Underrated Empire - The Mighty Tibetan Empire

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  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2024

Комментарии • 568

  • @CoolHistoryBros
    @CoolHistoryBros  2 года назад +21

    Visit brilliant.org/CoolHistoryBros/ to get started learning STEM for free, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.

    • @user-vo8nz2yn3y
      @user-vo8nz2yn3y 2 года назад +1

      Samye Debate part seems to have an error. It says the date as ( 792 - 7. Part of it seems to be missing

    • @alicjacaban2226
      @alicjacaban2226 2 года назад +1

      Hm i think than many nations have empire, s in past. (and many was forgotten like for example Bulgaria)

    • @tommo9176
      @tommo9176 Год назад

      14:10 I love how, no matter what video, no matter what empire, no matter what period of history - you always know who is the bad guy thanks to you or your animator lol

    • @lagrangewei
      @lagrangewei 8 месяцев назад

      the real issue with Tibet is not high atitude, you can always hire local to fight for you, the issue is logistic. logistic is greatly underestimated in history. the rise and fall of dynasty is frequently due to logistic changes. such as when shifting weather pattern push grain production centers further from the capital, this weaken the desire keep the army at the capital as it would be expensive to move food to the capital. the grand canal is build just to improve logistic. but how do chinese bring goods and supplies in to tibet? the mongol frequently conquer the tibetan, they ain't use to high atitude either, but they can ride on their "food", this is why they can be successful, it is a logistic problem. Tibet is a good and under cover topic that is worth more discussion.

    • @Sangeychhonjin
      @Sangeychhonjin Месяц назад

      I would like to see the animated story of the Monyul Kingdom of Monpa too.

  • @kikiso3196
    @kikiso3196 2 года назад +123

    As a Tibetan, this is much needed and thank you for covering tibetan history. 👍 it's very rare that people cover tibetan history on RUclips.

    • @mertixtv1322
      @mertixtv1322 Год назад +1

      Hello, im Pole and im really interested in current Tibet. I would be really happy if i can ask you some questions.

    • @tho_norlha
      @tho_norlha Год назад

      I agree !

    • @dawagensapa6885
      @dawagensapa6885 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@Astrophilist what're you yapping on about? You good?

    • @Astrophilist
      @Astrophilist 9 месяцев назад

      yeah yeah im alright .... R u Tibetian@@dawagensapa6885

    • @Astrophilist
      @Astrophilist 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah good ! ok@@dawagensapa6885

  • @orcguy51
    @orcguy51 2 года назад +46

    I've done some academic study of Tibetan Buddhism and even tried (And failed) to learn Standard Tibetan, so seeing this makes me extremely happy!

  • @anasevi9456
    @anasevi9456 2 года назад +59

    Great video, Tibet is such a strange but wonderful place historically.

  • @IndraKatiK
    @IndraKatiK 2 года назад +111

    I usually played Crusader Kings 3 on the 1066 start date so i always see all the kingdoms in the tibetan plateau already fragmented, but always wondered why some of the ruling dynasties there have such a high renown/fame
    Turns out they were this huge empire centuries prior

    • @prodbasedmystik
      @prodbasedmystik 2 года назад +5

      you should try more start dates mod, tibet op in those

    • @PoeticMenace_
      @PoeticMenace_ 2 года назад +2

      @@prodbasedmystik got it on xbox

    • @fritzvenezia9338
      @fritzvenezia9338 Год назад

      Not to mention that Buddhism is almost got rid in the CK3 start because of that attempted eradication by pro-bon factions.

  • @tenno5509
    @tenno5509 2 года назад +71

    as a tibetan, thank you for covering my heritage and its powerful past!

    • @silversurfer2977
      @silversurfer2977 2 года назад

      Are you in china now?? In xijiang??

    • @jiaqizhao4740
      @jiaqizhao4740 2 года назад +9

      @@silversurfer2977 dude, those are two different places

    • @ironheart5830
      @ironheart5830 2 года назад +1

      Overseas Tibetan ??

    • @blade1246
      @blade1246 2 года назад +8

      Tibet is a different country, not the same as China.. he could be living in US or India or in Tibet... But Tibet is not china bruh

    • @blade1246
      @blade1246 2 года назад +5

      He might be in lhasa, shigatse, kham or toey... These are all Tibet

  • @BloodnSteel
    @BloodnSteel 2 года назад +47

    Finally someone covers this. I did a research project and presentation on it in University, but it's otherwise a totally uncharted topic. Thank you for addressing this.

  • @dirtyjack6300
    @dirtyjack6300 2 года назад +68

    Fascinating. They basically figured out evolution in a spiritual/religious sense.

    • @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl
      @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl 2 года назад +3

      Muslims also did that

    • @lilithmotherofmonsters6055
      @lilithmotherofmonsters6055 2 года назад +4

      Pretty much everyone and every culture that is successful at *anything* has figured that shit out tho...

    • @ausgepicht
      @ausgepicht 2 года назад +6

      ​@@MohamedRamadan-qi4hl They most certainly did not. Islam is the only religion that on a daily basis, multiple times a day slaughters innocent people, beheads journalists, stabs cartoonists, shoots people sipping lattes at cafes, blows up market places of innocent people including innocent women and children, mutilates the genitalia of teenage girls, has men that tell women what to wear and whether they can travel unchaperoned, drive, or vote, has adult men marrying 12-year old girls, flies planes into buildings, burns people alive, etc. Islam is the most barbaric, evil, immoral, sick ideology on the planet. No other religion does those things constantly and consistently. Muslim have gone backward and there is evidence that Neanderthals were kinder, more spiritual. GTFO with your lies.

    • @鱼人-v8y
      @鱼人-v8y 2 года назад +2

      @@ausgepicht I love Muslims, they’re are based af

    • @user-Void-Star
      @user-Void-Star 2 года назад +8

      Actually, Buddhism is a pity much evolutionary. See at Buddhist six realm
      1: Deva
      2: Asura
      3: humans
      4: animals
      5: hungry ghost
      6: Naraka
      When the universe was born it was a dame hot that is hot Naraka and later it cooled down and formed galaxies and planetary and then first life form emerges that's is the hungry ghost and then time goes on many hungry ghosts evolve into many kinds of animals and then one of the animals evolve human and then human become highly technology that is Asura where you can change your biology body and then Asura becomes further advanced and becomes Deva and many eons later all the light in the universe dies off with blackness and cold that's is Cold Naraka. And then many many eons later universe born again that is hot Naraka and cycle goes on. This is the Buddhist cosmology of the Samsaric cycle.

