Guys, if you are fans of strategy games and love this period, Imperator: Rome is your best chance to taste this era. Consider buying it by using this link: store.steampowered.com/app/859580/Imperator_Rome/ We also released a new episode of our podcast and this one talks about the reasons the Successors of Alexander were almost always at war with each other: kingsandgenerals.libsyn.com/4-why-did-the-diadochoi-of-alexander-fight-each-other Our series on Caesar will be back soon, and here is a proof: bit.ly/2PX5A4n
You should reach out to Pen and Sword Publications, they published a biography of Pyrrus, and see if they will sponsor one of your videos. www.pen-and-sword.co.uk
@kings Please could ye sharing the link of "the three Kings battle "or "the river of Kings battle" as you wished to called !! (Morocco Vs Portugal/Spain ) . Many Thanks
I would rather play Rome 2 with Del mod. This new paradox game doesn't add anything interesting, other than the map. If this had battles like in Rome 2, sure I would have considered it.
The Romans are about to enter a cheat code which allows them to call on infinity reinforcements. It's just how it goes sometimes guys, Pyrrhus has yet to learn this.
12:24 "Imagine you're a provincial Roman farmer. The most you've seen of the world is maybe the length of Italy if you're really well-traveled. Now imagine that through the sleets and the mist you see a great grey lumbering bulk begin to emerge. Imagine you see this creature two-and-a-half times as tall as you, at least a chariot-length long, with glistening white tusks and a distended snout, its eerie trumpeting carrying across to you faintly on the wind. This is probably the closest that human beings ever got to legit fighting monsters - fighting something so alien and gargantuan that there was no frame of reference for them." - Extra Credits
@@phillip_iv_planetking6354 First off, it's the ancient times. People were quite superstitious and stories of monsters and ghosts were very much common "knowledge", especially if you were a not very well educated/travelled farmer in Italia, who never even heard about elephants let alone fought them. I think their terror was very well founded.
@@phillip_iv_planetking6354 The fuck are you smoking, it takes an enormous amount of efort to kill an elephant with pointy sticks. If I gave you a javelin, would you fight an elephant?
Phyrrus: "Alright, so I beat you and killed 7.000 of your finest men, here's an offer of peace." Rome: "No, we're fighting." Phyrrus: "But I won..." Rome: "Yeeeees..." Phyrrus: "I destroyed your army." Rome: "We'll make another one." Phyrrus: "I... but I won though. So that means you should surrender." Rome: "I don't follow."
5 лет назад+60
Ah the story of Rome "Surrender, you've been defeated" "NEVER! We will raise legions until you're bled dry"
Phyrrus: "Alright, so I beat you and killed 7.000 of your finest men, here's an offer of peace." Rome: "that was only the first army." Phyrrus: "You think you can beat me with your reserves?" Rome: "Nah, we'll rise an army double that size of men in their prime.". Phyrrus: "THEN I'LL BEAT IT TOO!" Rome: "Good. There will be room for the third one then."
@@martinaustin6230 Hannibal was an admirer of Pyrrhus, and realised the problem, infact he was careful to fight only annihilation battles vs. the Romans. He fought only when he was absolutely sure he could completely destroy the enemy's army, otherwise he preferred to accept a limited defeat instead to deplete his own men. The Romans then responded by not offering him a pitched battle.
@@Marcus280898 Rome was comparable to a modern nation state in the ability to take casualties and not collapse as a society. None of their neighboring powers could lose so many people and not unravel at the seams
It's interesting how the Hellenistic, glorious but risky, tradition of "command from the front" shown his weakness vs. the Roman "command from the rear", and almost costed Pyrrhus the entire campaign, in the first battle.
Hellenistic kings drew their power from their soldiers. If they just commanded from the rear they'd be considered weak and cowards. It's not the Greek way to command. Thus, even if you had ten of thousands better soldiers you had to go in the heat of battle yourself.Interestingly enough, that's how the last Roman emperor lost his life. Kings sometimes need to do that, or else some other guy, a valiant general may win the hearts of the army. In the Roman republic, this wasn't necessary.
@@jackdonith It was simply a different habit. The commanders of the Hellenistic armies had to do that because Alexander did that and, had not they done the same, they would have been considered cowards. The legionaries instead recognised the necessity for the commander to have a clear view of the situation and not unnecessarily risk his life (so putting the entire chain of command at risk). Sometimes a Roman commander, viewing one of the sectors of the front faltering, resorted to fight there himself. The result usually was that the same men that were previously losing ground, doubled and tripled their efforts, because it was kind of a shame for them to have forced the commander to take sword and shield, and their due was to put him out of troubles.
This began the rule after Alexander the Great campaign. If the hellenic general commanded the battle from the rear, then he was not a descendant of hercules/heracles or Alexander.
