Genghis Khan Was Unstoppable and We've Just Figured Out Why...

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  • Опубликовано: 23 апр 2024
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    About Thoughty2
    Thoughty2 (Arran) is a British RUclipsr and gatekeeper of useless facts. Thoughty2 creates mind-blowing factual videos about science, tech, history, opinion and just about everything else.
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    Writing: Steven Rix
    Editing: Jack Stevens

Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @Thoughty2
    @Thoughty2  Месяц назад +194

    Remove your personal information from the web at JoinDeleteMe.com/THOUGHTY and use code THOUGHTY for 20% off! DeleteMe international Plans: international.joindeleteme.com

    • @faysalmuhammad4969
      @faysalmuhammad4969 Месяц назад +11

      Hey thoughty 2

    • @smokeybear4life
      @smokeybear4life Месяц назад +7

      Thanks Arran

    • @christopherellis2663
      @christopherellis2663 Месяц назад

      Genghis not ghenghis

    • @hansolowe19
      @hansolowe19 Месяц назад +4

      Don't use those ai thumbnails, or clickbait titles.

    • @corbin_4738
      @corbin_4738 Месяц назад +2

      One of the many *best* things about your videos and content is that you go straight into the content. There is no time wasting. Your channel has quickly become on my favorite

  • @YoursUntruly
    @YoursUntruly Месяц назад +7868

    I don’t care what anyone says. As a nearly decade long subscriber; I’ve never heard anything other than “Hey, forty-two here”.

    • @dangreene3895
      @dangreene3895 Месяц назад +218

      That's what I hear

    • @TheArtofFugue
      @TheArtofFugue Месяц назад +458

      That’s because he’s always said forty two. It’s an ode to the book/movie a hitchickers guide to the galaxy which essentially goes as 42 is the answer to the life, universe and everything.
      Highly recommend the film and movie. Sorry for the grammar errors I’m learning enlgish

    • @JS-jn8ku
      @JS-jn8ku Месяц назад +94

      ​@TheArtofFugue Mind blown, boom. So we aren't mistaking thoughty 2 for 42. I saw the movie a long-time ago, nice catch, if so.

    • @puckingery915
      @puckingery915 Месяц назад +123

      @@TheArtofFugue your grammar is far better than a lot of what I see everyday

    • @TheMoonlightCraftsman
      @TheMoonlightCraftsman Месяц назад +91

      @@TheArtofFuguedon’t apologize for your English. That’s better than 90% of Americans…That is interesting if accurate

  • @spidalack
    @spidalack Месяц назад +3369

    In a world of 40 seconds shorts, Thoughty2 comes out with a 45 minutes gem.

    • @daryld4457
      @daryld4457 Месяц назад +25

      Daryl likes this.

    • @MrThe1234guy
      @MrThe1234guy Месяц назад +20

      42

    • @haviper
      @haviper Месяц назад +22

      Honestly didn't realize it was that long until I finished watching it

    • @cmoncuhhh700
      @cmoncuhhh700 Месяц назад +11

      thoughty second shorts*

    • @Vee_of_the_Weald
      @Vee_of_the_Weald Месяц назад +27

      People with long attention span unite! 🤘🏼

  • @andiralosh2173
    @andiralosh2173 19 дней назад +67

    This is why I never make fun of my friend's tent

  • @MrLabpro
    @MrLabpro 27 дней назад +123

    Temujin and Jamuka weren’t just friends they were brothers, they exchanged blood which in mongol culture is a bond stronger than family

    • @EmirTimurlenk
      @EmirTimurlenk 18 дней назад +1

      Not from nothing… he had his name and title. And he just needed to honor it. Anyone else would’ve been laughed away. From less than him was Tamerlang his son in law to his tribe…that limp Turk never lost a battle by himself.

  • @michaeldriggers7681
    @michaeldriggers7681 Месяц назад +591

    What I'm learning from this is that if you want your people to conquer the world, pay them well, show them respect, and promote based on merit, not social standing.

    • @ryanzutell1423
      @ryanzutell1423 27 дней назад +19

      That’s kind of continually been proven throughout history. Not particularly groundbreaking

    • @shadenym5094
      @shadenym5094 27 дней назад +91

      @@ryanzutell1423that’s what HE learned man. No need to shit in his oatmeal

    • @ryanzutell1423
      @ryanzutell1423 27 дней назад +8

      @@shadenym5094 it seems more like a snarky observation on his thoughts of society. But to each their own

    • @gnaleinad
      @gnaleinad 27 дней назад +9

      Did you forget the cruelty and mass murder? 😂

    • @stephensaunders3759
      @stephensaunders3759 27 дней назад +18

      Everyone back then committed mass murder look at Caesar, Alexander, Napoleon, the Spanish the list goes on and on

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 Месяц назад +2728

    If Genghis Kahn had permanently conquered the entire world then I might be teaching Mongolian poetry, a job which would have its PROSE and KHANS. 😜

  • @keithberjeron763
    @keithberjeron763 25 дней назад +64

    If you were My history teacher, I might have actually passed the subject.
    NOW I see why History is an enthralling saga- a brilliant epic played out on the same stages where we currently stand, commute, shop and live life. Not some stale endless list of: On or about (date), (Name) of (place) did (verb) to (name) of (place) because (reason). That was how I learned and why I failed. I never felt the slightest bit interested. But here you come and I am enjoying learning about history- That almost never happens. Cheers, Thoughty2!

    • @allan2665
      @allan2665 23 дня назад +3

      My thoughts exactly he really outdid himself on this video.

    • @markgoodwin5918
      @markgoodwin5918 23 дня назад +2

      Oh..... if you like long form audio, you should check out Dan Carlin's Hardcore History. His style is absolutely mesmerizing. :)

    • @OnMyLunchBreak07
      @OnMyLunchBreak07 20 дней назад +1

      Same bro.
      Of all the subjects in school the one I hated most/found most boring was history.
      It's only now that I've graduated and watched incredible videos on these topics that I appreciate and enjoy them more.

