Battle of Tsushima (Empire of Japan vs Russian Empire)

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  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2018
  • The Battle of Tsushima (Russian: Цусимское сражение, Tsusimskoye srazheniye), also known as the Battle of Tsushima Strait and the Naval Battle of the Sea of Japan (Japanese: 日本海海戦, Nihonkai-Kaisen) in Japan, was a major naval battle fought between Russia and Japan during the Russo-Japanese War.
    It was fought on 27-28 May 1905 in the Tsushima Strait between Korea and southern Japan. In this battle the Japanese fleet hailed from Busan under Admiral Tōgō Heihachirō destroyed two-thirds of the Russian fleet hailed from Baltic Sea, under Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky, which had traveled over 18,000 nautical miles (33,000 km) to reach the Far East.

Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @RoyalDog214
    @RoyalDog214 Před 3 lety +1680

    They are now Ghosts of Tsushima.

    • @toast2300
      @toast2300 Před 3 lety +95

      Take my like and just leave. The door is over there

    • @JIRO-FX3150
      @JIRO-FX3150 Před 3 lety +43

      The game is history when the strongest Mongolian empire around 1200-1300 attacked Japan.

    • @toxin1882
      @toxin1882 Před 3 lety +14

      @@JIRO-FX3150
      every time I go to a youtube channel discussing the topic
      Tsushima gets ignored and they head over to mainland japan

    • @howardthealien2606
      @howardthealien2606 Před 3 lety +4

      @ビッグマグナム you know nothing of history.

    • @juanagustinsanchez4766
      @juanagustinsanchez4766 Před 3 lety +3

      Como se llama la pelicula o serie

  • @alexruby7624
    @alexruby7624 Před 5 lety +5570

    *Sake* Vs *Vodka*

    • @Lowlander-ci7is
      @Lowlander-ci7is Před 5 lety +169

      Vodka should have won, hey man have you tried steam and iron?

    • @alexruby7624
      @alexruby7624 Před 5 lety +47

      @@Lowlander-ci7is ofc

    • @ilm325
      @ilm325 Před 5 lety +65

      ALEXDUSTY Which do you like?(im Japanese)

    • @alexruby7624
      @alexruby7624 Před 5 lety +25

      @@ilm325 random

    • @MicahRdr
      @MicahRdr Před 5 lety +120

      Sake is superior!

  • @razasayyed382
    @razasayyed382 Před 3 lety +923

    "Although the era of samurai was ended their spirit is still alive"(Admiral Togo was a samurai in childhood)

    • @AbrahamLincoln4
      @AbrahamLincoln4 Před 3 lety +47

      wow that is interesting. Lived from the Samurai to the Imperial era

    • @chrismoreno7181
      @chrismoreno7181 Před 3 lety +107

      @@AbrahamLincoln4 samurai never truly gone. Most of leaders of japanese navy and army were all from samurai class. Satsuma are mostly on navy and chosu mostly on the army. To these day at least 10% of total japanese population had links or direct descendant of samurai warriors.

    • @DeathsOnTheYAxis
      @DeathsOnTheYAxis Před 3 lety +10

      These were the men who broke the pathetic feudal elite, and now held up the samurai legend through state propaganda, to serve the machine of expansion and reform. The spirit of the samurai more than lived on. Beneath the veil of a feudal warrior code resided something even greater and more terrible. The Japanese conscript soldiers became in mass reality what the samurai were in exaggerated old stories. Their rapid development is one of the greatest successes of any society in world history.

    • @commanderyuri5609
      @commanderyuri5609 Před 3 lety

      Yoo haunted.....

    • @renzeusoya5828
      @renzeusoya5828 Před 2 lety +31

      @@chrismoreno7181 Actually, the Japanese army hierarchy mostly came from the peasant class, while the samurai class dominated the navy. It was the big reason why the IJA and IJN despised each other.

  • @balargus319
    @balargus319 Před 3 lety +237

    And thus, Admiral Togo's name achieved immortality in naval history.

    • @BioHunter1990
      @BioHunter1990 Před 2 lety +35

      Lord Admiral Nelson of the East.

    • @paulsteaven
      @paulsteaven Před rokem +12

      His name was immortalised together with the likes of Nelson and Yi Sun Shin.

    • @ophirbactrius8285
      @ophirbactrius8285 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Togo? Aha its remind me about Emmanuel Adebayor

  • @veteranassassin4591
    @veteranassassin4591 Před 2 lety +1081

    "The fate of the Empire rest on the outcome of this battle, let every man do his utmost duty"
    -Admiral Tõgõ Heihachirõ

  • @NickJohnCoop
    @NickJohnCoop Před 3 lety +1166

    The Russians actually barely had a chance. The fleet they were using was actually outdated,badly supplied and had already traveled across the entire world. The Japanese on the other hand were using a brand new fleet that was basically top of the line ,British constructed and well drilled. It was one of the things that showed how far the Russians had slipped.

    • @Potatotenkopf
      @Potatotenkopf Před 3 lety +201

      I think it more importantly shows how far Japan had come, they were basically still in the 16th century until Perry forced them to open.

    • @sergeiosintcev735
      @sergeiosintcev735 Před 3 lety +28

      with the port Arthur squadron, there was a chance !! and when port Arthur fell 2 squadron went to the slaughter !!

    • @theosvult4857
      @theosvult4857 Před 3 lety +123

      @@Potatotenkopf it shows both. Yes Japan industrialized in amazing haste but Russia was a great power for many years and this war just showed how much they began to lack.

    • @Potatotenkopf
      @Potatotenkopf Před 3 lety +3

      @@theosvult4857 yep

    • @limmyk4943
      @limmyk4943 Před 3 lety +58

      The Russian had Some modern protected cruisers about 4 or 5 modern battleships
      but their crew is another story..
      The only ship that have excellent crew and gunnery is the Armored cruiser Aurora

  • @user-kp1xz9vi3p
    @user-kp1xz9vi3p Před rokem +34

    やっぱ戦艦同士の殴り合いはいいわぁ。漢って感じで

    • @KimJongun000
      @KimJongun000 Před rokem

      ロマンの塊
      現実で起きたらアレだけど

  • @shapandsons7402
    @shapandsons7402 Před rokem +481

    Amazingly, one particular sailor lost two fingers. One more loss of a digit would have invalided him out of the Navy.
    His name... was Yamamoto.
    Yes. That same Yamamoto who later served against Pearl Harbour.

    • @HistoryXBike
      @HistoryXBike Před rokem +23

      Thanks for that bit of info mate. Yamamoto himself at Tsushima. He is of the generation that tasted the sweet nectar of victory during that time and tried to carry on the tradition of Admiral Togo into the Japanese Navy of the 1930s and into the 1940s. Wouldn't be around anymore to witness though its complete and utter destruction in 1944 and 1945.

    • @inigobantok1579
      @inigobantok1579 Před rokem +17

      Probably why he was so obsessed with the Decisive Naval battle doctrine against the US

    • @yatsumleung8618
      @yatsumleung8618 Před rokem +57

      Some time after the war, the Japanese held a garden party to celebrate their victory.
      Some newly graduated naval officers from the visiting battleship USS Ohio were also invited to the party. One of them invited Admiral Togo to their table. They had a pleasant chat and the experience left a lasting impression on the young midshipman.
      His name was Chester Nimitz.

    • @f1b0nacc1sequence7
      @f1b0nacc1sequence7 Před rokem +4

      @@inigobantok1579 No more than the rest of the IJN's command. Decisive battle doctrine was deeply ingrained in their history. Yamamoto, while a daring gambler and a capable administrator (as well as an effective politician) wasn't a terribly innovative thinker (other than his early - and frankly opportunistic - grasp of air fleets as strike forces), so the notion of him being a maverick (with relation to his embrace of the Decisive Battle(tm)) really just doesn't strike me as credible.

