Epic History TV and Kings and Generals are the best. They surpassed Historia Civilis and BazzBattles( I hope they will do to in followers). The later 2 are to lazy
thought I was the only one who noticed what a way to sum it up great voice too. did you ever watch the series " origins" on discovery world I like the voice of the person speaking too making the show live just like this one
the combination of the animation and his epic voice backed by an emphazing background sound track makes it easier to understand than what you would get in class
I'll say it again, using Google maps to show topography really helps you visualize the experience. BTW.... great narration voice. And great animation. Just remember us when the History Channel tries to steal you away
Heck, the advertisement system is just a candy. If you enable the ads, it's actually RUclips that benefits the most. What you receive is very very very miniscule compared to what RUclips gets from parasiting your videos with its ads. Not to mention that RUclips/Google can do anything it pleases to affect your revenue, saying this excuses and that excuses to make it seem legitimate.
Alexander the Great is so epic that he gives the overused term and notion of "epic" a whole new level of meaning. Politicians and Leaders may learn a thing or two from this dude. Awesome.
"Epic" is such a suitable name for this channel. A good idea for a single video could be the battle of the Teutoburg forest. Such a fantastic channel 👏
Great video ! Alexander the Great visited the site of Ancient Troy in 334 B.C., as he embarked on his campaign against the Persian Empire, leading a unified Greek Army (Hellenic League). The visit to Troy held both personal and strategic significance for Alexander. On one hand, it fulfilled his long-held desire to pay tribute to his hero Achilles and connect with the glorious past of Greek mythology. On the other hand, the visit served as a powerful symbolic gesture that showcased his intention to unite the Greek world under his rule and carry on the legacy of the legendary heroes. Upon reaching the Tomb of Achilles, Alexander took a moment to pay his respects and acknowledge the greatness of the legendary warrior. Then, Alexander poured oil over the tomb, a customary practice in ancient Greek funerary rituals, symbolizing purification and sanctification. He also placed garlands of flowers and foliage on the tomb, signifying honor and respect for the deceased. Next, Alexander and Hephaestion sacrificed animals, likely horses, to honor the spirits of Achilles and Patroclus. This ritual was meant to appease the souls of the dead and seek their favor. Finally, Alexander is believed to have organized athletic games at the site, following the ancient Greek tradition of hosting such competitions in memory of deceased heroes. By paying homage to Achilles, Alexander was reinforcing his connection to the heroic past and legitimizing his claim to lead the Greek world. After Troy and his first victory at the battle of the Granicus, while leading a unified Greek Army (Hellenic League) to avenge the Persian invasions in Greece 150 years prior, Alexander the Great sent 300 suits of full Persian armour (to honor the legendary last stand of the 300 Spartans in Thermopylae) to Athens, as a votive offering to Goddess Athena, to be hung on the Acropolis. He ordered an inscription to be fixed over them; “Alexander, son of Philip and all the Greeks, present this offering from the spoils taken from the barbarians inhabiting Asia". A statue group, known as the Granicus Monument, was erected by Alexander in the sanctuary of Zeus at Dion. This consisted of bronze statues by Lysippus, of Alexander with twenty-five of his companions who had died in the initial cavalry charge, all on horseback. Alexander the Great is a sacred, immortal, legendary figure for us Greeks. Mostly for uniting all Greek City States and Kingdoms and spreading the unique Hellenic culture to the edges of the world. The rightful descendant of legendary Achilles. Eternal Hellas 🔥🇬🇷
That last scene was like so cold oh my God how did I do that I spend on something testing okay nevermind that last scene was amazing I loved it like oh my gosh that is amazing it really gave perspective of just how small Alexander's world was compared to the world and he put how big it was for him because Grace feels like a small area and he was practically virtually marching across the world if I love this so much thank you for making this stuff I love it
It still amazes me how ATG pulled that charge off. If the Persians outnumbered them so greatly, how was this achieved? The Cav force mirroring him, would have out numbered ATG. Even if he charged, the Persians would have been right behind him. In addition, ATG would have come under massive arrow/javelin fire upon approach. Like I said...Amazing!!
They already charged and sent in chariots. All the needed to be done was to fall in after their volley. Cavalry was already occupied with the left wing. It’s not about numbers - they ran. It’s the choice to charge. Alexander had nothing to lose. Darius had everything to lose.
This videos are genuinely great and I simply love. I revel in them. They could be used in schools to teach the kids... to show them that history is not boring.
