Game of Thrones/ASOIAF Theories | Valyria | Podcast

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  • čas přidán 24. 10. 2021
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    Part 15 in our Podcast Series: Valyria
    Theories and analysis of A Song of Ice and Fire using text evidence and quotes from George RR Martin.
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Komentáře • 157

  • @sleekoduck
    @sleekoduck Před 2 lety +27

    Millions of civilians - that's a way of looking at the Rhoynish Wars that people don't really think about. Wow. As always, your videos never disappoint.

  • @FishBoneD14
    @FishBoneD14 Před 2 lety +24

    The multiple chances for the ghiscari is a Punic war parallel.

    • @Isildun9
      @Isildun9 Před 2 lety +4

      Ghiscari delinde est!

    • @BruhMoment-mn9kn
      @BruhMoment-mn9kn Před 2 lety

      @@Isildun9 based 👌

    • @mpalfadel2008
      @mpalfadel2008 Před 2 lety

      @@Isildun9 Ghiscari Must Be Destroyed

    • @nicklepin7133
      @nicklepin7133 Před rokem

      Yep I can also see some Babylonian and ancient Egyptian influence in terms of the pyramids. and the harpy

  • @josephradley3160
    @josephradley3160 Před 2 lety +10

    The trade in slaves taken by conquest is similar to how ancient Rome did it.
    The army captures a town, city etc, the soldiers take slaves as their prize. Then sell them to slave traders.
    The more modern (post doom) slavery is a smaller scale operation. Corsairs, pirates, Dothraki do the collection and sell to the slave traders.

  • @CZ-dg7te
    @CZ-dg7te Před 2 lety +26

    I took the difference between the old Ghis and the Valyrian's, as the difference between going to war to get slaves as the goal (Ghis) vs. going to war over something else and slaves are a side-effect used to recoup the cost of war and send a message (Valyria). Old Ghis was strong enough to do their own conquest, new Ghis needs the Dothraki and to trade each other to get them.

  • @michelmorio8026
    @michelmorio8026 Před 2 lety +4

    The way I always understood this part of the story was, the Valyrians and the people they ruled over kept slaves, from conquests and concerning the people they ruled over, they were allowed to keep their slaves, it just was banned/forbidden to sell or trade slaves!
    So from there on, slaves were either born into slavery or brought into by conquest/defeat, but not through „robbing“ them or trading them

  • @kaylew108
    @kaylew108 Před 2 lety +21

    Indeed. When Aegon and his sisters conquered Westeros, he and his family didn't enact a system of slavery throughout the land. It would seem that if that was the system they were used to, they would use it as kings in a conquered land. Very great points on this podcast.

  • @johngo3715
    @johngo3715 Před 2 lety +5

    The way The Valyrians dealt with the Old Ghiskari and Rhoynar remind me of the Wrath of the Lich King trailer. "Show restraint while exercising great power"

  • @ivanbluecool
    @ivanbluecool Před 2 lety +14

    I always love the idea in stories where we may be in current times of the time world but the past has such better technology and magic that it makes it much more exciting when someone in the main story can use a fraction of the old magic.
    Hopefully we see more of valyria in the future books

  • @theavocado6061
    @theavocado6061 Před 2 lety +21

    Hey Dave roads are great for trade but I don’t necessarily know if they were strictly for that. The Romans, for example, are probably what George was trying parallel and as we know the Romans were pretty aggressive. Even here in the US we think of the Interstate system for civil travel. Of course they are great for that but they built during the Cold War with military uses in mind. Eisenhower was impressed with the German Autobahn network and pretty much copy and pasted it here at home. When you have a country like the US where we have like half a continent they wanted a way to quickly move troops and equipment quickly in the event of a Soviet attack.

    • @theavocado6061
      @theavocado6061 Před 2 lety +2

      @King Brandon IX Stark
      Thanks for the follow up and clarification. I know there are ppl who know a lot more about it than me but I just wanted to throw it out there. I know we had US routes earlier, however, my understanding has been the Interstate system as we know them today, I-80, I-95 etc, was started under Eisenhower. I better look into this a bit further.

    • @LucyLynette
      @LucyLynette Před 2 lety

      There were also attempts to get the ball rolling on a nationwide highway system of some kind prior to the Cold War. As a young man, Eisenhower was part of one of those efforts.

    • @alexanderdiaz8464
      @alexanderdiaz8464 Před 2 lety +1

      Do you really need roads for 300 dragon riders though?

    • @brucewaite3733
      @brucewaite3733 Před 2 lety

      It might also be might also be worth asking how these Valyrian got built with or with out any resistance from the lands they extended into. That would necessitate alot more details but it's worth asking.
      I'd wager any one already hostile with them wouldn't just sit by as they made marching field armies that easier

    • @jacobenke7936
      @jacobenke7936 Před 2 měsíci

      @@alexanderdiaz8464 There are some things you can't do with dragons. The Valyrians didn't require a massive army, but they did need some, and they needed to be able to move them rapidly. The roman roads can still be seen in many places if you know what you are looking for.