There's no real difference to the romans. Both organized in files where the promachos is the champion and the others literally follow in his footsteps. Formations were led by the rightmost file leader. Roman generals were known to fight as promachoi just as the Greeks, or even duel as the armies stood by to witness. Pyrrhos often fought as a cavalry leader or a front ranker, but in these same battles he also directed his troops hither and yon.
Pyrrhus: "Here are my terms of surrender." Romans: "Awfully nice, but we can´t accept your surrender unless we beat you fair and square. Wouldn ´t be proper you know." Pyrrhus: "Wait, what?"
he asked for the Romans to surrender (since they lost a massive battle) and make peace. He wasn't surrendering. Kings and Generals should have made that clear.
@@deskouk1773 This was supposed to be joke, referencing movie "Bridge too far" where Germans ask surrounded, outnumbered, and outgunned Brits to surrender.
“Those don’t look like barbarians to me”. This saying of Pyrrhus argues that he definitely considered himself and his soldiers Greek. It is a great argument against some modern Albanians and Skopjians who consider Epirotes and Macedonians non-Greeks just because of certain occasions where Southern Greeks called them barbarians. It appears that at times some Greeks abused the term barbarian and used it even for other Greeks who were less cultured or whose Greek dialect was unintelligible to them. It is interesting that even though Pyrrhus calls the Romans barbarians, another earlier Greek of the 5th century BC, Heraclides, a pupil of Plato, described Rome as a Greek city. The reason being that all ancient historians and chroniclers of Rome believed and wrote that Rome was founded by settlers from Greek Arcadia and Lacedaemon (Sparta)
That regionalism isn't that unusual though. Your typical citizen living in the city of Rome would likely consider only people living in the immediate proximity of the city to be "true Romans" while looking down on their Italian neighbors who don't speak Latin with the correct accent.
Sot Vasil i heard romans were of Celtic origin they still got their language and culture from Greeks tho. At the beginning they were also using phalanxes
Just watched this after listening to the latest episode of your podcast. Brilliant work all around and now Pyrrhus has felt the bite of the Hydra that is Rome. For every legionnaire that falls, two more shall take his place!
I think it was after his second battle against the Romans that when his captains came to him to congratulate him for another victory, Pyrrhus snapped: "Another victory like this and we will lose the war!" ... which is in fact what happened.
Pyrrhus : 7000 kills vs 4000 losses not bad, surely the Romans would realize how great I am now. Random Italian Greek: That was only their first army Rome: I'm about to end this man's whole career
Quite possibly my favorite battle on this channel so far. The fact that Pyrrhus was able to rally his troops at just the right moment is incredible. Not only was their training enough that they did not break right away but even without his grandiose armor his troops knew who he was by the way he commanded.
@@innerparty1 Rome was not a superpower at that time. But, it was Pyrrhus who actually made Rome relevant in the region by fucking up series of diplomacy with Carthaginians and Samnites and the entire southern Italy, causing the rise of Rome.
Excellent coverage of this more important meeting of two cultures and ways of war. One thing I don't think you mentioned was the near worthlessness of the people of the people of Taras or Tarentum as the Romans called it. They hired Pyrrhus thinking he would take care of the Roman problem without interrupting their nightly symposiums and other high cultured Greek traditions these Spartan ancestors had grown to love a bit too much!
Alexander the Great Oh yeah, you are right. But more importantly, how did you, Alexander the Great, the guy really good at walloping Achaemenids get access to a device?
pyrrhus unfortunately had no support from the greek city states from south italy...which could support him with much men and ships...on the other hand rome was not only a city she had her numerous allies....as a result pyrrhus was a good and tough general battleheardened who could win the romans but in every success he suffered losses with no backups....one more time greeks had the opportunity to remain free...
Marvelous, guys! Simply incredible for every history junkie and great for even the experienced people, to help them understand the tactics used in various battles as well as the complex situations that lead to those battles. A big like!
Given the Greek penchant for friends donning their friends armor and riding into battle and dying, as soon as they said “his friend Megacles” I knew this wasn’t gonna end well
Ahhh The Rise of Rome The Formidable Tested and True Phalanx against the Rising Fierce and Organised Legions We have peaked in this era Truly fitting for the Hype of Imperator Rome!
I still believe it was down to leadership in the 1st Macedonian war, the Phalanx defeated the legion 3 times, and at Zama the cavalry is what saved Rome.
