Napoleon Bonaparte: Crash Course European History #22

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2025

Комментарии • 853

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  5 лет назад +978

    We had a technical issue with the video today, and had to re-upload it. Sorry for any link confusion.

    • @mozzarellarat4373
      @mozzarellarat4373 5 лет назад +5

      Thank you ♥️

    • @BobPlaysOfficial
      @BobPlaysOfficial 5 лет назад +11

      I don't mind watching it twice. 😀

    • @trendtiger888
      @trendtiger888 5 лет назад +9

      No worries no confusion at all
      Thanks for sharing a beautiful video again ..
      you are the best ..
      Hats off to You Crash Course

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid 5 лет назад +13

      So the TV test pattern wasn't intentional, even though it had the texture overlay? Good, because I didn't get it 😄

    • @tommehlenbacher6832
      @tommehlenbacher6832 5 лет назад +5

      I'm just happy RUclips didn't pull it for [Insert terrible excuse here]

  • @XaurielZ
    @XaurielZ 5 лет назад +4913

    Love how as a historian, every time you mention Napoleon, you are legally obligated to tell people that he wasn't actually that short.

    • @paulpeterson4216
      @paulpeterson4216 5 лет назад +94

      The thing is, if he was small as a kid, he would feel short all of his life. Also if he was 5'7" or average for the day, then he was probably among the shortest people in the room whenever he was among the rich and powerful people who were his bureaucrats and his generals. There was some upward mobility in France at the time, but as usual in history it was mostly mobility from the upper middle class taking spots vacated by the upper upper class.

    • @Pelopen3bc
      @Pelopen3bc 5 лет назад +69

      @@paulpeterson4216 I'd take that him being mocked as a short kid with a grain of salt. He was gaunt, true. I've read a number of descriptions and he was mocked for a number of things; his unpronounceable last name, being a foreigner, his family's little income. One child insulted Napoléon's late father as a Corsican nationalist and thus a traitor - young Napoléon challenged him to a duel. Yet not much about his height. He might have been small framed but most kids are - they're kids. Crash Course got a number of things wrong in the video anyway (I'll recheck that one). However, the aforementioned torments had a much bigger effect on his attitude.
      And he would have been slightly above average so your assertion he was the shortest man in the room isn't true. True, his Old Guard were tall, but that's one specific unit. His adversary Horatio Nelson was ~164 cm or 5'4". The Archduke Charles, one of Napoléon's most persistent and overlooked adversaries was ~158 or 5'2". Both definitely shorter than Napoléon. The Duke of Wellington is either centimeters slightly shorter or slightly taller depending on what description you believe but hardly towering over Napoléon as pop culture suggests. So if anyone's height is in question it's actually other generals.
      Although it is continually rationalized, Napoleon Syndrome plays out as a myth.

    • @paulpeterson4216
      @paulpeterson4216 5 лет назад +13

      @@Pelopen3bc Yes but. I agree that the Napoleon complex is misnamed, his height was almost certainly not the driving factor in his psychology. That said, I was not comparing his height to the Army writ large, the rank and file were almost certainly a good cross section of the nation, given that the French drafted virtually an entire generation into the army. The average French peasant; however, was likely shorter than the average French, wealthy, upper-middle class, denizen of Napoleon's court. Wealth is generational, and most of his generals came from wealth, even if not the nobility. With wealth comes things like always having enough food and other advantages, including some genetic advantages, as the basis for most wealth in early modern Europe was a tendency of your ancestors to have been successful warriors, indeed likely knights, because they were big and strong enough to seize wealth.
      That said, I don't want to say he was feeling like Herve Velasquez, but in his social circle he was almost certainly below average in height. The idea of the Napoleon complex is wrong, but there has been a cottage industry for a century in "debunking" the "myth" and the fact that he was likely average height AT BEST, and likely shorter than most of his peers, is not convenient for people who need to debunk everything about the N complex. (Not saying you)

    • @Pelopen3bc
      @Pelopen3bc 5 лет назад +20

      @@paulpeterson4216 It's possible there was a differential in heights but not certain, we do know Napoléon _was_ taller than the average French peasant. Some of his generals came from wealth but others didn't. His best, Masséna, Lannes, and Davout, were either outright commoners or didn't come from money. Ney was the son of a cooper. The old aristocracy _was_ being replaced, even if a few remained.
      About his social circle, you can't say he was "almost certainly". Some we happen to know are taller, some we happen to know are shorter, some we'd need to dig up archives. You'd need to find their average and that conjecture would need to be supported. He was not "at best" average height; he was taller. 5'7" is taller than 5'5". Full stop. And one important question: why would Napoléon _especially_ have problems with height but the well-documented generals who were much shorter than him didn't?
      You don't need to debunk Napoleon Complex. It must be proven first.
      And one thing I forgot to mention before: despite the hostility he faced in his school days, Napoléon actually forgave them and looked back on his school days (at Brienne) with nostalgia. He did remember individuals who were kind to him and later rewarded them. But during the Revolution he violated orders to help a former school boy adversary avoid imprisonment. Despite his depression during Brienne, and retaining his disdain for most aristocrats, he oddly _wasn't_ bitter about his youth.

    • @alfredgomez3128
      @alfredgomez3128 5 лет назад +4

      The new shorty should be 5 foot Alsxander the Great

  • @jacobasimpson1995
    @jacobasimpson1995 5 лет назад +3323

    Funny how this video went down and came back a second time, fitting for a video on Napoleon

  • @gatb4387
    @gatb4387 5 лет назад +2005

    "When your leaders start talking about reviving the glory of the Roman Empire...get nervous!"

    • @XaurielZ
      @XaurielZ 5 лет назад +88

      The founding fathers of the United States of America sure loved them an image of the glory of ancient Rome. Just sayin'

    • @IkeOkerekeNews
      @IkeOkerekeNews 5 лет назад +7

      @@XaurielZ
      And so?

    • @XaurielZ
      @XaurielZ 5 лет назад +19

      And so what?

    • @IkeOkerekeNews
      @IkeOkerekeNews 5 лет назад +6

      @@XaurielZ
      And so what? What is it supposed to mean?

    • @Anactualfungus
      @Anactualfungus 5 лет назад +48

      Probably that the perceived ancient glory of Rome is highly sought by authority as an unreproachable expression of righteous justification of their rule, which is probably why the Capitol building has a mural of Washington ascending to godhood

  • @MortalWombat4480
    @MortalWombat4480 5 лет назад +1226

    Very rarely can you say that one man single handedly changed the world. Napoleon is one of them.

    • @MortalWombat4480
      @MortalWombat4480 5 лет назад +95

      Andrew Farrell Yes when you get nitpicky of course Napoleon couldn’t do anything alone. But very few times can you say that a mans ideas shaped the world in some way.

    • @MortalWombat4480
      @MortalWombat4480 5 лет назад +66

      Andrew Farrell And yes, I do think Napoleon changed the world alone. When he came back from exile he literally gathered an army of like 200,000 soldiers and took back France. If that doesn’t show how much power and respect you command then I don’t know what does. Another thing is that Napoleon was a brilliant strategist using new tactics with state of the art weaponry.

