Thank you for watching! As you may have noticed, some details unfortunately had to be omitted due to time constraints or for the sake of the overall readability of the map. The video does not include: -The United States' unenforced claims in the South Pacific and the Caribbean, as well as the Anglo-American Condominium of the Canton and Enderbury Islands (1939-1979); -Minute changes in state and territorial borders; -Anti-Confederate uprisings during the Civil War, with the exception of Jones County; -And Native American reservations. Furthermore, the Indigenous tribal borders shown in this video should be taken with a grain of salt. In reality, territories were often overlapping and much more dynamic than the video suggests. Thank you again! -- 시청해 주셔서 감사합니다! 눈치채셨을지도 모르겠지만, 유감스럽게도 시간 문제 또는 지도의 전체적인 가독성을 위해 일부 세부 사항을 생략해야만 했습니다. 이 영상이 다루지 않는 역사는 다음과 같습니다: -미국이 실제 행정력은 없이 영유권 주장만 한 남태평양과 카리브해의 각종 섬들, 그리고 영국과 공유했던 칸톤, 엔더버리 섬 (1939-1979) -주와 준주의 미세한 경계 조정 -미시시피주 존스군을 제외한 남북전쟁 당시 반(反)남부 반란 -원주민 보호구역 또한 본 영상에 묘사된 원주민 부족들의 영역은 참고 수준으로만 보시기 바랍니다. 실제 원주민 영토는 서로 겹치는 경우가 잦았으며, 영상에 나오는 것보다 훨씬 변화가 많았습니다. 다시 한번 감사드립니다.
Approximately every 80 years (~1:15 minutes in the video) there is a major socio-political event in American history 0:00 Jamestown & Plymouth colonies established (1607-1620) 1:00 King Phillips War (1675-1678) 2:15 American Revolution (1775-1783) 3:08 American Civil War (1861-1865) 4:01 US Involvement in World War II (1941-1945) 4:55 COVID-19 Pandemic (2020-)
Of all American epochs, the last one hurled above the once Herculean effort of America into substantial division. Also, major events are also held within these lapsing phases of major American events, from the colonial wars against the Dutch and the French, to American adventures beyond it’s borders and oceans, the Great War to the Cold Wars, and finally into the attempted supremacy of the lone hyperpower in the global stage, with multipolar rivals and minuscule factions defying the global order set since aftermath of the Second World War
@@bigchonkerraccoon5046 tho yes they are Jamestown and Plymouth to King Philips' War (78-79 years apart, 1607-1675) King Philips' War to American Revolution (~97 years apart, 1678-1775) this one is a stretch American Revolution to American Civil War (79 years apart, 1783-1861) American Civil War to World War 2 (75 years apart, 1865-1941) World War 2 to Covid 19 (70 years apart, 1945-2020)
This is excellent! As an American and history lover, I felt that it was both very accurate and visually appealing. I also really enjoyed the attention to detail with the native tribes still existing despite the political borders made over their lands. Overall, I can really tell that a lot of work went into this and it was a very good video! Great work!
You forget to mention the Hispanic aid (from the Hispanic Monarchy of Carlos III) and the Dutch aid. Hispanic help was just as crucial as that of France when it came to winning the war, since it had a direct frontier with the Thirteen Colonies.
I’d honestly be curious how much help they were. I would imagine the French would be, as they had just lost everything in the French and Indian War. That said, I know our school system is dastardly in portraying Republics as superior, and hence up-play our relationship with France (now a Republic) and not with a Kingdom such as Spain or the Netherlands. I always emphasize that European Republics are far worse than American ones. Our three branch government system was inspired by the monarchy (President), the Roman Republic (Senate), the British Parliament (House), and the Catholic Church (Court). European Republicans are revolutionary in the worst ways
@@JuandeMariana1994el rey de España no quiso apoyar a los rebeldes al principio porque a él no le gustaba la idea de una colonia independizada de su país, pero 3 años después el lo vio como una oportunidad para darle un golpe bajo al imperio inglés y decidió fundar la rebelión Americana mandando $3 millones pesos ( El equivalente de $3 trillones hoy en día) Inglaterra estaba dispuesto a terminar la guerra temprano si España estuviera dispuesto a intercambiar Puerto Rico por Gibraltar pero el Rey Hispano no lo vio un negocio y la guerra continúo hasta 1783. Años después el terror del Rey se hizo realidad...las Américas se estaban independizando de sus países centrales, España terminó perdiendo un gran terreno Americano quedándose con Cuba, Puerto Rico, Filipinas y Guam ( Los últimos 4 pilares del Imperio Español) en la guerra Hispano Américana perdió sus últimas posesiónes a Estados Unidos...la nación en la cual gastaron $3 millones ($3 trillones hoy) para que se independizaran.
Hi, I'm Saul Goodman. Did you know that you have rights? The Constitution says you do, and so do I. I believe that until proven guilty, every man, woman and child in this country is innocent. And that's why I fight for you, my fellow citizens. Happy 4th of July! *Better call Saul!*
One small mistake, Richard Cromwell was deposed in 1659, not in 1660. Other than that, this is the best map animation about the United States on RUclips.
this is really good! in the perfect world i’d love a version of this that’s super detailed and includes native reservations, but that’s even harder to make
Oh my, that is detailed! Incredible job! It would’ve been cooler to show off the guano islands expansion, but I love what you did with the Pacific Trust territory! Maybe one day you can do a map of the pacific and Australia, that region is super underrated. America used to own a lot more then we think!
