Rise of the Ottoman Empire - Bapheus 1302 - Medieval DOCUMENTARY

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  • Опубликовано: 17 сен 2022
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    Kings and Generals began remaking its animated historical documentary on the history of the Ottoman empire with the early rise of the Ottoman beylik under Osman I. In this video we will cover the early origins of the beylik, its status among the Muslim states in Anatolia and its early clashes against the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire at Bapheus and Dimbos in 1302. In this series we are planning to cover every major battle of the Ottoman empire, including Kosovo, Nicopolis, Ankara, Varna, 2nd Kosovo, Constantinople, Belgrade, Targoviste, Otlukbeli, Vaslui, Valea Alba, Skanderbeg's rebellion, Breadfield, Krbava, Otranto, Chaldiran, the Ottoman-Mamluk War of 1516-1517, siege of Rhodes in 1522, Mohacs of 1526, Vienna of 1529, Preveza, Gorjani, Castelnuovo, Buda, Eger, Malta, Szigetvar, Famagusta, Lepanto and much, much more!
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    The video was made by Ilhan Altunkaya, while the script was researched and written by Ege Güneş ( / ottomanhistoryhub . This video was narrated by Officially Devin ( / @offydgg & ruclips.net/channel/UC79s.... The art was created by Nargiz Isaeva. Machinimas by MalayArcher on Total War: Attila engine.
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    Production Music courtesy of Epidemic Sound: www.epidemicsound.com
    #Documentary #Ottomans #Byzantines
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @KingsandGenerals
    @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +82

    Click here tiege.com/kingsandgenerals to get 30% off your first Tiege Hanley box plus a FREE gift!
    Also, give some love to the author of this video and subscribe to his channel if you want to learn more about the history of the Ottomans: ruclips.net/user/OttomanHistoryHub

    • @yaralikatil
      @yaralikatil Год назад +6

      From what Pachymeres wrote, about the only thing we can surmise of the Turk he called Ataman is that he was a warrior. With the Sangarius (Sakarya) River raids and the victory at Bapheus, Turkish warriors came from far and wide to join him.7 Ataman laid siege to Nicaea and, though he was not able to take the city, subjected the surrounding area to raids, killing many, taking some captive, the tur ish flood 9 and scattering the rest. He did take several other fortresses and fortified towns in the Sangarius valley, using them to store his plunder.
      Howard, D. (2017). A History of the Ottoman Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press., pp 8-9
      Ibn Battuta claimed to have met Orhan, “the greatest of the kings of the Turkmens and the richest in wealth, lands and military forces.” Orhan “fought with the infidels continually,” and moved regularly between his more than one hundred castles, checking that they were in good repair, never staying more than a month in any one place.12 Ibn Battuta’s impression of Orhan as engaged in incessant combat is emphatically supported by Greek writers who left accounts.
      Howard, D. (2017). A History of the Ottoman Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press., pp 11

    • @BoraCM
      @BoraCM Год назад +4

      ı is pronounced as the upside-down e (schwa) in the IPA. Apart from that, I was impressed by the good pronunciations.

    • @christhomson8924
      @christhomson8924 Год назад +2

      I LOVE YOU GUYS- MORE OTTOMAN VIDEOS PLEASEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

    • @williamlaurent2857
      @williamlaurent2857 Год назад +2

      Will you cover Alexios Philanthropenos and the byzantine Empire over the period 1261-1301 ?

    • @minghan3431
      @minghan3431 Год назад +3

      Is that how Nicea is pronounced 7:56

  • @LeoWarrior14
    @LeoWarrior14 Год назад +2056

    Byzantines try not to start a civil war at the worst possible time for 5 minutes challenge [IMPOSSIBLE]

    • @Germ_f
      @Germ_f Год назад +58

      lmao

    • @shzarmai
      @shzarmai Год назад +56

      Honestly, so true

    • @WinnerNevQuitsQuitterNevWins
      @WinnerNevQuitsQuitterNevWins Год назад +24

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @lyonvensa
      @lyonvensa Год назад +149

      Byzantines losing? Cue revolts against the emperor
      Byzantines winning? Cue people 'better then the emperor' attacking the capital

    • @aaa-hr2qs
      @aaa-hr2qs Год назад +7

      Yeah 👍

  • @hazorg16
    @hazorg16 Год назад +1383

    Ottomans were very lucky in the sense of producing consecutive capable military leaders. Out of the first 10 Ottoman leaders 9 of them are definitely excellent marshals. Osman, Orhan, Murad I Hüdevandigar, Bayezid I the Thunderbolt, Mehmet I, Murad II, Mehmet II the Conquerer, Selim I the Grim and Suleyman I the Lawgiver have all almost exclusively dominated on the battlefield and shown high adaptability in terms of technology and administration as well. Early Ottoman dynasty is definitely an interesting family of the late middle ages.

    • @Hammadz-li
      @Hammadz-li Год назад +250

      later they fucked up cuz after selim ii they stoped sending princes to provences for fear of rebelion it stopped any reblions from happening but it also meant the sultan had zero XPs in ruling

    • @saadshoaib901
      @saadshoaib901 Год назад +104

      Lucky? The conditions were perfect
      It was like they were destined to do this

    • @trapzed5331
      @trapzed5331 Год назад +130

      My guy really said lucky. All the Sultans were great just because of luck :D

    • @emirhank50823
      @emirhank50823 Год назад +208

      It's not luck. Ottoman Sultans were sending their sons to military trainings that named 'Sancak' also Ottoman Şehzades (Princes) were taking too good teaches about everything like languages, history, math, how to rule a country, war tactics, weapons, technology etc. So it was not luck, it was their system to theirselves.

    • @firstnamelastname4249
      @firstnamelastname4249 Год назад +63

      @@emirhank50823 yeah the first 10 Sultans were great by their own merit but shitty succession rules fear of Rebellion overreliance on their Grand vizirs and the janissaries pretty much crippled the Dynasty, I wonder sometimes what if the likes of Osman II Murad IV and Mustafa II would've done had they had a better circumstances...

  • @aslanbayramuqlany6189
    @aslanbayramuqlany6189 Год назад +518

    Ertugrul and Osman story give off such Mount and Blade vibes:
    Enroll to serve the local King with your band of warriors
    Raid enemy's territory
    Participate in campaigns with other chiefs
    Be gifted some villages for your accomplishments
    Take your first castle and make it your base
    Marry your friend's daughter.
    Gain support from other chiefs
    Declare independence
    Start campaign to seize your first capital.