  • @azdajajeanne
    @azdajajeanne 2 года назад +40

    CJ's correct pronunciation warms my SOUL. It's a huge pet peeve of mine when English speakers pronounce foreign words according to English phonetics. I read a lot of audiobooks, so I encounter it _constantly._ There's really no other explanation for why I was so moved by this video. THANK YOU!

    • @tasse0599
      @tasse0599 2 года назад +10

      Are you expecting english speakers to use sounds they don't have in their inventory?

    • @azdajajeanne
      @azdajajeanne 2 года назад +5

      @@tasse0599 Bold of you to assume I meant something so uncharitable. I was referencing the tendency, not to mispronounce by approximation (pronouncing "Xiran" as "Shiran"), but to mispronounce because you assumed English orthography could be universally applied to anything spelled with the Latin alphabet (pronouncing "Xiran" as "Zee ran" or "Ex-Iran").
      And, actually, the word that prompted this comment was an English word that native speakers often mispronounce. It's a loanword, though, so it follows the rules of its own language and not English. I was impressed CJ got it right!
      You really just look foolish for becoming provoked by a comment that...was an insult to nobody, and not even directed at you. 🤷‍♀️ Like...why do you care about my opinion so much you felt a need to contradict me? Broadcast your insecurity a little louder, there, mate.

    • @benni_thien
      @benni_thien 2 года назад +3

      @@azdajajeanne Thanks for the answer. I just wanted to answer that myself, but you phrased it better than I could have.

    • @azdajajeanne
      @azdajajeanne 2 года назад +1

      @@benni_thien Aww, thank you! 😊 Yeah, I'm over these randos who take umbrage at my trivial comments. Like...it's just-baffling. Some people really act like their disagreement with my opinions is a life or death issue? I'm a nerd, not a Nazi. It's okay if you disagree with my opinion.

    • @rms1034
      @rms1034 2 года назад +5

      Many many foreign languages pronounce foreign words in their own accent. English is the international language so some extra effort should be aplauded but not expected to the point of reprimanding. Examples that come to mind are how foreign words are pronounced in French are frankified and foreign words in Japanese are japanified. It's simply what people are capable of doing most of the time.

  • @devonjamesj
    @devonjamesj 2 года назад +51

    I’ve always interpreted the Tibetan Founding myth as a story of Homo sapiens meeting what we now know as Denisovans and founding what we now know as the Tibetan people. I don’t deny I’m probably wrong but I like the idea and it doing really hurt anything so I go with it.

    • @nehcooahnait7827
      @nehcooahnait7827 2 года назад +9

      It was more like a different group completely unrelated to proto-sino-Tibetans (because they didn’t exist yet) encountered Denisovans and mixed up with them a bit while causing them disappearing. They continued to exist in the region for a couple of thousands of years until proto-Tibetans arrived and mixed up with them while causing those groups to disappear.

    • @PaulAllen6304
      @PaulAllen6304 2 года назад +7

      Earliest of the early Tibetan skulls found show some degree of interbreeding between homo sapiens and another unknown homo species, other than neanderthal.
      The popular theory is Denisovans from Southern Siberia migrated Southwards to Tibet where they mixed with Cro-Magnons to form Modern Tibetans,Mongols, Altai people. Denisovan DNA can be found in Papuans in the highest concentration, but how it reached and why Papuans still look different than other groups carrying Denisovan DNA is still a big mystery.
      But thanks to CCP's "all Han policy" Tibetans would probably be all gone before we solve this mystery.
      The yeti, Altai apeman, Badmanou and other such cryptids could be the last remaining Denisovan or some sort of ancient hybrid tribe.

    • @ironheart5830
      @ironheart5830 2 года назад +2

      According to Tibetan legend Nyatri Tsenpo the founder of Yarlung dynasty was pull to heaven with a cord when he was dead
      History Channel: ALIENS 😆

    • @devonjamesj
      @devonjamesj 2 года назад +1

      @@PaulAllen6304 I personally think as an autistic person that I constitute a separate hominid and that I have a different way of processing and relating and that a unique set of normalized behaviours is a component part of speciation. Because we know that homo sapien has interbred with at three different hominid species under the current definition we would all be one species.
      Another question I have is are extra terrestrials actual extra terrestrial? Why would a more developed hominid want to interact with us? What would they gain? Any answer you come up with they have technology and understanding far beyond ours that renders that point moot. Not to mention the fact that we’d be a bunch of twats and try to take their stuff. I’m not saying any of what I say is 100% factually accurate but I’ve yet to see conclusive proof to disprove it. Once you remove all that’s impossible everything else is equally possible, not necessarily probable. But possible none the less and must be given equal consideration in the interest of a true and complete answer.
      And for everyone that is skeptical…..if you discovered something that disproved a deeply held personal belief that you hold on faith…. What would you do? You would destroy it in rage. I, as a homo Felidae am more interested in being a factually correct contrarian than validating any one belief I hold. I hold very few as inalienable. Like that I’ve been accused of being a genius for decades so you don’t get to turn around now and tell me I’m broken and wrong because without really trying I pointed out inconvenient oversights that invalid years of effort and that pisses Homo sapiens off. I have no issues being wrong, please explain it to me so I can understand. Since I guess I’m a genius, other peoples words not mine, that means if you’re an expert by definition you should understand it well enough to be able to explain it to me so I can understand. If you can’t then you can’t really claim to be an expert. (I have said no where you have to. My comment is on capability, not intent. It’s how I know who else is a homo Felidae. They understand the concept the point of consideration and know I picked my words very carefully. They understand what I’m referring to instinctively. 🤷‍♀️)

    • @WaMo721
      @WaMo721 2 года назад

      @@ironheart5830 nyatri tsenpo hands were like ducks....we read in tibetan story book....

  • @marcomartinez1843
    @marcomartinez1843 2 года назад +12

    Thank you for making a video about Tibetan history, and I can't wait for the history of the Uyghur Khaganate and the fall of the Tang Dynasty.

  • @dolmatsona2243
    @dolmatsona2243 3 месяца назад +2

    Thank you for such an important information 🙏

  • @nyxi6689
    @nyxi6689 2 года назад +68

    Everyone: The chill and thin air made the Tibetans nearly invincible in their own lands.
    The Mongols: Hold my spear

    • @dsong2006
      @dsong2006 2 года назад +7

      well the Manchu not only conquered them in the 1700s but kept Tibet until early 1900s. Mongols were just good at conquering but not holding territory for a long time

    • @sonam1959_
      @sonam1959_ 2 года назад

      Tibet is harsh but this didn't stop a lot of other empires from conquering tibet, mongols, khasa (nepali+indian), turks, persians, etc.

    • @weishi9804
      @weishi9804 2 года назад

      Yes, Tang Chinese victory come at the cost of their war god‘s lung, and passed away 3years later.

