Significant event yes, but top ten?

  • @n0body550
    @n0body550 Před 5 měsíci +97

    Abolishment of slavery should be top of the list, like wtf, britain has even had an anti slavery law in effect for nearly 1000years now. But the fact it isn’t even on the list is deplorable

    • @johnnycarrotheid
      @johnnycarrotheid Před 5 měsíci

      Britain hasn't even been a thing for 1000 years, and to this day, there still doesn't exist "British Law".

    • @user-pp6jg1kq4i
      @user-pp6jg1kq4i Před 5 měsíci +6

      Indeed! Please look into this as well.

    • @chrisdechristophe
      @chrisdechristophe Před 5 měsíci +4

      Not really, it didn't affect that many people.

    • @nigelsheppard625
      @nigelsheppard625 Před 5 měsíci +10

      Even before Great Britain engaged in the slave trade (centuries after the Africas, Persians, Indians, Arabs and Berbers, nearly two centuries after the Portuguese and Spanish, and decades after the Dutch and French) a quite peculiar form of English Protestant Christianity declared slavery not only morally wrong but against Gods Law. They then created the Plymouth Brethren, the Quakers and later the Methodists. This was a movement of the common people, the disenfranchised, exploited and powerless but this was the true spirit of the British people.

    • @jankinjuck9484
      @jankinjuck9484 Před 5 měsíci +4

      i agree it should be on the list but definitely not at the top, things like the battle of hastings, the end of ww2 etc etc all had effects on the whole population of britain and not just a minority

  • @atorthefightingeagle9813
    @atorthefightingeagle9813 Před 5 měsíci +51

    No mention of solving the timeless problem of how to accurately measure longitude. Without it there would be no GMT and the establishment of uniform time measurement across the globe. We just take it for granted now.

    • @natalielang6209
      @natalielang6209 Před 5 měsíci +7

      Or the fact that until the trains went everywhere, we didn't even have a nationally agreed "time".
      Needed to agree a national time so that people knew when to expect their train.

    • @dankitcher1904
      @dankitcher1904 Před 5 měsíci +6

      And yet trains hardly ever arrive on time!

    • @JohnImrie
      @JohnImrie Před 5 měsíci

      But you only know that because of GMT ​@@dankitcher1904

    • @Simon-hb9rf
      @Simon-hb9rf Před 4 měsíci

      i agree the chronometer would certainly be on my top 10, it was the atom bomb of its time and assured our naval supremacy. but these lists are always subjective and rather dependant on the authors knowledge.

  • @RogersRamblings
    @RogersRamblings Před 5 měsíci +24

    The British have one very significant reason to detest Napoleon Bonaparte. Until the government needed to raise more money to fight France there was no income tax in the UK. That's one consequence of the Napoleonic wars we're still living with.
    The American colonies gaining their independence from the UK is obviously going to be a big thing for the colonists. For the British, the USA is only one of some 65 countries that gained independence from the UK. That they did it with violence set the precedent for American problem solving which continues to the present day.

    • @patthepelvisful
      @patthepelvisful Před 5 měsíci

      It was the british choice, Napoléon is not responsible.

    • @countOfHenneberg
      @countOfHenneberg Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@patthepelvisfulmy views on Napoleon have changed. I rather wish the British had followed the French example and overthrown their monarchy too. Then, without British money to fund attacks on France, our present world could be a lot different.

    • @anonymousmaster1983
      @anonymousmaster1983 Před 5 měsíci

      We should have taken a longer-term view and given them the tax breaks they wanted.

    • @RogersRamblings
      @RogersRamblings Před 5 měsíci

      @@countOfHenneberg I'd prefer to go back to 1066 and for the Bastard William to have stayed at home. I'd then have been born and grown up in a quite Norman commune instead of surrounded by all these rosbifs.

  • @jasonvardy991
    @jasonvardy991 Před 5 měsíci +21

    The Norman conquest and the french influence on the English language is also the reason we eat beef and not cow, pork and not pig, and mutton and not sheep, and venison and not deer because they where the foods of the french speaking aristocracy. Where the foods eaten by the english peasantry retain their english names like chicken, rabbit etc.

    • @Dave.Thatcher1
      @Dave.Thatcher1 Před 5 měsíci +12

      Glad you said the French "SPEAKING" nobility, because the Normans were of Norse extraction, (Hence the name of that region....NORMANDY, and had been in that part of "PRESENT" day France for just over a century, so not a lot of integration had taken place.
      For present day French to proclaim the French kicked our butts is a big misnomer!