  • @ThomasDepena
    @ThomasDepena Před 2 lety +8

    In reference to the “trade of slaves that they got by conquest” part, I’m pretty sure it means they would first get the slaves by force and then sell them for money, goods, or whatever. While the former part obviously isn’t a trade, the latter is.

  • @DafyddBrooks
    @DafyddBrooks Před 2 lety +10

    its great that you guys do these videos as it makes the whole history and world make a lot more sense to me now. keep up the great work :)

  • @alexandergangaware429
    @alexandergangaware429 Před 2 lety +6

    Counterpoint: The ancient Ghiscari didn't practice slavery, at least not at the scale they do today. The Green Grace tells Dany that they learned slavery from the Valyrians, and adopted it after the burning of their lands caused massive desertification and soil erosion, ruining the fertility. And their only real mineral asset is copper, less valuable for an iron-age world. Hence, the wholehearted embrace of the slave trade. And I think she's telling the truth, for several reasons. For one, the Harpy of Astapor (which serves as sort of a sigil for the city) is shown carrying a chain, while the Harpy of Yunkai carries a whip and an iron collar, which are both tools of the slaving business. Old Ghis, on the other hand, had its harpy carrying a thunderbolt, a more generic symbol of power. This suggests the embrace of slavery came after liberation, when new city governments were set up, and so new harpies could be designed.
    And don't get me started on the military organization of the Essosi city states

    • @TheOrderoftheGreenhand
      @TheOrderoftheGreenhand  Před 2 lety +6

      The Green Grace lies just about every time she talks. The history tells us the exact opposite of what she claimed

    • @thedelacruz
      @thedelacruz Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheOrderoftheGreenhand Danny has a history of believing every 'nice ' old lady who eventually lies to her( Mirri Maz dur for instance, Quaithe ). The Green Grace is manipulating her and I wouldn't be shocked if she was behind the Sons of the Harpy.

    • @alexandergangaware429
      @alexandergangaware429 Před 2 lety

      @@TheOrderoftheGreenhand Cuz see, both modern Slavers' Bay and Volantis have a 5-1 slave-freeman ratio, and all use a mix of slave soldiers and sellswords. Lys, Tyrosh, and Myr all have 3-1 ratios, and seem to primarily rely on mercenaries and privateering. The Qohorik use Unsullied, and Norvos trains its own slave soldiers like Areo Hotah. Of the Free Cities, Braavos is the only one* that would seem to rely on its citizens to man its military (especially its navy, given that it can build a warship a day and considers its fleets to be its wooden walls), given that it is antislavery
      The pattern is that societies dependent on slavery are decadent, and the social contract between the government and the free citizenry is that the former must shield the latter from the burdens of war, especially the dangerous drudgery of soldiering. Only Braavos* with its commitment against slavery, seems to rely to any extent on citizen soldiers
      Which brings us to New Ghis and its Iron Legions, made up of freemen who serve mandatory three-year terms. An organizational model explicitly likened to the Lockstep Legions of Old Ghis. Thus, Old Ghis was not slavery-centric
      *Pentos is demilitarized by treaty, and Lorath doesn't count because of geopolitical irrelevance

    • @frankvandorp9732
      @frankvandorp9732 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheOrderoftheGreenhand The maesters also lie every time they talk, and they wrote those histories.
      You can't just arbitrarily pick and choose which histories are false and which are true, simply based on what you want to be true.

  • @warlorddavid8290
    @warlorddavid8290 Před 2 lety +8

    I know someone's probably already stated this but I want to let you know you're wrong about Persia. The central government of Persia did not endorse slavery, and in some ways we're against it. Now with that being said Persians were highly decentralized, and slavery took place in the satraps away from the Persian heartland of modern-day Iran

