The First Armies: Bronze Age Egypt and Mesopotamia 3,500 BC-1200 BC

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  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2024
  • Checkout Total War: PHARAOH here: play.totalwar.com/SandRhomanH...
    In the very south of Egypt, in the temple of Abu Simbel, a wall / mural relief tells the story of one of the first great battles of history, the Battle of Kadesh. The victory of the Egyptian ruler Ramesses II was elaborately staged: Several depictions along the Nile from present-day Luxor to Abydos tell of the great deeds he is said to have performed at Kadesh in present-day Syria. What he really did, however, has not been completely resolved to this day. In this video, we look at how the Bronze Age brought about an unprecedented escalation of warfare. We investigate when exactly large armies entered the stage of history and how they evolved into formidable forces like the one of Ramesses II.
    Are you interested in reading more on military history? Do you like the artwork in our videos? Then have a look at the various books that Zinnfiguren.com offers. They allow us to use some of their artwork in our videos and have an abundance of other books that might interest you: www.zinnfigur.com/en/Books-Me...
    Some must read mlitary history books:
    Ambrose, S. E., Band of Brothers: E Company, 2001. amzn.to/438ltvZ
    Baime, A. J., The Accidental President: Harry S. Truman, 2017. amzn.to/3TcDGUj
    Beard, M., Emperor of Rome: Ruling the Ancient Roman World, 2023. amzn.to/49L2olR
    Bevoor, A., Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege: 1942-1943, 1999. amzn.to/4a4rqwe
    Beevor, A., The Second World War, 2013. amzn.to/3wNFITu
    Brennan, P+D., Gettysburg in Color, 2022. amzn.to/48LGldG
    Clausewitz, C., On War, 2010. amzn.to/3Vblf5
    Kaushik, R., A Global History of Pre-Modern Warfare: 10,000 BCE-1500 CE, 2021. amzn.to/49Mtqt7
    McPherson, J., Battle Cry of Freedom, The Civil War Era, 2021. amzn.to/3TseYAW
    Tsu, S., The Art of War, 2007, amzn.to/3TuknHA
    Sledge. E. B., With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa, 2008. amzn.to/439olIK
    Pomerantsev, P., How to Win an Information War, 2024. amzn.to/3Ts0YqQ
    00:00-02:50 Intro / Battle of Kadesh
    02:50-10:53 First Armies
    10:53-17:03 First Empires
    17:03-20:44 Grand Strategy of Egypt (Old Kingdom)
    20:44-25:08 Grand Strategy of Egypt (Middle Kingdom)
    25:08-28:43 Grand Strategy of Egypt (New Kingdom)
    28:43-30:10 Epilogue
    #history #documentary #education
    Patreon (thank you): / sandrhomanhistory
    Paypal (thank you: www.paypal.com/paypalme/SandR...
    Twitter: / sandrhoman
    Bibliography:
    Archer, Christon I./Ferris, John R./Herwig, Holger H./Travers, Timothy H. E., World History of Warfare, Lincoln 2002.
    Ferril, Arther, The Origins of War. From the Stone Age to Alexander the Great, London 1997.
    Fibiger Bang, Peter/Scheidel, Walter, The Oxford Handbook of the State in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean, Oxford 2013.
    Frayne, Douglas R.: The Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia. Early Periods II: Sargonic and Gutian Periods (2334-2113 BC), Toronto 1993
    Hoffmeier, James K., "The Walls of the Ruler" in Egyptian Literature and the Archaeological Record: Investigating Egypt's Eastern Frontier in the Bronze Age, in: Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, No. 343 (2006), pp. 1-20.
    Horn, Christian/Kristiansen, Kristian, Introducing Bronze Age Warfare, in: ead. (eds.), Warfare in Bronze Age Society, Cambridge 2018.
    Horn, Christian/Barry Molloy, Weapons, Warriors and Warfare in Bronze Age Europe, in: Fagan, Garret et al. (eds.), The Cambridge World History of Violence, vol. 1: The Prehistoric and Ancient Worlds, Cambridge 2020.
    Roy, Kauschik, A Global History of Pre-Modern Warfare. Before the Rise of the West, 10,000 BCE-1500 CE, London/New York 2022.
    LeBlanc, Steven, The Origins of Warfare and Violence, in: The Cambridge World History of Violence vol. 1: The Prehistoric and Ancient World, pp 39-57.
    Petrie, William Matthew Flinders/Griffith, F. Ll./Mace, Arthur Cruttenden, Deshasheh, Diospolis Parva, Athribis, s. p. (Plate IV), New York 1897.

Komentáře • 746

  • @SandRhomanHistory
    @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +49

    Checkout Total War: PHARAOH here: play.totalwar.com/SandRhomanHistory
    Are you interested in reading more on military history? Do you like the artwork in our videos? Then have a look Here: www.zinnfigur.com/en/Books-Media/Book-series/Military-history/Heere-Waffen/Schertler-O-text-Lunyakov-S-illustrations-Die-Heere-im-Alten-Orient.html
    The Publisher Zeughaus allows us to use some of their artwork in our videos. They have an abundance of other books that might interest you.

    • @arnijulian6241
      @arnijulian6241 Před 6 měsíci +7

      Damn your videos put most documentaries to shame.
      No modern politicized agenda or patriotic hoopla just the events from what sources you have obviously surveyed given in a neutral entertaining manner.
      Of all the all those cashing in on total wars long arm yours at least isn't over reaching which I appreciate.

    • @uelibinde
      @uelibinde Před 6 měsíci +1

      the books look nice

    • @shinsenshogun900
      @shinsenshogun900 Před 6 měsíci

      I'm afraid of what that statistic post-it note on the 1815 Battle of New Orleans suggested...
      ...A brave new Napoleonic world lmao

    • @TokenWhiteGuyAGR
      @TokenWhiteGuyAGR Před 6 měsíci +3

      Nah

    • @NobleKorhedron
      @NobleKorhedron Před 6 měsíci +1

      OBJECTION! The Americans didn't fight the French at New Orleans - they fought the British...

  • @Thraim.
    @Thraim. Před 6 měsíci +85

    Chad Ramesses destroying 1500 chariots all on his own.

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +30

      Propaganda at its best!