    • @weishi9804
      @weishi9804 2 года назад

      @@dsong2006 Tibetan empire has 70 times larger army.

    • @WaMo721
      @WaMo721 2 года назад +2

      @andrew ansyon nobody cares about nepal,lol

  • @darthvenator2487
    @darthvenator2487 2 года назад +5

    I'm really glad your channel is growing. Thanks to you, the history of the peoples of Asia is accessible to me and helping me to grow as a person.

  • @shampashampa6729
    @shampashampa6729 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for written inspired caption and clear interpreting 👍😁🙏Beri Jampa

  • @fraktaalimuoto
    @fraktaalimuoto 2 года назад +3

    Nicely done! Saying this as someone who has tried to know about Tibetan history.

  • @sonamnechen8733
    @sonamnechen8733 2 года назад +13

    Gotta say his pronunciation of Tibetan words are spot on..

    • @ctynwbraygalm
      @ctynwbraygalm 2 года назад

      He is tibetan

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 2 года назад +2

      @@ctynwbraygalm i don't think he is, why do you say that?

    • @WaMo721
      @WaMo721 18 дней назад

      yes i was surprised as well

  • @alessandrodelogu7931
    @alessandrodelogu7931 2 года назад +15

    Good video, about a mighty empire seldom talked about. Next time you could make something about the Tocharians or the Dali kingdom. These forgotten corners of history are always interesting.

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw 2 года назад +3

      Tocharians are Indo-Europeans thus is the job of westerners/white people to cover them

    • @viracocha6093
      @viracocha6093 2 года назад

      @G L ????

    • @blarg2429
      @blarg2429 2 года назад

      @@GL-iv4rw You don't have the authority to decide such a thing, nor is it possible for any person to legitimately claim that authority.

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw 2 года назад

      @@blarg2429 do i have to no the burden/obligation still lies with the west dont need anyone to state reality they are part of _their_ history, not China's, failing to do so would be neglect and you know how the west are in that regard

    • @blarg2429
      @blarg2429 2 года назад +1

      @@GL-iv4rw I understand where you're coming from, but preventing people from studying history unless that history revolves around their own culture is too far. It is, ironically enough, racist.
      I do very much agree that the mainstream western perspective on a great many topics, especially those pertaining to the east, is a simplistic and wrongheaded perspective indeed, but without the freedom to seek this type of knowledge the situation cannot improve.
      Furthermore, while studying a culture and history you do not participate in has many pitfalls, studying a culture and history to which you are native has pitfalls of its own. For example, most countries deny any war crimes committed by their militaries, refusing to educate their own citizens about these events and sometimes actively suppressing information on the topic; and in general there is a risk of nationalistic pride skewing someone's perspective.
      If a native historian can look past their pride when it gets in the way of the truth, so can a foreign one.

  • @akochimgapo1410
    @akochimgapo1410 Год назад +1

    Amazing, got to tell my friends about Tibet.. Thank You..

  • @catanada9111
    @catanada9111 2 года назад +3

    An underrated topic on an underrated channel

  • @tao.of.history8366
    @tao.of.history8366 Год назад +2

    Just found your channel through History with Cy, it’s great! I’ve been looking for well researched info about eastern Asia, outside of China, thank you!

  • @sherabdorjee4966
    @sherabdorjee4966 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for making this video sir.

  • @YahBoiCyril
    @YahBoiCyril 2 года назад +1

    Whoop! The historical summaries are back.

  • @Raidon8537
    @Raidon8537 2 года назад +3

    Cool video! I'm waiting for Yughur-Uygur Empire. And also Qocho and Ganzhou Kingdoms.

  • @MarcosVinicius-hg4uz
    @MarcosVinicius-hg4uz 2 года назад +3

    so quick i want more

  • @ElBandito
    @ElBandito 2 года назад +31

    Langdarma is so infamous in Tibetan Buddhism that his name is used to mean "apostate", or "bad person", in Mongolian.

    • @ganbat
      @ganbat 2 года назад +3

      Never heard langdarma word in mongolian language

    • @ElBandito
      @ElBandito 2 года назад +7

      @@ganbat Zoomer yumuu huu? Humuusiig Landram gej heldeg shdee.

    • @tripplehhh2584
      @tripplehhh2584 Год назад

      Langdarma was around 6-8 century brother Mongolian came to Tibet around 12 th century ....they established the khoshut khanate ruled by gushri khan ....his descendants and his soldiers got mixed up with tibetan later on

  • @amrisyafari3946
    @amrisyafari3946 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for bringing this content. Now i know. 🥰

  • @Berat-ey8qp
    @Berat-ey8qp Месяц назад +1

    Bravo

  • @vvalmart
    @vvalmart 2 года назад +1

    Your channel is great and very informative thank you for all of the knowledge I love learning about eastern cultures and empires!

  • @ruthxk7844
    @ruthxk7844 2 года назад +3

    Awesome

  • @micahdunwoody6555
    @micahdunwoody6555 2 года назад +2

    This is fascinating. I study violence in Asian traditions, and it is astounding to see how it is existed both within and without of a culture that people often label as completely pacifistic.

  • @chanhyunpak4021
    @chanhyunpak4021 2 года назад +3

    whoo hoo 2nd!

  • @MrAllmightyCornholioz
    @MrAllmightyCornholioz 2 года назад +10

    BUDDHA BLESS TIBET

  • @eternalmaximum6899
    @eternalmaximum6899 2 года назад +8

    My families religion is Buddhism and my family is from Vietnam so it’s Mahayana Buddhism

  • @theMOCmaster
    @theMOCmaster 2 года назад +2

    Very cool

  • @alexalpine4490
    @alexalpine4490 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for the animated timeline

  • @cgt3704
    @cgt3704 2 года назад +20

    "According to Mani Kabum, the ancestor of the Tibetans was a monkey".
    So the Theory of Evolution pre dates Darwin ? The more you know, right guys .

    • @fannyalbi9040
      @fannyalbi9040 2 года назад +1

      it was a hybrid, monkey + demon

    • @cgt3704
      @cgt3704 2 года назад

      @@fannyalbi9040 details.

    • @fannyalbi9040
      @fannyalbi9040 2 года назад

      @@cgt3704 watch the video again

    • @cgt3704
      @cgt3704 2 года назад

      @@fannyalbi9040 dude. It was a joke.

    • @fannyalbi9040
      @fannyalbi9040 2 года назад

      @@cgt3704 that’s the reason i lazy to elaborate

  • @samham4669
    @samham4669 2 года назад +32

    Korea basically exists because the Tibetans drew troops away from Tang's Eastern Frontier, allowing the Silla forces to drive out the Tang-allied Jurchen contingents from the peninsula.
    I am surprised the bit about Xue Rengui being routed was omitted from the video.