    • @anthonycaruso8443
      @anthonycaruso8443 Před 11 měsíci

      ..And killed by Yanks.

  • @dernierergenekon5234
    @dernierergenekon5234 Před 5 lety +1331

    Japans were very succesful at reforming themselves.

    • @panzerkiller4847
      @panzerkiller4847 Před 5 lety +65

      If you call fighting a civil war and breaking away with traditionally values a very successful reformation, then yh. They went from a nation that kept to itself after the failed Korean invasion, to an Imperial power that almost conquered the Pacific and Asia.

    • @histman3133
      @histman3133 Před 5 lety +82

      And then they let the war with Russia go to their heads. Their victory changed the way they looked at themselves and the rest of the world. After this they became more assertive and aggressive, believing they were as good if not better than the West. All of this led to their defeat in WWII.

    • @brand-194
      @brand-194 Před 5 lety +6

      But at the cost of by power-obsessed and fears of looked down by superpowers.

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 Před 5 lety +40

      It's been my opinion too if they had lost about half their fleet @ Tsushima they wouldn't be so aggressive about it.
      The Japanese warrior culture (however tamed) has always been about being assertive and aggressive to get ahead, it's how they survived until then.
      The way I see it, Admiral Perry forcing Japan to open up to the West is the direct cause of the misery to follow in the next 70-80 years.
      Also that except the whole Imperial thing they came out of forced opening > civilized nation in 20 years (and a formidable fighting force in 30) incredibly fast, and now they are peacefully prospering.
      The weird thing is that suddenly that's bad too according to some political... spectrums :)

    • @snagarum
      @snagarum Před 5 lety +15

      @@histman3133 they viewed themselfes as equals. They were colonising like western powers and handling matters similarly

  • @user-vu4yq3we5y
    @user-vu4yq3we5y Před 2 lety +92

    ここで負けてたらって思うと鳥肌が止まらない‼️

    • @hajyakenshou2578
      @hajyakenshou2578 Před měsícem +4

      今頃、みんなロシア語を喋り〇〇スキーとか〇〇チェフスカみたいな名前になってたんでしょうね。

    • @user-bb9sy7qu2x
      @user-bb9sy7qu2x Před měsícem +3

      ここで日本海軍の運命が変わり、太平洋戦争です日本海軍の力が発揮された

    • @kujirakaba9905
      @kujirakaba9905 Před 2 dny

      ここで負けてたら 日本人皆ロシア人にされて 正に今頃 男はロシア軍服着せられ シベリア鉄道に乗せられ ウクライナでゾンビ突撃して死んでたわ。 実際樺太の住民 アイヌ人かロシア人か知らんが 数十人ウクライナで戦死してるね。

  • @huseyinemre6419
    @huseyinemre6419 Před rokem +211

    Fun fact: The Japanese defeat of the Russians was considered an exciting development for many intellectuals and statesmen who thought and worried about the "fall" of the Ottoman Empire. Let me give an example to understand the effect of this wave of excitement on the Ottoman Empire. The name of the victorious admiral of the Japanese is Togo. At that time, many children in Ottoman lands, especially in Istanbul, were called "togo". The source of "zeki hikmatullah togo", the name of the second child of Halide Adıvar(turkish writer), is this war and the victorious admiral of this war, Togo. This war excited Halide and Adıvar, and clever Hikmatullah was called "togo" like other boys born in his neighborhood at that time.

    • @Ajclz
      @Ajclz Před rokem +22

      Another win for Turan bros 🇯🇵🇹🇷

    • @binbasesatoktayyldran5236
      @binbasesatoktayyldran5236 Před rokem +10

      Keşke diğer Türkler de senin gibi bilgili olsa sağol kardeş

    • @mad_max21
      @mad_max21 Před rokem +10

      And then it fell. The end.

    • @dingleberry4234
      @dingleberry4234 Před rokem +1

      Why were they rooting for Japan so hard?

    • @theroaringdragon306
      @theroaringdragon306 Před rokem +23

      @@dingleberry4234 Cause the ottoman empire was an ailing empire dying of corruption and the inability to industrialize. So when an oriental empire that just industrialized in less then a generation managed beat your main rival. You too would see this as a good thing and try to copy or at least cheer them on to beat the Russians ass harder so you have a chance of reclaiming power in the Balkans and caucuses.

  • @ace10229
    @ace10229 Před 4 lety +174

    you know you've watched too many war-related movie clips when you start recognizing the sound samples

    • @bengarbacz9350
      @bengarbacz9350 Před 3 lety +3

      besides the soundtrack from last exile, what else do you hear? just curious

    • @hu3bman
      @hu3bman Před 2 lety +4

      Ikr. The clips of the Russian officers here are from a different movie called "The Admiral" where they're firing against Germans instead but eh, doesn't really make much difference visually 🤷

    • @ChingaDingabidingdong-ln2ek
      @ChingaDingabidingdong-ln2ek Před 3 měsíci

      Do you by chance know the song from the intro? I can't Shazam it

    • @ChingaDingabidingdong-ln2ek
      @ChingaDingabidingdong-ln2ek Před 3 měsíci

      0:00

    • @ace10229
      @ace10229 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@ChingaDingabidingdong-ln2ek I do not know the name, but it is from Civilization 5. It is one of the tracks that plays when you enter the trade/diplomacy screen with Japan while you are at war.

  • @ziongite
    @ziongite Před 3 lety +1371

    It was the first time a European type enemy was defeated by an Asian nation in the modern era, one thing not shown in this video is that Japan invented a new type of explosive charge that it used during this battle, it was invented by engineer Masachika Shimose of the imperial Japanese navy. It was used to great effect against the Russians and was the highest powered explosive at the time.
    Here is a quote from the Russian Colonel after experiencing the attacks.
    "I experienced most of the mortars and Shimose powder once, but this is a completely new invention. It is suspected that what is inside the ship and falls on the deck is not a shell, but a torpedo. This powerful shell explodes as soon as you touch something. Those protruding above the iron plate and upper deck on the ship's side become fine dust, which injures people and the iron ladder bends in a bay shape and the cannon that is fixed bends from the root. Such work is by no means dependent on the striking force of the bullet, but entirely on its explosive force."
    Despite Japan winning, the USA didn't like seeing a non European type people defeating other European looking people, and thus America basically came in forced Japan to sign a treaty to end the war with Russia. So the USA literally saved Russia in this war. The Japanese became even more militarist as a result of this, because they didn't like how the USA robbed them of further success.

    • @hanselsihotang
      @hanselsihotang Před 3 lety +344

      Ironic considering it was the USA that forced them (Japan) to open up and modernize in the first place.
      USA often makes its own enemies and turns them into monsters it seems.

    • @jurjur8811
      @jurjur8811 Před 2 lety +213

      @@hanselsihotang nah the U.S only forced them to open up with unequal treaties Japan modernized itself

    • @everyonesdisappointment7629
      @everyonesdisappointment7629 Před 2 lety +74

      If I remember well, didn't USA come to Japan and was like "You're gonna trade with us, and you're gonna like it" when Japan was isolationist?

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 Před 2 lety +46

      Yeah can all be traced back to the U.S, they had huge interests in Asia and thought to include Japan in that sphere of influence, and well.. it backfired.

    • @fadillah6014
      @fadillah6014 Před 2 lety +7

      @@everyonesdisappointment7629 it was before the war I guess (which lead Meiji restoration), but without that act Japan won't realize how far behind actually they are.
      Anyway nice Oversimplified reference

  • @ewhizz1122
    @ewhizz1122 Před 5 lety +50

    Beautiful graphics! I already knew the outcome but I was still enthralled the whole time!

