Sweden's Borders from 1150 Until Today

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 439

  • @bauxsedai1495
    @bauxsedai1495 8 лет назад +274

    Love it!
    Learning Swedish and history at the same time.
    A lovely combination!

    • @jeykies3745.
      @jeykies3745. 5 лет назад +1

      Baux Sedai yes.

    • @cosmiccruise8372
      @cosmiccruise8372 4 года назад +1

      hej

    • @IsopropylRecordings
      @IsopropylRecordings 4 года назад +4

      Undra hur det gick med svenska studierna?

    • @legendaydin8837
      @legendaydin8837 3 года назад +1

      you prolly dont give a damn but does someone know a method to get back into an instagram account?
      I was dumb forgot the password. I would love any help you can offer me.

    • @jck956
      @jck956 2 года назад +2

      Honestly I keep coming back to this video because I am both interested in Stormaktstid and because I want to learn how to talk about it in Swedish

  • @jp3274
    @jp3274 Год назад +122

    Det er virkeligt godt lavet. Elsker Sverige, Norge og Findland. Fedt at være Nordisk.

    • @deluxepower5965
      @deluxepower5965 Год назад +7

      Alla goda ting är 3! Scandinavien! 🇩🇰🇧🇻🇸🇪

    • @Br1cht
      @Br1cht Год назад +6

      Brödrafolkets Väl!

    • @robertwallen9583
      @robertwallen9583 Год назад +3

      En nordisk union för de nordiska folken ville eg ha.

    • @susanna8612
      @susanna8612 Год назад +2

      Finn here, I love our Nordic countries and culture too!

    • @audhumbla6927
      @audhumbla6927 11 месяцев назад

      Nordisk power!!! Vi ska ta tillbaka vårt älskade norden!!!

  • @Kikkerv11
    @Kikkerv11 6 лет назад +88

    Wildeshausen is so only about 400 km from my home :) Can't believe it used to belong to Sweden! Greetings from Belgium.

  • @sealkeen
    @sealkeen 6 лет назад +39

    Ingermanland is where I, my dad, my granddad and also my great granddad were born. That feeling when the author is speaking about your homeland

  • @charlesrozen987
    @charlesrozen987 Год назад +121

    Nu kan vi göra som Ryssland o hävda våran rätt till vissa områden. Vi har ju historiska rättigheter.

    • @Lemonadee771
      @Lemonadee771 Год назад

      Om ryssland brakar ihop, vilket det ju historiskt har tenderat göra, så kanske vi ska passa på att ta tillbaka kexholm och ingermanland. Oironiskt skulle de nog få de bättre än hos vilken rysk efterträdarstat skulle få kontrollen...

    • @Moiaija
      @Moiaija Год назад +18

      Nej tack😅🇫🇮

    • @Leiflokey
      @Leiflokey Год назад +10

      Ryssland, Israel etc är bara att välja och vraka😅

    • @LeonLo2037
      @LeonLo2037 Год назад +7

      Helt rätt🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪

    • @KjellAurisAndersson
      @KjellAurisAndersson Год назад +24

      Eller som USA, hävda vår rätt till alla möjliga områden utan några som helst historiska rättigheter 😂

  • @swedneck
    @swedneck 8 лет назад +149

    Skitbra gjort! Hoppas det kommer fler videor om gränsändringar eller svensk historia.

  • @tim8653
    @tim8653 8 лет назад +40

    Tack för den här videon som är mycket informativ och har också hjälpt mig att förbättra min svenska :)

