What sense does it make to start with Oct 7th when the problem started back when Benjamin Disraeli, then the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, facilitated the British government's purchase of a 44% stake in the Suez Canal Company from the Egyptian Khedive Isma'il Pasha in 1875. To finance this acquisition, Disraeli arranged a loan of £4 million (approximately £500 million today when adjusted for inflation) from Lionel de Rothschild, a prominent member of the Rothschild banking family. The British bombarded Alexandria and subsequently occupied Egypt, including the Suez Canal area, in 1882 during the Anglo-Egyptian War. This strained the relationship between the British Empire and the Ottoman Empire, contributing to the Ottoman Empire siding with Germany during WWI because it perceived the occupation of Egypt as an occupation of the Ottoman territory. To add to the problem the British occupied the newly discovered Iranian oil fields which was another developing issue between the Ottomans and the British who wanted oil for their new war ships. To overthrow the Ottoman Empire the British turned to the Arab people, The McMahon-Hussein Correspondence occurred between July 14, 1915, and March 30, 1916. It was a series of letters exchanged between Sir Henry McMahon, the British High Commissioner in Egypt, and Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the Emir of Mecca. The correspondence was initiated during World War I as part of British efforts to secure Arab support against the Ottoman Empire, which had aligned itself with Germany and Austria-Hungary. It promised among other things a free and independent country for Palestinians. The correspondence was later a source of significant controversy because it appeared to conflict with the Sykes-Picot Agreement (1916), a secret agreement between Britain and France to divide Ottoman territories in the Middle East into spheres of influence, and the Balfour Declaration (1917), which expressed British support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. So, the stage was set for the ongoing Palestine Israel conflict by a British Empire that had come under the control of people like Bejamin Disraeli and "Lord Rothchild" the Balfour Declaration was issued on November 2, 1917, and General Edmund Allenby entered Jerusalem on December 11, 1917, just over five weeks later. With Palestine now occupied by the British, and the formal establishment of the British Mandate for Palestine in 1920, under the auspices of the League of Nations, was pivotal. The mandate incorporated the Balfour Declaration, committing Britain to support the establishment of a "national home for the Jewish people" in Palestine. This legal framework significantly facilitated Jewish immigration; the Zionists started the invasion of the now British occupied Palestine. The United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine of 1947. The plan proposed by the UN General Assembly in Resolution 181 called for the partition of the British Mandate of Palestine into two separate states: one Jewish and one Palestinian, with Jerusalem under international administration. This two peaceful nations side by side never occurred because you cannot just invade someone's homeland and demand half of it for yourself and expect the people to just bow down to your desire for an ethno-state, instead the Nakba took place 700,000+ Palestinians were displaced, and 500+ Palestinian towns and villages were wiped off the map by Zionists, the number of dead was hidden and denied but was in the millions followed by 75+ years of occupation where Palestinians are denied their basic human rights by their brutal, sadistic occupiers, every Palestinian remaining in Palestine is treated as a prisoner of war including infants. When the Palestinians resist, they are labeled as terrorists and the focus of the Hasbara (הסברה) propaganda program is to always keep the focus on terrorism to keep the Americans from focusing on the real problem which is occupation and violations of human rights.
If you're wondering why the Ottomans used to wear such large turbans, these were their kefens, the cloth that was wrapped around the deceased before they were buried. Remember death often said our Prophet a.s.
Great work! The history of the Ottoman Empire is a fascinating tapestry of ambition, cultural fusion, and eventual decline, illustrates the complexities of governance, military strategy, and cultural assimilation. The empire's legacy is particularly poignant in how it shaped modern Turkey.
Man, kids today have it lucky when it comes to history. Sure we had history books and teachers but they would break it down into every complex occurrence that happened and make it hard to see the big picture. Here we have it all summed up perfectly in 20 mins! Yes, there's a lot of crap on RUclips and the internet as a whole but thankfully there's some really good stuff, like this, as well. Thanks TIH 🙂
It's absolutely incredible; I like to use videos to get that big picture then read books to get more information, its best to have a mix of both because books are more accurate. You always have to watch for false information when studying history on the internet.
