Took the words right out my mouth as I sit here 42 and just finding out that I’m not a African nor American,The only way to learn anything is to teach yourself cause school only taught me Christopher Columbus,discovered Canada,1+1=3and Americans really went on the Jupiter 🤷🏿♂️So aye🤣🤣🤣🤣have a great day on purpose yall ,listen to your self
Ya I have to agree. Like that it’s mostly unbiased and full of information and facts. A lot of them I kind of knew but with your extra information it made my learning better. Thanks.
My grandmother lived in North Korea, 6 months before the war she moved south, and survived the Northern occupation of Seoul. If she hadn't made that decision I probably wouldn't be writing this comment.
Man this video is over an hour long and at the end I still thought 'it's over already?!' Awesome video man. I learned so much that should be talked about way more
lol i watched it too and though it was just another 15min video :D haha i had no idea it was 1 hour long until i red this.. Good videos sure are captivating.
Holy shit, this is such a good overview of Korea. Just as a note, although the government DID invest in the music industry, it did not actively participate in the detailed production and "owned" the process. It kept a "aid but dont get involved" attitude. If it did, imho k-pop would have flopped early on. But other than that, a fantastic video. Kudos mate, keep up the good work! -A S.Korean passing by
I am Korean(from South). Thanks for the quite good history lesson. I am not super professional about the history. But I should say a specific error. 24:23. The name of president by military coup is “Park Jungee”. “Park Keunhae” is his daughter, president 2013-2017, who was finally impeached.
I spent 3 different decades in Korea. One year I lived under Martial Law the entire time, because they shot the South Korean President. His daughter latter became the 1st Female President of South Korea. My final assignment was in the former Japanese War Headquarters in Seoul, Korea. Living in Seoul was my ultimate favorite assignment of all assignments. I would like to thank Chung Hee who became my BFF & guide in Seoul. She went to live in Australia, I returned to the USA. I am a Career Female Soldier and love documentaries. Thank you for this video.
@Bolt92* The prior assignments were not a thrill and being forced to extend or career ending was not a pleasant experience. The ones after me, who were asked to extend to get more money, I did not get that choice or money. It took the worst assignments and interviews to get Seoul. It was not handed to me on a silver platter like most.
Just like it did with Japan when it closed its country, the US also tried doing the same with Korea. In what became known as the General Sherman incident, the General Sherman entered the Taedong with goods purchased from Tientsin in 1866. They stopped at Keupsa Gate where the crew met Koreans. The Koreans refused all trade offers, but told the crew to wait at the gate while higher government officials were contacted. The captain didn't listen, and continued heading up river towards Pyongyang. The ship proceeded to attack anyone who tried to stop it. This was when it was decided to attack the ship. It was finally destroyed after being fought over for several days.
@@FOLIPE But it marked the beginning of the US expedition to Korea (the first American military action in Korea). And an attempt to open Korea to American trade
I wouldn’t even compare what Korea went through with Japan AT ALL LOL cause they were almost entirely different!! Korea can be compared with Vietnam as they are brothers in more ways than arms, but most importantly: they were both split into north and south on the exact same day in 1953, at the exact same Geneva conference and both had communist north sides that were under the Soviet Union, both southern countries had the same alliance with the United States! And of course both have went through very brutal and the most important conflicts of the Cold War. japan was the only country in the Sinosphere that managed to dodge the bullet that was communism while the other three countries (China Vietnam and Korea) all had very different outcomes surprisingly. Korea remained split, China’s democratic half fled to establish Taiwan, while South Vietnam had lost and those residents fled all over the world
A well-presented highly educational crash course on the two Koreas thoughtfully crafted with balanced perspective. I commend you on this impressive undertaking. Will be looking at more of your videos. Subscribed.
Japan did not invade nor colonized Korean peninsula. Korea was so afraid of Russian invasion. So, Korea ASKed Japan to ANNEX the peninsula. It was approved lawfully by the International community. Korea did not fight against Japan. Both Korean countries did not win their independence by themselves.
Excellent video. Especially the south Korean cultural influence. I'm a Greek living in Thessaloniki, Greece's second largest city after Athens. I decided to learn Korean because of kpop and squid game. So I registered in a local private school. I was blown away when they told me the class was full and I would have to wait the formation of another. Let it sink for a minute... Huge demand for Korean lessons in... Greece! And not in Athens.
Very interesting...probably just the beginning of an Asian language learning wave, but I think the young should start learning Mandarin as well for the long-term no matter, if it is relevant now or not... Cheers from Sofia dear Balkan brother! 🍻
Skewed takes on Korea almost feel like propaganda in itself. Not only is this guy spitting stone cold facts, he also remains respectful to the country he culturally dissects.
@@sloshed-rat skewed takes on a hermit kingdom we know little about shouldn't surprise anyone. If people don't understand you it's your fault not theirs.
Hey Kim Jong-Un, if you join South Korea, you get tons of resources from South Korea such as steel and food, more military and troops can be produced!!!
Literally Korea had the same struggle as my homecountry Poland. Always struggling because of stupid neighbors that are pain in the ass for centuries, while the only thing people wanted is living in peace
I actually think Korea was more like Switzerland until the 1800s. Because before that Japan was far too weak (it was historically weaker than Korea) to bother trying to conquer and due to it's geography it would be nearly impossible to fully conquer Korea from China. Even the Mongols took 40 years and 9 separate invasions to create a vassal state and not something completely under their control. However these days it's similar to Poland I agree
It's inevitable considering that both North and South Korea are at least somewhat on board with the idea in principle. The point is when? Next year? Within the next 5 years, 10, 100? It's hard to say.
@@nitusrivastava7803 I think it should but it really is going to have to be difficult and slow. I think that for the meanwhile, they would have to focus on developing the North, then I guess that they should teach them the Seoul accent because it would help them better get the hang of things in South Korea. I also think that there should be laws preventing the exploitation of the Northerners.
Thanks for this I’m currently writing an essay about North & South Korea dividing, I still have a lot more to write but this is extremely helpful thank u!!! :)
Wow, thanks so much for this! It's refreshing to see a more balanced view of both nations, both the good and bad in both. I now have a newfound appreciation for Korea, on either side of the 38th parallel. 😁
Really found this video to demonstrate a lot of in-detail history and how both Koreas fared after the war. Been reading on the history since 2008 and visited South Korea & the DMZ back in the early 2010s, but definitely have picked up some good knowledge from this well-produced and narrated video. Thanks again for sharing!
I probably learned more from this one video than I did in a whole year at school💀. As a foreigner that was introduced to korea through kpop and kdramas it was interesting learning how the sk gov is using the interest for those as a way to make Korea more successful(which is probably why the gov postponed bts from military duty) Also I always wondered how China made almost everything I bought at the store, I guess it makes since now😂
@@abbfilmann3735 eh, that's not always true. I study music, and a lot of online resources that are available for free are just straight up better and more understandable than some of the uni classes I pay a shitload of money for
A U.S. Marine co-worker explained to me that the Korean written language is relatively new and that the letters indicate how the sounds are formed in the mouth. That's why there are so many "O" shapes in their alphabet. I'm curious to know if that is true.