  • @frankvandorp9732
    @frankvandorp9732 Před 2 lety +5

    You seem to start with a desired conclusion ("the Valyrians weren't that bad") and then work backwards from there to fit everything you read in the World of Ice and Fire into that conclusion. For example, you interpret the Valyrians as merciful for not genociding the Rhoynar for 250 years while they could, until the Rhoynar aggression could no longer be ignored. But there is nothing in the text that suggest the Rhoynar were actually starting any of these wars, in fact, the very last one was kicked off by the three dragonlords burning down a Rhoynish city, a clear act of Valyrian aggression.
    It is akin to saying the Europeans were really nice to the Africans actually, because they could have colonized Africa in 1600 already, but they waited until 1800 to really get started there. It just makes no sense, and GRRM, as a historian, would never intend for his history of Westeros to be interpreted so positively for one side who, as is clearly stated, were the invading party who tried to colonize the Rhoyne area, where the Rhoynar already lived. The Valyrians were the ones spreading out to other people's countries to settle (aka, steal) their land. At no point did the Rhoynar ever show any ambition of attacking Valyria itself, they just wanted a foreign aggressor and slaver gone from their lands. The text explicitly states the Rhoynar never had interest in expansion.
    George often draws from real history to inspire his history of Planetos, and the Valyria/Rhoyne conflict is clearly inspired by European colonialism. It even describes the progression of colonialism as it happened for example in North America. First the Rhoynish princes welcomed the Valyrian settlers into their lands, stating that the bounty of Mother Rhoyne was for all peoples of the world to share. But as the Valyrians grew stronger and more numerous, the Rhoynish "came to regret the forbearance of their forebears".
    Then he states that a great advantage the Valyrians had was they worked together, while the Rhoynish were more like individual tribes who each worked alone.
    He even makes sure to inform the reader that the Rhoynish were actually really progressive and allowed women to rule as often as men, which is a (rather incorrect) image many people have of original Native American cultures.
    The parallels between the European/Native American conflict and the Valyrian/Rhoynish conflict is obviously quite intentionally put there by George. And I really don't think George intended his stand-ins for genocidal European colonialists to be seen as reasonable, merciful people who eventually had no other option than to brutally slaughter the savage natives. The Valyrian Empire seems to be written as an evil empire, just not the kind you see in some other works where evil empires are just evil for the heck of it. Instead, Valyria was evil in a very human way, caused by human greed, ambition, decadence, cruelty and indifference.

    • @keithhudgins1904
      @keithhudgins1904 Před 2 lety

      word

    • @thedripkingofangmar6778
      @thedripkingofangmar6778 Před rokem

      You can see whatever real world parallels you want but the truth is that the Valyrians were pretty open handed. All of their colonies were granted self government and at the end of the day they didn't conquer much, even having a positive relationship with Sarnor and the likes. Over the course of thousands of years they destroyed 2 civilizations, which isn't much tbh.
      On a side note, the Europeans definetely couldn't have colonized Africa in 1600 because they lacked immunity to local diseases. That's why they had to buy slaves from Africa instead of taking them for free.

  • @ashleyofnaath
    @ashleyofnaath Před 2 lety +5

    Xaro Xhoan Daxos' point about Dany destabilizing a centuries old balance - of which he's an immense beneficiary- has me convinced that he's the mystery poisoner in Meereen and he acted to restore that balance. Likely w/the connivance of House Pahl, another beneficiary of the balance who happened to have a massive grievance with Daenerys. The enemy of my enemy is my friend🤷‍♀️.
    Awesome episode as always. I look forward to Mondays for these.

  • @balkrishnalaishram7417
    @balkrishnalaishram7417 Před 2 lety +4

    Everytime i want to rest or have trouble sleeping. I just listened to your theories of asoiaf and like a lulaby i would sleep after 20 30 mins. N. B. I listened even when i dont feel sleepy😂.

  • @Hernameispamela
    @Hernameispamela Před 2 lety +3

    Love these podcasts! Thanks for all the effort guys!

  • @bmirkhanzadeh
    @bmirkhanzadeh Před 2 lety +6

    They destroyed Rhoynars and enslaved them. Valyria was as bad as Gis and White walkers. They are just the fiery version of Others that ruining everything!

    • @TheOrderoftheGreenhand
      @TheOrderoftheGreenhand  Před 2 lety +7

      They kept the gloves on for centuries and didn’t unleash their dragons until after the Rhoynar drowned a few million of their people and made it necessary to take the gloves off

  • @RevealTheStyle
    @RevealTheStyle Před 2 lety +2

    Guys, we need part two about FIREWIGHTS AND FIRE OTHERS in Valyria! 🔥🔥🔥

    • @RevealTheStyle
      @RevealTheStyle Před 2 lety +1

      P.S. Melisandre is a fire Other - LML’s theory 👌

  • @peteperkins3859
    @peteperkins3859 Před rokem

    I suspect the crews building the roads, or trading caravans from Valyria were attacked by land pirates, so the Valyrians got tired of it.

  • @Cojer52
    @Cojer52 Před 2 lety +3

    Love these podcast videos. Thanks guys.

  • @lennartkaiser2809
    @lennartkaiser2809 Před 2 lety +2

    Yessssss
    Finally an other Podcast ❤️❤️🙌

  • @bAmMoD216
    @bAmMoD216 Před 2 lety

    Thank-you for a different perspective on this topic, you're explanation makes a lot more sense then some other ideas.

  • @navykip
    @navykip Před 2 lety

    Another great discussion. Thanks for the mental escape from the daily grind.

  • @willymo1729
    @willymo1729 Před 2 lety +2

    Missed you Thursday and in time for my drive home.

  • @bihottie26
    @bihottie26 Před 2 lety

    I just discovered you a week ago and I'm hooked! Valyria is my favorite!