    • @hishot1078
      @hishot1078 2 года назад +1

      Tang + Khitan + Jurchen vs Silla + Goryeo

    • @GL-iv4rw
      @GL-iv4rw 2 года назад +1

      But in present day Koreans and Manchurians like each other and hate Chinese 😂

    • @taejo4975
      @taejo4975 2 года назад +12

      @@GL-iv4rw Bro Manchurian are literally gone, I’m one myself by genes but moved overboard, we don’t even care and honestly the people are already assimilated

    • @milfisme5621
      @milfisme5621 2 года назад +14

      @@GL-iv4rw I am Manchu Chinese, and thank you for known our existence. But how can I hate Chinese when I am Chinese myself? I don’t hate my country and Han Chinese so stop those bs

    • @milfisme5621
      @milfisme5621 2 года назад +2

      @@taejo4975 你是ABC?你还会说中文吗?

  • @polleonardtaliesinhywel6986
    @polleonardtaliesinhywel6986 Год назад +3

    This is a great episode and one of the few that explores Tibetan history in detail. I would love to see your take on other periods such as the Zhangzhung and Sumpa, the Era of Fragmentation, and the Yuan vassalage and rise and fall of the Guge kingdom.

  • @robertroe9563
    @robertroe9563 10 месяцев назад +1

    Can you do a history of the Gar Clan in Tibet and what happened to their clan after some were chased to china. I know later that much later there was a Gara lama also known as Nora rinpoche who was at Riwoche in Kham who the yellow hats accused of being a chinese spy. He went to china and became an important figure who revived vajrayana in china. Chiang Kai Shek gave him control over Buddhism in nationalist china and he established a center in Sichuan (or Chongqing). Would love to hear a more nuanced history of that family.

  • @NP-jy7qs
    @NP-jy7qs 2 года назад +3

    Can you please make more about Tibet.

  • @hellboundtruck123
    @hellboundtruck123 Год назад +5

    Zhang Zhung kingdom is arguably older than Egyptians and Sumerians. Tibetans almost wiped out their remnants. Only in Ladakh some traditions are of old bon.

    • @bavii5189
      @bavii5189 Год назад

      Zhang zhung is our old kingdom. Just like Bhutanese are tibetan but still recognized as their own kingdom.

    • @sonam1959_
      @sonam1959_ Год назад

      @@bavii5189 Bhutanese is NOT Tibetan and were never ever considered in any period of Tibetan history, they were never directly a part of the Tibetan empire ever. They fall under , below the Himalayas, south of the mountains, it was extremely difficult to maintain long standing control over a region as such. They just paid taxes to our government

    • @tripplehhh2584
      @tripplehhh2584 Год назад +1

      @@sonam1959_ I think a monk who fled Tibet created Bhutan 🇧🇹 no .

    • @dorjeepalden86
      @dorjeepalden86 Год назад +1

      @@sonam1959_ Bhutan never existed until Tibetans migrated to the area in 9th century and later Tibetan monk named the region Bhutan. Dzongkha is Tibetan dialect.

    • @raidang
      @raidang Год назад +1

      ​@@bavii5189yep Bhutan Sikkim Tibet Arunachal are Tibetan states

  • @Ritvik-xs3yh
    @Ritvik-xs3yh 2 года назад +6

    ODD COMPASS has a very informative video on the 'TIBETAN EMPIRE'
    Highly recommended...!!!

  • @kuroazrem5376
    @kuroazrem5376 2 года назад +8

    Wait, they went to Mordor? Are the Tibetans and the Orks related?

  • @silvercorvidsmarketing
    @silvercorvidsmarketing 2 года назад +6

    2:38
    Nice segue lol.
    Edit:
    Very cool video also. The Tibetan empire is the Mithani empire of the east: epic, fascinating, mighty and utterly snobbed by history fans.

  • @PseudoProphet
    @PseudoProphet 2 года назад +3

    It's literally impossible for a regular person to live at those heights, let alone fight wars.

  • @benthomason3307
    @benthomason3307 2 года назад +8

    CJ: "Tibetan myth holds that humanity came to be when a particular monkey was blackmailed into sex by a snake demoness."
    The History Channel: "WRITE THAT DOWN, WRITE THAT DOWN!"

  • @barguttobed
    @barguttobed Год назад +1

    As Tibetan appreciate this 👍🏼👍🏼

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam 2 года назад +15

    How about Uyghur Khaganate (also other Turkic empires) vs Tibetan Empire battles

    • @therminust4
      @therminust4 2 года назад +2

      Also Uyghur vs Dzungar & Tocharians (natives Tarim Basin/ Ancient Xinjiang)

    • @sonam1959_
      @sonam1959_ 2 года назад +3

      Tocharians and Tibetans shared a close relationship, proof is in Gansu Xinjiang-Qinghai Tibet

    • @Willxdiana
      @Willxdiana 2 года назад

      needs to do one on gokturk for sure

  • @mylesjude233
    @mylesjude233 2 года назад +8

    Awesome video as always my dudes. Also it'd be cool in the future to see you guys cover more of Southeast Asia ( perhaps Narai's embassy with King Louis XIV 8r discuss the rise and fall of the Angkor Wat/ just some of my favorite videos of yours was when you covered Majapahit and Vietnam).

  • @ikengaspirit3063
    @ikengaspirit3063 9 месяцев назад +1

    What are the speculations for the country of Mor?.

  • @theishingkhuishimray1892
    @theishingkhuishimray1892 2 года назад +2

    Tell me something about the Rinphungna Dynasty of tibet

  • @MarcosVinicius-hg4uz
    @MarcosVinicius-hg4uz 2 года назад +2

    wow i'm so curious

  • @bakdakal
    @bakdakal 2 года назад +7

    Do the Chinese teach also this in school? Just curious. If for example the developers of age of empires 4 would add the Tibetans as a playable civ would the Chinese government ban the game?

    • @gutsikkyamo8426
      @gutsikkyamo8426 2 года назад +2

      Not a chance, even Spartan’s 3000 heroes depicted as rebels instead of standing against the Persian army in Chinese school text book.