  • @4xrandom867
    @4xrandom867 Před 3 lety +835

    The story of how the russian fleet even got to Tsushima is at least as interesting and way more crazy than the battle.

    • @atomicvacation8819
      @atomicvacation8819 Před 3 lety +15

      Oh yes I've read about this. It's terrible

    • @MrHistory269
      @MrHistory269 Před 3 lety +80

      The voyage of the dammed

    • @mustard4762
      @mustard4762 Před 3 lety +8

      @Nobby Nobbs Either the admiral was incompetent or the fleet just had bad luck

    • @thegeneral4943
      @thegeneral4943 Před 3 lety +106

      @@mustard4762 Actually, the admiral (I know his name, but it's practically the size of Russia itself) was a very capable, efficient and intelligent man, if impatient and irritable, but given the ABSURD levels of incompetency displayed by most of the fleet's crew, you could not blame him. Look up Drachinifel's video on the Second Pacific Squadron for a full recap of the events leading up to this battle.

    • @mustard4762
      @mustard4762 Před 3 lety +2

      @@thegeneral4943 oh ok, thanks for the info

  • @alimammadli5231
    @alimammadli5231 Před 2 lety +109

    Long Live Japan
    Love Azerbaijan
    🇦🇿🇯🇵

  • @randeshjayawandhane2844
    @randeshjayawandhane2844 Před rokem +100

    Japan is so similar to Britain
    1) both of them possessed powerful empires
    2) both of them owned powerful fleets
    3) both had mainland rivals
    4) both were island nations

    • @vuctz
      @vuctz Před rokem +36

      Both had monarchs and loved tea

    • @Thurnmourer
      @Thurnmourer Před rokem +12

      That is such a boiled-down, meaningless comparison. Got a good chuckle.

    • @Selvikus
      @Selvikus Před rokem +18

      When I studied history I had to write an essay comparing and contrasting the two, and yes, in many ways they were similar.

    • @alexlyster3459
      @alexlyster3459 Před rokem +16

      The ships they used here were British built

    • @thespiritphoenix3798
      @thespiritphoenix3798 Před rokem +4

      @@Thurnmourer how is it meaninglessness?

  • @Tod_x
    @Tod_x Před rokem +28

    from 1867 to 1905...
    in just 38 years they have such a modern army

    • @paleoph6168
      @paleoph6168 Před rokem +6

      And navy

    • @yatsumleung8618
      @yatsumleung8618 Před 2 měsíci

      While Tsushima was a completely lopsided victory for the Japanese Navy, the land battle of the Siege of Port Arthur was extremely costly for the Japanese Army with 57,000 casualties (although it was later found out most were due to illness -- vitamin B deficiency, which was absent from the Navy). So much so that General Nogi requested Emperor Meiji to allow him to commit seppuku in atonement.

    • @deeznoots6241
      @deeznoots6241 Před měsícem +1

      @@yatsumleung8618yeah people remember the Russo-Japanese war as a complete blowout of the Russians but the Japanese army actually suffered higher casualties than the Russians(excluding captured soldiers), the Russian army was perfectly capable of fighting head on battles against the Japanese army and coming out ahead(these battles often resulting in absurdly high casualties for the Japanese that tended to engage in risky frontal assaults) but the higher leadership of the Japanese army was far more competent than the Russians, where the Russians consistently chose to defend the wrong areas and leave their flanks open the Japanese high commanders would see the failures of initial frontal assaults carried out by over-eager lower officers and direct troops into flanking assaults into the gaps left open by the incompetent Russian generals.
      Also the naval war before the battle of Tsushima was fairly balanced with the Russian Pacific fleet coming out slightly the worse largely due to being confined in their ports well by the Japanese efforts, unable to escape their port confines without risking hitting mines, though the real death knell for the Russian Pacific fleet was the loss of Port Arthur.

  • @lantruongtuan582
    @lantruongtuan582 Před 11 měsíci +97

    Pure battleship gun fire battle, no submarine, no aircraft. What a symbollic naval battle, which the world might never have another one.

    • @mzou89
      @mzou89 Před 8 měsíci +4

      The last pure major naval battle between just capital ships was probably Jutland during WW1

    • @inigobantok1579
      @inigobantok1579 Před 7 měsíci +7

      ​@@mzou89but this was the only decisive battle of battleships that ever occurred in naval history

    • @paprizio1073
      @paprizio1073 Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@inigobantok1579only someone who never read in depth about Jutland would say it wasn't decisive. The simple fact that the high seas fleet never again tried to engage the grand fleet (and when they tried a good chunk of the crew mutinied) says more than enough of who won.

    • @paprizio1073
      @paprizio1073 Před 5 měsíci +2

      besides that decisive is a broad term, wouldn't you say that the battle of the north cape was decisive? Not for the whole war, but for the artic convoys it lifted a whole of pressure that the krigsmarine could make, no intervention from submarines nor from aircraft, even if heavily outnumbered, it was an only surface action.

    • @Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent
      @Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent Před 5 měsíci

      They had a bunch of torpedo boats running around. These would have been the sub equivalent especially during a battle.

  • @GTA-iu1ok
    @GTA-iu1ok Před 10 měsíci +46

    The moment when an Asian country beat Europe for the first time.

  • @DewiTelaphia
    @DewiTelaphia Před 2 lety +25

    Japan Won

  • @xavi-kun
    @xavi-kun Před 5 lety +621

    IMO, the Japanese Ships (which were designed by the British) look better than the Russian Ships.

    • @limmyk4943
      @limmyk4943 Před 4 lety +163

      Because the Russian Ships are French Designs

    • @thehorselesshussar9813
      @thehorselesshussar9813 Před 4 lety +31

      And it's because they were...

    • @Luke-tp3xm
      @Luke-tp3xm Před 4 lety +20

      Isn’t those battleships mikasa class battleships were the most powerful battleships that Japan has and I heard that japan built the ships itself

    • @thehorselesshussar9813
      @thehorselesshussar9813 Před 4 lety +71

      @@Luke-tp3xm Not true, they're British made and most of the accents such as The ships wheel and smaller plaques were in English. They are a variation on the British design of the Formidable class.

    • @slider903
      @slider903 Před 4 lety +13

      It was so hard for me to tell who is who.

  • @LordZontar
    @LordZontar Před 2 lety +357

    One of the keys to the Japanese victory at Tsushima was Admiral Togo's deployment of picket boats equipped with wireless transmitters, which relayed information in real-time to the Admiral on the approach of the Russian fleet.

    • @MarcDufresneosorusrex
      @MarcDufresneosorusrex Před 11 měsíci

      @@nonamenosurname3637 😝talk about desperate.. your comment made me chuckle.. : D

  • @sukunahikonatokoyokami5200
    @sukunahikonatokoyokami5200 Před 9 měsíci +56

    When Japan opened its doors to the world, the literacy rate in London was around 25%, while the literacy rate in Japan was between 80 and 90%. The driving force behind Japan's victory was not the power of weapons, but the power of education.

    • @user-jf5qw6vg3h
      @user-jf5qw6vg3h Před 8 měsíci

      That "literacy" you're talking about was Shinto fairytales, Japan never got the chance to even receive education, it closed its doors to the world

    • @_k_banach7918
      @_k_banach7918 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@user-jf5qw6vg3h
      何も知らないくせに語るな😂
      調べたら分かるぞ、当時の日本の識字率は高えよ

    • @paprizio1073
      @paprizio1073 Před 5 měsíci +2

      If they were so educated, why did they lose ww2?

    • @sukunahikonatokoyokami5200
      @sukunahikonatokoyokami5200 Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@paprizio1073
      Samurai fought for victory in the Sino-Japanese War and the Russo-Japanese War. In World War II, the battle against America was fought with no intention of victory in the first place. The battle of the peasants who dreamed of samurai.

