Why did it take so long for France to conquer Brittany? (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2023
  • The small Duchy of Brittany sat on the north-west frontier of France for over six centuries. Despite France being much larger and much more powerful, its king never managed to conquer the Bretons and instead had to wait to marry into its ruling family. So why not? Why didn't France conquer Brittany in such a long period of time. To find out watch this short and simple animated history documentary.
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Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @jonbaxter2254
    @jonbaxter2254 Před rokem +12081

    If Elder Scrolls taught me anything, the Bretons were hard to defeat because they kept spamming magic and France was doing a melee-only run.

    • @westrim
      @westrim Před rokem +718

      Fools, they should have brought stealth archers.

    • @sephikong8323
      @sephikong8323 Před rokem

      ​@@westrim What a fool you are, I'm a Breton, how could you kill a Breton ?
      What a grand and intoxicating innocence

    • @jonbaxter2254
      @jonbaxter2254 Před rokem +493

      @@westrim What are you, some kind of Bosmer?

    • @Matakshaman
      @Matakshaman Před rokem +342

      @@jonbaxter2254 Damn elves

    • @Neolazaro91
      @Neolazaro91 Před rokem +303

      Never should have come here

  • @RmsOceanic
    @RmsOceanic Před rokem +4744

    We all know the real reason Brittany wasn't subdued earlier was a small village near the coast, existing all the way back to when it was known as Armorica, whose inhabitants fought off any incursion to their lands with amazing strength, almost like they had a magic potion.

    • @jonbaxter2254
      @jonbaxter2254 Před rokem +68

      Wasn't that on the Belgium border, not the other side?

    • @joeallen9104
      @joeallen9104 Před rokem +325

      @@jonbaxter2254 Nope, it's supposed to be located in Erquy on the Brittany coast.

    • @michelarsenault4088
      @michelarsenault4088 Před rokem +378

      and that a small blonde midget and a Huge Man with red hair always went on adventures to save the village, what were there names again? Asterix and Obelix? yeah those guys, great warriors

    • @diney7085
      @diney7085 Před rokem +240

      It's actually because James Bissonette wouldn't allow Brittany to be assimilated into the French kingdom

    • @greyghost2492
      @greyghost2492 Před rokem +137

      Ah, a fellow cultured Asterix and Obelix enjoyer

  • @iattacku2773
    @iattacku2773 Před rokem +5628

    I think this video does a good job in showing how decentralized the Middle Ages were. Kings rarely if ever had true absolute power.

    • @mrgalaxy396
      @mrgalaxy396 Před rokem +573

      Difficult to project power over hundreds to thousands of kilometers when it takes so long for troops to reach that land. Many times this just wasn't economically sensible and economics are usually the underlying reason for war in the first place.

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem +298

      True. Everything political in the middle ages was a matter of power balance, mediation and reputation. Soft power, negotiation and prestige were the key to peace and success. Being power hungry and petty would get a king no support.

    • @GarkKahn
      @GarkKahn Před rokem +78

      People talk about hre but they were more like "everyone is the same, i just merely say it out loud"

    • @AVKnecht
      @AVKnecht Před rokem +121

      In the case of France you could go so far that the Battle of Agincourt was a blessing in disguise because so many powerful French nobles lost their lives on that day. Less competition for the King.

    • @theotakukaiser7892
      @theotakukaiser7892 Před rokem +57

      @@GarkKahnthe hre just didn’t progress when the others did. There’s a reason for why it was often called a relic of the feudal days

  • @nv4217
    @nv4217 Před rokem +1519

    "Opted to spend some time in the afterlife" the monotony of telling history is how often saying someone died, his ability to keep it always clever is one of my favorite things about the channel

    • @spk1121
      @spk1121 Před rokem +7

      👻👍

    • @mr9512
      @mr9512 Před rokem +24

      Someone needs to make a list of, or a video of clips of, all his euphemisms for dying...

    • @BuriedFlame
      @BuriedFlame Před rokem +3

      @Ethanol 6565 *mmrrphh mmrrh mmh!*
      _"What?"_
      *sound of hooves and clanging metal*
      _"I said, Ima conquering you!"_

    • @kevinmahernz
      @kevinmahernz Před rokem +12

      Another great one from another video of his is "he caught a mild case of death "

    • @luisshorts.
      @luisshorts. Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@kevinmahernz”his mortal coil ran out”

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Před rokem +3642

    The real reason is Brittany simply said "no" whenever France thought about conquering it aggresively

  • @gudmundursteinar
    @gudmundursteinar Před rokem +1507

    I want to add the argument that Brittany is not on what might be described as any natural supply route from Paris. France is the three/four rivers. Seine, Loire, Rhone and nr 4 the Garonne. From Paris you can dominate the Seine, Loire and Rhone by river boat and a short land crossing Paris-Orleans and Rheims-Dijon. Getting to Brittany (or Gascony) is hard. You need to go to Le Havre, get on a large ship, sail into the atlantic ocean and not have any beef with english, basque, irish, dutch or any other pirates in the region. That's why it took so long, They couldn't run the place so letting somebody friendly run it was the only real option. When land communications improved the french eventually were able to run the region themselves. However, as late as the Napoleonic Era Brest found itself being isolated from the rest of france by the royal navy because the roads were so bad. It wasn't until railroads connected brittany to the rest of france that it could be ruled as anything other than an autonomous region.

    • @genovayork2468
      @genovayork2468 Před rokem +1

      This is dumb. Languedoc, le Massif Central, Foix, Béarn are much harder to access than Brittany. So you can teleport to the Garonne (which by the way flows in Gascony) but you can't take carriage or boat to Brittany? You're dumb.
      You could have just said infrastructure was undevelopped there and the sea route was vulnerable to the English, it would have made a sufficient explanation, without the brain rot.

    • @VoltismProductions
      @VoltismProductions Před rokem +20

      isn't that entire area pretty flat? What made the roads so bad?

    • @gudmundursteinar
      @gudmundursteinar Před rokem +100

      @@VoltismProductions I'm confused, why would roads be good between the fall of the roman empire and the invention of tarmac? Hills, forests, swamps, rain, donkey carts.. everything made the roads terrible.

    • @_blank-_
      @_blank-_ Před rokem +40

      @@gudmundursteinar I wonder if it's the reason why Brittany's roads were never taxed, a tradition that continues to this day.

    • @gudmundursteinar
      @gudmundursteinar Před rokem +76

      @@_blank-_ No, probably no, all roads sucked balls in that period. If you couldn't get there by river or sea then you couldn't get very far and in the scheme of things the distance from cherbourg or nantes to brest is very far.

  • @emsouemsou
    @emsouemsou Před rokem +933

    For a few hundred years the French kings watched the "Leave Brittany alone" video and thought the guy kind of had a point

    • @GnomaPhobic
      @GnomaPhobic Před rokem +34

      Genuinely laughed at loud at this.

    • @falcon5588
      @falcon5588 Před rokem +17

      Underrated comment

    • @galanopouloc
      @galanopouloc Před rokem +39

      Damn. You went with a pre-2010 meme? Much respect.

    • @danidejaneiro8378
      @danidejaneiro8378 Před rokem +15

      @@galanopouloc - yeah it’s almost like the world existed more than 13 years ago!

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 Před rokem +13

      @@danidejaneiro8378 not to Gen Z it didn't

  • @MatheusLB2009
    @MatheusLB2009 Před rokem +162

    "This time, they DID have children"
    Her face...

  • @GerardM1996
    @GerardM1996 Před rokem +917

    As an archaeologist who works on the Early Middle Ages in Brittany, this video came close to what my dreams look like. Thank you for this!