Stunning video, actually The Battle of Gaugamela sometimes called The Battle of Arbella which is modern day of Erbil that i'm from, when i was going to the plains of Erbil in spring i was always thinking about Alexander and his army passing through and fighting in these plains, just incredible!
I wish more youtube history vids cited their book sources or atleast good reads, thanks for the recommendation I'll definitely be checking those out! :)
Wow, really quite fantastic. I have a passion for history and there are so many parts of it i'd love you to cover. I am genuinely excited for you next video. Keep it up! DEUS VULT!
WOW. Cannot appreciate and thank your channel enough - what a wonderful way to learn History: engaging, well-researched, and captivatingly told. You have my deepest gratitude :)
I really like this video thanks for making the part 3 I hope there more videos to come the epic history is one of the best studying and learning in history
"Ruler of the Greek kingdom of Macedonia" Glad more and more historians are starting to underline this. Macedonians being a branch of Greece just as Parisians are a branch of France is a no-brainer for most historians but many people are confused about the modern country calling itself "Macedonia", in an effort to establish a separate identity from their former Yugoslav oppressors. Thank you for giving us credit. -Sincerely, a real Macedonian (Greek), and apologies if this sparks a comment war.
Jab5460 This is the problem when you don't read things properly (and don't listen properly). Parisians are people from Paris who belong to the French nation as Macedonians were members of the Hellenic (or if you prefer the Hellenistic) world.
There are more intricate details to the battles that epic history glosses over, such as the army formation and exact battle tactics of Alexander's army(I'm not blaming them for glossing over it as this series is more of a overview of alexander) Also, it was actually the cavalry that did most of the smashing :)
Alexander kept making the other generals (and king) rout from the battlefield, which would be insanely demoralizing to a force of conscripted peasants, especially when they were up against Alexander's elite forces of hardened war veterans.
Alexander's influence was such that +2000 years later there are still clear remnants of the Greek culture he spread in Egypt and the Middle East. Even up to Western India.
I love that you're working with Invicta he is like so cool you know like he is a really good RUclipsr and I like really like him and like oh my God yeah. Please thank you thank you Google
When Alexander arrived in Israel, he met Shimon The righteous, who was the head of the Jewish people at that time. When Alexander saw Shimon approaching, he got off his chariot and bowed down to Shimon. His commanders asked him how such a king can bow to a Jew. He told them before each battle he was shown a vision of a very holy man dressed in the special garments of the Kohen Gadol promising him victory. He thought it was an angel in the vision but when he saw Shimon the righteous , he immediately recognized he was the one in all his visions. Because of that, Israel was not plundered or harmed in any way.
Yeah just think back to what happened when Lyndon Johnson tried to micromanage Vietnam or when Hitler and Stalin each tried to micromanage their own war efforts. They All ended up hurting their countries war efforts more than they helped. Plus in Hitler and LBJ's cases, their micromanagement helped ensure or accelerate their nations losing of the war.
Well, even if they had knowledge about the operational level of war, strategy, logistics, and tactics, none of that would be useful if they were up on the front. If Alexander the Great was born today, I highly doubt he would choose to do so in our day and age if he were up to speed on everything. I'll elaborate below in more detail. Keep in mind, what I'll be saying barely scratches the surface of why this is just sheer foolishness. I will only really be delineating more on what the other two have said above me. From the mid-19th century and onward, leading from the front as a leader in front of a large unit like a division is not only foolish but actually selfish if you choose to do so in this day and age. You would be pretty much considered to be on the level of being like Lucius Aurelius Commodus in terms of brazen stupidity and ego. What benefit would the unit gain besides trying to prove how brave you are. You will die rather quickly since you will most likely be the primary target of enemy indirect fire via mortars, howitzers, airstrikes, or even drone strikes. If you do survive, you will fail to plan or coordinate, as you're far too busy trying to fend off the enemy instead of doing your job. The range of what a standard rifle can fire is pretty much similar to what a CANNON could back then. GG, man, GG. That's not even considering the noise factor. If they are that close to you, vocal communication is practically impossible. Coordination is going to be hellish for no good reason. In the end, you will die quite easily without much cost to the enemy, and the next leader up will also soon follow the same fate if he has to do the exact same thing as you. This will be an immense drain on the pool of experience and quality of leadership, much like what the Wehrmacht suffered to a severe extent during Operation Bagration, hell even beforehand. Being assigned leadership isn't an honor at that point. It's suicide! It's just like the reason why snipers aim for the fellows in the front: the psychological effect is immense. Leaders would drop like flies, and even if they didn't, they would fail to coordinate and communicate well considering the nature of warfare revolves not around singular, decisive battles but fronts and theaters. It's part of the reason why "operational warfare is largely war on a map". Knowing the big picture is crucial, and you won't get that at the front. All in all, it's a waste of resources for absolutely no gain.