  • @christopherbrewer222
    @christopherbrewer222 Před 2 lety

    Makes my day when I see a new Greenhand Video

  • @madambutterfly1997
    @madambutterfly1997 Před 2 lety +13

    I wish they had green lit the prequel series about valyria leading up to the doom

    • @johngo3715
      @johngo3715 Před 2 lety +5

      Probably not the right time with all the Hollywood woke stuff ruining how accurate and intense shows/movies can be.

    • @madambutterfly1997
      @madambutterfly1997 Před 2 lety

      @@johngo3715 they’re not truly woke

    • @matematicarka
      @matematicarka Před 2 lety +5

      they would probably not give it justice

  • @shieldsyx
    @shieldsyx Před 2 lety +2

    I view Valyrian Slavery in the same light as many of our own ancient and pre ancient cultures. It was the alternative to death penalty and only capital /war criminals were made slaves. And as for our own ancient cultures the Persians were the old Gists and were heavy slavers as the Egyptians are more relatable to Valyria and have been painted as slave culture by mostly certain religions. We’re the historical evidence suggests slavery was not a main stay in Egypt till the Greeks to over

  • @pauldaskal9510
    @pauldaskal9510 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks again Dave & Mary Ellen!

  • @yuan713
    @yuan713 Před 2 lety +2

    Well some civilizations didn't have slavery until they were colonized, so basically due to the influence of another culture (Idk if that counts). Then there's the differences between slaves and war prisoners.

    • @AnndenMark
      @AnndenMark Před 2 lety +1

      What civilizations are you referring to, that never had slaves?

  • @AbdulBido
    @AbdulBido Před 2 lety +2

    Val and aria. One of the North, and one of the real North.

  • @kcjeremiah7262
    @kcjeremiah7262 Před 2 lety +3

    Love these videos because you guys have a lot of similar conclusions I've drawn. From the World Book, I always figured anything that used the lock step legions created in Ghis was probably a slaving society. So, the turtle shielded slave spearman of the Rhoyne, the Unsullied, those shitty Dornish. I think Valyrians actually only enslaved slavers & used them in internment/work camps while using former slaves to oversee them (something Jaqan said once about how the Faceless Men came to be). Anyway, love the videos, especially since I also believe Jon is the son of Ned Stark (possibly Brandon) & Ashara.

  • @Rodiacreed
    @Rodiacreed Před 2 lety +4

    Are you really assuming that 250 years of wars were all started by the Rhoynar? You are too biased in favor of Valeriyans.
    Also I highly doubt millions died when the Rhoynar attacked since these aren't modern cities. Several hundred thousand based on the size of King's Landing which is a very large city.
    Valeriyan sorcery was based mainly on blood magic which requires human sacrifice. They needed lots of slaves for their horrible wyrm filled mines and blood magic. They were 100% pro slavery.

    • @TheOrderoftheGreenhand
      @TheOrderoftheGreenhand  Před 2 lety

      No. We didn’t say there were 250 years of wars started by the Rhoynar. We said the Valyrians gave them 250 years worth of chances to live in peace. They could have annihilated them the first time

  • @CJusticeHappen21
    @CJusticeHappen21 Před 4 měsíci

    It's important to remember that not all slaves are equal. Some were doctors, mæsters, apothecaries, people who knew routes for trsde and espionage, comedians and builders.

  • @roguerodriguez8215
    @roguerodriguez8215 Před 2 lety

    I hope you guys do more parts about valyria since there was so much to talk about the different types of magic their language the few non Targaryen valyrian characters etc...

  • @cbob213
    @cbob213 Před 2 lety +1

    Missed your video this week 😢
    I hope your move went well M.E.
    =)
    Another great podcast

  • @Richard_Nickerson
    @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 lety

    Detailed comment responses in video form are a good idea.

  • @derhustlerderhustler2589

    thanks very much guys

  • @jacobenke7936
    @jacobenke7936 Před 2 měsíci

    A thought on the Rhoynar: The Dornish, especially the Martells, are still trading in slaves. They don't have a fleet at home to speak of, their lands are not rich other than fruit where there is ample water next to the few rivers Their lands are largely barren. Where do the Martells, who are obviously rich, get their money?

    • @TheOrderoftheGreenhand
      @TheOrderoftheGreenhand  Před 2 měsíci

      Exactly. Watch our Doran series. We discuss that in the second video if I’m not mistaken

  • @eziowayne
    @eziowayne Před 2 lety +1

    I’m really enjoying this podcast series! Keep up the great work y’all!

  • @D.Records
    @D.Records Před 2 lety +1

    Missed you guys last week!

    • @TheOrderoftheGreenhand
      @TheOrderoftheGreenhand  Před 2 lety +5

      sorry about that...moving to Valyria took a little longer than we hoped

    • @shanenolan8252
      @shanenolan8252 Před 2 lety

      @@TheOrderoftheGreenhand its always summer in valaria ( sunny in Philadelphia) .