    • @jacobfrank2164
      @jacobfrank2164 4 дня назад

      You didn't fail anything. Your teacher graded you as a failure. You can't "fail" at learning. School is for idiots.

  • @catherineberry6971
    @catherineberry6971 28 дней назад +89

    This was a great history lesson. Wish I had you for my history teacher!! Thank you!

  • @epaniyYoutub
    @epaniyYoutub Месяц назад +183

    the name “Genghis” is actually mangled “Chingis”, because westerners learned first about him from Persian and Arabic sources. Since there is no “ch” sound in Arabic, the name “Chengis” was transliterated to “Gengis”. Same thing happened to Osmans which were transliterated to “Othman” in Arabic and became “Ottomans” in Western world.

    • @JohnNiiggington
      @JohnNiiggington Месяц назад +41

      It was actually “Chungus”

    • @epaniyYoutub
      @epaniyYoutub Месяц назад +12

      @@JohnNiiggington copy “Чингис хаан” and paste it to youtube search. You will get videos of Mongolians talking about him. Notice how they pronounce the name.

    • @user-rd6lb1ov6n
      @user-rd6lb1ov6n Месяц назад +10

      @@JohnNiiggington It's pronounced Chinggis, with 2 [iː] sounds.

    • @otherself7400
      @otherself7400 Месяц назад +4

      ​@@JohnNiiggingtondon't speak if you don't know anything

    • @ishanchegu
      @ishanchegu Месяц назад +2

      Very nice bit of history and etymology! Got any more for us? 😅

  • @epaniyYoutub
    @epaniyYoutub Месяц назад +485

    Jamukha's head wasn’t chopped off. At the time in Mongolian tribes it was customary for nobles to get “bloodless” death upon execution. Jamukha was captured and later got his back broken, that’s how he was executed.

    • @pheresy1367
      @pheresy1367 Месяц назад +10

      Good one!

    • @uuganbayartserenochir
      @uuganbayartserenochir Месяц назад +62

      As a Mongolian myself i would say this comment was very true according to my and everyone else's knowledge.

    • @madfrosty5228
      @madfrosty5228 Месяц назад +3

      correct

    • @MehWhatever-uw9gc
      @MehWhatever-uw9gc 29 дней назад +3

      Glad I scanned the comments before saying something About that.

    • @Astrnauted
      @Astrnauted 29 дней назад +12

      That sounds like an extraordinarily painful way to die

  • @pandasiah5264
    @pandasiah5264 7 дней назад +4

    I use Genghis Khan as an example of excellent management and strategy regardless of if its warfare or business. Gather your assets, find good managers that have proven themselves capable and give them autonomy in their department. Also if there's an apocalypse create a horde of warriors that can hunt, fish, and gather resources on their own

  • @mellowmike6263
    @mellowmike6263 28 дней назад +90

    There's a quote from this great show utopia that I always think about:
    "You know the person who had the greatest positive impact on the environment on this planet? Genghis Khan, because he massacred forty million people. There was no one to farm the land. Forests grew back."
    Interesting to see the truth in it

    • @Humanaut.
      @Humanaut. 23 дня назад +7

      And yet the human is the only species that can save life on earth from certain extinction.

    • @allan2665
      @allan2665 23 дня назад +3

      @@Humanaut. ?

    • @maximos905
      @maximos905 22 дня назад +5

      Except it's not true because a lot of those lands are plains that don't grow trees

    • @marktyler3381
      @marktyler3381 20 дней назад +9

      Remember the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Guess what happened in the following 2 years? The fish stocks recovered, because people weren't allowed to fish.

    • @nguyentandung42
      @nguyentandung42 17 дней назад

      @@Humanaut. and humans are the one causing the most extinction.

  • @BiggChunguss
    @BiggChunguss Месяц назад +476

    Thoughty2 dropping a 45 min video on Genghis Khan? Nice.

    • @botezsimp5808
      @botezsimp5808 Месяц назад +2

      You forgot the period.

    • @lydiaben1724
      @lydiaben1724 Месяц назад

      I didn’t realize it was 45 min 😂

    • @Hession0Drasha
      @Hession0Drasha Месяц назад

      Is that how he was finally defeated? Crushed by a chonky video 😊

    • @RosinGoblin
      @RosinGoblin Месяц назад

      Noice m8 meow meow meow meow meow

  • @holeymcsockpuppet
    @holeymcsockpuppet Месяц назад +898

    Lessons I learned from the video:
    1. Build friendships.
    2. Leave no potential threat with any power...or alive.
    3. Recruit talent, not "titles" (noble birth people)
    4. Build loyalty through limited freedoms and money.
    5. Don't attack directly. Instead, cut off supply lines and draw out enemies. Make them fight you on your terms.
    6. Constantly seek to improve your tactics and technology. Be a lifelong learner.
    7. Adapt to your circumstances rather than trying to adapt them to you. Use available resources...like rivers or horse milk (and bl00d).
    8. Know your limitations.
    9. Strike fast, strike hard...very hard.
    10. Use your enemies fear, their anger, and their greed against them.
    Bonus lesson:
    11. Decorate your enemies with liquid silver.
    Awesome video as always Thoughty2!

    • @skyehigh2527
      @skyehigh2527 Месяц назад +1

      .

    • @RearAdmiralTootToot
      @RearAdmiralTootToot Месяц назад +28

      This hasn't been approved by Sun Tzu yet though, so it is still just mere speculations as to the art of victories.

    • @oguzkaganonder1331
      @oguzkaganonder1331 Месяц назад +70

      @@RearAdmiralTootToot Conquered half of the world, I think this proves something

    • @aldouztek2784
      @aldouztek2784 Месяц назад +33

      12. Don't steal other people's wife

    • @Nowhere-from
      @Nowhere-from Месяц назад +14

      It all sounds great until you try putting them together.
      Let's say recruiting talent instead of entitled people.... Temujin had to loose the important friendship of nobles and instead he made new and powerful enemies within his own people, the Mongol tribes. This powerful aristocracy became better suited as enemy than as friend in the end, but putting that into practice is just impossible. You would need the power to see the future to put it into practice.
      Temujin had to be very intelligent and charismatic, but also highly lucky...which is possible, just think in lottery winners.