    • @uelibinde
      @uelibinde Před 6 měsíci +25

      i mean he is much bigger than the chariots in the image, so maybe they sent toy chariots against him...

    • @SillyGnome
      @SillyGnome Před 6 měsíci +11

      @@uelibinde we cannot disprove this theory

    • @noreply-7069
      @noreply-7069 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@SandRhomanHistory 2:15 you had Battle of New Orleans 1815 as US vs French, it was US vs UK.

  • @mariushunger8755
    @mariushunger8755 Před 6 měsíci +402

    Fun fact: Ramesses' sister Tia married a man also named Tia. They are buried in a grave known as Tia and Tia.

    • @MyGuy18
      @MyGuy18 Před 6 měsíci +35

      History will forever be stranger then fiction always lol. 😂😂

    • @AlexeyPiet
      @AlexeyPiet Před 6 měsíci +12

      Or maybe she was just really narcissistic... (Just joking)

    • @jtzoltan
      @jtzoltan Před 6 měsíci +9

      Wasn't that the names of the twins from the show "Sister Sister"?... actually it was Tia and Tamara

    • @matthewcrosby3615
      @matthewcrosby3615 Před 6 měsíci +4

      It would be cooler if she married a guy named Tamara.

    • @matthewcrosby3615
      @matthewcrosby3615 Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@jtzoltanthis guy beat me to itz

  • @SeverusFelix
    @SeverusFelix Před 6 měsíci +28

    Tangentially, I just think it's interesting that Sumerian survived long after being supplanted by Akkadian as a sacred language, and Akkadian became a sacred language after being replaced by Aramaic, which is now mostly a liturgical language for Arabic-speaking Christians.
    To quote an earlier Total War game, "the world turns. What once was, may come again."

    • @olivierpuyou3621
      @olivierpuyou3621 Před 6 měsíci +10

      This Summerian culture is fascinating, not only for their art of war but for the founding of the first cities (or among the first of which traces remain), the invention of writing and therefore the most important literary work. ancient that we know "the epic of Gilgamesh"

  • @Eodbatman
    @Eodbatman Před 6 měsíci +30

    While the Battle of Tollense seems to be the first evidence of organized large scale warfare in Europe, the Mesopotamians and Egyptians were marching armies of several thousand men. Pretty incredible.

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +8

      yeah, ex oriente lux, as they say. seems to be the same for war, i guess.

    • @e.l.b6435
      @e.l.b6435 Před 6 měsíci +6

      As a Guy who lives in the Tollensetal it‘s incredible to know, that only a few miles away of my House one of the first battles ever was fought

    • @mladenmatosevic4591
      @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Keep in mind that standing armies were at maximum 1% of population and well equipped part-time army made perhaps 5%.

    • @Eodbatman
      @Eodbatman Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@mladenmatosevic4591 I get the feeling that perhaps the mostly settled but non-agricultural people could have formed large armies for a campaign, but if they lost, their entire able bodied male population would be in ruin. The book Dawn of Everything kind of details how sedentary but non agricultural people lived, and how they and even semi-nomadic people could mobilize large labor forces for megastructures. On that same thinking, they could probably occasionally field large armies, but only once. And they probably wouldn’t be going on campaigns or anything, just fighting in one location.

    • @mladenmatosevic4591
      @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Eodbatman Was it ever settled population of exclusive hunter-gatherers and what would be population density, both in terms of single settlement size and ability to form coalitions? And my comment addressed early large states with division of labour and their ability to project power on larger distance.

  • @blakebailey22
    @blakebailey22 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Topics I would love to see you cover in future videos:
    1. The use of bronze armor in late Migration Period by the Western and Eastern Romans
    2. The extent of iron armor and weapons in late Egypt, right before they were conquered by the Achaemenids

  • @MM-zg4wu
    @MM-zg4wu Před 6 měsíci +16

    This 5000 men of Sargon is very reminiscent of the description of Mieszko I's 1000 personal warriors team. Especially since both of them had an advantage thanks to a permanent professional army and created countries by conquest.

  • @klausgerken1905
    @klausgerken1905 Před 6 měsíci +31

    Re: Historians used to think that Egypt wasn't very militarized. I rember beeing a young histroy nerd, and beeing VERY confused, by the apparent split in popular history books of the time. The text were talking about how Egypt was a peaceful socierty with out much military, and the pictures depicted Pharaos executing prisoners, the count on the heads of killed enemies, miniatures of archers in march formation etc. It felt almost shizophrenic, but probably was just the new expert position on the militarization of early seeping into pop-science.

    • @morriganmhor5078
      @morriganmhor5078 Před 6 měsíci +13

      Those leftist historians of the fifties to seventies just loved the idea of peaceful aborigine societies with only a few aggressive ones, mainly of the European stock (and possibly Mongols). Only after the archaeologists accumulated enough proof that it was not so, was that idea partly dropped. But up today some "historians" lament on bad British colonization of India between the 18th - 19th century AD but at the same time omit six centuries of Muslim raids from the northwest which led to the establishment of all those sultanates.

    • @georgethompson1460
      @georgethompson1460 Před 6 měsíci +2

      There seems to be a bias in assuming civilisations are peaceful until we read them boasting about stringing up the bodies of their enemies on their walls.
      I mean the lack of walls is seen as evidence that the Minoans where peaceful yet it is assumed that the walls or the Harrapans and of Jerico were just for floods and not for protection.

    • @jordinagel1184
      @jordinagel1184 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@morriganmhor5078that’s an awful lot of apologist distractions from British colonialism

    • @morriganmhor5078
      @morriganmhor5078 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@jordinagel1184 No, its reality.

    • @jordinagel1184
      @jordinagel1184 Před 5 měsíci

      @@morriganmhor5078 is it now? It sounds to me like you’re trying to distract from the very real atrocities the British Empire committed. “Look, these people did bad stuff too, so stfu! You have no right to criticize Britannia Who Rules the Waves!”
      Whataboutism at its finest. How sad to see.

  • @uglymeez236
    @uglymeez236 Před 6 měsíci +18

    It's a shame Pharoah will be a shallow flop of half finished game. The period is so fascinating and I really want to wargame the period. Great video as always

    • @edelweiss-
      @edelweiss- Před 6 měsíci +1

      yep! TW Pharaoh isnt a bad game!!! its pretty good!