    • @D.Records
      @D.Records Před 2 lety

      @@TheOrderoftheGreenhand oh i forgot you guys were moving. How was the voyage?

    • @TheOrderoftheGreenhand
      @TheOrderoftheGreenhand  Před 2 lety +3

      Long

  • @presleybaldwin3756
    @presleybaldwin3756 Před 2 lety

    That was fascinating.

  • @toomuchsauce5599
    @toomuchsauce5599 Před rokem

    I think what they meant in regards to how they acquire their slaves is before the doom of Valyria the only way you could get slaves was only through “conquer” by raiding small villages, the lambs men , summer isle. However in the present time although they get some by trading with the Dothraki, most come from the children of their current slaves. As the expression goes “bred like a brewed mare”, they probably had a system of “mass production” to maximize their profits. It’s insinuated in Astapor in how the unsullied are ordered to kill a baby of a slave but paying the owner in silver, in what seems to be premeditated agreement that’s only possible if those babies are in abundance. It’d make sense for them to come up with a system more suited for settled land, as by then most of the habitable lands outside the gates of every city have been conquered or are vulnerable to a Dothraki raids. Not to mention how much they’d save on traveling, the cost of steel, loss of lives, etc.

  • @ptptpt123
    @ptptpt123 Před rokem

    They should have sent dragon riders to whack those 10,000 ships.

  • @sayarhmehdi3597
    @sayarhmehdi3597 Před 2 lety

    A force for good that sacrifices people to forge steel. Nice one

    • @TheOrderoftheGreenhand
      @TheOrderoftheGreenhand  Před 2 lety +2

      We didn’t say perfect. We said they were a positive for the world overall. That’s very different

  • @thomasspyri9067
    @thomasspyri9067 Před 2 lety

    Great another podcast!! They are great you should keep them up!
    I would like to ask an unrelated question though. In dance, illyrio after being asked by tyrion about the blackfyres, says that the male line has eclipsed implying that the female line had not. Is there any possibility that there is secret blackfyre running around, who's father might even be illyrio himself, thus explaining the mummers dragon daenerys was warned about?
    I would really love to hear your opinion on this as it has been bugging me for months!
    Thanks beforehand!

    • @ashleyofnaath
      @ashleyofnaath Před 2 lety

      Many fans would say fAegon, but I don't think the N+A folks are in favor of that because they think fAegon is Lyanna's baby. But fAegon is the common consensus for a lot of others.

    • @thomasspyri9067
      @thomasspyri9067 Před 2 lety

      @@ashleyofnaath I know i ask this in a context where we believe that L+R=Aegon to be true. Then who might that blackfyre be?

  • @plainbrad
    @plainbrad Před 2 lety +1

    GRRM sigil is mosst likely a turtle ( he even had a charater in a book named Turtle).

  • @QueenDaenerysTargaryen
    @QueenDaenerysTargaryen Před 2 lety +3

    I am the blood of old valyria 🔥🐲

  • @looverse2023
    @looverse2023 Před 2 lety +1

    Unrelated to Valyria, but Varys can read minds. In A Clash of Kings when Tyrion is testing out Cersei’s spy, Varys referred to honey, which Tyrion only thought while talking to Little Finger.

    • @looverse2023
      @looverse2023 Před 2 lety

      @King Brandon IX Stark He had a bird on his thoughts? You know those are inside his head. He did not talk to Little Finger about the honeycomb and watching for bees. He thought it. And Varys made reference to them.

    • @MissPopuri
      @MissPopuri Před 2 lety +1

      Hmm, perhaps, it could be also that Tyrion’s face was saying something about honey not that Varys reads minds. Where is this exactly because I don’t recall the specifics in the scene?

    • @looverse2023
      @looverse2023 Před 2 lety

      @@MissPopuri Pg 562 Tyrion *thinks* Littlefinger looks like he’d just taken a bite of a honeycomb but was wary of bees but the honey was just so sweet. Then on 567 Varys is discussing what Tyrion wants from Doran Martell and Varys says if he were Doran the honeycomb might have to be sweeter for him to reach for it. And Tyrion suspects Varys knows what was in the letter Pycelle sent off. The reason is not birds. He knows *thoughts*

  • @wizardvrse7338
    @wizardvrse7338 Před 2 lety +1

    Just a heads up- Nymeria added the spear to the Martell sigil not the Sun.

  • @constantinetranos2225
    @constantinetranos2225 Před 2 lety +4

    Valyrians/Others Parallels:
    1. Both are supernaturally beautiful, yet dangerous like Ice and Fire.
    2. The Others reseruct the dead ( enslaving the unrested souls of humans) disturbing the circle of life, while the Valyrians were obsessed with slavery and genetic manipulation, creating monstrous abominations.