  • @tiinau6562
    @tiinau6562 10 месяцев назад +3

    .... Medetiden... Av Sverige.. 🤫✌️👍🕊️🇫🇴❤️✌️✌️✌️✌️💋

  • @kurtolsson9557
    @kurtolsson9557 8 месяцев назад +1

    Bra program👍

  • @sirseigan
    @sirseigan Год назад +39

    Ångermanland was settled by Norse speaker long before 1150 AD! You can see this in both placenames, placename patterns and archelogical findings. In fact during the first half of the milennia what is today Hälsingland, Medelpad, Ångermanland and parts of Jämtland were its own petty kingdom (the area north of the border forest of Ödemården, desolcated forest, and south of Skuleskogen, Skule forest). The burial mounds along Selånger in Medepad from this era rival that of the mounds in old Uppsala in riches and in wealth - it was not some poor back water area. After the eviromental catastrophy around 536AD and thereafter (several vulcanic eruptions and the following years of global vulcanic winter) the settlments in the north looses their elite characteritics and the population was notibly decreased but never vanished. The political entity was splintred and you can see this when King Sverre of Norway ride first through Hälsingland and the up to Jämtland where he in 1177(?) conqured Jämtland at the battle of Storsjön (on the ice). Here Hälsingland and Jämtland acts as two different political entites, both governed by so called "folk-republics" (similar to Iceland).
    However it is worth knowing that Jämtland, and most likely the rest of the middle north area as well in some shape or form, was at times paying tribute to the Swedes in exchange for protection from the Norwegian kings, not rarely based in Trondheim at the time.
    However the Norwegian king Olaf the Holy was held in very high regard and is said to have promoted church building in the whole river vally of Ljungan on his way to the battle Stikkelstad where many men from the area joind him. Had he not died there who knows if the area would perhaps become under Norwegian rule.
    We know that in the 1200-ish the Swedish king considered the area his subjects. But in his letters he is begging the area to pay tribute, pay taxes and provide military men. A medeival king do not beg and it clearly show that the inhabitants of this area thought of themselves as independent no matter what the king himself thought. It was not until 1320AD that Swedish taxcollectors stopped being killed on the spot and the area started to become a integrated part of the Swedish kingdom.
    If you swap the area "Ångermanland" out with "Västerbotten" though then the word "colonize" is a somewhat better fit as the majority of norse/Swedish placenames are of a younger date in this area. However you miss quite a big political entity in the region and that is the Finnish speaking Kvens/Kväner who is most likely from whom the elite known as "Birkarlar" (likely meaning merchants who trade with, and later collected tax from, the Sami) came. Along the coastline there had also been home, seasonal amd permantly, to Norse speaking coastal fishers. There is at that many different entities inside what we today just call Sami. So lumping all this groups, with different languages, lifestyles and culture into one with the missrepresetative lable "Sami" is bordeline disrespectful and carry in it self a bad aftertaste of a colonial mindset.
    That this ares were incoperated into the Swedish kingdom is a fact. If it was voluntarely or involuntarely or both at the same time is a complex issue. However the choices of words are important and using "colonised" indicates that there was no Norsepeaking people there before this date, which is false. The very name "Ångermanland" is old Norse in origin (meaning "the fjord mens land") and even have a flavour of west Norse (like Norwegian; compare "ånger" with Norwegian "anger", as in Stavanger, as the word for "fjord") rather the east Norse (like the Swedes). Infact the dialects of the whole area has flavours of west Norse that the rest of the east coast do not have.

    • @brickan2
      @brickan2 Год назад +4

      I'm very interested in this time period (1050-1350) for the entire peninsula. You make a lot of claims in your text. Can you point me to a summary paper or two where you get your facts from? If not summary - individual papers. Thanks! ( Please give me a book :) )

    • @Hypnapompa
      @Hypnapompa Год назад +2

      @@brickan2 In this Wikilink about Genesmon you find some books on the topic: sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesmon. Furthermore, a vast majority of the place names along Ångermanälven and the Coastline in Ångermanland are Norse and dated to old Iron Age. However, some of the place names has sapmi, finnish, unclear or hybrid origin.

    • @UrmasPukk
      @UrmasPukk Год назад +1

      Juhatasid mind mõtlema

  • @chapno4255
    @chapno4255 Год назад +4

    vi förtjänar Finland tillbaka

  • @davestrasburg408
    @davestrasburg408 Год назад +7

    Valdigt interessant! Som en finsk-amerikan med svensk ursprung, allting med Sverige intresserar mig.

  • @spoe_
    @spoe_ 8 лет назад +129

    damn mate finally a channel that focuses on Scandinavia. I speak Swedish on an OK level and wanna get into Finnish too so I hope you'll be making more sick videos like this.

    • @paperxzone4938
      @paperxzone4938 6 лет назад +1

      Lycka till på din Svenska, hoppas det fortsätter bra!

    • @welp4576
      @welp4576 5 лет назад +2

      memez trojan perkele qää wää e ää ää ää ää ää ää ää ää ää ää ää. ää ää ää ää ää ää ää ää ää

    • @maonparas
      @maonparas 3 года назад +5

      @@welp4576 mitää vittua sä siellä selität?

    • @pyromorph6540
      @pyromorph6540 3 года назад +2

      Just so you know, you might have trouble with Finnish as it is not a North germanic or Scandinavian language, it is entirely separate, It is a Uralic language.