First: amazing Second, I wish you guys continue to talk about the diadochi wars. I know this is related but man the greek world and stories are stunning
4:48 The video went over these events too quickly but here's what actually happened. Seleucus stand poised to essentially reunite the Asian and Greek parts of Alexander's empire for the first time since the partition. Seleucus had been fighting and reuniting Persia, Syria, and Anatolia for many years and it seemed after his final victory over Lysimachus that a total reunification was within his grasp. Only Ptolemy in Egypt remained as a real threat. Seleucus was a popular leader and well respected as an able and benevolent ruler. The cities of Anatolia declared him their savior. Things were finally at long last looking good for Alexander's legacy and by this point 77 years old, Seleucus sought to settle down in a hard earned retirement in Macedonia and hand over most affairs to his son Antiochus. It looked like Greece proper was going to be finally for the most part at peace. Ptolemy I's son had joined Seleucus' court claiming to be a victim fleeing the intrigues of Lysimachus's family. After Seleucus crushed Lysimachus, it was Ptolemy that persuaded Seleucus to intervene in the dynastic disputes in Thrace and Macedon, assuring him they'd quickly recognize him as their new king. As soon as Seleucus crossed the Hellespont, it became clear to Ptolemy that he'd receive no real power or kingdom of his own. Self-entitled and bitterly jealous because his younger brother had been chosen as his father's heir in Egypt, Ptolemy turned on Seleucus and treacherously killed him at Lysimachia. He then used his influence in the Macedonian army and heritage as a descendant of Antipater to declare himself king in Macedonia. It was only a year later when the Galatian tribes subjugated the Thracians and then invaded Macedonia. The Gauls proved to be a final reckoning. Ptolemy Keranous suffered a humiliating defeat in battle with them and he was soon after decapitated. Karma for his dooming of the vision of the Seleucids to reinstate Alexander's empire of east and west.
Your videos never dissapoint, not once ;-) Love the animations! Eagerly waiting for a series on Simon Bolivar... You guys have the best historical battle series on RUclipsr, Keep up the awesome work.
I think of all the history channels that animate ancient battles, you've got one of the greatest knacks for drama. I was literally on the edge of my seat for this one--I was rooting for Pyrrhus, so thank god elephants spook the hell out of horses! The Romans probably should have taken better notes... it would have helped them against the Carthaginians a century later.
I was wondering if I could get some sort of reminder to the podcasts. I suppose I can just watch every video you post and you'll just announce it here. By the way, I love the new way you show off the armies numerically and visually. Great addition.
Great video as usual! This is a very interesting series. In my opinion, Pyrrhus is the last great Greek tactic master in Hellenic era. After him, only Carthage can stand against rising Rome in Mediterranean world. And all Phalanx will eventually defeated by new legions( although romans admitted phalanx in open field is still a formidable force)......
Shutong Liu Antiochus III. was relatively succesful. He may have lost at Raphia and Magnisia. But he consolidated the Seleucid Empire and subjugated the Armenians, Parthians and Bactrians.
Thessalos I think Antiochus was a very capable ruler, as he was possibly the one to unify the whole Alexander’s legacy if without Rome. But he was not quite a match to Rome on tactical level. Especially considering Flamininus wasn’t even considered as top general in Rome history but beat him relatively easy. He was a great strategist but his lack of tactical mean to defeat Rome on battlefield lead to his downfall.
Shutong Liu Antiochus made one decisive mistake at Magnisia. He did not aid his infantry. He already defeated the roman cavalry with his own. But instead of charging the roman infantry in the rear, he decided to loot the roman camp.
Seems like borders changed very rapidly in the Hellenistic world. Pyrrhus versus the Roman Republic in the third century B.C. was a pretty even fight. If Pyrrhus or one of the other Greek generals had united a larger portion of the western Greek speaking world during this period, they probably could have defeated Rome.
It goes to show how amazing Pyrrhus was. He simply lacked manpower and made a couple of unfortunate decisions (going for Carthage instead of finishing Rome). Roman Republic got crazy lucky, but still in their own credit could have given up at any moment but didn't.
Pyrrhuss said of the Romans "We'll see what they can do soon" a century later, they conquered Greece and held it for a thousand years. Some epic foreshadowing there.
There was a quote a Roman general said about Rome, something like: the Gauls were more numerous, the Spanish were stronger, the Germanics were taller, the Greeks more intelligent and the Africans more treacherous, but Rome overcame all these foes through perserverance. Beating a Roman army meant nothing to them, they would just recruit and try again
In the early days an army camped outside a city in a seige, and the city emissaries came out and told the Roman army to just give up because the city has enough supplies to last for 10 years without outside help. So the Roman General said: Wll excellent, we'll have the city in the 11th year then. Supposedly the emissaries were so thrown by his response that they went back inside and the city surrended not long after.
I have often wondered what would have happened with Mediterranean history if Pyrrhus had won Heraclea and Asculum with even 2/3 the casualties he suffered. His Sicily campaign might have gone completely differently, he might not have gone back to Greece to take a roof tile to the head. What do you guys think, would he have been Alexander of the West?
No one wants to point out that Pyrrhus effectively used war elephants without damaging his own forces with them? If i learned anything from this channel, it's that war elephants often do way more harm than good.
You could do a video on the Illyrians,you already mentioned them, but they are interesting. They went from controling Macedonia(king Bardylis conquered them) to a pirate queen named Teuta.
Piracy is an fabrication made by Romans to attack Illyria so i think was Rome who killed Agron because they knew with king Agron leading Illyrian armies Rome had no chance defeating them .