This is true. My ex who is fluent, both in spoken and written korean (their parents are first gen), said the same thing, which was a really helpful thing to hear. Albeit confusing at first.
Thank you for your explanation of the Hallyu wave and its purpose as ‘soft’ power. I had no idea the strategy came from a Samsung think tank! Keep up the great work
Congratulate you on your very unbiased and factual look at North Korean history because as someone who wants to learn more about North Korea, it can be annoying to constantly only hear about it from sources that portray it as if it were 1984 in modern day. Keep up your great videos!
@@aidan8473 The defector’s name is Yeonmi Park and her channel is The Voice of North Korea, not only does she make her own videos but she’s been in so many different interviews and documentaries, she talks about everything from what they ate in NK to how they escaped. It’s all very fascinating.
@@thepoorliltaxi2176 The problem is they're incentivised to come up with ever more outlandish stories to get more interviews. You'd hardly draw a crowd by saying "Well yeah the situation was pretty shit" as compared to "They made us literally eat babies" Also it should be obvious that an escapee from a Nation would have biased opinions. Go ask starving poors what they think of their country. While they're opinions are valid in their own right, I'd hesitate to call it unbiased.
After the korean independence, Japan was going through hard time managing the post-war issues (war compensation, nuclear bombings) But when Korean war broke out, US needed somewhere close to Korea to manufacture military goods and place military troops. Japan was like : yes :) This helped Japan a LOT get rid of post war problems and gain economic power. While both Koreans were killing each other for someting they didnt ask for.
I have to say, this is one of only a handful of videos on RUclips I could keep watching over and over, and still learn something each time. Please make more similar 👍🏻👍🏻
Sorry for the re-upload. The previous version was only available in 360p because of a mistake with Adobe Premiere and I didn't check the video quality. So here is the same video but in HD quality... sorry about that.
General Douglas MacArthur came out with the idea to expand the war into the north with President Truman reluctant approval because of China's response to the expansion of the war Truman's fear was proven correct and china sends its troops to push them back. MacArthur wanted to expand the war into China but was rejected by Truman as he feared it might start ww3 MacArthur predicted that they might drop hundreds of nukes onto china. It didn't happen. After Truman rejected the idea, MacArthur wouldn't take no for an answer, and added insult to injury took it to the press and complained about it, which resulted in Truman firing him for insubordination
I love studying the Asian nations, and this is a wonderful study! Heck, I watch only Asian, primarily Korean dramas. Never watch American, and am actually A Korean, Mandarin & Japanese language student. Your history presentation has been the best I've read, a continuous chronological account of how it has all come about.
The separation of Korea into two rival states is most tragic to those families with relatives on the other side of the border. North Korean defectors often have to make a lengthy detour via other countries to reach South Korea because of how fortified and guarded the DMZ is. 😢
Awesome! Well nuanced analysis. You packed so much content in just an hour. Great to see references in the description as well for further reading. Your story telling style is also refreshing. Kept me in the flow. Thank you for making this.
This was such a great and thoughtfully made video. Thoroughly researched, it appears to be as well! Thank you for making this content. As a Korean growing up in the west, watching this makes me realize some of the freedoms I have now and the many sacrifices my parents have made (by enduring poverty, war, military dictatorships, leaving Korea, building a life elsewhere) for granted. It has been enlightening to say the least.
Such a great video? Do you really think Korea was a puppet state of China? Korea has 5000 years of standalone history and never been a part of China nor its puppet. Joseon Dynasty had its own politics, military power and the law system. Is adopting the government system and learning Confucianism making Korea a “puppet?!” Lmao It is shameful that you didn’t find it biased as a Korean-American..
@@undistortedmeans yes, Korea had their own government and culture, but we were linked to china as a weaker nation. Why do you think we used the Chinese alphabet for more than half our existence?
@@Kunfucious577 I would agree if ‘weaker country’ refers to the Joseon Dynasty, but I would say that linking the usability of Chinese characters in that way is not logical at all…
@@undistortedmeans Dude, WHAt? Korea was a vassal state to China for much of it's existence. It was "allowed" independence in return for women, gold, art, labor, etc. That's one of the reasons Koreans have a natural hatred for China let alone they are communist and preventing reunification... Learn history bro
'Alright, back to depression' 😂😂 dude, not only are you super informative and interesting but funny too! The full package. This video was insanely good - thank you for making it!
This was incredible.. I’ve been to South Korea four times and I wish could have seen this video before going. It helped me understand the culture much better.
Great video man. I was stationed there for a year back in 2010-2011. Loved Korea. South Korea best Korea, but I wish peace and unity for all of the Korean people.
My uncle is part of the Korean military, so when I visited Korea, he took me to one of the military bases next to the DMZ. I remember him specifically telling me not to walk into the woods because there are still hundreds of unexploded land mines that could have killed me.
I think there's like millions of them... I know along the actual DMZ with the fences there are millions. There's probably still millions of mines in the woods. I've heard you can cut the tension with a knife.
Thank you for sharing your perspective on both, South and North Korea, it has been a really interesting journey around history, culture, politics and I gained a thorough overview about many why and wherefore! Keep up the excellent job! 👏👏👏👏👏
This video was informative and also has a particular neutral scope, actually tries to make us understand why North Korea goes this way, instead of depicting it like hell on Earth, home of the devil. Great channel!
Amazing video and filled in a few gaps I had in regards to certain years right after Japanese occupation and the Korean Was and the Korean war and it's efforts for democratisation in the 80s. I really like how neutral your video was in regards to NK and I also really enjoyed how you explain harder concepts in a simple way, e.g. when you explained state capitalism and the subsequent economic models that Korea adopted. Thank you for this! Highly educational and yet still entertaining.
When talking about the history of ancient Korea from a Western perspective, it will be difficult to catch the hidden role of Korea in East Asia. East Asian aesthetics or soft power has always played an important role in Korea. Were the ruling classes of the Mongol Empire or the Qing Empire really Chinese? They respected Korea, and their family tried to find a connection to Korea's origins.
Korean army used to play Kpop songs on DMZ area with huge speaker, so that North Koreans can listen. there are soldiers who actually crossed the boarder to south Korea, because they were influenced by the songs. Now we can't play because North Korea goverment's complaining.
@no, stupid Well it depends on how they unite, if the Korea's are China friendly it would be better for humanity as a whole if they don't unite, if they're Anti-China then no one would bat an eye, hell So many countries suffering due to China would openly help the developmemt of the northern part and help unifed korea be a powerhouse if they were against China, atleast that's what I hope so as anyone sane hates China, and it should be gone, it stirs up so many problems, antagonizes so many people, commits so many crimes against humanity, amd has such treachorus diplomacy, the list goes endless.