He didn't even show all of our historic territories here. We also controlled Palau, Micronesia, the Marshall Islands (these three got independence in the 1980s under agreements they made with Carter and Reagan) and the outer islands of Japan after 1945. The US Pacific Empire was absolutely HUGE in decades past. We essentially redrew the map of that whole region.
@@thunderbird1921 I can agree there. He DID show the Pacific Trust Territory, just not very well. Also a shame the Guano Islands were not shown, either. We claimed everything from Kiribati to Marcus Island, Japan
nice video, especially like the effort to try and put in the Indian territories. And it was nice you showed some Canada & Mexico during the wars (but not Spain nor WWI or WWII?). However, some weaknesses IMHO. 1. I would have started a century earlier with Spain and Frances struggle over the Carolinas and Florida. I probably would add in the various failed 3+ English colonies. 2. You show bias, by pretty much based the US on what England did, ignoring Spain/Mexico, France, Scotland, Holland, Sweden and their legacy. Well, you did have a little unlabeled yellow territory for later Spanish and French east coast only only. 3. While adding in the Indian territory is nice, you made the common mistakes of tribal hard borders, and unchanging areas - except the Iroquois beaver wars. For example the Saux/Fox moved into US from Canada because of Beaver Wars, but you have them already there. The whole Sioux family (Lakota, Ho-chunk, Iowas, Oto, ect.) were moving westward because of both horses and because of push by other tribes, who were pushed by whites. Also the Ho-chunk and other tribes were pushed away from Great Lakes by Iroquois during the Beaver Wars. During this period the Council of 3 fires with Ojibwa/Chippewa, Odowa and Potawatomi were moving up the St. Lawrence.dropping off the Potwatomi and Odowa in E Michigan, while the Ojibwa/Chippewa moved west (with parts dropping off) in Canada finally ending up around Lake-in-the-woods area. You show nothing of this, only the Beaver wars. 4. What about Liberia, US almost colony in Africa? . So, while i applaud the effort, i wish it would have been better.
I agree there are a lot of issues with the native dispositions on the map. The Wyandot are way out of place, the Kaskaskia shouldnt be in southwestern Missouri there, the Miccosukee should be on the Flint River rather than southern Appalachia. I've read that the Fox & Sauk were in the St. Lawrence river valley at some point before migrating to between Saginaw Bay & Detroit at some point and later to Wisconsin because of the Beaver Wars, but not specifically with any dates. Have you read specifically somewhere that they were in Canada rather than Michigan when the video starts at 1607? How far away were the Winnebago pushed from the Great Lakes by the Seneca & all that? Everything I've read is that they had villages between green bay & Lake Winnebago before, during, and for a while after the Beaver Wars but were invaded/crowded into a corner by the Great Lakes Algonquian tribes fleeing the Iroquois.
@@Iaksones Thanks for your reply. The Saux/Sac and Fox/Meskwaki tribes being in St. Lawrence valley is new to me but not a surprise, but i did also had they were around Detroit in Canada, then moved to US side around the beginning of the Beaver Wars or just before. The Beaver Wars pushed the S/F to the south and i believe the later US gov't fought them in Indiana or Illinois, and later in Iowa - not Wisconsin. The map does NOT show the causes of the Beaver Wars well, the English were pretty much out of it for 1st half, it was a 3 way fight where traders of Netherlands, Sweden and France ran a proxy war for beaver skins. Sweden supported the Iroquoian Susquehannock/Conestoga confederation, Netherlands the Iroquoian Haudenosaunee confederation, and the French the Iroquoian Huron confederation. The Susquehannock beat off the Haudenosaunee Mohawks, the Huron did less well against them and had to flee to the French at first. But the Haudenosaunee Seneca side had no guns to oppose them, they destroyed the also Iroquoian Erie confed, the Iroquoian Petun/Tobacco/Tionontati confed, and the Iroquoian Neutral confed around Lake Erie, before they spread over the Great Lakes. But when England captured New Amsterdam(New York) and New Sweden(Delaware & New Jersey), and the French & Hurons beat the Haudenosaunee, the Seneca turned south into Ohio instead of Great Lakes turning it in to a war zone in the 2nd half of Beaver Wars. As far as I know, the Siouxuan Winnebago/Ho-Chunk moved away from the Lake coast only during the first half of the Beaver War, and then moved back. I am not certain when the Siouxuan Iowa tribe split from the Ho-Chunk and moved into Iowa state area, it may have been earlier or caused by Beaver Wars. My $0.05 worth
America started with the english colonists. If there were no English colonists the US wouldn't exist. So it doesn't make any sense to start the video with the Spanish in Florida just because they had a fort in Florida
Реально классное видео, смотрел не отрываясь) большая работа проделана, потрясающе вышло))) Интересно, откуда взяты столь подробные границы индейских племён?)
