A Mughal Sultan sends African-Indian soldiers to fight an English merchant company which in turn sends Japanese Ronin to fight a Dutch merchant company which sends pirates to fight Portugese merchants in India...the Age of Exploration was wild
@@kingofflamingos4344 if that sounds crazy, I recently sw a video of Aztecs under Spanish command fighting the Ottoman Sultan's janniseries in South East Asia.
It's only fitting, and a testament to the quality of this channel, that when the Dutch finally get some love on the channel it's done within the context of not just the impressive things they accomplished but also the horrible things they did to get there. *tips hat to Extra Credits*
I agree, As a dutchman myself i love stories that where the dutch are involved with, they make me want to learn more and more about my nation`s past instead of others, i really do hope we get something like the 80s war as a series! that would be amazing.
Scotland went bankrupt after the failure of the Darien scheme. So they looked to England to merge, also worth considering they both had the same monarchs during this time.
Scotland was left with two choices: watch as it's economy is completely eclipsed by England's or bet everything they had on a colonialization attempt Related this is why I believe that province will never leave the UK, it's economy would become way too weak and vulnerable
What I also consider interesting about Portuguese in India is that when they arrived they discovered Christian community there (allegedly found by st. Thomas Apostle) and managed to convert many of them into Catholicism.
@@anarcopablo Local name for those people are Nasrani Mapillas, some of them were forced to become Catholics some weren't, and there are names for each, which I don't remember exactly.
That was in Kerala, Orthodox Christians are still a massive proportion of the Kerala Christian population. Kerala however was never under proper Portuguese rule unlike Goa
The Mughals weren't ruling India for the entire time of European exploration. When the Portuguese arrived the Mughal Empire had just gotten started, and so the Portuguese didn't even interact with the Mughals for much of their time in India since they occupied coastal towns while the Mughals started inland. I get the drive to show how India didn't just get rolled over by the Europeans, but India was much more than just the Mughal Empire.
yeah, extra history is a fun popular introduction to these topics, but can sometimes have things embarrassingly wrong (most commonly when they rely on older secondary sources that werent necessarily that well-researched to begin with)
The dutch don't have the manpower to dump whole populations of indentured workers and tenant farmers in their colonies. They focus on a few important places and set up something more like trade posts. Why have a bunch of dutch go out into the interior and hunt pelts when there's already people doing that who will sell them to you.
@@esthersmith3056 yes. this was poorly researched. the mughals didn't even exist when the portuguese came to India and the vijayanagara empire which controlled most of south india for the next 5-7 decades after the portuguese arrival didn't even get a mention. the zamorin king who received vasco da gama in 1498 was also called a "mughal" when the mughal empire hadn't conquered Calicut even at its peak
Companies acting like governments isn't just a European thing, the US has had its share of that as well. See things like "company stores" and the Pinkertons.
2:20 The mughal empire was non-existant in 1498, Babur himself was still ruler of Ferghana and had no territory outside of central asia, and most of the India that the portuguese met was largely divided into many independent sultanates and hindu kingdoms
Delhi sultanate was in the delhi-panjab area during this time. I think you meant bahamani sultanate and it's fractured states. Intresting thing is one Portuguese traveller even worte about the 3rd vijayanagara-gajapati war and the lesser known 1 year siege of udayagiri.
@@WeebFox69 I think it's a simplification for now. After every series EC do a "lies" episodes, where they offer corrections and explain the simplifications
With you talking about the VOC, I now itching to see a series on some part of Dutch history (preferably about the cape but that just my South African side showing)
One complaint, Scotland agreed to the act of union after the failure of the Darien scheme and that was proposed by a Scottish dynasty of monarchs in off itself and the Scottish and English parliaments were merged. So, conquest is really the wrong word for that example, right armmy?
One thing I don't get is why lots of Americans seem to think England conquered Scotland and even most British know that a Scottish king _inherited_ the throne of England and further integration would happen later. This misconception might make a bit of sense if a English king inherited Scotland.
In Shashi Tharoor's famous speech at Oxford, he did talk about how the Scots tried sending out colonies of their own and failed. Then came the Union, which partly occurred due to the raging poverty in Scotland at the time. After the Union, Scots found lucrative administrative positions in the British Raj - often a larger proportion of Scots than Englishmen were stationed in India in the 19th century.
Sidenote on the Dutch East India Company (VOC) & Indonesia, compared to the Mughals & India, that I was surprised you guys didn't mention out: The situation in Indonesia of 17th century was far more easy to be dealt with compared to India at that time, since the Mughals were at their height of the power. Meanwhile in Indonesia there were numerous smaller Islamic kingdoms that were just starting to rise after the chaotic 16th century. The 1500s saw the demise of both Majapahit Empire (that EC did a series couple of years ago!) and Malacca Sultanate (which was upended by the Portuguese). If Majapahit or Malacca wasn't destroyed, the Dutch might have also encountered a similar situation to what the Europeans faced in India: Forced to sign one-sided trade deals with a local hegemonic power, instead of leveraging their trade power and pitting small local kingdoms against each other.