    • @fatihersayn6692
      @fatihersayn6692 Год назад +109

      Mount and Blade is a Turkish game.

    • @suluklu
      @suluklu Год назад +17

      Lol did that happen in real life 🤣🤣

    • @herhangibirisi_
      @herhangibirisi_ Год назад +17

      That's a really funny story but true.

    • @syedafzaalalishah3835
      @syedafzaalalishah3835 Год назад +2

      Yes dude i was thinking all the time of starting one campaign like this

    • @user-xr2jt7ss4o
      @user-xr2jt7ss4o Год назад +11

      Actually there is a series called ( kurulus Osman) "Osman the founder" tells this story
      It's until now 4 season with 100 episodes

  • @michaelsinger4638
    @michaelsinger4638 Год назад +247

    The Ottomans had A LOT of talented rulers early on. They were fortunate in this area.

    • @omerfaruk6082
      @omerfaruk6082 Год назад +65

      First 10 consecutive Ottoman sultans were all brilliant conquerors and statesmen.

    • @125discipline2
      @125discipline2 Год назад +5

      they have to become the best. if they dont want to die.

    • @torikeqi8710
      @torikeqi8710 Год назад

      @@omerfaruk6082 They were good governors but not conquerors

    • @jj-gz9xd
      @jj-gz9xd Год назад +40

      @@torikeqi8710 really, was that how they had amassed such vast territories? by being bad conquerors?

    • @resentfuldragon
      @resentfuldragon Год назад +1

      and A LOT of events that could be called actual miracles.
      Many of the most powerful empires ever (ex: romans, umayyad caliphate, mongols, etc.) had crazy coincidences and nigh impossible wins to back up their great leaders.

  • @anglowarrior7970
    @anglowarrior7970 Год назад +445

    The Rise of the Ottomans is one of the most fascinating and interesting time in history, just 70 years before Genghis Khan died and his empire was divided. Which was one of the major reasons why the ottomans were able to rise as the sultanate of rum collapsed. The rise of Osman and the early ottoman expansion is very interesting to learn and then the smooth succession to Orhan his son and one of the rare instances when his brother Suleyman didn't divided the beylik among them and became the grand vizier (prime minister) reforming the ottoman military and administration is very interesting and fascinating to learn about.

    • @nenenindonu
      @nenenindonu Год назад +31

      Zengids and Eldiguzids were also Seljuk successors but didn't even come close to the glory of Ottomans, don't even need to mention the Khwarezmians since they were direct victims of the Mongol empire

    • @bugday3688
      @bugday3688 Год назад +5

      Most importantly, it was an empire that lived for the longest time.

    • @anglowarrior7970
      @anglowarrior7970 Год назад +5

      @@bugday3688 What about the Eastern Roman Empire that lasted for more than a 1,000 years?

    • @mehmetfatihcetin5932
      @mehmetfatihcetin5932 Год назад +30

      @@anglowarrior7970 difference is ottoman empire ruled by only one dynasty in all her life. Which is rare for any empire.

    • @KainWT
      @KainWT Год назад +2

      @@anglowarrior7970 I think they meant "for the longest time" as simply for a very long time. That's a saying we have in America, "He was a carpenter for the longest time." for example.

  • @aasemahsan
    @aasemahsan Год назад +81

    2:06 Before the Ottomans
    4:32 The Kayi tribe
    6:14 Ertugrul under Seljuk sultan Kayqubad I
    9:20 Osman Gazi's leadership & expansions into Byzantine territory of Bithynia
    13:29 Declaration of independence from the Seljuks after Sultan Konya's capture
    14:35 Thrashing the Byzantines
    15:36 Battle of Bapheus (first major victory) July 27, 1302

  • @AlhamduTV1
    @AlhamduTV1 Год назад +56

    Ertugrul and Osman both were ambitious. They stuck to their goals. Then comes Murad. He is mind-blowing...

  • @IronpenWorldbuilding
    @IronpenWorldbuilding Год назад +365

    It’s really cool seeing these conquests happening on a fort by fort basis rather than on a larger scale. I wish there was a strategy game that worked on these scales.
    Edit: To the people who recommended Mount and Blade 2: Bannerlord I appreciate you. I got the game and it is exactly what I’m looking for.

    • @matpesot9903
      @matpesot9903 Год назад +12

      Agreed....it's strangely more satisfying

    • @ArcAngle1117
      @ArcAngle1117 Год назад +66

      That's what I was thinking. Both points actually. I've seen plenty of videos about Ottoman history but they always brush over this Era. I'm glad to finally see a more in-depth documentary. To the second point, I was imagining how bad ass a Mount and Blade Bannerlord mod set in this time period would be.

    • @IronpenWorldbuilding
      @IronpenWorldbuilding Год назад +25

      @@ArcAngle1117 Yeah, conquering an area for your dynasty town by town with strategic battles would be way cooler than conquering an entire kingdom in one stroke with battles decided by more troops or better knights.

    • @jgwebb1o1
      @jgwebb1o1 Год назад +29

      Mount and Blade might be what you're looking for

    • @mitjed
      @mitjed Год назад +4

      You can play the game medieval total war 2 as an early Ottoman warlord battling the Byzantines

  • @hiddenhist
    @hiddenhist Год назад +313

    Weird comment, but being able to see the increase in video quality, editing, etc over time has been something of an honor. You don't exactly see it as it happens, but comparing this video to videos from just a couple of years ago... man. Thanks K&G, keep doing what you do.

    • @memorymeme51
      @memorymeme51 Год назад +2

      I thought the same aswell

    • @freddekl1102
      @freddekl1102 Год назад +6

      Have to hand it to them, current quality of both animation and in-depth information is amazing. But I don't like all that they currently start 10 different documentaries and finish like 3

    • @sidp5381
      @sidp5381 Год назад +3

      @@freddekl1102 I agree with the statement unfortunately I don’t know why they’re restarting the Ottoman series they finished all the way up to the long Turkish war they should finish it all the way until the first world war including the wars with Russia and the great Turkish war as well and then go back and redo this that’s what makes more sense

    • @daarom3472
      @daarom3472 Год назад

      It's kinda strange when you start following a really small channel and after a few years they're huge. Have had that K&G, Agadmator, Lex Fridman, Kurt Jaimungal and a few others!

  • @muratevren2857
    @muratevren2857 Год назад +105

    For etymology enthusiasts: the word "tekfur" comes from the Middle Armenian word "tagvor/թագւոր" (in Modern Arm. "թագավոր/tagavor") which means "king", literally “crown bearer”. In the early Ottoman period, the word was used especially for the Byzantine governors and princes.