    • @coldwhite4240
      @coldwhite4240 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Indeed, it's fascinating to look at the influence over the English language that the Norman conquest had, in particular over language in the law (the legal couplets like "aid and abet", "assault and battery", "cease and desist", "null and void", "all and sundry" and many more, come from the combined Anglo-Norman language roots). Judicial phrases tend to have Norman roots (judge, jury, court, magistrate, etc) as do words in the government and military (revenue, realm, battle, garrison, sergeant, defence) while common domestic words and place names have Anglo-Saxon roots (bed, chicken father/daughter, gate, man/woman ; place names ending in -ford, -ham, -bury, etc). This shows the relative status of the two languages, with Norman French being the official language of the ruling classes after the conquest, while Anglo-Saxon remained the language of the common folk and the everyday.

    • @KeytarArgonian
      @KeytarArgonian Před 5 měsíci

      It’s interesting considering we didn’t have Rabbits in the U.K. before the Norman invasion. It was the Normans that brought the European Rabbit here, along with the Fallow Deer. Rabbits aren’t native to Britain.

    • @yumyummoany
      @yumyummoany Před 2 měsíci

      I speak French and I have a french Skype friend, sharing french/english. I often say to her, that’s a word your William stole from us for the french!!! 🤣

    • @yumyummoany
      @yumyummoany Před 2 měsíci

      @@Dave.Thatcher1One of my dim and distant ancestors, in 876 married a ‘Norseman’! Note that the aristocratic line in my ancestry was diluted into insignificance long ago! 🤣

  • @weejackrussell
    @weejackrussell Před 5 měsíci +11

    The invasion of Britain by the Romans has been overlooked here, the Romans built roads, walls, villas and were the rluing power for many years. Hence the influence of Latin on the development of the English language. Viking invasions likewise massive in our history.

    • @cerdicw9998
      @cerdicw9998 Před 5 měsíci +1

      To be fair, the narrator did begin by saying it was the most significant events in the last 1000 years…

    • @kittling5427
      @kittling5427 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Could be that England hadn't been founded at that point, let alone Britain. What the Romans invaded was a collection of different countries. Æthelstan was the first king of England from 927AD, although the project had been started by by his grandfather Ælfred the Great (871-899 AD) That's why they refered to a thousand years of history

    • @MrGreen1314
      @MrGreen1314 Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@kittling5427 won't it therefore apply that 'Britain' didn't exist before 1707 or 1801?

    • @kittling5427
      @kittling5427 Před 4 měsíci

      @@MrGreen1314 Tricky one, we know the term Britain was around long before Anne took the title in 1707. James 6 & 1 proclaimed himself King of Great Brittaine in 1603 - but parliament rejected the title. There's an argument that if the term Britain, or Great Britain, is being used to refer to the entire isle then it exists,but you can also argue that until Anne used the title that is when it starts. The point about England is that it had not been thought of (as far as we know) before Alfred the Great. It then took two & a half generations before England came in to being, before that it was many different countries.

  • @MostlyPennyCat
    @MostlyPennyCat Před 5 měsíci +3

    ☕🧐🤌🇬🇧
    M. British: "I'm sorry, we don't remember.
    For the you, your revolutionary war was the most important event to ever happen to your nation...
    For us, it was Tuesday"

  • @GSD-hd1yh
    @GSD-hd1yh Před 5 měsíci +10

    In 1666 the area affected by the fire was two thirds of the city at the time, hence the Great Fire terminology. The official death figure is just 6 people, but the fire led to new building regulations and a move to brick instead of timber buildings.

    • @JohnImrie
      @JohnImrie Před 5 měsíci +3

      Also the creation of the London fire bregade, as up to then insurance companies had their own fire bregades and if you weren't insured with them they would let your property burn

    • @theeighthdoctorpaulmcgann1789
      @theeighthdoctorpaulmcgann1789 Před 5 měsíci

      Fun fact the great fire of london Monument is more deadly than the fire itself was

    • @GBURGE55
      @GBURGE55 Před 5 měsíci

      How so?​@@theeighthdoctorpaulmcgann1789

  • @freemansteinslab
    @freemansteinslab Před 5 měsíci +9

    As I recall, the only thing that suggests how King Harold died, is that his name appears on the tapestry just above where a body lays with an arrow in the head...but there is no suggestion that the placement of other names is representative of the figures beneath them, and there are apparently no other indications in the historical record that that is how he died... we just know he fell in battle.

    • @kevincasey5035
      @kevincasey5035 Před 5 měsíci

      According to the “Song of the Norman Conquest” (Carmen written in 1067) Harold was taken out by 4 assailants. He wasn’t killed by an arrow at least given that the Bayeux Tapestry records unarmored men running away with an arrow in their eye. Good luck finding out where all this took place!

  • @timidwolf
    @timidwolf Před 5 měsíci +5

    "The peasants are revolting!"
    "I know, I can smell them from here!"