As an American, the tribes did not have borders in the sense we did. A lot of them were hunter-gatherers so they just usually hung out around the same areas. But it does really come down to the tribe. In the South West, the Pueblo, kinda just sat around their villages. While the Apache and Comanche lived off of raiding other peoples. Edit: I should also mention that my info may not be 100% correct. For some reason, they don’t really teach about the Indian Tribes all that much in the state I grew up in. They only taught about one because they were a local tribe. Most of this information is gone independently gathering info about these guys.
This video is honestly stunning. I honestly can’t imagine how much work you put into this. This is honestly the best USA every year video I have ever seen! It’s honestly amazing
2:37 "After... staving off Britain in the War of 1812" an interesting perspective given the United State's declaration of war and the burning of the capital.
It was merely a political war, we were given Louisiana from the French and wanted to be of some use for the French. The US could never have won the war and even if we occupied Canada, we still would've lost due to the might of the Royal Navy at the time. The War of 1812 was driven by stupid southerners (coming from a southerner) who thought that if we got Canada, we could be the next British Empire.
@@_casanova all wars are political Response to: "It was merely a political war, we were given Louisiana from the French and wanted to be of some use for the French. The US could never have won the war and even if we occupied Canada, we still would've lost due to the might of the Royal Navy at the time. The War of 1812 was driven by stupid southerners (coming from a southerner) who thought that if we got Canada, we could be the next British Empire."
@@_casanova yes, political structures were utilized for genocide. Even long before the advent of the national socialists, antisemitism rhetoric was engineered on an institutional basis. The Japanese also claimed to be liberating East Asia from colonial possession and establishing unified coherence in the region, all while murdering countless people. Good on you for informing yourself. Response to: "Yeah man, Nazi Germany really hated the politics of the Jews, that's what happened in WW2 and Japan politically massacred the Chinese."
Very nice video, specially by showing the native "borders" (and portraiting Martin Van Buren at the age when he was president😊). And very nice summary of American history. The only thing I disliked was that the light blue color chosen to represent changing territories was the same of the color of the ocean, giving a weird impression.
This is really well made but it would have been even more interesting if you put in the native reservations. As they are their own body and jurisdiction
Nice job with the video, though I'm confused to why Okinawa wasn't included on here after WWII. Also this video just screams of having just recently taken APUSH :p (high-five fellow Asian-American!)
As an Australian, the history of the United States is quite fascinating to me, and much more than Australian history. You had a violent independence, civil war, colonial power competition and were settled quite a bit earlier. I hope to visit the battlefield of Gettysburg one day and other historical sites.
You have the Occupation of Greenland and Iceland during WW2, and the occupation of Japan, South Korea, and Southern Germany after WW2. But other than that, great video.
This video seems to be made up of slides. Have you considered sharing a link to them so it is easier to see the details of each one without pausing the flow?
The Spanish also helped in the war of independence of the United States under the leadership of Bernardo de Galvez, it seems that the anglos are angry that a Spaniard gave you independence
Totally true. The Spanish unofficially helped the revolutionaries from the beginning. The Spanish Governor of Louisiana, Bernardo de Gálvez blocked the port of New Orleans from the English, allowing the Americans to use it. He also helped, through Oliver Pollock, the revolutionaries with money and supplies. For example, the record in the Spanish National Archive of the supplies delivered by Spain in 1776, before the key battle of Saratoga (1777): 216 cannons, 209 carriages, 27 mortars, 29 saddles, 12,826 bombs, 51,134 bullets, 300 thousand gunpowder, 30,000 rifles with their bayonets, 4,000 stores and 30,000 complete dresses (uniforms). After the declaration of war in 1779, Gálvez invaded and occupied Florida and the Bahamas, signing peace while preparing the invasion of Jamaica. On the other hand, the Spanish navy, under the command of Luis de Córdova y Córdova, captured 52 English ships in the action of August 9, 1780. This logistical blow has remained the largest suffered in history by the Royal Navy, with 1350 sailors captured, 1,357 officers and infantrymen captured and 286 civilians captured. Total: 2943 prisoners, plus the seizure of 80,000 muskets, 294 cannons, 3000 barrels of gunpowder, clothing and equipment for 12 infantry regiments and large quantity of provisions for the Indian and American fleets, 1 million pounds in gold. In 1781 he captured another convoy of 24 ships. This caused the London stock market to crash. George Washington's famous phrase: "Not without Spain."
Great video. Although i noticed some mistakes: william henry harrison was president too in 1841. Died 30 days into his tenure. The independent party is called "the whig party" forgot James A. Garfield. He died 6 months into his term due to assassination.
Each slide is December 31 of that year, which is why he did not include William Henry Harrison and James A. Garfield. Also, John Tyler was expelled from the Whig Party 5 months into his term due to his policy priorities opposing most of the Whig agenda, therefore making him an independent for most of the rest of his term (only affiliating with a political party for a few months in 1844 when he formed his own third party called the National Democrats also known as the Tyler Party or Tyler Democratic Party for that year's election).