  • @kaztarihtanu
    @kaztarihtanu 27 дней назад +15

    The success of genghis khans rapid expansion was the fusion of huge/heavy chinese sieging tools with mobile nomadic army from steppe. On the one hand, chinese siege tools were able to move across landscapes easily with the help of massive amount steppe horses. On the other hand, nomadic army solved their main issue - the inability to siege down big cities with wide walls.

    • @mitchellcouchman1444
      @mitchellcouchman1444 11 дней назад +1

      They often traveled without fires as the often didn't cook their food making their approach as stealth as you can be for an army that size and were described as very large by the Chinese as at this time the Chinese diet was low in animal protein but the mongols diet was almost completely animal protein

  • @xy1xy
    @xy1xy 22 дня назад +41

    He reincarnated as Greta

  • @skeepodoop5197
    @skeepodoop5197 Месяц назад +1143

    I'm sorry... He killed SO many people that he reduced the amount of carbon in the atmosphere!? WHAT!?

    • @ronanonymous6017
      @ronanonymous6017 Месяц назад +326

      Where do you think the WEF got the idea from?

    • @zeitghost1321
      @zeitghost1321 Месяц назад +32

      ​@@ronanonymous6017 😂

    • @25lxghters11
      @25lxghters11 Месяц назад +31

      This is actually insane 😂

    • @Joeshmo772
      @Joeshmo772 Месяц назад +49

      Thoughty sent a message. Covertly, and accurately.

    • @jonwoodmass2849
      @jonwoodmass2849 Месяц назад +15

      This thoughty2 guy sounds unhinged

  • @Dandydorf
    @Dandydorf Месяц назад +325

    Genghis khan has one of the coolest origin stories ever. To be kicked out as a boy and subsequently build your empire growing up, is absolutely fuckin bonkers

    • @r3qwst71
      @r3qwst71 21 день назад +2

      Cain did the same

    • @bigheadrhino
      @bigheadrhino 21 день назад +25

      His life also has a romance origin as well. His first wife Borte, his bethrothed since childhood, was kidnapped by a rival clan shortly after they were married. His initiative in collecting allies and ultimately rescuing her is said to be the catalyst for becoming the uniter and conqueror that he eventually became.

    • @MichaelBrandonMcCartney
      @MichaelBrandonMcCartney 16 дней назад

      ​@@bigheadrhinoI have a sneaking suspicion Genghis Khan was going to go this route regardless. Too much power lust, ego & ambition in him not to have

    • @annemaria5126
      @annemaria5126 15 дней назад +2

      Not an original story (meaning noone else had an origin-story like him). In history, all great men in various aspects of society, had no father (him being killed, died from an illness, just left, out of wedlock). Followed by an struggling youth and raised by a poor mother, neglected by the family, but determined to change and enhance his prospects, have his revenge by fighting and killing, or climbing that social ladder and get rich and influential.

    • @bigheadrhino
      @bigheadrhino 14 дней назад +7

      @@annemaria5126 like who? I just checked, Caesar, Napoleon, Alexander the Great, none of them had the story you just described. Are you thinking about Braveheart? Definitely not “all great men” in the context of conquerors have this origin story.

  • @theforestoftchanbyyaoma7441
    @theforestoftchanbyyaoma7441 22 дня назад +3

    It’s really pleasant to watch, your way of presenting is truly engaging. I am a fan of Genghis Khan since my childhood. Your refreshing and joyful sarcastic approach is top notch! Thank you

  • @mrj3217
    @mrj3217 19 дней назад +3

    This was the best history lesson I have ever had the pleasure of learning.
    How are you and other dedicated creators/historian lovers.
    Bravo 👏.. Bravo... 👏 👏 👏

  • @collinsasena621
    @collinsasena621 Месяц назад +306

    This guy is just on a diff level of narrating. So far in my opinion the best piece i have seen from him.

    • @obiwrongkenobi
      @obiwrongkenobi Месяц назад +3

      I agree 100%

    • @benjaminguilatcoiv
      @benjaminguilatcoiv Месяц назад +3

      I can imagine that he was just like many guys who were even as kids drawn to the story of Genghis / Chinggis Khan and the great Mongol hordes, this is a distillation of his lifetime passion, interest of reading and learning about this subject matter.. as well after having made many videos with feedback on each one from the audience he knows how to best present his information in the most engaging manner. This is a culmination of many aspects coming together at the right time.

    • @John-mf1sz
      @John-mf1sz 24 дня назад +2

      Dates and Dead Guys is an absolutely killer channel as well.
      If you want to dive into Native American history he’s the go to.
      Native American history is absolutely incredible by the way, especially the Comanche and Apache. Those guys were on another level.

  • @balpreetsingh6834
    @balpreetsingh6834 Месяц назад +549

    Id like to meet Thoughty1 someday and learn about the origins of Thoughty2

    • @user-jq7dm7en8t
      @user-jq7dm7en8t Месяц назад +66

      Imagine the o.g. "Thoughty0"

    • @balor7872
      @balor7872 Месяц назад

      ​@@user-jq7dm7en8the has a kid thoughty²

    • @Chronicoverburn
      @Chronicoverburn Месяц назад +9

      ❤ this comment

    • @TheStupidityBand
      @TheStupidityBand Месяц назад +35

      42 - the answer to life, the universe and everything.

    • @bonehead007
      @bonehead007 Месяц назад +14

      Thoughty1 is you, the viewer.

  • @rtsesmelis
    @rtsesmelis 28 дней назад +1

    Thanks, man. Absolutely great video. Fantastic story-telling!

  • @carlagthinkbig8638
    @carlagthinkbig8638 27 дней назад +1

    Another impressive video! Thank you so much 🙏🏻 your videos are my companion

  • @iw9472
    @iw9472 Месяц назад +171

    This is my Comfort channel. I come here whenever I need a pick me up and I always go out happy.