    • @magnuspeacock5857
      @magnuspeacock5857 5 лет назад +13

      @@MortalWombat4480 him and his *200,000* strong army retook France alone

    • @MortalWombat4480
      @MortalWombat4480 5 лет назад +38

      Magnus Peacock I’m saying it’s important because he inspired his men even despite them fighting for a different french government. That’s how powerful Napoleon was.

    • @magnuspeacock5857
      @magnuspeacock5857 5 лет назад +11

      @@MortalWombat4480 but to say he did it alone would be a bit disingenuous

  • @subutaynoyan5372
    @subutaynoyan5372 5 лет назад +941

    "If you're gonna live in a dictatorship you at least want to be dictated by the dictator, not some brother"

    • @justinpachi3707
      @justinpachi3707 5 лет назад +44

      Napoleon’s brother’s weren’t really incompetent except for Jerome. Louis was popular in Holland and ruled pretty well. He couldn’t really enforce the Continental system and was removed by Napoleon. Had Napoleon kept Louis on the throne, the Dutch would likely have been more amenable to Napoleon. Joseph as King of Naples enacted land reform and helped alleviate the Kingdom’s bankruptcy and provided relief to the peasantry by liquidating many church lands whom the government didn’t collect taxes on. Many of these lands were redistributed to the peasantry. Lucien Bonaparte was instrumental in Napoleon’s coup against the incompetent Directory.

    • @doesnotexist305
      @doesnotexist305 5 лет назад +16

      Justin Pachi this is true. And by placing family members on the thrones of foreign countries Napoleon sought to create the one thing he never really had: allies. All the old monarchies of Europe never accepted him as one of their own out of fear.

    • @lsatep
      @lsatep 4 года назад +5

      @@justinpachi3707 Napoleon was NOT good for France or Europe, so in the end, Napoleon actually proved to be an incompetent, disastrous leader.. Napoleon left France occupied, defeated, and never able to recover from defeat. Under Napoleon, the enemy was fighting on French soil closing in on Paris. Napoleon got ripped-off by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase, costing France millions of dollars. Napoleon was responsible for some of the worst military disasters in history that caused the lives of millions of Frenchmen. Egypt/Syria was a disaster. Spain was a disaster. Russia was the worst disaster in military history. Leipzig was a disaster. Waterloo was a disaster. France had its problems before Napoleon, but it was still, by far, the most powerful army in Europe. Napoleon inherited a superb war machine from the most powerful state in Continental Europe. Many times Napoleon, with a powerful army that could out-gun the enemy, would just barely win through sheer numbers while being a colossal drain on his soldiers and country. To a large extent, his tactics were irrelevant, as Napoleon could field outrageous numbers of troops and guns who could suffer losses that were easily replaceable by France's vast population and military resources. Napoleon is even quoted as saying "You cannot defeat me, I spend 30 000 lives a month." This ineffective strategy of course was wrong, as it led to drain and defeat, and it was France that paid the price with their own dead. In the end France suffered dearly because of Napoleon, and it is a shame that French and British historians have lied about the greatness of Napoleon in order to glorify their own history. A French historian wants you to think that Napoleon was a triumph for their own morale, but Napoleon is a story of tragedy that left France humiliated and cost the lives of millions. A British historian wants you to believe that Napoleon was a genius instead of a madman. Wouldn't you rather defeat a genius than a delusional madman. These are the lies that these historians want you to believe. But the facts are out there. Read about Napoleon's disasters of Egypt, Spain and Russia. Read about how Napoleon got swindled by the fledgling United States in the Louisiana Purchase, as Napoleon foolishly sells Louisiana territory 1,000 % under its value. Read about how Paris was occupied in 1814, and how France was tired of Napoleon, including Napoleon's own army. Don't let these biased historians who spin the facts make up your mind for you.

    • @matzekelle8482
      @matzekelle8482 4 года назад +8

      @@lsatep You're not wrong, but kind of missing the point of this episode and the story behind it. French people (as far as I can tell from my french family) see Napoleon as a national hero for all he archieved for France. His failings aren't ignored - they're part of the story, but make him rather more relateable. A commoner who reached the top, turned chaos into order and achieved lots of things - but also had human failings.
      I thought John did a good job showing, that he created more than wars. That the revolution and its aftermath were drenched in blood, but also brought changes he spearheaded, which reformed not only france, but all of europe and much of the world.

    • @pteeradukteel
      @pteeradukteel 4 года назад +2

      @@lsatep your comment is probably the first so long comment I've read :) thank you for such an interesting point of view.
      Here in Russia, despite the fact that he killed thousands of our ancestors, our historical propaganda works for Napoleon glory and greatness too.
      I suppose, it's also enough beneficial for us, as we won the most powerful army and empire in the world.
      Also good side, that our occupation no France gave our aristocracy view, how Europe is different then Russia and it caused the December Revolution, which was directed towards Europeisation of Russia. But unfortunately it has collapsed and all aristocratic officers were imprisoned.

  • @mikematthews6944
    @mikematthews6944 5 лет назад +543

    To add to the idea about how artists included Napoleon in their work, Beethoven’s 3rd Symphony, Sinfonia Eroica (Heroic Symphony), was originally titled Sinfonia Buonaparte. Beethoven was enamored with Napoleon’s anti-monarchical ideals and believed strongly in the idea of democracy. However, when Napoleon named himself Emperor, Beethoven revoked the dedication, ripping the title page of his score in half, and then he retitled it to Eroica. Another copy of the original title page has two subtitles, “intitolata Bonaparte” (“Titled Bonaparte”), and “Greschriben auf Bonaparte” (“Written for Bonaparte”), scratched out.

    • @mirceadraculov6515
      @mirceadraculov6515 5 лет назад +16

      It was also subtitled "In memory of a great man"

    • @cometmoon4485
      @cometmoon4485 5 лет назад +57

      It's cool how he actually acknowledged Napoleon's flaws and changed his views. I imagine a lot of people would stay fanatically devoted to certain leaders, regardless of how cruel or hypocritical they get.

    • @jupiter8512
      @jupiter8512 5 лет назад +14

      ​@@cometmoon4485 I would choose Napoleon the cruel dictator 10000 times over the government of my country.

    • @valentinapau4352
      @valentinapau4352 5 лет назад +11

      This is similar to the story of Ugo Foscolo, an important Italian poet. He addressed an ode to Napoleon, seen as the carrier of the principles of the revolution but after the Treaty of Campoformio by which Napoleon handed Venice, his town, over to the Austrians he felt betrayed and had disdain and resentment. Since this event, Foscolo showed himself hostile to any pro-Parisian government. (sorry for my poor english but I wanted to tell this story)

    • @JohnSmith-xf6nb
      @JohnSmith-xf6nb 4 года назад +4

      @@jupiter8512 Which country?

  • @TacticusPrime
    @TacticusPrime 5 лет назад +749

    The Napoleonic invasion of Spain gave English the word "guerrilla" war. It described the Spanish resistance fighters who hide in the rural areas and attacked the invaders in small raids. Guerrilla is Spanish for "Little War".

    • @fenhen
      @fenhen 5 лет назад +6

      So Guerrilla war is a Little War War? Or a war similar to the Guerrilla war in Spain?