    • @noreply-7069
      @noreply-7069 Před 3 měsíci

      ​​@@edelweiss- Did you even read his comment lol? He said the opposite. Or am I missing sarcasm

  • @sarahsidney1988
    @sarahsidney1988 Před 6 měsíci +22

    Love the diversification of topics lately

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +18

      we're very happy to hear that!!! we weren't sure whether people would be interested if we covered ancient history.

    • @SuperFredo145
      @SuperFredo145 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@SandRhomanHistory I think people are very interested in that topic, as quality videos dealing with it are quite rare.

    • @finglelpuppl
      @finglelpuppl Před 6 měsíci +1

      very very interested in your coverage of ancient history@@SandRhomanHistory

  • @FoxWolfWorld
    @FoxWolfWorld Před 6 měsíci +14

    Babe wake up, SandRhoman just posted

  • @olivierpuyou3621
    @olivierpuyou3621 Před 6 měsíci +14

    It's funny that you would consider the Battle of Agincourt to be the most famous.
    We in France know the battles of Bouvines, Patay or Castillon much better as medieval battles.
    This shows that the reputation is far from universal depending on the country where you live.😉

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +12

      Definitely true. I think Agincourt is well known internationally because we're heavily influenced by English / Britsh culture.

    • @ArkhonXIX
      @ArkhonXIX Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@SandRhomanHistorygreat point. Never thought of it that way but if your culture is Anglican in nature than you would be subject to its stories of great victories. Btw love your channel brother. Keep it up

    • @olivierpuyou3621
      @olivierpuyou3621 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@SandRhomanHistory Yes, this battle is very well known in the Anglo-Saxon sphere, perhaps to console oneself for having lost the 100 Years' War.🤔

    • @thattotalwarguy7911
      @thattotalwarguy7911 Před 6 měsíci +1

      more likely that it depends for each side. You frenchies probably just want to ignore the most embarrassing disasters. Same as the English@@olivierpuyou3621

    • @olivierpuyou3621
      @olivierpuyou3621 Před 6 měsíci

      @@thattotalwarguy7911 Surely, but isn't the important thing to have won the war?

  • @FlorinSutu
    @FlorinSutu Před 6 měsíci +9

    The ancient Egyptian version of the Battle of Kadesh, written under Ramses the 2nd and translated in the late 1800's, was the only source of information until recently. Much more recent, at the end of the 1900's, in the former capital of the Hittite Empire, high in the mountains that today are in Turkey, the royal / government's library was discovered. In the beginning, researchers only knew that the letters were Babylonian cuneiforms. Then, the Hittite language could be translated (it was an Indo-European language). After that, among many other things, the Hittite version of the Battle of Kadesh was discovered. According to the Hittites, not only that they defeated the Egyptians, but in the aftermath, they hunted and pursued the withdrawing Egyptians for hundreds of kilometers. They stopped their pursuit only when they reached the border of Egypt.
    If this is true, the Egyptian texts written under Ramses the 2nd are the oldest propaganda / misinformation known in history.

    • @THECHEESELORD69
      @THECHEESELORD69 Před 2 měsíci

      Hey anyone who can say otherwise is long dead, and most records are lost to time so that’s some great propaganda! Man maybe I should burry a big stone slab describing how I was the king of the world, maybe that’s a project for another time lol

  • @Strat-Guides
    @Strat-Guides Před 6 měsíci +19

    I was really hoping this wasn't sponsored by that game. Your work is amazing, which can't be said for what CA is pushing. Glad you got paid for it at least!

    • @flyingurchin
      @flyingurchin Před 6 měsíci +2

      They'd probably be open to you paying them just as much instead. Until then, I'm hoping all their videos are sponsored by something as innocuous, or maybe as pleasant and even relevant to their material, as a game like that.

  • @egillskallagrimson5879
    @egillskallagrimson5879 Před 6 měsíci +10

    Love the video but for our friends of CA the thing why their game is flopping and it's gonna flop is not the setting, the setting is amazing, is the playability the way the game behaves and the lack of ambition as to an amazing project as the bronze age collapse. There are so many things wrong with this game and all is because they refuse to listen the community.

  • @MaxTheGamingMan
    @MaxTheGamingMan Před 6 měsíci +7

    10:24
    Bro literally campaigned into Sus

  • @mundylunes7755
    @mundylunes7755 Před 6 měsíci +6

    Fucking crazy to think horses we knew today didn't exist back then.

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 Před 6 měsíci +11

    Another fantastic historical coverage video about bronze age shared by an amazing channel 👏🏻

  • @VainerCactus0
    @VainerCactus0 Před 6 měsíci +17

    Before there was "Drive me closer so I can hit them with my sword!" There was "Drive me closer so I can get out and poke them with my spear!"

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +7

      haha, well summarized. Interestingly enough, that was also how chariots are used in the Iliad (even if that is an entirely other thing because it's epic literature). There was also "drive me close so I can shot them with my bow" I guess.

  • @Human-163
    @Human-163 Před 6 měsíci +15

    I love Egypt but could you please pleaseeeee do a video on bronze age Greece?

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +11

      at some point we will. probably next year though!

    • @Human-163
      @Human-163 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@SandRhomanHistory 😮
      Will definitely look forward to that!

  • @HenryElfin
    @HenryElfin Před 6 měsíci +8

    Once again, this is such a fantastic video. Thank you!

  • @nonyabeeznuss304
    @nonyabeeznuss304 Před 5 měsíci +16

    Imagine 3,000 years from now, all they have to go off of to figure out how we wage now is a few dozen incomplete war memorial statues and the tattered fragments of a call of duty modern warfare advertisement poster. Thats what archeologists have to deal with.