Yung cash register A.K.A Lil Broomstick who says im slavic, im from dalmatia and i know many illyrians there got slavicized, but our genes is almost the same.
Guys, if you are fans of strategy games and love this period, Imperator: Rome is your best chance to taste this era. Consider buying it by using this link: store.steampowered.com/app/859580/Imperator_Rome/
We also released a new episode of our podcast and this one talks about the reasons the Successors of Alexander were almost always at war with each other: kingsandgenerals.libsyn.com/4-why-did-the-diadochoi-of-alexander-fight-each-other
Our series on Caesar will be back soon, and here is a proof: bit.ly/2PX5A4n
@@alexkirrmann8534 only you
You should reach out to Pen and Sword Publications, they published a biography of Pyrrus, and see if they will sponsor one of your videos. www.pen-and-sword.co.uk
@kings
Please could ye sharing the link of "the three Kings battle "or "the river of Kings battle" as you wished to called !! (Morocco Vs Portugal/Spain ) .
Many Thanks
Kings and Generals how soon until the next battle? I must know, for the fate of lizards depends on it.
I would rather play Rome 2 with Del mod. This new paradox game doesn't add anything interesting, other than the map. If this had battles like in Rome 2, sure I would have considered it.
"Those don't look like Barbarians to me."
10/10
“It’s a space station”
"What's barbarians "
"Non-Roman" said the Roman
"What's that supossed to mean?"
"Relax, Conan. We weren't talking about you."
@@nisibonum7634 These Barbarians hardly bathe! And they cover up the smell by covering themselves in Olive Oil. UGH!
There are multiple plausible translations for that Plutarch quote but I chose the one which fit the drama best ;)
The Romans are about to enter a cheat code which allows them to call on infinity reinforcements. It's just how it goes sometimes guys, Pyrrhus has yet to learn this.
Nah they are just buying infinite "reinforcement" lootboxes, to achieve pride and accomplishment
"manpower 9999999"
truth.
No..howdoyouturnthison....and then there will be fast cars with machine guns.
It's unfair their region can build extra units each turn.
"It is easier to find men who will volunteer to die, than to find those who are willing to endure pain with patience.
" - Julius Caesar
Actually it was some Gaul chief
m7ray Actually it was Jesus
@@willkp50 No, this is Critognatos' quote. Read Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic war, "joker".
Phyrrus prottecc
Phyrrus attacc
But most importantly
he don't ger his army bacc
Phyrrus give me back my phalangites
oofff
Nikola how are you doing mate?
12:24 "Imagine you're a provincial Roman farmer. The most you've seen of the world is maybe the length of Italy if you're really well-traveled. Now imagine that through the sleets and the mist you see a great grey lumbering bulk begin to emerge. Imagine you see this creature two-and-a-half times as tall as you, at least a chariot-length long, with glistening white tusks and a distended snout, its eerie trumpeting carrying across to you faintly on the wind. This is probably the closest that human beings ever got to legit fighting monsters - fighting something so alien and gargantuan that there was no frame of reference for them." - Extra Credits
@@phillip_iv_planetking6354 Yeeeah, but it took a good couple of years to realize. Until then, the terror was very much legit.
@@phillip_iv_planetking6354 well, yeah, but Rome was far from being an empire by 280 BC, even though they were slowly getting there :)
@@phillip_iv_planetking6354 First off, it's the ancient times. People were quite superstitious and stories of monsters and ghosts were very much common "knowledge", especially if you were a not very well educated/travelled farmer in Italia, who never even heard about elephants let alone fought them.
I think their terror was very well founded.
Now imagine 200 such beasts, that is what alexander faced in baluchistan..
@@phillip_iv_planetking6354 The fuck are you smoking, it takes an enormous amount of efort to kill an elephant with pointy sticks. If I gave you a javelin, would you fight an elephant?
Phyrrus: "Alright, so I beat you and killed 7.000 of your finest men, here's an offer of peace."
Rome: "No, we're fighting."
Phyrrus: "But I won..."
Rome: "Yeeeees..."
Phyrrus: "I destroyed your army."
Rome: "We'll make another one."
Phyrrus: "I... but I won though. So that means you should surrender."
Rome: "I don't follow."
Ah the story of Rome
"Surrender, you've been defeated"
"NEVER! We will raise legions until you're bled dry"
Rome truly was the ancient Soviet Union in that respect, endowed with an endless supply of men
Phyrrus: "Alright, so I beat you and killed 7.000 of your finest men, here's an offer of peace."
Rome: "that was only the first army."
Phyrrus: "You think you can beat me with your reserves?"
Rome: "Nah, we'll rise an army double that size of men in their prime.".
Phyrrus: "THEN I'LL BEAT IT TOO!"
Rome: "Good. There will be room for the third one then."
@@martinaustin6230 Hannibal was an admirer of Pyrrhus, and realised the problem, infact he was careful to fight only annihilation battles vs. the Romans. He fought only when he was absolutely sure he could completely destroy the enemy's army, otherwise he preferred to accept a limited defeat instead to deplete his own men.