Thank you for such an insightful, nuanced and most importantly objective video. I believe history in general is a crucial science and well-made content such as yours is an important resource, especially considering how little of world history gets covered in elementary and high school history courses worldwide.
@@dontfeelcold History IS a scientific discipline. You sound like a pretentious person in STEM lol. Plus English is not my native language and the word 'science' directly corresponds to the word in my language. This is a very odd thing to comment on anyway 😭
@@tomorrowriruI'm not from the STEM fields. My comment was a correction of yours, just as the video had a detail corrected by people in the comments section. There can be scientific methods used to discover and verify history but it is not the whole of history, it is a part. There is nothing inherently scientific about history. To say the two fields are the same is a sign of a gross misunderstanding of the two fields. From the web search I just did, the people who say history is a science seem to be "feelings" type of people, so I completely understand their perspective and why it is false.
I have always been fascinated by the DPRK, not sure why. You taught me many things I did not know with this video. I now have a much better understanding of Korean culture. Thanks so much for the effort. Great work!
The relationship between China and Korea in the past is a different concept from that of modern colonialism. To put it bluntly, it is a formal colony. China could not interfere in Korea's internal affairs. When a king was established in Korea, it was formally informed to China, and China formally accepted it. The only country that truly colonized Korea was the Japanese Empire, which ruled Korea for 35 years from 1910 to 1945.
technically no, Korea was a kingdom under every Chinese Empire, so Korea wasnt only informed China to establish its King, they needed the approval from the Emperor of China, China intervened a few time when the throne of Korea was hijacked by non royal bloodline, under the request of the rightful heir China always imposed sanctions or war. The only different between the Kingdom of Korea and numerous kingdom inside Mainland China was the Empire did not directly assign governance official to Korea
@@limcheating1 That's what happened, as described in the comments. But just because China didn't like Korea's new king doesn't mean they had the power to replace it. There was no case of the king being overthrown because it was not recognized in China. (In the Mongol Empire era, it was possible to control the king of Korea, but this was Mongolia, not China, so this case will be an exception.) To metaphor it, the emperor of China was the pope of Europe, and the king of Korea was the king of European countries. Not only Korea, but also many neighboring Asian countries paid tribute to China and sent the envoy, but not all of them were ruled or colonized by China.
@Lim chea ting there is a reason why china never outright conquered korea. It would have been too difficult and too long and the Koreans knew this. How? It actually happened. Back when Korea was three Kingdoms one of em allied thenself with China and took over the other two. Then China attempted to take over that last one but failed due to it's geography and especially the people themselves (people from all 3 nations fought off the Chinese because although they were different nations they had a special kinship that they did not have with the Chinese, their culture was super similar or even identical). Thus the tributary system with Korea would be smarter for both nations. Even the Mongols had a hard time with Korea. What everyone knows is that it managed to beat Korea but what people don't know is that it took over 9 invasions in a period of 40 years and eventually it even broke off from the Mongols. (For instance Japan was only invaded twice and got very lucky twice). For China it was another country under it's influence (just like Japan, SE Asia, and parts of South Asia). For Korea it was so they had a big ally and wouldn't have to deal with even more invaders. Jurchens, Japanese pirates, other nomadic tribes. They also knew that China was very technologically powerful and having access to that made them more powerful as well. There's a reason why Korea has effectively had long LONG periods of peace. It's because they knew their surroundings and knew how to adapt. China also isn't able to interfere with the Koreans government very well. It was the Koreans who willingly followed them because they knew it would further advance the country (at least until it's decline). The Koreans fatal flaw was being too peaceful. They got rid of their military and did not progress their military because of such long periods of peace. The country stagnated and the only fighting that happened was the occasional Japanese but it was really amongst themselves. They were their own worst enemy and that's how Korea has been throughout it's history. Strategically moving around stronger nations while being their own worst enemy. Even the Japanese occupation was instigated by a Korean, the refusal to industrialize was caused by a handful of corrupt officials, etc. Korea has only been under the hands of other nations twice. Once by the Mongols once by the Japanese but never have they been under the control of China. Wars between Korea and China were rare and none of them were about installing a puppet.
I’m from Brazil and Loved your perspective related about North Korea and South Korea, I have no idea for history these contries. Thank you for explanation.
This was an amazing video, great work man. If you guys (all of you guys lol) are interested in “Asian” history & culture, I absolutely recommend you guys actually spend time learning about “The Sinosphere” as this covers the Chinese influenced (extreamly influenced lol!) countries historically. This includes four countries: China, Vietnam, Japan and Korea. Yeah, these are also the “popular” Asian countries that a lot of people love lol but this is also known as historic East Asia. The other side of Asia, was made up of the other sphere of influence: the “Indosphere” which includes The Main Player: India, and then Thailand, Burma, lao, Malaysia and Indonesia and Cambodia (this also includes Pakistan and Bangladesh). China and India have historically been rivals and both spheres of influence are extreamly powerful in how they’ve impacted those countries until this day. The Sinosphere is also easily identified by how the majority of residents have lighter skin. The indosphere have a bit tanner and dark skin (although there are a good percentage that have artificially altered their skin tones sadly, as many residents of Thailand/lao/Cambodia and ecspecially Malaysia invest in skin bleaching products, and even the media always likes to choose models that have fair skin and at times even force many models to undergo bleach procedures lol) the indosphere can also easily be identified by how much Indian influence affects their daily life, FOODS, morals and values, traditions and most importantly: fashion. You’ll notice they all have extreamly similar clothing. The Sinosphere can be compared using the very exact same things as they all share all of those exact same values as well! Even more, only the Sinosphere countries had used Chopsticks, while the indosphere did not. But only waaaaaay more recently they adopted the utensil but yeah you won’t find Thenuse of it on most of their foods lol
@@L3monsta I think the point is US won't hesitate to continuously shake the ghost of tianmen about how bad Communism or China is for their hundreds or possibly thousand killed while actively ignoring the tens of thousands they killed to keep and settle their own dominant position.
@@Arag0n the difference is China claims it didn't happen and if it did, they deserved it, while the US just does their best to look the other way or call the people doing it bad actors. Although no 2 situations are the same, neither is good and citing atrocities shouldn't be used in bad-faith arguments.
This is such a brilliant video. I'm a university student studying east Asian history and this has helped me alot in understanding my subjects. Thank you for your hard work 🎉
Loved the video. So often in the news or even by learned experts, North Korea is portrayed as an almost schizophrenic society, unable to determine a course of action and stick with it. Understanding their history has really helped put into perspective acts which sometimes seem nonsensical. North Korea looks like a nation that realizes it is walking several tightropes at the same time. Some of those may even be of their own making, but that's what nations do sometimes. Screw up and get themselves into a bind.