    • @varana
      @varana 5 лет назад +42

      @@fenhen "Guerra" is "war", "guerrilla" is "little war". Therefore, yes, a "guerrilla war" is a "little war war". :)

    • @maximilianopena
      @maximilianopena 5 лет назад +23

      Not quite, "guerrilla" refers to an unorganized or paramilitary group and not the act of making war. In spanish we even have the phrase "guerra de guerrilas" or guerrilla war. I guess you can say "guerrita" to refer to an small war but no one says that.

    • @heidetenchavez9911
      @heidetenchavez9911 5 лет назад +1

      @TacticusPrime wow! Never thought of that...

    • @annoloki
      @annoloki 5 лет назад +7

      Ohhhhhhhhhhhh.... so.... nothing to do with the animal then!

  • @magtovi
    @magtovi 5 лет назад +1173

    When the French do it is called looting, when the British do it is called safekeeping.

    • @mikeesposito8745
      @mikeesposito8745 5 лет назад +130

      When the Democrats do it, it's called redistbution of weatlh

    • @TuomasKivisto
      @TuomasKivisto 5 лет назад +16

      @@mikeesposito8745 lol actually laughed a bit

    • @cometmoon4485
      @cometmoon4485 5 лет назад +157

      @@mikeesposito8745
      When super-rich white men do it, it's called Wednesday.

    • @CorneliusDawser
      @CorneliusDawser 5 лет назад +53

      @@cometmoon4485 My favourite comment ever.
      Billionnaires are the dictators of our days.

    • @mrAZcardinal
      @mrAZcardinal 4 года назад +5

      Britain didn't blast off the nose on the Sphynx or desecrate sites.

  • @1987MartinT
    @1987MartinT 5 лет назад +468

    Napoleon did a lot of bad things, and he did a lot of good things. But whether you think he was a tyrant or a hero or a bit of both it can't be denied that he left an enduring mark on the world.

  • @Azire
    @Azire 4 года назад +866

    As a French, I grew up with a mostly positive image of Napoleon, because I don't recall school teaching us all the bad things he did. We learned about the Napoleon Code ("Code Civil" over here, which was also followed by many codes of criminal law, commercial law, etc.), how he was obsessed by the Roman Empire and very war-driven. But honestly, he was at worst framed as an enlightened despot. Didn't help that I had a father who practically worshipped him. My point is mostly that in the last five years I've found out how horrible he was, and also how much of Europe sees him as a tyran. Ask a french and a british about Napoleon, opinions will be really different :').
    At the end of the day, he was probably that complex. A complete dictator, who did many good things. To be honest, I think he was exactly what the nation needed at that moment. History is an interesting discipline because, as objective as you try to be, there is always opinion. Anyway, great video as always, I love how you always update us on women and don't invisibilize them as has always been the case in all history classes i've ever taken.

    • @EJ-sp9gf
      @EJ-sp9gf 4 года назад +75

      I really enjoyed reading your take on this video.

    • @Azire
      @Azire 4 года назад +35

      @@EJ-sp9gf that is such a sweet comment, did not expect this

  • @ksc7957
    @ksc7957 4 года назад +367

    Quote by Napoleon Bonaparte: "Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."

  • @Victordstg
    @Victordstg 5 лет назад +1305

    That moment when you need 7 coalitions to take down one man

    • @violenthell
      @violenthell 5 лет назад +157

      And only after losing just couple of 600,000 troops, were they able to take him down

    • @MyPisceanNature
      @MyPisceanNature 5 лет назад +91

      Well, when one is the best general on the planet, it is hard for one to be defeated, until the rest of the world adapts.

    • @sabre3696
      @sabre3696 5 лет назад +50

      Technically 6 - 5 coalitions since the first two were the French Revolutionary Wars.

    • @NeoShameMan
      @NeoShameMan 5 лет назад +79

      Power of friendship, it always takes 5-6 power rangers to take down one big monster

    • @varana
      @varana 5 лет назад +9

      Just one man? Didn't he at least have a cook? ;)
      It took seven (or five or six, whatever) coalitions to take down one man - together with millions of others, French and non-French, who were with him.

  • @phoenixshadow6633
    @phoenixshadow6633 5 лет назад +1936

    "Something Europeans do like soccer and ensuring all citizens have healthcare"
    Ooh, shots fired.

    • @user-yv2cz8oj1k
      @user-yv2cz8oj1k 5 лет назад +69

      Well we don't all like soccer but we do like free healthcare.

    • @Rattiar
      @Rattiar 5 лет назад +229

      Shots fired? That's very American... ;)

    • @MrPbhuh
      @MrPbhuh 5 лет назад +8

      Canada looked over again xD

    • @Bird_Dog00
      @Bird_Dog00 5 лет назад +41

      @victor hoang
      Shots fired indeed. It's called football!
      Americans all have a tiny archeologist inside them, as they are terrible at naming things.
      That's the best explanation I have as to why they use the term football for a game that would be better described by the term "arm pit eg"... :D

    • @MadNumForce
      @MadNumForce 5 лет назад +38

      Actually, the "imperial system" is pretty much american nationalistic backwardness. The whole world uses metric now, except for the US.

  • @TetraDax
    @TetraDax 5 лет назад +259

    4:20 Interestingly, the German word for emperor is also stemming fom Caesar: "Kaiser". Of course that makes sense as well, considering the Holy Roman Empire understood itself as the continuation of the OG Roman Empire.

    • @subutaynoyan5372
      @subutaynoyan5372 5 лет назад +2

      The word emperor is from Latin too. Imperator was a plural form of preator. And preator meant a military and political figure, responsible of the well being and expanditure of a certain land or situation.

    • @TheLuuuuuc
      @TheLuuuuuc 5 лет назад +4

      @@subutaynoyan5372 I don't believe the first part is true

    • @subutaynoyan5372
      @subutaynoyan5372 5 лет назад

      @@TheLuuuuuc Really? Because whenever a member of the senate was having a bunch of legions for a purpose, wasn't he called imperator? A preator can lead an army, an imperator can lead a huge army if memory serves.

    • @Ruhrpottpatriot
      @Ruhrpottpatriot 5 лет назад +12

      ​@@subutaynoyan5372 That's totally wrong. First the plural of praetor is praetores (In Latin the plural is never formed by prefix), second praetor originates from prae-ire, "move in front of [sb./sth.]." On the other hand, imperator is the person who reigns over an imperium. Imperium comes from the word imperare, which translates to ruling.

    • @subutaynoyan5372
      @subutaynoyan5372 5 лет назад +1

      @@Ruhrpottpatriot Well, might be I'm wrong I'm not that sure of it

  • @spqr1945
    @spqr1945 5 лет назад +534

    Well actually, Napoleon invaded Russia not because he wanted to conquer her, but make her to join to the continental blockade of England.

    • @fenhen
      @fenhen 5 лет назад +33

      You mean “um, actually”

    • @Pelopen3bc
      @Pelopen3bc 5 лет назад +96

      Thank you, someone understands it. Napoléon understood the logistical nightmare that was ruling all of the Russias and did not envy that headache. His plan was to have a major victory and force Emperor Alexander to comply with probably a modified version of the Treaty of Tilsit.