    • @paprizio1073
      @paprizio1073 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@sukunahikonatokoyokami5200 so you're telling me they deliberately enter a war, dealing the first blow, with no intention of winning? Sounds pretty dumb to me.

  • @AndieArbeit
    @AndieArbeit Před 2 lety +8

    thanks for adding that part from last exile ost, really fits perfect with the battle

  • @user-xz3zh5oo8v
    @user-xz3zh5oo8v Před 2 lety +120

    日本の誇り

    • @Red-vm2vu
      @Red-vm2vu Před 2 měsíci

      Funny... what's the point of pride? Two empires fought to please others. Russia and Japan are stupid

  • @user-fq3zg2nn4h
    @user-fq3zg2nn4h Před 7 měsíci +12

    I can't believe this battle happened 35 years after the Meiji Restoration.

  • @Risingdarkness108
    @Risingdarkness108 Před rokem +26

    Meanwhile Putin was watching dragon ball

  • @tylerhoop5312
    @tylerhoop5312 Před 3 lety +72

    "Do you see torpedo boats" Kamchatka

    • @IJNMikasa
      @IJNMikasa Před 4 měsíci +1

      Underrated comment right here.

  • @tylernelson328
    @tylernelson328 Před 2 lety +57

    The view at 1:28 is absolutely insane… the black smoke and the muzzle flashes. To see something like that in real life and know those shells were coming for you had to be terrifying in more ways than one.

  • @user-rl1qo8xe3j
    @user-rl1qo8xe3j Před 4 lety +39

    坂の上の雲だ!!
    懐かしい、毎週欠かさずに観てたな
    伝説の東郷ターンは必見だね!!!

    • @user-rp6yh1gw2e
      @user-rp6yh1gw2e Před 3 lety +6

      キャストがこれまた全員はまり役だった。モックンの秋山真之には心底しびれた。

  • @yocyoku
    @yocyoku Před 4 lety +332

    The Japanese navy was able to win with high skill and T-style. The Russian navy who was tired from the long trip was also brave. And thanks to Britain.

    • @yogiz46x25
      @yogiz46x25 Před 4 lety +44

      yes indeed, the Russian navy had to go through the Africa using alternative way because the British close the Suez canal for Russian Navy

    • @asheer9114
      @asheer9114 Před 3 lety +28

      @@yogiz46x25 And all this because a cursed Russian ship called Kamchatka. 😂

    • @originalkk882
      @originalkk882 Před 3 lety +9

      @@yogiz46x25 Not really surprising when the Russian fleet fired on British fishing boats in the North Sea

    • @zhongxina7601
      @zhongxina7601 Před 3 lety

      @@yogiz46x25 omg thats a long travel lol

    • @j.f.fisher5318
      @j.f.fisher5318 Před 3 lety +1

      @@yogiz46x25 the fleet split into 3 groups - 2 of which went through Suez. Surprisingly, after they shot up a bunch of british fishing boats they thought were torpedo boats and almost got wiped out by the royal navy. The RN admiral in charge outnumbered them 4-1 but after inspecting the damage to the fishing boats planned to take on the fleet wit just 4 battleships to make it sporting haha.

  • @user-xn3qp9ls1t
    @user-xn3qp9ls1t Před 2 lety +24

    It shocked people all over the world that the small island country in Asia won the Russian Empire.

    • @DarkSova
      @DarkSova Před rokem

      У нас в России до сих пор так. Россияне винят полководцев того времени, потому что "Мы проиграли войну каким то макакам". Хотя в действительности японская армия была невероятно могущественна и мотивирована, а японские адмиралы учились у англичан и были прекрасными моряками. Наш внутренний расизм и шовинизм позволили нам задрать свой нос вверх и пропустить быстрый удар от японского боксера

  • @olivergoldthorpe9493
    @olivergoldthorpe9493 Před 3 lety +24

    Funny how it’s Britain and France indirectly fighting.

  • @anxiousbottle
    @anxiousbottle Před 25 dny +1

    your editing is amazing, i love how you strung 2 movies in 0:46 together in such a way

  • @Storm07YY
    @Storm07YY Před 4 lety +30

    やっぱり航空戦闘機交えての乱戦より、戦艦の一騎討ちの方が「海戦」というべきにふさわしい戦だと思う。

  • @welovemina
    @welovemina Před 5 lety +401

    Japan was the pride of the whole Asia at that time

    • @3dimension545
      @3dimension545 Před 4 lety +67

      Actually Asia was suffered under Japan's imperialism

    • @IrgunII
      @IrgunII Před 4 lety +173

      Yes boy, let's forget about the British and French colonies and let's blame Japan for the suffering of asian countries

    • @seanq6570
      @seanq6570 Před 4 lety +46

      @@IrgunII Well, forcing the civilian girls in their colonies to serve as sex slaves for the emperor's soldiers would be definitely harder to forget than ordinary colonization experience. There's a significant difference between European and Japanese colonization, that the latter was far more brutal, although Japanese called it 'liberation'.

    • @makky6239
      @makky6239 Před 4 lety +10

      @@IrgunII who said anything about forget? Wtf

    • @satriorama4118
      @satriorama4118 Před 4 lety +86

      @@3dimension545 AT THAT TIME every Asia countries praising Japan for the victory against Tsar. Even their (Japan) number one hater/enemy/whatever you would say, Sun Yat Sen say that Japan victory are the victory of Asia against western country. This war ignite the flame of nationalist in Asian countries to break away from their colonial overlord.

  • @sushiromifune7096
    @sushiromifune7096 Před 4 lety +109

    In 1905, Admiral Togo U-turn in front of the Russian fleet and won. In 1944, Admiral Kurita U-turn in front of the American fleet and lost.

    • @kameraldbahrul3432
      @kameraldbahrul3432 Před 4 lety +28

      Its different condition, russia basically outnumbered in total ship but not in firepower, but russian fleet was tired from long journey and relatively poor trained due rushed to sea while japan has experience and good condition, while in battle of samar japan great firepower was useless due didn't have fire control like allied and remember it was era of airplane so yeah end age for ship full naval gun

    • @kameraldbahrul3432
      @kameraldbahrul3432 Před 4 lety +3

      Yeah basically battle of samar ( campaign of leyte gulf) was already known who is won the battle, US fleet and some allied ship have more than 300 ship while japanese just under 80 and many of them unequipped with fire control unlike their counterpart and have more experience due good rotation and best of damage control

    • @kameraldbahrul3432
      @kameraldbahrul3432 Před 4 lety +7

      Togo won in tsushima and other naval battle due happen its happen in sea of japan (its like playing in backyard) while russian navy get separated, so japan just using strategi defeat in detail, if japan was sending their navy to europe even get help from british port, i doubt they didn't get slaughtered like russia in tsushima, it was already doomed for baltic fleet sailing to far east

    • @scunthorpe6198
      @scunthorpe6198 Před 3 lety

      @@kameraldbahrul3432 yep the Baltic fleet travelled 33 000 km to reach the far East

    • @user-gh7go3nx9i
      @user-gh7go3nx9i Před 3 lety +4

      In 1975, The US couldn't even beat farmers in a jungle armed with sticks.

  • @slider903
    @slider903 Před 4 lety +87

    Very well done. RIP to all who fell beneath the waves. The sea remembers her own.

  • @dirkvanmourik871
    @dirkvanmourik871 Před 4 lety +204

    For over 200 years the Dutch were the only western nation that was allowed to trade with Japan. The Japanese also gained a lot of knowledge through the Dutch. Also the the first modern Japanese ships (steamships) came from The Netherlands. The first modern Japanese naval training was also conducted by the Dutch.