    • @TrollCapAmerica
      @TrollCapAmerica Před 5 měsíci +4

      Imagien when they resconstuct our history from bits and pieces and figure out that a mythical hero named Hulk Hogan once protected the entire country from evil foreign powers of some sort

    • @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin
      @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin Před 5 měsíci +2

      Are you imagining a world where the remnants of the past have so failed to be preserved? I mean, maybe if digital memory just stops being archived all at once, and every hard drive with textual data is poorly maintained and never backed up, so that an entire century of history gets essentially whiped out.
      AAAAAND also you'd have to burn all the physical items that have been mass produced and are currently occupying land fills, and simply not decaying for multiple centuries.
      I can see the "imagine future archaeologists at least thinking about us, I'm lonely" being a meme, just saying. It's fine though, I'm autistic too

    • @nonyabeeznuss304
      @nonyabeeznuss304 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@Usammityduzntafraidofanythin Its okay. I genuineley like long winded rants about stuff literally nobody cares about. I'm a compsci major. If I handed you a floppy disk from 1995 and told you to find whats on it, you'd have trouble. It would probably take you a few days to locate a floppy disk reader. A data-cassette from the 80's? A few weeks. A binary punch card ribbon from 1950? The machine that was made to read it may no longer even exist, and neither do the code books to properly compile whats on it. You now face the task of having to not only reverse-engineer the machine that reads it, but construct the entire operating system for it from scratch. Reverse-engineering is a BITCH.
      And thats for systems whose inventors are even still alive. 3,000 years of technological drift? forget it. Whatever is on those disks is inaccessible.
      Its also a moot point because even a perfectly preserved drive miraculously sealed away somewhere in still operating condition will not have any readable data left on it in 3,000 years. Drives start facing the issue of data decay after sitting unattended for about 20 years. After 3,000 there'd be nothing left. Functionally, the way we record our data now is going to be totally gone.

  • @XxxXxx-br7eq
    @XxxXxx-br7eq Před 2 měsíci +5

    I've always wanted there to be a video game that wasn't quite a real time strategy game but had some elements of it while also having some Grand strategy elements around this time. Where you could try to forge a little city-state in the bronze age and expand your influence over time

  • @the.pandamonium
    @the.pandamonium Před 6 měsíci +5

    I loved this bronze age series. I'm looking forward to the Iron Age and to learning more about the rise of the Achaemenid and Assyrians

  • @Weptak
    @Weptak Před 6 měsíci +16

    About the bronze swords, yes many were not very practical (and probably mostly to display status), but they were usable and, as far as we know, used in battle.
    The main reason axes and spears were predominant in the bronze age might just be that a sword requires a LOT more metal to make. And also, it is more difficult to make because of its size.
    That can explain why swords became increasingly more frequent in later periods and particularly in the Iron Age : you can find decent iron almost anywhere (at least decent enough to give to foot soldiers). But to make bronze you need copper, which is more rare, and tin which is even less frequent. And this is one of the reason why the people in the Mediterranian traded with people as far as northen Europe (in particular the British isles).
    My point is, you can make a lot more axes and spears with the same amount of bronze, which is really expensive because of rather limited supply (in comparison with the quantity available once iron will be used).

    • @Weptak
      @Weptak Před 6 měsíci

      @@Jesse_IDG well, in fact there is no "iron sword", it has always been steel (maybe not by design, the added carbon came from the burning of the wood or coal). But yes of course, a good quality steel sword would have been more expensive. It was not my point. I never said all iron/steel swords were cheaper, just that the fact that usable iron is less rare (so cheaper) would mean more people could afford it, or the riches/state could make more to equip their soldiers.

    • @lolasdm6959
      @lolasdm6959 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Weptak No, steel didn't exist for quite some time. Some steel was always produced when smelting iron but most of it would just be iron. It is for this reason the state of the Qin maintained using bronze despite rest of China using iron. Because bronze is way more resistant to corrosion, Qin bronze swords remain sharp after 2000 years for example. While the later Han only switched over to steel because of the invention of cast furnaces.

    • @Weptak
      @Weptak Před 6 měsíci

      @@lolasdm6959 No, you can't make a usable weapon with only iron.
      First carbon gets mixed with the iron during the heating process and second, if you manage to make an iron weapon (by isolating your iron well enough during the process, good luck considering the technology of the period) pure iron is not resistant enough, your weapon will get badly damaged with each strike and will break after a few.
      I'm not saying the metal workers were making steel knowingly, and definitely not always in good proportions to make what today we actually call steel, but it was a form of steel. Like any alloy made with copper is bronze (as far as archaeology is concerned).
      The "iron" weapons always had a external layer of steel due to the fabrication process. There could be "purer" iron at the core of the weapon (depending on the technique used to make it), but the surface had to be steel to be of any use. The quality of an "iron" weapon in those days would be tightly linked to the proportion of carbon and balance between external steel and core iron. But keep in mind that there were still a lot of impurities in the iron used, so it would still be a form of iron alloy.
      Today, we have a lot of words for those alloys (steel, cast iron, ...) depending on the quantity of carbon (or other) but you could not measure it precisely in ancient times.
      So, in fact, they were trying to make steel. Too much carbon, you'd get what we call "cast iron" (which is just steel with too much carbon in it), not enough (almost impossible in ancient times) you'd get impure iron, and that is even worse for a weapon.
      To qualify as steel (in today's terms), an alloy has to have between 0.02% and 2% of carbon. I don't know how you could get less than 0.02% of carbon in any iron alloy in ancient or medieval times considering the fabrication process...
      I'm not an expert on ancient china, but my guess would be that the Qin sticked to bronze because (a) they had the means to it (access to the needed resources) that the others might have lacked to some extent and (b) the rest of China might in fact have made weapons with too much carbon (or other impurities) in it. And then, yes, bronze weapons are superior (and more expansive). The apparition of better furnaces allowes to better remove impurities in the raw iron used and improved heating means less 'fuel' needed, so less carbon mixing with the iron.

    • @lolasdm6959
      @lolasdm6959 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Weptak Early iron weapons had steel, but very impure with many random stuff in it and unbalanced distribution of carbon. There might be lots of carbon on one side and not enough on the other side. We know this because early iron weapons are as strong as Bronze, while steel weapons are much stronger. As described in Ancient China: Cut through iron like through dirt. The difference between iron and steel was immense.
      Yes iron made with primative methods always had carbon, but then you are just arguing sementics. Steel isn't steel just because it's impure and has carbon. Steel is steel because it's got a clear method of production, and is distinguishable enough from iron to be considered a different material.
      Also pure iron were made, the very early iron are distilled from iron oxidizing bacteria found commonly in bogs and swamps. Those rust pretty fast but they are better than stone, which is why I imagine anyone would bother make iron tools at fist. Those existed since late neolithic era or something I think.