  • @rufussouthgate7532
    @rufussouthgate7532 Месяц назад +393

    He nearly doubled the world as well.

  • @MichaelCalcinari
    @MichaelCalcinari 16 дней назад +1

    Excellent job on this episode 👏 Your stuff has been constantly great for as long as i have known about you.... Thanks for sharing your creativity and humor with us 😊 😀 👍

  • @filmsofgilbert
    @filmsofgilbert 8 дней назад

    Loving the long form videos, keep it up and thank you!

  • @dixienormus6941
    @dixienormus6941 Месяц назад +208

    Absolutely brilliant. This is better than anything you’d ever see on bbc. This man is a legend

    • @SportsBettingFacts
      @SportsBettingFacts Месяц назад +1

      So what is the reason he was unstoppable?

    • @drewdabrew4745
      @drewdabrew4745 Месяц назад

      BBC are clout chasing losers .

    • @KyxLimitless
      @KyxLimitless 28 дней назад +1

      @@SportsBettingFacts He was better

    • @SportsBettingFacts
      @SportsBettingFacts 28 дней назад +2

      @@KyxLimitless 😂😂😂We knew that before watching this clickbait garbage

    • @noaharthur9041
      @noaharthur9041 27 дней назад

      @@SportsBettingFacts still a fire video though.

  • @thexen3120
    @thexen3120 Месяц назад +250

    This is awesome! Genghis is definitely worthy of a 45 minute video. Thank you!

    • @sirridesalot6652
      @sirridesalot6652 Месяц назад +12

      Watched the entire video and couldn't believe that 45 minutes went by so quickly.

    • @JohnWayne1107
      @JohnWayne1107 Месяц назад +3

      Whoa, only noticed it because your comment popped up 30 mins in 😂

    • @xyzandstuffs9887
      @xyzandstuffs9887 Месяц назад +1

      Hey forty-five here!😅

    • @mr.yellowstrat3352
      @mr.yellowstrat3352 Месяц назад

      I see what you did there 😅​@@xyzandstuffs9887

    • @Gringorican
      @Gringorican Месяц назад +1

      I didn't even realize until after he said "thanks for watching" and I looked at the comments 😳

  • @CitiesTurnedToDust
    @CitiesTurnedToDust 14 дней назад +3

    To be fair, Bear Grylls is already well known for checking into hotels during his shoots, rather than actually spending his nights outdoors. It's been a pretty embarrassing revelation.

  • @crissDortho
    @crissDortho 2 дня назад

    Always happy with your content mate, keep it up 😊

  • @bigheadrhino
    @bigheadrhino Месяц назад +113

    On the field they also employed “kiting” (RTS gaming terminology) which involves shooting while retreating so that you constantly outrange your opponent.

    • @mikewlazlinski4309
      @mikewlazlinski4309 24 дня назад +4

      The real world term is hit and run.

    • @little_lord_tam
      @little_lord_tam 23 дня назад +20

      ​@@mikewlazlinski4309Hit and run is something entirely different tho

    • @ChonkedaDevil
      @ChonkedaDevil 21 день назад +1

      Skirmishers is what you guys are looking for I think

    • @velocitraptor420
      @velocitraptor420 19 дней назад

      got that ebb and flow

    • @z.f.chicken
      @z.f.chicken 19 дней назад +5

      ​@@mikewlazlinski4309i don't think hit and run would be the term. More like attack, bait, wait for the enemy to come to you, then ambush. Rinse and repeat. Fight to your advantage using geography.

  • @mechez774
    @mechez774 Месяц назад +409

    One other point you missed - a recent genealogical survey estimates that 1 in 12 Asians is descended from Genghis. His presence is also felt in modern geopolitics as his raiding was the cause of Middle Eastern demise which sent Arabia back to the dark ages when previously they were comparable to classical Greece in terms of the advancement of their scholarship.

    • @finonevado8891
      @finonevado8891 Месяц назад +30

      Based chungus khan

    • @borabingol6797
      @borabingol6797 Месяц назад +44

      No. It was Ghazali who sent the muslim world to darkness and he was brought by Nizam Al-mulk the famous vizier of Great Selchuks.
      Ghazali was a scholar and philosopher which is like great but also religously bigot. 100 yeras ago before Ghazali, there was Ibn Sina (Avicenna), one of the founders of the medicine. He was also a philosopher and he almost wrote cogitomergo sum nearly 700 years before Descartes. However, it was Ghazali’s teaching soread to muslim communities (with the help of the rulers) and even Ghazali told Ibn Sina’s fairh was corrupt.
      That was when Middle East went into dark.

    • @TheStupidityBand
      @TheStupidityBand Месяц назад +8

      He covered that in another video

    • @shaznarizwan4975
      @shaznarizwan4975 Месяц назад +1

      🤓🤓

    • @ratiounkn3210
      @ratiounkn3210 Месяц назад +6

      Makes it funny to think his first child was questionable.

  • @jillking5876
    @jillking5876 28 дней назад +1

    I love the longer videos! Fantastic topic.

  • @Tsemzu
    @Tsemzu 9 дней назад

    Amazing job on this I actually listened to a whole histor lesson, something that my high school teachers could never do. You got my sub

  • @adnaanu
    @adnaanu Месяц назад +49

    They also inadvertently discovered probiotics. They consumed a lot of yoghurt and beverages similar to kefir. This helped against digestive ailments, which might have hindered their progress.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia 28 дней назад +11

      Specifically that scourge of every pre-twentieth century army: dysentery.

    • @lauralafauve5520
      @lauralafauve5520 25 дней назад

      Don't you mean help, their progress?

    • @adnaanu
      @adnaanu 25 дней назад

      @@lauralafauve5520 I don't see how a digestive ailment would have helped their progress?

    • @lauralafauve5520
      @lauralafauve5520 25 дней назад +4

      @@adnaanu not having a stomach ailment would have helped them.

