Garibaldi: For Love and Country | Unifying Italy | Extra History | Part 2
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- Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024
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Captured by Brazilian soldiers during the Ragamuffin War, Anita searches the battlefield for the body of her lover, Garibaldi. Her captors claim he's dead, but she refuses to believe it. That night, driven by hope, she escapes, dodging gunfire and navigating the jungle for four days before reuniting with Garibaldi. Their love, forged in the fires of war, becomes legendary. This is the tale of their incredible journey together, from intense battles to the birth of a movement that would forever change the course of history.
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Miss an episode in our Giuseppe Garibaldi Series?
Part 1 - • Garibaldi: Hero of Two...
Part 2 - • Garibaldi: For Love an...
Part 3 - • Garibaldi: The Siege o...
Part 4 - • Garibaldi: The Cost of...
Part 5 - • Garibaldi: Expedition ...
Series Wrap-up & Recommended Reading / Lies Episode - • Giuseppe Garibaldi: Un...
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Artist: Nick DeWitt | Writer: Robert Rath | Researcher: A. Siso | Showrunner & Narrator: Matthew Krol | Video Editor: Devon House Creative | Audio Editor: Clean Waves | Studio Director: Geoffrey Zatkin | Social Media: Kat Rider | ♪ Music by Demetori: bit.ly/1EQA5N7 | ♪ "A Distant Enemy Approaches" by Tiffany Roman
#ExtraHistory #Italy #History
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This series shall be among your very Best Guys! Thanks For all your hardwork 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
It's once again the best time of the week. Extra History upload day!
Good video
If you even do a video on Colombia, please mention the emeralds. A LOT of the world’s emerald’s come from Colombia. In fact that’s why the movie Encanto made Bruno Madrigal’s color green. Superstition around emeralds in Colombia says they can help tell the future apparently.
One of the most amazing Brazilian soap operas, "seven woman" retells the ragamuffin war. It is romantic with capital R
When he was bored instead of go reading a book or go to a walk he simply join a revolution what a character
Exactly!
Funny enough that happened again at the Copacabana Fort revolt
So... Grian
HE JUST LIKE ME FR lol
Bunch of Italians: yo wanna generate another historical event/revolution?
Giuseppe: *Mama Mia, Im In!*
As a Uruguayan i never new that Garibaldi had taken part in our civil war. Man is a legend
A legend that you've never heard of.
Your country literally has dozens of monuments dedicated to him
Really? I'm a Brazilian (not even from the south) and I would say most people know he partook in the Farroupilha
I just learned his grandson (also Giuseppe) fought in the Mexican Revolution. That's why our plaza with Mariachi is called Garibaldi
Did you Uruguayans use cheese as cannonballs in one naval battle?
One sad thing is that, just like in the United States. Brazilian history classes never focuses on what exactly was going on the rest of the continent, Only the broad strokes, Garibaldi himself is never even mentioned on most states, the rebellion itself is told as a "oh yeah this happened, moving on"
Extra History is amazing for going shallow enough that most people understand what happened while at the same time making those interested for it to go deeper. Thank you all for this great content
Maybe you didn't pay attention to history classes... We did talk about Garibaldi in our last year's curriculum and I'm not even a sulista.
Also, half of the population being enslaved by less than 10% of the population might be a more important subject than some random Italian nationalist mercenary kicking around in the countryside
@@chimpazoo1143 Escrevendo esse texto em português porque eu acredito que você fala a verdade. História é uma das minhas matérias favoritas, no meu currículo escolar não foi aprofundado a temática das diversas revoltas feitas contra a monarquia, cobraram de nós a escravidão, o ciclo do café e a guerra da Tríplice Aliança. Eu acho muito má fé de sua parte de acreditar que o 5º maior país do mundo tem o mesmo currículo escolar em todos os estados. Mas bom que você já sabia de tudo isso.
@@leonardorivelorivelo9253 Tirando a Guerra da Tríplice Aliança, os dois que você mencionou são os que ainda impactam a sociedade brasileira hoje em dia, portanto recebem atenção especial.