    • @rafaelingarov9239
      @rafaelingarov9239 Год назад +10

      The word "tekfur" originated from Turkic language and Low German (Low-Saxon) . "Tek" comes from Turkic meaning "entirely", "exclusively" and "Fur" comes from Low German Fürst (king/prince). The word Tekfur means the ONLY KING.

    • @smavi4133
      @smavi4133 Год назад +10

      @@rafaelingarov9239 sounds like horseshit. In all those years I have been reading into turkish and ottoman etymology, I never EVER encountered a word particle that originated from low-german. There's an influx of high-german (not low german) military terms into turkish in the late 19th century, but that's about it when it comes to german influence into turkish. But this explanation doesn't stop there - this obscure etymological particle that is nowhere else used in turkish, is, for whatever reason, combined with a turkic word. Turkic words and particles which survived into modern turkish language are very old, basic and "archaic" terms that are shared throughout turkic speaking regions, and thus predate even Arabic and Persian loanwoards. And this almost prehistoric syllable/word "tek" is now (13th century) combined with a title (Fürst) that gains its political significance as late as the the early modern age? BTW: the explanation of op is also the official one accepted within turkish literature.

    • @apostolispouliakis7401
      @apostolispouliakis7401 Год назад +1

      Yeah I was about to write that not only is that not Greek in origin but also that it is not an official title ever given by the Emperor

    • @aaronmarks9366
      @aaronmarks9366 Год назад +1

      If the meaning is "crown bearer", then it sounds like the Armenian tag(a)- element is related to Persian tâj (crown) while the -vor element is related to Greek -phor (to bear)

    • @muratevren2857
      @muratevren2857 Год назад +1

      ​@@aaronmarks9366 Exactly Aaron! Persian "taj" is directly used in Modern Turkish as "taç" (ç gives "ch" sound), meaning "crown". Armenian "vor" comes from Proto Indo-European "bher" meaning "to bear, carry" and this means that it is cognate with Greek "phor" (as you have noticed), Latin "fer" (as in Lucifer, refer, confer etc.), English "to bear", Persian "بار/bar" (meaning "burden, load"). Since you have recognized Persian "taj", I suppose you may be familiar with Persian language, then you may know Persian word "باردار/bardar" which means "pregnant", literally meaning "burden carrying (person)", once again showing us cognate relation between Armenian "vor" and Persian "bar" :)
      I'm no expert in etymology, just an amateur showing off his knowledge in every opportunity :)

  • @Kuwaie10
    @Kuwaie10 Год назад +85

    Incredible quality. This channel has become one one the best when it comes to the animated history. Keep up the excellent work. Thank you for all this.

  • @ArcAngle1117
    @ArcAngle1117 Год назад +47

    This is a series I'm excited for. The Ottomans are one of the most interesting Empires in history.

    • @user-xr2jt7ss4o
      @user-xr2jt7ss4o Год назад +5

      There is a turkish drama series called ( kurulus Osman) which talk about the story of the birth of the ottomans
      ( kurulus osman/ osman the founder)
      Until now it's 100 episodes Divided into 4 seasons

    • @Southie
      @Southie 4 месяца назад

      @@user-xr2jt7ss4o I have watched that show and even though it's a good show, there are too many cheap approaches being made in terms of battles, especially in the 4th and 5th season. Majority of the castles that have been conquered are identical to one and other (maybe it's because the architecture could have been similar at the time, due to the geographical distances between each city/castle), and the Battle of Bapheus was a massive disappointment. Instead of showing a proper battle, the director somehow turned it into a beach fight, and then a forest fight sequence with less than 50 soldiers involved. It's more disappointing when you realise that they put more effort into some less known battle at the start of the second season, which was showcased properly, instead of such an important historically battle. They didn't even show the Battle of Dimbos lmao.
      Of course, when it comes to castle conquests, you can't expect to see every fort get conquered in the show, but the director missed out on conquering forts like Yarshisar, Karacahisar, and the conquests in season 4 and 5 were a joke, including the conquest of Kopruhisar, Lefke, Kestel, which were poorly made and looked as if they had barely any resistance. Not to mention that in the first season, the conquest of Kulucahisar was done historically incorrect in terms of the date of when it happened and because it was a day raid, instead of a night one. Though they did get the surprise attack part right, which is good. I really hope that at least more effort is going to be put into the conquest of Bursa, otherwise all this watching will just turn into a big disappointment.

  • @onurkaradeniz569
    @onurkaradeniz569 Год назад +23

    I learn more about the Ottomans on this channel than I have in my junior high and high school history lessons combined.

  • @MrZero12132
    @MrZero12132 Год назад +27

    Finally kings and general covered the origins of the Ottomans. There is a very long tv series known as ertugral for those interested that covers this too in more detail. Though I would say this short video has sufficient information regarding this topic.

  • @maddogbasil
    @maddogbasil Год назад +148

    The ottoman history on this channel is truly superb
    Its unbelievable that modern history classes barely teach about this empire in schools when its history was so world changing

    • @AlpArslanTheSeljuk
      @AlpArslanTheSeljuk Год назад +18

      In Germany we mostly have Egyptian and Roman history. And then only WW2 and post WW2.

    • @assyriancrusader3760
      @assyriancrusader3760 Год назад +5

      @@AlpArslanTheSeljuk in Australia in year 8 i learned about vikings and year 10 Russia revaluation and ww1 and ww2.

    • @anglowarrior7970
      @anglowarrior7970 Год назад +12

      In India, we only learn about the Indian empires and not even any interesting things because they don't talk about wars very less or not at all till class 8, in class 9 it's the most interesting where we learn about the French Revolution, the Russian Revolution and the Rise of Hitler and Nazism and that's it 😢

    • @yrlikng5767
      @yrlikng5767 Год назад +4

      @@AlpArslanTheSeljuk
      Thats the problem with schools.
      If you just teach about ww2 and stuff like that, without teaching other important things like how it came to these wars, execuse my language but nobody aint learning sh*t.
      I think not learning Worlds history but instead learning so much unnecessary stuff is a big issue.
      This genarationnis dumb af and its getting worse

    • @AlpArslanTheSeljuk
      @AlpArslanTheSeljuk Год назад +15

      @@yrlikng5767 when I asked my teacher why we don't learn about the ottomans, he got angry with me lol. Also the stuff we learned about WW2 wasn't always historically accurate.