Bear in mind that the Netherlands, altho smaller, was significantly wealthier than the kingdom of Portugal. They also had advanced economic system (e.g. concept such as Stock Exchange originated either in the Netherlands or Italy). In fact, in the 17th century, the Low countries (Dutch Republic, Austrian Netherlands, and Spanish Netherlands) had comparable population (~6 millions) to the whole Spice Islands (~8 millions). Above all, VOC did not just willy nilly attack local rulers and commit piracy like the Portuguese. The Dutch were shrewd merchant, who put their mercantile interest above religious and political supremacy. Wherever the Spanish or the Portuguese rule, they forcibly convert local people into their culture and religion, not the case with the Dutch.
Minor mistake: the map at 2:15 shows a gap between Africa and the Middle East, but I don't think the Suez Canal had been built yet. This stuck out, because that scene was about the Portuguese having to sail around Africa to get to India, and I was all " wait, but why didn't they go the short way... Oh."
India: You seem to want to buy our goods Britain: Nah m8, we good India: We have some unwanted drugs and leaves in water tho... Britain: GIVE ME THE PLANTS!
@@Tommy-5684 Not really, If anything the 'glorious revolution '1688 and events such as the battle of the Boyne is seen as being a vital part of English Nationalism and Identity. Just look at the Orange Order to see how some people revere WIlliam III as a hero.
@@Tommy-5684 The Dutch forget that we're the reason they're an independent nation, without our intervention in the 80 years war with De Vere the Dutch would have been crushed
@@Swift-mr5zi what are you talking about? Do you mean Robert Dudley the governor who screwed everything up? The republic gave Vlissingen and Den Briel as collateral in exchange for military support. Under his command the following cities got sacked; Zutphen, Deventer, Brussel, Mechelen,Grave and Sluis. The English mercenaries even defected towards the Spanish. His policies on trade led to a financial crisis. The English acted in their own interests and certainly were not the reason why the Dutch republic became independent.
Interestingly, the English Crown(and subsequently the EIC) only got possesion of Mumbai because of a Political marriage between portugal and England. When I think about the British Conquest of India I just think "damn if I ever was so lucky myself"
Earlier this month I found out my Great Great Grandmother was born in British India. Her father was an Irishman serving as a British Army Engineer and was sent to India for many years. While there he married a local Christian woman whose father was from Poland(he was in India doing work for the British as well and decided to stay) and her mother was Indian. Eventually he brought his new family back home to Ireland. My Great Great Grandmother would eventually join her children in the US, but couldn't immigrate to the US from Ireland so her immigration papers say she is from India which is technically true. My dad currently has my Great Great Great Grandfather's watch that he got serving in India. Our cousin in Ireland has the complimentary saber.
Most of the gold stayed in the colony. The royal taxation in Brazil was of 20% of the total annual gold extraction. The remaining wealth was due to be kept in Brazil for the development of the cities and infrastructures.
You're telling me the cyberpunk corporate dominated future dystopia we all dread is coming in the next ~30 years has _already happened!?_ Time really is a flat circle. I mean we already have pirates, at least.
1:45 Here in England we don't spend a lot of time on the EIC but when we do we usually skip over the American and Caribbean bits and focus on the Indian bit.
Funny thing is EIC isn't taught about much in India (at least when I studied). It's usually the Mughal and some other empires and then fast forwarded to 1857 (the year of Indian revolt against EIC and the British monarch directly taking over).
@@Anurag-xe2jp In Pakistan we did learn about the EIC but not too much. Basically we are told about their fight with Aurangzeb, the battle of Panipath and how they forced themselves upon Sindh cause they got their ass handed to them in Afghanistan and then we move to 1857 and its effects including Muslims getting most of the blame which is cited as the reason Muslims didn't learn English or work with the Indian civil service in the Raj and for the founding of Aligrah College to mitigate that, which then leads into the All India Muslim League and Pakistan.
@@jhonshephard921 ohh they dont teach last part or sindh part in india they focus mostly on british conquest of bengal. Then a little about rebellion then straight to 1919=non cooperation movement khilafat movement jhalliawala bagh etc. And before these they teach a little bit about marathas then about mughals ruler from baber to aurangzeb,before that vijaynagar empire bahamani etc.And before that delhi sultanate then chola gupta maurya etc. Big empires of india
Yeah, there were many companies back in the day. Here in Canada, the English had the Hudson Bay Company and down in the Carribean, the Dutch had the West Indies Company. Even the French had the Frenxh East India Company, which employed local soldiers just like how the British East India Company would do later
And when you take into consideration that the Mughal Empire did not even exist when the Portuguese arrived in India,this simply makes the British defeat even more humiliating.