It's like that in many countries, I think
Eu acho q a gnt até foca d mais na farroupilha e n ve quase nada da cabanagem e sabinada etc. eu até entendo pq é mtts revoltas q acontecem nesse periodo e pouco tempo d aula, café e escravidão é mais importante pra entendr o brasil d hj
I have dual citizenship, Brazilian and Italian, so Garibaldi is my dual hero.
Dual hero? He fought for the separatists why would he be your hero?
@@yibithehispanic he fought against an Empire, trying to start a democratic Republic.
@@ivanpetro8464 He fought against the brazilian government, he fought not only against the emperor but also against the democratically elected Parliament and Senate of Brazil and regardless of it he fought the brazilian government not to create a new Brazilian Republic but to carve a new different country using brazilian territory.
You do you dude but watching you say Garibaldi is your hero as a brazilian is like watching an argentinian unitarian calling Dom Pedro II his hero.
@@yibithehispanic I can assure you that Brazilians don't think of him like that. Almost every big City in Brazil has a "Garibaldi Street", and there's an entire City named after him. He was in the right side of history.
@@yibithehispanic I'm Brazilian and you are absolutely right. Read my reply to @ivanpetro8464
"One of the reasons Garibaldi found her so sexy was that she was a very talented rider..."
Talk about double entendre.
*BIG INNUENDO!*
I should be ashamed of myself for laughing at that childless joke. But I'm not.
A perfect innuendo
In the 1840s, Garibaldi and his wife had their hands tied with a Romantic expedition.
Also she was barely 18, but I guess that spoils the angle they're going for here.
How is there no current movie about this man? Dude was a real life action hero
I'm sure there are a lot of movies
Anita’s a frickin’ boss. That’s some Princess Leia-level toughness.
Disney needs to make a movie in hernir something lol
Just adding some names:
1-Fructuoso Rivera, the Colorado leader.
2-Manuel Oribe, the Blanco leader.
3-Juan Manuel de Rosas, dictator of Argentina.
Both Oribe and Rosas would be defeated by a united force of Argentinians, Uruguayans and Brazilians in 1852.
Rosas and Oribe were defeated by Urquiza and Mitre with the help of Uruguay and Brazil in the battle of Caseros in 1852 duting the Platine War
@@vladsiminica2801Mitre was mearly an artillery major during Caseros.
He played no decisive role in the campaign.
Fructuoso is a bizarre name, lol. Way too similar to Fructose Syrup.
@@MatthewTheWanderer Because they are related: Fructuoso means Fruitful in Spanish, and Fructose is a sugar present in... Fruits...
@@Danilium That makes sense, but why would someone name their child "Fruitful"?
By far one of the best series done by the channel so far.
Reminds of the older time such Bolivar and Bismarck.
Thank you for talking about Garibaldi! As you will probably mention, during the last part of his life he retired to the island of Caprera in northern Sardinia. I was born in La Maddalena, the island right next to Caprera, and my grandpa recently told me about the time he met Giuseppe Garibaldi's daughter Clelia Garibaldi visiting the family's house (which is now a museum). I'm sure you will do a great job at giving people the most important pieces of information regarding his life and contributions and inspiring people to learn more about it and about the unification of Italy.
P.S.
It's Giuseppe (similar to -ay), though, not Giuseppi!
5:06 Oversimplified: "WHO SUMMEND ME?!?"
Summoned*
I would love to see a series covering the Argentine Civil war and the Guerra Grande (the one mentioned here). It's not very known about by the rest of the world and it played a major role in South American history
Ojala te den bola 🙏
O una serie que hable sobre San Martín, ya que hicieron una de Bolívar.
I'm Uruguayan and I never knew about that Dumas novel comparing Montevideo to Troy, that's absolutely wild!
Details about that civil war are often glossed over in Uruguayan schools (it gets overshadowed by the Paraguayan war and later conflicts between Blancos and Colorados which lasted well into the 20th century), I was looking forward to learn more about how Garibaldi fitted into that
Me when they said Garibaldi needed uniforms: "This is it right, the sponsor lead in?"
Me when they said he'd need food: "Ah okay, I think this is it."
Then they said factor and I knew, that was indeed it.