  • @nenenindonu
    @nenenindonu Год назад +120

    623 years of which 4 centuries consisted of expanding over 3 continents, rivaling entire European coalitions for centuries, spreading influence from Indonesia to Iceland, ending the Middle Ages with the conquest of the Roman Empire in 1453, triggering the Age of Exploration, and much more all this from a small Beylik, the Ottoman empire left a huge mark in history...

    • @liukang3545
      @liukang3545 Год назад

      yeah but they can burn in hell, they were extremely genocidal, HAIL VLAD TEPES!

    • @TheTokkie
      @TheTokkie Год назад +7

      entire European coalitions lol the French were big buddies with the Ottomans because they were both against the Austrian Hungarian empire and the Habsburgers

    • @darklight8338
      @darklight8338 Год назад +17

      @@TheTokkie yet on many occasions they fought the ottomans alongside everyone else in Europe in there crusades

    • @nenenindonu
      @nenenindonu Год назад +18

      @@TheTokkie France was opposing the Ottomans prior to the 1500's and led the Crusade of Nicopolis. The Holy League was made up of several interchangeable European nations ; Spain, Portugal, Russia, Genoa, Papal states, HRE, Venice, etc

    • @mputilin
      @mputilin Год назад +7

      From the positive side... and from the negative?
      Left the whole skull pyramids in the Balkans and Greece. Though there was no other way for you to rule over us but through use of such cruelty.

  • @phelinx623
    @phelinx623 Год назад +25

    Wow the amount of research that is done for this video is simply amazing. And your Turkish pronunciations are not bad. Keep up the great work!

  • @fmk10
    @fmk10 Год назад +17

    As a Turk I find your video absolutely amazing. It really fascinating to see how my ancestors spread on this lands and grow to world. It’s just their baby time (: Go ahead I am waiting next chapters soon please. Thank you.

  • @yaralikatil
    @yaralikatil Год назад +110

    Ibn Battuta and Ibn Khaldun were also really important sources about early Ottomans

  • @fsdds1488
    @fsdds1488 Год назад +23

    *Being foreign traveller
    *Forms warband and joins a local power
    *Capture and awarded village for your service
    *Break off when your overlord weakened by fighting invaders
    *Proceed to form own faction and built a great empire
    A true mount and blade experience.

    • @nech1
      @nech1 Год назад +3

      btw, Mount and Blade made by Turkish game company

    • @ufem2159
      @ufem2159 8 месяцев назад +1

      exactly :D

  • @mdmiloy5897
    @mdmiloy5897 Год назад +3

    Finally my hero's episode came! Thank you Kings and generals! Love you very much ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @ozkanboyraz7626
    @ozkanboyraz7626 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video Kings and Generals, looking forward for the next episode

  • @blademanx
    @blademanx Год назад +19

    Great timing! Finished Ertugrul series in 4 months. Now watching Osman. This gives a good overall explanation of whats happening!

    • @ilhamiata769
      @ilhamiata769 Год назад +2

      those series are not that close to actual history

    • @fatihbey7398
      @fatihbey7398 Год назад

      Boş yapma tarihimiz doğru bizim kansız

    • @oblamovadvanced5956
      @oblamovadvanced5956 Год назад +3

      @@ilhamiata769 it is a drama after all. it does not have to be accurate like a documentary for the god sake...

  • @emperornapoleon6204
    @emperornapoleon6204 Год назад +47

    Your Ottoman videos, as with the others, are unmatched! I am excited to see this series continue. Truly tremendous how the quality of your videos has evolved. Admirable work!

  • @xenofonmitsalas8905
    @xenofonmitsalas8905 Год назад +10

    Very interesting video about a very interesting period. Battles of Bapheus and Dimbos marked the beginning of the byzantine-ottoman conflicts. I am looking forward to watching the next episodes for that period. I am vert curious to watch how your channel can cover the Catalan Company expedition in Asia Minor and the byzantine intrigues that turned Catalans against them, capturing the duchy of Athens. Besides that, continue your great work of videos!!

  • @risboturbide9396
    @risboturbide9396 Год назад +2

    Amazing channel! Thank you to everyone involved! 🍻🍻

  • @huseyincobanoglu531
    @huseyincobanoglu531 Год назад +1

    Great documentary. Thank you Kings and Generals Team!

  • @omerfaruk6082
    @omerfaruk6082 Год назад +3

    I am impressed by your correct pronounciation of many Turkish names, such as "söğüt", "domaniç" etc.

  • @RoboticDragon
    @RoboticDragon Год назад +8

    Nice, redoing the Ottoman Empire series? I am down for it. Your Ottoman series was amazing the first time through, I learned so much.

  • @waic1639
    @waic1639 Год назад +2

    History is very interesting to me, I love learning about them.
    Thanks for making the video! 😎

  • @saadktiwana5559
    @saadktiwana5559 Год назад +1

    Much needed topic. Thank you.

  • @omeryucel7888
    @omeryucel7888 Год назад +92

    Turkish historian Halil İnalcık says about Osman: Osman is a Turkish knight, that is, "Alp", not an ordinary sword-wielding militia. He is a master at using bows, arrows, spears, swords and horses. He is a strong warrior like his father Ertugrul. His comrades are also Alps. He personally fought in dozens of wars against Byzantium and Mongols. This is perhaps the biggest difference from the Ottoman sultans after him. Mehmet, Suleiman, Selim are great leaders, but their ancestor Osman is both a leader and a warrior. And it is not correct to draw him as an overweight religious scholar with a big beard, turban, in representational drawings, it would be more logical to draw him on a horse with his sword.

    • @alperenlive
      @alperenlive Год назад

      Osmanlı geleneğinde çok zayıf hükümdarlar bile kilolu ve iri yapılı olarak resmedilmişti çünkü kilolu görünmenin heybet kattığına dair bir inanış vardır.

    • @kerimcan7011
      @kerimcan7011 Год назад +22

      The concept of Alp in Turkic culture is ignored, just like the Mongolian concept of Baatir. Alps and Baatirs were favorite warriors of the steppe lords. What distinguished them from ordinary nomadic horsemen was their armor, their lance, and their prowess in battle. Kul Tigin is the best example of an Alp.

    • @torikeqi8710
      @torikeqi8710 Год назад +1

      Does he have any facts that Osman was not fat?
      Looks like a myth to me.