Yet, we dont learn the lesson. How the empires fall and glory fades. The riots in the USA , political turmoil, etc. eventually, our great country will be divided into smaller provinces and won't b grandeur. The US might be the shortest lived superpower.
Well, I guess you could say we're living in the History for Dummies era. Who needs textbooks when you can get the TL;DR version in just 20 minutes? Thanks, technology!
it's funny how western depictions of the Ottoman empire always displays a minimalist approach to the borders, never coloring more than the essential cities they controlled when in actuality all of Arabia and most of north Africa was under complete control of the empire. You don't see modern Arabian/Egyptian maps only coloring the areas where most of the population resides in...
It’s amazing to see how this empire shaped the course of history for centuries, spanning continents with its incredible architecture, powerful sultans, and complex society. A great watch for anyone interested in learning about one of history's greatest empires!
This was an excellent summarization! Well researched, written, presented and paced. As a history buff, but not an academic, I found it thoroughly interesting and educational. 👍🇨🇦
The decline of the Ottoman Empire is very important for setting the geopolitical stage in the levant in the 20th century. The British Mandate of Palestine after WWI preceded the nation of Israel in 1948 and the troubles now in Gaza since stem from the promises of Lawrence of Arabia to Palestinians quickly broken by Lord Balfour.
Indeed. Very accurate statement. This once was a part of history that got skipped over in secondary school history education (at least in my country.). That was a big mistake.
So bad we don't learn any of this in high school here in my boring country! The syllabus sucks like hell, is inaccurate and hardly highlights significant global events and issues. That's why as a fifteen year old interested in history, I'm thinking of leaving this impoverished nation (Malawi) and emigrating to the United States for tertiary education and to fulfill my career. Nice comment though, and why's your user name "cow eats man?" Good one.
@@Robespierre-lI we didn’t even talked about the ottomans and the events surrounding their fall in my HS WWI class(section) kinda sucks makes for a huge gap w little answers
I'm quite astonished to see the extent of similarities of Turkiye history with Chinese in the past 200 years. Both countries used to have a glorious history and vast territory but failed in modernizing itself due to the currupted monarch rules. Then they experience an entire century of being humiliated, dissected and colonized by the west. However, the great people led by their leaders fought the bloody war that regained their foothold and independence, shaping what they are currently. Thanks for making the video. Salute to the great people
Good analogy and summary but I'd like to mention that Turks were never colonized by the west mate. Right after the defeat of the Ottomans in WWI, the Turks under the leadership of Ataturk refused the humiliating terms dictated on them by the treaty of Sevres and started the war of liberation which resulted in victory and led the way to the establishment of the current modern Turkiye.
They literally talked about how the Mongols and inception of the empire/that was done through the Mongol invasions and they were pushing west and were trying to fight and capture different lands. Istanbul was previously Constantinople and the church was converted to a mosque.
Also the Chinese were also invaded by the Mongols. The great wall of China was built to discourage the Mongols from invading. Chinese rule was for a time taken over by the mongol rule for some time. So this is not an east vs west thing.
Sir, it was a period of a long series of battles, bloodletting,harem and intrigues and of course fall of Constantinople becoming Istanbul ,and the discovery of new worlds,industrialization/colonization.
There were 13 Ottoman-Russian wars. It's impossible to explain it all in 20 minutes. For example, Napoleon's Egyptian expedition. It is impossible to explain in a few minutes.
The Ottoman empire, was so beautiful architecture, the gardens , the markets, constanaple. They even kept their own language. Thank you for so much info into a short time. Such a wonderful historical experience. Please consider making more docs on the Ottoman Empire. ❤😊 7:357:377:38
@@reefmohammed3553thank you yes. They created it. Jewish people wanted to stay in their homes and some didn't want to force gods hand. Israel should be a place. Palestine too. Israel was just created and then the british left them. They were both angry about the way it happened. Churchill was antisemitic.