    • @NapoleonCalland
      @NapoleonCalland 5 лет назад +37

      The tsar trying to invade a Polish State under Napoleon's protection (Grand Duchy of Warsaw) had a lot to do with it too !

    • @LeHappiste
      @LeHappiste 5 лет назад +63

      Everything in this video is very simplified to the point of sometimes being inaccurate.
      Like saying Napoleon "wanted to conquer Europe", while he actually really did it on self-defense as European monarchies declared war on France because they hated seeing a commoner on the throne.
      Or acting like the muslim population of early 19th century Egypt cared about the ancient pagan artifacts the French recovered from their land. In reality they had so little respect for ancient artifacts they even used them as building material (that's how the Rosetta stone was found by the French in the ruins of a recent military fort).

    • @fclp67
      @fclp67 5 лет назад +3

      He said "especially because Russia opted out of his continental system." The continental system was that embargo you are talking about. So he didn't forget it.

  • @Bejunckt
    @Bejunckt 5 лет назад +122

    I admired Napoleon a lot when I was a kid, I was a Francophile, and because of it I got very interested in studying world history.

    • @TuomasKivisto
      @TuomasKivisto 5 лет назад +33

      Napoleon achieved many things and shaped history I think that is something to be admired.

  • @JigJagging
    @JigJagging 5 лет назад +86

    Having lived in several parts of the world, I see a very distinct dichotomy in how Napoleon is perceived. In French-speaking countries, he is still to this day glorified, exalted and idolized as a liberator, a forward-thinker, a military genius and an inspiration. In English-speaking countries, he is reviled, hated, dismissed as a blood-thirsty, conquer-happy demagogue.

  • @DontMockMySmock
    @DontMockMySmock 5 лет назад +495

    Luckily, they banished him to an island.
    BUT HE CAME BACK!
    Luckily, they banished him to another island.

    • @EcceJack
      @EcceJack 5 лет назад +15

      A rather more remote one, this time ;P

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад +20

      Not really lucky though, Napoleon was a better ruled than most of the leaders of Europe at the time. the only one who might have been a better ruled than Napoleon was Jean Baptist Bernadotte, once one of Napoleon's general (and the guy who planned the Leipzig campaign against him). Everyone else went back to their pre napoleonic corrupt systems. Except Britain who never left this corrupt pre napoleonic system. What made Sweden so great in the coming century is that they kept their Napoleonic monarch and his reforms.

    • @DFloyd84
      @DFloyd84 5 лет назад +7

      He came back again. They banished him to a third island. That one burned, fell over, and he came back. But the fourth island worked!

    • @alejandrokaplan7243
      @alejandrokaplan7243 5 лет назад +3

      DontMockMySmock but then he wrote a book

    • @jupiter8512
      @jupiter8512 5 лет назад +4

      Luckily to sheep like you.

  • @jaybirdjetwings7516
    @jaybirdjetwings7516 5 лет назад +187

    Napoleon was an anti villain, one of the most interesting characters in history

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад +33

      He was a hero, he was a chance for European unity. First one since Charlemagne. Because the British managed to turn everyone agaisnt him we had to wait another century before another chance (the German concept of Mittleeuropa when they looked on the verge of winning ww1) and when that failed another century. But Europe shall be united.

    • @jaybirdjetwings7516
      @jaybirdjetwings7516 5 лет назад +12

      @@DaDunge Well in a sense yeah, he's defiently a complicated person kinda hard to call him or good or bad bur regardless he was an boss

    • @tonyhawk94
      @tonyhawk94 5 лет назад +14

      @@DaDunge As a French I disagree, there are only two people that dream of United Europe :
      - France
      - Germany
      In both cases it's because we are the two children of Charlemagne, and in both cases if it happens, this unification would be under the rule of the country that makes it. Just look at how Napoléon started to adapt all the countries to the French standards in less than 10 years.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад +4

      @@tonyhawk94 You are incorrect, there have been plenty of pan europeanists from other countries. I myself am neither from France nor Germany,

    • @tomsteenblok5080
      @tomsteenblok5080 5 лет назад +16

      @@DaDunge A hero? He was a horrible, power-hungry, totalitarianist man. How could he be a hero?

  • @hellboy30098
    @hellboy30098 2 года назад +9

    As a person who struggles with history and always has history teachers who end up just rambling in trying to connect points together.
    Putting it in a timeline is a godsend

  • @LuinTathren
    @LuinTathren 5 лет назад +22

    I know I've found a great channel when I don't mind re-watching a video I saw the day before. Thanks, John Green and everyone else on the CrashCourse team.

  • @aaronm8143
    @aaronm8143 4 года назад +49

    General at 24. It’s hard to put my mind around that, imagine that happening today.

  • @Grauschattierung
    @Grauschattierung 5 лет назад +115

    About the height: The English measure of foot was shorter than the French measure of foot. And thus: English propaganda-war at its finest!

    • @rozakfassah7730
      @rozakfassah7730 5 лет назад

      Which one is the universal 'foot' today? The French one or the English one?

    • @nessesaryschoolthing
      @nessesaryschoolthing 5 лет назад +8

      @@rozakfassah7730 There is no "universal foot" because Napoleon made everyone use Meters. Probably to obscure how short he was.

    • @rozakfassah7730
      @rozakfassah7730 5 лет назад

      @@nessesaryschoolthing so where did 1 foot = 0.3048 meters come from?

    • @nessesaryschoolthing
      @nessesaryschoolthing 5 лет назад +1

      @@rozakfassah7730 That's just it: it's complete nonsense. Nobody knows how long a meter is, it's incomprehensible.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад +1

      @@rozakfassah7730 It's the american foot, probably based on the British one but then again Ben Franklin did hang around a lot in France so it could be the french one.

  • @theunknownpersonism
    @theunknownpersonism 5 лет назад +187

    You know, Napoleon's descendant Jean Christophe is recently married to a Habsburg.

    • @justinpachi3707
      @justinpachi3707 5 лет назад +36

      Napoleon’s son Napoleon II was the grandson of Emperor Francis of Austria. Napoleon III’s wife was a legitimist (supported the House of Bourbon rather than Orleans) until her marriage.
      Jean-Christophe is not a direct descendant. He’s from a different line of the House of Bonaparte. Napoleon’s only legitimate child was Napoleon II who died at 21 from tuberculosis.

    • @richardsmall2855
      @richardsmall2855 5 лет назад +22

      @@justinpachi3707
      Alexandre Colonna Walewski was an illegitimate child of Napoleon. Issues of legitimacy today are whether or not the father was Napoleon. No longer do genealogists care whether or not the child was born out of wedlock. DNA evidence has proven that Napoleon was the father. Ergo, all descendants produced from this lineage are descendants of Napoleon.
      René Auberjonois, the actor who plays Otto on Deep Space 9, is a descendant of Napoleon's sister Caroline. While not a direct descendant of Napoleon, Rene is the most famous current member of the House of Bonaparte.