    • @unwnme
      @unwnme Год назад

      @@pyromorph6540 How can you be so arrogant to think that the OP doesn't have a clue?

  • @AllSeerAugustus
    @AllSeerAugustus 6 лет назад +64

    Awesome. It was interesting for me because it's the first time I've ever heard Swedish but understood a lot of what was said without subtitle help. Really beautiful language 👍

    • @archive1318
      @archive1318 5 лет назад +4

      Norwegian swedish dutch scots leid and german have alot of cognates with english (cognate is a word that shares a common ancestor word with other languages

    • @stephen9381
      @stephen9381 4 года назад +4

      Germanic-derived languages are similar in their structure of speech, and word pronunciations, well, unless you’re speaking danish.

  • @ItsMichaelNilsson24
    @ItsMichaelNilsson24 Год назад +2

    Grymt bra video och väldigt detaljrik sammanfattning. Tusen tack!!

  • @paulsirugo8840
    @paulsirugo8840 Год назад +8

    Riktigt bra. Denna bör många fler (historielösa) människor se.

  • @mrdaym
    @mrdaym Год назад +5

    Fantastiskt spännande presentation. Bra jobbat!

  • @HerrHolmqvist
    @HerrHolmqvist 8 лет назад +20

    Mycket välgjort och intressant, youtube behöver fler videor som denna!

  • @stefanelfving5031
    @stefanelfving5031 Год назад +1

    Väldigt roligt att få veta det här har alltid undrat men nu vet jag

  • @22SAMURAJ
    @22SAMURAJ Год назад +1

    Intressant,
    Det där visste jag inte så i detalj.
    Thanks allot friends, 🙏👍🙂🇸🇪

  • @2wodrqwoa
    @2wodrqwoa 3 года назад +6

    Thank god there's an actual English subtitle, to whoever translated, whether it be the creator or a random person I shall worship you.

  • @TheTachy0n
    @TheTachy0n 8 лет назад +37

    7:50 Stolta Älgtårar.

    • @HB-qu8dm
      @HB-qu8dm 4 года назад +5

      10:36 Ledsna älgtårar :'(

    • @Redcliffe_
      @Redcliffe_ 3 года назад

      Neeeeej

  • @limegreenlive7813
    @limegreenlive7813 2 года назад +3

    Bästa videon någonsin

  • @ignika11
    @ignika11 6 лет назад +11

    I have recently discover, that my great grandfather was born in Småland. And myself are finnish in 3rd generation

  • @leiffredriksson3584
    @leiffredriksson3584 Год назад +9

    Inte bara Samer, vi Tornedalingar/Kväner fanns där med!

  • @klusty5414
    @klusty5414 Год назад +4

    INTRESSANT VIDEO, SPENDERADE MIN LÖRDAG MED FAMILJEN OCH FICK EN HÄRLIG KONVERSION RUNT MATBORDET 👍

  • @ert5419
    @ert5419 Год назад +1

    tack, bra att veta

  • @linkgrinmbn
    @linkgrinmbn Год назад +2

    likte denne vedlig godt, presis, og oversiktelig! 👌

  • @Hallonbot
    @Hallonbot Год назад +19

    Utmärkt sammanfattning, och fint att inte bara visa gränsförändringarna utan även ge litet kontext vid varje årtal.
    Apropå pantsättningen av Wismar 1803 så var det ju en pantsättning på 100 år. Sverige hade kunnat lösa in lånet 1903 och återfått provinsen, även om det varit dyrt, bisarrt och onödigt.

    • @Lemonadee771
      @Lemonadee771 Год назад +3

      Onödigt, ja kanske, men fatta hur annorlunda hela 1900-talet hade blivit...

    • @Hallonbot
      @Hallonbot Год назад

      @@Lemonadee771 Absolut! Ett svenskt område i Tyskland under det tidiga 1900-talet? Vi hade mycket väl kunnas dras in i Första världskriget då.

  • @kasper8509
    @kasper8509 3 года назад +1

    Tack för denna video!

  • @burnotto1663
    @burnotto1663 Год назад

    Tack lärorikt till max i denna lagom långa film

  • @sircoloniser5454
    @sircoloniser5454 3 года назад +12

    It’s weird listening to Germanic languages as a Brit, it’s like you can understand what he’s saying but don’t know what the words mean

    • @PalkkiTT
      @PalkkiTT 3 года назад +6

      English is a Germanic languag too.