The Romans then responded by not offering him a pitched battle.
@@Marcus280898 Rome was comparable to a modern nation state in the ability to take casualties and not collapse as a society. None of their neighboring powers could lose so many people and not unravel at the seams
It's interesting how the Hellenistic, glorious but risky, tradition of "command from the front" shown his weakness vs. the Roman "command from the rear", and almost costed Pyrrhus the entire campaign, in the first battle.
True quite amazing in all his battles fighting from the front Alexander the Great was never killed. He had more than nine lives on the battlefield.
Hellenistic kings drew their power from their soldiers. If they just commanded from the rear they'd be considered weak and cowards. It's not the Greek way to command. Thus, even if you had ten of thousands better soldiers you had to go in the heat of battle yourself.Interestingly enough, that's how the last Roman emperor lost his life. Kings sometimes need to do that, or else some other guy, a valiant general may win the hearts of the army. In the Roman republic, this wasn't necessary.
@@jackdonith It was simply a different habit. The commanders of the Hellenistic armies had to do that because Alexander did that and, had not they done the same, they would have been considered cowards.
The legionaries instead recognised the necessity for the commander to have a clear view of the situation and not unnecessarily risk his life (so putting the entire chain of command at risk). Sometimes a Roman commander, viewing one of the sectors of the front faltering, resorted to fight there himself. The result usually was that the same men that were previously losing ground, doubled and tripled their efforts, because it was kind of a shame for them to have forced the commander to take sword and shield, and their due was to put him out of troubles.
This began the rule after Alexander the Great campaign. If the hellenic general commanded the battle from the rear, then he was not a descendant of hercules/heracles or Alexander.
There's no real difference to the romans. Both organized in files where the promachos is the champion and the others literally follow in his footsteps. Formations were led by the rightmost file leader. Roman generals were known to fight as promachoi just as the Greeks, or even duel as the armies stood by to witness. Pyrrhos often fought as a cavalry leader or a front ranker, but in these same battles he also directed his troops hither and yon.
Pyrrhus: "Here are my terms of surrender."
Romans: "Awfully nice, but we can´t accept your surrender unless we beat you fair and square. Wouldn ´t be proper you know."
Pyrrhus: "Wait, what?"
that actually made me laugh
@Richard James Kemp *Dingdingding* And we have a winner. =)
he asked for the Romans to surrender (since they lost a massive battle) and make peace. He wasn't surrendering. Kings and Generals should have made that clear.
@@deskouk1773 This was supposed to be joke, referencing movie "Bridge too far" where Germans ask surrounded, outnumbered, and outgunned Brits to surrender.
@@Taistelukalkkuna oh sorry my bad, I didn't get the reference. Thanks for the clarification.
“Those don’t look like barbarians to me”. This saying of Pyrrhus argues that he definitely considered himself and his soldiers Greek. It is a great argument against some modern Albanians and Skopjians who consider Epirotes and Macedonians non-Greeks just because of certain occasions where Southern Greeks called them barbarians. It appears that at times some Greeks abused the term barbarian and used it even for other Greeks who were less cultured or whose Greek dialect was unintelligible to them. It is interesting that even though Pyrrhus calls the Romans barbarians, another earlier Greek of the 5th century BC, Heraclides, a pupil of Plato, described Rome as a Greek city. The reason being that all ancient historians and chroniclers of Rome believed and wrote that Rome was founded by settlers from Greek Arcadia and Lacedaemon (Sparta)
That regionalism isn't that unusual though. Your typical citizen living in the city of Rome would likely consider only people living in the immediate proximity of the city to be "true Romans" while looking down on their Italian neighbors who don't speak Latin with the correct accent.
Sot Vasil i heard romans were of Celtic origin they still got their language and culture from Greeks tho. At the beginning they were also using phalanxes
Hahaha
Just watched this after listening to the latest episode of your podcast. Brilliant work all around and now Pyrrhus has felt the bite of the Hydra that is Rome. For every legionnaire that falls, two more shall take his place!
Hope you enjoyed the podcast! :-)
“Those don’t look like Barbarians to me”
I think it was after his second battle against the Romans that when his captains came to him to congratulate him for another victory, Pyrrhus snapped: "Another victory like this and we will lose the war!" ... which is in fact what happened.
Oh Pyrrhus all you did was awaken a sleeping giant.
Ptolemy Keraunos was a genius for encouraging Pyrrhus to attack the Romans and let him fall on them like an egg hitting a brick wall.
Well the Romans weren't really sleeping at that point. But he did give them a reason to turn their attention eastwards.
Giant was not sleeping he was awake and Pyrhus tried to stop him
@@barbiquearea And then, hundred years later, the wall will come to see where the egg flew from... ))
@@kostasmponis1386 In that case they ticked off the giant.
When an unstoppable force meets an immovable object
Can't find a better summary.