3:26 "staving off the British in the war of 1812" The Americans were the aggressors in the war, where they tried to annex Canada. Wouldn't it make more sense to have it be the other way around, the British staving off the Americans
Great video, I just hope that one day the overseas Territories become states of the USA. Though the US officially ceded the Panama Canal Zone to Panama in 1999
good job although nitpicking the mississauga didn't migrate from north of lake huron until the late 17th century and the Iroquois did claim much of the land up to the ottawa.
without any doubt , i just wanna say , the eternal country of world and universe is united states of america , so basically i proud of united states of america and i should proud of it , because i love my country and i will be loyal to it forever , as an american from new york city , from state of new york from united states of america , i just wanna say , long live united states of america , glory to united states of america , victory to united states of america , salute to united states of america .
I think the circumstances surrounding the "election" of 1876 and how it led to the end of occupation and enforcement of the new laws in the south would be something worth having a note about. We are still paying the price for it today, arguably.
An American and a Pole, two nephews! Thank you for the fact that the Americans fought with us against the Bolshevik onslaught in 1920 in the war for the independence of the Republic of Poland.In the end, it was a thank you for the participation of Poles in the war for independence of the United States. Kosciuszko and Pulaski, great heroes of the United States and Poland! 🇵🇱❤️🇺🇸 forever!
@Иосиф Медведев We, Poles, belong to the Latin Civilization, not the Turin one like you.We have nothing to talk about. Americans and Poles are representatives of the Latin civilization.
@@alguemai6636 How? We gave them billions of dollars in financial aid and investments, we helped them join NATO to prevent any more Russian invasions, and we helped them crash the soviets to gain their freedom
Thank you for watching! As you may have noticed, some details unfortunately had to be omitted due to time constraints or for the sake of the overall readability of the map. The video does not include:
-The United States' unenforced claims in the South Pacific and the Caribbean, as well as the Anglo-American Condominium of the Canton and Enderbury Islands (1939-1979);
-Minute changes in state and territorial borders;
-Anti-Confederate uprisings during the Civil War, with the exception of Jones County;
-And Native American reservations.
Furthermore, the Indigenous tribal borders shown in this video should be taken with a grain of salt. In reality, territories were often overlapping and much more dynamic than the video suggests.
Thank you again!
--
시청해 주셔서 감사합니다! 눈치채셨을지도 모르겠지만, 유감스럽게도 시간 문제 또는 지도의 전체적인 가독성을 위해 일부 세부 사항을 생략해야만 했습니다. 이 영상이 다루지 않는 역사는 다음과 같습니다:
-미국이 실제 행정력은 없이 영유권 주장만 한 남태평양과 카리브해의 각종 섬들, 그리고 영국과 공유했던 칸톤, 엔더버리 섬 (1939-1979)
-주와 준주의 미세한 경계 조정
-미시시피주 존스군을 제외한 남북전쟁 당시 반(反)남부 반란
-원주민 보호구역
또한 본 영상에 묘사된 원주민 부족들의 영역은 참고 수준으로만 보시기 바랍니다. 실제 원주민 영토는 서로 겹치는 경우가 잦았으며, 영상에 나오는 것보다 훨씬 변화가 많았습니다.
다시 한번 감사드립니다.
Epic
Also didn't show the Adams Onis Treaty which happened in 1819 until 1821!
@@Minion-my4xz Good catch, but the treaty didn't actually take effect until 1821
No Fil-Am war in the 1900 map frame?
이미 위의 영상에서 본 것만 해도 아메리카 원주민들의 수를 헤아릴 수 없을 정도라서,
저 정도 변화만 하더라도 납득하지 않을 수가 없습니다...
As an American, I’m thoroughly impressed by the level of detail here. Insane. Good job
Approximately every 80 years (~1:15 minutes in the video) there is a major socio-political event in American history
0:00 Jamestown & Plymouth colonies established (1607-1620)
1:00 King Phillips War (1675-1678)
2:15 American Revolution (1775-1783)
3:08 American Civil War (1861-1865)
4:01 US Involvement in World War II (1941-1945)
4:55 COVID-19 Pandemic (2020-)
Of all American epochs, the last one hurled above the once Herculean effort of America into substantial division.
Also, major events are also held within these lapsing phases of major American events, from the colonial wars against the Dutch and the French, to American adventures beyond it’s borders and oceans, the Great War to the Cold Wars, and finally into the attempted supremacy of the lone hyperpower in the global stage, with multipolar rivals and minuscule factions defying the global order set since aftermath of the Second World War
None of these are approximately 80 years apart
@@bigchonkerraccoon5046 tho yes they are
Jamestown and Plymouth to King Philips' War (78-79 years apart, 1607-1675)
King Philips' War to American Revolution (~97 years apart, 1678-1775) this one is a stretch
American Revolution to American Civil War (79 years apart, 1783-1861)
American Civil War to World War 2 (75 years apart, 1865-1941)
World War 2 to Covid 19 (70 years apart, 1945-2020)
There were dozens of events more important to US than COVID pandemic
Spanish American War, Great Depression, WWI, housing bubble... There's typically a crisis in the US every 8-12 years.
This is excellent! As an American and history lover, I felt that it was both very accurate and visually appealing. I also really enjoyed the attention to detail with the native tribes still existing despite the political borders made over their lands. Overall, I can really tell that a lot of work went into this and it was a very good video! Great work!