@@freeplex589 yep after mughal lost to marathas and marathas lost to afghans😀 and by that time europe gained much more tech advantage and india got in same situation as Indonesia which is small kingdoms
True, between 1400 and 1500, Northern India was divided into several large and wealthy Kingdoms like the Muzaffarids of Gujarat, Tomaras of Bundelkhand, Sharqis of Uttar Pradesh, Gajapatis of Odisha, Hussain Shahis of Bengal and Bihar, Shahmiris of Kashmir, Sisodias of Mewar, Ahoms of Assam and Adil Shahis of Maharashtra. Southern India, however, was ruled by the large Vijayanagara Empire which controlled the port city of Calicut or Kozhikode (with the Zamorin as a ceremonial leader) where Vasco de Gama docked.
4:15 If anyone is wondering about the Darien Scheme, basically Scotland tried to fund the founding of a colony in Panama, and sunk half the country's budget into the venture. Only once they got there, they realize that not only are Scots not suited to the jungle and Malaria, they also settled on a spot the Spanish claimed. England basically turned to Scotland and said "hey, we'll assume the debt if you join with us as a single nation". Thus, the Acts of Union gave birth to Great Britain
This is well researched but presented in such a simple and concise manner. Your channel is really good at sharing perspectives and capturing the true essence of a historical topic.
I would love to see more episodes on Dutch exploits during this era. Thank you for the interesting content as always! Stay well out there everybody, and God bless you friends! :)
One slight correction to this excellent video: the East India Company was named and set up to “venter in the pretended voiage to ye Est Indies and other Ilands and Cuntries thereabouts there to make trade…” In other words, their primary target was the East Indies, or Indonesia as we now know it. Failing to beat the Dutch then led to the trade with the Mughals as an afterthought. It is no accident that India and Indonesia / East Indies have similar names. They are all named after the Indus River, which is in modern day Pakistan. India meant ‘beyond the Indus’ and is, what we would now call, south and south east Asia.
6:30 Hang on, there was a time in history when British merchants and Japanese ronin teamed up to conduct espionage in Dutch-controlled Indonesia?!? Why the heck isn't someone making *that* film?!?
Wait a minute you say Portuguese settled in India with the permission of the mughals? But the Portuguese had a lot of possessions in India before the mughals came...
They didn't, Mughals were not rulling India when the Portuguese came, they were permitted to start trading by the Vijaynagar empire who gave the Portuguese land for building ports and trading.
@@yj9032 A mistake on my part; Wellesley was only responsible for the Maratha wars, while the Mysorian wars were done with the governor-general Cornwallis. Also Clive was only responsible for a few battles and peace treaties not taking over large swathes of land.
@@dnlowithstripes What makes you think about that? "Armchair [insert field]" is a colloquial term for dilettante, meant to be an insult to that person's (lack of) grasp of a certain field. It's pretty much a generic term for Dunning-Krueger "experts"...
Right? So much God damn history to cover.. One of the biggest empires of the 1600s that is nothing but a shadow now.. only remnants of the language and culture remain, being Merged with local cultures
Yeah, as someone who has an interest in history, its always highly amusing to me that somehow Tiny itty-bitty Little Britain managed to take over so much of the world
*Correction Needed* The siege you are referring to started on February 15,1689 and not in April 1619. Forts of Bombay came into the hands of British on 11th May 1661 as dowry to Charles II.
the mughal empire DIDNT exist in 1498. The kings which the portugeuse met were the Zamorins of Calicut, a city state based on trade, similar to the city states of italy in that period. (of course being Indian made them much richer)
I think the main reason why China Korea and Japan was so Persimistic about Weatern and fearing influencing them. Because of India, once a powerful and economically ruboost empire fall in the hands of the British
The portuguese didn't find the mughals but rather a bunch of indian kingdoms such as the sultanate of Gujarat and the sultanate of Bijapur. The mughals only come later, in 1526.
Extra Credits: I’ve been rewatching your entire series again. Have you ever thought about revisiting some of your earlier series and expanding on them? Also, I don’t know if you still write music for your characters but the Mary Seacole series directly references a magazine that wrote a song for her... just saying 😉
A Mughal Sultan sends African-Indian soldiers to fight an English merchant company which in turn sends Japanese Ronin to fight a Dutch merchant company which sends pirates to fight Portugese merchants in India...the Age of Exploration was wild
Wait till you here about the Mayans and thr Japanese.
@@kingofflamingos4344 if that sounds crazy, I recently sw a video of Aztecs under Spanish command fighting the Ottoman Sultan's janniseries in South East Asia.
@@DieNibelungenliad Damn it's like it's a historical fan fiction
Don’t forget the scientific advancements by Harvey, Huygens, and Galileo. The 17th century alone sounds like a great tabletop setting.
17th Century globalism at play
It's only fitting, and a testament to the quality of this channel, that when the Dutch finally get some love on the channel it's done within the context of not just the impressive things they accomplished but also the horrible things they did to get there.