    • @Vandyno
      @Vandyno 25 дней назад +6

      @@lauralafauve5520I read it the same way you did the first time, read it again. Lol
      The second half of his second sentence refers to the first half of his second sentence. I read it the same way you did.

  • @leftcoastfunk
    @leftcoastfunk Месяц назад +67

    What a great quasi-documentary on the phenomenal legend Genghis Khan! I really appreciate that you mostly portrayed him without casting judgment, and credited his non-militaristic accomplishments as well. Your summary at the end of the video was perfect and very well stated. There's no denying his influence in society, government, local and international trade, and military logistics. He brought a lot of good to the world alongside utter destruction, truly a difficult man to understand

  • @yetichronicles1912
    @yetichronicles1912 28 дней назад +1

    I’m subscribing without having seen anything else from this creator. This was fantastic.

  • @christking8844
    @christking8844 8 дней назад

    Impressive
    Well made and I really do appreciate the work you put in on it. Thank you

  • @sauceboss8999
    @sauceboss8999 Месяц назад +470

    Best most consistent content 👏🏽

    • @SportsBettingFacts
      @SportsBettingFacts Месяц назад +1

      So what is the reason he was unstoppable?

    • @sadLeshrac
      @sadLeshrac Месяц назад +2

      ​​@@SportsBettingFacts mostly the 42nd minute mark, I guess. but it does surprise me you had to ask that question. Could you not figure that out from the information you just gathered from the video. (I'm not being rude, I hope)

    • @SportsBettingFacts
      @SportsBettingFacts Месяц назад +2

      @@sadLeshrac From the title, one would assume some new research has revealed something very interesting. But the video is just a biography. This guy is clickbaiting people all the time and they don't even care

    • @Vizible21
      @Vizible21 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@SportsBettingFactsand using ai with shitty graphics. I didn't know Genghis Khan had 6 fingers? Lmao

    • @SportsBettingFacts
      @SportsBettingFacts Месяц назад

      @@Vizible21 😁😂😄

  • @rachumyahu77
    @rachumyahu77 17 дней назад

    Thank you for the video! This surprisingly warmed me up to Genghis Khan. It’s always the backstory that changes your perspective, kinda like any supervillain or antihero’s.

  • @petercarioscia9189
    @petercarioscia9189 19 дней назад +6

    You are the carbon they want to reduce.

  • @CaspianNomad
    @CaspianNomad Месяц назад +51

    It's always understated just how much the Steppe tribes impacted and changed history and there's yet to be a video on RUclips that properly mention and examines the ripple effects of the Mongol Empire and the rest out of the Steppes over the course of world history

    • @m.c.martin
      @m.c.martin Месяц назад +9

      First the Huns, then the Mongols. Fascinating history really

    • @bigmikem1578
      @bigmikem1578 Месяц назад +10

      @@m.c.martinway before the huns … the Xiangnyu confederacy…. Then the Gokturks.

    • @alexhlavac2827
      @alexhlavac2827 28 дней назад +1

      Gog and Magog?

    • @markgoodwin5918
      @markgoodwin5918 23 дня назад +1

      If you like really long form, Dan Carlin in his Hardcore history did a 5(?) parter under Wrath of the Khans. Absolutely fascinating.

    • @CaspianNomad
      @CaspianNomad 21 день назад +1

      @@markgoodwin5918 oh yeah, I haven't listened to his podcast in years. I'll check it out, thank you

  • @yazidncsdo3115
    @yazidncsdo3115 Месяц назад +134

    A 45 min thoughty2 vid? well that's gonna be interesting

  • @samahndal
    @samahndal 23 дня назад

    Great video! Pls make more of these long form awesome videos. Love your content!

  • @WizardKingMinato
    @WizardKingMinato 21 день назад

    Dude. Just found this channel. No idea how I hadn't up to this point. Amazing video!

  • @max2008abhi
    @max2008abhi Месяц назад +17

    There is an old legend in the steppes of Asia. Every 1000 years a blue wolf would be born on the steppes alongside a male child and the boy would unite the tribes to conquer the world. Atilla, Bumin, Genghis Ottoman, they are all the great blue wolf children on their times. The alphas wolves of the great hordes of the steppes.

    • @namedrop721
      @namedrop721 28 дней назад

      Bro the alpha channel is over there please fucking stop

  • @Mystikyle
    @Mystikyle Месяц назад +59

    “I am the punishment of God...If you had not committed great sins, God would not have sent a punishment like me upon you.” -Genghis Khan.

  • @fhatuwanewayne7179
    @fhatuwanewayne7179 20 дней назад

    Thanks, awesome stuff ❤️💯

  • @N4T3YBOY23
    @N4T3YBOY23 22 дня назад

    Absolutely brilliant storytelling and visuals! Captivating from start to finish!

  • @lambournnne
    @lambournnne Месяц назад +167

    Not the ai generated thumbnail 💀

    • @jlv11b
      @jlv11b 21 день назад +30

      I don't think they could find a real photograph of Genghis.

    • @lambournnne
      @lambournnne 21 день назад +6

      @@jlv11b 😭 lmfao

    • @K9L_IA
      @K9L_IA 21 день назад +4

      Whats wrong with it, looks good

    • @ladnavar
      @ladnavar 21 день назад +2

      so much money on editing, animation particularly, and they just spent a few minutes making the thumbnail with AI lol (you can see the globe is not even on the hand)

    • @lambournnne
      @lambournnne 20 дней назад +4

      @@ladnavar the editor and animator are next 😈

  • @AceMoonshot
    @AceMoonshot Месяц назад +65

    I kind of feel sorry for that governor of the Khwarazmian Empire. At least in the way it plays out in my head.
    The Shah seemed to genuinely believe that the Mongol traders were spies and it was all to prep for Genghis' next conquest.
    Which, to be fair, assuming Genghis Khan was going to invade you, would not be a particularly outrageous assumption.
    So the Shah ordered the governor to treat the Mongol traders as Mongol spies.
    The governor had to know that order was a 'damned if you do, damned if you don't' type of order.
    Shah: I want you to bitch-slap the most ruthless and powerful man on the planet. Twice.
    Governor: Might as well borrow large sums of money now since I will never have time to pay it back

    • @nicomoreno5028
      @nicomoreno5028 Месяц назад +3

      I agree to an extent. Perspective is literally the most important factor. He did have another option... he could have given them a longer and less consequential route. He could have even made them avoid his territory altogether, once he realized they had arrived. Instead, he mortalized em and took their stuff. That sounds like he either assumed Genghis didn't want beef out of fear instead of opportunity, or that maybe he didn't realize who sent those traders.