My goat legobrian
You forget to mention the Hispanic aid (from the Hispanic Monarchy of Carlos III) and the Dutch aid. Hispanic help was just as crucial as that of France when it came to winning the war, since it had a direct frontier with the Thirteen Colonies.
I’d honestly be curious how much help they were. I would imagine the French would be, as they had just lost everything in the French and Indian War.
That said, I know our school system is dastardly in portraying Republics as superior, and hence up-play our relationship with France (now a Republic) and not with a Kingdom such as Spain or the Netherlands.
I always emphasize that European Republics are far worse than American ones. Our three branch government system was inspired by the monarchy (President), the Roman Republic (Senate), the British Parliament (House), and the Catholic Church (Court). European Republicans are revolutionary in the worst ways
nb care
@@vetabeta9890 Y viendolo en retrospectiva, fue un error apoyarlos.
Bro just discovered alliances
@@JuandeMariana1994el rey de España no quiso apoyar a los rebeldes al principio porque a él no le gustaba la idea de una colonia independizada de su país, pero 3 años después el lo vio como una oportunidad para darle un golpe bajo al imperio inglés y decidió fundar la rebelión Americana mandando $3 millones pesos ( El equivalente de $3 trillones hoy en día) Inglaterra estaba dispuesto a terminar la guerra temprano si España estuviera dispuesto a intercambiar Puerto Rico por Gibraltar pero el Rey Hispano no lo vio un negocio y la guerra continúo hasta 1783. Años después el terror del Rey se hizo realidad...las Américas se estaban independizando de sus países centrales, España terminó perdiendo un gran terreno Americano quedándose con Cuba, Puerto Rico, Filipinas y Guam ( Los últimos 4 pilares del Imperio Español) en la guerra Hispano Américana perdió sus últimas posesiónes a Estados Unidos...la nación en la cual gastaron $3 millones ($3 trillones hoy) para que se independizaran.
Hi, I'm Saul Goodman. Did you know that you have rights? The Constitution says you do, and so do I. I believe that until proven guilty, every man, woman and child in this country is innocent. And that's why I fight for you, my fellow citizens. Happy 4th of July!
*Better call Saul!*
And a Happy Glorious Fourth upon you too, my good man Saul
One small mistake, Richard Cromwell was deposed in 1659, not in 1660. Other than that, this is the best map animation about the United States on RUclips.
this is really good! in the perfect world i’d love a version of this that’s super detailed and includes native reservations, but that’s even harder to make
Oh my, that is detailed! Incredible job! It would’ve been cooler to show off the guano islands expansion, but I love what you did with the Pacific Trust territory! Maybe one day you can do a map of the pacific and Australia, that region is super underrated. America used to own a lot more then we think!
Ajw! Nice to see you here!
Hafa Adai
He didn't even show all of our historic territories here. We also controlled Palau, Micronesia, the Marshall Islands (these three got independence in the 1980s under agreements they made with Carter and Reagan) and the outer islands of Japan after 1945. The US Pacific Empire was absolutely HUGE in decades past. We essentially redrew the map of that whole region.
@@thunderbird1921 I can agree there. He DID show the Pacific Trust Territory, just not very well. Also a shame the Guano Islands were not shown, either. We claimed everything from Kiribati to Marcus Island, Japan
ajwster
As I've said before, you are incredibly underrated. This video is awesome, good job
nice video, especially like the effort to try and put in the Indian territories. And it was nice you showed some Canada & Mexico during the wars (but not Spain nor WWI or WWII?). However, some weaknesses IMHO.
1. I would have started a century earlier with Spain and Frances struggle over the Carolinas and Florida. I probably would add in the various failed 3+ English colonies.
2. You show bias, by pretty much based the US on what England did, ignoring Spain/Mexico, France, Scotland, Holland, Sweden and their legacy. Well, you did have a little unlabeled yellow territory for later Spanish and French east coast only only.
3. While adding in the Indian territory is nice, you made the common mistakes of tribal hard borders, and unchanging areas - except the Iroquois beaver wars. For example the Saux/Fox moved into US from Canada because of Beaver Wars, but you have them already there. The whole Sioux family (Lakota, Ho-chunk, Iowas, Oto, ect.) were moving westward because of both horses and because of push by other tribes, who were pushed by whites. Also the Ho-chunk and other tribes were pushed away from Great Lakes by Iroquois during the Beaver Wars. During this period the Council of 3 fires with Ojibwa/Chippewa, Odowa and Potawatomi were moving up the St. Lawrence.dropping off the Potwatomi and Odowa in E Michigan, while the Ojibwa/Chippewa moved west (with parts dropping off) in Canada finally ending up around Lake-in-the-woods area. You show nothing of this, only the Beaver wars.
4. What about Liberia, US almost colony in Africa?
.
So, while i applaud the effort, i wish it would have been better.
I agree there are a lot of issues with the native dispositions on the map. The Wyandot are way out of place, the Kaskaskia shouldnt be in southwestern Missouri there, the Miccosukee should be on the Flint River rather than southern Appalachia.
I've read that the Fox & Sauk were in the St. Lawrence river valley at some point before migrating to between Saginaw Bay & Detroit at some point and later to Wisconsin because of the Beaver Wars, but not specifically with any dates. Have you read specifically somewhere that they were in Canada rather than Michigan when the video starts at 1607?