Pyrrhus : 7000 kills vs 4000 losses not bad, surely the Romans would realize how great I am now.
Random Italian Greek: That was only their first army
Rome: I'm about to end this man's whole career
Quite possibly my favorite battle on this channel so far. The fact that Pyrrhus was able to rally his troops at just the right moment is incredible. Not only was their training enough that they did not break right away but even without his grandiose armor his troops knew who he was by the way he commanded.
More on the way! :-)
The more i read about Rome, the more I revere the Roman spirit of sheer determination. The world can still learn from their tenacity.
Can we have a F in the chat for Alexander's empire.
F
F pepeHands
@platypus a Heir*
F
f
No one:
Pyrrhus: I'm about to start a series of pointless campaigns just so that in 2000 years time people will still be referring to my name
@@innerparty1 Rome was not a superpower at that time. But, it was Pyrrhus who actually made Rome relevant in the region by fucking up series of diplomacy with Carthaginians and Samnites and the entire southern Italy, causing the rise of Rome.
So its not pointless you see...
Excellent coverage of this more important meeting of two cultures and ways of war. One thing I don't think you mentioned was the near worthlessness of the people of the people of Taras or Tarentum as the Romans called it. They hired Pyrrhus thinking he would take care of the Roman problem without interrupting their nightly symposiums and other high cultured Greek traditions these Spartan ancestors had grown to love a bit too much!
Pyrrhus another legendary Greek king that the vast majority doesn't even heard of...
I played this in total war Rome. I won, and it had nothing to do with my mounted t.rex riders, honest.
Thats the Battle of Asculum. There is no Heraclea.
Alexander the Great Oh yeah, you are right. But more importantly, how did you, Alexander the Great, the guy really good at walloping Achaemenids get access to a device?
Tyrannosaurus Rex Hephaestion saw I was getting bored with sex so he hammered me a device with a bit of help from Apollo.
Alexander the Great Seems legit. This Hephaestion guy sounds pretty cool.
Tyrannosaurus Rex Yeah, he’s cool but he was humiliated in a ‘certain affair’.
It will end in a Pyrrhic victory... Shamefur Dispray...
You mean, if you don't win the battle as greatly as Austerlitz, it was as good as the lost one, eh?
Last time I was this early Rome was still a republic.
Rome is still a Republic in this video lol
Last time I was this early, Rome was still a kingdom.
Last time I was this early, Romans were Greeks and Christians.
I am not very early, am I?
This was probably the best battle you guys posted on this channel.Thanks!
Can't beat Roman/Greek Battle! Good work Fellas, thx!
pyrrhus unfortunately had no support from the greek city states from south italy...which could support him with much men and ships...on the other hand rome was not only a city she had her numerous allies....as a result pyrrhus was a good and tough general battleheardened who could win the romans but in every success he suffered losses with no backups....one more time greeks had the opportunity to remain free...
Great episode to watch guys! Had fun illustrating it!
We love working with you!
One of the greatest Greek king and fighters of all the time
When you just ended a war that drained your manpower pool...
But another nation declared war all of a sudden...
Napoleon I Bonaparte total war in a nutshell
@@blankname2026 No, it's in reference to EU4
Marvelous, guys! Simply incredible for every history junkie and great for even the experienced people, to help them understand the tactics used in various battles as well as the complex situations that lead to those battles. A big like!
Given the Greek penchant for friends donning their friends armor and riding into battle and dying, as soon as they said “his friend Megacles” I knew this wasn’t gonna end well
Yep, Achilles and Patroclus
Basically, when at Rock Paper Scissors
the two players play rock.
But he still won tho
@@dontsearchdocumentingreali9621 I guess, he had a better rock! Thessalian "diamond" formation maybe.
youre are getting better and better !keep up the good work Devin and your team
Thanks!
Ahhh The Rise of Rome
The Formidable Tested and True Phalanx against the Rising Fierce and Organised Legions
We have peaked in this era
Truly fitting for the Hype of Imperator Rome!
I still believe it was down to leadership in the 1st Macedonian war, the Phalanx defeated the legion 3 times, and at Zama the cavalry is what saved Rome.
First: amazing
Second, I wish you guys continue to talk about the diadochi wars. I know this is related but man the greek world and stories are stunning
Thanks! There will be more!
This is awesome. Thank you for publishing this content!
Thanks for watching!