    • @fallendown8828
      @fallendown8828 Před rokem +6

      Wow, cool

    • @genovayork2468
      @genovayork2468 Před rokem +8

      Nah, he skipped four centuries as "cause feudalism and England".

    • @bcvetkov8534
      @bcvetkov8534 Před rokem +5

      Dude, you have the coolest job ever.

    • @MrBattlecharge
      @MrBattlecharge Před rokem +15

      You dream in blocky 2D?

    • @cshelley5658
      @cshelley5658 Před rokem +6

      Did you also wake up from a nightmare of someone wearing a Morion helmet in 1000 AD England?

  • @mrterp04
    @mrterp04 Před rokem +259

    I heard they had really sharp weapons-nobody wanted to mess with Brittany’s spears

  • @williambrennan104
    @williambrennan104 Před rokem +310

    Technically Brittany was held in personal union under the French king, but was not actually part of the Kingdom of France, until the Revolution. This had some practical effects, like exemption of Brittany from certain taxes, which allowed its economy to grow both directly and through being a tax haven.
    EDIT: See below. Feudalism was complicated.

    • @nolanrichoux3538
      @nolanrichoux3538 Před rokem +45

      Not quite. While it's indeed true that Britanny held special privileges, and still does, the duchy was fused with the Kingdom of France during the 17th century, during the time when French kings desperately tried to centralize power. The reason for its privileges was the same reason as Catalonia got some from Spain : the population was quick to revolt.
      However, the Kingdom of Navarre was indeed held as a personnal union with the Kingdom of France until the revolution. All kings of France from Henry IV to Louis XVI styled themselves "Kings of France and Navarre". Afterwards, Navarre was fully absorbed in France.

    • @xenotypos
      @xenotypos Před rokem +35

      Britanny was actually de jure "part" of the kingdom of France during the entire process, all the way from West Francia's era. In practice, it was very different, but most territories in France were quasi-independent from the french kings during most of the middle ages. The royal domain was very small. France was basically a HRE-like entity that managed centralization by the end of the middle ages.

    • @walideg5304
      @walideg5304 Před rokem +5

      Nah, After Francis 1st, Brittany was fully part of the Kingdom of France and no more a personal Union. It’s even displayed in Big in the Castle of the Brittany dukes in Nantes. 😊

    • @guillaumelegouais6987
      @guillaumelegouais6987 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@xenotypos We are not in CKII.The britanny is completly independant in middle ages,there has never been a real concrete and lasting vassalization as it was for the other duchies of France, the French knights had to have safe-conducts to enter the Breton territory which would not be the case if it was a de jure province.

    • @erwannthietart3602
      @erwannthietart3602 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@guillaumelegouais6987"completely indepandant"
      No actually, the Kingdom of Britanny was indepandant yes so stuff around Solomon Alan I
      and post Charlemagne but we became a duchy and proclaimed fealty to the french king, making us part of the De Jure Kingdom of France.
      Ofc prior we had Viking incursions all around the coasts and in Naoned, and after the French kings were so weak we were de facto indepandant.
      But thats no differant than the other duchies.
      What saved us at first was that Brittany was worth around 1/10th of France by military economical and population and quite distant from Paris both culturally and physically, putting us more akin to Duchies like Aquitaine and Toulouse who just did whatever the f they wanted and the King had to deal with it.
      As much as we swore fealty, we didnt really care because really just like them we could just do whatever we wanted.
      Then when the King of France started centralising, we did our masterplay called "f*ck you im siding w8th the "English"/Angevin, Normand, and the absurdly large Duchy of Aquitaine".
      And when the Kings of England started centralising? "f*ck you im siding with the french"
      Along the way and a few civil wars later since France and England were tearing each other apart each with our support to protect our asses, we claimed indepandance, and that the only time in the middle ages since the beginning of the Duchy of Brittany that we were truly indepandant.
      Unfortunately England lost
      Fortunately, England lost meaning Brittany will never be ruled by Angevin or Normand, twould be the worst man lol

  • @itzadam9359
    @itzadam9359 Před rokem +2631

    Video idea as a loyal Patreon supporter: Why did Finland 🇫🇮 gain autonomy in the Russian Empire?

  • @Mister-Red
    @Mister-Red Před rokem +265

    In French, the word that they use to refer to Brittany is the same word they use for Britain thus I taught that land was called Britain

    • @lhistorienchipoteur9968
      @lhistorienchipoteur9968 Před rokem +112

      That’s why it’s called « great » Britain. It’s to differentiate it from just Britain, or « Brittany » as the Anglo-saxons say.

    • @TheBlaqOrder
      @TheBlaqOrder Před rokem +55

      Yes, the island is Great Britain, the peninsular is Little Britain.

    • @lhistorienchipoteur9968
      @lhistorienchipoteur9968 Před rokem +64

      @@TheBlaqOrder Actually, we usually just say « Bretagne » without « little » in French to designate Brittany.

    • @alexanderzippel8809
      @alexanderzippel8809 Před rokem +21

      If it wasn’t for the Groß (Great) in german, the only way to differentiate between the two is that Britanny is said without an „n“ at the end

    • @bananenmusli2769
      @bananenmusli2769 Před rokem +13

      don't you call Britain "Grande Bretagne" ?

  • @calmkat9032
    @calmkat9032 Před rokem +572

    One thing that comes to mind is the fact that Brittany being independent means just one more possible front of attack. Then I realized I was forgetting we're talking about Feudalism, where that kind of thinking was not really a factor due to small vassals (marches) bordering other countries being responsible, and usually able, to defend themselves, one of the only innovations of that system.

    • @alexG106
      @alexG106 Před rokem +83

      I'm going to pushback on that last point.
      When you say 'innovation' I'm going to go ahead and interpret that as 'improvement' seeing as how political systems are only as innovative as they need to be to survive.
      Feudalism was an absolute improvement over the decaying classical age Roman autocracy. Basically everyone who endured that transition became better off as the ruinous taxation and militarization of Rome ended, land ownership became less stratified and inefficient, and Feudalism enabled a process of technological innovations, particularly in agriculture that improved Europe and helped it to then transition to mercantilist and capitalist economic systems.

    • @sleeexs
      @sleeexs Před rokem +2

      ​@@alexG106 We gonna go back to that shit

    • @Admiral45-10
      @Admiral45-10 Před rokem +4

      To some extent it could also make sense even in Middle Ages - after all, it was a reason why Mesco I of Gnesnian Duchy married Bohemian Queen Dobrava and created an alliance - to prevent strong clan of Vieletes from forming a very dangerous anti-Polish alliance, forcing Polans to fight on both fronts.
      Attack from both sides meant that you'd have to:
      A) Divide your army to take care of both problems at the same time - leaving you with less men to fight each side
      B) Take care of each army one by one, which was both time-consuming and exhausting for the soldiers - not to mention by that time the army you didn't take care of can as well take your capital in this time.
      So even in Middle Ages it was a big advantage to attack from both sides. In case of Britanny it was a case of either France having to take care of wider front and thus more time-consuming siege (and with England just next door, ready to send a lot of men and other reinforcements), or being able to separate Southern French garrison and take it before English would be able to send reinforcements.

    • @highgrounder5238
      @highgrounder5238 Před rokem +17

      @@alexG106 Wrong and false. Feudalism was a mess of an economic and societal system that only existed because nobody in Europe was able to collect enough taxes to train loyal tax collectors and bureaucrats to manage them for 1000 years, so they had to split land up so much and into so many layers that the lowest layers (barrons, counts, etc.) could tax the peasants directly.
      The moment they could centralise, they did so, and we see that in Europe after the invention of the cannon, which allowed kings to destroy the castles of the nobility and take the land for the crown to manage directly by force.

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem

      ​@@highgrounder5238 Centralisation and Absolutism screwed over the people and ultimately caused the downfall of monarchies.