How far away were the Winnebago pushed from the Great Lakes by the Seneca & all that? Everything I've read is that they had villages between green bay & Lake Winnebago before, during, and for a while after the Beaver Wars but were invaded/crowded into a corner by the Great Lakes Algonquian tribes fleeing the Iroquois.
@@Iaksones Thanks for your reply.
The Saux/Sac and Fox/Meskwaki tribes being in St. Lawrence valley is new to me but not a surprise, but i did also had they were around Detroit in Canada, then moved to US side around the beginning of the Beaver Wars or just before. The Beaver Wars pushed the S/F to the south and i believe the later US gov't fought them in Indiana or Illinois, and later in Iowa - not Wisconsin.
The map does NOT show the causes of the Beaver Wars well, the English were pretty much out of it for 1st half, it was a 3 way fight where traders of Netherlands, Sweden and France ran a proxy war for beaver skins. Sweden supported the Iroquoian Susquehannock/Conestoga confederation, Netherlands the Iroquoian Haudenosaunee confederation, and the French the Iroquoian Huron confederation. The Susquehannock beat off the Haudenosaunee Mohawks, the Huron did less well against them and had to flee to the French at first. But the Haudenosaunee Seneca side had no guns to oppose them, they destroyed the also Iroquoian Erie confed, the Iroquoian Petun/Tobacco/Tionontati confed, and the Iroquoian Neutral confed around Lake Erie, before they spread over the Great Lakes.
But when England captured New Amsterdam(New York) and New Sweden(Delaware & New Jersey), and the French & Hurons beat the Haudenosaunee, the Seneca turned south into Ohio instead of Great Lakes turning it in to a war zone in the 2nd half of Beaver Wars.
As far as I know, the Siouxuan Winnebago/Ho-Chunk moved away from the Lake coast only during the first half of the Beaver War, and then moved back. I am not certain when the Siouxuan Iowa tribe split from the Ho-Chunk and moved into Iowa state area, it may have been earlier or caused by Beaver Wars.
My $0.05 worth
The American occupation of Southern Germany and Parts of Austria, aswell as the occupation of Japan was not shown
America started with the english colonists. If there were no English colonists the US wouldn't exist. So it doesn't make any sense to start the video with the Spanish in Florida just because they had a fort in Florida
Also Liberia wasn't a colony of the US. It was a country founded by ex black slaves.
Happy 4th of July, my American friends! Congrats from Indonesia.
🇮🇩❤️🇺🇲
Indonesia and USA have bad relations today in governments
Love Indonesia from the US
@@cakeyummy5285 Let's send more American and NATO volunteers to Ukraine to defeat Russian forces in Crimea and Donbas.
@@juanindojorgijanad782 Crimea are Russian territory
@@alguemai6636 Crimea is Ukrainian territory. Glory to Ukraine.
will you be making any language video's in The nearest future?
THAT. WAS. THE.
BEST HISTORY OF USA I HAVE EVER SEEN ON RUclips IN MY LIFE.
Реально классное видео, смотрел не отрываясь) большая работа проделана, потрясающе вышло)))
Интересно, откуда взяты столь подробные границы индейских племён?)
As an American, the tribes did not have borders in the sense we did. A lot of them were hunter-gatherers so they just usually hung out around the same areas. But it does really come down to the tribe. In the South West, the Pueblo, kinda just sat around their villages. While the Apache and Comanche lived off of raiding other peoples.
Edit: I should also mention that my info may not be 100% correct. For some reason, they don’t really teach about the Indian Tribes all that much in the state I grew up in. They only taught about one because they were a local tribe. Most of this information is gone independently gathering info about these guys.
This is some amazing work done! Love the video, very inspirational!
I've never seen a video of this sort show the native states, huge appreciation to that and unbelievable attention to detail.
Great work 👍 🇺🇸
details made this so gold
I can’t wait to see more videos like this in the future! Maybe even a Canadian one. Anyways, great work
This video is honestly stunning. I honestly can’t imagine how much work you put into this. This is honestly the best USA every year video I have ever seen! It’s honestly amazing
This video is absolutely amazing. I love it. Keep up the great work.
This is the best History of the U.S. video I’ve seen on RUclips. Well done.
Absolutely love th attention to states, populational settlement, and actual core territory vs claimed / recognized land
2:37
"After... staving off Britain in the War of 1812"
an interesting perspective given the United State's declaration of war
and the burning of the capital.
It was merely a political war, we were given Louisiana from the French and wanted to be of some use for the French. The US could never have won the war and even if we occupied Canada, we still would've lost due to the might of the Royal Navy at the time.
The War of 1812 was driven by stupid southerners (coming from a southerner) who thought that if we got Canada, we could be the next British Empire.
@@_casanova all wars are political
Response to: "It was merely a political war, we were given Louisiana from the French and wanted to be of some use for the French. The US could never have won the war and even if we occupied Canada, we still would've lost due to the might of the Royal Navy at the time.
The War of 1812 was driven by stupid southerners (coming from a southerner) who thought that if we got Canada, we could be the next British Empire."