  • @sporkafife
    @sporkafife Před 6 měsíci +4

    I love how your channel depicts much less discussed periods of history. I love watching videos about the Roman Empire as crusaders as much as the next guy, but this is the only channel I see talk about early modern history, like the 30 years war, and now war in the copper age. I love it

  • @Weptak
    @Weptak Před 6 měsíci +8

    Hello, first I really enjoy your videos! Thanks a lot for your work.
    I would like to point out something. I studied archaeology, and specialised in the Neolithic, Bronze and Iron age. I don't know if you covered this, but it's a very common misconception that bronze of antiquity is stronger or sturdier than copper, unlike iron and steel. The fact that, as you hinted, "bronze" in the period is any copper alloy (usually with tin or arsenic). If bronze is really better at something over copper is resistance to corrosion (which is curent for an alloy). But the materials in those days were never quite pure, and proportions of copper varied in bronze alloys.
    What is a really big difference is that by adding tin you lower the temperature needed to work the metal (it was really difficult to bring copper to the melting point, and impossible for iron until the invention of the high furnace... and requires exponentially more fuel).
    So it is probably mostly ease of fabrication that made bronze more used than copper.

    • @THECHEESELORD69
      @THECHEESELORD69 Před 2 měsíci

      Military grade is actually just the stuff that meets the bare minimum of requirements, I say this because I’m guess bronze was worse then copper, but because it was easier to manipulate then copper, and it still worked for what it was needed for it was used, so that’s kind of funny.

  • @tsar_zo8007
    @tsar_zo8007 Před 6 měsíci +13

    I wished you cover China.
    There is so much to talk about

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +20

      will do. Roman is writing the script right now. video will only be released in a couple of months though.

  • @Amadeu.Macedo
    @Amadeu.Macedo Před 2 měsíci +4

    Outstanding! As a lover of the Bronze/Iron ages, thank you so much for this upload. Bravo!

  • @daankw
    @daankw Před 6 měsíci +5

    Another 30 minutes of great content!

  • @SB-129
    @SB-129 Před 6 měsíci +3

    -Egyptian Charioteer: "Man, those things are wonky looking, how did you guys make due?"
    -Sumerian Charioteer: "You might say we kind of _Half-Assed it..."_

  • @pajiibmackee2526
    @pajiibmackee2526 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Fantastic video, consistently one of the best history channels on YT, in all aspects.

  • @Antaragni2012
    @Antaragni2012 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Great vídeo!
    I cannot say the same about the sponsor. TW Pharaoh is another CA missed opportunity.

  • @angusarmstrong6526
    @angusarmstrong6526 Před měsícem +1

    Fantastic work,love everything you do! Info is in depth and the presentation is entertaining.

  • @HowTo-rs9iy
    @HowTo-rs9iy Před 3 měsíci +5

    Biggest battle of medieval ages (in europe) was battle of grunwald, where almost 60k off soldiers from poland and teutonic order meet on battlefield.

  • @24mech
    @24mech Před 6 měsíci +4

    Damn nice presentation. Never fails to show information from the past in a manner that I’d sit down and listen to

  • @midshipman8654
    @midshipman8654 Před 6 měsíci +4

    this is an excellent video! it really does explain the current understanding of the bonze age near east military situation amazingly well. concise and understandable while still informative. Really good at painting a picture.
    good work!

  • @petrapetrakoliou8979
    @petrapetrakoliou8979 Před 6 měsíci +12

    I think snow didn't occur in lower Mesopotamia since the last Ice Age, but perhaps we shouldn't take your pictures that accurately.

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +13

      it's just stock footage that makes clear that we talk about seasons. hard to find a similar time lapse.

  • @fdumbass
    @fdumbass Před 6 měsíci +2

    Great video man, love your channel!

  • @jonpato
    @jonpato Před 9 dny +2

    I've never been able to understand how chariots could ever be used in war. I mean, a kinda uneven piece of land is all it takes to fuck its day up...

  • @keanuortiz3766
    @keanuortiz3766 Před 6 měsíci +9

    30 minutes? Your spoiling us

  • @sensibleperson8208
    @sensibleperson8208 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Another great video. Lots of great illustrations too I have not seen before. More Bronze Age please 😀

  • @mladenmatosevic4591
    @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Only with agriculture it became possible to wage real war. You could carry grain and bring livestock with army and easily bring more from home base. At contrast, hunting could not feed large army and relying solely on foraging dispersed fighting power. Consider you would need 0.5-1kg of food for each man per day, and was bulkiest part of supply till at least 1500s. Only with rise of artillery, ammunition and other supplies started to outweight food.

    • @adriancampos8640
      @adriancampos8640 Před 6 měsíci

      You could also go the Spanish in the Americas route and herd hundreds of pigs on the march to feed your troops.

    • @mladenmatosevic4591
      @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 6 měsíci

      @@adriancampos8640 That goes into "bring livestock with army". But pigs are interesting choice.

    • @adriancampos8640
      @adriancampos8640 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@mladenmatosevic4591 Pigs are about the toughest livestock the Spanish had, they eat just about everything, they are very compact and they reproduce quickly. The best livestock to bring on long sea voyages.

    • @mladenmatosevic4591
      @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@adriancampos8640 I know that British released them on many South Pacific islands, including New Zealand. So you can go there and shoot wild pigs for free. But, in Panonian plane soil freezes so it is old custom to kill most of the stock in late autumn and make sausages, hams and other smoked / cured meat. But real wild pigs survive there without too much problems.

  • @markalan2829
    @markalan2829 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I'm enjoying your videos. FYI, I found this channel after it was recommended over at Alternate History Hub.

  • @FutureBoyWonder
    @FutureBoyWonder Před 6 měsíci

    Hell yes! More SandRhoman!
    Any more 16/15th century military content coming out?
    You're one of the few with great videos in that period

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +2

      At some point, yeah sure but not within the next couple of uploads. There will be some stuff about the 18th century though, also a pretty neglected time period. I think we covered many of the better known events of that period and we struggled to get people to watch the more niche stuff. Even our Thirty Years' War videos have struggled to get over 60k which almost ruined us this summer, to be honest. So, we're hesitant to cover 15th and 16th century history too often, I'm afraid.