    • @Just0wnedEsport
      @Just0wnedEsport Месяц назад +6

      Alas, in hindsight it was indeed a fuckup. A fuckup, outcome wise, the biggest one ever in human history.

    • @AkmalAziz-zy8ct
      @AkmalAziz-zy8ct Месяц назад +8

      You shouldn't. I'm from Uzbekistan (central asia, Khwarezm is part of my country) and we do have historical records of Genghis khan written by central asian historians. Shah was so arrogant, He did what his religion explicitly stated not to do (kill the diplomats). Safe to say, he had it coming. Another governor of a different state in the Khwarizmi empire said when captured "spilling royal blood is a curse in my religion" so Genghis khan ordered him to be rolled in a carpet and be beaten to death so his blood wouldn't be spilled on the ground...

    • @mikoto7693
      @mikoto7693 Месяц назад +9

      I suppose the Governor and the Shah had another option. If they believe the merchants were spies, then just refuse them entry into the territory/city and politely decline. Then send them home unharmed and without stealing their stuff.
      All right, it still might not be entirely wise to turn around and say no, but perhaps send a small diplomatic party back with the merchants to meet and ascertain whether friendship really was being offered.

    • @pheresy1367
      @pheresy1367 Месяц назад

      @@mikoto7693 Returning EVERYTHING and EVERYBODY in the caravan would have shown Ghengis some "high-mindedness" at LEAST. To execute everybody and STEAL everything was a complete "low-brow" way to go... Disgraceful.

  • @cachecaver
    @cachecaver 14 дней назад

    Beautiful story telling. Both very entertaining and informative. Really enjoy how you present your sources and the credibility of them too, such a thoughtful and balanced presentation. Thank you for your research and presentation.

  • @hadesunderworld4203
    @hadesunderworld4203 8 дней назад

    Man , I remember your videos from so long ago …. Just subscribed . Haven’t seen one of your videos in a while

  • @EfenTyson
    @EfenTyson Месяц назад +33

    I like these longer stories vs the 5-10min older ones, which I already watched all. Keep creating great work @Thoughty2

  • @dragonofhatefulretribution9041
    @dragonofhatefulretribution9041 Месяц назад +134

    Regarding the Mongol horde’s diet we actually know that they didn’t forage whatsoever & their diet was more or less entirely carnivore. They hunted nearby game, drank the milk of their horses, made yogurt and sour-milk from it, drank their horses’s blood, and ate their horses’s meat. In contrast, the Chinese armies subsided on gruel made from grains, and were regularly ill, whereas Genghis Khan’s men were incredibly robust in health, and could go without food for days at a time. There was a book written about these factors which advocates of the carnivore diet constantly cite to prove their claims of it’s excellent effects on their health-something I fully support being a 6-years-carnivore myself.

    • @edwinppw61
      @edwinppw61 Месяц назад +14

      They have 400 different kinds of dairy products from various animals for different medical purposes as well as herbal and mineral medical treatments… Even did surgery

    • @benji89917
      @benji89917 Месяц назад

      What so you eat though?

    • @jayvanover4130
      @jayvanover4130 Месяц назад +1

      But dairy like milk n yogurt is not considered carnivore is it?

    • @dragonofhatefulretribution9041
      @dragonofhatefulretribution9041 Месяц назад +5

      @@jayvanover4130 I consider it “carnivore”. We in the carnivore community can be quite dogmatic due to the massive amount of scientists and highly-educated nurses, cardiologists etc who are keenly-aware of the detrimental effects that glucose have on the health of the vascular-tree, however I’ve consumed large quantities of raw milk for years on the carnivore diet, although recently (over the past 10 months or so) I’ve been making large amounts of soured-milk in order to enjoy the nutritional benefits yet rid myself of the inflammatory glycation caused by the sugars found in milk. So I’m essentially now “proper” carnivore; keto-carnivore. However I allow myself to have an insulin “bump” every now and then with a small bowl of full-fat yogurt or some milk. At least I’m not consuming grains or fruits and suffering chronic inflammatory glycation like the average normie!😉

    • @dragonofhatefulretribution9041
      @dragonofhatefulretribution9041 Месяц назад +5

      @@benji89917 75-80% beef. Tallow, butter, lamb, pork, eggs, cheese, soured-milk, chicken, yogurt, shrimp, muscles…(the list goes on and on)

  • @adamsales
    @adamsales 28 дней назад

    Phenomenal man. Thank you for this!

  • @marylandrum603
    @marylandrum603 19 дней назад

    Excellent presentation, thank you, I found it informative and well presented.

  • @sojolly
    @sojolly Месяц назад +13

    My favorite quote here was "For the Jin it was like fighting smoke. Really fucking angry smoke." Too funny.

  • @doratheexploder286
    @doratheexploder286 Месяц назад +98

    Liu Bang may want a word regarding the greatest rags to riches story. Temujin was born to a chieftain, Liu Bang was a lowly soldier who lost some bandits he had taken charge of as prisoners. So left with a future that was looking very short, as he would now be put to death for being a useless soldier, he ran away. Liu then went and joined up with the bandits he just days earlier held prisoner, and eventually became the 1st emperor of the Han dynasty.