Me to because everyone yells colonization but they don't understand that all nations take land and colonize it it just depends on whether they can hold it
And now in turkey some peoples says that we have to help them you know syris, pilistiane(idk how to write in eglish but we say in turkey filistin) and the other arabian country . They thought we help them, give them some money and soldiers . But why. They betrayed us during ww1 and after . You know for us 19. And 20. Century they were so Hard times . Russian, ottoman war , balkan wars and some rebellion and finally ww1 and they betrayed us during ww1 . And we have this sentences to tell their therechery " arabian country have much more traitor than their sand " in turkish (arabın kumundan çoktur haini) . So i am very sorry about syria and filistin but this was their choice . And we lostes almost everything after ww1 . Even they wpuld have taken(english, greek , french)big part of our country (istanbul and medittraion side of turkey and southeastern turkey )but ataturk and his friends saved us . But should never forget and we concentrate ourselves. We should teach us , make more science and have more power . But should.not help them . Let them do it , this is not our issue , this is their issue. And i will finiş my words with ataturk's maxim ' war is murder unless for self defence' we are gratefull to ataturk and his friends and our bravo soldier who gave their life for next generation without hesitate . And the most important things about ataturk is not his war capanilty and being big commandary. He was very succesfull politician , scientist if hed had not exist maybe we would save us somehow but we would Be like egpty or syria. If now we have civilization (comprate to the other middleeast country) i
One thing not mentioned here is that the Ottomans did not “colonize”, enslave, or even fight the civilian populace of the countries they invaded. There was a “jizya” tax of 2%, which was a fee for protection as non-Muslims were not required to serve in the military (unless converted as children to become Janissaries). Through the Millet system, Christians were judged by Christian law/court systems, and Jews were judged by their own law and court systems.
The Ottoman empire ran extensive slave markets & sponsored many slave raids across the Mediterranean & African continent. The empire also colonise its subjects within its sphere of influence, the reason they never colonised elsewhere was simply due to them being out competed by rival European empires. However you are correct about the taxes. Non-Muslims ended up becoming a sustainable part of the empire's income which was used to maintain both the state & military expenditures. When the European sections of the empire broke off, it created a large financial blackhole which necessitated the need for political & economic modernization.
Quran 9:29 Fight those who do not believe in Allah and the Last Day, nor comply with what Allah and His Messenger have forbidden, nor embrace the religion of truth from among those who were given the Scripture,1 until they pay the tax,2 willingly submitting, fully humbled. Islam tells Muslims to fight disbelievers and the context behind the verse is so that the Muslims can get money.
@@lukesullivan9344 There’s a difference between the two. The Quran is telling to fight because of money and this is a command for Muslims for all time not just at that time. In the Bible specifically the Old Testament, God told the Israelites to fight the nations around them because they were practicing evil, not simply because they were non believers. Duet. 9:3-5 Gotta do better research than that not just say what everybody else says. Killing is definitely not the point of Christianity idk where you get that from lol and you don’t have to be a Christian to know that.
You're forgetting why the Selijuk Empire ultimately collapsed: The invasion of the Mongols. With the defeat of the Selijuks by the Mongols,the Selijuk state in Anatolia broke down into several smaller states/principalities,one of them eventually becoming the Ottoman Empire. Had the Byzantine Empire been stronger and more competent, they could've taken advantage of the Selijuk disarray in Anatolia and regained control
I still don't understand why only the Selijuk in Anatolia spoke Turkic, the narration of this video even says that after taking over Persia, the Selijuk adopted their language ...
@@zy9662 No, Turks never abandon their language wherever they go. You can see it in Mamluk, Mughal etc. dynasties too. Their subject can speak their native language, but the Khans or later Sultans speak Turkish along with the language of that land.
@@Runo1923 so why they don't speak Turkish in Syria, northern Iran and Iraq?, if those regions were similarly conquered by the Turks even before Anatolia. If you check the DNA of modern Greeks and Turks is very similar, as if the Turkish are ethnic Anatolians that happened to change their language from Greek to Turkish
@@zy9662 First of all, Greeks was not that common in Anatolia. There were already many different ancient people. Greeks came from modern-day Greece and colonized mostly the coastline cities. Second, the similarity btw DNAs is the result of population exchange after the WW1 from both sides. Greeks in Anatolia and Turks in Greece exchanged. After living centuries together, of course a genetic bond occurred. Finally, Turkic people in Syria and Iraq are called Turkmen and they can still use many old Turkish words. But unfortunately the nation state age began and familiarized every ethnic group outside their majority population to adopt the new rules. The things I said above were about before these changes in world politics.