*tips hat to Extra Credits*
I agree, As a dutchman myself i love stories that where the dutch are involved with, they make me want to learn more and more about my nation`s past instead of others, i really do hope we get something like the 80s war as a series! that would be amazing.
@@steampunksamurai1704 wait until you learn what your ancestors did in Indonesia.
Like eating their Prime Minister
@@farhanahmed2508 Eating a prime minister is one of the impressive things. I'm more concerned about the dozens of genocides.
@@yj9032 Oh that i know, dear god that i know.....i feel bad for the indonesian people for having suffered under us that much
The VOC: Where to match the sheer amount of wealth they had (adjusted for inflation) you have to combine the entire Fortune 500
Yes
It is incredible that the Dutch did so much despite their small size.
Scotland went bankrupt after the failure of the Darien scheme. So they looked to England to merge, also worth considering they both had the same monarchs during this time.
Scotland was left with two choices: watch as it's economy is completely eclipsed by England's or bet everything they had on a colonialization attempt
Related this is why I believe that province will never leave the UK, it's economy would become way too weak and vulnerable
Scotland was forced to join England after being bankrupt from the Darien scheme
England had an had in that "failure". Perfid albion
@@christianweibrecht6555 Meh. Scotland now has an option: EU
@@christianweibrecht6555 That hasn't stopped many smaller countries inside Europe from existing.
What I also consider interesting about Portuguese in India is that when they arrived they discovered Christian community there (allegedly found by st. Thomas Apostle) and managed to convert many of them into Catholicism.
Many are still non Catholics here
@@apogeelord7013 How are they called?
@@anarcopablo Local name for those people are Nasrani Mapillas, some of them were forced to become Catholics some weren't, and there are names for each, which I don't remember exactly.
That was in Kerala, Orthodox Christians are still a massive proportion of the Kerala Christian population. Kerala however was never under proper Portuguese rule unlike Goa
@@shanbhagrohan Kerala was briefly under Portuguese rule, before they shifted to Goa
The Mughals weren't ruling India for the entire time of European exploration. When the Portuguese arrived the Mughal Empire had just gotten started, and so the Portuguese didn't even interact with the Mughals for much of their time in India since they occupied coastal towns while the Mughals started inland.
I get the drive to show how India didn't just get rolled over by the Europeans, but India was much more than just the Mughal Empire.
The Portuguese mainly dealt with the Bahmani Sultanate and the Vijayanagara empire when they arrived, If I am not wrong.
yeah, extra history is a fun popular introduction to these topics, but can sometimes have things embarrassingly wrong (most commonly when they rely on older secondary sources that werent necessarily that well-researched to begin with)
The dutch don't have the manpower to dump whole populations of indentured workers and tenant farmers in their colonies. They focus on a few important places and set up something more like trade posts. Why have a bunch of dutch go out into the interior and hunt pelts when there's already people doing that who will sell them to you.
@@esthersmith3056 yes. this was poorly researched. the mughals didn't even exist when the portuguese came to India and the vijayanagara empire which controlled most of south india for the next 5-7 decades after the portuguese arrival didn't even get a mention. the zamorin king who received vasco da gama in 1498 was also called a "mughal" when the mughal empire hadn't conquered Calicut even at its peak
in fact the Mughals only directly ruled a few northern provinces as everything else was held by local Hindu princes.
“Oh my God don’t tell daddy Bezos”
I actually laughed at that one
Companies acting like governments isn't just a European thing, the US has had its share of that as well. See things like "company stores" and the Pinkertons.
@@stevejakab274 yes anyways what is your opinion on Amazon not paying taxes
@@stevejakab274 I hope they make a video about me one day
…aaannd Amazon has a private army now…
@@gryphonprovenzano3156 Yeah
2:20 The mughal empire was non-existant in 1498, Babur himself was still ruler of Ferghana and had no territory outside of central asia, and most of the India that the portuguese met was largely divided into many independent sultanates and hindu kingdoms
The Portuguese mainly dealt with the Bahmani Sultanate and the Vijayanagara empire when they arrived.
@@anirudh177T that would be the Delhi sultanate
Portuguese mainly dealt with the Delhi sultanate as the main state and the coastal smaller states as trading partners
Portuguese factory were setup under protection from the vijaynagar empire and Delhi sultnate Era mughal arrived in india in 1526
Delhi sultanate was in the delhi-panjab area during this time. I think you meant bahamani sultanate and it's fractured states. Intresting thing is one Portuguese traveller even worte about the 3rd vijayanagara-gajapati war and the lesser known 1 year siege of udayagiri.
Deccan Sultanates*
@@SafavidAfsharid3197 but there fact that mughal backed the Portuguese in 1496 is wrong
@@WeebFox69 I think it's a simplification for now. After every series EC do a "lies" episodes, where they offer corrections and explain the simplifications
@@zubinjain8675 this is still misinformation. I mean how many people actually watch their lies episodes than the actual series.
With you talking about the VOC, I now itching to see a series on some part of Dutch history (preferably about the cape but that just my South African side showing)
Same here
Perhaps The Glorious Revolution would fit better.