    • @chepitoloroco
      @chepitoloroco 5 лет назад +6

      @@justinpachi3707 The laws of succession of the French Empire state that any descendant of Napoleon's brothers can become the head of the house.
      And by the way Napoleon has an actual direct descendant from his relationship with the Polish countess, they didn't know that until a few years ago because of DNA

    • @alexandrian7772
      @alexandrian7772 4 года назад +1

      Guillotine them

    • @aybrokemyback6739
      @aybrokemyback6739 4 года назад

      @@richardsmall2855 the Bonaparte are illegitimate in their lunacy. The legitimate one took Napoleon as a name

  • @JohnSmith-pm3ew
    @JohnSmith-pm3ew 5 лет назад +57

    I (rarely) disagree with you John, because your videos are very good at capturing a concept's essence, but I have to speak up.
    Napoleon, a lay man, and his rise to power represented an enormous threat to the Ancièn Régime, or the old monarchical ways of Europe. If I'm not mistaken, every war Napoleon fought (coalitions 3-7) was started by the British or the Austrians. Virtually every monarchy in Europe wanted him gone, and they were willing to fight to see that goal achieved. Portraying Napoleon as a bloodthirsty conqueror is just a little bit disingenuous; at most one could say he used the impending threat of invasion as an excuse to conquer and expand the buffer zone around France. The only exception to this is his invasions of Russia and Spain.

  • @DrGaellon
    @DrGaellon 5 лет назад +16

    The Latin origin shared by revolt and revolve is "revolvo," which simply means to "turn over" - the sense of a complete 360 degree turn seems to be pretty unique to English. From that perspective, revolt/revolution as a "turning over" of government by violent means makes more sense.

  • @jennifergriel861
    @jennifergriel861 5 лет назад +57

    When I was in 1st grade the teacher read us a book that had napoleon in it, and when someone asked who he was she said “he was this short French guy who thought he owned land”.

    • @jakebender9355
      @jakebender9355 4 года назад +8

      Well, that little guy ruled Europe for a long time.

    • @Xawsyt
      @Xawsyt 4 года назад +24

      Stupid teacher.

  • @umjackd
    @umjackd 4 года назад +16

    People forget how almost all the standard military ranks and organisational terms came from French. Many of Napoleon's military achievements came from organisational reform and innovation, not just tactical or strategic success. The concept of recruiting an army for national service rather than the private recruitment for a monarch is also something that came from the French Revolution democratising the idea of citizenship. Napoleon and France could afford to spend more of his men's lives because he recruited bigger and faster than his rivals.

  • @Shirokroete
    @Shirokroete 4 года назад +14

    13:48 I'm in disbelief how poetic history can be sometimes

  • @thomasvertommen9526
    @thomasvertommen9526 5 лет назад +29

    However; aristocratic titles didn't necessarily mean feodal titles. For example; Soult, being Duke of Dalmatia, or Ney being Price of Muscovy, weren't really "entitled" to these regions. He did put his family into monarchical positions, because he believed this would stabilize Europe in the way that these states wouldn't take up arms against France again. So saying that Napoleon "revived" the ancien regime by returning aristocratic titles isn't really accurate.

  • @heathermilnes7744
    @heathermilnes7744 5 лет назад +10

    Thanks so much for these videos. How you manage to pack to much information into 15 minutes is astonishing- great pics as well as great script. And you guys at crash course all seem so nice. Thanks again X

  • @shockingheaven
    @shockingheaven 4 года назад +24

    The main reason I learned about the place of Napoleon's defeat was ABBA

  • @justinpachi3707
    @justinpachi3707 5 лет назад +54

    13:17
    Napoleon could have easily won Leipzig. He almost turned it into an Austerlitz scale victory. The French Cavalry were in pursuit of Prussian and Russian outriders. They chose not to pursue. It was later revealed that this group contained Tsar Nicholas I and Prussian King Frederick Wilhelm III along with some of their top army command. Had the French captured this group, the battle would have been a massive decisive victory. Napoleon would have won with the Coalition forces in complete disarray with such a decapitating move. Napoleon can now negotiate from a position of strength here. With both monarchs as his prisoners, his Empire is secure with Prussia and Russia forced to make peace with the French. It’s likely that Poland revolts and the Grand duchy of Warsaw is reinstated. With a withdrawal from Spain Napoleon can now consolidate enough troops to defend what he has.
    The Austrians would be desperate to make peace as with Russia and Prussia beaten and humbled, Napoleon’s wrath is directed at them for their betrayal. Tsar Nicholas’s rule is likely destabilized as a result of his loss of prestige resulting in something of an earlier Decembrist revolt.
    Italy and Germany are firmly within France’s orbit and Britain would be forced to make peace. The public was already weary of war and a victorious Napoleon would only re-affirm his image as an unbeatable general. Napoleon without being poisoned of arsenic, would likely live into the 1830’s.
    Napoleon II would be crowned as King of Italy, Emperor of the French, and Protector of the Confederation of the Rhine. Based on what we know of him from otl, he was quite intelligent and charming and had a desire to go into the army. With a living Napoleon, his son is likely trained by him to keep the army together. France likely recovers pretty quickly here and industrialized rapidly. The French army is still intact here and industrialization is more rapid thanks to France controlling the resources (coal and iron ore) of the Rhineland, the riches of Italy. Napoleonic France doesn’t experience a demographic collapse since it industrializes on schedule and there is no Franco Prussian War.

    • @kayeka4123
      @kayeka4123 5 лет назад +1

      Okay. So why did they give up?

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 5 лет назад +7

      That doesn't sound much like an astounding victory so much as them getting lucky by capturing two important dudes. Or, in reality, being unlucky in missing that opportunity. I wouldn't compare that with an actual victory on the field of battle or in a siege. The latter showcase the skill of the general and soldiers, the former just a bit of fortune.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 5 лет назад +3

      @Barrack Obama Vlogs True. But you can decide what to think of it. Napoleon isn't remembered for his military acumen just cos people considered him extraordinarily lucky.

    • @justinpachi3707
      @justinpachi3707 5 лет назад +2

      Koen Kamphorst
      They likely didn’t know who was in that group. Their main priority was likely to return to the battlefield rather than chasing what appeared to be lowly soldiers. The likely didn’t want to be straying too far away from friendly troops as well.

    • @justinpachi3707
      @justinpachi3707 5 лет назад +1

      Mendicant Bias
      I mean if you go by that account Caesar’s stunning victory at Alesia was overrated. He won thanks to luck, and had the Gauls not lost their organization, or Caesar not been saved from an enemy soldier at the last second, Roman Gaul would have been lost. Who knows perhaps Pompey takes it upon himself to avenge Caesar here, and takes Gaul.

  • @jimmyyang9464
    @jimmyyang9464 4 года назад +42

    Constructive Criticism: I think a big mistake in this video is not actually clarifying what the Continental System was. You mention that Napoleon invaded Spain, Portugal, and Russia because of it, so it’s an important topic worth mentioning because it led to the invasions that brought down Napoleon.

  • @MeganHollyy
    @MeganHollyy 5 лет назад +17

    one of the islands he went to, st helena, is where my great great great grandparents lived, and my great great grandad was actually born in napoleons house :)

  • @closetcocktailmonday2287
    @closetcocktailmonday2287 5 лет назад +51

    If Dr. Who ever comes and asks me to time travel, I'd say, "We have to pick up John Green first!"

  • @bappoprottecandbappoattacc107
    @bappoprottecandbappoattacc107 4 года назад +4

    I have a history test tomorrow and I have to thank you because you made the subject easier/more enhanced

  • @1BrandonWebb
    @1BrandonWebb 5 лет назад +39

    I love Napoleon! Gosh right!