  • @crazeelazee7524
    @crazeelazee7524 Před rokem +385

    So basically Brittany was too unimportant to bother while also being too important to anger them.

    • @tomi2205
      @tomi2205 Před rokem +13

      basically

    • @_blank-_
      @_blank-_ Před rokem +14

      Hannah Montana, the best of both worlds.

    • @paarmenion3635
      @paarmenion3635 Před rokem +37

      Well yes and no. Let's say that at first the king of France was so weak that he couldn't even deal with petty counts 50km away from Paris whilst the duke of Brittany became insanely powerful. In the 14th and 15th century Breton wealth was more significant than Portugal's. Brittany was too far away from both England and France to be directly conquered but was too close to be ignored, so it just aligned with one or the other to avoid getting beat.

    • @cptmiller132
      @cptmiller132 Před rokem +3

      Soo they were the same as scotland was to England?

    • @declangautier645
      @declangautier645 Před 11 měsíci

      Like Portugal and Spain

  • @TheOGDisco
    @TheOGDisco Před rokem +608

    Because James Bissounette refused to let France conquer it.

    • @Palinghufter
      @Palinghufter Před rokem +74

      The French revolution started when James Bissonette stopped funding the French economy.

    • @jamesbissonette8002
      @jamesbissonette8002 Před rokem +59

      Nah

    • @Palinghufter
      @Palinghufter Před rokem +34

      @@jamesbissonette8002 Is that the legend himself?

    • @henrikilis
      @henrikilis Před rokem +24

      Kelly "the money maker" was a strong ally of Brittany, let us not forget

    • @lexonfors
      @lexonfors Před rokem +3

      ​@@Palinghufter it is!

  • @magnushultgrenhtc
    @magnushultgrenhtc Před rokem +62

    Her look at 2:44 is truly the realisation that life is not what she had hoped.

    • @Iason29
      @Iason29 Před rokem +27

      Lol yea being passed around from king to king like a lawn chair, not much of a life is it

    • @eduardkantholz3725
      @eduardkantholz3725 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@Iason29 actually it's bs because she couldn't decide it on her own but besides that it's still a better life than sitting 24/7 at home and scrolling tiktoks. What kind of life is that? xD sorry didn't mean to roast anybody but actually being her would be more interesting than what most people understand of a life in 2024. But surely the perfect life would be in peace.

    • @authorofone
      @authorofone Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@eduardkantholz3725life back then was absolutely not better than it is now.
      You could pick out a million different excuses for why life back then was so much better, but I could refute every single one.

    • @shawn4116
      @shawn4116 Před 9 hodinami

      ​@@eduardkantholz3725 Being forced to marry and have someone's children against your will (we'd typically call that rape these days) seems a better life to you than living in the modern world?
      You are unforgivably foolish.

  • @Hehstorian
    @Hehstorian Před rokem +64

    As a Breton I appreciate this video very much, thank you!

  • @xenotypos
    @xenotypos Před rokem +115

    It's also important to emphacize that during all this time, it was still formally part of the kingdom of France, with varying degrees of autonomy depending on the period. It's important, because as opposed to what that blue map suggests, most of France's duchies and counties had a large autonomy during most of the middle ages. Maybe it was more pronounced in Britanny, but fondamentally the situation wasn't that unique. Normandy, Aquitaine, and other territories were also very free, France was a somewhat loose confederation in which the royal dynasty spent most of the middle ages centralizing power. Something that will be completely achieved in the early Renaissance.

    • @thatguyfromwalmart
      @thatguyfromwalmart Před rokem +5

      I think one factor in this is that Brittany was culturally descended from the Celts of Cornwall and Wales, rather than being truly French like most of the other vassals. You are correct, but I think the Bretons just stand out more as a people to historians.

    • @PipoZePoulp
      @PipoZePoulp Před rokem +3

      That's why I somehow disagree this the "independent" statement, "largely autonomous" fits better. And being willing and able to play France and England against each other to get a better deal for 500 years did help.

    • @tibsky1396
      @tibsky1396 Před rokem +6

      @@thatguyfromwalmart I don't think it's just a matter of culture, but more political. It was feudal times.
      Because technically, in your logic, Southern France (Aquitaine, Gascony, County of Toulouse, Provence, Lemosin, Auvergne etc...) was also not "French" as in the North (even if it was ruled by Frankish nobles of origins), but Occitan/Provencal. At the time, culturally, it's as if we were comparing France and Spain today.
      In the same principle as for Brittany later, the Northern Franks took advantage of the opportunity of the Albigensian crusade to conquer a large part of the south, and thus enlarge the Capetian royal domain.
      And I think that's what the author was talking about, bhe blue map was not set in stone over all of the medieval eras. It was very politically fractured, and so was the Holy Roman Empire. Seems huge and unified seen like this, but it was fractured too.

    • @ebm9231
      @ebm9231 Před rokem +1

      @@thatguyfromwalmart "Brittany was culturally descended from the Celts of Cornwall and Wales" Only the east. The other part spoke Gallo which is a latin language but different from French. Note that only the northern part of the kingdom spoke french.

    • @rheijm9201
      @rheijm9201 Před 11 měsíci

      Now these authentic times are headstrong ly remembered. They have no peage.
      Life, 2023

  • @MuchWhittering
    @MuchWhittering Před rokem +74

    "The marriage was done remotely." I'm just picturing the two of them saying their vows over Zoom.

    • @3st3st77
      @3st3st77 Před rokem +2

      Actually, that was still possible at least in some countries in the 20th century. I remember my law teacher telling me that some soldiers in WW2 married remotely by having someone else be there during the ceremony with the necessary permission. Nowadays you have to be there in person, though.

    • @tentathesane8032
      @tentathesane8032 Před rokem +18

      You may @ the bride

    • @Iason29
      @Iason29 Před rokem +1

      Wow and some people think such things only happen today, or in Vegas

    • @Matthy63
      @Matthy63 Před rokem

      Anne of Brittany just saying "I do" to just, a painting of a massive chin

    • @BangFarang1
      @BangFarang1 Před 2 měsíci

      @@3st3st77 The French parents of my father's cousin where married remotely in 1941. His father was in the army in Tunisia and his mother was in Paris and pregnant. She got the authorisation to marry by postmail from the father's commander and she went to the townhall to get married.

  • @alexanderyacht6483
    @alexanderyacht6483 Před rokem +51

    Brittany's independent streak continued even after it became part of France. It was one of the few provinces to retain its provincial estates until the revolution, and its parlement (court) was one of the more likely parlements to resist anything it saw as royal tyranny.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před rokem +1

      There was a big quarrel in the 1760s when the royal governor tried to levy new taxes without the consent of The Bretons.
      All a bit reminiscent of what was going on in America at the same time but The French Government was eventually able to calm things down.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před rokem

      In those days The Bretons had two representative bodies, The Estates (feudal assembly) and The Parlement (court of appeal).
      However both represented the nobility rather than the people.

    • @jeangenie9597
      @jeangenie9597 Před rokem

      You’re completely wrong.
      All provinces had their own provincial estates and dozen were much more diligent in asserting that they were strictly personal union of the King (which Brittany wasn’t as it was a de jure vassal since it’s ceased to be a kingdom).
      During the general estates of 1615, the representatives of Dauphiné refused to be in the same room as the other because according to them, they were still part of the HRE.

    • @alexanderyacht6483
      @alexanderyacht6483 Před rokem +1

      @@jeangenie9597 By estates I mean the provincial assemblies which originated in the medieval period, the primary function of which was to approve taxes. By the 18th century only a few survived, the major ones being in Brittany, Burgundy, Languedoc and Provence.