    • @Hallvard0
      @Hallvard0 Год назад

      originally it was. Now it's a mix of latin, greek, french, and old english@@PalkkiTT

  • @andreasbergman3231
    @andreasbergman3231 Год назад +1

    Intressant och lärorikt. Intressant att Sverige och Danmark varit i krig så mycket men sedan gränserna blev lättare att försvara och gick mer i enlighet med naturens förutsättningar har det varit fred.

  • @softwhitewings725
    @softwhitewings725 3 года назад +2

    Tack! Så intressant!

  • @okaro6595
    @okaro6595 5 лет назад +7

    Satakunta is currently Satakunta in Swedish also. It is a translation of Hundare (Hundred in English) i.e. an area that would raise a hundred soldiers.

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  5 лет назад +4

      The way I have understood it is that Satakunta is used for the modern province, while Satakunda is still preferred for the historical province. The latter is the name I am most familiar with in historical contexts, personally.
      A quick google search makes me wonder if anyone really knows... Uppslagsverket Finland uses 'Satakunta' for both the modern and the historical province, while Mediespråk mentions 'Satakunda' as an 'outdated/historical form' but also notes that 'Satakunta' is used "for modern situations". Swedish wikipedia uses Satakunta for the modern province, and Satakunda for the historical one.

    • @miguellindstrom4204
      @miguellindstrom4204 2 года назад

      Hundred counties.

    • @sampohonkala4195
      @sampohonkala4195 Год назад +2

      Kunta is a municipality, so Satakunta could refer to a hundred municipalities. But as Finnish is a weird language, the meaning is totally different. It is more like a company of a hundred, a group of a hundred. A good comparison is 'venekunta' which means the crew of a boat. Or 'lautakunta' which means a board or a jury.
      Literally satakunta also means 'about a hundred' or 'roughly a hundred' but that is hardly the historic meaning of the word.

  • @Idellle
    @Idellle 8 лет назад +4

    Tack!

  • @mrdaniel2215
    @mrdaniel2215 3 года назад +6

    trevlig video fortsätt

  • @matsa2620
    @matsa2620 Год назад +1

    Thanks a lot for a very informative and pedagogical video.

  • @unnamed2049
    @unnamed2049 6 лет назад +5

    And this, my friend, is why RUclips added subtitles

  • @oreokjeks6079
    @oreokjeks6079 4 года назад +14

    Now i see why your norwegian pronounciation is so good (Still kinda sounds like a swede tho). Because of your good american english accent i thought that you actually was american. I loved the vid my fellow scandinavian

    • @freefalling6960
      @freefalling6960 Год назад +1

      This is Swedish

    • @oreokjeks6079
      @oreokjeks6079 Год назад

      @@freefalling6960 I know. Don't really remember why I commented this over 2 years ago. I might have commented on a different video here by a mistake. He has a really good video on the Norwegian language. Either that or I complemented his pronouciation of Norwegian territories. :3

    • @oreokjeks6079
      @oreokjeks6079 Год назад +1

      @@freefalling6960 After rereading my comment many times, I can say that I meant that his Norwegian pronounciation (in a different video) made sense to be good after learning (through this video) that he's swedish. Before this I thought he was an native english speaking American.

  • @Cristiano2896-x2w
    @Cristiano2896-x2w Год назад +2

    Academia cerava jag älskar dina videos så mycket

  • @blueguns15000
    @blueguns15000 Год назад +5

    Why do I somehow understand this without subtitles?

  • @prosipp
    @prosipp Год назад

    imponerande tydlighet 👌

  • @historiepodden5197
    @historiepodden5197 2 года назад +6

    Bra berättat! :)

  • @Apeshaft
    @Apeshaft 8 лет назад +6

    Väldigt intressant! Lägger ut länken på cuzz.

  • @SvenEven
    @SvenEven Год назад +6

    According to Ottar from Hålogaland (visiting king Alfred of Wessex around 890, i.e. 1130 years ago) Norway reached up to about todays Tromsø.
    He knew, because he lived there. He was also granted the right to tax the Sami-people. One may ask who it was that could grant such rights to his underlings?
    Ottar (in English Othere) told king Alfred about Norway, and he also knew of the Svear and Daner and the Kvener (swedes, danes and finns) and where they lived! He also visited the Bjarmer (present day Russia) and gave king Alfred a gift he had purchased from the people he met in Bjarmeland. Actually he understood the languages of the Bjarmer because they spoke a language very similar to the Samis. At that time it was a group closely related to the Sami that lived along the shore of the White Sea (as we call it).
    Maybe the most important thing was that he told king Alfred that he was a Norwegian that came from Norway, and he also tried to explain how the Norwegians differed from the neigbouring countries of Svear and Daner.