Vereegnide oost indishche compagnie
Voc overwhelmed with java war (prince diponegoro)
Why not VOC as well in general, I would love to watch that as an Indonesian.
Eerily love 6:53. I can imagine Vlad saying, "Ah... Good to see such knowledge still in use"
And wave...like this! *twiddles fingers*
I am so happy to see a fellow Barbossa stan. Everything that comes out of that man's mouth just screams 'pirate' in a way that just makes me happy.
I think everyone loves Barbossa 😊
He is one of the few characters that works extremely well as both a hero and a villain.
Just because I love Jack Sparrow doesn't mean I don't also love Barbossa
Barbossa is the real pirate boss, Sparrow is great too though.
@@Devantejah What aaargh you doin?
One complaint, Scotland agreed to the act of union after the failure of the Darien scheme and that was proposed by a Scottish dynasty of monarchs in off itself and the Scottish and English parliaments were merged. So, conquest is really the wrong word for that example, right armmy?
Um, actually 😂😂😂
One does wonder what British history would have been had Henry VIII had any legitimate grandchildren.
One thing I don't get is why lots of Americans seem to think England conquered Scotland and even most British know that a Scottish king _inherited_ the throne of England and further integration would happen later. This misconception might make a bit of sense if a English king inherited Scotland.
One complaint? What about “armie”?
@Sam Smith 100%.
In Shashi Tharoor's famous speech at Oxford, he did talk about how the Scots tried sending out colonies of their own and failed. Then came the Union, which partly occurred due to the raging poverty in Scotland at the time. After the Union, Scots found lucrative administrative positions in the British Raj - often a larger proportion of Scots than Englishmen were stationed in India in the 19th century.
From a country that's never surpassed 5 million people, Scots could organize really well.
Sidenote on the Dutch East India Company (VOC) & Indonesia, compared to the Mughals & India, that I was surprised you guys didn't mention out:
The situation in Indonesia of 17th century was far more easy to be dealt with compared to India at that time, since the Mughals were at their height of the power. Meanwhile in Indonesia there were numerous smaller Islamic kingdoms that were just starting to rise after the chaotic 16th century. The 1500s saw the demise of both Majapahit Empire (that EC did a series couple of years ago!) and Malacca Sultanate (which was upended by the Portuguese). If Majapahit or Malacca wasn't destroyed, the Dutch might have also encountered a similar situation to what the Europeans faced in India: Forced to sign one-sided trade deals with a local hegemonic power, instead of leveraging their trade power and pitting small local kingdoms against each other.
G E K O L O N I S E E R D
They did explain this: @5:42
Bear in mind that the Netherlands, altho smaller, was significantly wealthier than the kingdom of Portugal. They also had advanced economic system (e.g. concept such as Stock Exchange originated either in the Netherlands or Italy).
In fact, in the 17th century, the Low countries (Dutch Republic, Austrian Netherlands, and Spanish Netherlands) had comparable population (~6 millions) to the whole Spice Islands (~8 millions).
Above all, VOC did not just willy nilly attack local rulers and commit piracy like the Portuguese. The Dutch were shrewd merchant, who put their mercantile interest above religious and political supremacy.
Wherever the Spanish or the Portuguese rule, they forcibly convert local people into their culture and religion, not the case with the Dutch.
Thanks for calling Indian strong as you must in those times
I love how you know both the Indian and Indonesian political situation at this time. Really offers some perspective.
Minor mistake: the map at 2:15 shows a gap between Africa and the Middle East, but I don't think the Suez Canal had been built yet. This stuck out, because that scene was about the Portuguese having to sail around Africa to get to India, and I was all " wait, but why didn't they go the short way... Oh."
Construction started in 1859 and finished around 1869 or 1870
India: You seem to want to buy our goods
Britain: Nah m8, we good
India: We have some unwanted drugs and leaves in water tho...
Britain: GIVE ME THE PLANTS!
Wasnt that China though?
@@DieNibelungenliad Both countries are the largest producers of tea, but technically, you are npot entirely wrong
@@nimportequi2249 thats pretty rude
@@DieNibelungenliad A little industrial espionage here, a bit of transplantation there, and a whole lot of opium addiction to go around.
@@AtheistPirate How Britain made an empire in Asia in a few simple steps
The history of british-Dutch relations are also interesting.
1688 the time english natiolists like to convenatnlty forget
@@Tommy-5684 Not really, If anything the 'glorious revolution '1688 and events such as the battle of the Boyne is seen as being a vital part of English Nationalism and Identity. Just look at the Orange Order to see how some people revere WIlliam III as a hero.