@@Runo1923 OK even if Greek was not common in anatolia, there were other languages before the turks arrived. So why of all places where turks (and later the Ottomans) conquered in the middle east only in Anatolia they speak Turkish...
My favorite revision of history is European Jews saying that Muslims exiled them and they ended up in Europe when really they converted to Judaism while in Europe and was protected by Muslims against European Christian’s who were out to murder them.
Thank God we had a wonderful leader like Ataturk. saved us from the brink of disintegration and exploitation. He was a courageous, visionary and intelligent leader. He gave us the human rights that most countries had to fight for, on a silver platter. He gave us the right to vote and be elected, equality, justice... everything. I wish he had lived longer, our country still needs him.
Ataturk was a crypto jew of Greek ancestry who hated Turkey as it really was and was a Francophile who touched children just like french philosophers. He continued genocide against kurds and came from the same faction as those who committed genocide against the Armenians. He followed barbaric nationalism and was good only as a general. He didn’t modernise anything, apart from committing cultural suicide which still has unfortunate consequences to this day. The ottomans had a parliament much before Ataturk. He is complicit in genocide and should not be worshipped for his only good feat which was saving turkiye from invaders.
gecmişiyle gurur duymayan bizden degildir gecmişide yoktur ne ataturku lan cumhurbaskanlıgında 17 bilinen devlet kurmus yıkmısız hepside bizim nedir bu gecmiş dusmanlıgınız hainliginiz ilamdan dolayı
Ottoman Empire’s lands in Europe and Africa were bigger than its territories in the middle east. Therefore Ottoman Empire was not a middle east empire. Also the origin of Ottomans was not from middle east. It was from middle Asia, Caucasia… Nothing to do with middle east…
The reason for the turmoil in the early 15th Century was Timur The Lame,who very nearly destroyed The Ottoman Empire before it got off the ground What saved it was Timur's sudden death at 35.
This video on the history of the Ottoman Empire is well narrated. Your channel which I follow is an emerging channel on RUclips, but with support from viewers like me and creation of such nice well-explained videos, This is History will surely rise and become a great channel on RUclips. Best of luck!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
8:35 although the main religion in the Ottoman Empire was Islam, ottomans didn’t force anybody to covert to Islam and gave everyone freedom to practice their religion.This is false. You can also see it portrayed in many Turkish dramas that are made about the Ottoman Empire and Turkish history, that religion was never forced upon anyone.
Thanks for summarizing The Ottoman Empire, which was always a weak link in my education, although very important. I hope that you shall create a video on The German Empire, which will be much more tricky than with the other empires. Sometimes it looks to me that the Germans colonized the USA (instead of emigrating there) in the 19th century, which may be the tricky card of their imperial power ...
Me as a Bulgarian! I have always been cultural, respectful and educated. History hours were great to learn more for our enemy Ottoman Empire. Bulgaria was one of the first three empires declared as such in Europe. The period in which ottoman slowly and gradually become powerful we didnt had such a presence for it and we paid for it. I have always been inspired by Balkan countries and how we influence each other. Thats why I am a little arrogant towards other countries since Balkans exist from so long. Only a real man will respect his enemy and consider him a friend. I have friends who are Turks. They will sacrifice a lot to help me if I have need and I will do it the same for them. Many nowadays kids have some hate towards Turkey but they never been interested in honour, code, discipline, respect etc. I know a lot for history. Balkan nations are really magnificent.
British empire was weak compared to these Men. These were Men who didn’t hide behind their religion for personal gain. The conclusion at best of the British empire is “Pax Romana”. A bunch of dudes with washed out Roman blood arguing of who the rightful rulers truly are. All while bathing in filth and drinking wine to stay hydrated because those dunces as they call other people couldn’t well water. Didn’t know how to properly make soap and bathe themselves for Christ sake until The Ottomans showed them what’s up. Another conclusion of them as a whole. Besides a very small percentage of their knights/soldiers/Nobles who walked an honorable path. Most of them were weaklings hiding behind a gun. Attacking people nowhere near as armed as them. Which cutos to them a win is a win these days. But cut out that crap like they added any fruit to society. They simple took the fruit from the trees others planted. That the dunces stumbled upon. All of that garbage. Like in school you learn about Rome. WOW. So fascinating! Until you realize they were a bunch of child f*cking weirdos. Many nobles and men and women with “royal” blood but riddled with disease. Repugnant. Go lie elsewhere.