Washington was the only US president to lead troops into battle, during the Whiskey Rebellion, though the rebels ran away after seeing Washington's Army, so no actual fighting happened. I'll add on to what Godzilla52 said, some past presidents have been thoroughly involved in the war effort.
Yeah imagine being at the helm of 40,000 men and getting ready to charge straight into another line of 120,000 in front of you. Ancient warfare was truly a whole different ball game that's for sure.
Leading armies and dying in battle was actually preferable to ancient leaders I'm sure, since the alternative was assassination or dying of sickness since very few people made it to old age. Honestly though, wars are too complicated and gigantic now to be led by the president or another elected official, leave it to the guys who actually know what they're doing rather than pointlessly trying to win glory for yourself.
I hope that you move to a more frequent schedule. Great start to my day!
Great to know you watch Epic History too! Another great start to my day as well as your videos!
I love history and would probably watch any historical content. The fact that Epic's content is so good makes it so much better. :-)
Epic History TV and Kings and Generals are the best. They surpassed Historia Civilis and BazzBattles( I hope they will do to in followers). The later 2 are to lazy
Indeed, and thank you for your videos as well! Respects to you and Epic for amazing animations and frequent uploading at a scheduled base.
it is 11 pm for me,, great to end the day
Alexander himself would be proud of this video
V. Athanasiou *proud of this video
+avinash katiki Fixed!
Game james of course he was greek, the slavs barely had any people in Greece and Macedonia
Ya. The cover up still maintained.
Do the slavs consider him slavic? That makes no sense. By all accounts, he had Greek lineage.
The ending where it zooms out of the map of the world with the great soundtrack and commentary was spectacular! Well done !
SaracenCount
thought I was the only one who noticed what a way to sum it up great voice too. did you ever watch the series " origins" on discovery world I like the voice of the person speaking too making the show live just like this one
the combination of the animation and his epic voice backed by an emphazing background sound track makes it easier to understand than what you would get in class
Gave the me chills. Masterfully done.
Alexander....the only General to conquer a major faction with just one stack.
patrick O'flannigan lol
He put a veteran in the army and left it there for a few years to make sure it had 3 gold chevrons.
patrick O'flannigan um you can conquer the SPQR faction with one stack
Not General... king.
*Heraclius: “Hold my wine…”*
this channel truly stands to the "epic" word
I'll say it again, using Google maps to show topography really helps you visualize the experience. BTW.... great narration voice. And great animation. Just remember us when the History Channel tries to steal you away
The music during the Battle of Gaugamela was so awesome.
At the end when you see how much territory he conquered you can't help get chills
Love this Series so Great!!!!!!!!!!!!!
One channel I don’t press the skip option when an advertisement pops.
Heck, the advertisement system is just a candy. If you enable the ads, it's actually RUclips that benefits the most. What you receive is very very very miniscule compared to what RUclips gets from parasiting your videos with its ads. Not to mention that RUclips/Google can do anything it pleases to affect your revenue, saying this excuses and that excuses to make it seem legitimate.
Love the animations
They're from Rome Total War 2
It was made by Invicta. He has made several 'historical' videos on his own; very good quality stuff
was the ' historical' really nessacary? he makes some great stuff
They're from Rome 2 Total War on extreme unit texture quality
Jan Sanono animations are only thing this channel has going for it! Lack of actually history and content!
Alexander the Great is so epic that he gives the overused term and notion of "epic" a whole new level of meaning. Politicians and Leaders may learn a thing or two from this dude. Awesome.
Thank you for great work
How the hell was this posted 5 days ago?
patreon
The Roasting Toaster Back to the future 4
Mikeharuki time travel?
Yea, Patreons can travel in time!
"Epic" is such a suitable name for this channel. A good idea for a single video could be the battle of the Teutoburg forest. Such a fantastic channel 👏
Gaugamela is seriously up there with the most decisive and titanic clashed in human history.
Truly, an Epic battle of History.
Great video ! Alexander the Great visited the site of Ancient Troy in 334 B.C., as he embarked on his campaign against the Persian Empire, leading a unified Greek Army (Hellenic League).
The visit to Troy held both personal and strategic significance for Alexander. On one hand, it fulfilled his long-held desire to pay tribute to his hero Achilles and connect with the glorious past of Greek mythology.