    • @reinerbraun5229
      @reinerbraun5229 Год назад +12

      @@torikeqi8710 The painting of Osman is just a representative descrpition. It is made at 19 th century by Konstantin Kapıdağlı (Konstandinos Kizikinos) . Just one sultan, II. Mehmed's painting is the real description of him that made by Gentile Bellini at 15. Century

    • @313asm
      @313asm Год назад

      He was not a religious scholar, but was very religious and married to the daughter of his spiritual mentor. Keep your hatred for pious people with yourself, Mr. Kemalist.

  • @KHK001
    @KHK001 Год назад +7

    Amazing! a remake to the Ottoman series thank you KnG!

  • @video-adam
    @video-adam Год назад

    I'm looking forward for the next episode,Thanks for the video Kings and Generals

  • @balintlaszlo8673
    @balintlaszlo8673 Год назад +2

    Extraordinary work that you are doing! Keep it up🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @nenenindonu
    @nenenindonu Год назад +189

    The rise of Ottomans is similar to that of Muscovite, the two started as regional underdogs overshadowed by potentially greater regional dynasties like the Karamanids - Germiyanids and Novgorod - Lithuania respectively, yet both against all the odds managed to emerge as the actual champions

    • @lerneanlion
      @lerneanlion Год назад +15

      I thought I was the only one who noticed this. Thank you for sort of pointing out and agreeing about this with me!

    • @sidp5381
      @sidp5381 Год назад +5

      Yeah then the Russian empire completely demolished the ottoman empire and several battles took massive swaps of territory from them crippled and beyond repair before they finally collapsed the Russia had a lost the Crimean war ottoman empire would’ve fell in 1853

    • @sidp5381
      @sidp5381 Год назад +2

      Especially after the devastating battle of Sinope it looked like the turks were finished

    • @nenenindonu
      @nenenindonu Год назад +35

      @@sidp5381 "Then" = 5 centuries after the establishment of both which includes the Russian Tsardom that succeeded Muscovite and preceded the Russian empire

    • @nenenindonu
      @nenenindonu Год назад +34

      @Milošević in hell Ottomans were 3-continental and ruled better lands like the Mediterranean also "Russia" wasn't a continuous entity being divided among Muscovite, the Tsardom, and the Empire

  • @iSchneeball
    @iSchneeball Год назад +50

    How far you have come since your Nurrik & Phoenix days. The intro back then with the epic music with the book opening and each page saying famous battles you had covered is what first capured me. I am so glad to feel the exact same childlike excitement when you now release videos. And just look at the beautiful quality you've accomplished. I wish you the best of luck, kings and generals!

    • @KingsandGenerals
      @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +6

      Thanks for being with us!

    • @yaman169
      @yaman169 Год назад +1

      @@KingsandGenerals Ottoman principality" Osman Gazi
      Ottoman state Yıldırım Bayezid
      Ottoman empire "brutal Sultan Selim

  • @chibble3591
    @chibble3591 Год назад +1

    Let’s go been waiting for this series

  • @average.user_
    @average.user_ Год назад +2

    Phenomenal work and presentation.

  • @stevelemuel9820
    @stevelemuel9820 Год назад +3

    wonderful job kings and generals .......keep up the good work ...also please make a video on the life of the unkown belisarius of the palaiologan era.......michael doukas glabas tarchanieotes.....also make videos on the lifes of john palaiologos,alexios philaphtropenos,michael tarchanieotes ....would be very helpful

  • @CaspianNomad
    @CaspianNomad Год назад +8

    I know they're not the focus of this video but it never ceases to amaze me how strong the Mongols were and how much they changed the tides of history directly and indirectly

    •  Год назад +1

      It was literally the age of steppe nomads. From Mongols to Seljuks, and even the Ottomans. What made Ottoman success more permanent was that, they were smart enough to learn how to play "city dwellers' game"

  • @bladeray1014
    @bladeray1014 Год назад +2

    Kings and generals have such quality content! Keep it up!

  • @alpcan3264
    @alpcan3264 Год назад

    Another masterpiece! Thank you

  • @sethralavode3052
    @sethralavode3052 Год назад +3

    :( i was so invested about the expansions i was really suprised and sad when the video ended suddenly.

  • @systemreset9410
    @systemreset9410 Год назад +30

    Age of Empires 2's one expansion has Battle of Bapheus as a single battle on the battles list. I actually just had played it about a month ago.
    Thank you Kings and Generals! I had read a book about the establishing of the Ottomans in around 2003. This sparked that memory. I especially remember the night raid, Michal and the dream part.

  • @cnw6306
    @cnw6306 Год назад +1

    Wow this is what i waiting for, but i'm not expect this !!
    Thanks, K&G. You are the best !! 😁

  • @daudbaloch6892
    @daudbaloch6892 Год назад

    Thanks for creating this video

  • @mertzileli7691
    @mertzileli7691 Год назад +10

    Each of the names of 6 descendants of Oguz Kagan has a unique meaning of its own. Günhan (Lord of Sun), Ayhan (Lord of Moon), Yıldızhan (Lord of Star), Gökhan (Lord of Sky), Dağhan (Lord of mountain), Denizhan (Lord of sea)

  • @thesaygl7020
    @thesaygl7020 Год назад +5

    I'd like to thank you cause of you showed origins of Kayı Tribe. Oğuz Kağan Epopee is very important point for Old Turkic History.

  • @Uzair_Of_Babylon465
    @Uzair_Of_Babylon465 Год назад

    Fantastic video keep it up your doing amazing job

  • @nohandlenotme
    @nohandlenotme Год назад +2

    I subscribed to comment, your channel helps with the education of history, I only have high expectations for this channel, I know you won't disappoint. I look forward to more videos.

  • @socratesii91
    @socratesii91 Год назад +6

    When Ottoman empire at the tip of collapse, Sultan Mehmed save and won it after 10 years, this guy just incredible.

  • @Ryzexus
    @Ryzexus Год назад +3

    bro kings and generals never disappointed me with their videos and now there back with another magnificent ottomen series

  • @blackhorse113
    @blackhorse113 Год назад +1

    The channel I love to listen history 💜 keep going dude u r doing good 🙂

  • @ahmedazhar8485
    @ahmedazhar8485 Год назад

    Amazing video. And by the way your graphics are amazing

  • @Fornacis69
    @Fornacis69 Год назад +5

    Can you do a video at some point over the avars since you have one of the Huns and khazars ? I feel like it would be really interesting video

  • @gluetreeofthenobleturkishh2022
    @gluetreeofthenobleturkishh2022 Год назад +37

    I don't think Osman's grandfather's name was Suleiman. Because Osman, son of Ertugrul, son of Gunduz, is written on a coin found in Osman's period. In order to establish a connection with the Seljuks, the name of Osman's grandfather must have tried to resemble Suleiman Shah, son of Kutalmis, the founder of the Anatolian Seljuk State.

