Byzantine Army: Armenians, Georgians, Turks, Catalans, Slavs DOCUMENTARY

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  • Опубликовано: 27 янв 2025

Комментарии • 377

  • @KingsandGenerals
    @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +56

    🎥 Join our RUclips members and patrons to unlock exclusive content! Our community is currently enjoying deep dives into the First Punic War, Pacific War, history of Prussia, Italian Unification Wars, Russo-Japanese War, Albigensian Crusade, and Xenophon’s Anabasis. Become a part of this exclusive circle: ruclips.net/channel/UCMmaBzfCCwZ2KqaBJjkj0fwjoin or patron: www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals and Paypal paypal.me/kingsandgenerals as well!

    • @KingsandGenerals
      @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +3

      @@danielsantiagourtado3430 a new comment, please

    • @ajithsidhu7183
      @ajithsidhu7183 Год назад +1

      thank you for this topic @@KingsandGenerals

    • @bradmyst1339
      @bradmyst1339 Год назад +1

      Which option supports you better, Patreon or RUclips members? And which gives you more financial support?

    • @KingsandGenerals
      @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +4

      @@bradmyst1339 thanks for considering. Patreon gives us a higher %, RUclips has more functionality for the people who support us.

    • @berkosmansatiroglu
      @berkosmansatiroglu Год назад

      16:05 With Jerusalem and St.John Hospitaller knights served.

  • @nomcognom2332
    @nomcognom2332 Год назад +487

    Desperta ferro!! PS: On the other hand, in 1453, the Catalans fought until the very end in Constantinople against the ottomans. From the wiki: "The Catalans that maintained their position on the section of the wall that the emperor had assigned them, had the honor of being the last troops to fall."

    • @alexestevez8266
      @alexestevez8266 Год назад +35

      Este es el comentario que estaba buscando, desperta Ferrooo!!

    • @jordisaura6748
      @jordisaura6748 Год назад +21

      Someone stayed loyal to those backstabing bastards?

    • @rishavkumar1250
      @rishavkumar1250 Год назад +20

      ​@@jordisaura6748would you care to elaborate?

    • @alessandrolarroca5386
      @alessandrolarroca5386 Год назад +25

      Viva la corona de Aragón, pero no está claro si paso realmente o fue para presionar la reclamación en el imperio romano. Recordar que teóricamente se dice que el título pertenece a España

    • @rotciv1492
      @rotciv1492 Год назад

      ​​​​​​@@rishavkumar1250In the XIII Century, a Bizantine emperor hired a mercenary army of Catalan almoghavars called The Catalan Company, under Roger de Flor, to fight the Turks.
      They did it fabulously, beating the Turks up and down and accomplishing all objectives set by the Bizantines.
      However, bored almoghavars are known to be very unruly. So the son of the emperor decided to dispose of them before they became a problem. Then attacked them with an army and killed their leader.
      That backfired in a spectacular way. Most of the Catalan Company escaped, and, despite being heavily outnumbered and lost in a hostile land, proceeded to wipe out every single Bizantine and Alan army the emperor threw at them, battle after battle.
      Then they ransacked Thracy and Greece and especially Gallipolli for years and conquered both the duchies of Athens and Neopatras, which belonged to the Chrown of Aragon for a few years more after the successes.
      It's a very interesting episode in history, and a perfect example of instant karma.
      Pd: as a curiosity, Roger the Flor was from Prussian origins, and his actual name was Rudger von Blum

  • @ElBandito
    @ElBandito Год назад +89

    The Catalans are amazing with how strong they were, using how little equipment they used. Mobility is truly the king.

  • @ahmettas-xp6hc
    @ahmettas-xp6hc Год назад +171

    In Romanus Diogenes' tent before the battle of Manzikert, the Pecheneg leader and Seljuk envoy were communicating with each other in their own languages during a meeting. The Greek historian who was watching them was shocked and said Wait a minute, they speak the same language?

    • @ΧΑΡΗΣΚΟΥΡΗΣ-ψ3ν
      @ΧΑΡΗΣΚΟΥΡΗΣ-ψ3ν Год назад +56

      The Pechenegs and the Seljuks were Oghuz Turks, and at that point the two men would probably speak the same language with a slight difference in accents and vocabulary. Concerning the Pechenegs and the Cumans, with the latter being linguistically more related to the Kypchaks, them being neighbourly peoples would mean that they probably had difficulty understanding each other, but not after continued exposure.

    • @tatarcavalry2342
      @tatarcavalry2342 Год назад +4

      That's why Pechenegs later joined the Seljuks at Manzikert

    • @precursors
      @precursors Год назад +13

      @@ΧΑΡΗΣΚΟΥΡΗΣ-ψ3ν Actually, Kipchak was much less deviated from Oghuz at the time, and they could easily understand each other. Even a thousand years later, considering all the cultural, and linguistic changes, we in Turkey now can read and understand Codex Cumanicus which was written by the Latins in Cuman and Latin languages to convert Cumans to Christianity. A thousand years ago, the Oghuz-Kipchak branches were probably just forming, and there probably wasn't too big a difference between the two branches.