  • @user-gd3xy2vl1s
    @user-gd3xy2vl1s Před 6 měsíci +3

    Very informative I love military history and have learned a lot. Subscribed...

  • @roypiltdown5083
    @roypiltdown5083 Před 4 dny +1

    one of the recurring complaints among us military-historians, is "the ones who did the fighting are not the ones who did the writing" (and vice versa): until the advent of state-sponsored literacy programs around the start of the industrial revolution, the common soldier was illiterate and did not record his experiences; his officers, if literate, were 'gentlemen' and would not lower themselves to write descriptions of tactics, logistics, etc; and the vast majority of literate persons were employed to write, did not participate in combat, and were as unfamiliar with war-related things as most non-combatants today. it's no wonder that we have to fall back on archeology and stylized artistic representations to understand how they did things.
    one of the hazards of doing so is the conservatism of 'official' artistic motifs (the pharaoh must be shown like this, etc) - Sumer and Akkadia were going concerns for almost 4000 years, and it stretches credibility to assume that there was no innovation in the warlike arts: even if their weapons were limited to the technologies available (stone & bronze), someone SURELY at some point would have said to his squad, "guys, this time, try to stand close to your neighbor & take cover behind his shield" (or whatever).

  • @bellrugby03
    @bellrugby03 Před 6 měsíci +5

    Outstanding presentation of such a great period in history.
    Excellent presentation and narrative.
    Thank you.
    Have just subscribed now..😊

  • @Pepelomb
    @Pepelomb Před 3 měsíci +1

    This Is my favorite video in a long Time. Interesting AND fun to watch. Congratz ❤

  • @lorenzocracchiolo
    @lorenzocracchiolo Před 6 měsíci +1

    Another beautiful video!

  • @GregMcNeish
    @GregMcNeish Před 6 měsíci +2

    Outstanding video. The approach of analyzing grand strategies is one that makes a lot of sense to me. Cheers!

  • @survivalizer
    @survivalizer Před 6 měsíci +4

    Just found this channel from alternate history hub. RIP my free time.

  • @jessealexander2695
    @jessealexander2695 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thanks, really enjoyed this.

  • @wiktorberski9272
    @wiktorberski9272 Před 2 měsíci

    Really, well-told history. Thank you very much indeed

  • @peterdore2572
    @peterdore2572 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I gotta admit, with such a general topic of a title I didnt expect such an IN-DEPTH Video!! Thank you! I sub and share!

    • @WeWillAlwaysHaveVALIS
      @WeWillAlwaysHaveVALIS Před 6 měsíci +2

      You won't regret it, the channel is honestly one of the best out there for describing the intracity and dynamics of troops and tactics across the span of human history in a manner that is accurate (and informs the viewer when the issue is up for debate), succinct and, most impressively, easily digested even for those who don't have any background knowledge on military history.

    • @THECHEESELORD69
      @THECHEESELORD69 Před 2 měsíci

      @@WeWillAlwaysHaveVALISI learned how to siege a castle, defend a star fortress, ease a medieval army, and more tactics here, same I’m never going to get to use them because of the whole modern thing but you know. Nice to have.

  • @RespectMyAuthoritaah
    @RespectMyAuthoritaah Před 6 měsíci

    Very well done. Thank you.

  • @xblakelfoglex
    @xblakelfoglex Před 6 měsíci

    So thankful for this and the Wevers Institute!

  • @SB-qm5wg
    @SB-qm5wg Před 6 měsíci +1

    High quality as always 👏

  • @sensibleperson8208
    @sensibleperson8208 Před 5 měsíci +5

    Lovely and interesting documentary. Love images/film/ photography ect. Narration great too👍

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Před 6 měsíci +7

    We're not far from a Total War: Alexander.

  • @samwisegamgee8318
    @samwisegamgee8318 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Total war Pharoah should be the one thanking total war Troy for allowing use of their assets, lol

  • @aldgate
    @aldgate Před 6 měsíci +3

    I've time traveled to tell you the video is amazing.

  • @MyName-tb9oz
    @MyName-tb9oz Před 5 měsíci +7

    That wall painting at 24:09 is a martial arts training manual. It seems weird that no one has ever mentioned it. Look up some medieval martial arts training manuals. They look amazingly similar.

    • @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin
      @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin Před 5 měsíci +3

      Well, I mean, the body mechanics of humans hasn't really changed, so yes, wrestling still works the way it does. That's why cultural fighting methods usually only have slight variations. And also why every character with a "secret technique" you see in anime tends to just be fantastical, because writers think real life is boring, because hey, martial arts is broadly similar among different culutres.
      HOWEVER, properly realistic fighting would still be interesting to see in fiction

    • @MyName-tb9oz
      @MyName-tb9oz Před 5 měsíci

      That's not really my point, @@Usammityduzntafraidofanythin.
      My point is that I've never heard _anyone_ mentioning that the ancient Egyptians had fighting manuals. I didn't say anything at all about fiction writing or different fighting styles which, really, are pretty different across the world. Yes, there are similarities, but there are also very significant differences.

  • @orthoff123
    @orthoff123 Před 6 měsíci +4

    thank you for your work!!!!

  • @Valdagast
    @Valdagast Před 6 měsíci +8

    3:55 one of the Ur-liest, you say?

  • @rockstc955
    @rockstc955 Před 6 měsíci +8

    Awsome! can you make a similar video relating to the myceneans or minoans?

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 Před 6 měsíci

      Or let's go back to the early modern era where there's much more evidence and research. This channel specializes in proper history.

  • @silverchairsg
    @silverchairsg Před 6 měsíci +6

    Regarding Bronze Age fiction, I recommend Dawn of Empire by Sam Barone. Basically it's the story of how a barbarian Eskkar rose to the defence of the first big village, Orak, and trained its people and built a wall to resist the nomadic Alur Meriki for the first time in history. Later he became father to Sargon of Akkad. It's a really good read.