Genuinely amazed by the lack of salty Japanese comments. Any time a history video about Japan and it’s war crimes pop up, they’re quick to defend. From my knowledge, Japanese classrooms rarely teach about the awful things they did in colonizing Korea. (I know all countries ignore their more shameful history-other than maybe Germany-but it’s a whole new level over there.) I respect Japan and love learning their history and and culture, not just anime lol, but they need to step up and admit they didn’t treat Korea right.
They've forgotten that Koreans brought the culture into their land, learned many things from Korean artisans including the pottery making, temple building skills, Katakana writing and so on. Their royal and aristocratic families are originally came from Korea. Japanese people seem to have this "envy and hate" feelings toward Koreans for some reason. Imagine, books that have contents on Korean hatred, seem to sell well in Japan.
@@wannasleepforever-q7u The origin of Japanese katakana is a method widely used in East Asia to flexibly interpret Chinese characters in their own words. it is highly likely that it was introduced from ancient Korea.
@@wannasleepforever-q7u Of course Koreans can't read. How can they read the script used in an ancient country 1500 years ago? and katakana is a way to write Japanese. It is not a way to write Korean. What I'm talking about is 'method'. It was an additional means used by Asian countries that used Chinese characters at the time to write their own languages. This method was introduced from Korea to Japan, and this is the origin of katakana. In ancient Korea, this was called 'Gugyeol'. Gugyeol also worked in the way Japan now writes Japanese. Nouns or meaningful morphemes are expressed in Chinese characters, and the particles or predicates that follow them are written using Gugyel characters.
I think you left some of the facts out. The only reason 1895 was an important year was because Japan had already taken over Korea. They assasinated the queen of king gojong. Japan took over by 1895.
Park Geun-hae was the daughter of Park Chung-hee the dictator @24:22
Thank you. I couldn't find a good way to put that anywhere in the video without breaking the flow.
Park Chung-hee was high rank military officer of the Imperial Japanese army stationed in china.
@@HistoryScope she's saying you said "Park Geun-hae" instead of "Park Chung-hee" in the video.
@@haedamahn7229 well... I tried :(
@@HistoryScope That's fine! :)
Never learned this in school, but really is such an important part of global history..
Agree
@@johnnycagood9013 p
Yes
Trust me as a history buff myself I'll tell you school doesn't really teach you a dam thing about history
Took the words right out my mouth as I sit here 42 and just finding out that I’m not a African nor American,The only way to learn anything is to teach yourself cause school only taught me Christopher Columbus,discovered Canada,1+1=3and Americans really went on the Jupiter 🤷🏿♂️So aye🤣🤣🤣🤣have a great day on purpose yall ,listen to your self
Dude, this is one of the best history content that talks about Korea, great job
ADA INSPECT HISTORY WKWKWK
On point. Educated. Narrated. Some triple A stuff sir ty 4 content
Lah nyasar min? Wkwkkw
True Korea or False Korea
Ya I have to agree.
Like that it’s mostly unbiased and full of information and facts.
A lot of them I kind of knew but with your extra information it made my learning better.
Thanks.
My grandmother lived in North Korea, 6 months before the war she moved south, and survived the Northern occupation of Seoul. If she hadn't made that decision I probably wouldn't be writing this comment.
Do you know if you have any relatives in the North? I'd imagine it would be next to impossible to keep in touch.
Man this video is over an hour long and at the end I still thought 'it's over already?!'
Awesome video man. I learned so much that should be talked about way more
lol i watched it too and though it was just another 15min video :D haha i had no idea it was 1 hour long until i red this.. Good videos sure are captivating.
the fact that you squeezed almost everything in in just 1 hour is amazing, I'd keep going on for at least 5 if I were to make a video about it-
Holy shit, this is such a good overview of Korea.
Just as a note, although the government DID invest in the music industry, it did not actively participate in the detailed production and "owned" the process. It kept a "aid but dont get involved" attitude. If it did, imho k-pop would have flopped early on.
But other than that, a fantastic video.
Kudos mate, keep up the good work!
-A S.Korean passing by
You should not use the word "Holy" with an evil word. Be careful what you think and say. God is watching and listening always.
@@Sam.G79holy shit
I am Korean(from South). Thanks for the quite good history lesson. I am not super professional about the history. But I should say a specific error. 24:23. The name of president by military coup is “Park Jungee”. “Park Keunhae” is his daughter, president 2013-2017, who was finally impeached.
That's the one who was impeached when it came out she was a puppet for a cult right?
@@chiefwolf5079 You can say. That was kind of true, unfortunately.
@@chiefwolf5079 She was impeached, and put in jail. Luckier than her father, who was shot by a follower.
@@isaaceuisuklee7257 killed by your body guard.. how very roman of y’all
@@isaaceuisuklee7257 And the next president is a disaster.
That fire nation reference gave me chuckle. Thanks mate, your hard work is really appreciated.
A jaw dropping and amazing documentary. As some one who has just discovered Korean culture I've found this invaluable. Thank you so much.
I spent 3 different decades in Korea. One year I lived under Martial Law the entire time, because they shot the South Korean President. His daughter latter became the 1st Female President of South Korea. My final assignment was in the former Japanese War Headquarters in Seoul, Korea. Living in Seoul was my ultimate favorite assignment of all assignments. I would like to thank Chung Hee who became my BFF & guide in Seoul. She went to live in Australia, I returned to the USA. I am a Career Female Soldier and love documentaries. Thank you for this video.
o!o lick it
@Bolt92* The prior assignments were not a thrill and being forced to extend or career ending was not a pleasant experience. The ones after me, who were asked to extend to get more money, I did not get that choice or money. It took the worst assignments and interviews to get Seoul. It was not handed to me on a silver platter like most.
Just wait for the north korea assignment
Just like it did with Japan when it closed its country, the US also tried doing the same with Korea. In what became known as the General Sherman incident, the General Sherman entered the Taedong with goods purchased from Tientsin in 1866. They stopped at Keupsa Gate where the crew met Koreans. The Koreans refused all trade offers, but told the crew to wait at the gate while higher government officials were contacted. The captain didn't listen, and continued heading up river towards Pyongyang. The ship proceeded to attack anyone who tried to stop it. This was when it was decided to attack the ship. It was finally destroyed after being fought over for several days.
I feel like m seeing you everywhere
You know you've made it on RUclips when Avery the Cuban leaves a comment on your videos.
Actually no, that ship and expedition was not sponsored by the government or even official unlike the Perry expedition to Japan.