English-Dutch union would have been such a great alternative history
@@Tommy-5684 The Dutch forget that we're the reason they're an independent nation, without our intervention in the 80 years war with De Vere the Dutch would have been crushed
@@Swift-mr5zi what are you talking about? Do you mean Robert Dudley the governor who screwed everything up? The republic gave Vlissingen and Den Briel as collateral in exchange for military support. Under his command the following cities got sacked; Zutphen, Deventer, Brussel, Mechelen,Grave and Sluis. The English mercenaries even defected towards the Spanish. His policies on trade led to a financial crisis. The English acted in their own interests and certainly were not the reason why the Dutch republic became independent.
Interestingly, the English Crown(and subsequently the EIC) only got possesion of Mumbai because of a Political marriage between portugal and England. When I think about the British Conquest of India I just think "damn if I ever was so lucky myself"
Earlier this month I found out my Great Great Grandmother was born in British India. Her father was an Irishman serving as a British Army Engineer and was sent to India for many years. While there he married a local Christian woman whose father was from Poland(he was in India doing work for the British as well and decided to stay) and her mother was Indian. Eventually he brought his new family back home to Ireland. My Great Great Grandmother would eventually join her children in the US, but couldn't immigrate to the US from Ireland so her immigration papers say she is from India which is technically true. My dad currently has my Great Great Great Grandfather's watch that he got serving in India. Our cousin in Ireland has the complimentary saber.
That's so cool and interesting to know! I am glad you know a lot about your predecessors.
My ancestor, John Laurence Tarras actually was one of the directors of the Swedish East India Company.
Really nice to find such a person.
Cool
That's awesome bro
That's great
Good very nice
I worked with an Anthropology professor who wrote a book on railway lines created by the EIC. Very interesting topic.
hello there
@@channel_void Ah, General Kenobi *cough cough splutter splutter*
As a dutch person myself i approve of this episode.
As a British person, I also approve of this episode
As an Italian i also approve this episode
@Steven Universe i absolutely agree
As Indian I agree
Zeg makker, kokosnoten zijn geen specerijen
2:55 - Portugal speaking to Brazil: "See now, son?! If you want your gold back, talk to India. Stop bothering me with that story..."
And part of the Gold was send to the british
Most of the gold stayed in the colony. The royal taxation in Brazil was of 20% of the total annual gold extraction. The remaining wealth was due to be kept in Brazil for the development of the cities and infrastructures.
You're telling me the cyberpunk corporate dominated future dystopia we all dread is coming in the next ~30 years has _already happened!?_
Time really is a flat circle. I mean we already have pirates, at least.
Spicepunk
Yup, and it's literally just *the worst*
don't ever let ancaps sell you on the idea of letting corporations dominate the world
@@pax6833 Don't call them "ancaps", call them for what they are: Neo-Feudalists...
@@ccricers Done already.The spice must flow bud
A period appropriate re-imagining of cyberpunk tropes would be rad, though
1:45 Here in England we don't spend a lot of time on the EIC but when we do we usually skip over the American and Caribbean bits and focus on the Indian bit.
EC can be quite lax and ignorant with their research at times.
@@tams805 Yeah, that is what I've noticed as well. They find something and then don't go deeper than that and work with that shallow research.
Funny thing is EIC isn't taught about much in India (at least when I studied). It's usually the Mughal and some other empires and then fast forwarded to 1857 (the year of Indian revolt against EIC and the British monarch directly taking over).
@@Anurag-xe2jp In Pakistan we did learn about the EIC but not too much. Basically we are told about their fight with Aurangzeb, the battle of Panipath and how they forced themselves upon Sindh cause they got their ass handed to them in Afghanistan and then we move to 1857 and its effects including Muslims getting most of the blame which is cited as the reason Muslims didn't learn English or work with the Indian civil service in the Raj and for the founding of Aligrah College to mitigate that, which then leads into the All India Muslim League and Pakistan.
@@jhonshephard921 ohh they dont teach last part or sindh part in india they focus mostly on british conquest of bengal.
Then a little about rebellion then straight to 1919=non cooperation movement khilafat movement jhalliawala bagh etc.
And before these they teach a little bit about marathas then about mughals ruler from baber to aurangzeb,before that vijaynagar empire bahamani etc.And before that delhi sultanate then chola gupta maurya etc. Big empires of india
Definitely the best historical overview
Fun fact the east india company which was present in india for over 2 century is now a cake shop in london
And is controlled by a indian
I just searched that I LOVE THIS WORD
that's awesome
The Hudson Bay Company which dominated the fur trade in Anglo North America is now analgous to a Macy's or Nordstrom's in Canada
@@hurgcat omg is that correct? The clothing company is what's left? how the wheel turns. (not looking forward to Wheel of Time tv series incidentally)
It's a tea shop
Video Idea: The First Balkan War
Love the video!!
Yeah, there were many companies back in the day.
Here in Canada, the English had the Hudson Bay Company and down in the Carribean, the Dutch had the West Indies Company. Even the French had the Frenxh East India Company, which employed local soldiers just like how the British East India Company would do later
You should make a video (maybe not enough material for a series) on Scottish Darian scheme and how Scottland became a part of UK permanently.
The spice must flow
Eu4?