    • @jeangenie9597
      @jeangenie9597 Před rokem

      @@alexanderyacht6483 There were still dozens of small provincial estates.

  • @allanlank
    @allanlank Před rokem +39

    Jacques Cartier, who explored Canada for the king of France, was born in an independent Brittany.
    Many of the settlers to New France were from Brittany and have given Canada a Celtic base along with settlers from the British Isles.

    • @bengoloitachi2565
      @bengoloitachi2565 Před rokem +5

      Most of french immigrant at the beginning were normans

    • @domjuancourtleciel742
      @domjuancourtleciel742 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Not true. Many settlers from the West of France but not from britanny. It s easy to see with french canadian Names for example in -eau wich is typical to Poitou and Loire. Moreover, about celtic origin, Julius Caesar explain in the war of the gauls that romans called them gauls but they calls themselves celts.

    • @domjuancourtleciel742
      @domjuancourtleciel742 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@bengoloitachi2565and from Poitou.

    • @bengoloitachi2565
      @bengoloitachi2565 Před 11 měsíci

      @@domjuancourtleciel742 actually normandy is a part of France

    • @vitorhugosantana7053
      @vitorhugosantana7053 Před 9 měsíci +1

      They were from the whole Atlantic cost, from Normandy all the way to the Basque country.

  • @VulcanLogic
    @VulcanLogic Před rokem +89

    The other part that made it hard was the Bretons didn't speak French--they spoke Breton, a Celtic language like Welsh or Irish. It wasn't until radio and television that they started to lose their language in favor of French, but it's still a living language and the road signs are in both Breton and French. It is endangered, however, as most primary speakers are over 80 years old.

    • @shzarmai
      @shzarmai Před rokem +18

      Yeah, that's horrendous that the language is disappearing 😕 and of reminds me of the Occitan language.

    • @SFCKNZSD
      @SFCKNZSD Před rokem +21

      Its sad that a beautiful language like breton is being replaced by an ugly horrible language like french i hope they manage to bring the speakers back up

    • @ebm9231
      @ebm9231 Před rokem +13

      "The other part that made it hard was the Bretons didn't speak French--they spoke Breton" Only the western part. The other spoke Gallo.

    • @monapon8169
      @monapon8169 Před rokem +7

      I've never heard of a medieval ruler that couldn't conquer a territory because the people there didn't speak his language though

    • @VulcanLogic
      @VulcanLogic Před rokem +2

      @@monapon8169 Could they? Sure. But it's going to be more expensive. And France was broke for most of the time they didn't.

  • @YouTube
    @YouTube Před rokem +214

    brittany really said: no 😌

  • @cjraymond8827
    @cjraymond8827 Před rokem +29

    James Bisonnette gets all the credit, but Kelly Moneymaker is out there doing a lot too

    • @benb6060
      @benb6060 Před rokem +1

      Kelly Moneymaker supplies James Bisonnettte with the funding he needs to change history

    • @haplon33
      @haplon33 Před rokem

      Making money, for one!

    • @Mikebumpful
      @Mikebumpful Před rokem +4

      Fun fact: Kelly Moneymaker has been known to post in the comments!

    • @kellymoneymaker3922
      @kellymoneymaker3922 Před rokem +6

      🤔

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Před rokem +44

    Britanny: the French Wales.

  • @clementdeazevedo5469
    @clementdeazevedo5469 Před rokem +16

    As a Breton I must by law tell everyone here that the map of Bretagne at the beggining is the one of the administrative region as of today. Bretagne in terms of culture and entity misses a whole chunk in the south that was taken away by the fascist gouvernement collaborating with the nazis in 1941 and never given back.

  • @TheStickman419
    @TheStickman419 Před rokem +78

    I actually wondered this quite a lot, and before actually doing research on it for a recent video I made I used to watch those timeline videos showing the rulers of countries, and I saw that despite France absolutely ballooning in size they didn't conquer Brittany for almost 900 years or so...not even Charlemagne annexed it, he settled with it as a vassal.
    Its an amazing thing really, shows that you don't really have to be big and strong to really survive, especially when you realize that Brittany technically lasted longer than the western Roman empire and even the Roman Republic

    • @alejandrotoro9676
      @alejandrotoro9676 Před rokem +13

      Wow kudos Bretons

    • @mojewjewjew4420
      @mojewjewjew4420 Před rokem +4

      Brittany survived those 600 years because 2 hegemons fought over it but the fact that it was small and insignificant is what really allowed it to survive so much,Rome and the Republic were big,belligerent and rich and that usually puts a target on your back,your comment is just plain wrong.

    • @Rofflestomper
      @Rofflestomper Před rokem +6

      @@mojewjewjew4420 how is his comment wrong? He seemed to say exactly what you said.

    • @mojewjewjew4420
      @mojewjewjew4420 Před rokem

      @@Rofflestomper He said that Brittany survived because it was small and it didn't need to be powerful,he missed the whole point of the video that states that it survived because of a strong state and played both against each other, england lost its power and France conquered it swiftly.
      Worst of all is comparing an insignificant state to Rome that was practically under siege or fighting off invasions for alot of time plus their colossal contributions to culture and technology that are the foundation of the world civilization we have now.

    • @Rofflestomper
      @Rofflestomper Před rokem +3

      @@mojewjewjew4420 I don’t think you or he watched the video either…this isn’t really what the video talked about.

  • @paco2942
    @paco2942 Před rokem +37

    As someone from brittany I am surprised history matters made a video about us

    • @TheBlaqOrder
      @TheBlaqOrder Před rokem +6

      Why? You're the Wales/Cornwall of France, how could he forget lol

    • @windshipping
      @windshipping Před rokem +7

      @An very person Very few people speak Breton nowadays, but I've learnt it for a couple of years when I was in middle school. I don't speak Welsh but I've seen some sentences / hear some words and it's definitely closer to Welsh than it is to French.

    • @JohnSmith-rk6jy
      @JohnSmith-rk6jy Před rokem

      As Someone from the other side of the planet, I've been waiting for someone to make a video on Brittany for Years. Soo many unanswered questions. This answered one of them. But yes, I've seen old maps and always wondered why Brittany was independant against its Powerful neighbours for soo soo long?? I Still want to know why it held out agsinst the Romans for so long even before the Bretons arrived? I mean is there some kinda truth to the Astrix stories?

    • @paco2942
      @paco2942 Před rokem +1

      ​@@JohnSmith-rk6jy well the Bretons were also crushed by the romans but kept their beliefs and culture throughout the occupation of Gaul. Also one remnant of the Breton duchy is that you don't pay for roads in brittany, there is no toll

    • @bartho4483
      @bartho4483 Před rokem +1

      ​@An very person I'm currently learning the language at uni, but I wish I had been raised in Breton. There are some words borrowed from French, but having been shown what written Welsh looks like, it's the same relation as that is between Swedish and German

  • @RhenishHelm
    @RhenishHelm Před rokem +96

    I was dumbfounded earlier last week when I discovered that St. Pierre & Miquelon exists. For the uninitiated, this is an overseas territory of France that belongs to the French Republic and uses the Euro as its currency, but is a tiny archipelago just below the coast of Newfoundland. Its population of 6,000 people (of largely Basque, Breton, and Norman ancestry) inhabits two fishing villages whose economies are supported by tourism and lobster. It has a long history of being passed around by the Brits and French because of the former's conquest of New France, then the later problems posed by Napoleon and then Vichy France. Despite its proximity to Canada, the French spoken there is closer to Parisian rather than Quebecois. One oddity: in Quebec, "stop" signs say ARRÊT, but on St. Pierre & Miquelon (as with the rest of France), they say STOP.