@@0MVR_0 Yeah man, Nazi Germany really hated the politics of the Jews, that's what happened in WW2 and Japan politically massacred the Chinese.
@@_casanova yes, political structures were utilized for genocide. Even long before the advent of the national socialists, antisemitism rhetoric was engineered on an institutional basis. The Japanese also claimed to be liberating East Asia from colonial possession and establishing unified coherence in the region, all while murdering countless people. Good on you for informing yourself.
Response to: "Yeah man, Nazi Germany really hated the politics of the Jews, that's what happened in WW2 and Japan politically massacred the Chinese."
Awesome! I like this!
Btw can you make History of Mexico plsss???
Very nice video, specially by showing the native "borders" (and portraiting Martin Van Buren at the age when he was president😊).
And very nice summary of American history.
The only thing I disliked was that the light blue color chosen to represent changing territories was the same of the color of the ocean, giving a weird impression.
I like how William Henry Harrison was in office for so little time in 1841 that it just skipped from Van Buren to Tyler
Because he was president for 31 days
This is really well made but it would have been even more interesting if you put in the native reservations. As they are their own body and jurisdiction
I just liked how the state capital is shown before zoomed out
Nice map, i wish you upload the video about the history of the philippines
Very well done! 👏
Nice job with the video, though I'm confused to why Okinawa wasn't included on here after WWII. Also this video just screams of having just recently taken APUSH :p (high-five fellow Asian-American!)
As an Australian, the history of the United States is quite fascinating to me, and much more than Australian history. You had a violent independence, civil war, colonial power competition and were settled quite a bit earlier. I hope to visit the battlefield of Gettysburg one day and other historical sites.
You forgot to color Greenland and Iceland when they were occupied in ww2
This video is very relatable
'역사가 짧은게 불만이라면 그 짧은 역사를 ㅈㄴ 대단하게 만들면 된다' 의 예시
ㄹㅇㅋㅋ
@@Squidward-un4ov Chinese characters for 'lol' looks like 2077 or 2033 :D
@@fallendown8828 They're not chinese characters
@@avcght7330 oh i am unfamiliar with asian alphabets so can you tell me which one is it? I am curious to know
@@fallendown8828 Korean
You have the Occupation of Greenland and Iceland during WW2, and the occupation of Japan, South Korea, and Southern Germany after WW2. But other than that, great video.
God bless the United States of America and God bless all Americans! 🫡🇺🇸🗽
I love how you displayed the states themselves
I love the details for the native Americans territories. Still waiting for the Sino-Tibetan languages tho.
Hey, would you ever do a video on the Nivkhs people?
3:07 you are a wonderful historiqn. Congratulations
Brilliant!
Amazing
혹시 프로필사진이 뭔가요? 왜 역사룡인가요?
Can't wait.. make it more detailed this time or some new facts
GOD BLESS AMERICA 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
I ❤️ USA 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
This video seems to be made up of slides. Have you considered sharing a link to them so it is easier to see the details of each one without pausing the flow?
Well done 👍
Woah, this is cool. Can I have the map I want to play with it and make some alternate history pictures.
HEY!!
이번영상 정말 좋네요
The Spanish also helped in the war of independence of the United States under the leadership of Bernardo de Galvez, it seems that the anglos are angry that a Spaniard gave you independence
Totally true.
The Spanish unofficially helped the revolutionaries from the beginning.
The Spanish Governor of Louisiana, Bernardo de Gálvez blocked the port of New Orleans from the English, allowing the Americans to use it.
He also helped, through Oliver Pollock, the revolutionaries with money and supplies.
For example, the record in the Spanish National Archive of the supplies delivered by Spain in 1776, before the key battle of Saratoga (1777): 216 cannons, 209 carriages, 27 mortars, 29 saddles, 12,826 bombs, 51,134 bullets, 300 thousand gunpowder, 30,000 rifles with their bayonets, 4,000 stores and 30,000 complete dresses (uniforms).
After the declaration of war in 1779, Gálvez invaded and occupied Florida and the Bahamas, signing peace while preparing the invasion of Jamaica.
On the other hand, the Spanish navy, under the command of Luis de Córdova y Córdova, captured 52 English ships in the action of August 9, 1780.
This logistical blow has remained the largest suffered in history by the Royal Navy, with 1350 sailors captured, 1,357 officers and infantrymen captured and 286 civilians captured.
Total: 2943 prisoners, plus the seizure of 80,000 muskets, 294 cannons, 3000 barrels of gunpowder, clothing and equipment for 12 infantry regiments and large quantity of provisions for the Indian and American fleets, 1 million pounds in gold.
In 1781 he captured another convoy of 24 ships.
This caused the London stock market to crash.
George Washington's famous phrase: "Not without Spain."
Why did you rule out Okinawa and South Korea? These were briefly under American control after the defeat of the Japanese empire.
Okinawa wasn't even briefly either, the US governed it from WW2 until 1972.
"The History of the United States: Every Year" avoids entirely the spanish background. Good lord, these blacklegendy videos are getting so popular...
PHENOMENAL JOB!
whats the font
Caviar Dreams Bold
Great job, although this is not just a history of the United States, it's a history of North America as well. Cheers.