    • @user-xn3qp9ls1t
      @user-xn3qp9ls1t Před 2 lety +29

      A Dutch instructor was said to be a samurai with blue eyes and commanded the Imperial Japanese army.

    • @tooru1110
      @tooru1110 Před rokem +1

      We learn modern football tactics from Dutch

    • @samuel10125
      @samuel10125 Před rokem +23

      Then Japanese started getting all their vessels build in Britain and their crews trained by the Royal Navy weirdly even to this day Japan heavily values its relationship with the Royal Navy.

    • @brianflynn5355
      @brianflynn5355 Před rokem +7

      @@user-xn3qp9ls1t Bullshit lol

    • @user-lg2fn1tq2e
      @user-lg2fn1tq2e Před rokem +21

      ちなみに、日本の出島にあったオランダ商館は、オランダ本国が国体を失っていた1811〜15年あたりも、商館長の意向により旧オランダ国旗が掲げられていたため、当時出島は世界唯一のオランダ国であったと言われる。

  • @tennoshenaniganizer9234
    @tennoshenaniganizer9234 Před 5 lety +668

    When you have the power of god and anime on your side

    • @-_Hatred_-
      @-_Hatred_- Před 5 lety +37

      and Britain with USA.

    • @rubbermallet3873
      @rubbermallet3873 Před 4 lety +10

      Tenno Shenaniganizer the western God is spelled with a big capital G, for many reasons but the most importants are: respect for christians and christianity, education level, ethics, etc etc etc
      your god is probably japanese and that is why you spelled like that, right? 👁

    • @superlumbagoman9370
      @superlumbagoman9370 Před 4 lety +7

      Certainly *NOT ANIME*

    • @dragoninthewest1
      @dragoninthewest1 Před 3 lety +3

      @wowalinbie it's probably Amaterasu. Also God has a name, Jehovah or Yahweh

    • @zegalt
      @zegalt Před 3 lety +2

      LeL

  • @zacharyzier314
    @zacharyzier314 Před 4 lety +72

    The 2nd Russian Pacific Squadron was the closest thing to a real-life Ben Stiller navy movie. It was amazing they lasted as long as they did.

    • @slider903
      @slider903 Před 3 lety +7

      It was the equivalent of Monty Python.

    • @starkiler13
      @starkiler13 Před 2 lety

      Explanatios?

    • @ThrowawayModeller
      @ThrowawayModeller Před 2 lety +4

      @@starkiler13 Look at Drachinifel's video on it

    • @sr7129
      @sr7129 Před rokem +1

      @@starkiler13 They attacked “Japanese torpedo boats” (fishing boats) in the North Sea (yup) causing the British fleet to shadow them and shut the Suez Canal. They went around Africa the long way. Stopped in Madagascar for supplies and to give the men a break. What do the men do to boost morale? Buy a bunch of exotic (venomous) animals that they take onboard. Which get loose Oh, and they buy opium cigarettes. Then they get to Tsushima and are completely obliterated. I’m only skimming the surface, look it up. It’s fuckin hilarious. Russia never changes

    • @10Tabris01
      @10Tabris01 Před rokem +1

      @@ThrowawayModeller Do you see torpedo boats?

  • @JesusT150
    @JesusT150 Před 3 lety +3

    amazing edit great music choice

  • @na3044
    @na3044 Před 3 lety +8

    "Saka no Ue no Kumo" and "The Admiral" , isn't it? Nicely done there, though that japanese drama certainly had the perfect music already. Damn, we need a movie about Jutland.

  • @urmo345
    @urmo345 Před 4 lety +73

    This battle and loss of the Russian fleet had a MAJOR effect and contributed a lot for the 1905 and 1917. revolutions and ultimately birth of Soviet Union. (cruiser Aurora took part of this battle)

    • @donpacificbobcat9er615
      @donpacificbobcat9er615 Před 4 lety +3

      To be fair a good number of the sailors drafted for the Russian 2nd Pacific Squadron most likely never even saw the sea before they set sail to their demise.

    • @anthonycaruso8443
      @anthonycaruso8443 Před 11 měsíci

      Was near Aurora when my wife and I wee in Leningrad in 1990.Tried to get on,but could not.

    • @I.BEREZHNOFF1973
      @I.BEREZHNOFF1973 Před 7 měsíci

      КАСАТЕЛЬНО ЭФФЕКТА НА РУССКИЙ НАРОД.. ПРОИЗВЕДЁННОГО ГИБЕЛЬЮ.. ПЕРВОЙ И ВТОРОЙ ТИХООКЕАНСКОЙ ЭСКАДР.. ВСЁ БЫЛО С ТОЧНОСТЬЮ ДО НАОБОРОТ.. ФОРМИРОВАЛИСЬ НОВЫЕ ДИВИЗИИ.. ЭШЕЛОНЫ..С БОЕМРИПАСАМИ.. ДЛЯ ОТПРАВКИ НА ДАЛЬНИЙ ВОСТОК.. И ПОБОЯВШИЕСЯ ПОБЕДЫ РОССИИ В ВОЙНЕ С ЯПОНИЕЙ НАГЛО-САКСЫ С СОЮЗНИКАМИ (АНГЛИСКИЕ И АМЕРИКОСОВСКИЕ БАНКИРЫ..!) ПРОПЛАТИЛИ ПОПА ГАПОНА.. И ДРУГИХ "РЕВОЛЮЦИОНЕРОВ" ..,КОТОРЫЕ УСТРОИЛИ 9 ЯНВАРЯ 1905- ГО ГОДА.. ,А ВПОСЛЕДСТВИИ УСТРОИЛИ БУНТЫ НА БРОНЕНОСЦЕ "ПОТЁМКИН" .. КРЕЙСЕРЕ "ОЧАКОВ".. СДЕЛАВ ВСЁ ДЛЯ ТОГО..,ЧТОБЫ РОССИЙСКАЯ ИМПЕРИЯ НЕ УСПЕЛА СФОРМИРОВАТЬ И ОТПРАВИТЬ ТРЕТЬЮ ТИХООКЕАНСКУЮ ЭСКАДРУ.. И КСТАТИ ЕЁ МОЖНО БЫЛО ОТПРАВИТЬ СЕВЕРНЫМ ПУТЁМ..

  • @winstonseecharan5772
    @winstonseecharan5772 Před 2 lety +10

    The rise of japan was a role model for the Asian countries to follow it made them believe in there self

  • @user-zd7rd4ch5k
    @user-zd7rd4ch5k Před 4 lety +17

    大日本帝國海軍,軍魂可敬,東鄉平八郎指揮勵害,中華民國千秋萬載,萬萬歲💖💖💖

  • @xcw4934
    @xcw4934 Před 3 lety +25

    The comically woeful seamanship and obsolescence of almost the entire Russian fleet and its Odyssean magnitude of travails on their long journey before ever confronting Japan pretty much ensured their defeat before they ever engaged. Their journey is absolutely worth finding out about and there are some great videos on CZcams that discuss the jaw-dropping misfortunes and inept seamen and officers their admiral confronted along the way.

    • @Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent
      @Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent Před rokem +3

      Seems Russia having its armies beaten by a smaller power seems to be a new repeating pattern for them apparently. Smaller power tends to have advanced stuff too.
      Russia- Japanese conflict. Japanese has brand new top of the line British built battleships. Crews are well trained and literally have been prepped for a conflict.
      Russia: Over bloated, corrupt to the core, its officers not well trained, its soldiers not well trained, its weapons outdated or not well maintained.
      Russia Ukraine War: Ukraine been preparing for a possible Russian invasion for years. Weapons were on par if also a little better. It has increasingly been given newer weapons and makes very good tactical decisions and excellent use of what its been given. Literally it stalled Russia's advance and Russia is currently retreating.
      Russia: Over bloated, corrupt to the core, its officers, not well trained, its soldiers not well trained, its weapons outdated, not well maintained.
      I'm sensing a pattern..