  • @bepponen
    @bepponen Год назад

    bra gjort, tydligt och intressant.

  • @ventdelamer
    @ventdelamer Год назад +11

    Interesting. Tack så mycket! However, there was no “Russia” in the 17th century, as it was called Moskovia at the time. It started being called “Russia” in the 18th century, with czar Peter I.
    Besides, it the 13th century Novgorod was connected to Rus, which was not the same thing as the modern Russia.

    • @alfatejpblind6498
      @alfatejpblind6498 Год назад

      The Russian tsardom existed since the 1550s, when Muscovy was officially renamed.
      If you want to talk about modern nations as a concept altogether though, you could just as well make the claim that there existed no "Sweden" eighter. People identified much closer to people from the same Landskap than some abstract concept of "Sweden" and "Swedishness" and had essentially no national allegiance as we would conceive of the concept today.

  • @hmsilset
    @hmsilset Год назад +5

    Bra forklart :) Jeg tror det mangler en kort men spesiell hendelse i 1644 eller noe. Vanskelig å finne info.

  • @EzRida04
    @EzRida04 2 года назад +2

    8:04 The Boss when you fight him
    0:09 The Boss when you unlock him as a playable character

  • @militarsnack8704
    @militarsnack8704 Год назад +1

    Bra!

  • @Javlafan
    @Javlafan 4 года назад +14

    As one Swede once told me: Svenska Estland är det bästa Estland :)

    • @EstViking
      @EstViking Год назад +2

      Estonia was very rich part of Sweden, sweden was lucky that Estonian nobility wanted to join Sweden.
      Even today, Sweden would be happy to have Estonia as Estonians are smarter and more progressive than Swedes.

    • @alfatejpblind6498
      @alfatejpblind6498 Год назад +1

      ​@@EstViking > Estonia was very rich
      Literally consisted of a feudal hellhole with impoverished practically enslaved native serfs ruled by colonizing germans
      >Estonian nobility
      I don't know about you but I would not bestow the title of Estonian on people who had "von" in their surnames, spoke german, launched crusades, and looked down on and oppressed your nation for centuries
      >Even today Sweden would be happy to have Estonia
      Bro... Do you not want independence or what? And btw, most Swedes can't even place Estonia on a map
      >Estonians are smarter and more progressive than Swedes
      I dunno about that one bro

    • @EstViking
      @EstViking Год назад

      @@alfatejpblind6498 look at PISA score tests, startups per capita, etc.
      I havent said anything about wanting to go under Swedish rule. Dont put words into mouth.
      Sweden itseld had serfdom ( as whole europe in that matter ) at the time, so your information is irrelevant.
      I was talking about region itself.
      Stop using illogical demagogy.

    • @pinkbabycrocs5577
      @pinkbabycrocs5577 Год назад

      @@alfatejpblind6498 I'm not arguing with you on the rest but you're kind of stepping on your own point with the last two statements haha

    • @alfatejpblind6498
      @alfatejpblind6498 Год назад

      @@pinkbabycrocs5577 haha what do you mean bro

  • @arthursandomine5464
    @arthursandomine5464 Год назад +1

    Föredömlig video!

  • @matsjonsson9492
    @matsjonsson9492 Год назад +1

    "If liberty means anything at all,
    it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear" - George Orwell

  • @thebigbanimationco.2985
    @thebigbanimationco.2985 Год назад

    That was great! Thanks.

  • @4Trainzer4
    @4Trainzer4 4 года назад +8

    Hade varit roligt om du tog med svenska kolonier samtidigt som de facto var svenska områden :)

  • @rajoshusse
    @rajoshusse Год назад

    Skönt att vi blev av med Norge.

  • @viper0097
    @viper0097 Год назад +2

    Kan du inte göra en film om vilka gränser Sverige hade utanför Europa

  • @yopro6596
    @yopro6596 7 месяцев назад +2

    Så vackert🥲

  • @Felixxxxxxxxx
    @Felixxxxxxxxx 4 года назад

    Väldigt bra förklarat

  • @mikaelb7735
    @mikaelb7735 Год назад

    INTRESTING!!