  • @joaoonda
    @joaoonda 5 лет назад +64

    I don´t understand why you say that Spain was thwarting his Continental System. The Spanish were more than happy to be part of it! Only Portugal opposed this (due to the Windsor Treaty, the oldest Military Alliance still active) and Spain was invaded because Napoleon wanted to conquer Portugal. The Portuguese Royal Family did flee to Brazil but the Spanish one was captured and forced to abdicate on his brother Josef. Because of this, Portugal was able to secure his colonies and Spain lost many of theirs to the British and France.

    • @Mrdest211
      @Mrdest211 5 лет назад

      The video's talking about Russia at that point, not Spain.

    • @joaoonda
      @joaoonda 5 лет назад +7

      @@Mrdest211 no, at that moment he was speaking about Spain. He says that Spain wasn't respecting his continental blockade but it Portugal in fact that wasn't respecting it. He only talks about Russia after that.

    • @joaoonda
      @joaoonda 5 лет назад

      @Asier Linazasoro the Portuguese royal family fled to Brazil in 1807

    • @freewal
      @freewal 5 лет назад +5

      Spanish were splitted between the cities and the countryside. Cities were with Napoleon, and countryside were against him.

  • @clanker3885
    @clanker3885 Год назад +22

    there's nothing we can do

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 5 лет назад +51

    You called?

  • @hackman-hackman
    @hackman-hackman 5 лет назад +60

    *Any war ensues Europe*
    Random country: Yaayy! I am winning!
    Russia: I am going to do what's called a Pro Gamer Move -

    • @VRichardsn
      @VRichardsn 4 года назад +3

      Eh, not so fast, Hackman. Germany defeated Russia. So did Poland. And the Mongols. And Russia tends to perform less impressively once they try sallying out of their borders.

  • @DaDunge
    @DaDunge 5 лет назад +22

    14:35 Funny you should mention that because the British did that on the next order of magnitude later.

  • @ana-lr3bw
    @ana-lr3bw 5 лет назад +8

    my history test is tomorrow. i am about to cry... this is too much for my small brain.

  • @jordanharkins97
    @jordanharkins97 4 года назад +4

    Napoleon is my favorite historical leader. The true definition of chances makes champions

    • @lsatep
      @lsatep 4 года назад +3

      Far from a champion my friend. Napoleon was no champion and was NOT good for France and turned out to be an incompetent, disastrous leader. Napoleon left France occupied, defeated, and never able to recover from defeat. Under Napoleon, the enemy was fighting on French soil closing in on Paris. Napoleon got ripped-off by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase, costing France millions of dollars (In 1800s amount). Napoleon was responsible for some of the worst military disasters in history that caused the lives of millions of Frenchmen. Egypt/Syria was a disaster. Spain was a disaster. Russia was the worst disaster in military history. Leipzig was a disaster. Waterloo was a disaster. France had its problems before Napoleon, but it was still, by far, the most powerful army in Europe. Napoleon inherited a superb war machine from the most powerful state in Continental Europe. Many times Napoleon, with a powerful army that could out-gun the enemy, would just barely win through sheer numbers while being a colossal drain on his soldiers and country. To a large extent, his tactics were irrelevant, as Napoleon could field outrageous numbers of troops and guns who could suffer losses that were easily replaceable by France's vast population and military resources. Napoleon is even quoted as saying "You cannot defeat me, I spend 30 000 lives a month." This ineffective strategy of course was wrong, as it led to drain and defeat, and it was France that paid the price with their own dead. In the end France suffered dearly because of Napoleon, and it is a shame that French and British historians have lied about the greatness of Napoleon in order to glorify their own history. A French historian wants you to think that Napoleon was a triumph for their own morale, but Napoleon is a story of tragedy that left France humiliated and cost the lives of millions. A British historian wants you to believe that Napoleon was a genius instead of a madman. Wouldn't you rather defeat a genius than a delusional madman. These are the lies that these historians want you to believe. But the facts are out there. Read about Napoleon's disasters of Egypt, Spain and Russia. Read about how Napoleon got swindled by the fledgling United States in the Louisiana Purchase, as Napoleon foolishly sells Louisiana territory 1,000 % under its value (The US should still be paying France yearly payments for the Louisiana Purchase). Read about how Paris was occupied in 1814, and how France was tired of Napoleon, including Napoleon's own army. Don't let these biased historians who spin the facts make up your mind for you.

    • @VRichardsn
      @VRichardsn 4 года назад +15

      @@lsatep An incompetent general could not have produced victories such as that of the Italian campaign, one fought with a mutinuous army, underfed, underclothed, trudging along without being paid for months, facing unfavourable terrain against a numerically superior army. The Italian Campaign wasn't the work of a delusional madman.

    • @arididomenico6974
      @arididomenico6974 4 года назад

      He was also hugely sexist.

    • @VRichardsn
      @VRichardsn 4 года назад +8

      @@arididomenico6974 XVIII century gonna be XVIII century.

  • @powdermonkey7697
    @powdermonkey7697 5 лет назад +28

    'My enemies are many....
    My equals are NONE.'

  • @wa1kingcreeper543
    @wa1kingcreeper543 4 года назад +7

    truly helped me to study for a history test

  • @slothfulcobra
    @slothfulcobra 4 года назад +9

    I think you could've mentioned Napoleon's American adventures since you mentioned his African ones. He sold off Louisiana and blundered into creating independence for Spanish America and Haiti.
    It's hard to really fully judge Napoleon. He did so much, and yet also he had such wild and crazy ambition far beyond what could've ever been possible, and it's hard to really understand why.

  • @TheOfficalLutube
    @TheOfficalLutube 5 лет назад +5

    Congrats john greene on your hulu series based off your book! I havent read it yet but it looks great. I'm so happy for you as a long time fan of this RUclips page and your work. You give me inspiration and hope.

  • @napoleonbonaparte2527
    @napoleonbonaparte2527 4 года назад +22

    Yeah, I remember French revolution.

  • @jessicamarshall1975
    @jessicamarshall1975 5 лет назад +5

    The march on Russia was a little bit more complicated. The troops may have been from all of Europe but mostly because the peace treaties signed required the other states to support Napoleon with troops if asked. It wasn't popular and some resigned their commissions and fled to other countries to avoid it - fleeing to Russia, Britain or Spain.

  • @samwithoutlimits7766
    @samwithoutlimits7766 5 лет назад +10

    I really enjoy your presentations. I've got a request for a course. My belief is that our government has never (and never will) truly represented the people who live in this country. In fact, it was set up not to represent the majority of us. It has always represented political parties and influencers. How can we get a government that represents us, the people? What form of government would that be and how would it work?

    • @MrHanderson91
      @MrHanderson91 5 лет назад +3

      There is no perfect political system.

    • @samwithoutlimits7766
      @samwithoutlimits7766 5 лет назад +1

      @@MrHanderson91 I'm not looking for perfect. There just has to be something better, something that would actually represent WE the people more than what we have now

  • @alexander.yarema93
    @alexander.yarema93 Год назад +1

    Great work John!