I'm from Rio Grande do Sul, the state where the ragamuffin war took place, and on the 20th of this month will be the anniversary of its beginning. We have a big horseback parade and big open barbecues on the day to commemorate.
🎉 feliz cumpleanos! I don't know what anniversary is in Spanish.
Edit: feliz anniversario!
OH SHI YALL DOING A GARIBALDI SERIES????
FR
I did a historical essay on garibaldi my final year of highschool. If only they thought about this sooner
YA BROTHER WE BE A GIRBRIDALI SERIES HOP ON IN HOMESLICE
0:00
nice reference to "it was walpole" as the author of the book at 1:55
Also the maths equation: W = (838 x 500) + 13 = 419013, or W419013 (WALPOLE - might take a few looks)
I live only a couple of blocks away from "General Garibaldi Avenue" here in Montevideo, Uruguay. One of the major avenues on the city.
9:05 you forgot Sardinia in the italian map, which is really important in the Risorgimento (years when italy gained independence), since the most important characters in the revolution came from the Kingdom of Sardinia, formerly known as The duchy of Savoia. Btw great vid and can't wait to see the series continued. When I learned this in school I was bored as sh*t , but the way you're telling and teaching it is amazing and I actually became a little more interested in the revoluton that brought my home.
The extra history series about the Sengoku Jidai I watched as a kid is what set me on the path to becoming a history teacher
Savoy was horrible they commited war crimes in sicily and south italy
Yes, it was called kingdom of Sardinia, but the political and economic center was Piedmont, in Italian history books kingdom of Sardinia and Piedmont are used interchangeably. But yes, they forgot it
@@Herobrineminecraft-returnThey didn't
@@funghi2606eh Sardinia did have special privileges under the “perfect union” treaty
I love this channel so much, thank you for keeping it going
"one of the reasons Garibaldi found her so sexy is that she was a very talented rider"
Not a sentence I thought I would ever hear in ExtraHistory
Wow, that's an opening story!
THIS SERIES HAS BEEN SO EPIC! One of my héroes! Thanks For this Guys 😊😊😊😊❤❤❤
Bruh
During the American Civil War, 1861-1865, Lincoln asked Garibaldi to lead Union Forces. He declined the offer as his focus was the unification of Italy. When Garibaldi was victorious in a major battle and on the road to Rome, King Victor Emmanuel I of Savoy stopped him by shooting him in the leg.😢
Love your vids! Keep being who you are and entertaining us with history
I'm so happy that Uruguay is mentioned in one of your videos!! 🇺🇾🇺🇾🇺🇾
Would love more Latin American history videos like this one 💙
6:09 this is à mistake ! The biggest foreigners group in Montevideo at that time were the French (moslty immigrant from the Southwest) and then the Italian
" Montevideo had become a foreign capital with a very strong European but especially French dominance: 2/3 of its inhabitants were in fact of European origin, and nearly half of them were French, most often born in the Adour basin or in a Pyrenean valley"
You ready to be featured in the lies episode?
Where did you get that information from????
The only source i can find for your claim of a1/3 is a newspaper article claiming that, without any sources, but they also mention that the immigrants where basque and they are not french even if they come from french areas.
from what i can find there was no real amount of french in the city of montevideo at 1843, spanish was the third largest group after the italian and native urugyans at a third.
with a cencus showing just that italian where the largest non native population group
@@thrandompug2254 probably not since i belive what he is writing is probably not true, beside a wiki artivle i cant find any proof of his claims, but i cant read spanish so cant say what the 1840 montevideo census say
@@tuehojbjerg969 I just took him at his word figuring that no one is ever wrong on the internet
@@tuehojbjerg969The French made up 41.5% of the immigration received by Uruguay between 1835 and 1842, and constituted the largest source of immigration for the country in that period.
Source Uruguay - Síntesis histórica de las migración internacional en Uruguay
THE RED SHIRTS!!!!
Wondering who wrote THAT novel...perhaps it was ghost written by a certain prime minister. 🤔
Hey! I didn't know you had a RUclips channel! 🙂
@@briannamcdaniel266 Well, I *am* everywhere! Just more likely to be found in EH and EC themed spaces!