  • @helenroberts1107
    @helenroberts1107 Před 5 měsíci +8

    You just proved why other countries think that Americans think they are better than they are by not liking that America was only number 9.

  • @nicw5574
    @nicw5574 Před 5 měsíci +11

    I love our history over here, it's fascinating. I've just finished a book on day to day life in Elizabethan England (1558-1603). Though lately my favourite period of history to read about is the Victorian era (1837-1901). Great reaction, wishing you well

  • @barneyrubble1964
    @barneyrubble1964 Před 5 měsíci +5

    One of the things that came out of the Norman Conquest is making Slavery illegal. In 1080, William the Conqueror banned the sale of slaves to non-Christians. In 1102, the ecclesiastical Council of London banned the slave trade within England, decreeing “Let no one dare hereafter to engage in the infamous business … of selling men like animals.”. The one event that seems to be missing however is the Battle of Brunanburh. fought in 937 between Æthelstan, King of England, and an alliance of Olaf Guthfrithson, King of Dublin; Constantine II, King of Scotland; and Owain, King of Strathclyde. This is often cited as the point that England was created. Historians have said that "the men who fought and died on that field forged a political map of the future that remains, arguably making the Battle of Brunanburh one of the most significant battles in the long history not just of England, but of the whole of the British Isles.

  • @brucewilliams4152
    @brucewilliams4152 Před 5 měsíci +14

    We still find bombs in my city,(Coventry) dropped by the Luftwaffe. The last one was 2000if bomb found 2years,ago

    • @JohnnyZenith
      @JohnnyZenith Před 5 měsíci +2

      Coventry was one of the finest cities in Europe before the war. Tragic. Mass civilian bombing was a huge mistake.

    • @dianeshelton9592
      @dianeshelton9592 Před 5 měsíci

      Plymouth here, bombs discovered last week. Got evacuated from m and s a few years ago. It’s a very regular occurrence. Our house sustained bomb damage and is out of true by 2 inches top to bottom. The closest bomb was about 25 yards away.
      A previous house had a bomb drop in road directly outside it. The bomb map of Plymouth is really interesting. Available for free on google.

    • @weejackrussell
      @weejackrussell Před 5 měsíci +2

      Sheffield also a place where WW II bombs still keep cropping up.

    • @CelticSaint
      @CelticSaint Před 4 měsíci

      Same here in Plymouth. One was found only last month!

  • @faithpearlgenied-a5517
    @faithpearlgenied-a5517 Před 5 měsíci +10

    American independence shouldn't even be on this list lol. WatchMojo is obviously trying to appeal to their US viewers 😂 as if losing one of our MANY colonies, a less important one at that, is in the top 10 moments in our vast history 😅

    • @GBURGE55
      @GBURGE55 Před 5 měsíci

      Well said. I just made a comment very similar to yourself. An unimportant war for us Brit's..

  • @jos9116
    @jos9116 Před 5 měsíci +6

    Act of Union, Peace Process in NI, establishment of NHS … all could be added

    • @johnnyboy-f6v
      @johnnyboy-f6v Před 4 měsíci

      ...not from a biased English narrator like this it wouldn't.

  • @emmakirk9194
    @emmakirk9194 Před 5 měsíci +8

    “It’s so small a woman could piss it out” is what he was supposed to have said.

  • @orwellboy1958
    @orwellboy1958 Před 5 měsíci +55

    The North American Colonies were not 'that' important to the U.K. back in the 1700s, we were far more concerned with France.

    • @SophiaPangloss
      @SophiaPangloss Před 5 měsíci +5

      I think George III might disagree with that, it really upset him, made him quite mad, though he was heading that way already...

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Gibraltar was seen as far more important.

    • @clowncarqingdao
      @clowncarqingdao Před 5 měsíci +5

      They were important, but the expectation was that the colonies would remain loyal to the crown. Indeed, most people were loyal to the Crown even up to the revolution.

    • @batman51
      @batman51 Před 5 měsíci +5

      And it helped expand our horizons in other directions.

    • @grahamyates2490
      @grahamyates2490 Před 5 měsíci +5

      It was a loss of face and a loss of a dumping ground for convicts they used to send to Virginia. But not much else.

  • @Gmachine88
    @Gmachine88 Před 5 měsíci +35

    Surprised the Industrial Reveloution didn't get a mention. Lets face it, with out our empire the world would be a very diffferent place, India wouldnt have trains, USA wouldn't exist, Europe would be all German. I believe French was the official language in England at one point for about 100 years.

    • @atorthefightingeagle9813
      @atorthefightingeagle9813 Před 5 měsíci

      It didn't make it because WatchMojo are clueless.

    • @helenwood8482
      @helenwood8482 Před 5 měsíci +1

      The Industrial Revolution is nothing to be proud of.