On the other hand, the visit served as a powerful symbolic gesture that showcased his intention to unite the Greek world under his rule and carry on the legacy of the legendary heroes.
Upon reaching the Tomb of Achilles, Alexander took a moment to pay his respects and acknowledge the greatness of the legendary warrior.
Then, Alexander poured oil over the tomb, a customary practice in ancient Greek funerary rituals, symbolizing purification and sanctification.
He also placed garlands of flowers and foliage on the tomb, signifying honor and respect for the deceased.
Next, Alexander and Hephaestion sacrificed animals, likely horses, to honor the spirits of Achilles and Patroclus. This ritual was meant to appease the souls of the dead and seek their favor.
Finally, Alexander is believed to have organized athletic games at the site, following the ancient Greek tradition of hosting such competitions in memory of deceased heroes.
By paying homage to Achilles, Alexander was reinforcing his connection to the heroic past and legitimizing his claim to lead the Greek world.
After Troy and his first victory at the battle of the Granicus, while leading a unified Greek Army (Hellenic League) to avenge the Persian invasions in Greece 150 years prior, Alexander the Great sent 300 suits of full Persian armour (to honor the legendary last stand of the 300 Spartans in Thermopylae) to Athens, as a votive offering to Goddess Athena, to be hung on the Acropolis.
He ordered an inscription to be fixed over them; “Alexander, son of Philip and all the Greeks, present this offering from the spoils taken from the barbarians inhabiting Asia".
A statue group, known as the Granicus Monument, was erected by Alexander in the sanctuary of Zeus at Dion. This consisted of bronze statues by Lysippus, of Alexander with twenty-five of his companions who had died in the initial cavalry charge, all on horseback.
Alexander the Great is a sacred, immortal, legendary figure for us Greeks. Mostly for uniting all Greek City States and Kingdoms and spreading the unique Hellenic culture to the edges of the world. The rightful descendant of legendary Achilles.
Eternal Hellas 🔥🇬🇷
That last scene was like so cold oh my God how did I do that I spend on something testing okay nevermind that last scene was amazing I loved it like oh my gosh that is amazing it really gave perspective of just how small Alexander's world was compared to the world and he put how big it was for him because Grace feels like a small area and he was practically virtually marching across the world if I love this so much thank you for making this stuff I love it
I don't know how many times that I have watched this video in the past 6 years. Your excellent work will never get old. Thank you so much.
Wished it was frequent uploading, very educational! tysm
I always get this childish excitement when I see a new video was posted from you guys! Thanks for the great content!
Incredibly well done series! Would love to see a similar one on Pyrrhus of Epirus.
It still amazes me how ATG pulled that charge off. If the Persians outnumbered them so greatly, how was this achieved? The Cav force mirroring him, would have out numbered ATG. Even if he charged, the Persians would have been right behind him. In addition, ATG would have come under massive arrow/javelin fire upon approach. Like I said...Amazing!!
100 percent
They already charged and sent in chariots. All the needed to be done was to fall in after their volley. Cavalry was already occupied with the left wing. It’s not about numbers - they ran. It’s the choice to charge. Alexander had nothing to lose. Darius had everything to lose.
This videos are genuinely great and I simply love. I revel in them. They could be used in schools to teach the kids... to show them that history is not boring.
"-In the small Greek Kingdom of Macedonia" Thank you for sticking to the truth that historians and facts agree on!
I studied ancient history and i love these videos very much. They would have helped me greatly during finals season. :-)
More please, the only videos I like right away without watching the whole thing.
A new standard for this kind off videos has been set!
Absolutely awesome!!! Have watched this 4 times now. You guys have done an amazing job bringing the ancient world to life.
These videos are so superbly done! Make more of them. These about Alexander the great are very well done.
Stunning video, actually The Battle of Gaugamela sometimes called The Battle of Arbella which is modern day of Erbil that i'm from, when i was going to the plains of Erbil in spring i was always thinking about Alexander and his army passing through and fighting in these plains, just incredible!
I wish more youtube history vids cited their book sources or atleast good reads, thanks for the recommendation I'll definitely be checking those out! :)
+Omnisciency The five main sources for Alexander the Great are Arrian, Plutarch, Diodorus, Curtius and Justin
Thank you BRO, I can't find words to convey my feelings so simply THANK YOU.
Wow, really quite fantastic. I have a passion for history and there are so many parts of it i'd love you to cover. I am genuinely excited for you next video. Keep it up! DEUS VULT!