Great video. Although i noticed some mistakes: william henry harrison was president too in 1841. Died 30 days into his tenure. The independent party is called "the whig party" forgot James A. Garfield. He died 6 months into his term due to assassination.
Each slide is December 31 of that year, which is why he did not include William Henry Harrison and James A. Garfield. Also, John Tyler was expelled from the Whig Party 5 months into his term due to his policy priorities opposing most of the Whig agenda, therefore making him an independent for most of the rest of his term (only affiliating with a political party for a few months in 1844 when he formed his own third party called the National Democrats also known as the Tyler Party or Tyler Democratic Party for that year's election).
Gods America is so young.
It’s kind of insane how nearly an entire continent (North America) was completely empty when we colonized the land
"empty"
For real man XDDDD
And the very few people that were there just gave the land for free how kind of them
Alaska: *becomes state*
Every native Americans on Alaska: 😑✌
Beautiful how you presume they must be oppressed just because of their skin color
3:26 "staving off the British in the war of 1812"
The Americans were the aggressors in the war, where they tried to annex Canada. Wouldn't it make more sense to have it be the other way around, the British staving off the Americans
didnt the british steal american seamen?
Eh it’s probably more complicated than both you and the uploader are making it out to be
More like the British for the impressment of American sailors into their navy.
It's not a bad way to put it if only because the US spent a lot of the war on the defensive, despite being the aggressor.
@@oofijaYes, and British were supplying Native Americans with guns to fight settlers, and the US Army.
Great video, I just hope that one day the overseas Territories become states of the USA. Though the US officially ceded the Panama Canal Zone to Panama in 1999
When your sam is named uncle.
good job although nitpicking the mississauga didn't migrate from north of lake huron until the late 17th century and the Iroquois did claim much of the land up to the ottawa.
Bit inaccuracies in the Native American lands but this is pretty good I can’t wait for emperor tigerstars video on this
그야말로 현대의 로마...
adverbay city 1820 to 1832 capital maine
Love it, but one of the ‘tribal outlines’ titled “W. Apache” in southern Arizona actually belongs to the O’odham people
Do Canada please
Dont know how I missed this
Happy 4th
love from Turkey
Turkiye
@@레몬밤자몽 True. I just don't think many folk accept the new name yet.
ÜBERBÜRG
Same
@@레몬밤자몽 Turkia
Someone finally decided to put Vermont 🤩
I think a place in Texas or Texas itself was called Nuevas Filipinas
King James founded the Thirteen Colonies (United States) in 1607
What about your second channel?
Which tribe lived on the territory of modern New York before the arrival of Europeans? Lenape or Susquehannock?
The most productive, wealthy and powerful country in the world.
USA USA USA !
without any doubt , i just wanna say , the eternal country of world and universe is united states of america , so basically i proud of united states of america and i should proud of it , because i love my country and i will be loyal to it forever , as an american from new york city , from state of new york from united states of america , i just wanna say , long live united states of america , glory to united states of america , victory to united states of america , salute to united states of america .
Really fantastic work here, but the natives were not shown well.
I really like your videos, please make next video in India.
I think the circumstances surrounding the "election" of 1876 and how it led to the end of occupation and enforcement of the new laws in the south would be something worth having a note about. We are still paying the price for it today, arguably.
2:02 I love the history of the United states
What about New Netherland 1609-1674? Totally left out?
2:11 so it's actually the first american civil war
Staving britain in war of 1812 you mean after being repelled by britain and failed to attack or conquer the south part of canada they expand west
Long live the United States!
🇵🇱❤️🇺🇸
USA government dislikes Poland
@@alguemai6636 Don't watch Russian TV.
@@Polska_Channel I not, Biden is a liberal democrat and Poland have conservative government
Mendžec Starožitnošci
@@ajthebestguy9th Poland government hate USA
And Colombia?
Democratic-Republican is an anachronistic term because they called themselves republicans rather than the modern term
The republicans also do democracy, just not the kind of the partisan Democrat you’d be expecting
Got to see the death of the frontier in real time... i guess that was that...
One thing, though. Alaska still is the Last Frontier...
Can you do Canada
good
お疲れ様です
The Indians sure did put up a fight but it was ours in the end!
2:36 😯
The strongest empire(actually republic)
there is nothing about the spanish wars for Texas and California
Mexican wars.
as an American indian,i feel ashamed that US history should start in 1607?!😅
USA GOD BLESS AMERICA 🇺🇸
An American and a Pole, two nephews! Thank you for the fact that the Americans fought with us against the Bolshevik onslaught in 1920 in the war for the independence of the Republic of Poland.In the end, it was a thank you for the participation of Poles in the war for independence of the United States. Kosciuszko and Pulaski, great heroes of the United States and Poland!
🇵🇱❤️🇺🇸 forever!
@Иосиф Медведев We, Poles, belong to the Latin Civilization, not the Turin one like you.We have nothing to talk about. Americans and Poles are representatives of the Latin civilization.
@@Polska_Channel USA dislikes Poland
@@Polska_Channel Love Poland from the USA!
@@alguemai6636 How? We gave them billions of dollars in financial aid and investments, we helped them join NATO to prevent any more Russian invasions, and we helped them crash the soviets to gain their freedom