    • @maximus1868
      @maximus1868 Před 5 měsíci +17

      @@helenwood8482give your head a wobble, it birthed the modern world! You wouldn’t be able to watch a video in your hand and comment on it.

    • @cockleshellzero3893
      @cockleshellzero3893 Před 5 měsíci +16

      ​@@helenwood8482The modern world that we enjoy is a direct result of the industrial revolution, and has consequently lifted more people globally out of crippling poverty, than any other point in the history of humanity. I think we can be rightly proud of that.

    • @stue2298
      @stue2298 Před 5 měsíci +11

      @@helenwood8482 Wow, what arrogrance and ignorance said in one sentence. You can always go a live like English people did before the industrial revolution, without all the comforts, medicines and coventiences of a modern world that wouldn't have come to be without the industrial revolution, the birth of the modern world where we didn't have to rely of animals and people as power sources.

  • @tk9780
    @tk9780 Před 5 měsíci +21

    The list should been No. 3, the Retaking of Falkland Islands, No. 2, Battle of Britain, and no,1 British Empire war on Ending the World slave trade.

    • @phoenix-xu9xj
      @phoenix-xu9xj Před 5 měsíci +5

      The Falklands. No. Killing untrained young boys with no uniforms or barely any weapons , no. It’s embarrassing.,

    • @JohnImrie
      @JohnImrie Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@phoenix-xu9xjnot all the Argintian troups where young conscripts in the Falklands conflict

    • @faithpearlgenied-a5517
      @faithpearlgenied-a5517 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Not The Falklands, come on.

    • @tk9780
      @tk9780 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@faithpearlgenied-a5517 Okay, not the Falklands War. No.3 Formation of National Health Service and other Social services 1947

    • @tomasdawe9379
      @tomasdawe9379 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Number 1 should have been Trafalgar. Kind of silly this list doesn't have a single naval event on it. Without a powerful Navy, the abolition of the slave trade, the Falklands war, WW1 & 2, then Napoleonic wars and the Empire would have been very difficult for the British.

  • @gmdhargreaves
    @gmdhargreaves Před 5 měsíci +11

    I forget the USA having their own Country is a big deal to them but just one of those things to us Brits! Great list though and reaction ❤❤😂😂

    • @khankrum1
      @khankrum1 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Even bigger deal for the native Americans!

  • @dankitcher1904
    @dankitcher1904 Před 5 měsíci +10

    American independence is so minor over here I bet the majority of U.K. residents don’t even know the date of your independence (I had to look it up)

    • @marycarver1542
      @marycarver1542 Před 5 měsíci +1

      It was also fought for by the British settlers, who were sick of the taxes imposed on them by the
      King !

    • @andrewtadd4373
      @andrewtadd4373 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@marycarver1542it wasn't the King imposing tax on the colonies it was parliament, the king didn't have the to raise taxes. The tax was levied to pay for the protection provided by British troops, against the attacks by the French, Spanish and indigenous population.

  • @muskerp
    @muskerp Před 5 měsíci +2

    pretty sure King John could write, but the magna carta was officially sanctioned using his official seal, that's just how it was done in those days. Love your vids.

  • @offal
    @offal Před 5 měsíci +10

    pudding lane, which is still there today, apparently it was a baker..

  • @PHDarren
    @PHDarren Před 5 měsíci +9

    11:05 The Battle of Blenheim (1704, part of the War of the Spanish Succession.) is considered more important than the Battle of Waterloo. The book, The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World has Waterloo at 15 and Blenheim at 11. Hastings is 8th, defeat of the Spanish Armada is 9th.

  • @Renzsu
    @Renzsu Před 5 měsíci +7

    Man, some of the writing on the Watchmojo videos.. "residents there were becoming increasingly dissatisfied with the British rule and had been waging war on the Brits for more than a year"... well, if you're in a war, then dissatisfied seems to be a bit of an understatement.

    • @GBURGE55
      @GBURGE55 Před 5 měsíci

      Well said. I didn't pick up on that!

  • @Oddballkane
    @Oddballkane Před 5 měsíci +10

    Crating Gravity.
    Now the thing did exist before but the british gave it a name.
    So technically, we did invent gravity.

  • @old.not.too.grumpy.
    @old.not.too.grumpy. Před 5 měsíci +21

    HENRY VIII bescame the head of the Church of England, thus linking state and Church.
    Move on a few years, a group of Puritans objected to the integration of the church and state. They believe the two should be separate. So they go onto a ship and went to the American colonies becoming the Pilgrim Fathers.
    So if it hadn't for Henry VIII American history would be different, and Americans wouldn't be celebrating Thanksgiving

  • @user-py5ct1go2s
    @user-py5ct1go2s Před 5 měsíci +6

    The great fire of London was started by a baker in pudding lane. His name was Thomas Farriner.