    • @unien6781
      @unien6781 2 года назад +3

      中学的历史课上会教,不过不会讲的太多。真的要学习的话大学有专门的专业课程。说实话如果帝国时代4将西藏人作为可玩文明的话中国人应该会很高兴

    • @gutsikkyamo8426
      @gutsikkyamo8426 2 года назад

      @@unien6781 ཉིན་དེར་གནམ་གཤིས་དྭངས་བས་མཆོད་རྟེན་བྱ་རུང་ཁ་ཤོར་ལ་སྐོར་རར་ཕྱིན། ལམ་དུ་བལ་ཡུལ་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་མཐོ་སློབ་ཀྱི་བོད་ཡིག་དགེ་རྒན་ལྷག་པ་ལགས་ནས་ཁ་པར་འབྱོར་ཏེ་དུས་ཁོམ་ཡོད་ན་མཉམ་དུ་ཁ་ལག་བཟའ་བར་འགྲོ་ཟེར། ཁོང་ནི་དེ་སྔོན་ས་རཱ་བོད་ཀྱི་མཐོ་རིམ་གཉེར་ཁང་ནས་སློབ་མཐར་ཕྱིན་པ་དང་། དེ་རྗེས་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་མཐོ་སློབ་ཏུ་བོད་ཡིག་དགེ་རྒན་གྱི་ཕྱག་ལས་གནང་ནས་ཡུན་རིང་སོང་བའི་དགེ་རྒན་རྙིང་གྲས་ཤིག་རེད། ཁོང་ལ་ཁས་ལེན་གྱིས་ཕྱི་ཉིན་མཆོད་རྟེན་མདུན་སྒོར་ཐུག་རྒྱུར་ཁས་བླངས། ཁ་ཆད་བྱས་པ་ལྟར་ཕྱི་ཉིན་དེར་མཆོད་རྟེན་མདུན་སྒོར་ཐུག་མཚམས་གློའི་ཟ་ཁང་ཞིག་ཏུ་བལ་པོའི་ཁ་ལག་བཟའ་བར་མཉམ་དུ་བསྐྱོད། ཟ་ཁང་དེར་ཁ་ལག་ཟ་ཞོར་སྔ་རྒྱུས་ད་རྒྱུས་སྣ་ཚོགས་གླེང་ནས་ཡུན་རིང་བསྡད།
      དེ་ནས་ཐོན་ཁར་ཁོང་གི་འཛིན་གྲྭའི་སློབ་ཕྲུག་རྣམས་ལ་བོད་ཀྱི་སྐད་ཡིག་གི་གལ་གནད་སྐོར་ལ་སྐད་ཆ་ཐུང་ཙམ་ཞིག་ཤོད་ཅེས་བརྗོད་པས། འདས་པའི་མི་ལོ་བཅུ་གཅིག་ཙམ་གྱི་རིང་རང་ངོས་ནས་ཐད་ཀར་བོད་ཀྱི་སྐད་ཡིག་དང་འབྲེལ་བའི་ཐོག་དོ་སྣང་གང་ཡང་མ་བྱས་སྟབས། འདི་འདྲ་ཞིག་བཤད་ན་ཕན་ཆེ་སྙམ་པ་གང་ཡང་སེམས་ལ་མ་ཤར་བ་མ་ཟད། ཁོང་གི་སློབ་ཕྲུག་ཁྲོད་བལ་ཡུལ་མཐའ་མཚམས་ཁུལ་ནས་ཡིན་པའི་ཧི་མ་ལ་ཡའི་བོད་རིགས་ཀྱང་མང་དུ་ཡོད་པར་བརྟེན་དེ་བས་བསམ་གཞིགས་དགོས་པ་ཆགས། འོན་ཀྱང་ཁོང་གིས་རང་མི་རིགས་ཀྱི་སྐད་ཡིག་ལ་བཅངས་པའི་ལྷག་བསམ་དེར་རྒྱབ་སྐྱོར་མཚོན་ཕྱིར་དང་། རང་ཡང་མཐོ་སློབ་དེ་མཐོང་འདོད་པས་གཤམ་གྱི་རྩོམ་ཡིག་འདི་ཁོང་གི་སློབ་ཕྲུག་ཚོར་གྲ་སྒྲིག་ཞུས།
      རྣམ་ཀུན་སྐད་ཡིག་གི་གལ་གནད་གླེང་ཚེ་སྐད་ཡིག་གང་ལ་དབང་སའི་མི་རིགས་དེ་མ་གླེང་ཐབས་མེད་བྱེད་ཅིང་། དེའི་རྒྱུ་མཚན་ནི་མི་རིགས་གང་དེ་གྲངས་མང་མི་རིགས་ཁོངས་སུ་མངོན་མེད་སིམ་ཡལ་དུ་མི་འགྱུར་བ་དང་། རང་བཞིན་རྩ་བརླག་ཏུ་མི་འགྲོ་བའི་དོན་དུ་སྐད་ཡིག་དེ་སྲུང་སྐྱོབ་དགོས་པར་ནན་བརྗོད་བྱེད། དེ་ནི་སྐད་ཡིག་སྲུང་སྐྱོབ་དགོས་པའི་སྤྱི་ཡོངས་ཀྱི་རྒྱུ་མཚན་ཞིག་ཀྱང་རེད། མཐར་གཏུགས་ན་སྐད་ཡིག་སྲུང་སྐྱོབ་ཅེས་པ་མི་རིགས་དེ་མ་བརླག་པའི་དོན་དུ་ཡིན་པས། དེ་ནི་ཆབ་སྲིད་འཐབ་རྕོད་ཀྱི་ལྟ་བའི་ཆ་ནས་འགྲེལ་ཚུལ་ཞིག་ཀྱང་ཡིན་ངེས།

    • @taejo4975
      @taejo4975 2 года назад +2

      @@gutsikkyamo8426 Well you ever look into why?

    • @huskaroar6869
      @huskaroar6869 Год назад

      @@taejo4975 they were defending their nation against an invading force. The reasons behind the greco Persian rivalry is long and complicated but the Spartans and the Greek forces were defending an invading force. Simple as that. I don't know how anyone can brand them as rebels! Lfmao

  • @natashafrancis406
    @natashafrancis406 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed watching it, however, found it a bit weird how some names are pronounced. Tang capital was Chang'an and not Tzangan....

  • @subrotoxing8214
    @subrotoxing8214 2 года назад +6

    While you re at it with the early narration of legend / history .. why not follow up with the history / legend figure guru padmashambava .. how much historical is he ?

  • @Sparticulous
    @Sparticulous 2 года назад +4

    Yeah I only learned about this empire trying to learn about the Tang Dynasty

    • @premchopra6521
      @premchopra6521 2 года назад

      tang empire is part of tibetan empire

    • @Sparticulous
      @Sparticulous 2 года назад +2

      @@premchopra6521 um no

    • @premchopra6521
      @premchopra6521 2 года назад

      @@Sparticulous hey bro, you can check history n tell me...I always stand by the truth, that's why I'm telling the truth. by the way I'm rakesh from bangladesh we support humanity

  • @MrAllmightyCornholioz
    @MrAllmightyCornholioz 2 года назад +5

    Creationist: We don’t come from no monkeys!
    Tibetan Buddhist: We came from monkeys!