@android175 Words convey a meaning and understanding. If when I speak of something. You understand what I am saying referring to. That's what it becomes and is. Maybe you can make a push for the global conscience of the "accurate" name.
@@Bustaperizm the accurate name is what they called themselves. Everything else is an artificial label. You may know what it means, but its a corrupted image of the real historical name.
@RobespierreThePoof that's not true. He is right. It's a made up term to cover the fact that the Romans were defeated. It sounds better to say the Byzantine empire was defeated. All it is, is historical revisionism and has no truth in it
Bugün İsrail ve Filistin olan yerlerden biz 600 sene boyunca barış ve kardeşlik içinde yaşadık ancak İngilizler geldi ve Osmanlıyı yıkıp orta Doğu'da savaşların bitmediği Bir yer olarak dizayn etti.. Filistin'e Özgürlük.. Türkiye'den selamlar
History documentaries often explore the Ottoman Empire, founded in 1299 by Osman I and lasting until 1922. At its peak, under the rule of Suleiman the Magnificent (1520-1566), the empire became a dominant global power, stretching across Southeast Europe, Western Asia, and North Africa. The conquest of Constantinople in 1453 by Mehmed II marked a significant turning point, ending the Byzantine Empire and establishing Istanbul as the Ottoman capital. Documentaries frequently delve into the empire’s rich cultural and architectural contributions, military conquests, and complex administrative systems that left an enduring legacy on the regions it ruled.
It was. The Ottoman sultan called himself "Sultan al Rum". Rum means Rome. So they saw themselves as the continuation of that. People from Turkey were called "Rumi" (from Rome) like the famous sufi poet Rumi. But the west only saw them as a muslim empire
A different dynasty. A different language. A conquest. A different religion. A major historical shift, in essence. But historians do discuss and research the ways in which the Ottomans did, partly, continue to carry on elements of the Eastern Roman Empire. It's also important to acknowledge that the Greek nation and, in some ways, the Bulgarians can claim to be heirs to that tradition. Furthermore, Moscow soon claimed to be the real inheritors of "Rome" So .. yes. Ottoman. That's the accepted historical term in English. Historians try to avoid biasing or explicitly political terminology, at least when possible.
The representation of the Ottoman Empire map is innacurate. The Valachia & Moldova were NEVER part of the empire (that is a big chunk of land north of Danube River, west of the Black Sea. The 2 Romanian contries were NEVER lead by a Pasha. They paied Haraci, but they were not under islamic legislation. Also their rullers constantly seeked aid to fight the Ottomans, from their Christian neighbours. Suleiman the Magnifiscent never conquered Moldavia and Valachia. I wonder how many other errors are squised into the narative. I would have enjoyed a more neuthral tone of the narator, instead of the open admiration to an oppressive force that held 1/2 of Europe under threat, especially in the first part of the clip.
“The history of the Ottoman Empire is a fascinating journey of conquest, culture, and power that shaped the course of civilizations. Are you ready to uncover its remarkable legacy
It's absurd to call the Ottoman Empire religiously tolerant when your only other examples are Christianity and Judaism. They along with Islam are just sects of the same Abrahamic tradition. The Circassians and Ossetians and I'm sure many more examples were pushed into Abrahamism by the Ottomans.
Well they were going to be pushed by the ottoman influence or the Russian encroachment which lead to a reasonable genocide of the circassians in the Caucasus
It was the empire you could see and where the most freedom and religious freedom was enjoyed. When Fatih conquered Istanbul, he founded the first Armenian orthodox church. Dozens of churches were built in the Ottoman Empire. He embraced the Jews. He embraced all nations. Otherwise, the Ottomans did not try to Turkify the people under the Seljuk rule for 600 years and 400 years. And in their time there was peace in the orthoeast, except for minor incidents. Until British agents provoked different ethnic groups because of oil.