    • @Matthew_Rushton
      @Matthew_Rushton Před 5 měsíci

      Indeed, however there was a French watchmaker with a learning disability who confessed to starting the fire. Despite misgivings about whether or not he was fit to plead and with the public wanting to blame somebody he was hanged at Tyburn. It turned out later that he hadn't actually arrived in London until 2 days after the fire started

    • @mylifebelike5017
      @mylifebelike5017 Před 5 měsíci

      I always thought it was the Dutch who stared the fire? … dunno where I got that from then 😅

    • @user-py5ct1go2s
      @user-py5ct1go2s Před 5 měsíci

      @@Matthew_Rushton That is very sad to hear Matthew. But it has happened many times where people have confessed to something they never done.

  • @user-xz6qk9wf9j
    @user-xz6qk9wf9j Před 5 měsíci +23

    The Abolishment of Slavery should have been top as it stopped the trade of slaves all over the world, including America, although the Americans don't like to admit it 😊

    • @noggintube
      @noggintube Před 5 měsíci +9

      Couldn't agree more - while Britain takes a lot of flak over the slave trade, it was the very reason it came to end (in the way it was in the western world at least). The Royal Navy even blockaded African coastline to try to prevent any countries slaves ships from leaving. A slave was immediately a free man stepping onto British soil. It's something to actually be proud of, regardless of those trying to suggest otherwise.

    • @gwaptiva
      @gwaptiva Před 5 měsíci

      Except that the Brits only abolished slavery in 2013 (or thereabouts). They thing they did in the first half of the 19th century was to abolish the slave trade.

    • @noggintube
      @noggintube Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@gwaptiva the Norman conquest put an end to slavery in Britain.

    • @JohnImrie
      @JohnImrie Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@gwaptivawe abolished slavery in the England in 1112 not sure where you are getting your date from

  • @samuelphillips8090
    @samuelphillips8090 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Been watching you for a year now and as a Cornish man I can only say I love your videos and the way you give an effective considered outlook in your opinions is refreshing, keep doing what you're doing

  • @KeithWilliamMacHendry
    @KeithWilliamMacHendry Před 5 měsíci +2

    It didn't officially become the nation state of GB until the act of union between Scotland & England in 1707. So much shown here is English & omits Scotland & Wales.

    • @MrGreen1314
      @MrGreen1314 Před 4 měsíci

      And isn't it just tedious that the narrator can't use rhe term England & Britain correctly. Very sloppy.

  • @julianaylor4351
    @julianaylor4351 Před 5 měsíci +4

    The Battle Of Hasting also fixed English genetics. There are people with Anglo Saxon, Briton, Norman, Danish and Jute ancestry. The English part of me is Danish, because my paternal grandfather was a Yorkshireman.

    • @susansmiles2242
      @susansmiles2242 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Same for me only my ancestors came from Derbyshire prior to the Norman invasion

  • @julianaylor4351
    @julianaylor4351 Před 5 měsíci +3

    There is a monument to the Fire Of London in Pudding Lane. The local tube station is named after it.

    • @mollyevansyoung9255
      @mollyevansyoung9255 Před 5 měsíci +2

      The monument is not on the site of where the fire started. I believe the height of the monument is the distance from the monument to where the fire started.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Před 5 měsíci

      @@mollyevansyoung9255 Yes it's a position marker created for mapping purposes, typical of the scientific advances of the time.

    • @theeighthdoctorpaulmcgann1789
      @theeighthdoctorpaulmcgann1789 Před 5 měsíci

      It also killed more people than the fire did

  • @martinp8174
    @martinp8174 Před 5 měsíci +2

    One major point in history is when William The Marshal defeated the Invaders welcomed in by the residents of London in 1217 when he was 70 years old !

    • @josiehoyle9314
      @josiehoyle9314 Před 5 měsíci

      He makes a very interesting subject to read up on

  • @henriettafinch6057
    @henriettafinch6057 Před 5 měsíci +2

    1) Oliver Cromwell was a descendant of Thomas Cromwell infamous aide to Henry VIII
    2) During the great fire Charles II actually went on a boat down the Thames and got hands on involved with putting out the fire, as a great partyer he probably thought it was a lark but it was an important turnaround in his popularity with the people.
    3) had WWI not happened it could be argued that votes for women would not have happened as soon, women took up a lot of jobs that men used to do, had more independence because of a lack of men and therefore exerted more political pressure

  • @Mk1Male
    @Mk1Male Před 5 měsíci +3

    @JJLA What's confusing about calling it the "American War of Independence"? Isn't that what you named the 4th July after?