@@FOLIPE But it marked the beginning of the US expedition to Korea (the first American military action in Korea). And an attempt to open Korea to American trade
I wouldn’t even compare what Korea went through with Japan AT ALL LOL cause they were almost entirely different!! Korea can be compared with Vietnam as they are brothers in more ways than arms, but most importantly: they were both split into north and south on the exact same day in 1953, at the exact same Geneva conference and both had communist north sides that were under the Soviet Union, both southern countries had the same alliance with the United States! And of course both have went through very brutal and the most important conflicts of the Cold War. japan was the only country in the Sinosphere that managed to dodge the bullet that was communism while the other three countries (China Vietnam and Korea) all had very different outcomes surprisingly. Korea remained split, China’s democratic half fled to establish Taiwan, while South Vietnam had lost and those residents fled all over the world
44:56 "convincing message" is my favorite protest banner so far.
A well-presented highly educational crash course on the two Koreas thoughtfully crafted with balanced perspective.
I commend you on this impressive undertaking. Will be looking at more of your videos. Subscribed.
I'm South Korean and you made me more understandable my country's history :) Thank you, I also like watching other history videos of other countries
Japan did not invade nor colonized Korean peninsula. Korea was so afraid of Russian invasion. So, Korea ASKed Japan to ANNEX the peninsula. It was approved lawfully by the International community.
Korea did not fight against Japan. Both Korean countries did not win their independence by themselves.
@@DEEYANASEnext time you get robbed you should just ask them to stop
@YawayyyyyNo they are ugly bastards
@@DEEYANASE
Yeah sure, we should trust you who has experience where?
@@DEEYANASE As expected, Japanese is learning a distorted version of history and truly believes it. Learn the truth about what you did.
Excellent video. Especially the south Korean cultural influence. I'm a Greek living in Thessaloniki, Greece's second largest city after Athens. I decided to learn Korean because of kpop and squid game. So I registered in a local private school. I was blown away when they told me the class was full and I would have to wait the formation of another. Let it sink for a minute... Huge demand for Korean lessons in... Greece! And not in Athens.
Very interesting...probably just the beginning of an Asian language learning wave, but I think the young should start learning Mandarin as well for the long-term no matter, if it is relevant now or not...
Cheers from Sofia dear Balkan brother! 🍻
@@Veselinius_III Bulgaria + Greece = ❤
"Alright back to depression" me after watching most of his videos
Whenever I get depressed I remind myself "it could be worse, I could be in North Korea, or Russia, or China, or Portland"
@@C21H30O2 portland😭😂😂
Portland? 😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
I have to go back and re-watch a lot because either my depression distracted me or I had another dissociative episode. Fun times.
@@TrashDeviant that's sad, i hope you get better
Thank you for this nuanced synthesis of Korean history! It's difficult to find one that is not "North Korea bad, South Korea good" out here.
Skewed takes on Korea almost feel like propaganda in itself. Not only is this guy spitting stone cold facts, he also remains respectful to the country he culturally dissects.
@@sloshed-rat skewed takes on a hermit kingdom we know little about shouldn't surprise anyone. If people don't understand you it's your fault not theirs.
@@C21H30O2 Why the hostility? Information being kept from public eye is not the fault of the individual.
Maybe it's mostly like that because there is evidence of NK being WAY WORSE than SK
@@darcy1226 and does that change the fact that they committed and still commit human rights violations?
We built our metro before Seoul, and it's way more beautiful than theirs. Gotta give props
Hey Kim Jong-Un, if you join South Korea, you get tons of resources from South Korea such as steel and food, more military and troops can be produced!!!
@@Newdivide the Peoples' Army is at the beck and call of Kim Jong un.
This is why i love youtube
All hail to our glorious Supreme Leader!
ㅅㅂ ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ존나 웃긴 컵셉충이네
This was fascinating. As Westerners, we lack solid education on the east. Thank you, this has elucidated a lot for me
Literally Korea had the same struggle as my homecountry Poland. Always struggling because of stupid neighbors that are pain in the ass for centuries, while the only thing people wanted is living in peace
I actually think Korea was more like Switzerland until the 1800s. Because before that Japan was far too weak (it was historically weaker than Korea) to bother trying to conquer and due to it's geography it would be nearly impossible to fully conquer Korea from China. Even the Mongols took 40 years and 9 separate invasions to create a vassal state and not something completely under their control. However these days it's similar to Poland I agree
South Korea and Poland have huge military deals right now with each other
감사합니다.동맹국들
Poland is clealy Nato’s side. South Korea goes to which side in case of war, Chinese and Norgh Korean side, or American and Japanese side ?
Sorry, you just gonna have to live with Germany. All apologies.
Can't wait for "Korea will be united" line in the future
If it will happen though...
I hope so too. Seriously. But I feel as though it might be trickier to unify than it was for Germany.
It's inevitable considering that both North and South Korea are at least somewhat on board with the idea in principle. The point is when? Next year? Within the next 5 years, 10, 100? It's hard to say.
Not this decade, or in two decades I would say it would be a slow gradual process taking 30-50 more years.
It shouldn't happen only a few areas close to seoul should be veded to the south and that's it
@@nitusrivastava7803 I think it should but it really is going to have to be difficult and slow. I think that for the meanwhile, they would have to focus on developing the North, then I guess that they should teach them the Seoul accent because it would help them better get the hang of things in South Korea. I also think that there should be laws preventing the exploitation of the Northerners.
Thanks for this I’m currently writing an essay about North & South Korea dividing, I still have a lot more to write but this is extremely helpful thank u!!! :)
We are here learning all of us
Wow, thanks so much for this! It's refreshing to see a more balanced view of both nations, both the good and bad in both. I now have a newfound appreciation for Korea, on either side of the 38th parallel. 😁
Really found this video to demonstrate a lot of in-detail history and how both Koreas fared after the war. Been reading on the history since 2008 and visited South Korea & the DMZ back in the early 2010s, but definitely have picked up some good knowledge from this well-produced and narrated video. Thanks again for sharing!
Thankyou. Not only informative, interesting but entertaining. The best history session I have witnessed, so far !
I probably learned more from this one video than I did in a whole year at school💀. As a foreigner that was introduced to korea through kpop and kdramas it was interesting learning how the sk gov is using the interest for those as a way to make Korea more successful(which is probably why the gov postponed bts from military duty) Also I always wondered how China made almost everything I bought at the store, I guess it makes since now😂
You learned because you wanted to and the content of video is interesting for you
@@abbfilmann3735 eh, that's not always true. I study music, and a lot of online resources that are available for free are just straight up better and more understandable than some of the uni classes I pay a shitload of money for
Also google China "special economic zone" for why everything is made there
There is no change or news regarding BTS's military enlistment
@@Lyuze You ever wonder why you are unable to understand those uni classes?
A U.S. Marine co-worker explained to me that the Korean written language is relatively new and that the letters indicate how the sounds are formed in the mouth. That's why there are so many "O" shapes in their alphabet. I'm curious to know if that is true.
This is true. My ex who is fluent, both in spoken and written korean (their parents are first gen), said the same thing, which was a really helpful thing to hear. Albeit confusing at first.
Indeed it is "new" (over half a millennium old) and the shape is based on the shape of the mouth/throat/tongue when making these sounds.