@@baraamuhamed2918 Dune
WAIT WHAT I JUST SUBSCRIBED TO YOU WONDERING WHEN THE NEXT VIDEO ON INDIA WAS GOING TO COME OUT AND IT'S OUT NOW WOAAAAAHHHHH
6:37 British Spies, Dutch Traders, Japanese Ronin and Torture? How isn't this a big budget film?
Loved the crop up of Vlad Dracula observing the beheaded man on a pole and thinking" Hey, I could kill all by Boyars that way!"
Dracula lived before this era
Do you have a upload schedule? I want to know when to expect new vids. They're really fun to watch
Extra History comes out on Saturdays. Not sure what the schedule is for their other series.
@@PalmelaHanderson thank you for the info because i am always desperate for their history videos
And when you take into consideration that the Mughal Empire did not even exist when the Portuguese arrived in India,this simply makes the British defeat even more humiliating.
The tastiest defeat i ever heard about
@@Boretheory stop talking crap
Britain conquered india though
@@freeplex589 yep after mughal lost to marathas and marathas lost to afghans😀 and by that time europe gained much more tech advantage and india got in same situation as Indonesia which is small kingdoms
True, between 1400 and 1500, Northern India was divided into several large and wealthy Kingdoms like the Muzaffarids of Gujarat, Tomaras of Bundelkhand, Sharqis of Uttar Pradesh, Gajapatis of Odisha, Hussain Shahis of Bengal and Bihar, Shahmiris of Kashmir, Sisodias of Mewar, Ahoms of Assam and Adil Shahis of Maharashtra. Southern India, however, was ruled by the large Vijayanagara Empire which controlled the port city of Calicut or Kozhikode (with the Zamorin as a ceremonial leader) where Vasco de Gama docked.
So are we keeping the talking arm chair? I am hoping it's existance ends with this particular series.
But he’s a new character, and Extra History should save Army for a series on the colonization of the Americas by the Spaniards and the Portuguese.
I got to teach with this today! I used 4:40 to tell the history of LLCs
This will be a really fun series to watch, to know what I ignored in my history class...
I believe the VOC still remains the most valuable company of all time (if measured in modern currency)
4:15 If anyone is wondering about the Darien Scheme, basically Scotland tried to fund the founding of a colony in Panama, and sunk half the country's budget into the venture. Only once they got there, they realize that not only are Scots not suited to the jungle and Malaria, they also settled on a spot the Spanish claimed. England basically turned to Scotland and said "hey, we'll assume the debt if you join with us as a single nation". Thus, the Acts of Union gave birth to Great Britain
Looks like Lies is going to be a 2 parter this time, lol.
This is well researched but presented in such a simple and concise manner.
Your channel is really good at sharing perspectives and capturing the true essence of a historical topic.
I would love to see more episodes on Dutch exploits during this era. Thank you for the interesting content as always!
Stay well out there everybody, and God bless you friends! :)
One slight correction to this excellent video: the East India Company was named and set up to “venter in the pretended voiage to ye Est Indies and other Ilands and Cuntries thereabouts there to make trade…”
In other words, their primary target was the East Indies, or Indonesia as we now know it. Failing to beat the Dutch then led to the trade with the Mughals as an afterthought.
It is no accident that India and Indonesia / East Indies have similar names. They are all named after the Indus River, which is in modern day Pakistan. India meant ‘beyond the Indus’ and is, what we would now call, south and south east Asia.
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6:30 Hang on, there was a time in history when British merchants and Japanese ronin teamed up to conduct espionage in Dutch-controlled Indonesia?!? Why the heck isn't someone making *that* film?!?
Just you wait till you see the Spanish Conquistadors and Aztecs fighting against Ronin and Filipino warriors.
Wait a minute you say Portuguese settled in India with the permission of the mughals?
But the Portuguese had a lot of possessions in India before the mughals came...
They didn't, Mughals were not rulling India when the Portuguese came, they were permitted to start trading by the Vijaynagar empire who gave the Portuguese land for building ports and trading.
@@ishanbajpai6940 and they took some territories from the Bijapur Sultanate too
@@ishanbajpai6940 and they also fought kerala and won
Greatest team to tell us history
check out their other narrator from the past.he was the best.
He is good but there is error in histroy
It's just fascinating how Wellesley took over SO much of India after admittedly very difficult wars with the mysorians and the marathas.
You mean Clive?
@@yj9032 A mistake on my part; Wellesley was only responsible for the Maratha wars, while the Mysorian wars were done with the governor-general Cornwallis. Also Clive was only responsible for a few battles and peace treaties not taking over large swathes of land.
Didn't Wellesley say Assaye was his finest victory? I heard that somewhere, please correct me If I am wrong.
I was kind of hoping Armie was going to be a one-time thing.
I've been looking for this video for one week
Love the channel, keep up the awesome work!! Have a great Halloween(tomorrow, today or both)
Alright we rip on the armchair historian, but what about THE armchair historian, the channel I mean
has he done a video on the history of armchairs?