    • @cba2make1up
      @cba2make1up Год назад +9

      I've seen that even a member of the Ottoman "royal family" today, a certain Orhan who's a descendant of Abdulhamid II, insists that Ertugrul was the son of Gunduz Alp. So I'll honestly go with the family's gut

    • @muzaffernurullah9811
      @muzaffernurullah9811 Год назад

      Hocam ağzına sağlık. Dediğin gibi Ertuğrul Gazi'nin babası Süleyman Şah değil, Gündüz Alp'tir. Osman Gazi döneminden kalma sikkeler bile bunu gösterdi.

    • @herhangibirisi_
      @herhangibirisi_ Год назад +2

      @@cba2make1up Yes the father of the Ertuğrul was Gündüz Alp/Begh. But the name Suleiman is his nick name as the leader of Kayi Tribe. In Turkish History books he named as (Suleiman Shah).and the name Suleiman is a meaningful name in Islam. In islam there is a prophet who live long long ago and named Suleiman. And prophet Suleiman was a king who his kingdom given from god (Allah) to him.

    • @herhangibirisi_
      @herhangibirisi_ Год назад +2

      @ali Of course a Turkish tribe. The Kayi tribe one of the Oghuz tribes. Oghuz tribes has 2 boy's (boy mean branch in Turkish) as BOZOK and ÜÇOK. And Kayi Tribe was in the GÜNHAN boy. And GÜNHAN boy is in the BOZOK boy.They go Middle Asia to Anatolia. (Oghuz> Bozok> Günhan> Kayi> Karakeçililer > Ottomans)

    • @herhangibirisi_
      @herhangibirisi_ Год назад +1

      @ali WHAT?!

  • @Jesse_Dawg
    @Jesse_Dawg Год назад +1

    Love this series. Please more

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ Год назад

    Great video!

  • @Liquidsback
    @Liquidsback Год назад +10

    Ah, the rise of Osman this would be good to watch from my couch, but if only I had something to put my feet up as I lay here. But as far as I know, no piece of furniture exists....

    • @KingsandGenerals
      @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +1

      Because of the people like you, they will force us to use Turkiye instead of Turkey and Osman instead of Ottoman :D

    • @Liquidsback
      @Liquidsback Год назад +1

      @@KingsandGenerals Turkiye only changed its name because its feared the namesake was too close to the terrible Avian Empire ruled by the Gobble Dynasty.

    • @123telamon
      @123telamon Год назад

      There is a TV show about Osman. the name is Kurulus Osman.

  • @danielnita2072
    @danielnita2072 Год назад +9

    Didn't think I'd ever see a video mentioning Ertugrul, I want to take a moment to recommend the historical turkish shows Resurrection: Ertugrul and Establishment: Osman.

  • @liberalgoodi
    @liberalgoodi Год назад

    Perfect as always

  • @hasanyildirim4859
    @hasanyildirim4859 Год назад

    Thank you so much!!!

  • @Mokhtar-al-Thaqafi
    @Mokhtar-al-Thaqafi Год назад +100

    Osman was one of the smartest man among his time. He politcally turned the Byzantine Tekfurs against each other, evaded war with other Türkish tribes and hired warriors from all races,castes and religions. Once again another masterpiece by Kings And Generals

    • @ejayaziz470
      @ejayaziz470 Год назад

      He was the greatest sultan of osmanli .. Real gazi and hunkar

    • @Mokhtar-al-Thaqafi
      @Mokhtar-al-Thaqafi Год назад

      @Ottoman & Osmanlı edit evyallah

    • @Mokhtar-al-Thaqafi
      @Mokhtar-al-Thaqafi Год назад +7

      @@vandare6913 What's your point? My ancestors were Türks

    • @akinci6355
      @akinci6355 Год назад +1

      @@vandare6913 European source, American source, more European sources and trash DNA testing using small sample sizes that contain Cricassian, Kurdish, Bosnian and other non Turk but Turkish citizens samples.
      We don't use Ottoman sources to define European history. So stick to the Ottoman primary source's when talking about Turkish history.
      Muslim historians described the Europeans as cowardly, unwashed or cuckolds in many writings should we use that to define European history?

    • @yaralikatil
      @yaralikatil Год назад +4

      @@vandare6913 “Turkey in Europe,” “European Turkey,” and la Turquie d'Europe began to be used by the Ottomans and in Western Europe in the sixteenth century and became standard around the mid-eighteenth century.
      Miškova, D. and Trencsényi, B., n.d. European regions and boundaries. p.143.
      The traumatic element of Greek national identity is reinforced in memories of Ottoman rule known as the 'Turkish yoke'.
      HALIKIOPOULOU, D., 2019. PATTERNS OF SECULARIZATION. [Place of publication not identified]: ROUTLEDGE.
      Five hundred years of Ottoman rule (or “the Turkish yoke” as commonly heard in Bulgaria), which ended with the Russian-Ottoman war, have intensely marked the Bulgarian consciousness.
      Forte, M., n.d. Force multipliers. p.151.
      Hamish Scott (2015). The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern European History, 1350-1750: Volume II. p. 612. ISBN 9780191020001."The Ottoman Empire-also known in Europe as the Turkish Empire"
      In that same year, Luther was traveling from Wittenberg to Marburg. It is well known that the Turkish threat to the "Holy Roman Empire" was an important topic between Luther and his friend and collaborator Philip Melanchthon. In that year, prior to the Siege of Vienna, Luther published two small treatises: Vom Kriege widder die Türcken and Eine Heerpredigt wider den Türcken.
      The Europeans called Suleiman "the Magnificent" or "the Great Turk." while the Muslims preferred to characterise him as "Suleiman the Lawgiver" because he harmonized the religious laws of the shari'a with those of the sultan." According to a Tischrede in Wittenberg. Luther had learned that Suleiman was interested in him and had inquired about his age. When the sultan had been informed of this, he is reported to have said: "Pity. I wish he were even younger. He would find in me a gracious protec tor: Luther sighed were when he heard this and made the sign of the cross. "May God protect me from such a generous benefactor, he quipped.""
      European Christianity was extremely divided internally and therefore could Wessels, A., Jansen, H. and Jansen-Hofland, L., n.d. The grand finale. p.85.
      Bologna through the Christian courts of Europe in 1460-61 / 864-66 to drum up support for yet another crusade against the " Grand Turk ” in Istanbul.4 Thus did the name of Uzun Hasan , the “ Little Turk , ” first become known in Poland, Hungary, the Hapsburg Empire, Venice, Rome, Florence, France, and Burgundy.
      Woods, J., 1999. The Aqquyunlu. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, p.89.
      "The Turk came upon us as a rapacious marauder," Kolokotronis said. "He put to death some of our people and made slaves of others, but when our King in Constantinople fell in battle, he made no treaty with the Turks but left a bequest bidding his people carry on the war. His garrison has never given up and his fortresses have never capitulated."
      The Hour of the Bell: A Novel of the 1821 Greek War of Independence Against the Turks. Paperback - August 1, 2001
      by Harry Mark Petrakis (Author) p.185
      When the Turks overran Hungary ( 1532 ) , and threatened Vienna and Germany , Sachs published a poem of two sheets , “ Against the Bloodthirsty Turk . ”
      Lives of the leaders of our church universal : from the days of the successors of the Apostles to the present time Vol: 1 1879 [Hardcover] Hardcover - January 1, 1879
      by Dr. Ferdinand and Henry Mitchell MacCracken Piper (Author) p.295