  • @user-fw6kz1kc4n
    @user-fw6kz1kc4n Před 5 měsíci +7

    The commonwealth banned celebrating christmas, dancing,and theaters too.Partly why people hated cromwell and his son and restored the monarchy

  • @edwardsadler3348
    @edwardsadler3348 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I believe the battle of Brunamburh in 937 although forgotten was England's most inportant battle ...it is the battle that formed England.. and although nobody knows where it was .. we believe it was on the Wirral in Bromborough.. but other places claimed it.. worth a look

  • @PiersDJackson
    @PiersDJackson Před 5 měsíci +2

    The Revolutionary War.... also called the Colonial Insurrection, or that skirmish that happened on the periphery of the (26th) Anglo-French War.

  • @anthonydinsdale8783
    @anthonydinsdale8783 Před 5 měsíci +2

    There is an important aspect of the magna carta that was very important to the American revolution. In an attachment to the main document calked the Forests charter it is set out how some forssts would become commonage where freemen could forage, collect wood and pasture their small herds ; it also prohibited the king and barons from imposing new taxes without the consent of Parliament: no tax

  • @CorinneDunbar-ls3ej
    @CorinneDunbar-ls3ej Před 5 měsíci +3

    Henry VIII's break with Rome and establishment of the Anglican Church in the 16th century was about FAR more than ditching a barren queen for a fertile one!
    His father, Henry VII, was a usurper, permanently indebted to his supporters. Henry VIII likewise. At that time, the greater part of England's wealth was tied up in land and property owned by the Roman Catholic Church and its aristocratic investors.
    The King's selling-off of all this provided a massive land-grab for Henry's 'new men', and ushered in a period with a completely up-ended wealth and power dynamic in England, in Henry VIII's favour.
    It changed England for ever. 😱🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧

  • @Richard500
    @Richard500 Před 5 měsíci +2

    It was not a truly popular thing when Cromwell had the King executed. It was reported in one book I read that the people were stunned in that it was as if a Saint had been executed.

  • @denismorgan9742
    @denismorgan9742 Před 2 měsíci

    In Hastings William wasn't called a conquer, he was called William the bastard. The conflict was at Battle a place near Hastings which is now used to describe a conflict.

  • @jillybrooke29
    @jillybrooke29 Před 5 měsíci +7

    My ancestor, friend of Ben Franklin, made the silver inkstand in which they dipped the pens to sign the Declaration of Independence; He also helped Ben in inventing electricity. Wm the Conq landed up the road from me in Pevensey, Sussex and killed all the inhabitants,

    • @grahamyates2490
      @grahamyates2490 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Sorry but Benjamin Franklin did not invent electricity.

    • @Grib68-
      @Grib68- Před 5 měsíci

      Benjamin Franklin invented electricity in the same way that Isaac Newton invented gravity lol

    • @grahamyates2490
      @grahamyates2490 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Grib68- not even that. Franklin wasn't the first to discover the effects of electricity. Neither did he (like Newton), create formulas that predicted its behaviour.

    • @jillybrooke29
      @jillybrooke29 Před 5 měsíci

      @@grahamyates2490 Sorry, they were both investigating it

    • @grahamyates2490
      @grahamyates2490 Před 5 měsíci

      @@jillybrooke29 sure, Franklin was investigating electricity. And if that's all any commenter said, I wouldn't have had any argument with that.

  • @charleshowie2074
    @charleshowie2074 Před 5 měsíci +5

    Napoleon was a monster.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Před 5 měsíci

      He went round Europe stealing stuff.

    • @JohnImrie
      @JohnImrie Před 5 měsíci +4

      ​@@julianaylor4351limited ambition, if he'd been British he'd have gone around the world stealing stuff 😂

    • @MrBulky992
      @MrBulky992 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@julianaylor4351He went to Egypt: that's not in Europe.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Před 5 měsíci

      @@MrBulky992 He travelled all over Europe and into Russia, during his wars. The Mona Lisa came from an Italian convent and was looted and taken to Paris. That's why it is in The Louvre.

    • @MrBulky992
      @MrBulky992 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@michaelrogers2080I think you might need to explain why Napoleon had anything to do with same-sex marriage. I don't associate Napoleon with same-sex anything. Am I missing something?

  • @susanbearchell6436
    @susanbearchell6436 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Hello JJLA. I went to school in London in the sixties and there is rhyme that we learned about it so we remembered the date.
    THE GREAT FIRE OF LONDON SONG. and LONDONS BURNING it was embedded in us when we were young. Now most teenagers don't have a clue who WINSTON CHURCHILL is. Its pitiful

  • @The2010designer
    @The2010designer Před 5 měsíci +2

    Not a single moment - but the Industrial Revolution was the start of change for the whole world, that spread from Britain in the 18th-19th Centuries. Cultural, Political & Economic conditions in Britain allowed the growth of new processes & ideas that were not possible elsewhere. Iron & Steel production, steam power, railways & factories just some of the milestones!