    • @RevealTheStyle
      @RevealTheStyle Před 2 lety +3

      Were they? There was a prison colony island indeed, Gogossos, but that one was used for breeding half-human hybrids even before Valyryans took hold of it.

    • @RevealTheStyle
      @RevealTheStyle Před 2 lety +2

      I would rather like to think, that just as Others have their “cold zombies”(wights + Coldhands??), valyrians also had their own kind of undead. Firewights, like Beric Dondarrion. Probably even “fire Others”, like Melisandre and Mocorro. (Shout out to LML).
      That would have explained most reasonably, why Faceless men with their “all men must die” motto were considering Valyrians as abomination.
      Valyria had a slave army of firewights, who had laboured in inhumane conditions of their mines.

  • @shanenolan8252
    @shanenolan8252 Před 2 lety

    Thanks dave and mary Ellen.

  • @thedelacruz
    @thedelacruz Před 2 lety +2

    Maybe this was addressed already but wasn't Nymeria's Sigil the spear and the Martel's the sun? Then they were merged together? Sun= Dorn Spear = Nymeria?

    • @Isildun9
      @Isildun9 Před 2 lety

      Hence why the ruling house of Dorne is actually named Nymerios Martell, Martell for short.

    • @brucewaite3733
      @brucewaite3733 Před 2 lety

      It's the reverse i believe. I think house Martell's original sigil was the spear

  • @greenrighthand
    @greenrighthand Před 2 lety

    What happend last week to the live stream?

  • @MaoThe1st
    @MaoThe1st Před 2 lety +1

    My Persian history is a bit rusty, but I think there was no slavery in their empire, at least in the iteration that Alexander subsequently conquered. It's one of the great misconceptions in history - we picture Spartans and other Greeks as these noble defenders of freedom, while in reality, they were a bunch slavers (Spartans even had Greek slaves, the Helots, which was a big no-no even in Greek culture). Persians were shockingly tolerant and forward thinking for their time - no slavery, religious tolerance.

  • @doogle13
    @doogle13 Před 2 lety +1

    The Persian Empire you were probably referring to actually outlawed slavery. Slavery was certainly common in the Ancient world, but it was far from universal.

    • @thedripkingofangmar6778
      @thedripkingofangmar6778 Před rokem

      No, slavery was basically universal, with some ecceptions. Civilizations that never came into contact with each other thousands of kilometers apart had slavery

    • @doogle13
      @doogle13 Před rokem

      ​@@thedripkingofangmar6778 So we are agreed then.? Slavery was not universal. Since universal is not the same as "basically universal with some exceptions".

  • @destaniebarnes
    @destaniebarnes Před 5 měsíci

    1000 years ago wasn't that when house Manderly moved North

  • @trethornton1709
    @trethornton1709 Před 2 lety

    Maybe Nymeria's sigil was the spear and the martell sigil was the sun and when she married him they combined the two?

  • @wagrhodes13
    @wagrhodes13 Před 2 lety +7

    There is little to no real world evidence of the Exodus story and Hebrew slavery. All archeology points to most of the large building project being done by Egyptian citizens who's labor was sort of taxes being paid to the Pharoh. That is not to say there wasn't slavery, there was, just not for those purposes.

    • @Ravi9A
      @Ravi9A Před 2 lety

      @King Brandon IX Stark It's decades old info at this point that there is zero historicity to exodus narrative.

    • @frankvandorp9732
      @frankvandorp9732 Před 2 lety

      The Exodus story is obviously a legend, not real history. But as you always see with legends, is that the people who construct them will use their own knowledge of their own time for it. So the whole "brutal Egyptian slavery" trope as depicted in Exodus was not a memory the Hebrew people had of the Egyptians 500 years earlier, but a story based on their contemporary Egyptians and the way they treated their slaves.
      It's a bit like medieval artists painting scenes from the Trojan war and depicting the soldiers as medieval armored knights.

    • @Ravi9A
      @Ravi9A Před 2 lety

      @@frankvandorp9732 ah yes, the mass murdering Hebrews, complaining about the Paid workers of the Egyptians.
      Your attempts at letting exodus retain value as sociological commentary fail when actual history knowledge is referred to. There is zero value there.

    • @frankvandorp9732
      @frankvandorp9732 Před 2 lety

      @@Ravi9A What a childish reply. Every 2300 year old text has extreme historical and sociological value. Your own personal gripes with the jewish and christian religions are utterly irrelevant to that fact.
      And yeah, Egyptians used slaves at times. Their civilization existed for 3000 years or so, you are simple in the head if you think you can just say "Egypt used paid workers" because they did so at one point for one specific project during those 3000 years. Believe it or not, things change all the time over the course of 3000 years.