  • @Kojstojs
    @Kojstojs 2 года назад +2

    Åh Äntligen en svensk video

  • @swedichboy1000
    @swedichboy1000 4 года назад +5

    8:04 Den gamla goda tiden. The good old days. Ah..

    • @Javlafan
      @Javlafan 4 года назад +1

      I Estland vi kallar denna period "den gamla goda svensktiden" :)

    • @alfatejpblind6498
      @alfatejpblind6498 Год назад

      @@Javlafan Vad exakt var bra med den tiden för den genomsnittlige estlänningen? Svenska kronan intervenerade inte alls till estlänningarnas förtjänst, snarare till deras nackdel då de feodala tyska landägarnas rättigheter stärktes och kunde öka sitt förtryck över den livegna lokalbefolkningen. Kanske kallas det "den gamla goda svensktiden" för att det nuvarande historiska narrativet skrevs av dessa i praktiken slavägande tyskar som bedrev kulturellt folkmord mot din befolkning? Hmm...

  • @Bedinsis
    @Bedinsis 3 года назад +4

    Var det inte någon fästning i Åländska skärgården som finnarna råkade bygga på den svenska sidan av en ö i modern tid, som fick kompenseras av att Sverige fick mark från finska sidan av ön? (vilket förvisso är en historisk fotnot men trots allt är en gränsförändring).

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  3 года назад +9

      Skäret heter Märket. Ryssland byggde en fyr på den svenska sidan 1885 utan att någondera part verkar ha reflekterat över det, vilket ledde till en gränsjustering hundra år senare.

  • @MS-nk4xb
    @MS-nk4xb Год назад +1

    - Å fan!

  • @katarinaekblom1063
    @katarinaekblom1063 Год назад

    Intressant!

  • @phil..rubi123
    @phil..rubi123 4 года назад +2

    Genialisk video!!

  • @eriknoworries
    @eriknoworries Год назад +2

    Älskade Sverige!

  • @Mosern1977
    @Mosern1977 Год назад

    Veldig interessant som nordmann å se hvordan Sverige ble til og grensene ble slik de er i dag.

  • @magnus9618
    @magnus9618 6 лет назад +3

    Denmark and Norway vs Sweden and Finland

    • @luminoustarisma
      @luminoustarisma 6 лет назад

      Vad sägs som nej tack, vi tycker om er också grannländer, men vi är inte intresserade av att slåss.
      Väck inte den björn som sover.

    • @linusfotograf
      @linusfotograf 4 года назад

      luminoustarisma Jag tror Magnus bara ville förenkla videon med glimten i ögat

    • @ristusnotta1653
      @ristusnotta1653 3 года назад +2

      maybe Sweden Norway and Denmark got more in common :D Greetings from Finland, we have been busy during the couple hundred of years building back our language and culture :D

    • @Djuuugarn
      @Djuuugarn 3 года назад +2

      @@ristusnotta1653 The Swedish, Norwegian and Danish languages might be more similar, but Finland, or rather Suomi will always be a part of Sweden (in heart and soul). We love you and always will. Like a caring older sibling we are always keeping a watchful eye on the antics of our little brother to the east but we need to let you do your own thing so you can grow up to fulfill your potential. I am Swedish but parts of my ancestry are from Finland aswell. 🇸🇪❤️🇫🇮 Rakastan Suomea ikuisesti!

    • @ristusnotta1653
      @ristusnotta1653 3 года назад +2

      @@Djuuugarn i dont think the feeling is mutual in Finland 😂

  • @timolehtinen9348
    @timolehtinen9348 Год назад +2

    There was a time when Sweden was a part of Finland.

  • @loki76
    @loki76 Год назад

    Excellent

  • @afttd6426
    @afttd6426 5 лет назад +3

    Oj sverige var litet!

  • @v3k1tg
    @v3k1tg 4 года назад +7

    I never knew you were Swedish (I don’t even know if you are speaking Swedish but probably yes because this is a video about Sweden)

  • @kingwadani861
    @kingwadani861 4 года назад +7

    Fred är bästa som finns i världen. Krig ar onödigt och tråkigt bättre liva med fred. Hoppas hela världen blir fred en vacker dag så folk slipper fly

    • @Car_Mo
      @Car_Mo 4 года назад +5

      Kom bara ihåg att fred inte är motsatsen till krig. Fred under förtryck, med förföljelser och hård beskattning kan vara nästan lika destruktivs som krig.