  • @dara_1989
    @dara_1989 2 года назад +1

    Zhang zhunh , yarlung and azha ... sounds like Chang thang , u.tsang and amdo

  • @sonam1959_
    @sonam1959_ 2 года назад +10

    Very interesting video, I'd like to point out that speakers of the western tibetic branches speak one of the purest and archaic forms of the Tibetan language, these include people of Kinanur, Lahaul & Spiti, Ladakh, Zanskar, Ngari (Tibet), Gilgit and Baltistan and even those from Amdo. These regions are historically classified as "western tibet" , which was the land of the aryans or "Arya", the initial bon religion worshippers and followers of Tonpa Sherap, who was a Tajiki himself, having migrated from the Pamirs, and his disciples from the greater steppes of Central Asia and the Karakoram, the original inhabitants of Western Central Tibet (Ngari, Purang) and Ladakh, Baltistan, were all Indo Europeans, particularly Iranic people, in Ladakh known as the Mons, a people group closely related to Dards, who are found scattered all throughout Kashmir and POK, and northern Pakistan. The Bon religion is very similar to Zoroastrianism, you can see bon worshippers in the Iranic populations of Pakistan, Gilgit Baltistanis, etc. The region of Amdo is also very complex, the earliest settlers in the region were people related to the Scynthians, who were Iranic, who were great horsemen who used the great steppes to their advantage, mummifications and stone inscriptions are found all over Amdo and the Xinjiang Uyghur region. The Chinese have tried to destroy us and our heritage, but they will not take away our history. I would appreciate if you made another video about western tibetan regions and empires such as Guge, those of Ngari, Ladakh, Mustang Nepal, Zanskar, these are all regions where tibetan culture was born and modern day tibetan culture as we know it was adapted from, as well as the ancient Tibetan Bon religion and it's connections with Zoroastrianism and Persia.

    • @tsewangrinzin2421
      @tsewangrinzin2421 2 года назад +1

      Tibet is geographically Vast. Ancient Tibet does have connections with Persian, Indians & Arabs. But modern Tibetan were all Tibeto- Burman ethnic groups. Genetically Modern Tibetans were related to other East Asian population such as Chinese. Average Tibetan is 82% East Asian, 11% Central Asian with 8% others.

    • @sonam1959_
      @sonam1959_ 2 года назад +5

      @@tsewangrinzin2421 "Tibeto-Burman" is not an ethnic group or a linguistic group, people can adopt languages, that doesn't change your genetic makeup. The oldest tibetans are found in Ladakh, they have dardic mixture, original tibetans are related to Iranic people groups. Common knowledge, the mongols swept out the native population of Central Asia.

    • @sonam1959_
      @sonam1959_ 2 года назад +3

      @@tsewangrinzin2421 There is not enough research done on Tibetan people for you to come to a conclusion as such. Not to mention, people from every region of tibet has different genetic makeup, the most archaic tibetans are found in Western and northern tibet ( Amdo, Ngari, Changtang)

    • @tsewangrinzin2421
      @tsewangrinzin2421 2 года назад +2

      Tibetan were not related to Iranic people in a similar way as Northern Indians are. Linguist had noted a similarity between Tibetan, Burmese & Chinese language. With the exception of some Buddhist terms, Tibetan language is not related to neither India nor Persia. Even if we look at old Tibetan from Dunhuang manuscripts of 8th century, the Tibetan as a language hardly changed. I read couple Tibetan manuscripts of 8th century.
      Even the Mongols like tribes were present since the beginning in the Eurasian steppe. It is only 11th Century, with the rise of Genghis khan, the Mongols became a Global force even conquering Tibet & China. But the Mongols had not swept the native of Tibet. The Dunhuang manuscripts predates the rise of Mongols.

    • @sonam1959_
      @sonam1959_ 2 года назад +2

      @@tsewangrinzin2421 Northern India is inhabited by Tibetic people groups too. Also, learn to separate language and ones ancestry. You could speak a Indo-euroepan language but still be from a turkic dominant country and have turkic ancestry or vice versa. Ancient Tibetan language is very complicated, if you want to udenrstand ancient tibetan language and culture take a look at Ladakh. NO, the natives of the Central Asia particularly northern tibet were the tocharians, not mongol people. The Mongols dispopulated ALL of the region, don't get it twisted

  • @ironheart5830
    @ironheart5830 2 года назад +8

    According to Tibetan legend Nyatri Tsenpo the founder of Yarlung dynasty was pull up to heaven with a cord when he was dead.
    History Channel: ALIENS 😆

  • @nomanor7987
    @nomanor7987 2 года назад +20

    Are the Tibetans the closest ethnic group to the Han Chinese? Sino-Tibetan is shared language group.

    • @papazataklaattiranimam
      @papazataklaattiranimam 2 года назад +15

      Tibetans are Tibetic people like Bhutanese but Han Chinese are Sinitic people like Wu, Hui, Hakka etc.

    • @CoolHistoryBros
      @CoolHistoryBros  2 года назад +35

      No, language group is not the best marker for culture & ethnicity, the Tibetan culture is much closer to the pastoralist nomads and the surrounding culture. Not only that, their DNA has evolved to adapt to high-altitude life.

    • @ali40589
      @ali40589 2 года назад +12

      Northern Han Chinese is closer to Koreans and Japanese, that's what I only know.

    • @calvinblue894
      @calvinblue894 2 года назад +8

      Han Chinese is actually not an ethnic group..but an assimilation over time in history..
      So..this question cannot be answered

    • @CoolHistoryBros
      @CoolHistoryBros  2 года назад +16

      @@calvinblue894 By definition, that is an ethnic group, Calvin.

  • @Pedrosa2541
    @Pedrosa2541 2 года назад +1

    4:20 - Man after man?

  • @crypto66
    @crypto66 2 года назад +2

    For a second there, I read the Three Dharma Kings' names as "Songtsen Gampo, Trisong Detsen, and RALPH."

  • @unifieddynasty
    @unifieddynasty 2 года назад +8

    Good stuff. Not many people know that Tibet had an empire that even managed to successfully invade Han China several times. Also, not many people know the history of the Dalai Lamas, which could be compared to that of the Pope, or at least a Patriarch, in the west.