    • @Ravi9A
      @Ravi9A Před 2 lety

      @@frankvandorp9732 "But but"
      They have value in describing Hebrews, not the wild fantasies they had of others.
      You deserve childish replies lmao if that's best defense you can manage. Feel free to your religion, but do not delude yourself into thinking it has universal value like some semi literate shepherd who can't conceive of the wider world.

  • @andrewniehoff8612
    @andrewniehoff8612 Před 2 lety +3

    I would propose a counter-argument regarding the slave trade. As you yourself stated, the trade brought in great wealth. Is it not possible that the Valyrians simply enforced a monopoly on it? After all, they were traders and what trade was more profitable? Then the Ghis simply took the trade back after the Doom.
    As for not always conquering there are possible explanations for that. One, they did not want to advance themselves too far too fast and overstretch themselves. Two, not economically feasible. Real world example; the US and its allies could take North Korea, but the cost, both of conquering it and bringing it up to speed would be greater than any benefits. The same may have been true for the Valyrian.
    As for Garin the Great, there are several possibilities. Like him or no, it cannot be denied that, at least at first, he was a successful military commander; see Alexander the Great and Pompeii the Great. Another possibility would be he would be see as their equivalent of Vlad the Impaler; who many see as a butcher, but many of his own see him as a hero for fighting the Turks; or in this case a butch of incest-practicing dragon-lovers who killed a sacred religions creature and seemed bent on having the whole world for themselves.

    • @andrewniehoff8612
      @andrewniehoff8612 Před 2 lety +1

      @King Brandon IX Stark Thanks for commenting and allow me to answer your points. These are just my opinions and I could be wrong. As for the effects that he had on his own people, I am not sure that he was aware of how strong the Freehold was; it almost sounds like before that they only sent a few dragons at a time so he probably did not know that it was a trap. As to his massacring of Valyrians, that was started by the Valyrians, who were pushing into Rhoynish territory in the first place, destroyed Sarhoy. I am sure that civilians were killed there as well and so it was the dragon lords who set the rules for that conflict.
      As for the slaves I think that they were more involved in it than it is stated. Look at Gogossos and the story of the Kindly Man; I am skeptical that those were the results of one or two sudden infusions of slaves. I would also point the former colonies in the Free Cities who make much wealth in the slave trade. Did they all suddenly undergo simultaneous moral degradation after the Doom?

  • @andrescalderonsanchez6515

    Plus remember what happened to the oakhaerts

  • @pauldaskal9510
    @pauldaskal9510 Před 2 lety

    Thousand years ago ...was it Bravvos

  • @ripduck9361
    @ripduck9361 Před 2 lety

    Good looks big homies

  • @TheLastSoundNL
    @TheLastSoundNL Před 2 lety

    I wouldn't use Biblical stories as a proof of Egyptian slavery. Scholars are very sceptical of that claim. A lot of biblical stories are taken from an older faith or legends, like I think Moses was originally a Zoroastrian prophet.

  • @wolfsbanealphas617
    @wolfsbanealphas617 Před 2 lety

    This feels unfinished are you making a part 2

  • @mhammedakrot3600
    @mhammedakrot3600 Před 2 lety

    Hi David of the Green hand Hi marry of the Green hand

  • @made-line7627
    @made-line7627 Před 2 lety +2

    I'd rather drown than be burnt alive ☹️

  • @yaboyed5779
    @yaboyed5779 Před 2 lety

    So Rome with Dragons

  • @nichoalsmith7712
    @nichoalsmith7712 Před 2 lety

    First I like your videos and recognize your efforts. When I comment I do it to open discussion not to be insulting or rude. Now, that said, this discussion is about trying to distinguish something that shouldn’t be. I don’t care who is enslaving who it’s slavery. It preys on the weakest of any society. The ones left behind… the widows, the children, the elderly, the craftsman; those that can’t fight. You keep mentioning the Valyrian went out of their way to not completely destroy their foes but it doesn’t mean it’s out of a moral goodness. Rather it’s greed. If you intend to not use slavery and you have dragons then you burn an opposing civilization to the ground and no one will challenge you again. They will let you in no matter why you show up. Leaving survivors allows you to destroy the fighters, the ones who cause trouble and leaves you to gather the craftsmen and artisans and move them to the Valyria. The fact is that Valyria like their neighbors practiced slavery and had populations born into slavery. As readers we want their to be a distinction because Danearys makes a stand but that doesn’t mean the society highlighted by this fictional world did or would. Just like the Romans, our huge cultural influence, practiced slavery and benefited from its existence. It’s still not distinguishable and shouldn’t be. It’s the oldest lesson in the world that humans are capable of great things and even worse atrocities.

  • @SHARKVADERS
    @SHARKVADERS Před 2 lety +1

    OOTGH !!!!!!!

  • @maxmercer1931
    @maxmercer1931 Před 2 lety

    Any word on TWOW yet? Or is George just going to dangle it in front of his fans every time he has a new HBO series to sell?