  • @In_Our_Timeline
    @In_Our_Timeline Год назад +217

    Note: The Byzantine Empire had been reduced to its smallest territorial extent in history at the start of the Komnenian period (1081). With all of its enemies surrounding it and a protracted civil war having devastated its finances, the empire's future had seemed bleak. However, by building a new army from the ground up, Alexios I Komnenos, John II Komnenos, and Manuel I Komnenos were able to restore the power of the Byzantine Empire through a combination of skill, determination, and years of campaigning.

    • @DestroyerOfSense000
      @DestroyerOfSense000 Год назад +12

      That the Empire even survived under Alexios was a truly remarkable achievement. The Seljuk Turks and Normans, two of the greatest warrior peoples to ever walk the Earth, who had carried all before them since they first exploded onto the scene, barreled towards the Romans simultaneously, and he successfully dealt with them both.

  • @robertrodriguezharo1906
    @robertrodriguezharo1906 Год назад +58

    Excelent video! Here a Catalan inmensely happy for you to tell a little of the amazing, horrifying and hard ventures of Roger de Flor (born Roger von Bloom, as he was from german ancestry) and the Great Catalan Company. It is still being discussed by Catalan historians if his actions in Eastern Rome were a secret ploy of the House of Barcelona to try to take over the Byzantine Empire. Thank you K&G for this!

    • @JavierGarcia-nm4zr
      @JavierGarcia-nm4zr Год назад +6

      It’s truly an amazing feat for the Crown of Aragon really, hope they make more videos about other Aragonian conquest such as Sicily or Corsica!

    • @TrollersJustice
      @TrollersJustice Год назад

      Yet not enough to stop a superiour army, the Ottomans.

    • @alfredocallesaez7631
      @alfredocallesaez7631 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@TrollersJusticeno solo los detuvieron sino que los persiguieron hasta muy atrás. Dejaron de luchar para Constantinopla por una grave traición que sufrieron. Nunca fueron catalanes eran aragoneses y juraban a Aragón. Lo de catalanes es una mentira nazi

  • @nenenindonu
    @nenenindonu Год назад +60

    Apparently Turkic mercenaries in the Byzantine army date back to late antiquity with Oghuric tribes like Sabirs, Huns, Kutrigurs, Saragurs, Onogurs,... being prevalent in Belisarius's era

    • @TheDON2111
      @TheDON2111 Год назад +7

      @@julia2k8 the Byzantine empire was vast and had many territories all over Europe, North Africa and the Middle East so it wouldn't be too far fetched for them to have various ethnicities serving under them. For example, the Ghassanids (Christian Arab kingdom in the levant and northern Arabia) fought alongside the Byzantine Empire against the Persian Sasanians and Muslim Arabs.

    • @precursors
      @precursors Год назад

      @@julia2k8 "Greek history"? Did you even watch the video? @9:50 Athens wasn't even part of Eastern Roman Empire for centuries (or even half of Greece)! 😂😂Idiot

  • @davidhughes8357
    @davidhughes8357 Год назад +15

    Excellent presentation my friends. My continuing lifelong (I am now 73) study of ancient and medieval military history depends greatly on your hard work!!
    Thank you.

  • @iraklisuladze1185
    @iraklisuladze1185 Год назад +38

    Thanks from Georgia, glad that you mentioned us in this video about a very interesting period of Europe.

    • @Darkseidsolosfiction
      @Darkseidsolosfiction Год назад +10

      ჩვენს ქვეყანაზე რომ მოუხშიროს ვიდეოებს კარგი იქნებოდა

    • @tylerjackson2906
      @tylerjackson2906 Год назад +5

      You guys had some pretty dope ass heavy Cavalry back in the day too. Also, Thanks for probably being the reason the rest of us werent conquered and enslaved by various baddies from the East. @@Darkseidsolosfiction

    • @Darkseidsolosfiction
      @Darkseidsolosfiction Год назад

      @@tylerjackson2906 you are more than welcome mate

    • @cegesh1459
      @cegesh1459 Год назад +1

      Well let's hope Gorgia stops being such a conservative place.

    • @ConquerorsnotColonizers
      @ConquerorsnotColonizers 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@cegesh1459Or what?

  • @mikemodugno5879
    @mikemodugno5879 Год назад +41

    This has got to be one of my favorite videos from you guys. Keep up the great work, K&G! I would love to see more about the Cumans.