4:48 The video went over these events too quickly but here's what actually happened. Seleucus stand poised to essentially reunite the Asian and Greek parts of Alexander's empire for the first time since the partition. Seleucus had been fighting and reuniting Persia, Syria, and Anatolia for many years and it seemed after his final victory over Lysimachus that a total reunification was within his grasp. Only Ptolemy in Egypt remained as a real threat. Seleucus was a popular leader and well respected as an able and benevolent ruler. The cities of Anatolia declared him their savior. Things were finally at long last looking good for Alexander's legacy and by this point 77 years old, Seleucus sought to settle down in a hard earned retirement in Macedonia and hand over most affairs to his son Antiochus. It looked like Greece proper was going to be finally for the most part at peace. Ptolemy I's son had joined Seleucus' court claiming to be a victim fleeing the intrigues of Lysimachus's family. After Seleucus crushed Lysimachus, it was Ptolemy that persuaded Seleucus to intervene in the dynastic disputes in Thrace and Macedon, assuring him they'd quickly recognize him as their new king. As soon as Seleucus crossed the Hellespont, it became clear to Ptolemy that he'd receive no real power or kingdom of his own. Self-entitled and bitterly jealous because his younger brother had been chosen as his father's heir in Egypt, Ptolemy turned on Seleucus and treacherously killed him at Lysimachia. He then used his influence in the Macedonian army and heritage as a descendant of Antipater to declare himself king in Macedonia. It was only a year later when the Galatian tribes subjugated the Thracians and then invaded Macedonia. The Gauls proved to be a final reckoning. Ptolemy Keranous suffered a humiliating defeat in battle with them and he was soon after decapitated. Karma for his dooming of the vision of the Seleucids to reinstate Alexander's empire of east and west.
Great job! You made the battle thrilling to watch.
Thank you!
Pyrrhus: " We have beaten you in battle. Surrender."
Rome: "Surrender? Hell, we're just getting started!"
Thanks for sharing!!! Keep up the great work Kings and Generals!!!
We will, thanks for watching!
Epirus is actualy my choice of nation when I play imperator Rome, very interesting nations and location.
4:43-4:49 HAHAHAHAH get rekt Lysimachus u scrublo- O WAIT O NOOOOOOO
Shame you died mate
Nothing personal.
A personal favourite of all the series given to us by this wonderful channel
Your videos never dissapoint, not once ;-) Love the animations!
Eagerly waiting for a series on Simon Bolivar...
You guys have the best historical battle series on RUclipsr, Keep up the awesome work.
Love this series on Pyrrhys of Epirus. Thank you for going ancient again!
THESE ARE MY FAVORITE!!! THANK YOU!!!
Thanks for watching!
This was amazing. The music made everything so tense.
Love these videos on one of the most underrated and my favorite general of antiquity. Keep them coming and keep up the good work. 👍
Thanks for watching!
10:57 A enemy what? AN ENEMY WHAT!? Also, Megacles is an awesome name. RIP.
Thank you for doing this series Pyrrus is my favorite antiquity person and he is so misunderstood or unknown.
These animations just brilliant and keep getting way better I love it
Thanks! :)
I think of all the history channels that animate ancient battles, you've got one of the greatest knacks for drama. I was literally on the edge of my seat for this one--I was rooting for Pyrrhus, so thank god elephants spook the hell out of horses! The Romans probably should have taken better notes... it would have helped them against the Carthaginians a century later.
Some drama never hurts. :-)
I love love waking up and having a notification for one of your videos
My god kings and generals this is one of the most intersting and well made documentary so far. I truly love your channel. God bless your channel.
6:14 love this artstyle ^^
Good :-)
I was wondering if I could get some sort of reminder to the podcasts. I suppose I can just watch every video you post and you'll just announce it here.
By the way, I love the new way you show off the armies numerically and visually. Great addition.
Great video as usual! This is a very interesting series. In my opinion, Pyrrhus is the last great Greek tactic master in Hellenic era. After him, only Carthage can stand against rising Rome in Mediterranean world. And all Phalanx will eventually defeated by new legions( although romans admitted phalanx in open field is still a formidable force)......
Shutong Liu Antiochus III. was relatively succesful. He may have lost at Raphia and Magnisia. But he consolidated the Seleucid Empire and subjugated the Armenians, Parthians and Bactrians.
Thessalos I think Antiochus was a very capable ruler, as he was possibly the one to unify the whole Alexander’s legacy if without Rome. But he was not quite a match to Rome on tactical level. Especially considering Flamininus wasn’t even considered as top general in Rome history but beat him relatively easy. He was a great strategist but his lack of tactical mean to defeat Rome on battlefield lead to his downfall.
Shutong Liu Antiochus made one decisive mistake at Magnisia. He did not aid his infantry.
He already defeated the roman cavalry with his own. But instead of charging the roman infantry in the rear, he decided to loot the roman camp.
I am a simple man. I see a Kings and Generals video, I click Like button.
Ditto
2:00 Aegea was the traditional capital of Macedon , until it was changed to Pella in the 4th century.
Studying for Finals but Kings and Generals uploaded another video again 🤷♂️
Me too haha
But the finals are anceint history and now you have a big boy brain
Why do you have finals at this time of the year?!
Nice work! And nice illustration from Robbie McSweeney!
I'm will check out the podcast, sounds like a great topic.
I always enjoy these kind of videos !!!! Keep up the good content
Seems like borders changed very rapidly in the Hellenistic world. Pyrrhus versus the Roman Republic in the third century B.C. was a pretty even fight. If Pyrrhus or one of the other Greek generals had united a larger portion of the western Greek speaking world during this period, they probably could have defeated Rome.