Splendid! Marvellous! Amazing! This is by far one of the best channels on RUclips.
This is the best channel on RUclips keep up the amazing work thank you epichistorytv
You really did this justice. Love the icons for the different military units each side had, and the bit about the Persian Gates.
Wow, these videos are amazing! Keep up the great work. Once you finish Alexander the Great, you should do Julius Caesar and/or Napoleon Bonaparte.
Great use of music during the battle.
Right as Fields of Glory 2 is released ...this series has had me jacked to play. Love Epic History TV
WOW. Cannot appreciate and thank your channel enough - what a wonderful way to learn History: engaging, well-researched, and captivatingly told. You have my deepest gratitude :)
I really like this video thanks for making the part 3 I hope there more videos to come the epic history is one of the best studying and learning in history
The voice is too epic too handle
Really Epic, but I'm a little disappointed you didn't do a separate episode for the Persian gates it was our Thermopylae it deserves more recognition.
I love this series keep it coming with part 4. I may have to dedicate my life to watching this channel
"Ruler of the Greek kingdom of Macedonia" Glad more and more historians are starting to underline this.
Macedonians being a branch of Greece just as Parisians are a branch of France is a no-brainer for most historians but many people are confused about the modern country calling itself "Macedonia", in an effort to establish a separate identity from their former Yugoslav oppressors. Thank you for giving us credit.
-Sincerely, a real Macedonian (Greek), and apologies if this sparks a comment war.
lazaros zissis ✌️🇬🇷
how the hell are the Persians a branch of France? Also the Macedonians of that time were not Greeks
john bowers Think he meant the French population who live in Paris (Parisians)
Jab5460 This is the problem when you don't read things properly (and don't listen properly). Parisians are people from Paris who belong to the French nation as Macedonians were members of the Hellenic (or if you prefer the Hellenistic) world.
+Jab5460 They were chinese
How the hell do you not have more subs? This was beautiful, I almost died when you did that zoom-in into The Persian gate's topography
part 4 is coming right?this lesson was awesome
I love how most of these battles seem to have been won because Darius chose to run away.
Christ that dude had no balls whatsoever :)
WTF? Every battle is basically like "Alexander smashed the center with his Sarissa infantry and everyone ran away"
To be fair he charged headfirst with his companion calvary several times. It's amazing he didn't die any of those times.
A small tweak like doubling lengths of pikes virtually made him undefeatable it seems. such innovation, much wow.
Well, that's literally what happened lmao.
There are more intricate details to the battles that epic history glosses over, such as the army formation and exact battle tactics of Alexander's army(I'm not blaming them for glossing over it as this series is more of a overview of alexander)
Also, it was actually the cavalry that did most of the smashing :)
Alexander kept making the other generals (and king) rout from the battlefield, which would be insanely demoralizing to a force of conscripted peasants, especially when they were up against Alexander's elite forces of hardened war veterans.
This is the best channel on YT. Thank you for your videos!
Your contents are simply marvelous! Great, great work! Thank you for all the efforts!
Great video, great commentator. Great series of Alexander
Darius is a true friend of Alexander. Without his running skill, Alexander would be in much difficult situations
What a good time to spend my late night dinner !
Your work is just awesome.
All your videos are extremely well-made with wow animations.
Thank you.
Awesome work...but thirst for more is not settled...we want more and more frequent.
Alexander's influence was such that +2000 years later there are still clear remnants of the Greek culture he spread in Egypt and the Middle East. Even up to Western India.
All your videos are epic! Thank you!
Thanks very much for this video
Thanks for uploading so frequently!
Priceless work . Loves it.
Alexander was amazing as always
I love that you're working with Invicta he is like so cool you know like he is a really good RUclipsr and I like really like him and like oh my God yeah. Please thank you thank you Google
ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, the Greatest of all "Greats"!
love the drums and horns in 2:25
This channel is so awesome, top notch quality! You deserve more views.
Keep the videos flowing mate! Love the Alexander series :)
Brilliant as always. Keep up the great work.
I wait a long time for this to come!! Love this channel.... hopefully u will start doing this daily
Ha, not until there's about twenty of me!