  • @kaybevang536
    @kaybevang536 Год назад +45

    I remember before Harold Sigursan became King Hardrada he joined the Varangian Guard as a Viking mercenary to think Norseman managed to get that far is amazing

    • @aokiaoki4238
      @aokiaoki4238 Год назад +4

      He even took part in the dethrone of Michael V Kalaphates

    • @michaelhaderach277
      @michaelhaderach277 Год назад +5

      Varangian guard is called so because it was mainly from Norsemen

    • @kaybevang536
      @kaybevang536 Год назад +5

      @@michaelhaderach277 it was probably both Kieven Rus And Norseman who like Sigurson came from Norway or happen to live along side Slavs who all together went south to join the Byzantine army

    • @andersbjrnsen7203
      @andersbjrnsen7203 Год назад

      ​@@kaybevang536correct

    • @andersbjrnsen7203
      @andersbjrnsen7203 Год назад

      and even that pales to us getting to the new world hundreds of years before Colombus.

  • @fatherofhistory
    @fatherofhistory Год назад +6

    Very informative video about the diverse composition of the Byzantine army. I was particularly interested in learning about the role of foreign soldiers, such as the Armenians, Georgians, and Turks. It's fascinating to see how the Empire incorporated different cultures and fighting styles into its military structure.

    • @PANTHERA.
      @PANTHERA. 5 месяцев назад

      yeah i was waiting for hearing about georgians

  • @australianopal4778
    @australianopal4778 Год назад +4

    Thanks mentioning Armenians and Georgians. Great job 👏

  • @marticabre286
    @marticabre286 Год назад +11

    In the year 2005 the Catalan government sent a representative mission to the Theocrathic Republic of Mount Athos Monasteries to express regret and lift the prohibitiom of Catalan people to enter its domains in exhchange for rebuilding some structures. The case had been brought forward when in 1991 a Catalan musician had been expelled from the Greek monasteries after they discovered his nationality, making it clear that the prohibition was still in effect 700 years later and the Orthodox monks would have none of it!

  • @f3wbs
    @f3wbs Год назад +56

    One of the reasons why the Byzantines in Medieval 2 are great is because of their big mercenary roster. The Byzantine roster provides a strong core and the mercenaries provide auxiliary support. Both are versatile but the mercenaries provide specialization to the region with the drawback that they have to be recruited/retrained in the region.

  • @ΑΝΑΣΤΑΣΙΟΣΤΣΙΟΤΣΙΑΣ

    Another beautiful Eastern Roman video. Thank you very much!!

  • @chuzoable
    @chuzoable Год назад +28

    Do a video about Roger de Flor

  • @jozzieokes3422
    @jozzieokes3422 Год назад +24

    Just amazing in detail and brilliantly narrated as always!

  • @Drew151Proof
    @Drew151Proof Год назад +2

    Wow, What an intro! You guys are the best. Love Roman and Byzantine history. Thanks so much for

  • @talos1253
    @talos1253 Год назад +8

    Very interesting topic. Thank you very much!

  • @sonercakir7542
    @sonercakir7542 Год назад +6

    İ didn't know there were that much Turkic warriors on Byzantine side. Great video btw

  • @AngSco30
    @AngSco30 Год назад +22

    Would highly recommend becoming a member. The videos on Sulla and the Albigensian Crusade were reason enough for me!

  • @lothric_k
    @lothric_k Год назад +20

    Yes i told and guess, before Seljuks come Anatolia, there are many Turkic nomads already settled by Byzanine Empire in west Anatolia like Pechenegs, Cumans. Later ofcourse they adopted Seljuk/Ottoman culture, religion en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manavs

  • @JonnyMclelland
    @JonnyMclelland Год назад +2

    Can’t get enough of this content

  • @andreaspitsinis255
    @andreaspitsinis255 Год назад +6

    whoever is running this channel is just the OG as my kids would say. I've been following them for years and their in depth knowledge of world history, their ability to narrate it seamlessly and their graphics are out of this world.

  • @noone4700
    @noone4700 Год назад +2

    A true blessing in the skies! Love the Byzantine vids

  • @dansmith4077
    @dansmith4077 Год назад +2

    For the algorithm great video

  • @tylerjackson2906
    @tylerjackson2906 Год назад +1

    outstanding video, this type of unique and often overlooked piece of history (as welll as your docs on Yuehzi, white huns, varingians etc) set K&G apart from most of the history content on the internets. I have a history minor (my parents arent proud either lol) and have been a gigantic history nerd all my life and I've seriously never heard of even a shred of this badassery.
    For my nerd credentials, me and my gf just had dinner at Pei Wei, and I made her sit for half an hour as I used our silverware to demonstrate the factors that led to the triumph of the roman legion over the greek phalanx. She was not as riveted as I initially hoped.

  • @marticabre286
    @marticabre286 Год назад +4

    You could do some of the Catalan Company victories over the French at Formigues (naval) or Cefis (land). Using light infantry with missile weapons and stalling the heavy cavalry charges using prepared terrain and avoiding the shock, the Catalan Company anticipated by some decades the similar and more famous English victories over the French in the Hundred Years War.