    • @Nassamest
      @Nassamest Před rokem

      yeah, the quebecois need anything they can hold onto to stop them from instantly assimilating to anglo-canadian that's why they do this(fake ass people)

    • @houssamassila6274
      @houssamassila6274 Před rokem +3

      where is the mandela effect in all this?

    • @RhenishHelm
      @RhenishHelm Před rokem +22

      @@houssamassila6274 I thought I knew the Canadian coastline pretty well. I was convinced that, USA aside, Canada's closest neighbour was Russia or Greenland. I swear I've looked at maps for 30+ years and never before seen a French territory a stone's throw from the Canadian coast.

    • @MekarWB
      @MekarWB Před rokem +27

      @@RhenishHelm Have you considered that it might be because St. Pierre and Miquelon is really fucking small?

    • @houssamassila6274
      @houssamassila6274 Před rokem +15

      @@RhenishHelm I beg to differ, that's not what a Mandela Effect is, that just you not knowing something.
      Mandela Effect means that an event happened, that you and many other people remember as happened, (the name coming from remembering the event that Mandela Died in prison in 1980s and the media covering it) only for the event to be shown as if never happened later on (Mandela appears alive and well in the 1990s onward)

  • @ravenwilder4099
    @ravenwilder4099 Před rokem +17

    The thousand-yard-stare on Anne after that two forced marriages and one forced pregnancy is just the perfect touch.

    • @zoetropo1
      @zoetropo1 Před 3 měsíci

      Her Capetian descendants died out, I think. However, her living heirs include the Hapsburgs.

  • @nikolaytsankov9066
    @nikolaytsankov9066 Před rokem +31

    Truly answering the important questions of our time, especially for ck2 and eu4 players.

    • @davidhouseman4328
      @davidhouseman4328 Před rokem +5

      Yep, I thought the real reason was it allows your Norse to become Norman before heading to England without breaking France and letting in the Muslims.

    • @nanimator0
      @nanimator0 Před rokem +5

      force vassalization CB is simple enough... why didn't the kings of France use it??

    • @MonsieurToasteur
      @MonsieurToasteur Před rokem +2

      ​@@nanimator0too much AE

    • @jeangenie9597
      @jeangenie9597 Před rokem

      ⁠​⁠@@nanimator0 Cause it was already a vassal. The Kingdom of Britanny was invaded by the vikings in the Xth century. The Bretons then asked the king of the franks for help and in exchange, became one of his vassal, the Duchy of Britanny.

  • @un_nainposteur6560
    @un_nainposteur6560 Před rokem +16

    Breton here, i think that for a 3 min video you did a really good summary ! You even did a better work than most of the French documentary about Britanny. The only thing i can maybe contest is when you show Britanny at the begining without the South East part. Even if the administrative region drawn by the French governement don't inculde this part we mostly consider it as a part of Britanny.

    • @miserablySleepy
      @miserablySleepy Před rokem +4

      I honestly can't believe The Celtic people have survived throughout the ages and that you guys are still around quite impressive

    • @brewen_lmrch
      @brewen_lmrch Před 11 měsíci +4

      ​@@miserablySleepyWe survived, and we will survive.

    • @BzhToine
      @BzhToine Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@miserablySleepy Just a matter of being stunnorn enougth. :)

    • @_Twisty
      @_Twisty Před 8 měsíci

      @@miserablySleepyI don’t know about the others but Brittany’s still fighting ! :)

  • @arcrimeaball
    @arcrimeaball Před rokem +34

    Thank you for the video! It'd great if you cover these topics in the next one:
    - Why did North Macedonia break away from SFR Yugoslavia without a fight?
    - Why Russian Empire lost in the Russo-Japanese war (1904-1905) despite having a larger army?
    - Why did Kosovo declared independence only 9 years after the Kosovo War?
    - Why USSR annexed Tannu Tuva during the WW2?
    - Why did Croats fight on a German side in WW2?

    • @brent.b.productions2015
      @brent.b.productions2015 Před rokem +1

      Nice suggestions! Would like to know that Kosovo one for sure...

    • @arcrimeaball
      @arcrimeaball Před rokem

      @@brent.b.productions2015 Thanks!

    • @Briggie
      @Briggie Před 11 měsíci

      “Why Russian Empire lost in the Russo-Japanese war despite having a larger army.”
      Because their navy was dog shit, and when looking at a map, I can’t help to notice that Japan is an Island.

  • @unicorngall1047
    @unicorngall1047 Před rokem +182

    As both an EU4 player and a very proud inhabitant of Brittany, I can only say thank you for this video. Long live Great Brittany!

    • @Shaman42069
      @Shaman42069 Před rokem +11

      Would you recommend playing Brittany in a defensive & tall (& colonial) playthrough? Seems like fun

    • @gryfalis4932
      @gryfalis4932 Před rokem +18

      @@Shaman42069 only way to play Eu4 Brittany is jump into Ireland and conquer Britain

    • @enderkatze6129
      @enderkatze6129 Před rokem +6

      Would you be in Support of Britton Independence then

    • @unicorngall1047
      @unicorngall1047 Před rokem +24

      I will support breton independence as long as we can export our butter, kouign-ammans and crepes all over the world. Oh, and our flag too, but that's already the case. Fear the breton colonizers!

    • @enderkatze6129
      @enderkatze6129 Před rokem +2

      @@unicorngall1047 deal

  • @rkc62
    @rkc62 Před rokem +3

    The "I have a meeting" with St Peter is my new favourite History Matters euphemism. Excellent.

  • @cryptocsguy9282
    @cryptocsguy9282 Před rokem +5

    2:33 I love how he says Charles VII opted to spend some time in the afterlife instead of just saying he died 💀

  • @dontbewrong7706
    @dontbewrong7706 Před rokem +12

    You know France is always gonna have trouble dealing with something which has the word "Brit"

  • @albevanhanoy
    @albevanhanoy Před rokem +23

    Today the region of Brittany is very popular in France. We have a saying "La Bretagne, ça vous gagne" ("Brittany wins you over") because it is simply a very nice place to live and spend vacations.

    • @Iason29
      @Iason29 Před rokem +1

      there was this french comedy I watched once, Welcome to the Sticks, it really described quite well how nice life is in the north.

    • @albevanhanoy
      @albevanhanoy Před rokem +2

      @@Iason29 That's not Brittany, but yes, I know the movie you're referring to.

    • @cryptocsguy9282
      @cryptocsguy9282 Před rokem

      @@albevanhanoy What's nice about it ? I bet t looks like England and has the same questionable weather as England lol

    • @albevanhanoy
      @albevanhanoy Před rokem +3

      @@cryptocsguy9282 No, it only rains on English tourists ;)

    • @scorpixel1866
      @scorpixel1866 Před rokem +2

      ​@@cryptocsguy9282Brittany and Normandy are essentially sunnier rural Britain.
      It's less densely populated than the East, meaning lots of nature, which is actually green year round due to mild weather ( mostly 10 - 20°C, -5 - 30 at worst) contrary to Southern France where it gets hot and dry as soon as mid spring.

  • @danieloehler2494
    @danieloehler2494 Před rokem +44

    Brittany is the place where you find the village of Asterix. As long as the Gaules had their magic potion neither Romans nor barbarians could conquer the region. But once the current druid died before explaining the recipe to a successor it was all over.

    • @domjuancourtleciel742
      @domjuancourtleciel742 Před 11 měsíci +1

      It was armoric. Britanny was in great britan when caesar conquers celtic gals.

    • @bretagnejean2410
      @bretagnejean2410 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@domjuancourtleciel742armorica was yet linked with south england. That the reason why breton migrant came there and lot of very old location are in gaelic name in west brittany.

    • @domjuancourtleciel742
      @domjuancourtleciel742 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@bretagnejean2410 not it is not. Armorica exist before briton invasion of the West of celtic gaul. It was all the coast from Finistera to actual Le Havre ( Seine). Caesar speaks about it 40 years BC.