  • @joshua3539
    @joshua3539 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Abolition of slavery is way higher.
    Doomsday book. The industrial revolution. Just a few like plenty more than American independence, it was a small part of the empires problems

  • @seanoreilly7293
    @seanoreilly7293 Před 5 měsíci +2

    City of London 1 sq mile.

    • @madabbafan
      @madabbafan Před 5 měsíci

      And the only part of England where:
      The Met police have no powers of arrest (unlike other constabularies they can make an arrest any where else in England and Wales).
      As Scotland have a different legal system the Met can not make an arrest in Scotland and N.Ireland is solely PSNI

  • @suetatlock8328
    @suetatlock8328 Před měsícem

    If you look carefully at the Bayeux tapestry you will see the man waring a crown was not killed with an arrow in his eye. The wording on the tapestry say this is where King Harold dies, but just shows a soldier, not a King.

  • @KeithJohnson.
    @KeithJohnson. Před 5 měsíci

    Great list, great reaction as always . I definitely thought the Battle of Trafalgar was going to be in though

  • @bobbybigboyyes
    @bobbybigboyyes Před 5 měsíci +2

    Sam Neill at the start.

  • @archiebald4717
    @archiebald4717 Před 5 měsíci +9

    Not only women did not have the vote, many men also could not vote.

    • @margaretreid2153
      @margaretreid2153 Před 5 měsíci +4

      New Zealand 🇳🇿 was the first country in the World to give women the vote in 1893,not bad or a small nation!

    • @archiebald4717
      @archiebald4717 Před 5 měsíci

      @@margaretreid2153 Yep, New Zealand did well. Does it regret that pioneering decision?

  • @malewitch101
    @malewitch101 Před 5 měsíci

    i love your reacts one of the few who looks stuff while reacting keep it up

  • @jackmason4374
    @jackmason4374 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Samuel Pepys convinced the king that pulling the houses down was the right thing to do

  • @Cirrus_Minor
    @Cirrus_Minor Před 5 měsíci +3

    Invaded by The French in order to start a 1000 year rivalry with...
    ...The French.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Because most of the medieval monarchs were French in origin. That ended with the Tudors, Welsh cousins, Stuarts, Scots cousins of the Tudors and then the German cousins that most of modern European royalty are descended from.

  • @Lee0568
    @Lee0568 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Living through AND serviving destruction on the home front,and being A REAL INSPIRATION AND WORLD LEADERS, something the YOU ES AY know NOTHING ABOUT.

  • @forty-two7298
    @forty-two7298 Před 5 měsíci +2

    1066 was the most pivotal moment in English history. The language changed, the ethnicity changed and the social structure changed. It is when the class system was created. Today all the English aristocracy can trace their lineage back to a Norman lord, while us poor Anglo-Saxon descendants still work under the yoke of the British class system.

  • @The_Prole
    @The_Prole Před 3 měsíci

    A decent little fact is Zeppelin refused to play TOTP but became the intro music with the whole lota love riff. You should watch some of the white room, was a much better "alternative" in every meaning of the word than TOTP. Much love from Scotland 💙💙💙

  • @CriminoxMC12
    @CriminoxMC12 Před 5 měsíci +14

    The reason that the american war for independence is so minor is because we have so many countries declaring independence from us that it's another tuesday (Chewsday) for us, our country is so old people forget that we had the norman battle of hastings in 1066 almost 700 years before the US was it's own country. Just let that sink in
    EDITED: Realised I put Civil war like a doughnut lol

    • @Mark-Haddow
      @Mark-Haddow Před 5 měsíci

      Only 2 nations declared UDI. The US being the first of those.

  • @pipsiscroudel3847
    @pipsiscroudel3847 Před 5 měsíci +7

    I love how the Industrial Revolution that began in Britain and affected the WHOLE world is not in the top ten of important moments in British History. Too much focus on the negative things being important

  • @thomassharmer7127
    @thomassharmer7127 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Magna Carta was not "initiated" by King John, it was composed and imposed on him by the English barons who wanted to limit the powers of the crown.

  • @davidcross8028
    @davidcross8028 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Napoleon said that the English were a Nation of Shopkeepers. Big mistake. It was those "Shopkeepers that beat him at Waterloo. Someone once said that the Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eaton (the Public School) But another voice once said that the Battle of Waterloo was not won on the playing fields of Eaton but on the village greens of England; giving respect to the ordinary man and his musket who is there at the front and fights rather than the senior officers who rarely are.

  • @mattsmith5421
    @mattsmith5421 Před 5 měsíci +10

    Im surprised America is even on the list and britan inventing the modern world isn't.