  • @giannisgiannopoulos791
    @giannisgiannopoulos791 Год назад +11

    Let us not forget the Khazars, possibly the Turkic mercenaries who fought alongside Emperor Heraclius at the Battle of Nineveh.

    • @brainblox5629
      @brainblox5629 Год назад +4

      They werent mercenaries, they were literally allies. Herakleos even promised his daughter to their leader (who spontanously died)

    • @giannisgiannopoulos791
      @giannisgiannopoulos791 Год назад

      @@brainblox5629 Indeed! Perhaps they and the Ghassanids were the only true allies.

  • @Armanmets
    @Armanmets 3 месяца назад

    Great video,Greeting from Armenia!

  • @basharkema4684
    @basharkema4684 Год назад

    And again man, this is just beautifully made!

  • @ibrahimcoskun5602
    @ibrahimcoskun5602 Год назад +8

    Hey guys, wonderful video! I wonder how the ealry 1300s saw large Ottoman armies fighting in the Cilician Gates, though. Might it be an Atabeg army, perhaps Ataman?

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE Год назад +2

    Thanks for the video 👍🏻

  • @gevorg.m.2856
    @gevorg.m.2856 Год назад +23

    Armenians not only fought and rose in the ranks - there were also Armenian dynasties of emperors...
    In addition, about 20-30% of the empire’s population at one time were Armenians - after the division of Armenia, its western part (Western Armenia) was annexed to Byzantium...

    • @aokiaoki4238
      @aokiaoki4238 Год назад

      When Byzantium annex Armenia, witch year?

    • @gevorg.m.2856
      @gevorg.m.2856 Год назад +1

      @@aokiaoki4238 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_of_Acilisene?wprov=sfti1

  • @ianblake815
    @ianblake815 Год назад +3

    Keep on rolling K&G! 😎

  • @hugod2000
    @hugod2000 Год назад +3

    everyone loves your channel

  • @adamwee382
    @adamwee382 Год назад +20

    wooooooo, more stuff on the Byzantines. They're so under-appreciated.

  • @hussienbintalal91
    @hussienbintalal91 Год назад +1

    5:22 the word (almocadin) sound very simular to the arabic word (المقدم /almocadim) and have the same meaning too

  • @raylivengood8040
    @raylivengood8040 Год назад +1

    A lot of details I hadn’t been informed of before. 👍🏼

  • @liamwilsonwright4116
    @liamwilsonwright4116 Год назад

    Been watching for a while now, I think it's a brilliant watch it's very detailed aswell as described beautifully. Thanks for the videos you make

  • @PonçHugdEntença-k9o
    @PonçHugdEntença-k9o Год назад

    Great video, thanks for speaking of the history of the Catalan Company (Almogàvers). If you want to know more about that history you can read “The Chronicle of Ramon Muntaner” (1328)

  • @DominicJGomez
    @DominicJGomez Год назад +5

    Ideas for future ERE videos:
    - how their view on what was de jure Roman territory evolved over time
    - how their knowledge and affinity for the antique empire evolved over time
    - the livelihood and state of subjugation of Roman identifying populations in Anatolia after Manzikert 1071
    - the hellenization of Anatolian populations like Galatians, Lydians, Isaurians, cappadocians, etc over time
    - the governing and state of affairs and culture of the Roman Millet of the Ottoman Empire
    - responses to cultures that formed within their view like Bulgarians, Serbians, Rus, etc
    - modern (early and current) perceptions of the ERE among groups that interacted with them regularly when they existed
    - direct ERE influences in modern nations

  • @vishinowcat
    @vishinowcat Год назад +12

    Hello, I wanted to double-check the information you provided at 8:28 where you are describing the battle of Kibistra. In this battle, the Catalan company fought local Turks. At the time of this battle (1304), the Ottomans were a small beylik in northwestern Asia Minor and the location of Kibistra is kilometers away from their beylik. Did the Catalan company really fight the Ottoman Turks in that location?

    • @adidoki
      @adidoki Год назад +10

      Most likely not ottomans but other turkic armies that were present there for instance Dulkadirs or sth, but nonetheless formidable foes

    • @nomadichorseman
      @nomadichorseman Год назад +5

      I also noticed this that the video reads straight from the wiki page as I read the entire wiki about the Catalans about the a month with this exact battle describing the ottomans in south-eastern Anatolia. I had the same thought: were the ottomans really that far away from their Beylik where they had fought the Catalans, Especially with the numbers that the video describes? It seems doubtful.

    • @adidoki
      @adidoki Год назад

      @@nomadichorseman Probably not, a possibility is an ottoman alliance with another Beylik, and thus ottomans being represented there, but not a full on ottoman force

    • @Meraklı_çocuk
      @Meraklı_çocuk Год назад

      He is so ignorant about history but he is running a history channnel 😮

  • @rotciv1492
    @rotciv1492 Год назад +14

    I'd really love to see a video featuring the Catalan Company under Roger the Flor.
    One of the most epic stories of the Middle Ages.
    It's almost like Xenophon's 10.000, but on steroids.