    • @bretagnejean2410
      @bretagnejean2410 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@domjuancourtleciel742 caesar said bullshit. Armorica isnt a folk. Roma governor in brittany said " they cross the channel with familly and.wifes in 2 sides. They go see familly . They do trade. Some rebellion there are ordered of albion. "
      North of brittany was the most inhabitted during many centuries due to link with breton of england. Rennes area was the less inhabitted.
      Now its the opposite since brittany is french. The rivality between france and england have destroy brittany economy which was became the poorest region of france. Naval trade is become very small. Rennes linked with paris star network economy have done a big developpement.

    • @_Twisty
      @_Twisty Před 8 měsíci

      @@bretagnejean2410then how do you explain the importance of Nantes when we were independent ? the french def weren’t the ones to make it a big city since they all love Rennes so much.

  • @ArthurCSchaper
    @ArthurCSchaper Před rokem +20

    Please do the following videos:
    1. Why did the People's Revolution of 1848 fail in Spain and the Germanies?
    2. Why do people drive on different sides of the road in different countries?

    • @tomi2205
      @tomi2205 Před rokem +1

      on the first one, CallmeEzekiel has videos on it, both very good. one about the german counte-revolutionaries (forgot their names) and a recent one about the spanish civil war

    • @konstantinosnikolakakis8125
      @konstantinosnikolakakis8125 Před rokem +2

      @Tomi Freikorps. Communism! Not in my Germany!

    • @tomi2205
      @tomi2205 Před rokem

      @@konstantinosnikolakakis8125 yes exatly

  • @realDanielAugustine
    @realDanielAugustine Před rokem +1

    I have wondered this for years. Great video.

  • @owenb8636
    @owenb8636 Před rokem +2

    HM has mastered the art of picking topics that I always kind of wondered about myself but never enough to actually look up the answer

  • @angelb.823
    @angelb.823 Před rokem +17

    Britanny, a land unconquered even for the Romans in the Asterix comics.

    • @tentathesane8032
      @tentathesane8032 Před rokem

      ohhhh armorica is britanny?

    • @erwannthietart3602
      @erwannthietart3602 Před rokem +1

      ​@@tentathesane8032 preeetty much?
      Like the only differance is the feudal system and the massive settlement of Briton that assimilated the Gallo-Romans and remaining Gaulish of Armorica

    • @davidhouseman4328
      @davidhouseman4328 Před rokem

      The slight flaw is that it was essential conquerored by the Bretons.

    • @GrrAargh1
      @GrrAargh1 Před rokem

      There was a lot of migration in the late Roman/immediate post Roman period from what's now Devon and Cornwall, and to an extent Wales, to Brittany. The Breton language is considered one of the Insular Celtic languages, as opposed to Gaulish which was in the Continental Celtic branch.

    • @AllanLimosin
      @AllanLimosin Před rokem

      @@erwannthietart3602 What do you mean « remain Gaulish of Armorica »?

  • @pabcu2507
    @pabcu2507 Před rokem +6

    Brittany had special protection from James bissonette, but their warranty had expired

  • @JohnnyWindmill
    @JohnnyWindmill Před rokem +3

    Man’s once again asking questions I’ve always had in the back of my mind

  • @ComfortsSpecter
    @ComfortsSpecter Před 9 dny

    Thank You for This Incredible Work
    Simply and Trustworthily Answering and Explaining countless Lesser yet Important Questions
    Giving Alot of Historical Context to other Events
    Great Vibe
    Thank You Good Man

  • @chakraborty1989
    @chakraborty1989 Před rokem +12

    Isn't Brittney was called "leaser Britain" as the area was settled by Roman Britton who were fleeing German invasion?
    That's why the island of Britannia is called "great Britain"

    • @TheBlaqOrder
      @TheBlaqOrder Před rokem +4

      Correct.

    • @erwannthietart3602
      @erwannthietart3602 Před rokem +1

      It was called Little Britain because England was Britain really
      Then England took over the whole island and it was named Great Britain
      Meanwhile little Britain became Britain although although called Britanny in english

    • @msumode4493
      @msumode4493 Před 3 měsíci

      @@erwannthietart3602 Where did u learn this from? Tiktok?

    • @erwannthietart3602
      @erwannthietart3602 Před 3 měsíci

      @@msumode4493 ew no, actual history you know the kind you learn at school? im from Brittany
      Id know the basics of its history

  • @satanwithinternet2753
    @satanwithinternet2753 Před rokem +4

    Finally. The question whose answer i wanted to know for so long. Thank you history matters

  • @whothatJoe
    @whothatJoe Před rokem +2

    Cool video man

  • @Casperdcvd
    @Casperdcvd Před 11 měsíci

    I always wondered this, very informative, thank you

  • @Camarillian
    @Camarillian Před rokem +23

    As a Welshman, I gotta hand it to the Bretons. They held out pretty well.

    • @Iason29
      @Iason29 Před rokem +2

      they also had bandits terrorising the local countryside with their singing, just like in wales

    • @cryptocsguy9282
      @cryptocsguy9282 Před rokem +1

      @SirSirupy Longer than the Welsh did against the Anglos

    • @jeangenie9597
      @jeangenie9597 Před rokem

      @@cryptocsguy9282 Yes and No. They effectly managed to not be completely integrated into the king personal domain for a longer time, but they submited to the King of the Franks to became his vassal much earlier (IXth century) than the welsh who maintained their independent Kingdom until the XIIIth century.

    • @erwannthietart3602
      @erwannthietart3602 Před rokem

      ​​​@@jeangenie9597 they became nominal vassal for the most part
      The king had VERY little power in the IXth century.
      In fact thats pretty much why they were de facto indepandant.
      Because while sure they obeyed the King of France yada yada, they could afford not to give a sh** and go scot free, Wales... not so much

    • @gwennblei
      @gwennblei Před rokem

      ​@@jeangenie9597now obviously, as you can see from the flag, I'm quite partial to this argument, but you can quite easily verify my claims. The Vassality claimed by Frankish sources is somewhat debatable, given the same sources also report raids after each concession. First, Franks get defeated at Ballon by Nominoe and agree to make the title of envoy of the emperor hereditary, but insist in the chronicles bretons remain their vassals. However Frankish chronicles then complain about Nominoë raiding their lands. Then when they get defeated by his son Erispoë at Jengland and he takes the Frankish kings royal attributes, they recognize him as a King, and grant him more lands, but insist he remains their vassals, yet again, complaining that he keeps raiding their land. Then the next king Salomon resumes the habbit of raiding Frankish lands, sometimes allying with Vikings, which led to a new treaty lending him more lands. This doesn't really look like a vassal's behavior and seem to indicate Frankish Chronicles where mainly trying to save face and explain the territory wasn't really lost, as it was just transferred to this Vassal state that kept attacking them.
      Later for the dukes, it's sometimes less questionnable, after the viking era, Brittany seems much poorer and it's neighbors are more powerful so we do have some of the dukes actually paying hommage, although not systematically, and French kings do have to send new expeditions at times to try and get hommage, and they do lose control officially to the Plantagenet King Henry II for a time as well.

  • @tomojr3674
    @tomojr3674 Před rokem +7

    So basically, Brittany is the Wales of France

  • @PeterPeadar
    @PeterPeadar Před rokem

    Wow. That was a mouthful. Super job!