    • @Brecconable
      @Brecconable Před rokem

      @@Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent I would not listen to our own propaganda regarding Russians fighting in their backyard. The Nazis underestimated them and look what happened afterwards. Plus the regime in Kiev has been getting backhanders from Creepy Joe himself.

    • @inigobantok1579
      @inigobantok1579 Před rokem +2

      Russia never had a chance as an Naval power really in all of its history

    • @CzechMirco
      @CzechMirco Před rokem +2

      Not to mention that this reinforcement squadron was itself a last ditch effort to change the course of the war, after the original Pacific Fleet was anihilated in and out of Port Arthur (and some remnants were interred in neutral ports) and Port Arthur itself had fallen even before this relief "Second Pacific Squadron" got anywhere near East Asia.

    • @user-hz2bm3xb8d
      @user-hz2bm3xb8d Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_SerpentРоссия, отступая, дойдёт до польской границы.

  • @suciretnowati8219
    @suciretnowati8219 Před 5 lety +533

    Those poor poor fish

    • @axlbrixsigmundkrause4163
      @axlbrixsigmundkrause4163 Před 4 lety +17

      Nah, poor men that was sent to the war just for the greed of certain men.

    • @kunnu6752
      @kunnu6752 Před 4 lety +11

      They already evacuated the area

    • @CubSATPH
      @CubSATPH Před 4 lety +5

      I think they escape earlier

    • @trafargarlaw4972
      @trafargarlaw4972 Před 4 lety +11

      On that sinking ship there's a hundred maybe thousands human being who died and yet the first thing come to your mind is fish?

    • @phydonne
      @phydonne Před 4 lety +4

      Jajajajajaja

  • @raitankorotan
    @raitankorotan Před 3 lety +7

    Thank you Turkey and Great Britain from Japan.

    • @namo9810
      @namo9810 Před 3 lety

      Hhh turkey what do for you?

    • @noobsaibot7006
      @noobsaibot7006 Před 3 lety

      @@namo9810 the Ottomans blocked the Russian Black Sea fleet. Ottomans did not give permission for the Russians to traverse the Bosphorus to fight in Japan. So Russia had to resort to its Baltic fleet.

    • @inigobantok1579
      @inigobantok1579 Před 2 lety

      And the Brits basically provided the battleships

  • @billrichter8871
    @billrichter8871 Před 4 lety +44

    This was only 40 years after the Civil War and the first ironclads, a quantum leap in technology and fire control, escalating to this day!

    • @Hunpecked
      @Hunpecked Před 3 lety +6

      And the following year HMS Dreadnought represented another quantum leap forward in naval design.

    • @satriorama4118
      @satriorama4118 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Hunpecked And around 20 years later, Japan built the world first modern destroyers, Fubuki class DD.

  • @admiralpavelnakhimov8755
    @admiralpavelnakhimov8755 Před 3 lety +16

    This battle made one empire and broke the other. With the loss, Russian opinion of the Tsar and the Imperial Government was shattered forever. With the victory, Japan was hurled into a golden age of naval design and imperial expansion.

  • @historyandgames
    @historyandgames Před rokem +5

    Great video. Thx from the history lovers!!!

  • @pizzapotato4609
    @pizzapotato4609 Před 4 lety +121

    R.i.p Russian and Japan
    両軍バンザイBanzai

  • @umegaenohana
    @umegaenohana Před 3 lety +20

    It was necessary to hit the Russian fleet "Baltic" before entering the military port "Lushun" on the Korean Peninsula.
    The reason is that if you enter the military port, reinforcements will be added to the highland "203", which is the base on land, and it will be impossible to recapture the base.
    So does the entry route for the "Baltic Fleet" come from above? I was searching in the Sea of ​​Japan because I wasn't sure if it came from below.

  • @user-gy8tn2rq7h
    @user-gy8tn2rq7h Před rokem +12

    Japan and Russia fought for their homeland, risking their lives.
    日本、ロシア、お互いが祖国のために命を懸けて戦いました。

  • @absolutfreeman1033
    @absolutfreeman1033 Před 3 lety +84

    Ghost of Tsushima 20th century edition

  • @nabegonnabedon2107
    @nabegonnabedon2107 Před 3 lety +84

    明治の大先輩にただただ感謝するのみ。
    元寇の時の鎌倉男子たちと同じ かっこよすぎて涙が出ます。

    • @hajyakenshou2578
      @hajyakenshou2578 Před 3 lety +15

      「かくまでも 醜き国になりたれば ささげし人の ただに惜しまる」
      石原慎太郎氏が国会で紹介した90歳超のある戦争未亡人の歌です。
      英霊が今の日本を眺めたら、きっと泣き崩れるでしょう。

    • @user-uv8rj4mt8r
      @user-uv8rj4mt8r Před rokem

      @@hajyakenshou2578 良い歌なんだけど、石原慎太郎が呼んだて聞いたら萎えるのは俺だけだろうか?

    • @user-uv8rj4mt8r
      @user-uv8rj4mt8r Před rokem

      @@an_rerere 河野さんは好きよ(笑)
      ただ俺ってアニメオタクなのよ、わかる?

    • @user-cu7qy1de1g
      @user-cu7qy1de1g Před rokem +2

      @@an_rerere ポプテピピック乙

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 Před 10 měsíci

    Awesome graphics!.. terrifying!

  • @user-ht7ml9wk2x
    @user-ht7ml9wk2x Před 2 lety +74

    皇国の興廃、この一戦に有り

  • @user-hw1pf4yq6j
    @user-hw1pf4yq6j Před 5 lety +125

    I'm a Japanese. R.I.P. for Victims of both countries.

    • @user-fm1yh5vc1o
      @user-fm1yh5vc1o Před 4 lety +10

      そうなんですね。

    • @jashabright4654
      @jashabright4654 Před 4 lety +17

      Japan killing thousand of sperm for making hentai .

    • @No-dy3zk
      @No-dy3zk Před 4 lety +16

      I like the imperial Japanese navy. And the German navy.

    • @user-hw1pf4yq6j
      @user-hw1pf4yq6j Před 4 lety +2

      @@No-dy3zk mir auch.

    • @No-dy3zk
      @No-dy3zk Před 4 lety

      魔法戦隊マジレンジャー what does that mean. I only know one word in Japanese.

  • @bangladeshi1458
    @bangladeshi1458 Před 5 lety +6

    Please make a video on the Battle of Plassey,,,,

  • @cpacac
    @cpacac Před 2 lety +3

    BGM懐かしい
    ラストエグザイル好きでしたねー

  • @tatsuokimura5668
    @tatsuokimura5668 Před 4 lety +108

    Japaneses:"Omaewa, Mo Shindeiru!", russians:" Nani!"

  • @vladkutepoff5586
    @vladkutepoff5586 Před 4 lety +80

    If anyone is interested, there are such books "Tsushima" (Novikov-Priboy) and "On the "Еagle" in Tsushima" (Kostenko). Both are written by participants in this battle and contain a lot of interesting information.

    • @UlsterHound77
      @UlsterHound77 Před 2 lety +3

      Fascinating. Are there Japanese accounts as well? I have found it most enjoyable to read both sides of battles, as it gives fascinating new angles of thought.

    • @DarkSova
      @DarkSova Před rokem

      @@UlsterHound77 После второй мировой войны американцы опубликовали много японских секретных документов про Цусимское сражение. Можете поискать там

    • @williwass6837
      @williwass6837 Před rokem

      @@DarkSova THX for Info!