  • @CrimeanHorseArcher
    @CrimeanHorseArcher Год назад +23

    Söğüt was captured in 1231, next try for retake by Greece was failed in 1922. However the bulletholes are still there on the steel windows of the tomb of Ertuğrul Gazi

    • @nech1
      @nech1 Год назад +2

      The British had told the Greeks many times to desecrate cultural, historical Turkish artifacts and monuments. I believe thaat was the case with the tomb as well

    • @resentfuldragon
      @resentfuldragon Год назад +2

      @@nech1 Isn't it funny that many, if not most, of the problems generated by a single nation in the modern era was britains fault.
      Their actions later caused the chain of events that led to the palestine-israel problem, the ogaden and shifta wars in somalia, the iraqi-kuwait disputes, and more.
      All the ones I mentioned were caused due to terrible borders and many false promises made to different nations.
      In somalia's case it was especially grevious because most of the nation was lost, the modern state of somala only has a portion of its ethnic land despite 2 those other parts attempting to join it democratically numerous times.

  • @serdarustaoglu2392
    @serdarustaoglu2392 Год назад

    Great video 👏

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE Год назад

    Good video 👍🏻 thanks

  • @boqork
    @boqork Год назад +20

    True gentlemen watch videos on Balkan history to make more accurate inflaming RUclips comments

    • @KingsandGenerals
      @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +7

      Tru. Flame them where it hurts the most, deep cuts only.

    • @iskambillordu
      @iskambillordu Год назад

      @@KingsandGenerals goofy aah generals

    • @Potatocius
      @Potatocius Год назад

      Lmfao 😂😂😂

    • @resentfuldragon
      @resentfuldragon Год назад

      @@iskambillordu You mean based generals, insults are an art that should be done after intense research.

  • @KingAlton9403
    @KingAlton9403 Год назад +3

    Excellent video, can't wait for the next part two months from now.

    • @KingsandGenerals
      @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +1

      The shade... :-)

    • @KingAlton9403
      @KingAlton9403 Год назад +1

      @@KingsandGenerals All jokes of course. I know you guys have a lot of things you cover at the same time so I can understand the long time it takes between each part of a series.

  • @wahedi9321
    @wahedi9321 Год назад

    Great Content 👍

  • @mazenaljayousi49
    @mazenaljayousi49 Год назад

    Thanks again kings and generals

  • @lerneanlion
    @lerneanlion Год назад +35

    So the Romans did respond to the conquests launched by the Turks. They just failed to do it properly. I cannot actually balme them since they were also worrying about another possible Sack of Constantinople from the West as well. Speaking of which, that's reminded me why they continued to appeal for helps from the Pope and the Western European nations so many times after what happened in 1204.

    • @Montechristoss
      @Montechristoss Год назад +10

      They did respond but by that was too little too late they tried several times but the civil strife of the mid 14th century was a disaster the one part even promised lands to the ottomans in Thrace and makedon for military support futhermore the rise of the Serbians was another issue the Italian republics managed all trade and last but not least the incompetent emperors such as andronikos II the ruler of the video fortunately they were some capable emperors that gave some time to the empire such as andronikos the third and john katakouzinos

    • @Montechristoss
      @Montechristoss Год назад

      @ali did l say in my comment anything about the Catalan company ? no and yes l know that helped the ottomans by ravaging lands of the people who hired them

    • @RichardEdwards40
      @RichardEdwards40 Год назад

      @@Montechristoss the byzantines committed suicide by inviting turks into europe to fight in their civil war. the turks ravaged byzantine thrace and took many slaves during that time. Byzantines also invited turks into anatolia to gaerison cities before manzikert. I dont know why they never learned..

  • @mohammadbilal4473
    @mohammadbilal4473 Год назад +2

    Pls make a video on the ottoman conquest of mainland iraq by suleyman 1 and shah tahmasp1 and the ottoman safavid war under murad 4 and shah abbas 1. Anyway ur videos are my only source of logical history please try to keep making them and conti nue the level of accuracy

  • @YoxiiPlz
    @YoxiiPlz 3 месяца назад +2

    I just checked on the video but you do it even better than the Turkish youtubers! Good quality and everything is true information. keep it up!

  • @malleus_malemaleficarus
    @malleus_malemaleficarus Год назад

    Well done like usual....

  • @Ulas_Aldag
    @Ulas_Aldag Год назад +11

    20:34 Seeing the ottomans so small compared to Byzantium. To think how they would incorporate the entirety of all those territories a few centuries later is just astonishing.

  • @Nomadictroll
    @Nomadictroll Год назад +5

    In the west the Seljuq invasion of Asia Minor began the process which was to make it the modern land of the Turks and the base from which the greatest Islamic empire of the past 600 years would expand into southeast Europe .
    MacEachern, S., 2010. The new cultural atlas of the Islamic world. p.32.