😂😂 I understand That this is a very hard thing to do...but Greta effort and awesome vids
These videos are so fascinating to watch
Liked it before watching it because i know its going to be Epic
When Alexander arrived in Israel, he met Shimon The righteous, who was the head of the Jewish people at that time. When Alexander saw Shimon approaching, he got off his chariot and bowed down to Shimon. His commanders asked him how such a king can bow to a Jew. He told them before each battle he was shown a vision of a very holy man dressed in the special garments of the Kohen Gadol promising him victory. He thought it was an angel in the vision but when he saw Shimon the righteous , he immediately recognized he was the one in all his visions. Because of that, Israel was not plundered or harmed in any way.
lol imagine generals, kings or heads of states now leading the battle head on just like before, and not stationed at the back
Yeah just think back to what happened when Lyndon Johnson tried to micromanage Vietnam or when Hitler and Stalin each tried to micromanage their own war efforts. They All ended up hurting their countries war efforts more than they helped. Plus in Hitler and LBJ's cases, their micromanagement helped ensure or accelerate their nations losing of the war.
Well, even if they had knowledge about the operational level of war, strategy, logistics, and tactics, none of that would be useful if they were up on the front. If Alexander the Great was born today, I highly doubt he would choose to do so in our day and age if he were up to speed on everything. I'll elaborate below in more detail. Keep in mind, what I'll be saying barely scratches the surface of why this is just sheer foolishness. I will only really be delineating more on what the other two have said above me.
From the mid-19th century and onward, leading from the front as a leader in front of a large unit like a division is not only foolish but actually selfish if you choose to do so in this day and age. You would be pretty much considered to be on the level of being like Lucius Aurelius Commodus in terms of brazen stupidity and ego. What benefit would the unit gain besides trying to prove how brave you are. You will die rather quickly since you will most likely be the primary target of enemy indirect fire via mortars, howitzers, airstrikes, or even drone strikes. If you do survive, you will fail to plan or coordinate, as you're far too busy trying to fend off the enemy instead of doing your job. The range of what a standard rifle can fire is pretty much similar to what a CANNON could back then. GG, man, GG. That's not even considering the noise factor. If they are that close to you, vocal communication is practically impossible. Coordination is going to be hellish for no good reason.
In the end, you will die quite easily without much cost to the enemy, and the next leader up will also soon follow the same fate if he has to do the exact same thing as you. This will be an immense drain on the pool of experience and quality of leadership, much like what the Wehrmacht suffered to a severe extent during Operation Bagration, hell even beforehand. Being assigned leadership isn't an honor at that point. It's suicide! It's just like the reason why snipers aim for the fellows in the front: the psychological effect is immense. Leaders would drop like flies, and even if they didn't, they would fail to coordinate and communicate well considering the nature of warfare revolves not around singular, decisive battles but fronts and theaters. It's part of the reason why "operational warfare is largely war on a map". Knowing the big picture is crucial, and you won't get that at the front. All in all, it's a waste of resources for absolutely no gain.
Washington was the only US president to lead troops into battle, during the Whiskey Rebellion, though the rebels ran away after seeing Washington's Army, so no actual fighting happened. I'll add on to what Godzilla52 said, some past presidents have been thoroughly involved in the war effort.
Yeah imagine being at the helm of 40,000 men and getting ready to charge straight into another line of 120,000 in front of you. Ancient warfare was truly a whole different ball game that's for sure.
Leading armies and dying in battle was actually preferable to ancient leaders I'm sure, since the alternative was assassination or dying of sickness since very few people made it to old age. Honestly though, wars are too complicated and gigantic now to be led by the president or another elected official, leave it to the guys who actually know what they're doing rather than pointlessly trying to win glory for yourself.
Hype for part 4.
love it guys I mean damn right what an inspirational story loved all the content....
It's always a thrill to watch your videos :D Keep up the good work :3
Alexander’s tactics being outnumbered is more superior than napoleons
jesus i could watch this all day
As students of history, we shouldn’t say this to a teacher but:
A+++ to you and your team. Just AMAZING!
I love the TW animations
I love this series I’m glad your uploading again
OMG
Really the best one
Loved it !👍👍
Another great part looking forward to the next one.
YEEEEEEEEEESSSS!!!!!! ANOTHER MASTERPIECE ❤❤❤❤
YOU... are... just... AWESOME!
The videos from alexander total war are great
Another fabulous video!
Wonderful as always.
Very nice work , i cant wait for part 4 :D
Awesome story telling and great work, keep it up!!
I look forward to your videos the most.
Awesome! Thank you!!
Amazing videos, just wish you would upload more :)
The best video yet!
Great work EHTV sad that your channel is underrated
Superb as always. Love this channel
Yes! I was wondering if there would be a part 3 to this.
The best channel on youtube! Keep it up!
that was truly epic history tv