  • @user-td9pk7bz6k
    @user-td9pk7bz6k Před 3 lety +9

    シリアスな特撮👍

  • @amagooyagi2791
    @amagooyagi2791 Před 3 lety +63

    第二次大戦より、この当時の戦艦の方がカッコいい 両国ともに、船首に日本は菊の御紋、露は紋章が付いてるのもクール

  • @kkhagerty6315
    @kkhagerty6315 Před 4 lety +133

    When you declare war in stellaris without knowing enemy fleet power

    • @fyodorkojevin5756
      @fyodorkojevin5756 Před 3 lety +24

      Except that it was Japan that attacked Russia without declaration of war.
      So, more like: when you think that small empire near your borders have no good fleet, but then they attack you and destroy all of your ships.

    • @fyodorkojevin5756
      @fyodorkojevin5756 Před 3 lety +2

      @Tejas Misra, basically - yes.

  • @lastcommodore9651
    @lastcommodore9651 Před rokem +7

    Japan's finest hour.
    The actor portraying Admiral Togo bears an amazing resemblance.

    • @WeissVogel
      @WeissVogel Před 11 měsíci +1

      Not just him. The late Toshiro Mifune did too.

  • @junkang8781
    @junkang8781 Před 4 lety +21

    Battleships : boom boom bing bong
    Sailors : wha aaah wuu ahhh

  • @user-dy4ny7wb3u
    @user-dy4ny7wb3u Před 2 lety +12

    酒vsウォッカってコメントクソワロタw

  • @zygokroll4342
    @zygokroll4342 Před rokem +2

    merci, très heureux de revoir cette échange d'obus, il est tiré du dernier épisode (13) du formidable drama japonais: Saka no ue kumo, pas facile à le trouver mais je sais qu'il y a Netflix qui l'a mis dans son programme pour certain secteur de la planète, en tout cas, c'est à voir et à revoir:
    Saka no Ue no Kumo est une série télévisée dramatique de guerre japonaise qui a été diffusée sur NHK pendant trois ans, du 29 novembre 2009 à décembre 2011, en tant que drame spécial sur la taïga. La série comporte 13 épisodes de 90 minutes chacun.

  • @user-ed2gw9oq7k
    @user-ed2gw9oq7k Před 3 lety +25

    こーゆー戦艦同士の殴り合い、良いよね

  • @devingraves8044
    @devingraves8044 Před 3 měsíci +3

    The fact the japanese manaeged to pull this off after only habing started modernization a few decades earlier is insanely impressive

  • @gm_teshdo427
    @gm_teshdo427 Před rokem +57

    日本人としてこの海戦に勝利したことを誇りに思います。
    As a Japanese, I am proud to have won this naval battle.

    • @VikaKastolomova
      @VikaKastolomova Před rokem +2

      Ты молодец что победил русских фашистов

    • @yoshikimizukami
      @yoshikimizukami Před rokem +12

      私は神奈川県横須賀市の三笠公園にある記念館三笠を観て中に入ったことがあります。本当に勝てたのが奇跡に思えました。この前の日清戦争の頃までの戦争は短期で負けた方が勝った方に賠償金を支払うことや勝った方に都合の良い条件を認めることで終わっていたのがまだましだったと思いました。

    • @KaisarBety
      @KaisarBety Před rokem +2

      ​@@VikaKastolomova tell me you know nothing about fascist

    • @18890426
      @18890426 Před rokem +16

      @@KaisarBety fascist? What does that have something to do with this?

    • @indonesianchinese5724
      @indonesianchinese5724 Před rokem

      あなた達はアメリカによって征服されました

  • @Flyingpotatos
    @Flyingpotatos Před 2 lety +17

    In fact, the British government's refusal to supply fuel to the Russian Navy had a considerable impact on Russia's defeat.

    • @jamesyap8364
      @jamesyap8364 Před 2 lety +6

      Because Russia open fired on their civilians (they misidentified fishing boats as Torpedo boats for some reason)

    • @MarcDufresneosorusrex
      @MarcDufresneosorusrex Před 11 měsíci

      what fuel?

    • @mitrogulf4073
      @mitrogulf4073 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@jamesyap8364 1. Britain at that time was already an ally of Japan. Therefore, they got scared.
      2. This only shows that it was beneficial for Britain to take the side of Japan, because they did not want to share influence with Russia, the previous Crimean War and the dirty game of Britain, where former enemies immediately became allies only because of their ambitions and fear, showed themselves and in this war. The fact that the ships were built according to the drawings and even the materials of Britain only confirm this. The case of the sailors is only a far-fetched casus belli.

  • @SmokeBloody
    @SmokeBloody Před rokem +5

    "Tsushima" became a synonym of a total defeat in Russia for many years. Probably one of the most shameful defeat in the Russian history.

  • @Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent

    Fun Fact. The Russian and Japanese ships was a excellent test of the different designs that was choosen. Many of the Russian ships were based on Frenched high board designs. Think a building on its side floating and it looks like a ship. Impressive to look at but basically screams shoot me. the newest models in the Russian fleet were based on the Tumblehome design also french designs. Making the ships have sloping sides and armor, Again they looked impressive but these designs not to mention improves freeboard but had a tendency to roll if your not careful with them.
    The Japanese Imperial Fleet was primarily British built. The BBs were all british. They used a low freeboard type design which well had the top of the hull closer to the water line and thereby water making them more vunerable to waves crashing over there. The Design gave better stability for using weapons, less chance of rolling, and harder to hit.
    Almost all Japanese Battleships after the turn of the century would be based on British designs and at least one famous one in WW2 was a british built ship.
    The IJN Kongo.. .

    • @sneeki8082
      @sneeki8082 Před 2 lety +6

      There's even a street in the UK named Mikasa street

    • @sneeki8082
      @sneeki8082 Před 2 lety +5

      There's even a street in the UK named Mikasa street

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Ah yes, the French hotels.

    • @Flymoki13
      @Flymoki13 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Actually most Japanese warships were already being made in Japan, battleships were one exception, they demanded more workforce, time and steel. At the time Japanese Shipyards were at full capacity manufacturing destroyers, gun boats, corvettes, and worse, yahata steelworks wasn't properly working as they expecting. Therefore
      they feared it would take too long to get the more labor intensive battleships just in time only by relying on local production line, they were thus compelled to request the brits

    • @zamnodorszk7898
      @zamnodorszk7898 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Tumblehome was also terrible against high arc modern guns, which would hit the armour at 90 deg, and thus have a greater chance of penetration.

  • @osushi1111
    @osushi1111 Před rokem +9

    この動画を見ていると悲鳴が聞こえてきて、悲しくなります。
    両国の英霊よ、安らかに。

  • @marekadrspach5845
    @marekadrspach5845 Před 3 lety +8

    Woah... The rework of triler for "Ghost of Tsushima" is lit🔥

    • @kookykoruc1827
      @kookykoruc1827 Před 3 lety

      No joke that would be hella nice, they still used katanas in the army didn't they? So the combat could've stayed the same
      Imagine playing as a lone japanease soldier and attacking russian outposts

  • @sirethanthegreat4069
    @sirethanthegreat4069 Před 3 lety +10

    Naval Warfare in early 1900s Terrain:
    Ocean
    Tons of smoke
    And what ever weather there was.

  • @SeamusMcFlurry
    @SeamusMcFlurry Před 3 lety +22

    "Powerful Russian fleet"
    Is this the same powerful, Russian fleet that thought fishing boats off the coast of Britain were Japanese torpedo boats, fired 300 shells, and only managed to sink one of them? The same fleet that fired on it's own ships (and missed) during that same fight?