    • @fanuelcui1109
      @fanuelcui1109 2 года назад +4

      lol
      The Tibetan Empire, collapsed in the late 9th century and never rose up to be a unified country again.
      The position of Dalai Lama was never remotely comparable to the Pope in terms of influence. Its See & lineage only started in early 15th century as the head of the Gelug school ("Yellow Hat") of Tibetan Buddhism. The sector remained obscure until late 16th century. By the time it reached its zenith in late 17th century, it enjoyed the status of being the most dominant religion in the regions of Khalkha Mongolia, Tuva, Dzungaria, Tarim Basin, and parts of Nepal and Bhutan. Not a single country on the list above had a population greater than 1 million. The office of Dalai Lama only briefly rose to political prominence during the rein of the Fifth Dalai Lama between 1640s and 1680s. Even during these decades the Dalai Lama was technically a vassal of the Khoshut Khans of Oriat Mongols who ruled over Tibet. The Khoshut princes took back the power from the regency appointed by the Great Fifth after his death. The subsequent factional struggle between the Dalai Lama's Gelug School and the rival Karmapa Lama's Karma Kagyu School (the "Red Hat") brought about Dzungarian occupation of Tibet, and finally the incorporation of Tibet into the Chinese Qing Empire in 1721. It was under the Qing's rule, the Gelug School was given the precedence over the other three schools and Dalai Lama was installed as both the religious leader and secular prince over the region of U-Tsang and Westnern Kham. The high name recognition of the title "Dalai Lama" among modern Westerners results from the great works of advocacy carried out by the incumbent 14th Dalai Lama and his associates, after the exile to the West of him and his followers in 1959.
      As popular as the 14th Dalai Lama has been in the past decades in the West, the image of influence he projects today is not a proportionally accurate reflection of the clout his office actually wielded in history.
      The analogy drawn between Lalai Lama of Lhasa and the Pontiff of Rome in terms of historical influence is utterly nonsensical.

    • @unifieddynasty
      @unifieddynasty 2 года назад +4

      @@fanuelcui1109 Sure, that's a good explanation, which is why I also included the caveat that he would "at least" be comparable to that of a Patriarch. I did not write the above as some sort of idolization of the Dalai Lama or the Tibetan Empire, but rather as perspective on the inherently and factually political and belligerent history of Tibet and its leadership. Are you sure you disagree with my position?

    • @delhikanpur789
      @delhikanpur789 Месяц назад

      ​@@fanuelcui1109cry commie slave of chinese criminal party....lol 😊😊😊

  • @MrPink-qf1xi
    @MrPink-qf1xi 2 года назад +11

    Chinese sending a princess or other nations maybe requesting one for better relations sounds interesting. Orkhon inscriptions talk about a similar thing too.

    • @celine7511
      @celine7511 2 года назад +2

      It is Tibet first required a princess from Tang Dynasty. Tang refused first then two fought

    • @jiaqizhao4740
      @jiaqizhao4740 2 года назад +2

      (Heqing) send princess is actually quite a common policy of all Chinese dynasty, I think only Ming did not have this practice. It give Chinese dynasty some influences in foreign court, while foreign entities have assurance(hostage) they will be not be attacked and trade occur normalcy. It does not always work. Also, normally, it someone with royal blood but not direct offspring of the imperial family.

  • @zerxuszhang8846
    @zerxuszhang8846 2 года назад +1

    How people think of these ancient empire are highly related to what their modern successor looks like

  • @youngs80s
    @youngs80s 11 месяцев назад +1

    great educational historical vlog ever,,thank u fr sharing such wonderful great real history of Tibet,,, hope Tibet will be free soon from Ccp china,,

  • @ed.7856
    @ed.7856 2 года назад +1

    Didnt they become the dali and nanzhao states before mongols?

  • @francokwok1667
    @francokwok1667 4 месяца назад

    Mates, all empires crumbled because if failed finances. Tibetan Empire no exception, as the land left idle because men went to become monks, and population shrank. Hastened the decline, they even joint forces with the Mongolians and Manchurians to conquer China Proper. Escaped from the hook, as Han Chinese just drive the Mongolians out. But, the Han Chinese toppled the Manchurian Empire all upside down, so inherit the empire which included Tibet. This is in accordance with the International laws. Had India toppled the British Empire all the way at London, then it inherits both Australia and Canada. Thumbs up.

  • @bjap1563
    @bjap1563 2 года назад +1

    3:59 If he mistakenly ask guidance from Gigachad....
    Monkey:"Begone Thot!"
    *And the land was filled with what she has cursed upon*

  • @CARL_093
    @CARL_093 2 года назад +2

    More bro i love it do not forget more chinese dynastys bro
    the mortal enemy of tang the tibetan

  • @kittykattzee
    @kittykattzee Год назад +1

    Are they unchallenged by external forces because they’re actually “mighty” or simply because of geography? They didn’t seem to win any significant battles or conquer territories outside of the Tibetan plateau, the times they win against Tang China is because the Tang are more focused elsewhere or are experiencing a potential dynasty-ending rebellion lol. It just seems like the other major powers around them didn’t care too much about the Tibetan plateau to try and conquer them seriously.

    • @MT-ks7fd
      @MT-ks7fd Год назад +3

      Tibetan empire streches around present day baltistan in pakistan, ladakh xinjiang, nepal, bbutan, parts of myammar ... even came upto ganga river in india...

    • @WaMo721
      @WaMo721 8 месяцев назад +1

      Bro why so much hate on tibetans….u clearly didn’t research before yap-pin….they fought in plains of arab land with the abassids and won against chinese tang

  • @sustaingainz7856
    @sustaingainz7856 2 года назад +6

    Tibetans in the Chinese capital 🤯

  • @jamesgordley5000
    @jamesgordley5000 2 года назад +1

    Wait... didn't they take over Burma at some point, too?

  • @mage9825
    @mage9825 2 года назад +2

    what happened after the Mongol empire collapsed?

  • @ErikHare
    @ErikHare 2 года назад +9

    They took Chang'An? If only they had held it! History would have been very different.

    • @ctynwbraygalm
      @ctynwbraygalm 2 года назад +1

      Chinese claim on tibet would have been even stronger. Like how they claim mongol and manchu territory

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 2 года назад

      Would be interesting

  • @architsharma6524
    @architsharma6524 2 года назад +1

    Man was interested in marrying princesses like there's no tommorow 🤘

  • @jonnyboy8143
    @jonnyboy8143 Год назад

    Buddha never die. It's a teacher when we read script

  • @animation1234111
    @animation1234111 2 года назад +2

    What was the conception of "Buddha" in the context of the Tibetan origin myth? If humans didn't exist, how was there a Buddha?

    • @Trapezoidal
      @Trapezoidal 2 года назад +4

      In Buddhist cosmology this planet, or even this universe, isn't the first. Others have already taken place and had Buddhas appear in them as happened historically on earth. Bodhisattvas like Avalokiteshvara then appear continuously to help lead beings to liberation whenever there are the circumstances to do so.