  • @muhammadhabibieamiro3639

    Another amazing video

  • @iliketea9122
    @iliketea9122 Před rokem +10

    Are you open to doing a video on Sir General John Monash? Man's was a civic engineer that rose through the ranks during WWI even though influential people really didn't want him to and was a big pioneer of modern combined arms warfare. His story is super interesting and without him WWI would have been a very different war

    • @Elitist20
      @Elitist20 Před rokem

      After the war he went back to civilian life, heading the Victorian State Electricity Commission and fixing its then-unreliable power generation. He's now on the Australian $100 note. (Dame Nellie Melba is on the other side.)

  • @tibsky1396
    @tibsky1396 Před rokem +4

    Duchy of Brittany was technically a vassal of the King of France, except they had more autonomy, and were not directly within the royal domain, like other duchies and counties at certain times in history (Normandy, Anjou, Toulouse, Burgundy, Aquitaine, etc...).

  • @Uzair_Of_Babylon465
    @Uzair_Of_Babylon465 Před rokem

    Fantastic video keep it up you're doing amazing

  • @joshlesure3196
    @joshlesure3196 Před rokem

    Another excellent video!

  • @joesomebody3365
    @joesomebody3365 Před rokem +4

    I remember that Portugal was almost united with Spain due to a marriage but it fell apart soon after it started.
    The smaller countries of Europe that somehow held out against larger neighbors were always interesting.

  • @NelsonDiscovery
    @NelsonDiscovery Před rokem +12

    Wow! That's a really good question. I've known that it took some time for the Franks to finally conquer Brittany and even then it wasn't really really incorporated into their Kingdom. But I never actually stood still and wondered if the few Briton tribes on the peninsula were so formidable a force to remain independent for so long.
    Nice to see you do a video not about modern history again BTW.

    • @bretagnejean2410
      @bretagnejean2410 Před 9 měsíci

      And brittany is stay a region of with a lot of millitary or gendarmerie. 3 times more per inhabitant that other region.
      During revolution brittany do a riot against revolutionnaires.
      In last century brittany have done riot against tax even in 2013 during tax carbon. Its a special region where inhabittant refuse to have tax for move. Actually issues are breton dont know their history and brittany become year after year just a territory of vacation and with globalization new inhabittant come but live as french or stranger. Politic breton party is ridiculous. France do all is possible for show them like nazi or outpaced views.
      Breton are too kind and too soft lefty. The best things breton have done in recent history is by the farmers or industrial of right.

  • @oldegrunt
    @oldegrunt Před 11 měsíci

    quick and very well done

  • @anthonylivesay6358
    @anthonylivesay6358 Před 6 měsíci

    I like you naming off your contributor's. It gives me time to like your content.

  • @dedrinzypool1209
    @dedrinzypool1209 Před rokem +63

    First, also Brittany has always been an intriguing region. Originally an area of Franco-Celts and still is considered one of the 6 or 7 Celtic Nations

    • @heidirabenau511
      @heidirabenau511 Před rokem +6

      You're not first.

    • @dedrinzypool1209
      @dedrinzypool1209 Před rokem +2

      @@heidirabenau511 cope

    • @brigantiasmemerepository6439
      @brigantiasmemerepository6439 Před rokem +1

      French people are still genetically Celtic, with a clear genetic continuity with Bronze Age Gallic populations.

    • @pierren___
      @pierren___ Před rokem +13

      All France is "franco-celts" lmao. Do you think people just popped ??

    • @lacreaturedumarais
      @lacreaturedumarais Před rokem +10

      They were the last to be celticized and the majority of the people in Gaul were celts, so Franco-Celts as you say are almost everywhere, French people, despite some changes like in Normandy with the vikings or other régions that have a différent blood, are technically Celts

  • @jonathanwebster7091
    @jonathanwebster7091 Před rokem +28

    Also fun fact: the title (but not the Duchy) of Duke of Brittany continued to be granted to minor members of the French royal family, albeit sparingly.
    It was granted to two short-lived sons of the Duke of Burgundy (the grandson of Louis XIV, and they were thus the future Louis XV's older brothers), and the older brother (who died prematurely in 1984,aged 11) of the current Legitimist claimant to the French throne was also styled Duke of Brittany.

    • @Matthy63
      @Matthy63 Před rokem

      which is funny (not that this child died ofc), but that the legitimist claimants barely speak French, let alone Breton. They've lived in Spain for decades as just sort of, extremely Catholic Someguys who end up on Spanish Strictly every so often.

    • @GavTatu
      @GavTatu Před 7 měsíci +1

      in jersey and the other channel islands, for almost a thousand years, the reigning British monarch has been known as 'the Duke of Normandy' .

  • @deprimiertSchwuchtel
    @deprimiertSchwuchtel Před rokem

    Love these videos 😄

  • @InviniteStudios
    @InviniteStudios Před rokem +8

    Always answering the questions I didn’t know I had!

  • @nilocblue
    @nilocblue Před 11 měsíci

    I love these videos about Crusader Kings 3, such a great game. Glad we have this channel to give it more exposure.

  • @seronymus
    @seronymus Před rokem +55

    Fun fact: Brittany had a strange minority of people who seemed to look almost Asian, which folklore painted as a regiment of Mongolian soldiers that got lost and mixed in. However it's more likely to be ancient admixture from fishing settlers distantly related to modern Finns. Also there's a ton of Breton saints still venerated in the Orthodox Church to this day.

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem +5

      Are there any images of these unusual people?

    • @ayrtonpavot3096
      @ayrtonpavot3096 Před rokem +7

      any links or sources for these asian britannish?

    • @freakrx2349
      @freakrx2349 Před rokem +11

      Why don’t you back it up with a source?

    • @dyvimtarkan2944
      @dyvimtarkan2944 Před rokem +11

      My parents told me about that in the past (my family is from Brittany), and yes I have met 3 womens in my life who have a strange look of mixed mongols with white skin and blue eyes, one was even red-haired, all from Brittany (Quimper and Pontivy). Always thought that was an old legend and a coincidence.

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus Před rokem +2

      @@dyvimtarkan2944 wow really? That's super fascinating and I'm honored to meet you, quelle magnifique. Do you mean they had eye folds despite looking white? Also red hair is beautiful and a flag of unique heritage too.

  • @ianpatterson6552
    @ianpatterson6552 Před rokem +7

    During the C12th the heiress of Brittany was Constance. She married Geoffrey of England (Henry ll son). She had two kids by him, Arthur who was done in by bad uncle John and Eleanor. By later practice the heiress of English throne was Eleanor not Henry lll, as John the younger son of Henry ll. She was detained for about 40 yrs in various castles.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před rokem +1

      It's amusing to imagine Arthur or Eleanor succeeding to the throne of England (with John or Henry dying or being killed).
      The Anglo - Breton Union goes on to achieve great things.
      What they are yet I know not.
      But they will be the terror of the earth.

  • @valentins.2637
    @valentins.2637 Před 3 měsíci

    2:05 I just realized that there are no sound effects in this videos except when somebody kicks the bucket. I love it

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ Před rokem

    Great video!

  • @ashcoria1268
    @ashcoria1268 Před rokem +5

    While formal title of Duke of Brittany was abolished, it still was an informal courtesy title for members of the French royal family in the 18th century.

    • @howtoappearincompletely9739
      @howtoappearincompletely9739 Před rokem +3

      Do you know who the Duke/Duchess of Brittany would be today according to the original Breton laws of succession (which were different from French Salic law)?

    • @EmmettMcFly55
      @EmmettMcFly55 Před rokem

      @@howtoappearincompletely9739 Based on a brief glance at Wikipedia that line should go through Henry II (of France's) daughter Elisabeth of Valois, then on to her daughter Catherine who married into the ducal family of Savoy, leading to the Breton line eventually merging with the Jacobite succession which would mean that the current heir would be Francis, Duke of Bavaria.
      Granted, that's based off pure agnatic-cognatic (male-preference) primogeniture; I know there was a 14th Century succession war in Brittany on male-preference primogeniture vs proximity of the blood, so I don't know which original Breton succession type you were asking for.