Walpole?
@@larrychilders6599 You could say so...
Was it... No, it cannot be, I dare not say his name
I've just started a History course in College, and this specific series couldn't have come at a better time. I hope theres more to come of Italian Unification and its key figures. Thank you Extra History.
Garibaldi sounds like one hell of a man
Ahhhhhh Mister Garibaldi...
Garibaldi was quite the badass
“Very talented rider”
Been waiting For this all week guys! Thanks 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Loving this series so far!
During his life Garibaldi was shot a lot of times, even with cannonballs (battle of Bezzecca to name one) he was wounded but always found a way to survive. He was mythologized for sure but it happened when he was still alive and he really lived a life that at times appeared to be out of a tale or a legend
VIVA ITALIA
SOBBING DID NOT EXPECT MY REGION TO BE MENTIONED TODAY. LOVE FROM RIO GRANDE DO SUL!
YES!! I'VE BEEN WAITING ALL WEEK FOR THIS!!!!
Yes! A week waiting for this! It felt even longer! It lived up to my expectations! I can't wait for more!
Extra History should do a future series on the Paraguayan War/War of the Triple Alliance, as it's just a continuation of the situation after Garibaldi left Uruguay (via the intervening Platine War and Uruguayan War).
He should be a leader in Civ 7
So this is where the term ragamuffin starts.
My grandma always called me a ragamuffin when I'd get dirty playing in the garden.
the brazilian word is FARRAPOUPILHA, from FARRAPO, which was a mocking term used by the Imperial Army, but was embraced by the Rebels.
Farrapo meaning "rag" or "tatter" in English
>be pregnant
>be captured in battle
>escape brazilian soldiers
>find your husband
>unify Italy
how did we get there?
Alexandre Dumas: history's most succesful weeb
I don’t think he ever wrote about Japan.
@@ferretyluv if he had lived in the 20th century you can bet your ass he would have
To be fair, back in the day the Western world weebed for West Asia. Getting a scimitar with jewels for them would be like getting a very nice katana for us. And in that regard, Dumas was absolutely a weeb.
@@ajohnymous5699 weeb only applies to Japan.
I'm reading The Count of Monte Cristo. He absolutely counts. Heck, the title character uses Sinbad the Sailor as an alias. Not to mention the storyline with the adopted daughter.
I'm from RS it's actually pretty cool to see you guys talking about the Guerra dos Farrapos even in passing.
This guy's doesn't receive not near enough recognition even here in Italy
Garibaldi fu ferito
Fu ferito ad una gamba
Garibaldi che comanda
Che comanda il battaglion
One of my great-great-grandfather was a red-shirt, as a kid i always wore a red-shirt costume for the carnivals (i also wore fake moustaches to look like Nino-Bixio lmao) !
2:19 if you know u know
I never knew the Redshirts were created before the Risorgimento I am honestly blown away at that Garribaldi's life
Garibaldi was low key a theater kid
These vids bring moments of happiness in my life. Its hard goin.
I'm waiting for part 3 to see the part i know more about because Garibaldi for me it's the best general in history
The "ay" right before the ad, you magnificent writers you
I hope the Extra History team make a series (or a episode at least) about wars and conflicts im South America, because every mentiom about it in the series is too simple.
Please do the Greek war of Independence against the Ottoman Empire. I've been asking for this since the first episodes of sengoku Jidai!
Oh gosh I’m so hooked on this story
Do Uruguayan history!!! 🇺🇾🇺🇾🇺🇾
I’d like them to do Colombian history too (and throw in some Encanto references, like how Bruno’s color was green because a large percentage of the World’s emeralds come from Colombia and superstition says that emeralds can help tell the future)
Love the video!
I wonder who got him that job as a math--
It was W419013.
How are you early
It's always Walpole
Well.. since the claim made by Brazilians over Uruguay, ant the links between the two countries borned from the time that Portuguese spent rulling it, and hat rulling was only possible because of the aid England in treaties signed by Walpole.... Yes it was Walpole
@@changingpeopleslivesmoon2993 Patrons get access a day early.