    • @premchopra6521
      @premchopra6521 2 года назад

      oi bro, there have been countless buddhas in our universe

  • @youtubelover7681
    @youtubelover7681 2 года назад +7

    our ancestor was a monkey.
    darwin: yeah what a great guy.
    our ancestor mother was a demon snake.
    darwin: yeah ... wait what?

    • @tanglung1543
      @tanglung1543 Год назад

      😅😅😅🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂

  • @arsenalofdemocracy9985
    @arsenalofdemocracy9985 2 года назад +4

    free tibet

  • @jonnyboy8143
    @jonnyboy8143 Год назад

    Enlightenment is hard. Once love material

  • @jonnyboy8143
    @jonnyboy8143 Год назад

    Khum umdo untsand . Can we stand together. Let's dance

  • @Liliphant_
    @Liliphant_ 2 года назад +2

    Yoooo

  • @sarahhatesit
    @sarahhatesit 2 года назад +1

    I know this is a really off topic question but I don't really know anyone else to come and ask it and Google wasn't of much help!
    What would you call someone obsessed with Asian culture apart from Japan or Korea? Around here we have Koreaboo's, Weeaboo's, even for Nazi Germany we have Wehraboo, I'd sincerely appreciate your input as I've heard other names but none seem to be quite standardized as the ones previously mentioned.

  • @alsetalokin88
    @alsetalokin88 Год назад +2

    this is proof that humans did not migrate out of afrika but here

  • @Remitonov
    @Remitonov 2 года назад +11

    Tang version: _Long story about the Tibetans' shameful display._
    Tibetan version: "We beat the shit out of them and got their princess' hand in marriage."
    Impossible to say which is the more accurate account, but at least the Tibetans were concise.

    • @tenzinminz5150
      @tenzinminz5150 2 года назад +5

      There is a stone pillar or tablet of treaty between Tibetan and Chinese. It reads.. "..... Tibetans shall be happy in the land of Tibet, and Chinese in the land of China"... It is still there.

    • @Rangzen555
      @Rangzen555 2 года назад

      @@tenzinminz5150 Yes, there is!

  • @JoeSmith-sl9bq
    @JoeSmith-sl9bq 2 года назад +2

    Pretty cool how they have the same monke origin story as most humans subscribe to today

  • @bigdoggy3031
    @bigdoggy3031 Год назад +1

    im so confused, perfect chinese pronunciation, but japanese english accent?

  • @phurbasherpa7441
    @phurbasherpa7441 2 года назад +8

    Ok.
    The history with first tibetan King is he was said to be different in terms of look. Had blonde hair and different facial features and so much that he did not look tibetan at all and is said to be from different country.
    When the tibetans found him and asked "where are you from?"
    The man pointed up into the sky.
    The tibetans thought that it was god who was in a human form and took him to their village on a palanquin. The palanquin was rested on the shoulders of the tibetan.
    Ngya in tibetan means shoulder
    Thri in tibetan means carried
    Chenpo means king.
    Sorry for bad format. Using a phone to type

    • @phurbasherpa7441
      @phurbasherpa7441 2 года назад +2

      Not very likely.

    • @tsewangrinzin2421
      @tsewangrinzin2421 2 года назад

      Khas king maharaja was 12th century. 1st Tibetan king was in 127BC. The ages different is 1227 years. Thousands of years apart. Indians had a very poor sense of History as compared to East Asian.

    • @DeusEstAmor________137
      @DeusEstAmor________137 2 года назад

      His name was Nagraj.

    • @tsewangrinzin2421
      @tsewangrinzin2421 2 года назад

      @@DeusEstAmor________137 Whatever his name is, he is very late in the history. That’s 11/12 century. We are talking about around 127BC

    • @DeusEstAmor________137
      @DeusEstAmor________137 2 года назад

      @@tsewangrinzin2421 First settlers in west Tibet near central Asia Kashmir, Baltistan were Aryans

  • @Beijaflordaamazonia
    @Beijaflordaamazonia Год назад +1

    The vídeo is beautiful to watch, the subject is very interesting but ... Why you speak soooo fast? It is difficult to understand this kind of information with different names and all as it was a person narrating a horse race. Please, speak a little more slow in a comfortable way to talk and listen. Nobody speak this way in a conversation, so at certain point to listen become uncomfortable. Thank you

  • @aishwaryashrestha8357
    @aishwaryashrestha8357 11 месяцев назад +3

    Nepalese princess was Bhrikuti

    • @WaMo721
      @WaMo721 3 месяца назад

      will you be my brikuti

  • @LunaticReason
    @LunaticReason 2 года назад +10

    The air nomads?

  • @oddstudio
    @oddstudio 2 года назад +1

    what a great video, absolutely love it, now subscribed. Free Tibet, F the CCP

  • @unifieddynasty
    @unifieddynasty 2 года назад +1

    Damn that snake is thirsty. 😀

  • @AlejandroHernandez-ej9fk
    @AlejandroHernandez-ej9fk 2 года назад +1

    Wait... Nepal existed in 7 th century? How old is this country? Isn't Nepal breakaway part of India or something like that?

    • @WaMo721
      @WaMo721 2 года назад +1

      No.but they r result of Tibetan armies raping some Indians at the border.......

    • @Hithere-qj1wj
      @Hithere-qj1wj 2 года назад +3

      Breakaway part of India?
      Lol where did you learn that.
      Our history dates back to Kiratas who dominated the hills and the mountains back then.
      Mentions of Nepali woolen rugs can be found in Chanakays arthashastra itself which is old as 3rd BCE.

    • @raidang
      @raidang Год назад

      Nepal wasn't even occupied by British either

    • @LeMoN-vb4pe
      @LeMoN-vb4pe Год назад

      there wasnt nepal lichhavi dyansty here is being referred as nepal, word nepal was only used during malla dynasty and after the unification of nepal in the 19th century

  • @MrVlad12340
    @MrVlad12340 Год назад +1

    Thats... curious how tibetans have legends that are basically humans evolving from apes and spreading around the world, while also mentioning ice age and etc.
    Kinda... strange. Interesting.

  • @Witnessmoo
    @Witnessmoo 2 года назад +1

    Didn’t the Monghols suffer from
    Altitude sickness?

    • @WaMo721
      @WaMo721 2 года назад

      Attitude sickness

    • @6principlesforcartography61
      @6principlesforcartography61 2 года назад +4

      Basically Tibet surrendered to Mongols when they reached border without major battles, since the place was divided and did not have a united force to stop the Mongols.

  • @delyththomas2093
    @delyththomas2093 2 года назад +1

    Maybe next Nepalese history