  • @peloken9793
    @peloken9793 5 лет назад +5

    History is much like an endless waltz. The three beats of war, peace, and revolution continue on forever... Mariemaia Kushrenada, Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz

  • @emilynightingale7758
    @emilynightingale7758 5 лет назад +2

    whenever i'm having a bad day, i can always rely on crash course to brighten things up, even if it is the french revolution...
    Thanks John, I'm glad you exist.

  • @psithyra_rogue
    @psithyra_rogue 5 лет назад +33

    Anyone else waiting for a Mongols reference when talking about Russia? No? Just me? Ok then.

  • @osc.r951
    @osc.r951 4 года назад +5

    Anyone else notice how Johns speaking slower than in the past crash course videos?

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ Год назад +3

    Great video, thank you very much , note to self(nts) watched all of it 15:32

  • @jimenezisbetta
    @jimenezisbetta 4 года назад +4

    Such a good show!!! John green is awesome!

  • @sorei1958
    @sorei1958 5 лет назад +10

    I set the video speed to 1.25...just for the good ol' days...

  • @ramshacklealex7772
    @ramshacklealex7772 5 лет назад +7

    "It literally means a full turn of 360 degrees, like, you end a revolution where you started out." And yet wheels.

    • @lmao6118
      @lmao6118 5 лет назад +2

      the car moves forward but that part of the wheel goes back to the same area it started say the floor or near the top of the wheel still not really going anywhere

  • @ellatessa7033
    @ellatessa7033 5 лет назад +18

    Corsets did not exist before the Victorian era and their predecessors, stays, were definetly worn during Napoleon's time.

  • @williaml5223
    @williaml5223 5 лет назад +17

    I feel like it's very anachronistic to say people were "shocked" by the Napoleonic code being harsh on women. France in the early 19th century was not Berkley, CA.

  • @damianrobbins4167
    @damianrobbins4167 5 лет назад +2

    Another great one John!

  • @Chadevereux
    @Chadevereux 4 года назад +1

    Awesomely summarised, Crash Course!

  • @akshpatel2470
    @akshpatel2470 4 года назад +1

    remember when John Green was so energetic and funny. Not that he is not know but he is kind of old. Great content helped me get a 100 on my test.

  • @nmoney6655
    @nmoney6655 2 года назад +3

    I remember learning about the French Revolution in my 10th grade history class I thought it was so cool that a random war started cause the king let them starve

  • @mikenna76
    @mikenna76 4 года назад +4

    Thank you for helping me succeed in my online history class.

  • @m.paquet1303
    @m.paquet1303 Год назад +1

    Napoleon Bonaparte was of Italian descent.
    Napoleon's family was of Italian origin. His paternal ancestors, the Buonapartes, descended from a minor Tuscan noble family that emigrated to Corsica in the 16th century and his maternal ancestors, the Ramolinos, descended from a minor Genoese noble family.

  • @pocok5000
    @pocok5000 5 лет назад +6

    I love how hungary is never mentioned in this series.

  • @DaDunge
    @DaDunge 5 лет назад +6

    4:30 Why? Napoleon was a great leader who rode into power on a wave of popular support, comparing him to Mussolini is really unfair.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад +8

      @Harry Paul Except he wasn't, in fact he wasn't even exactly the same as every other leader of his time being much more progressive than even the rulers of Britain, arguably more so than the early presidents of the united stats. The great coalition wars against Napoleon was not to stop a dictator it was to stop the liberal progressive ideas of the french revolution, the ideas about equality brotherhood and liberty. Oh and for Britain it was also to keep Europe divided.

  • @slugUlon
    @slugUlon 5 лет назад +9

    He also invented Neapolitan icecream

  • @lhfirex
    @lhfirex 5 лет назад +4

    While this video is fantastic, you guys missed some of the most important things that happened in Napoleon's life, like the awkward but funny dance he did in front of everybody, or when he voiced support for a candidate in an election and told everyone to Vote for Pedro. I'm assuming those are big things, or else they wouldn't have included them in that movie about his life that came out in 2004.

  • @leonahalder5630
    @leonahalder5630 4 года назад +1

    I needed this to read The Count of Mounte Cristo.

  • @icesk8rgrrl
    @icesk8rgrrl 4 года назад +5

    I think it’s important to mention that Napoléon also reinstated slavery in May 1802 after it had been abolished in the French colonies in 1794. He did this to gain support from the colonial nobility and other countries.
    A pretty terrible thing to do, imo

    • @lsatep
      @lsatep 4 года назад +2

      Yes! The larger point that Napoleon was NOT good for France and turned out to be an incompetent, disastrous leader. Napoleon left France occupied, defeated, and never able to recover from defeat. Under Napoleon, the enemy was fighting on French soil closing in on Paris. Napoleon got ripped-off by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase, costing France millions of dollars (In 1800s amount). Napoleon was responsible for some of the worst military disasters in history that caused the lives of millions of Frenchmen. Egypt/Syria was a disaster. Spain was a disaster. Russia was the worst disaster in military history. Leipzig was a disaster. Waterloo was a disaster. France had its problems before Napoleon, but it was still, by far, the most powerful army in Europe. Napoleon inherited a superb war machine from the most powerful state in Continental Europe. Many times Napoleon, with a powerful army that could out-gun the enemy, would just barely win through sheer numbers while being a colossal drain on his soldiers and country. To a large extent, his tactics were irrelevant, as Napoleon could field outrageous numbers of troops and guns who could suffer losses that were easily replaceable by France's vast population and military resources. Napoleon is even quoted as saying "You cannot defeat me, I spend 30 000 lives a month." This ineffective strategy of course was wrong, as it led to drain and defeat, and it was France that paid the price with their own dead. In the end France suffered dearly because of Napoleon, and it is a shame that French and British historians have lied about the greatness of Napoleon in order to glorify their own history. A French historian wants you to think that Napoleon was a triumph for their own morale, but Napoleon is a story of tragedy that left France humiliated and cost the lives of millions. A British historian wants you to believe that Napoleon was a genius instead of a madman. Wouldn't you rather defeat a genius than a delusional madman. These are the lies that these historians want you to believe. But the facts are out there. Read about Napoleon's disasters of Egypt, Spain and Russia. Read about how Napoleon got swindled by the fledgling United States in the Louisiana Purchase, as Napoleon foolishly sells Louisiana territory 1,000 % under its value (The US should still be paying France yearly payments for the Louisiana Purchase). Read about how Paris was occupied in 1814, and how France was tired of Napoleon, including Napoleon's own army. Don't let these biased historians who spin the facts make up your mind for you.

  • @tim_the_gr8_904
    @tim_the_gr8_904 4 года назад +1

    Love your show man!

  • @JavierBonillaC
    @JavierBonillaC 4 года назад +6

    Kaiser also comes from Caesar because in Latin C always sounds like a K.

  • @mikeoxmaul45
    @mikeoxmaul45 5 лет назад +1

    Love that line infantry battle animation

  • @charliegolsan2509
    @charliegolsan2509 5 лет назад +18

    I always kinda liked napoleon... he seem like someone who actually wanted to make his country better, and wasn't in it purely for power

    • @user-yv2cz8oj1k
      @user-yv2cz8oj1k 5 лет назад

      And technically it wasn't even his country.