Great serie!
This is so crazy. As an Uruguayan, I've never heard of Garibaldi. Our history is so ignored by our education system. Most schools tend to gloss over the 1830s - 1880s period like nothing happened. They just skip to Batllismo and Saravia...
everybody gangsta until extra history vid drops 💀
I'm surprised about the lack of Star Trek jokes involving Red Shirts.
PANR has tuned in.
Long live Italy! Long live Garibaldi!
I love ye guys in Extra History!
1:17 - Wait a second... Where is Paraguay on this map?!
Agreed! It seems to be missing!
I'm not very good at Paraguay history, but the independence was mostly recognize after 1842 going to 1856.
bro the entire map is terrible, we were not part of uruguay i have no clue what im looking at, thats maybe the worst map i have ever seen of south america no joke
ikr
paraguay was independent in the 1810s despite only having international recognition in the 1840s
besides, uruguay was restored in 1828
Bro Uruguay isn't there either 💀
Garibaldi inspired Joseph Conrad's Nostromo.
W = (838 x 500) + 13
W = 419013
W419013
WALPOLE
IT WAS WALPOLE
Garibaldi teaching math in Uruguay be like:
"So a man was gifted 900 cows by Brasil, 233 drowned in a river crossing, a further 397 died in a cow plague, 152 were stolen by bandits, during the trip 31 calfs were born, how many cows he have left when he arrived in Uruguay?"
good video
2:20 - I'd love a very talented cowgirl rider in my life.
6:37 Deadpool moment.
Very cool
Very interesting
Wow! I knew of Garibaldi & his Red shirts uniting Italy but I was unaware of his South American adventures. Great videos. Is there a part 3?
"the reason why he found ger so sexy was because she was such an amazing rider" 😂
EH video looks amazing as always! All your hardwork is always appreciated! Hearth please ❤❤❤❤❤
That map had a disturbing lack of a Paraguay.
and uruguay was already independent from brazil at that time
You got me!
Transitioned into that commercial that I totally fell for it.
°~•.☆.•~°
Abbiamo la giovinezza in cor, simbolo di vittoria.
Marciano sempre forte e non temiamo la morte.
La stella rossa in fronte, la civiltà portiamo.
Ai popoli oppressi, la libertà noi porterem.
9:22 "... big FACTOR..." hehehehe got it! :)
Nice video
"One of the reasons Garibaldi found her so sexy was that she was a very talented rider, skills she passed on to her man."
Man, I just can't resist that perfect setup. Ahem.
*Giggity.*
There is no jungle in Rio Grande do Sul, there are sub-tropical forests there, that are semi-deciduous, with many loosing foliage in the winter. Brasil is so vast that in the north there is the Amazon forest, a typical tropical jungle, and in the south this sub-tropical forest.
That statue showed up in my history book in high school.
Guissepi was going to be either a Mafia don or a revolutionary.
Oh my god it's my great-great-grandpa
YOOO NEW EH VID DROPPED
All the Argentina's subplot is worthy of a series, all the mess between the Unitarios and Federales. And Rosas fighting the united forces of France and the UK in Paso de Obligado in a battle compared with the Battle of Blackwater Bay from GoT
So basically, God was like "Ykw, I'm bored, I'm just gonna make this rando couple's story straight from a f*cking book.
My dude was living through a love and war relationship 👌
Yeah, he was definitely one of my favourite characters in Babylon 5... 😁
BRASIL!! 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Wait... he was commanding a ship FULL of red shirts, leading them into certain danger? Oh, Shatner...!😕
What happened to Garibaldi's son? He just seems to disappear, given his condition and the events around it sounds likely he died but I don't think it was mentioned. Also his deformity being linked to his mothers fall seems reasonable but how likely was it? Would there actually be any way to prove the link between the two?
@@adamprior8744 Menotti Garibaldi, their firstborn, lived long and wasn't seriously "deformed" by that fall.
Since the bones of newborns' skull are not fused yet, those deformations are quite common, and usually fix themselves in few days.
Menotti Garibaldi became a brilliant military commander himself, then a politician, until he died, at 63, of malaria.