We actually only showed the crucial changes.
@@KingsandGenerals, I'd like to know more about the less crucial border changes as well as the crucial ones.
It goes to show how amazing Pyrrhus was. He simply lacked manpower and made a couple of unfortunate decisions (going for Carthage instead of finishing Rome). Roman Republic got crazy lucky, but still in their own credit could have given up at any moment but didn't.
Pyrrus is an interesting historical character. Thanks for sharing this. Cheers!
Thanks for watching!
That was great. Always wanted to see Pyrrhuss story done.
👍 👍 love this chanel & love the battle strategies too thx guys !!
Thanks for watching!
Nice to see Paradox as sponzor! Love their games!!! Keep up
Awesome video as always!
That was awesome! Your Pyrrhus videos are great!
There will be more!
Kings and Generals Huzzah!
great job. Thank you!
Thanks for watching!
I want more of Seleucids..
When you reference earlier videos can you please also provide a link for them? Thank you for the wonderful documentaries!
4:43 Why does it say "301 BC"? That's a mistake.
Korupedium happened at 281 BC
Pyrrhus managed to save an "oh no our king is dead" situation...
Pyrrhuss said of the Romans "We'll see what they can do soon" a century later, they conquered Greece and held it for a thousand years. Some epic foreshadowing there.
I just want Imperator Rome noooow!!!
And yes gonna play as Rome as the first thing of course
I want to play as anyone but Rome, and burn it to the ground!
Kostas Grapsas worth it
Thinking Bactria or Sparta will be my first play
I want to play Athens and go all Otto von Bismarck on the Greek states
same i cant wait i want to play as the Seleucid empire as fast as possbile
I wonder if Pyrrus had a talk later on with those of Tarentum about what is a "barbarian"
the music in the end of the video is so good
Kings and Generals what is song you playing starting at 13:27?
I like how in the middle of all this commotion Sparta shuts and bolts the door and hangs a "Do no disturb" sign.
More on them later. :-)
A new video from Kings?! It is a good day today😁
There was a quote a Roman general said about Rome, something like: the Gauls were more numerous, the Spanish were stronger, the Germanics were taller, the Greeks more intelligent and the Africans more treacherous, but Rome overcame all these foes through perserverance.
Beating a Roman army meant nothing to them, they would just recruit and try again
In the early days an army camped outside a city in a seige, and the city emissaries came out and told the Roman army to just give up because the city has enough supplies to last for 10 years without outside help. So the Roman General said: Wll excellent, we'll have the city in the 11th year then.
Supposedly the emissaries were so thrown by his response that they went back inside and the city surrended not long after.
Hi that was a really good video. Can you perhaps make a video about the Four Emperor Year?
great new music :D really adds to the tension!
I have often wondered what would have happened with Mediterranean history if Pyrrhus had won Heraclea and Asculum with even 2/3 the casualties he suffered. His Sicily campaign might have gone completely differently, he might not have gone back to Greece to take a roof tile to the head. What do you guys think, would he have been Alexander of the West?
Where did Pyrrhus get his war elephants from?
Egypt
@@KingsandGenerals wow thanks
Poor critters probably asked each other "where in the heck are we exactly and what the hell are we doing here???"
Weren’t these elephants the descendants of Indian elephants given to the Greeks from Chandragupta?
They were given by Ptolemy from Egypt and were probably the now extinct subspecies of bush Elephant.
Awesome work
No one wants to point out that Pyrrhus effectively used war elephants without damaging his own forces with them?
If i learned anything from this channel, it's that war elephants often do way more harm than good.
already mentioned in comments: use them IN RESERVE!
Yes! More of this please I love it! :D
You could do a video on the Illyrians,you already mentioned them, but they are interesting. They went from controling Macedonia(king Bardylis conquered them) to a pirate queen named Teuta.
Piracy is an fabrication made by Romans to attack Illyria so i think was Rome who killed Agron because they knew with king Agron leading Illyrian armies Rome had no chance defeating them .
If an episode about Illyrians is to be made hospitals in serbia will get overcrowded with people suffering from severe butthurtness
@@RegretForNothing im Croatian and i know i have Illyrian blood, not all Illyrians are Albanian.
@@RegretForNothing in real history, turd
Yung cash register A.K.A Lil Broomstick who says im slavic, im from dalmatia and i know many illyrians there got slavicized, but our genes is almost the same.
I know I should not ask this question. But I did the research and did not get any result. What program do you use to create this masterpiece?
I love these damn videos!
These illustrations are top notch
This reminds me of the battle of hastings 1066
William the Conqueror
I AM NOT DEAD
Yes you are.
Quality of the videos is improving by the video especially the faces and drawings
Thanks :)
loving this background music!
Thanks!
Man these videos are well.made, was jst about to ask on ur last vidro what happened to the diadochi
More on them on the way!