소리나는데로적는 소리글자이고, 입에 이응리란 공명을만드는게 " ㅇ " 코리언 랭귀지 , 사운드 알파벳중 자음하나입니다,
소리나는데로적는 소리글자이고, 입에 이응리란 공명을만드는게 " ㅇ " 코리언 랭귀지 , 사운드 알파벳중 자음하나입니다,😊😊😊😊😊😊
소리나는데로적는 소리글자이고, 입에 이응리란 공명을만드는게 " ㅇ " 코리언 랭귀지 , 사운드 알파벳중 자음하나입니다,
Dude only you would call an hour long video short, absolutely love it
Thank you for your explanation of the Hallyu wave and its purpose as ‘soft’ power. I had no idea the strategy came from a Samsung think tank! Keep up the great work
Another extensive episode. Thanks for making this blockbuster!
Not just east Asia, K-Drama is very popular in the Spanish speaking world namely South America as they’re a lot like our telenovelas
Really? How interesting!
Really? I thought Turkish tv series are on the wave.
Congratulate you on your very unbiased and factual look at North Korean history because as someone who wants to learn more about North Korea, it can be annoying to constantly only hear about it from sources that portray it as if it were 1984 in modern day. Keep up your great videos!
It …. is though?
It is lol
@@thepoorliltaxi2176 our only sources are very biased. I'd love to learn how these people live for real.
@@aidan8473 The defector’s name is Yeonmi Park and her channel is The Voice of North Korea, not only does she make her own videos but she’s been in so many different interviews and documentaries, she talks about everything from what they ate in NK to how they escaped. It’s all very fascinating.
@@thepoorliltaxi2176 The problem is they're incentivised to come up with ever more outlandish stories to get more interviews. You'd hardly draw a crowd by saying "Well yeah the situation was pretty shit" as compared to "They made us literally eat babies"
Also it should be obvious that an escapee from a Nation would have biased opinions. Go ask starving poors what they think of their country. While they're opinions are valid in their own right, I'd hesitate to call it unbiased.
After the korean independence, Japan was going through hard time managing the post-war issues (war compensation, nuclear bombings)
But when Korean war broke out, US needed somewhere close to Korea to manufacture military goods and place military troops.
Japan was like : yes :)
This helped Japan a LOT get rid of post war problems and gain economic power. While both Koreans were killing each other for someting they didnt ask for.
I have to say, this is one of only a handful of videos on RUclips I could keep watching over and over, and still learn something each time. Please make more similar 👍🏻👍🏻
I never thought it would be an hour long, now i understand why it took sooo much time. Either way, great video!
THANK YOU! You taught me more about South and North Korea in one hour than anyone I know.
Sorry for the re-upload.
The previous version was only available in 360p because of a mistake with Adobe Premiere and I didn't check the video quality.
So here is the same video but in HD quality... sorry about that.
General Douglas MacArthur came out with the idea to expand the war into the north with President Truman reluctant approval because of China's response to the expansion of the war
Truman's fear was proven correct and china sends its troops to push them back. MacArthur wanted to expand the war into China but was rejected by Truman as he feared it might start ww3
MacArthur predicted that they might drop hundreds of nukes onto china. It didn't happen.
After Truman rejected the idea, MacArthur wouldn't take no for an answer, and added insult to injury took it to the press and complained about it, which resulted in Truman firing him for insubordination
43:19 belerus is missing
43:20 Why is Belarus part of Russia?
It’s uneeptible
@@robertjarman3703 k
I love studying the Asian nations, and this is a wonderful study! Heck, I watch only Asian, primarily Korean dramas. Never watch American, and am actually
A Korean, Mandarin & Japanese language student. Your history presentation has been the best I've read, a continuous chronological account of how it has all come about.
Wait you are studying three languages at the same time? That’s insane
Don’t romanticize it buddy, life is not so great in Korea….
okay weeb
@@JohnDoe-z2rhonestly don’t think they’re a weeb I think they have a genuine interest in Asia outside of anime💀
@@Ekdrink okay weeb
The separation of Korea into two rival states is most tragic to those families with relatives on the other side of the border. North Korean defectors often have to make a lengthy detour via other countries to reach South Korea because of how fortified and guarded the DMZ is. 😢
Thanks to the Americans and Russians
@@yiman7370would rather have half of Korea be free than a united Korea governed by communists.
Awesome! Well nuanced analysis. You packed so much content in just an hour. Great to see references in the description as well for further reading.
Your story telling style is also refreshing. Kept me in the flow. Thank you for making this.
Your videos are absolutely amazing. So professional and well done, great job man!
I've been legitimately looking foward to this video! Keep up the great work!
I almost never subscribe to RUclipsrs anymore but I subscribed after watching this thoroughly
Just found this channel by accident and can't stop watching the content- Really brilliant and well presented.
This was such a great and thoughtfully made video. Thoroughly researched, it appears to be as well! Thank you for making this content. As a Korean growing up in the west, watching this makes me realize some of the freedoms I have now and the many sacrifices my parents have made (by enduring poverty, war, military dictatorships, leaving Korea, building a life elsewhere) for granted. It has been enlightening to say the least.
Such a great video? Do you really think Korea was a puppet state of China? Korea has 5000 years of standalone history and never been a part of China nor its puppet. Joseon Dynasty had its own politics, military power and the law system. Is adopting the government system and learning Confucianism making Korea a “puppet?!” Lmao It is shameful that you didn’t find it biased as a Korean-American..
@@undistortedmeans yes, Korea had their own government and culture, but we were linked to china as a weaker nation. Why do you think we used the Chinese alphabet for more than half our existence?
@@Kunfucious577 I would agree if ‘weaker country’ refers to the Joseon Dynasty, but I would say that linking the usability of Chinese characters in that way is not logical at all…
@@undistortedmeans Dude, WHAt? Korea was a vassal state to China for much of it's existence. It was "allowed" independence in return for women, gold, art, labor, etc. That's one of the reasons Koreans have a natural hatred for China let alone they are communist and preventing reunification... Learn history bro
Brooo. Just got off my shift. Hour long video, so so happy!
aww a avatar the last airbender reference you're a man of culture i see
'Alright, back to depression' 😂😂 dude, not only are you super informative and interesting but funny too! The full package. This video was insanely good - thank you for making it!
This was incredible.. I’ve been to South Korea four times and I wish could have seen this video before going. It helped me understand the culture much better.
I have absolutely no idea how this opened lol. No i'm not kidding, i was posting and a tab opened up and this video began to play...
Great video man. I was stationed there for a year back in 2010-2011. Loved Korea. South Korea best Korea, but I wish peace and unity for all of the Korean people.
24:07 that’s a really convincing message
My uncle is part of the Korean military, so when I visited Korea, he took me to one of the military bases next to the DMZ. I remember him specifically telling me not to walk into the woods because there are still hundreds of unexploded land mines that could have killed me.