  • @lynnejamieson2063
    @lynnejamieson2063 Před 5 měsíci +10

    Can’t help but feel that the list was more ‘10 of the most important events in English history’. I know that as a Scot, there was little connected with Scotland (other than the beheading of the last Scottish born monarch, which was just a footnote in the point that was being made) plus when you take into consideration the fact that Britain as a political alliance didn’t exist until 1707 and the majority of the events listed happened prior to then…
    It’s a great list, I just believe it to be misleadingly titled.

    • @andyleighton6969
      @andyleighton6969 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Look a bit deeper.
      Without 1066 there would have been no underemployed Normans for David the First to use as muscle to launch the "Davidian Revolution".
      The extension of royal power and the eclipse of gaildom left a lasting mark on Scotland.
      Half the noble houses of Scotland have Norman roots.

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd Před 5 měsíci

      @@andyleighton6969Still England and not Great Britain though, Great Britain didn’t exist when many of these events happened.

  • @johnwilletts3984
    @johnwilletts3984 Před 5 měsíci +1

    1370 and the start of a recognisable Parliament. Within a couple of years it was opposing the King.

  • @gillcawthorn7572
    @gillcawthorn7572 Před 5 měsíci +1

    At times during Napoleon`s successes, every country in Europe was under his command ,except Britain .
    The fact that we held out for so long and so belligerently encouraged other countries to turn against him for periods of time. This meant that his sphere of influence had to be repeatedly fought across Europe and his armies stretched across many countries .
    Also, our pre-eminence at sea and Napoleon`s conviction that this was less important than land fighting meant we could move to defend our island more efficiently than his fleets could attack .
    But the fear of his invasion lasted for many years and he was a hated figure, as Hitler was later.
    " Be good or Boney will come for you" mothers told their children.

  • @Dave_Allen
    @Dave_Allen Před 5 měsíci +3

    the Armada should be on there, this was huge on a global scale. the defeat of the Spanish Armada has had a huge impact on world history.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Před 5 měsíci +1

      That and the English Navy plundering the Spanish merchant navy, which helped destroy the Spanish Empire.

  • @zaftra
    @zaftra Před 5 měsíci +3

    The American independence thing couldn't be more simplified if it tried. They were British colonials, they had war, the Indian war, all part of the French wars, the British won it for them but it cost a lot, not only to Britain but the French. Britain ask for payment for the war, the British colonials refused (imagine the UK refusing to pay America back) to pay. To get this back, Britain introduced stamp duty on everything, the French taxed their poor. The result of the British colonials not paying their war debt back was the America War of independence and the French revolution; millions dead.

  • @geekexmachina
    @geekexmachina Před 5 měsíci +1

    The outcome of the war of the roses was also very important point in history. The uniting of the UK is probably also important. And the industrial revolution,

  • @emmajayne4894
    @emmajayne4894 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Have you ever thought of watching the John Lewis Christmas adverts. They are brilliant and will have you in tears

    • @denisemeredith2436
      @denisemeredith2436 Před 5 měsíci

      Lewis's is an entirely different store to John Lewis, however, the Aldi adverts are the besr.

  • @stuart9683
    @stuart9683 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Surely the Act of Union in 1707 would be the most important moment considering it created the United Kingdom?

    • @johnnycarrotheid
      @johnnycarrotheid Před 5 měsíci +2

      The video is all over the place tbh.
      Apparently England is Britain 🤷🤦
      The Magna Carta bit.
      It's a British thing but is nothing to do with us up here in this bit of Britain 😂

  • @TheFatBeardedGamer
    @TheFatBeardedGamer Před 5 měsíci +3

    we dont even consider the American war for independence a real war, more like a little side skirmish while we were beating the French and Spanish

  • @geekexmachina
    @geekexmachina Před 5 měsíci +2

    According to records 536 CE was the worst year to be alive because of a volcanic winter.

    • @CorinneDunbar-ls3ej
      @CorinneDunbar-ls3ej Před 4 měsíci

      Yes, and the following year's were still affected. Successive harvests failed, then came famine.....and inevitably in 540 came plague.
      Plague came via the old Roman trade routes, and so impacted the Romano-British disproportionately. This may have facilitated the Anglo-Saxon takeover.

  • @catbevis1644
    @catbevis1644 Před 5 měsíci +1

    The Tower of London HAD to be saved during the Great Fire. It was where the entire country's store of military-grade gunpowder was kept. If the fire had got to it, it wouldn't be so much a "flattened city"- more a new Grand Canyon.

  • @19McCloy91
    @19McCloy91 Před 5 měsíci +5

    The narrator in the video keeps saying England when he means Britain. How was the battle of Waterloo an English victory when there was more than likely soldiers from Scotland and Wales there as well? England hadn't had its own army for more than 100 years at that point