  • @markd.s.8625
    @markd.s.8625 Před rokem

    the kh in khal/khalasar is pronounced like the ch in loch

  • @PhilHibbs
    @PhilHibbs Před 2 lety

    So the Braavosi are descended from the worst slavers ever.

  • @tooslow4065
    @tooslow4065 Před 2 lety

    'middle class' is the word you're looking for. there is no middle class in essos.

  • @shanecoles3840
    @shanecoles3840 Před 2 lety +1

    Getting Dan Carlin vibes from this podcast

  • @Pacbandit13
    @Pacbandit13 Před 2 lety +1

    Slavery was illegal in the Achameid Persian empire

    • @peterwindhorst5775
      @peterwindhorst5775 Před 2 lety

      but was still being practiced in far flung areas of the empire

  • @brucewaite3733
    @brucewaite3733 Před 2 lety

    Oh look, 4 haters disliked this video....make them fly!!!!

  • @alt-monarchist
    @alt-monarchist Před 2 lety

    Although I love and respect you guys, why do you Generalize ESSOS as if it's the same all over the continent???

  • @alexandergangaware429
    @alexandergangaware429 Před 2 lety +1

    The Freehold only gave Qarlon the Great one chance before they burned Lorassyon

  • @alexstewart9747
    @alexstewart9747 Před 2 lety

    George has withheld too much information to keep us guessing.
    Infuriating isn’t it ??

  • @visenyatargeryen2704
    @visenyatargeryen2704 Před 2 lety

    Harappa/Indus valley civilization didn't participate in slavery

  • @cassiocosta9854
    @cassiocosta9854 Před 2 lety +1

    first

  • @redladie8528
    @redladie8528 Před 2 lety

    How bout the quote where valyria the truce between valyria and the andles only last so long and that it's likely they fled to avoid valyrian conquer and ultimately slavery...you picked quotes took them out of their context and applied it to your own. Valyria were conquerors, with that they enslaved people, lot of people, face it

  • @bungalowfeuhler1541
    @bungalowfeuhler1541 Před 2 lety +1

    The Ten Commandments is not a documentary. It’s a movie. For being so obsessed with fake history, you should brush up on your actual history.

  • @dark_fire_ice
    @dark_fire_ice Před 2 lety

    Egypt and Persians did not have slaves, not until the Greeks brought them

  • @CAN_I_FINISH
    @CAN_I_FINISH Před 2 lety

    brah.... way too many ads

  • @dragonpharaoh8640
    @dragonpharaoh8640 Před 2 lety +1

    stop trying to talk history. The Egyptians NEVER enslaved conquered people, neither did the Persians or some other Mesopotamian kingdoms. this is a false and very wrong claim. Romans and other Anglo Saxon /Norse Kingdoms were the kingdoms that practiced this automatic enslavement of conquered people.

    • @TheOrderoftheGreenhand
      @TheOrderoftheGreenhand  Před 2 lety

      I’d say calling the Egyptian enslavement of the Jews anything other than enslavement from being conquered a semantic argument. They lived in Egypt, were overpowered by the pharaohs and were subsequently enslaved. The Persians had a largely slave army if I’m not mistaken and you’d be hard pressed to make a convincing argument that they didn’t come largely from within the territories they came to dominate, so I’d say that’s another rather semantic argument. And none of this changes the point I was making. It was a common practice in the ancient world

    • @dragonpharaoh8640
      @dragonpharaoh8640 Před 2 lety

      @@TheOrderoftheGreenhand what are your evidences that there was "an Egyptian Enslavement of Jews"?.
      the biblical version of events is not a solid factual history, nor is it even an argument. Even according to this source: there was no complete enslavement of Israelites - still not Jews at the moment - there was a prosecution under a specific ruler .
      This ruler by the way has never been proved to be an Egyptian Pharaoh or King according to actual history research.
      secondly: your argument is: "Enslaving conquered people was a common practice in the old world",
      sir or madam: this is completely wrong.
      with exceptions of practices by the Assyrians mostly of enslavement and brutality, most old civilizations especially Egyptian and Persians NEVER and I repeat NEVER enslaved the conquered people, neither to turn them into slaves in their own lands, nor to use them in slave trade.
      By the way: I do not know where you came by the notion that Persians had a slave Army. the army of the Persian empire in the first Greco Persian war for example was a mix of troops from all the provinces and regions controlled by the Persians. that was the norm of the Persian authority on the regions of their empire. it was no slave army at all.

    • @peterwindhorst5775
      @peterwindhorst5775 Před 2 lety

      other than conquering and enslaving Kush

  • @jacobenke7936
    @jacobenke7936 Před 2 měsíci

    Part of the speculation about the Valyrians is that slaves went to one of two places: the mines or blood sacrifice. If we ever get clarification about the Doom it will likely involve something about an imbalance of Ice and Fire caused by what the Valyrians were doing.