    • @svenskathule8434
      @svenskathule8434 3 года назад +3

      om vi inte hade krigat som vi gjorde så hade vi inte haft ett land idag. verkligheten är inte en dans på rosor antingen erövrar man eller så blir man erövrad

    • @wizpsy4051
      @wizpsy4051 2 года назад +1

      Håller med, så vi slipper dom här 👍

  • @bjorngustafsson6513
    @bjorngustafsson6513 3 года назад +4

    8:09 Laughs in Stormaktssverige

  • @herpsenderpsen
    @herpsenderpsen 7 лет назад +7

    Bra video, men hva med sveriges kolonier?

  • @pullibo
    @pullibo Год назад

    Tak alle i hop :)

  • @serpahologramsson2417
    @serpahologramsson2417 Год назад

    grym

  • @kevinspee7013
    @kevinspee7013 4 года назад +13

    So why didnt you visualize the colonies? Ive always been fascinated that Denmark and Sweden had colonial empires

    • @ylvagustafsson1242
      @ylvagustafsson1242 3 года назад +5

      Sweden, Norway, Finland and Russia are still colonizing Sápmi. Denmark are still ”owner” of Greenland.

    • @boek2777
      @boek2777 2 года назад

      @@ylvagustafsson1242 Without Denmark, Greenland would be the worst non Communist country in existence.
      The first Swedes and Norwegians actually settled their current lands long before the first "natives" arrived.
      If the Sami want their own country, they would starve to death!

    • @dschledermann
      @dschledermann Год назад

      @ylvagustafsson1242 very much not. Greenland has a lot of independence. It's only really within foreign politics that Denmark sets policies. Most internal stuff is completely up the Greenlandic government.

    • @ZzaphodD
      @ZzaphodD Год назад +3

      At least for Sweden’s part using the term ‘Colonial Empire’ is really an exaggeration.

  • @TomasGradin
    @TomasGradin Год назад +1

    Fast du glömde berätta vad som hände med Wismar: 1903 beslutade man att inte lösa panten (som hade varit på 100 år), varpå staden slutligt övergick i tysk ägo.

  • @ceciliarichter2458
    @ceciliarichter2458 Год назад +4

    So interesting!
    My family name is Richter and I have tried to figure out how I have this German name.
    I have traced my ancestry back to Uppsala in the middle of 1600. Then the traces are not clear.
    There are soldiers with the name Richter who fled the Russians from the Baltics.
    I would really appreciate if anyone could help me find out more.

    • @ottosaxo
      @ottosaxo Год назад +5

      The Thirty Years War was the first great mixer of the European nations. Half of Germany was occupied by Swedish troops around 1650, though vast parts were devastated and almost depopulated. Following the retreating troops to Sweden wouldn't have been a bad choice. Some parts of the country had even been annexed by Sweden, their citizens became subjects of the Swedish kingdom.

  • @Beatles5
    @Beatles5 Год назад +1

    8:03 Detta är Sverige. Vi borde avnazifiera Finland & Baltikum! (för att använda Putins narrativ) 😁

  • @user-sw5wn8go3k
    @user-sw5wn8go3k 7 лет назад +8

    subtitles in swedish maybe?

    • @EmilForsberg_GRYBO
      @EmilForsberg_GRYBO 5 лет назад +3

      There are subtitels in both english and Swedish. You just have to turn them on

  • @scandinavianmapping5916
    @scandinavianmapping5916 Год назад +1

    gillar svensk histora

  • @ETA555
    @ETA555 Год назад +2

    Landsgränsen hade en annan betydelse före EU´s existens.

  • @marcelhalza6916
    @marcelhalza6916 Год назад +4

    Hi. I actually don't understand the language, but as a slovak speaker, the word ,,sveriges,, catched my eyes. It is wery similar to SEVER whitch means north (eng). SVERNIK could be translated as : Northerner. This is also in other slavic languages.

    • @alfatejpblind6498
      @alfatejpblind6498 Год назад +1

      According to Wiktionary, север is etymologically related to the english word "shower". Interesting.

    • @Brakvash
      @Brakvash Год назад

      If I remember correctly, Sverige is actually the danish translation (In danish Sve/Svea = Swede, Rige = Kingdom) for the older Swedish name of Sweden "Svea Rike" (Swede/Svea Kingdom). That danish name for Sweden is still used by swedes as the name of their country. It's quite ironic how our biggest rivals, the danes, gave us the name of our country, and that it stuck :D

    • @marcelhalza6916
      @marcelhalza6916 Год назад

      @@Brakvash Thanks. And what does SVEA mean ? RIGE mean Empire ? Thats great. IT is simmilar to "Ríša" which has the samé meaning.