    • @topd0wn
      @topd0wn Год назад +5

      They can do a whole series on it. The Chronicle by Ramon Muntaner, one of the Catalan officers, is an amazing read. Better than fiction. I would also love to hear the Greek side of the story beyond 'the mercenaries were behaving badly' tale.

    • @rotciv1492
      @rotciv1492 Год назад +1

      @@Spartan_Disiplin they fought the Turkic beyliks which would later on turn into the Ottoman empire.

  • @nenenindonu
    @nenenindonu Год назад +27

    Flemish, Frankish, and Vlachic mercenaries were also among the common elements of the high medieval Eastern Roman Empire

  • @tehirlitren3540
    @tehirlitren3540 Год назад +2

    Additionally Turks served in East Roman ranks in Belasarios campaigns. To defeat Vandals, the general used Hun horse archers in north africa and in Italy.

  • @shanebattles6132
    @shanebattles6132 Год назад

    Such a great show thank you

  • @FirstNamelastName-xz9ok
    @FirstNamelastName-xz9ok Год назад +18

    Girlfriend:how often do you think about the roman empire?
    Me:yes

  • @historybr0
    @historybr0 Год назад +2

    great video as always ,but i kind of think you did not mention enough about georgian involvement in byzantine army i think you should have mentioned tornike eristavi that helped basil 2 bulgarslayer to maintain its throne. that's all and great video keep going

    • @PANTHERA.
      @PANTHERA. 5 месяцев назад

      i was hoping to see more about georgians

  • @giorgitavartkiladze3913
    @giorgitavartkiladze3913 Год назад

    Thanks to the creators once again! One remark here. Not doubting that Ottomans, just in 1349, could provide Byzantines with 20k cavalrymen does not corresponds to the channels extremely pessimistic calculations of much larger territorial army numbers in other videos. This comment does not doubts the numbers in this video.

  • @Shaman42069
    @Shaman42069 Год назад +13

    With the new Byzantium update in EU4, I have just started a Mercenary only campaign playing as Byzantium. This video's timing is impeccable

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti Год назад +2

      No one cares

    • @Lord_Lambert
      @Lord_Lambert Год назад +2

      Good luck. Shame you have to rush northern Italy and Egypt to get the proper name for your country.

    • @superyamky
      @superyamky Год назад +1

      Have fun

    • @Shaman42069
      @Shaman42069 Год назад +3

      @@balabanasireti :'( :'(

    • @jasonblack2760
      @jasonblack2760 Год назад +13

      @@Shaman42069don’t mind him. He’s just miserable. I agree! Nothing beats doing something in a game and then seeing a video about it! I’ve had that happen before and it was great! enjoy ur game :]

  • @N-Noori
    @N-Noori Год назад

    Please upload First Punic War and Sulla Wars.
    Love Your Channel ❤.

  • @joetamaccio9475
    @joetamaccio9475 10 месяцев назад

    That was one of the finest historical dissertations I have ever heard . And I love all things Byzantium . Question …. Where are all the Greek New Testament manuscripts . ??????

  • @dansmith4077
    @dansmith4077 Год назад

    Great video

  • @atrides7
    @atrides7 Год назад

    Very intersting video!!!!❤

  • @Carlo-zk2cy
    @Carlo-zk2cy Год назад +6

    It is insane how long the eastern half of the Roman Empire lasted.
    From the final division in 395 AD to the sack of Constantinople in 1204 AD spanned 809 years.
    To put it in our modern perspective, if the sack of 1204 occurred today, then the final division of the Roman Empire would have been in 1214 AD.

    • @ragael1024
      @ragael1024 Год назад +3

      well they did recapture Constantinople in 1261 and continued for almost 2 more centuries before the final fall.

    • @Carlo-zk2cy
      @Carlo-zk2cy Год назад +1

      @@ragael1024 True. And that brings the total existence of the Eastern Roman Empire to 1000 years.

  • @FelipeSilva-tu8tc
    @FelipeSilva-tu8tc Год назад

    Nice video!

  • @ytj17thjuggalo12
    @ytj17thjuggalo12 Год назад +2

    Another day, another perfect narration, animation, and explanation. 🤜🤛 Enjoying from across the world, fellas!

  • @precursors
    @precursors Год назад +3

    Video didn't mention but actually Eastern Rome employed many Turkic mercenaries against the Abbasids in 7th and 8th centuries also. Even the Gokturk Empire had envoys in Contantinople in 6th century. Historical relations between Turks and Romans go way back.

  • @mv5319
    @mv5319 Год назад

    Desperta Ferro, we want a full video about the Almogavers!

  • @OsmanlijaTR
    @OsmanlijaTR Год назад +7

    There is something that doesn´t add up here. Its mentioned in the video that Armenians had good relations with the Byzantines when it was in fact the opposite of that. The Byzantines in a sense saw them as lesser, denying them moving the Armenian Patriarchate to Constantinople which later on made them more loyal to the Seljuks and Ottomans later on. Im not sure if the same thing happened to the Georgians. Otherwise the video was well done.