I think there's like millions of them... I know along the actual DMZ with the fences there are millions. There's probably still millions of mines in the woods. I've heard you can cut the tension with a knife.
@@alexfriedman2152the DMZ is the most mined area in the world. I can only imagine the bases are following suit
Thank you for sharing your perspective on both, South and North Korea, it has been a really interesting journey around history, culture, politics and I gained a thorough overview about many why and wherefore! Keep up the excellent job! 👏👏👏👏👏
And as I said earlier and is till agree with this is the best video on this topic on RUclips
Agreed
This video was informative and also has a particular neutral scope, actually tries to make us understand why North Korea goes this way, instead of depicting it like hell on Earth, home of the devil. Great channel!
I'm glad you learned it... SK will disappear
@@luckycollie3380 dude tf?
@@luckycollie3380 r u from nk?
No definitely not from nk. Why do you ask??? Lol.
@@luckycollie3380 why would u want sk to disapear
Amazing video and filled in a few gaps I had in regards to certain years right after Japanese occupation and the Korean Was and the Korean war and it's efforts for democratisation in the 80s. I really like how neutral your video was in regards to NK and I also really enjoyed how you explain harder concepts in a simple way, e.g. when you explained state capitalism and the subsequent economic models that Korea adopted. Thank you for this! Highly educational and yet still entertaining.
When talking about the history of ancient Korea from a Western perspective, it will be difficult to catch the hidden role of Korea in East Asia. East Asian aesthetics or soft power has always played an important role in Korea. Were the ruling classes of the Mongol Empire or the Qing Empire really Chinese? They respected Korea, and their family tried to find a connection to Korea's origins.
Qing was ruled by Manchurians not Mongols
I've been using this to teach in class. Great content!
Cool documentary, with that excellent entertainment twist to it. Lovely made, well done mate! Really enjoyed watching it.
Glad to have the vid back! Love your content ❤️
"I cannot cover everything important in a SHORT video like this." He says in an hour long video.
Not everything can be covered in an hour. Do you watch movies? They're largely longer than an hour.
History is long
@@TuesdaysArt But 60 minutes make my brain go ouchie
Long man bad
I'm just chilling at work in Wisconsin, USA trying to learn more about my fellow humans. Peace and love to you all.
Thanks for making this! There is much I didn’t know (almost all of it, actually) and so much of it is fascinating! Definitely worth watching.
K pop is literally stronger than any bomb North Korea has, oh my god
No k pop is terrible
It's trash. Moranbong band is the real thing.
K pop ❌ DPRK pop ✅
Korean army used to play Kpop songs on DMZ area with huge speaker, so that North Koreans can listen. there are soldiers who actually crossed the boarder to south Korea, because they were influenced by the songs. Now we can't play because North Korea goverment's complaining.
@no, stupid Well it depends on how they unite, if the Korea's are China friendly it would be better for humanity as a whole if they don't unite, if they're Anti-China then no one would bat an eye, hell So many countries suffering due to China would openly help the developmemt of the northern part and help unifed korea be a powerhouse if they were against China, atleast that's what I hope so as anyone sane hates China, and it should be gone, it stirs up so many problems, antagonizes so many people, commits so many crimes against humanity, amd has such treachorus diplomacy, the list goes endless.
This is literally the best video out there for south and North Korean history. You saved my university grade my dude!
Excellent job on this topic. I will be watching more of your work.
Thank you for such an insightful, nuanced and most importantly objective video. I believe history in general is a crucial science and well-made content such as yours is an important resource, especially considering how little of world history gets covered in elementary and high school history courses worldwide.
History is not a science.
@@dontfeelcold History IS a scientific discipline. You sound like a pretentious person in STEM lol. Plus English is not my native language and the word 'science' directly corresponds to the word in my language. This is a very odd thing to comment on anyway 😭
@@tomorrowriruI'm not from the STEM fields.
My comment was a correction of yours, just as the video had a detail corrected by people in the comments section.
There can be scientific methods used to discover and verify history but it is not the whole of history, it is a part.
There is nothing inherently scientific about history. To say the two fields are the same is a sign of a gross misunderstanding of the two fields.
From the web search I just did, the people who say history is a science seem to be "feelings" type of people, so I completely understand their perspective and why it is false.
I have always been fascinated by the DPRK, not sure why. You taught me many things I did not know with this video. I now have a much better understanding of Korean culture. Thanks so much for the effort. Great work!
I’m korean and this video is the best history video that I’ve never seen thanks
I'm a simple person, you reference Avatar and I click the like button. (btw great video! :)
Finnally something about Korean history
Very refreshing.
the most complete, precise, comprehensive and entertaining video on the topic I've seen
The relationship between China and Korea in the past is a different concept from that of modern colonialism. To put it bluntly, it is a formal colony.
China could not interfere in Korea's internal affairs.
When a king was established in Korea, it was formally informed to China, and China formally accepted it.
The only country that truly colonized Korea was the Japanese Empire, which ruled Korea for 35 years from 1910 to 1945.
technically no, Korea was a kingdom under every Chinese Empire, so Korea wasnt only informed China to establish its King, they needed the approval from the Emperor of China, China intervened a few time when the throne of Korea was hijacked by non royal bloodline, under the request of the rightful heir China always imposed sanctions or war. The only different between the Kingdom of Korea and numerous kingdom inside Mainland China was the Empire did not directly assign governance official to Korea
@@limcheating1 That's what happened, as described in the comments. But just because China didn't like Korea's new king doesn't mean they had the power to replace it. There was no case of the king being overthrown because it was not recognized in China.
(In the Mongol Empire era, it was possible to control the king of Korea, but this was Mongolia, not China, so this case will be an exception.)
To metaphor it, the emperor of China was the pope of Europe, and the king of Korea was the king of European countries.
Not only Korea, but also many neighboring Asian countries paid tribute to China and sent the envoy, but not all of them were ruled or colonized by China.
@Lim chea ting there is a reason why china never outright conquered korea. It would have been too difficult and too long and the Koreans knew this. How? It actually happened. Back when Korea was three Kingdoms one of em allied thenself with China and took over the other two. Then China attempted to take over that last one but failed due to it's geography and especially the people themselves (people from all 3 nations fought off the Chinese because although they were different nations they had a special kinship that they did not have with the Chinese, their culture was super similar or even identical). Thus the tributary system with Korea would be smarter for both nations. Even the Mongols had a hard time with Korea. What everyone knows is that it managed to beat Korea but what people don't know is that it took over 9 invasions in a period of 40 years and eventually it even broke off from the Mongols. (For instance Japan was only invaded twice and got very lucky twice). For China it was another country under it's influence (just like Japan, SE Asia, and parts of South Asia). For Korea it was so they had a big ally and wouldn't have to deal with even more invaders. Jurchens, Japanese pirates, other nomadic tribes. They also knew that China was very technologically powerful and having access to that made them more powerful as well. There's a reason why Korea has effectively had long LONG periods of peace. It's because they knew their surroundings and knew how to adapt. China also isn't able to interfere with the Koreans government very well. It was the Koreans who willingly followed them because they knew it would further advance the country (at least until it's decline). The Koreans fatal flaw was being too peaceful. They got rid of their military and did not progress their military because of such long periods of peace. The country stagnated and the only fighting that happened was the occasional Japanese but it was really amongst themselves. They were their own worst enemy and that's how Korea has been throughout it's history. Strategically moving around stronger nations while being their own worst enemy. Even the Japanese occupation was instigated by a Korean, the refusal to industrialize was caused by a handful of corrupt officials, etc. Korea has only been under the hands of other nations twice. Once by the Mongols once by the Japanese but never have they been under the control of China. Wars between Korea and China were rare and none of them were about installing a puppet.