    • @fenhen
      @fenhen 5 лет назад +1

      Epsilon Jay ɛɈ ⸋ Ȣ ƪ ϡ ϧ Ϯ ϗ ƕ ⸈ It was only recently part of France at the time though.

    • @Pelopen3bc
      @Pelopen3bc 5 лет назад

      @@user-yv2cz8oj1k Technically it was. Corsica was annexed by France before he was born so he was born a French citizen.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад +3

      @mikechrishill The British were ending slave trade because it was no longer economically viable, not because some moral standpoint. Also why Napoleon could reintroduce it when asked to because it gained him favours and to everyone who could see the writing on the wall it was going away anyway.

    • @tonyhawk94
      @tonyhawk94 5 лет назад

      He thought as his destiny and the destiny of France was the same thing, he genuinely care for the well being of the country !

  • @jacobc2850
    @jacobc2850 5 лет назад +10

    Waterloo! Couldn’t escape if I wanted to!

  • @armorsmith43
    @armorsmith43 5 лет назад +7

    Rules for Rulers by CGP Grey is a great explanation of why Napoleon sought the support of the Catholic Church.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад

      I would actually argue that that video is very simplistic, mainly because the book it's based on is very simplistic. CGP grey is great but he's using bad source materials.

    • @armorsmith43
      @armorsmith43 5 лет назад

      Fredrik Dunge the model it presents is indeed just one model which leaves many things unexplained.
      That is also true of, say, the idea that atoms want to have 8 electrons in their valence shell. All models are incomplete; some models are useful.
      So would you say that the model of incentives presented in Rules for Rulers is not useful?

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад +1

      @@armorsmith43 Human behaviour is not the same as a scientific theory.

  • @cameronchurchill2749
    @cameronchurchill2749 5 лет назад +17

    The first time i watched these crash course histories i thought they were very good, more and more now i see the angles they take, they're fine but man, take it with a few grains of salt. Listen to the audiobooks of Will Durant if you want proper history

    • @bignasty389
      @bignasty389 4 года назад +1

      What names Will Durant less biased in his presentation?

  • @kaisertano
    @kaisertano 5 лет назад

    Hello, could you please tell me how's the painting from 1:24 called? I'm struggling to find it. Thanks in advance!

  • @ЛюбовьСвоя-э8ы
    @ЛюбовьСвоя-э8ы 5 лет назад +4

    Use your channel for learning english and history both. Thank you ❤

  • @DaDunge
    @DaDunge 5 лет назад +7

    11:20 At this point have you given up on giving an unbiased version of history? Napoleon did not seek to conquer Russia, he just wanted them back on the blockade against Britain, who was at war with him and a war not declared by Napoleon but by the British.

    • @WeAreAirborne
      @WeAreAirborne 5 лет назад

      bro are you like...... ok?

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад +3

      @@WeAreAirborne No biased telling if history posses me off. Also the quality if this is so much worse than crash course word history one and two.

    • @phuonganh149
      @phuonganh149 5 лет назад +1

      I don't know man. If Russia didn't want to be on the blockade, it was their (king's) decision. Forcing people to do what you want is essentially the same with wanting to conquer them. There's really no justification for bringing your army to other people's land.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 5 лет назад

      @@phuonganh149 I guess Britain and the US conquered Sweden in both world wars then.

    • @phuonganh149
      @phuonganh149 5 лет назад +2

      @@DaDunge Well, did they attack the Swedish force in Sweden? Did they force (or try to force) Sweden to do anything? Or leave Sweden to choose their own road and use negotiation instead for their gain? Did the Allies try to punish Sweden for allowing the Nazis to do things on their land?
      But you've got a point. I should have added "without their permission" after my previous comment. My bad.

  • @simplyjess9689
    @simplyjess9689 4 года назад +3

    fun video hack : change video speed to 1.25x and you'll summon the voice of 2013 Crash Course John Green. (( love u john ))

  • @nathanmorgan7717
    @nathanmorgan7717 5 лет назад +1

    Can you please talk about Ireland during your series it’s hugely interesting

  • @mattmacaulay2900
    @mattmacaulay2900 5 лет назад +43

    Long live the Emperor!

    • @freewal
      @freewal 5 лет назад +4

      Europe misses him so much. He was in advance for his time. We would have today an United Europe, without two bloody world wars, and Europe would be respected?

  • @MichelleC50
    @MichelleC50 5 лет назад +6

    Awesome! I get to see this twice today! ^_^

  • @brycezen1896
    @brycezen1896 4 года назад +7

    “We still have Napoleon in our guts” 😂😂

  • @Lucario-hv1iq
    @Lucario-hv1iq 5 лет назад +1

    Mr. Green, we love you ❤️

  • @Xawsyt
    @Xawsyt 4 года назад +6

    Napoleon, one of the best military general ! So many country for stopping him... 😍

  • @harrynac6017
    @harrynac6017 4 года назад +5

    I was always puzzled how people procreated in the past. But during your courses I found out that in history there were women too. Never learned that at school.

  • @Simasofa
    @Simasofa 4 года назад

    very solid! thank you!

  • @ahmedelmogi5113
    @ahmedelmogi5113 5 лет назад

    You can make a video about his journey to Egypt with some details plz

  • @bangscutter
    @bangscutter 5 лет назад +5

    Napoleonic Wars:
    Napoleon has grandiose image of himself as a dictator.
    Strong nationalism.
    France conquered most of continental Europe.
    Couldn't conquer the pesky British on their island, since Britain is a strong naval power.
    Tried to conquer Russia, but defeated by the Russian winter.
    Defeated by a coalition.
    World War 2:
    Hitler has grandiose image of himself as a dictator.
    Strong nationalism.
    Germany conquered most of continental Europe.
    Couldn't conquer the pesky British on their island, since Britain is a strong naval power..
    Tried to conquer Russia, but defeated by the Russian winter.
    Defeated by a coalition.
    History does repeat itself, yet ego gets in the way of learning from past mistakes.

    • @ralphlegros8803
      @ralphlegros8803 5 лет назад +6

      Yet Napoleon's remains lie under the Dome des Invalides, visited by millions every year. Hitler's jaw bone is in a drawer in Russia's state archives.
      The French still use the Napoleonic Code (with revisions of course). Quebec's Civil code is also a version of it.
      Their legacies are polar opposites I would say.

  • @Zepheriah
    @Zepheriah 5 лет назад

    I'd really like to know what some of the paintings in this video are, especially the one at 1:24, it's fantastic. I couldn't find anywhere where Crash Course puts that info up... can anyone tell me?

    • @seanrowden
      @seanrowden 4 года назад

      Bonaparte aux Tuileries, Maurice Réalier-Dumas

    • @Zepheriah
      @Zepheriah 4 года назад +1

      Thank you! (I did actually find it eventually, but thank you!) It's such an interesting piece of sotrytelling in one image.

    • @seanrowden
      @seanrowden 4 года назад

      @@Zepheriah Figured you might have by now but yes I agree :D

  • @Wybeee
    @Wybeee 4 года назад +1

    Wow so good

  • @aurelmatthews4164
    @aurelmatthews4164 4 года назад

    3:46 Are they heiling him in that painting?