    • @tritium1998
      @tritium1998 Před 2 lety +3

      Russia needed to be propagandized (still to this day) as a leading naval power that Japan (a British treaty ally whose battleships were even built in Britain) humiliated in what was practically a proxy war. Maybe the British were still sour about their mediocre allied victory in the Crimean War.

    • @cpj93070
      @cpj93070 Před rokem +3

      @@tritium1998 Yeah you keep spreading those lies Russia boy, you lost the Crimean war and the Russo-Japanese War, your Navy was an embarrassment seriously.

  • @gearbox3773
    @gearbox3773 Před 3 lety +21

    The japan flag ship "Mykasa" was built by British. It was a totally new project, even better than british ships. It was given to Japan as "prototype", so Japan can learn and improve next ships they will built.

    • @user-sx5ze8oq3k
      @user-sx5ze8oq3k Před rokem +12

      Its was not given, the Japanese bought it

    • @yatsumleung8618
      @yatsumleung8618 Před rokem

      Fun fact. It's the only surviving British battleship. All others have been scrapped despite all the battle honours.

    • @user-lg2fn1tq2e
      @user-lg2fn1tq2e Před rokem +4

      三笠は記念艦として現存していて、今日彼女に乗船してきましたが、素晴らしかったです。しかし、日本の敗戦後、アメリカ軍などによって三笠は武装解除され、下はコンクリートに固められ、艦上は水族館やダンスホールに改造されていた時代があったり、敗戦後の混乱による盗難が相次いだことから、当時の物はあまり残っていなかったのが残念です

    • @wasdwasdwasdwasd-lt7cq
      @wasdwasdwasdwasd-lt7cq Před 2 měsíci

      *mikasa

  • @morlock2086
    @morlock2086 Před 3 lety +16

    I got to walk the decks of IJN Mikasa. Mid July 2019. She is a heckuva thing to see.

    • @kkhagerty6315
      @kkhagerty6315 Před 3 lety +1

      Morlock indeed she is, the last British battleship and a reminder of japans once mighty imperial navy

    • @morlock2086
      @morlock2086 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kkhagerty6315 Knowing that she had to be extensively rebuilt and restored following her second "demilitarization" (the Russians still hate her) with parts sourced from all over the world, I stood on her flying bridge approximately where Adm. Togo and his staff stood in a light drizzle with the wind blowing the mist. It was quite a moment.

  • @sharis4130
    @sharis4130 Před rokem +3

    This remains to be one of the few Naval Battle scenes with "Over the Top" animations in movie history so far.

  • @Puritan1985
    @Puritan1985 Před 4 lety +11

    drachinfel made an excellent pair of videos about the baltic fleet's voyage and this battle.

  • @nozyspy4967
    @nozyspy4967 Před 3 lety +3

    That is some amazing special effects. What film/programme is it from?

  • @IAmTheAce5
    @IAmTheAce5 Před 3 lety

    Nice choice of Last Exile music

  • @gwgw1252
    @gwgw1252 Před 5 lety +351

    The flag of Japan's Rising Sun is really cool

    • @user-zh2gu8gp1x
      @user-zh2gu8gp1x Před 5 lety +22

      that's related to war crime it is same as Nazi flag. if you say that to any Asian it is offensing others. why some people dont recognize this damn flag as a serious matter?

    • @MarkhasSteelfort
      @MarkhasSteelfort Před 5 lety +97

      It looks cool indeed.

    • @skyclosed6292
      @skyclosed6292 Před 5 lety +7

      皆さん
      This flagship
      Now for yokosuka

    • @satyaadibaskarawiryawan130
      @satyaadibaskarawiryawan130 Před 5 lety +111

      이건희 Not really. Beside, Japanese Naval Fleet still use that Rising Sun flag until now. I think only China and Korea who still get offense with this flag in Asia. Not all asian nation.

    • @user-wt3gz2oc2z
      @user-wt3gz2oc2z Před 5 lety +75

      @@user-zh2gu8gp1x You just started to claim it in 2011. Lier football player Ki Sung-yueng fabricated it to avoid criticism for his racially discriminating demonstration of Japanese people in Japan-Korea game.
      In 1998 and 2008 Japanese navyships with rising sun flag had no problem to visit Korea.
      Abondon your meaningless imagination. You have to face the real history.

  • @tyrannicalgod6064
    @tyrannicalgod6064 Před rokem +15

    Glory to The Japan

  • @kalebhill63
    @kalebhill63 Před 4 lety +1

    The background music is from the great steampunk show Last Exile. Very cool aviation story, well worth the watch.

  • @misterpera94
    @misterpera94 Před 4 lety +9

    When every European power began to respect and fear the Empire of the Sun

    • @limmyk4943
      @limmyk4943 Před 3 lety

      not really, they still look down on Japan after ww1

  • @user-ou1xv9kj4b
    @user-ou1xv9kj4b Před 4 lety +99

    The shells Jin used at the time is high explosive named Shimose which isn’t good at penetrating armor but effective to burn to kill sailers

    • @bengarbacz9350
      @bengarbacz9350 Před 3 lety +6

      the russian ships had plastered themselves in thick canvas that would have been effective against the ap at the time, but they were not expecting the Japanese to use shimose shells that act a lot like napalm.

    • @draknight5081
      @draknight5081 Před 2 lety

      Ay Jin when did you get a gun?

    • @jadeorbigoso5212
      @jadeorbigoso5212 Před rokem

      ​@@draknight5081 probably he meant the IJN

  • @user-km1es1go1b
    @user-km1es1go1b Před 5 lety +12

    I love the heart not afraid of any partner in Japan

  • @yichenwang1600
    @yichenwang1600 Před rokem +28

    次はウクライナの番ですよ
    Now it's Ukraine's turn to beat Russia!

    • @cmax4548
      @cmax4548 Před rokem

      vain hopes of morons

    • @_stalnoye_yablochko_5357
      @_stalnoye_yablochko_5357 Před rokem

      しかし、満州で関東軍が壊滅的な敗北を喫したように、最終的にウクライナは敗北するでしょう。

    • @ivandedovvanes4579
      @ivandedovvanes4579 Před rokem

      Сперва ты сгориишь с семьёй недоносков и недолюдей

    • @cmax4548
      @cmax4548 Před rokem

      @@ivandedovvanes4579 no - this is not how it happens - at first you will run out of people - not even soldiers - just people, then the remaining bunch of Benders will try to repeat what happened after the 45th BUT there is a mobile connection - wangyu - it will be a megaphone - then the neighbors will hand over the fool of Benders and to them a tank drives up to the house and smears it into a pancake - no one needs them - after a dozen demonstration battles where the Bendery families do not give up and "heroically" roll into a pancake, the situation is the same as in Ichkeria - everyone is chasing Benders and the Benders have no work - no money - there is nothing - how much benderoff do you think will remain?

  • @user-yz5ry4cr9k
    @user-yz5ry4cr9k Před 9 měsíci +10

    やっぱり戦艦ってかっこいい

  • @user-pk1vw4uv5r
    @user-pk1vw4uv5r Před 4 lety +15

    打つ時に波がバァーンってなる感じ好き

  • @yuusama5203
    @yuusama5203 Před 6 měsíci +3

    この頃の戦争は、陸も海も大砲が戦局を左右させた。この作品では殆どの人が知らないテクノロジーであった、連合艦隊が用いる不発率の低い艦砲の砲弾「伊集院信管」と、着弾の際に容易に着火する「新型炸薬」の描写が忠実に描かれており、この海戦の詳細を知る者にとっても納得出来る映像に仕上がっている。

  • @user-cf8pv7ix4f
    @user-cf8pv7ix4f Před 4 lety +3

    良い選曲ですね🐭
    ラストエグザイル大好きです!

  • @koopanique
    @koopanique Před 3 lety

    Ooh Last Exile music! Great