Yeah, I really hope this isn't a poke at him, the dude and his team do an amazing work on their videos too.
@@dnlowithstripes What makes you think about that? "Armchair [insert field]" is a colloquial term for dilettante, meant to be an insult to that person's (lack of) grasp of a certain field. It's pretty much a generic term for Dunning-Krueger "experts"...
6:46
Nice reference to Vlad III
3:26 This is true
Greetings from a Dutchman.
Next episode: who would win: 18th century French Army at their strongest? Or some wet gunpowder?
I will write this under every video of this series- MAKE A TOTAL WAR GAME ON THIS TIME PERIOD, EXCLUSIVELY ON INDIA
Please don't let Elon Musk see this, he already owns twitter and now he's going to want to do get a real life lego army to do this on Mars.
kind of crazy given what happened this election
@dirt420 bruh we are going to end up with gundams 😆
Would love to see a Portuguese history episode someday.
Right? So much God damn history to cover..
One of the biggest empires of the 1600s that is nothing but a shadow now.. only remnants of the language and culture remain, being Merged with local cultures
Interesting!?
India: Come and buy our goods
Netherlands: Nah m8, we good
India: We have spices...
Netherlands: GEKOLONISEERD
Writer: How much copium do you want in this video series?
Producer: *Yes*
Man I love this channel
Please make a series about the VOC!
Yeah, as someone who has an interest in history, its always highly amusing to me that somehow Tiny itty-bitty Little Britain managed to take over so much of the world
In UK schooling I only ever learnt about the EIC in the context of India
As someone educated in Pakistan, how do they cover the war of 1857? Rani of Jahansi, Bahadur Shah II, Mangal Pandey and all that?
Loving this series, also I enjoyed the random Vlad cameo!!!
5:10 beware, the amazon gestapo
*Correction Needed* The siege you are referring to started on February 15,1689 and not in April 1619. Forts of Bombay came into the hands of British on 11th May 1661 as dowry to Charles II.
It's pretty insane to think companies once were capable of having their own armies and navies... Imagine that today...
3:30 my dutch proud levels whenth trough the roof
ps GEKOLONISEERD
🇳🇱
5:48 The city was called Batavia back then
Looking forward to hearing about Nader Shah in the next video
Nader shah would come very late.
As an American with Dutch roots, this video made me very happy.
At some point we are going to need a series on the dutch during this period
"Dont tell daddy Bezos that this has a historical precedent"
I really like where Extra History is now covering these new topic hope the team is doing good
Please talk about the Anglo-Maratha wars. I'll be very sad if you don't, cause most history channels always leave them out :(
This is my favorite history channel
the mughal empire DIDNT exist in 1498. The kings which the portugeuse met were the Zamorins of Calicut, a city state based on trade, similar to the city states of italy in that period. (of course being Indian made them much richer)
Italy in that period was among the richest place in the world though
@@NoName-hg6cc Yeah thats why I said being Indian made them even richer
4:02 *throws hands up and looks at the Dutch flag i have hanging*
V.O.C! V.O.C! V.O.C!
GIVE ME YOUR SPICES AND COCONUTS
I think the main reason why China Korea and Japan was so Persimistic about Weatern and fearing influencing them. Because of India, once a powerful and economically ruboost empire fall in the hands of the British
man this was chock full of fine historical information
The portuguese didn't find the mughals but rather a bunch of indian kingdoms such as the sultanate of Gujarat and the sultanate of Bijapur. The mughals only come later, in 1526.
I got a feeling Amazons CEO already has a PMC in his back pocket, right next to the “blackmail Brandon” button.
...Who's brandon?
@@subjekt5577 the potato in chief
I’d say they’re perfect for each other
@@Dovah22 That might have been clever if you knew how to spell potato.
@@Crazdor i was half awake when i typed that.
As an Indian, I'm psyched for this series
great video as always extra credits!
great video indian history is so interesting to me even tho i live in the indian subcontinent
Extra Credits: I’ve been rewatching your entire series again.
Have you ever thought about revisiting some of your earlier series and expanding on them?
Also, I don’t know if you still write music for your characters but the Mary Seacole series directly references a magazine that wrote a song for her... just saying 😉
3:35 It's kind of crazy that after 5 years EH still didn't covered Dutch revolt.
Well they choose topic through vote
Yeah but at least they did tulip mania recently
That Dutch/British comparison got a good laugh out of me.
Please make one of King John II Portugal
Wow we have this in class and your way better
The British empire is one of the most apt examples of "Rome wasn't built in a day".
Love EC so much. Buuuuuuuut can we be done with the talking armchair please?
Just me or Are those the crystals from boom beach ec yall hiring supercell staff?6:00
As an Indian, this series holds great importance for me.
Kudos team 👍🏾
Love your work.
I was waiting for that Amazon parallel
Play “John Company” to get an idea of the forces that conquered India