    • @SwedishDrunkard5963
      @SwedishDrunkard5963 Год назад

      ​​​@@marcelhalza6916Svea is the name of the area where Svearna lived sweden is the kingdom of svearna, sweden is "Svearnas Rike" which after a while became "Sverige".
      Svearna is the name of the people who lived in modern day southern sweden

    • @marcelhalza6916
      @marcelhalza6916 Год назад

      @@SwedishDrunkard5963 Alright, but how did that area got its name. Why it is called Svea ? Land got the name from people and people got the name from the same Land?

  • @BerntGranbacke
    @BerntGranbacke Год назад +1

    1150... Samer... Och de som var den härskande klassen: Kvänerna, som också var här innan nomadfolket Samer.

  • @AndersGetherSoerensen
    @AndersGetherSoerensen Год назад

    You do not take into account that after the Danish/German war in 1864, when Denmark lost the entire land area from Kolding down to Hamburg, there were negotiations between Germany and Sweden about dividing the remains of Denmark between them. Sweden was to get Zealand and Funen as well as Bornholm, and Germany was to have Jutland.
    The argument was that Denmark had become too small an independent state.
    It didn't come to fruition due to protests from e.g. Russia that did not want Sweden to control entry to the Baltic Sea.
    Denmark then got a piece of land back after World War 1 in a referendum which Hitler accepted.

    • @jatojo
      @jatojo Год назад

      There seems to be quite a lot of misunderstandings in what you’re saying here

  • @mikehawk7857
    @mikehawk7857 Год назад +1

    Bra video

  • @bofink5377
    @bofink5377 2 года назад +6

    Idag, 20.12.2021, tycks det vara nya bestämmare om var gränserna skall vara, och både Sverige och Finland bör vara på skarpen igen.

  • @skrickerum
    @skrickerum Год назад +1

    ❤❤❤👍

  • @sardoy
    @sardoy 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fram til 1826 vat Karasjok og Kautokeino del av Sverige. Riksgrensa gikk på Skoganvarre i Porsanger kommune nord for Karasjok.

  • @Ricedeer
    @Ricedeer 3 года назад

    i got this in my recomended

  • @sovandeprins2663
    @sovandeprins2663 6 лет назад +9

    Gillar att vi bara får hela jävla Norge av Danmark 😂😂😂

    • @luminoustarisma
      @luminoustarisma 6 лет назад +1

      Tekniskt sett fick vi inte Norge. När Norge gjorde sig självständigt gick armen över och tog det. Det finns en anledning varför vi räknar att vårt sista krig utfördes år 1814

    • @fiddibelow
      @fiddibelow Год назад +2

      Norway was struck hard by the black death there was almost no Norwegians left to defend previously conquered terretories thats why it got married into Danmark and why it lost so Much land. There where around 150 000 Norwegians left to rule and defend norway iceland Grenland and the Islands so it fell. Around 300 000 people died from the black death and our royal male Line died in war.

  • @AS-H539
    @AS-H539 Год назад +3

    Svenska landskapsnamnen minner om tiden, då det var flera små kungdömen. Däran ex GotLAND, JämtLAND, SmåLAND, osv.

  • @falsekings-p9z
    @falsekings-p9z Год назад

    Tavasland has been much longer there(1150 year.). Metal decting finds has proved that near Tampere area there has been much population.

  • @fellekillen99
    @fellekillen99 2 года назад +17

    Jag tycker det är dags att vi börjar expandera igen

    • @marias6583
      @marias6583 2 года назад +1

      Varför?

    • @periculosumadversario
      @periculosumadversario Год назад

      Vi kan ju börja med att annektera St. Petersburg och den regionen, sedan Kaliningrad (döpt efter KarlXII). Är säker på att ryssarna förstår & fogar sig, iom att Ukraina & Krim aldrig varit annat än ryskt territorium. "An arm for an arm".

    • @gunn-brittslagochetik2863
      @gunn-brittslagochetik2863 Год назад +1

      @@marias6583 De coolt

    • @alfatejpblind6498
      @alfatejpblind6498 Год назад

      Putin grindset?

  • @WernerRachtman
    @WernerRachtman Год назад +1

    Enkelt men utmärkt.

  • @maonparas
    @maonparas 3 года назад +4

    Nyland🇫🇮