    • @elvice3262
      @elvice3262 4 месяца назад

      No, Georgia has always remained independent and has always beaten the Oghuz tribes. No Oghuz has ever set foot in Georgia, only the Kipchaks, allies of the Georgians

    • @alucadoww3542
      @alucadoww3542 2 месяца назад

      I suggest you look at old maps again.

  • @yagmuralksal4762
    @yagmuralksal4762 Год назад +20

    The Bulgars were not Slavic, Bulgarians were

    • @arsevengumush3279
      @arsevengumush3279 Год назад +12

      Moved from the Steppes, that other Turkic Tribes came from!

    • @schpitzkomander2997
      @schpitzkomander2997 Год назад +1

      Irish are not Celtic they are Germanic

    • @subutaykhan9387
      @subutaykhan9387 Год назад +1

      ​@@schpitzkomander2997dont tell that to the gingers. They might slap you

    • @Kili2807
      @Kili2807 Год назад +2

      They became Slavs theoughout the Middle ages

    • @martinwich8788
      @martinwich8788 4 месяца назад

      He mentioned both

  • @Mrkabrat
    @Mrkabrat Год назад +3

    Should be noted that the Navarrese Company was a basque mercenary company (in its majority and beginning at least).
    There's something oddly funny now about basques and catalans fighting each other while under the employ of foreign monarchs

    • @joaqermeister6904
      @joaqermeister6904 Год назад +2

      The Navarrese company was not basque, it was composed of men from Navarra and Gascony. And unlike the Catalan company, the "Navarrese" company it's not its original name, it was originally named the "White" company.

    • @Mrkabrat
      @Mrkabrat Год назад +1

      @@joaqermeister6904 The navarrese are also basque, especially since basque has been referred to "lingua navarrorum" and the fact that Navarre is one of the seven historical basque territories (the other being Bizkaia, Gipuzkoa, Lapurdi, Zubero, Araba and Lower Navarre).
      Plus, wasnt the White Company the one led by the english John Hawkwood, and comprised of veterans of the Hundred Years War?

    • @JavierGarcia-nm4zr
      @JavierGarcia-nm4zr Год назад +2

      @@Mrkabratlol, basque territories? What a joke, Navarra was a real Kingdom, the basques never had any real estate or entity. Bunch of farmers in the mountains.

    • @Mrkabrat
      @Mrkabrat Год назад +3

      @@JavierGarcia-nm4zr Newflash, Javier; the navarrese where (and still are) basques, which even a navarrese queen Jeanne d'Albret commissioning the traduction of the bible in to basque so her subjects could read it.
      Plus the aforementioned "lingua navarrorum" bit, you have the Fueros in both the territories of navarre as well as bizkaia, gipuzkoa and araba, their own code of law that has been supressed at times by castillians (and later spaniards).
      Beraz harzak hire iritzi kaxkarra, ta ospa benito hire gazteldar zulora

    • @JavierGarcia-nm4zr
      @JavierGarcia-nm4zr Год назад +2

      ⁠@@Mrkabratmenuda comida de tarro lleváis madre mía. Tan Vasca era la Juana que su padre se llamaba Enroque y su madre Margarita. Pero oye seguro que llevaba el flequillo cortado! Que vacío estáis por dentro que tenéis la necesidad de llenar vuestra identidad con mentiras y subjetivismos.

  • @subutaykhan9387
    @subutaykhan9387 Год назад +4

    Karamanids were Christian Turks and they used greek Alphabet. In fact, a tombstone was found during an excavation and it had Türkoğlu(direct translation son of Turk) written on it. in Greek alphabet. I wonder if costas karamanlis is one of the Turkish Christians.

  • @EloiPujolRibalta
    @EloiPujolRibalta Год назад +3

    I only can say: Gràcies.

  • @Kaiyanwang82
    @Kaiyanwang82 Год назад +6

    If you are from Europe, North Africa, the Levant, or the western Eurasian Steppes, there's a chance one of your ancestors fought for Rome.

    • @aokiaoki4238
      @aokiaoki4238 Год назад +2

      For Constantinople

    • @Kaiyanwang82
      @Kaiyanwang82 Год назад

      @@aokiaoki4238 I meant including Gallic mercenaries or sarmatian knights for the western part.