  • @vorynrosethorn903
    @vorynrosethorn903 Před 6 měsíci +10

    Bronze swords are actually fine weapons, the edge is hardened by hammering and they bend rather than break so can be bent back. They can cut into steel as well as many other swords. They might have been logistically intensive to create and softer than iron but they were still very capable for their purpose.
    Lots of youtubers have made videos with reproductions, it sounds like your information is coming from the assumptions of historians without practical experience or specific knowledge of the subject. Maces and spears predominated due to cost of manufacture. This is a long period however and later on there was a shift towards more resource intensive warfare, which included a lot of bronze.

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +2

      Bronze swords were fine but probably not early on. I think the argument is thay the tin / arsenic content in the bronze was not high enough for the earliest bronze sworsd, so the weapons would not be very hard.

    • @vorynrosethorn903
      @vorynrosethorn903 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@SandRhomanHistory But this is a long period, that changed in time and they were certainly well made by the period Iron started replacing them.

    • @olivierpuyou3621
      @olivierpuyou3621 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@vorynrosethorn903 This is true, but since flint knapping reached its peak when the first copper tools appeared.
      These perfect weapons were already out of fashion by materials that were easier to find locally rather than bringing them from a distant country.

    • @vorynrosethorn903
      @vorynrosethorn903 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@olivierpuyou3621 That's why I mentioned logistics, it wasn't a matter of quality as much as cost. The adoption of Iron by the Assyrians was likely so significant because it allowed for mass deployment of heavy troops. Though of course the Assyrians were revolutionary in many other aspects of warfare as well, such as organisation and tactics.

  • @Wolfen443
    @Wolfen443 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Amazing, are there any Accurate films depicting this period of warfare?.

  • @billy6479
    @billy6479 Před 6 měsíci +1

    always loved the mysteries of this period

  • @Freepr411
    @Freepr411 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Thanks very informative

  • @nickdarr7328
    @nickdarr7328 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I want to be an art collector like the ones Napoleon brought to Egypt. In fact, it's actually in my blood. My grandfather had a great time collecting art in central and Western Europe in the late 1930s till mid 1940s. It sounds like a blast. Plus he made a killing

    • @sambob8019
      @sambob8019 Před 6 měsíci

      Um lol nice one I see what you're doing there 😅

  • @Ghastly_Grinner
    @Ghastly_Grinner Před 6 měsíci +7

    I still can't heat Sargon with out thinking of Carl 😂

    • @uelibinde
      @uelibinde Před 6 měsíci

      that politics dude? please stop.

    • @IamOutOfNames
      @IamOutOfNames Před 6 měsíci +3

      He lives rent free in many places...

    • @sambob8019
      @sambob8019 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I like that guy

  • @rsdingoa
    @rsdingoa Před 6 měsíci

    Brilliant content

  • @TheJediKnight91
    @TheJediKnight91 Před 6 měsíci +7

    Great video, as always!
    Just one thing. At 2:15 in the lower right corner. The Battle of New Orleans was fought between the US and the British, not the French.

    • @johnmanale3105
      @johnmanale3105 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I saw that right away since I'm from New Orleans.

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 Před 4 měsíci +5

    History is so interesting.

  • @arminius6276
    @arminius6276 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Well CZcams finally got something right in the algorithm. Would love to see a video on Götz von Berlichingen.

  • @elkingoh4543
    @elkingoh4543 Před 6 měsíci +3

    After Bronze Age, we have Iron Age.
    -Persian Empire
    -Greeks and Macedonians
    -Phoenicians and Carthagians
    -European Barbarians
    -Sythians
    -Italians and Romans

  • @DesertAres
    @DesertAres Před 6 měsíci +5

    Much of the information I have read says the Hittites had around 30K, the Egyptians 20K. After an battle with only the chariots, the Hittites retreated across the river. However, neither regular army troops were involved. Despite the Pharaoh claiming victory in great monuments, the city remained in Hittite hands. The tablets found in Hittite sources barely mention the battle as they kept Kadesh and conquered further south to Amurru.

    • @FlorinSutu
      @FlorinSutu Před 6 měsíci

      According to the Hittites, not only that they defeated the Egyptians, but in the aftermath, they hunted and pursued the withdrawing Egyptians for hundreds of kilometers. They stopped their pursuit only when they reached the border of Egypt.
      If this is true, the Egyptian texts written under Ramses the 2nd are the oldest propaganda / misinformation known in history.

  • @JaceCz
    @JaceCz Před 6 měsíci +2

    😮 The top two thirds the painting from Beni Hasan is a wrestling manual!!! I need to find more about it. This is can be the oldest example of depiction of wrestling techniques and they are I sequences!!!

  • @jackthunderbolt4307
    @jackthunderbolt4307 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Didnt you guys gave a full video about the tercios? I thought you did and i cant find it now

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Incredible.

  • @ScythianGryphon
    @ScythianGryphon Před 6 měsíci +12

    I like this "probably ritual weapon" meme, but people are using it way too often.

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +3

      Yeah we could have explained this better. We're aware that whenever archaeologists don't know something it's ritualistic but who are we to dispute it? It could be that there is more to it in this specific case and unfortunately we can't check it every time. We are kinda forced to trust the literature and hope that the major publication get these things right. Once thing, however, seems clear: early bronze weapon did lack tin / arsenic making them less effective for use in war. I think that's where the "ritual"-argument comes from in this case.

  • @Archangelm127
    @Archangelm127 Před 6 měsíci +16

    Good to see the assets from Pharaoh: TW being used for something fun. Because by all accounts the game mostly... isn't. /shrug

    • @ztac_dex
      @ztac_dex Před 6 měsíci +1

      tru

    • @uelibinde
      @uelibinde Před 6 měsíci +4

      as always, people just liked to whine. the campaign is fun, the battles are okay, the setting is fresh, so all in all i like it.

    • @conorvlad6412
      @conorvlad6412 Před 6 měsíci +3

      ​@@uelibindeI don't think people are just whining. Compare this game to the older ones. It looks terrible

    • @lyricofwise6894
      @lyricofwise6894 Před 6 měsíci +4

      ​@@conorvlad6412It looked like the developers didnt put much effort into it, problem is they priced it as a mainline game, but the quality is dlc like. Waste of the great setting, but total war franchise HAS had its hits and misses before.