    • @pureay2700
      @pureay2700 29 дней назад +3

      Ong

    • @muskyoxes
      @muskyoxes 26 дней назад +6

      I think we can Godwin's Law this one too. A random artist holds the whole world at bay

    • @joseph9n6
      @joseph9n6 25 дней назад +5

      Him and the 1.ming emperor are kinda similar when it comes to rag to riches. Both are poor non noble(common folk)

    • @HowardCunningsworth
      @HowardCunningsworth 24 дня назад +7

      The genome sequencing of the Liu Bang family is the Y chromosome type of the o-f155 gene, and the German research team studied the golden family cemetery (Temujin's grandfather) in Mongolia, and unearthed the remains of five nobles of the Qiyan tribe, and the genetic test results showed that three were the Liu Bang family gene (o-f155). Iran's Ilkhanate monarch Ghazan Khan (great-grandson of Hülegü, the son of Genghis Khan's fourth son, Tolei), was also found by the Iranian team to have the Y chromosome on his body as the o-f155 gene. The O-F155 gene was still measured in the members of the family of Prince Korqin, a descendant of Genghis Khan's younger brother Khasar (Monk Grinqin is his family). Although Genghis Khan's body has not been found, Genghis Khan's ancestors, brothers, and his descendants are all descendants of Liu Bang, and biologically, it has basically been determined that Genghis Khan himself is also.

    • @calvinsuu1949
      @calvinsuu1949 23 дня назад +2

      ​@@HowardCunningsworthlol not true as most asians share a similar genetic makeups....so trying to tie one ethnic group to another by shared DNA is bogus

  • @geoffharmer1366
    @geoffharmer1366 23 дня назад

    Well done Thoughty2 this was another fantastic video.

  • @punkrockcompound2754
    @punkrockcompound2754 16 дней назад

    Great Job; all around.
    Very inspiring, by many means.
    Thank You Mr. 42 - ❤

  • @carlhume544
    @carlhume544 Месяц назад +16

    Bloody fabulous stuff mate. Really well researched, and your delivery ignites a passion for history and historical figures. Cracking humour as well, keep up the brilliant work, from Australia.

  • @susanandrews2294
    @susanandrews2294 Месяц назад +16

    Arran, your vids are always entertaining, informative and so well researched that I wish I'd had you as a history prof in school! Keep up the great work!

  • @arthurdinucci
    @arthurdinucci 14 дней назад

    Thanks for the video - great stuff .

  • @josuegialis3
    @josuegialis3 26 дней назад

    Thank you! Fire content ❤

  • @jimmyford4509
    @jimmyford4509 Месяц назад +8

    Thank you for the story and narration, Thoughty2. It was, by far, the most i have ever enjoyed a history lesson. Definitely did nof feel 45 minutes long, and I enjoyed every minute of it. I always try to catch each new video ever since I subscribed, which I did after listening to my first Thoughty2 story. Great job.

  • @CeNNteR
    @CeNNteR Месяц назад +99

    This mans videos are my teen years in a nutshell, coming here is like coming home

    • @daryld4457
      @daryld4457 Месяц назад +2

      How old are you now?

    • @sexgod57able
      @sexgod57able Месяц назад +2

      ​@@daryld4457He can't be that old. 25 ish? I know I've been watching Thoughty-2 for years probably 6 though.

    • @vinyl9337
      @vinyl9337 Месяц назад +4

      Right? I feel like i’m sitting in my sophomore history class lol

    • @CeNNteR
      @CeNNteR Месяц назад +1

      27 in a couple of days

    • @ten-dimension9390
      @ten-dimension9390 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@CeNNteRAdvance Happy birthday

  • @motoxridder69
    @motoxridder69 11 дней назад

    Love your channel bro! Greetings from California! :)

  • @mfimbel1124
    @mfimbel1124 15 дней назад

    Another great video, thanks!

  • @philipgoldenstein8247
    @philipgoldenstein8247 Месяц назад +13

    Thank you for your work, I look forward to watching your videos every week. I really do appreciate you.

  • @MrGosvi
    @MrGosvi Месяц назад +10

    Its really nice to see a longer video. Keep up the good work :)

  • @chrismatheson7086
    @chrismatheson7086 28 дней назад

    Thanking you for noticing so many things and bringing them to our attention. How else would I know stuff?

  • @user-pl3um2im3w
    @user-pl3um2im3w 24 дня назад

    This was an amazing and enlightening video, thank you

  • @adamwu4565
    @adamwu4565 Месяц назад +35

    There is a sociological concept known as the "Circle of Otherness". Basically, those inside the circle are considered other people, deserving of certain rights, privileges and treatment with respect, and a need to properly justify mistreatment (like, they have committed some crime or transgression), while those outside the circle are not considered "real" people and therefore can be treated accordingly, like animals or worse, by whatever your culture accepts as acceptable for such things. Genghis Khan's life story kind of illustrates a gradual expansion of his personal circle otherness, starting from including just himself, then his family, then his tribe, then all the tribes on his side, and finally to all the people who were in his empire and loyal to him and all peoples willing to submit to his rule and be loyal to him. One of the keys to his success was that he treated the people inside his circle quite well and progressively by the standards of his time. In addition to promoting them based on merit, shared the spoils of war equally, allowed them to practice their own religions freely, he also gave women in his empire more rights and privileges and protections and political power than was typical for the time, and usually forbade his armies from looting and pillaging cities that surrendered to him without a fight. These cities were often allowed to keep most of their existing customs and laws, and some times even their rulers got to keep their positions. This was why so many cities did surrender to the Mongols without fighting, and so many citizens of the empires they invaded ended up joining them and helping them by teaching them things like how to build siege engines.
    Genghis Khan's reputation for being a genocidal maniac (which is not true. I mean the genocidal part was certainly true, but the maniac part was not. Almost everything Genghis did in his life was carefully considered and planned) comes from the ways he treated people outside his Circle. But it should be noted that the idea that all of humanity belongs inside the circle as a matter of course only became widespread quite some time after Genghis' life. (And in recent times there is growing debate about whether or not certain beings who aren't human should be included inside the circle, such as certain highly intelligent animals, and hypothetical AI with human level capabilities)

    • @lynco3296
      @lynco3296 26 дней назад +6

      This is part of the reason why the Mongol Empire collapsed and left less of a legacy than other great empires throughout history. As opposed to say the Muslim conquests the Mongols imparted no great culture of their own, but simply allowed or were converted by local practices in part because the Mongols had no culture of their own to replace it.