    • @alcaeus701
      @alcaeus701 Год назад

      ​@@aokiaoki4238 New Rome

  • @christianweibrecht6555
    @christianweibrecht6555 Год назад +5

    Catalans, 1st time I have heard of successful javelin based troops
    Besides pelcasts

    • @joaqermeister6904
      @joaqermeister6904 Год назад +2

      It's weird because they were not only skirmishers like peltasts or velites, they acted also as light infantry, chock unit, espionage, guerrilla and other roles depending on the moment. The "almogavars" composed the majority of men of the catalan company so they were the back bone of that army the same as horse archers for the mongols, Hoplites for the Greeks or legionaries for the romans, and it's also wierdly remarcable this specific type of light infantry was very succesful against heavy cavalry in an age when heavy cavalry was the common trend in Europe

    • @aokiaoki4238
      @aokiaoki4238 Год назад

      See also Stratioti

    • @carlespou4607
      @carlespou4607 Год назад

      Really? What about the pilum and the Roman Legio?

    • @elvice3262
      @elvice3262 4 месяца назад

      @@joaqermeister6904 Everything depended on their endurance abilities, they were real marathon runners, they advanced so quickly that the Turks did not have time to hit them several times while the guys were on foot

  • @irfandurmus1
    @irfandurmus1 Год назад

    Good video.

  • @donariil
    @donariil Год назад +1

    I really hope one day you cover some Polish medieval history, would love to see it. Besides your now very old video on grunwald, I only seem to find mentions whilst covering other nations.

  • @elianvelazquez1217
    @elianvelazquez1217 Год назад +2

    mixture of ethnic in or outside of christian roman empire whether as allied or opponents

  • @davidblair9877
    @davidblair9877 Год назад +2

    5:05: “Desperta, ferro! Matem!”

  • @alexandrumihai8434
    @alexandrumihai8434 Год назад +4

    1 question if posibile to answere....i saw that vlachs were in contact with the bizantines, did they fought for the empire? Ps: can you make an ep about vlachs? :)

  • @hansfabri6906
    @hansfabri6906 Год назад

    Love the byzantine videos

  • @Uzair_Of_Babylon465
    @Uzair_Of_Babylon465 Год назад +3

    Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things 😁👍

  • @ddpmk355
    @ddpmk355 Год назад +2

    I expected the Varangians to be mentioned.

  • @malusdarkblade1190
    @malusdarkblade1190 Год назад

    Finished your complete first crusade documentary very good and intresting made me look up the byzantine empire and look at them in different light and now ive been wathing your videos and others about them i will say yours are most numerous and covers the most. Would you consider doing. The same and put them all on 1 playlist under byzantine nkt greek or roman. when done so i can watch in one go.

  • @theromanorder
    @theromanorder Год назад +2

    please do a video on these
    (this is a copy and paste list for a few channels)
    units and tactics/evaluation of loadouts of troops (from different jobs (and other branches)
    the tank doctrine of countries
    evaluation of tank veiw ports
    evaluation of tanks/armored vehicles of different countries
    logistics units of the axes and allied powers in ww2
    ww1 estern front tactics
    Russian Civil war tactics and strategies
    navil ship cross sections (all the rooms and how it all works)
    evaluation of types of ships
    or evaluation of navil warfare
    air craft carrier strike group formations exsamples (from different countries)
    ancient persan ships,
    ancient veneti ships (gauls that fought ceaser)
    ships used by genoa and the vernesain republic
    the vernesain republic government
    all sailing ships, (i know theres many on yt but some contradict each other and i think theres more left out)
    tactics used so far in the Ukraine war,
    better for squads to be 2 teams of 5 or 3 teams of 3,
    and probably the easiest, better to keep troops well feed or starved like an animal
    how dose age effect comsnders eg napoleon got older so took less risks,
    ancient urban warfare
    ww2 tactics in Asia, tactics in the Chinese age of warlords, (and Chinese civil war)
    tactics in the ruso jap war
    cold war navil tactics,
    Korean war tactics,
    strange tactics or unque battles from the American war of independence and America civil war
    how were 17th centry sailing ships build
    types of bombs lunched by drones
    comands given on sailing ships (like ease the sheets and get ready to chine, or slack n beases, basically things you hear movie capitns say)
    why did the nazis never return (or a video on best occupations)
    why did the Japanese empire fall, dont just say "America" like things like how there army and navy argued alot
    alot more on the Polynesians and māori, but please learn pronounceations if you do this

  • @pakshirajan8585
    @pakshirajan8585 Год назад +3

    Please make a video on Chola Empire

  • @losttreker9449
    @losttreker9449 Год назад +1

    It seems to me that somehow, it is the continuation and evolution of the, previously ongoing, changes in the Roman army.

  • @Darkseidsolosfiction
    @Darkseidsolosfiction Год назад +3

    Me a Georgian: *sees the title.*
    *Faints from happiness*

  • @franciscoamezcua6338
    @franciscoamezcua6338 Год назад +2

    10:15 That moment when the iberian mercenaries were defeated only because they were against other iberian mercenaries lmao.
    Kinda interesting how the byzantines didnt develop a ''crusader'' mentality just like the iberians, despite the fact both of them were constantly in war against heathens or heretics.

  • @MegaBreheny
    @MegaBreheny Год назад +1

    Yo where is the Xenophon's Anabasis videos? I'm super hyped for em but can't find em!