    • @erwannthietart3602
      @erwannthietart3602 Před rokem

      ​​@@EmmettMcFly55 technically, as it has been absolished and merged with the Kingdom of France it would also follow its Salic law of straight up Agnatic, no women allowed, so wed be back with the son of the king of Spain

    • @EmmettMcFly55
      @EmmettMcFly55 Před rokem

      @@erwannthietart3602 That wasn't the question asked, though. Obviously, if we acknowledge Brittany's annexation into France proper, we'd end up with the current pretender to the French kingship, be that Louis Alphonse, Duke of Anjou or Jean, Count of Paris, depending on your allegiances.

  • @user-il1bm4mx7m
    @user-il1bm4mx7m Před rokem +4

    Well actually since at least the beginning of the XIVth century, the dukes of Brittany recognized the king of France as their liege and the land of the duchy as a fiefdom granted by the king, making it a part of the kingdom, which is why the king only invaded/acted when the duchy was threatening to leave the kingdom, because of the English or of any other reason

  • @philliprandle9075
    @philliprandle9075 Před rokem

    Another great video

  • @HarvestStore
    @HarvestStore Před rokem +1

    Great video.

  • @savagedarksider2147
    @savagedarksider2147 Před rokem +6

    Fun fact: Edward V was engaged to Anne of Brittany.

  • @SKIROW
    @SKIROW Před rokem +5

    My grandparents spoke Breton. I wish I learned more from them. I miss Brittany.

    • @skymaster4743
      @skymaster4743 Před rokem +3

      It's a shame that almost all of the Celtic languages are dying.

    • @breizhatao3561
      @breizhatao3561 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@skymaster4743 Though you can blame France for the slow death that Breton is having right now

  • @genericyoutubeaccount579
    @genericyoutubeaccount579 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Fun Fact: the name of the Jacobin club was originally just the "Breton Club" or the delegates to the Estates General who came from Brittany. After chopping off the King's head, the Girondin's heads, and the heads of anybody who didn't like the cult of the supreme being the Jacobins were ultimately beheaded in the Thermidorian Reaction although they continued to have post-mortem admirers up until the fall of the Paris Commune in 1871.

  • @prakashghumaliya2002
    @prakashghumaliya2002 Před rokem

    Thank you for video sir

  • @robertalaverdov8147
    @robertalaverdov8147 Před rokem +8

    Because France had too much AE from all their wars and didn't want to get a coalition forming too early.

  • @reygonzalez4719
    @reygonzalez4719 Před rokem +6

    I hope he does a video on why Spain gave the U.S.A. Florida.
    Also, before anyone comments, I know why they gave it away, I just want to see a video on it.

  • @nolann2900
    @nolann2900 Před 7 měsíci

    I remember reading about the battle of Jengland. It was pretty fun.

  • @iangang9535
    @iangang9535 Před 5 měsíci

    Playing CK2&3 for a long time, I've had this silent question in my head but never truly read about it. Thanks to this video.

  • @ethandornton355
    @ethandornton355 Před rokem +3

    Could you guys do a video on why Germany did not annex Denmark during the war of German unification? I’ve been trying to find information on it, and I have not been able to find very much.

  • @petitthom2886
    @petitthom2886 Před rokem +4

    Fun fact : when De Gaulle shouted « vive le Québec libre » at Montréal, Canadian PM Lester Person replied by saying he wondered what De Gaulle's reaction would've been if he said « la Bretagne aux Bretons » in Rennes

  • @BadgerAviation
    @BadgerAviation Před měsícem

    I have never verbally said huh to a history matters vid but I've never thought of this great vid

  • @daisukix2070
    @daisukix2070 Před 10 měsíci

    Forgot I was asking this question months ago but too lazy to search and wow a video awesome

  • @theguyfromwhereiam.3715
    @theguyfromwhereiam.3715 Před rokem +4

    So, effectively, it was just England spending a long time just repeatedly saying "Leave Brittany alone!"

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před rokem +1

      Kind of sad that bad king Henry VII abandoned this policy.

  • @sandstorm9305
    @sandstorm9305 Před rokem +7

    Because James bissonette paid a lot of money to keep it that way

  • @BaluBrew
    @BaluBrew Před 11 měsíci

    I love the casual Jeanne d'Arc being burned at the stakes in the background when mentioning the 100 years war.

  • @hyuga571
    @hyuga571 Před rokem

    History Matters I love your videos because I lerning new things by your channel sorry if spelling is bad

  • @ThijquintNL
    @ThijquintNL Před rokem +5

    Sad that the britainy celtic culture is being swiped out, but cool that britainy never lost that touch of freedom.

    • @gryfalis4932
      @gryfalis4932 Před rokem +2

      Brittany*, the qualitifive is "breton"

  • @shadikhaled1730
    @shadikhaled1730 Před rokem +14

    Your maps of Brittany are not always correct. The the region of Nantes is a part of Brittany, but sometimes you didn't include it, or sometimes only partially. Apart from that it's a nice video !

    • @Erad_Prime
      @Erad_Prime Před rokem +4

      I was going to say that. They are using the official French map and not the real map with out capital city.

    • @erwannthietart3602
      @erwannthietart3602 Před rokem +4

      ​@Olivier Verdys disagree, the official map is an administrative one, meaning some historical regions were butchered to make for new completely artificial region.
      The Historical map of Brittany to this day remains the same, with a constant debate between the locals between those in favor of asking the governement to stay as is because Nantes (Historical capital of Brittany, but also biggest city in the Region Pays de la Loire) profits the most from being linked with further up the Loire of its current region, and those that wishes to link it back to Brittany as it is the litteral CAPITAL of Historical Brittany (Alongside Rennes).
      Debate which unfortunately is stuck in endless status quo because the locals are litteraly 50/50 and whenever they ask for the governement to yknow, stop this endless debate and decide, the sole answer is "deal with it between yourselves".
      As far as im concerned as a local, both maps are correct, but one is only to be used in administrative and geopolitics, and the other in anything cultural and Historical, which should be the one used in here due to historical nature

    • @_Twisty
      @_Twisty Před 8 měsíci

      @@erwannthietart3602It’s not really 50/50 in Naoned when you look more closely. The ones who are against the reunification are French people who settled there recently, the ones who are in favour are mostly Breton. That speaks for itself.

    • @mythicdawn9574
      @mythicdawn9574 Před 5 měsíci

      @@_Twisty You've got "Grand Remplaced" by Parisians lol. But since they are born and raised in Nantes too, and for multiple generations, aren't they just as much Nantais than the Breton inhabitants ?

    • @math67000
      @math67000 Před 4 měsíci

      Same in alsace .

  • @caterpillarh8490
    @caterpillarh8490 Před rokem

    I was literally wondering this yesterday

  • @GCho733
    @GCho733 Před rokem +2

    “When Charles VIII opted to spend some time in the afterlife.”
    Dry humor is the best kind.

  • @chheinrich8486
    @chheinrich8486 Před rokem +7

    Its because the people there where inspired by a small village stubornly resisting the Romans in 50 bc 😅😅 (asterix anyone)

    • @evandavid2816
      @evandavid2816 Před rokem +2

      Yep, I guess they finally ran out of Magic Potion...

  • @paulofollowtheredsohes5180

    Could be nice to talk about the Plantagenêt empire with Henri II (father of Richard Coeur de Lion) one of the most powerful of European middle age. Coming from the pyrenees to the scotish border.

  • @AverageSyrianGeneral
    @AverageSyrianGeneral Před rokem

    cool video keep it up

  • @mrwelshmun
    @mrwelshmun Před rokem

    This channel asks the REAL questions