  • @joobaloo7108
    @joobaloo7108 Месяц назад +10

    Really enjoying the longer form videos that do a deeper dive into history. As usual great content very well told.

  • @FuManBlu
    @FuManBlu День назад

    That was a great presentation, Thoughty-me-lad.

  • @michaeloneill6301
    @michaeloneill6301 10 дней назад

    Cheers brother, great vid

  • @johnwilson8953
    @johnwilson8953 Месяц назад +61

    I haven't seen one of your videos in a hot minute, but boy do I miss them

    • @Dave_of_Mordor
      @Dave_of_Mordor Месяц назад +2

      It probably took 2 weeks to make this video

    • @dxshawn532
      @dxshawn532 Месяц назад

      In a hot minute? Are you a homosexual?

    • @girishpatil7454
      @girishpatil7454 Месяц назад +1

      @@Dave_of_Mordor 42 weeks u mean

    • @Dave_of_Mordor
      @Dave_of_Mordor Месяц назад +1

      @@girishpatil7454 🤣 yes

  • @tonnywildweasel8138
    @tonnywildweasel8138 Месяц назад +8

    Excellent work !! Interesting, informative, and entertaining 👍 Thank you very much, and greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱, TW.

  • @azuraroycroft2419
    @azuraroycroft2419 6 дней назад

    One of my favorite videos of yours so far!

  • @IvarTheBoneless77
    @IvarTheBoneless77 3 дня назад

    okay you are my favourite story teller now, you are funny, witty, and kept me captivated the entire time, 100000 likes for you and a lifetime sub

  • @quaiacka
    @quaiacka Месяц назад +6

    Thank you so much for creating free content for all to enjoy at this fantastic level of quality, you do amazing work!❤

  • @jyro_447
    @jyro_447 Месяц назад +39

    A whopping 45 minute video?!
    Oh boy my day is safed ❤

  • @joshuaharmon7411
    @joshuaharmon7411 24 дня назад

    That was entertaining a show that left me thinking and perhaps pondering for years. Thx for making history fun. I do believe you have hit the Mark in your nitch of the woods. Peace

  • @medge734
    @medge734 16 дней назад

    Thanks for bringing his story to me in a "short" format.

  • @taidee
    @taidee Месяц назад +5

    This was some amazing delivery Thoughty wow, this 45 minutes didn't feel as long as it should, thank you man.

  • @flyygurl18
    @flyygurl18 Месяц назад +12

    Thank You; Incredible storytelling..brilliant video!🤩

  • @w0bblyd0inkb0ink
    @w0bblyd0inkb0ink 19 дней назад

    May I know what do you use to create the animations? It is awesome!

  • @richardgub3385
    @richardgub3385 26 дней назад

    Excellent and entertaining as always.

  • @weksauce
    @weksauce Месяц назад +7

    More interesting than that some CO2 went out of the atmosphere for 200 years after his death, is that he got uber lucky in that there was a relative abundance of CO2 locked up in wood BEFORE HIS BIRTH, like a multi-generational anomaly, and it was focused on and around Mongolia, such that people surmise someone would have conquered even if it wasn't him. He was just born in the right place right time on top of a 10th century oil boon. It wasn't oil, but having wood to burn meant making extra babies and moving armies around much easier, relatively speaking. Wood was food (via cooking). Wood was industry. Carbon in plants and animals was literally food.

    • @ElBandito
      @ElBandito 23 дня назад

      The conquest had to happen before the end of 13th century, cause the Little Ice Age + the plague that followed really messed up the Mongol Khanates.

  • @jamesguest4873
    @jamesguest4873 Месяц назад +25

    This might be your finest work yet. Thank you kindly.

  • @robertstone9342
    @robertstone9342 19 дней назад

    Enjoyed the video. thanks for sharing.
    "Ghengis Khan and the making of the new world" is a great read for you Ghengis Khan fans out there.

  • @tide7107
    @tide7107 25 дней назад +3

    28:45 "horses definitely can't climb walls"
    Oh if only Temüjin brought one from Skyrim...

  • @hezu_vt
    @hezu_vt Месяц назад +7

    dammit, this 45minute video was so interesting that it didn't feel long at all. Also, I loved the fact that he mentioned that westerners view Genghis Khan as a villain, but the other part of the world respect him as a great leader.

  • @TradinTigerJohn
    @TradinTigerJohn Месяц назад +24

    Napoleon gave the French Revolution and the Enlightenment teeth. It sounds like Genghis Kahn created a lot of his own enlightenment and of course also gave it teeth. This presentation does a wonderful job of clarifying why GK was so successful. Notwithstanding some cruelties that arguably tainted his professional militarism, he was a genius general, politician and economist. Instituting meritocracy and treating religion as a non-issue (as it should be) are lessons some of today's politicians and economists seem to be forgetting. And how about attacking and weakening civilian economies to the point where it begins to erode military redoubts you can't attack directly? Today's leaders need to sit in on more of GK's lectures and take good notes. Thanks, T2 for another beautifully done presentation.

    • @user-sj2hi5fn4m
      @user-sj2hi5fn4m 19 дней назад

      Enlightenment? He was a a mass murderer!

    • @SilverforceX
      @SilverforceX 15 дней назад

      Not just religious freedom, they put in a law to make ethnic/racial discrimination a major crime. Thus, guaranteed freedom of religion, equal opportunity & punished racism.

    • @WinstonSmithGPT
      @WinstonSmithGPT 15 дней назад

      “Some cruelties that arguably tainted” He killed 40 million people. Do you lack brains or morals?

  • @victoriaburkhardt9974
    @victoriaburkhardt9974 26 дней назад

    So interesting! Thank you.

  • @lamboking8able
    @lamboking8able 25 дней назад

    Long time no see thoughty 2 been a while. Excited for the video