Awesome video! Pretty accurate historically
It's back.
I was sad when you had to pull your video this morning.
Great job loved every bit just wish it was longer lol
I’m from Brazil and Loved your perspective related about North Korea and South Korea, I have no idea for history these contries. Thank you for explanation.
I love what you did there with the fire nation and visuals from avatar the last Airbender. Over all great video, but that was my favorite part.
I just clicked on video,i thought it was uploaded years ago,now i see its made today.Yay,Good content for an hour!
This video should have more views
Just found your channel. Amazing content, I LOVE HISTORY WITH A PASSION! And really look forward to more of your content.
omg is almost 1hr content and it is great.. Great efforts bro.
great video man. Kudos!
This was an amazing video, great work man. If you guys (all of you guys lol) are interested in “Asian” history & culture, I absolutely recommend you guys actually spend time learning about “The Sinosphere” as this covers the Chinese influenced (extreamly influenced lol!) countries historically. This includes four countries: China, Vietnam, Japan and Korea. Yeah, these are also the “popular” Asian countries that a lot of people love lol but this is also known as historic East Asia. The other side of Asia, was made up of the other sphere of influence: the “Indosphere” which includes The Main Player: India, and then Thailand, Burma, lao, Malaysia and Indonesia and Cambodia (this also includes Pakistan and Bangladesh). China and India have historically been rivals and both spheres of influence are extreamly powerful in how they’ve impacted those countries until this day. The Sinosphere is also easily identified by how the majority of residents have lighter skin. The indosphere have a bit tanner and dark skin (although there are a good percentage that have artificially altered their skin tones sadly, as many residents of Thailand/lao/Cambodia and ecspecially Malaysia invest in skin bleaching products, and even the media always likes to choose models that have fair skin and at times even force many models to undergo bleach procedures lol) the indosphere can also easily be identified by how much Indian influence affects their daily life, FOODS, morals and values, traditions and most importantly: fashion. You’ll notice they all have extreamly similar clothing.
The Sinosphere can be compared using the very exact same things as they all share all of those exact same values as well! Even more, only the Sinosphere countries had used Chopsticks, while the indosphere did not. But only waaaaaay more recently they adopted the utensil but yeah you won’t find Thenuse of it on most of their foods lol
This has been SUCH an informative video. Thank you so much for enlightening us all on Korea
Very interesting video. Greetings from Brazil.
EXCELLENT
Thank you for this!!
I got curious about Korea after watching Squid Game, and this REALLY satisfied my curiosity.
We got to get you to a Mil subs soon bro, this is very well informed and documented.
I greatly appreciate this unbiased video. This is the history we all need. Thank you and happy new year!
Love your videos. Well done!
Everyone:tianmen square
The Koreans who dies protesting aginst the USA : Am I joke to you?
Sadly, not many people outside of Korea know about the protests.
are you talking about the grwanju uprising
The key difference here is that the Korean protestors were ultimately successful whereas the Chinese protestors were not.
@@L3monsta I think the point is US won't hesitate to continuously shake the ghost of tianmen about how bad Communism or China is for their hundreds or possibly thousand killed while actively ignoring the tens of thousands they killed to keep and settle their own dominant position.
@@Arag0n the difference is China claims it didn't happen and if it did, they deserved it, while the US just does their best to look the other way or call the people doing it bad actors. Although no 2 situations are the same, neither is good and citing atrocities shouldn't be used in bad-faith arguments.
This is such a brilliant video. I'm a university student studying east Asian history and this has helped me alot in understanding my subjects. Thank you for your hard work 🎉
I had no choice but to click the Like button after that ATLA reference
It's nice to see a video about korea with a neutral standpoint.
Loved the video. So often in the news or even by learned experts, North Korea is portrayed as an almost schizophrenic society, unable to determine a course of action and stick with it. Understanding their history has really helped put into perspective acts which sometimes seem nonsensical. North Korea looks like a nation that realizes it is walking several tightropes at the same time. Some of those may even be of their own making, but that's what nations do sometimes. Screw up and get themselves into a bind.
Genuinely amazed by the lack of salty Japanese comments. Any time a history video about Japan and it’s war crimes pop up, they’re quick to defend.
From my knowledge, Japanese classrooms rarely teach about the awful things they did in colonizing Korea. (I know all countries ignore their more shameful history-other than maybe Germany-but it’s a whole new level over there.)
I respect Japan and love learning their history and and culture, not just anime lol, but they need to step up and admit they didn’t treat Korea right.
They've forgotten that Koreans brought the culture into their land, learned many things from Korean artisans including the pottery making, temple building skills, Katakana writing and so on. Their royal and aristocratic families are originally came from Korea. Japanese people seem to have this "envy and hate" feelings toward Koreans for some reason. Imagine, books that have contents on Korean hatred, seem to sell well in Japan.
現在の朝鮮人と、当時の朝鮮人は完全に民族構成が異なります。
@@notclueless8949 thats true but at least kpop is one thing a lot of japanese people enjoy
@@wannasleepforever-q7u The origin of Japanese katakana is a method widely used in East Asia to flexibly interpret Chinese characters in their own words. it is highly likely that it was introduced from ancient Korea.
@@wannasleepforever-q7u Of course Koreans can't read.
How can they read the script used in an ancient country 1500 years ago?
and katakana is a way to write Japanese. It is not a way to write Korean.
What I'm talking about is 'method'.
It was an additional means used by Asian countries that used Chinese characters at the time to write their own languages.
This method was introduced from Korea to Japan, and this is the origin of katakana.
In ancient Korea, this was called 'Gugyeol'.
Gugyeol also worked in the way Japan now writes Japanese. Nouns or meaningful morphemes are expressed in Chinese characters, and the particles or predicates that follow them are written using Gugyel characters.
Thanks for making this video. I thought it was very comprehensive. I had alot of questions answered and lots of new and interesting facts i never knew
I think you left some of the facts out. The only reason 1895 was an important year was because Japan had already taken over Korea. They assasinated the queen of king gojong. Japan took over by 1895.