    • @uelibinde
      @uelibinde Před 6 měsíci

      @@conorvlad6412 graphically? it looks beautiful! don't you mean game play, mechanics?

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz Před 6 měsíci +12

    The doge of the Nahue II bronze swordmithing guild wants to have a word with the Belgian barbarian who claimed that bronze swords were useless. The guilds of Iberian bronze longswordsmiths support him.

    • @addisonwelsh
      @addisonwelsh Před 6 měsíci

      He said early bronze swords were not very effective. They got better as time went on, and more advanced smithing techniques and bronze alloys were discovered.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@addisonwelsh - Hmm... I may have misinterpreted?
      Surprisingly the oldest known bronze alloys, which are 1000 years before anywhere else in the Balcans (Karanovo-Gumelnita and nearby cultures), were quite perfect copper-tin alloys (they had not invented the sword concept however). AFAIK it was only later, probably because of tin scarcity, that worse alloys evolved, incluiding the infamously poisonous arsenic bronze one.

  • @KetsaKunta
    @KetsaKunta Před 2 měsíci +3

    It's kind of mind blowing how long the chariot was the king of the battlefield and then just suddenly went out of fashion. Then there was no equivalent until the 20th century.

    • @medalex195322
      @medalex195322 Před 2 měsíci +2

      What about the war wagon in the 15th century?

    • @5peciesunkn0wn
      @5peciesunkn0wn Před měsícem

      @@medalex195322 not as ubiquitous.

    • @maddocpax788
      @maddocpax788 Před měsícem +1

      It went out of fashion after horses were bred large enough to support a rider in battle attire. Cavalry had greater mobility and utility.

  • @uelibinde
    @uelibinde Před 6 měsíci +2

    the ziggurat of ur looks crazy cool

  • @terryharris1291
    @terryharris1291 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The Sintashta culture first emerged in the Urals at around 2,200 BC with multiple technological innovations, such as the earliest known spoke 2 wheeled chariots and training horses.

    • @terryharris1291
      @terryharris1291 Před 6 měsíci +1

      The Sintashta chariots weren’t just Middle Eastern imports. Like the more plodding wagons that have been found to the west, near the Black Sea, the Sintashta chariots were wide enough for just one person, whereas Middle Eastern chariots could hold two or three. Moreover, the Sintashta wheels had between 8 and 12 spokes, where as Middle Eastern chariot wheels had only 4. It doesn’t look like something that’s being copied from the Middle East.

  • @Jhaldmer
    @Jhaldmer Před 6 měsíci +1

    Imma sub in case you do more bronze age of near east stuff 😊

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +3

      We're going to do some Bronze Age stuff in the near future. Some siege related videos, some focused on the other cultures that we left out in this one.

  • @thomasjackson4059
    @thomasjackson4059 Před 6 měsíci +6

    Large armies had been raised for a long time. Some 2-300 years before Ramses thutmosis III raised an army of that size to fight the prince of Kadesh at Megiddo.

    • @mrbaab5932
      @mrbaab5932 Před 6 měsíci +1

      A-Meggido = mountain ⛰ of Meggido = Armageddon

  • @LordoftheSith
    @LordoftheSith Před 6 měsíci +2

    This is my favourite period of history

    • @sambob8019
      @sambob8019 Před 6 měsíci

      It wasn't called Palestine back in the bronze age really wish he would stop saying such a basic thing wrong I mean he could have said the area around modern Palestine I guess if you really wanted to but yeah just drives me a little mad getting something so basic wrong 😂

  • @northwest2647
    @northwest2647 Před 2 měsíci

    Kadesh was just one of the furst great battles recorded in history but clearly both powers involved were no strangers to battles. And many countless battles happened long before Kadesh

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video, thank you very much , note to self(nts) watched all of it 29:51

  • @OmriOfIsrael
    @OmriOfIsrael Před 2 měsíci +4

    Great video! Just one correction. The land was called Canaan at that time there was no Palestine for another 2000 years until the Romans changed the name from Judea.

  • @bartomiejzakrzewski7220
    @bartomiejzakrzewski7220 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Ancient history

  • @megathicc6367
    @megathicc6367 Před 6 měsíci +6

    Even in ancient summer i would suspect people to have access to at least clothing for their bodies. Also swords were used in bronze age warfare. Look at the sites they found in Europe.

  • @weltvonalex
    @weltvonalex Před 6 měsíci

    Yeah baby!! I love it

  • @superlegomaster55
    @superlegomaster55 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Bronze Age my beloved. 😩😍

  • @cmdrTremyss
    @cmdrTremyss Před 6 měsíci +9

    Every history youtuber in existence pumps out bronze-age/Egypt themed videos, like no tomorrow. CA marketing department really has a deep pocket.
    Nice video regardless.

    • @lucasvanderhoeven3760
      @lucasvanderhoeven3760 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Which CZcamsrs for example?

    • @MaHuD_
      @MaHuD_ Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@lucasvanderhoeven3760extra history for example.

    • @clintmoor422
      @clintmoor422 Před 6 měsíci +8

      that's one of the worst history channels. don't compare that to sandrhoman. extra history does not have a clue about history. they just reiterate what movies says. @@MaHuD_

    • @BlackWolf9988
      @BlackWolf9988 Před 6 měsíci +3

      ​@@clintmoor422agree one of the worst history channels out there

    • @SandRhomanHistory
      @SandRhomanHistory  Před 6 měsíci +9

      Haha, thanks. They are really nice to work with and have consistently let CZcamsrs use their footage in the past, so I'd say most history CZcamsrs are more than happy to work with them. For us it's a nice opporunity to cover another era of history. Because of this collaboration we also made the Origins of War video. It would have felt weird to have just the one video about the Bronze Age without more context.

  • @midshipman8654
    @midshipman8654 Před 6 měsíci +5

    I think using the example of the battle of agincourt is a bit misleading. That was a time where armies where activey downsizing and often increasing in eliteness for many reasons, such as the aftermath of the black death, and even in the 1100’s and 1200’s, armies of tens of thousands werent unheard of.
    Agincourt might be a famous battle of the middle ages, but comparing like to like, it was not one of the larger battles of the middle ages for a sense of relative scale. like crecy, the seige of acre, or battle of hattin.