  • @The_Corporal
    @The_Corporal Год назад +1

    From Turkey, Great Video! Thanks King of Generals

  • @lemonkrasavcik2114
    @lemonkrasavcik2114 Год назад

    such a masterpiece,what a video

  • @iLoveAppl3947
    @iLoveAppl3947 Год назад +4

    I'm from Romania however when i used to take the national exam test i took private history classes to pass the history exam. Surely it didn't was about Ottoman Empire but everytime after the history lessons ended he used to tell me extra things I didn't know such as Ottomans used special weapons like armed hoursemen with hooks dragging enemies from the battle lol this must be a very painful death. Also he told me many of the Wallchian rullers we're raised by the Sultan to be loyal and pay tribute once they we're assigned to rule a wallachian province. One of them is Vlad the Impaler surely he choose not to pay later and attack turks but he didn't do much of damage in the long term. Being raised by the Sultan he knew how to fight Ottomans and that was not by face to face but surprise attacks from the woods. After many many wallachian rulers revolted against the Sultan he decided to replace them with greek fanariots to be more loyal

    • @maperdiole
      @maperdiole Год назад

      @whataboutism5439 vlad was half dacian(the dudes from the roman empire times) and cuman turk was another half or could be quarter

  • @Tommykey07
    @Tommykey07 Год назад +13

    Who could imagine in 1300 that a minor Turkish beylik in western Anatolia would a little over two centuries later become a superpower that ruled large chunks of territory on three continents?

    • @elifern889
      @elifern889 Год назад +7

      -Who could imagine that a small fishing town in the middle of Italia founded by outcasts of society would conquer their known world and have Empires mimic them for thousands of years?
      -Who could imagine that some zealous Arabs would create the largest Empire of its time, become big players in world politics, and spread what is now the 2nd largest religion in the world?
      -Who could imagine that a few Mongolian horsemen in the steppes would conquer almost all of Eurasia and have a direct impact in almost every civilization?
      I'm not trying to downplay the Ottomans here, but events like these are common throughout history

    • @ertegi64366
      @ertegi64366 Год назад +2

      @@elifern889 i see 13 year old enlightment hit u hard xd

    • @YunusKULL
      @YunusKULL Год назад

      @@elifern889 cope

    • @Tommykey07
      @Tommykey07 Год назад

      @@elifern889 fair point! Yes, one could say the same about the Arabs in 7th century. It was quite the Black Swan event. With the Ottomans I would say their advantage over the other Turkish beyliks in western Anatolia was their proximity to Bithynia and then the Gallipoli peninsula. Once they were able to establish a foothold in Europe, they could expand more than the other beyliks.

    • @VergiliosSpatulas
      @VergiliosSpatulas Год назад +1

      @@YunusKULL Cope? True Mongol moment, back to working 8h shifts to buy a slice of bread Ahmut.

  • @pigswithpongs2616
    @pigswithpongs2616 Год назад +1

    Love this channel

  • @ahmetsertel437
    @ahmetsertel437 Год назад

    Great video.

  • @fero5519
    @fero5519 Год назад +6

    Bazı batılılar Türkleri kötü gösteriyor. Siz tarafsız ve doğru şekilde anlatıyorsunuz. İmparatorluk varisleri çalışmanızı takdir ediyor. 🇹🇷
    Ertuğrul'un babası tartışmalı bir konudur. Çoğu tarihçi Süleyman değil Gündüz Alp olduğunu söyler.

  • @hugokappes4077
    @hugokappes4077 Год назад +6

    The Turkish made shows , Erturgrul and then Osman are totally worth watching,,

  • @Matthew_080
    @Matthew_080 Год назад

    Great video

  • @honeybadger2705
    @honeybadger2705 Год назад

    Woow..thats a good documentary 👏👍

  • @nukeboynez3648
    @nukeboynez3648 Год назад +11

    As a turk, I am astonished at how accurately you explained the origin of the ottoman dynasty. Even most turk nowadays don't have this vast knowledge.

    • @waleed8530
      @waleed8530 Год назад +4

      bruh, I showed Suliman the Magnificent to a young Turk and didn't know him.

    • @Euzuner41
      @Euzuner41 Год назад

      @@waleed8530 yeah we have that kind of young people

    • @nech1
      @nech1 Год назад

      @@Euzuner41 Nasil oluyu oyle bisey haha.

  • @lawandahiru4064
    @lawandahiru4064 Год назад +8

    This is the video that I have been waiting for, I really want to know how this nomadic turkic tribe turn out to be the must successful empire in all of the turks history. And also Ottoman Empire is one of the greatest Empire in Islamic history.
    Thank you for uploading this Video, keep on doing good 👍.
    I request of you to do a video on the ancient Korean dynasties such as : Gojoseon, Goguryeo, Beakje Shilla. e.t.c, as well as the history of the Franks and how they managed to conquered and ruled France.

  • @ahmettahaketenci5035
    @ahmettahaketenci5035 4 месяца назад

    an amazing video and history...

  • @bahjasaeed9529
    @bahjasaeed9529 Год назад

    Thanks good job

  • @isjdj3293
    @isjdj3293 Год назад +5

    There 2 great TV series about this, the first one called Dirilis Erturgl abou the migration and the second, Kurulus Osman about how Osman Established his empire.

    • @idk-yk3xo
      @idk-yk3xo Год назад

      @@parasf2984 osmanonline

  • @azizbey4334
    @azizbey4334 Год назад +3

    Just mentioning this,Ertugrul's father's real name is Kunduz Alp not Suleyman Shah.
    It has been found in coins dating back to the period of sultan Orhan.
    It's unknown why the name suleiman Shah has been chosen for him.
    Most claim that this is another way of proving Ottoman legitimacy,by trying to trace their lineage to Suleyman Shah the conqueror of Anatolia during Seljuk times.
    But the actual reason is in fact unknown.

  • @antonsokolyuk6999
    @antonsokolyuk6999 Год назад +1

    Very nice style improvement of your video

  • @syedasharimam
    @syedasharimam Год назад

    Amazing. Can upload more of early Ottoman battles

  • @beachboy0505
    @beachboy0505 Год назад +8

    Excellent video 📹
    All great Empires have to start somewhere.
    King 🤴 Charles 2nd was given a small island called Bombay by the Portuguese as a dowry.
    The Duke of Moscow asked the Mongols if he could collect the money 💰 from the surrounding slavic nations as a rent collector.
    The rest is history

  • @hanzup4117
    @hanzup4117 Год назад +5

    Any chance you guys can do some videos on the rise and fall of the British Empire?

    • @ertegi64366
      @ertegi64366 Год назад

      @@legioromanaxvii7644 every film every game every documantry is about british it is not even interesting anymore🤷‍♀️

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 Год назад +1

      I'd watch it. I wanna see videos on the Anglo-Zulu and Angloo-Boer wars.

  • @onikkobe
    @onikkobe Год назад

    Love this 👍🏽

  • @bozare
    @bozare Год назад

    One of my favorite series!