    • @KingsandGenerals
      @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +3

      Have you tried the search function and looked through the members only playlist?

    • @MegaBreheny
      @MegaBreheny Год назад +1

      @@KingsandGenerals sigh, of course now I find it right away! Thank you :)

  • @i1987.
    @i1987. Год назад +1

    ПУСТЬ ПОСКОРЕЕ БУДЕТ МИР
    И ПОКОЙ ИНШААЛЛАХ🌎1:41
    УДАЧИ МИРА И ДОБРА ❤❤❤
    ◉⁠‿⁠◉◉⁠‿⁠◉◉⁠‿⁠◉◉⁠‿⁠◉◉⁠‿⁠◉◉⁠‿⁠◉ ___2:24

  • @bcs332
    @bcs332 Год назад

    Very interesting video. But what were Ottomans doing in Cillicia in 8:30

    • @precursors
      @precursors Год назад

      It wasn't Ottomans, it was one of the dozen or so Turkic Beyliks. Ottomans was one of the smallest ones in at the time, in Northwest Anatolia, far from Cilicia

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Год назад +1

    Infighting... a leading cause of an empire's fragmentation.

  • @williamlaurent2857
    @williamlaurent2857 Год назад

    Kings and Generals. Very good video but small nitpick at 3:47.
    Byzantine empire map is not really realistic.
    In Europe, thessaly should be removed. In asia, Doryleum and Kutaya area shouldn't be included. Why is the Kaystros valley, south of the thracesian not included ?
    Otherwise, great video as always !
    Hoping for a byzantine story covering 1261-1305 . (failed campaigns in europe and collapse of asia minor)

  • @onurkumcu5462
    @onurkumcu5462 Год назад +3

    The video was sponsored by catalans i think. Half of the video contains catalan company which had an importance for maybe a decade. Also their achievements were well exaggareted. How could a band of brigade make its way all through desert like and mountainous anatolia without supplies? Look at your map for god’s sake, you show as if they crossed the same distance as whole iberian Peninsula. And no mention of varangian guards, who were the most important mercenaries for the empire.

  • @beachboy0505
    @beachboy0505 Год назад +1

    9:58
    ..banned until year 2000?
    No to Catalan ?

  • @forgeflarion8362
    @forgeflarion8362 Год назад +1

    Can y'all do a video on Simon Bolivar, please?

  • @georginhoweahvic3977
    @georginhoweahvic3977 Год назад

    great!

  • @manuelapollo7988
    @manuelapollo7988 Год назад +6

    What about the genoese? 😌

  • @IbrahimStanikzai
    @IbrahimStanikzai Год назад +5

    8:39 ottoman army ? More like small turkish beylik army because at that time ottomans were small so i think you are mistaken.

  • @iliaaronia7025
    @iliaaronia7025 Год назад +4

    While it is a great short documentary about lesser known Byzantine auxilaries/mercenaries I have to point out that It does not do justice to Armenian and Georgian contribution to the imperial armed forces and political life. Georgians served less as mercenaries and more as independent armies aiding the empire through complex diplomatic ties, several notable Armenian and Georgian generals have saved the empire in dire situations and in other instances caused great grief to the Byzantines.

    • @PANTHERA.
      @PANTHERA. 5 месяцев назад

      i was hoping to hear more about georgians here yea

  • @chriscoates5312
    @chriscoates5312 Год назад

    Nice

  • @nomadv7860
    @nomadv7860 Год назад +1

    “Awake iron let’s kill” is something that one weird anime kid would say 💀

  • @theromanorder
    @theromanorder Год назад +3

    Some units would be nice
    But i noticed you put most detail into the catalan
    Why?

    • @joaqermeister6904
      @joaqermeister6904 Год назад +2

      It's the most infamous and probably has the most historical sources and information of all of the mercenaries shown in this video

    • @tylerellis9097
      @tylerellis9097 Год назад +1

      Right, might as well just have been a Catalan vid when they got the most screen time despite being a singular exception in all of Byzantine history near the end of the Empire that didn’t follow the system for Byzantines mercenaries at all.
      No Mentions of Normans despite making their own state in Anatolia, no Rus who Byzantine and Arab sources consistently point out throughout the centuries, no Vlachs, no Paulicians, Albanians, Persians, Franks(French and Germans), Lombards etc etc

    • @theromanorder
      @theromanorder Год назад

      @@tylerellis9097 exsactly, i hope they edit the title and aid part 1,
      Then soon make a part 2 with more

  • @Anton_Io66
    @Anton_Io66 Год назад

    More Byzantine content nice

  • @aroma13
    @aroma13 Год назад

    A video about the balkans before the slavic migrations would be interesting

  • @goldenfiberwheat238
    @goldenfiberwheat238 Год назад

    9:54 they probably just didn’t know about the ban after a while and some monk was going through old documents and found it one day and told the others they should repeal it