@@bir_cumlereligious freedom where?from what i know at least in balkans at the time,they weren’t really good towards Christians,and destroyed churches?
@@Im_here_lolWhen Fatih conquered Istanbul, he founded the first Armenian orthodox church. Dozens of churches were built in the Ottoman Empire. He embraced the Jews. He embraced all nations
As the 15th-century palace historian Aşıkpaşazade mentions in the *Menâkıb-ı Âli-i Osman* (The Story of the House of Osman), the dynasty is traced back to Oğuz Khan, the mythical Turkish ruler.
Who else is here to understand the history of how Israel became what it is today? So from my understanding, Palestine was an Ottoman empire which then became affiliated with Germany after the Ottoman's decided to join forces with them during WW1. They lost control after Britain and other countries defeated Germany and its allies- leaving Palestine under control of Great Britain.
Please dont try to understand history from videos, whose main intent is to get clout. Instead, read academic or encyclopedic sources which are very common thanks to the internet. Palestine was under Ottoman dominion, and Arabs sided with the Allied forces against the Ottoman Turks, and Brits betrayed the arabs after defeating the Axis powers in WW1
Genesis 12:1. The LORD appeared to Abram and said, "To your offspring [or seed] I will give this land." - Exodus 5:22 6:12 Therefore, say to the Israelites: ‘I am the Lord, and I will bring you out from under the yoke of the Egyptians. I will free you from being slaves to them, and I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment. 7 I will take you as my own people, and I will be your God. Then you will know that I am the Lord your God, who brought you out from under the yoke of the Egyptians. 8 And I will bring you to the land I swore with uplifted hand to give to Abraham, to Isaac and to Jacob. I will give it to you as a possession. I am the Lord.’” Israel was given by God to the jewish people thousands of years ago. Before the existence of Palestine. Who are you to say what God can do. Until you agree with God about isreal belonging to the jewish people. God will never forgive any of your sins for undermining his authority and position
At what point in history? You can look for the Iron Ave map of Judea and Samaria or the Roman Province of Judea. After that, it's an administrative area of various Islamic empires, briefly a crusader state, then a province of the Ottoman Empire, then a British Protectorate which is where the current shape mostly comes from. You aren't actually asking a simple question.
The Triple Entente was formed through three agreements: Franco-Russian Alliance: Formed in 1894 Entente Cordiale: Formed in 1904 between France and Britain Anglo-Russian Entente: Formed in 1907 The Triple Entente was a response to the Triple Alliance, which was formed between Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy. The Triple Entente was the core of the Allied Powers in World War I.
The Ottoman Empire, founded in 1299 by the visionary Osman I, rose from a small principality to dominate three continents. With the glorious conquest of Constantinople in 1453, the Ottomans transformed it into Istanbul, the heart of an empire that led the world in military might, cultural brilliance, and religious tolerance. Under the leadership of Suleiman the Magnificent, the empire reached its zenith, embodying strength, unity, and honor. Though the empire faced challenges in later centuries, its legacy endures, and from its ashes, the proud Republic of Turkey was born in 1923, continuing the spirit of Ottoman greatness.
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What sense does it make to start with Oct 7th when the problem started back when Benjamin Disraeli, then the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, facilitated the British government's purchase of a 44% stake in the Suez Canal Company from the Egyptian Khedive Isma'il Pasha in 1875. To finance this acquisition, Disraeli arranged a loan of £4 million (approximately £500 million today when adjusted for inflation) from Lionel de Rothschild, a prominent member of the Rothschild banking family.
The British bombarded Alexandria and subsequently occupied Egypt, including the Suez Canal area, in 1882 during the Anglo-Egyptian War. This strained the relationship between the British Empire and the Ottoman Empire, contributing to the Ottoman Empire siding with Germany during WWI because it perceived the occupation of Egypt as an occupation of the Ottoman territory.
To add to the problem the British occupied the newly discovered Iranian oil fields which was another developing issue between the Ottomans and the British who wanted oil for their new war ships.
To overthrow the Ottoman Empire the British turned to the Arab people, The McMahon-Hussein Correspondence occurred between July 14, 1915, and March 30, 1916. It was a series of letters exchanged between Sir Henry McMahon, the British High Commissioner in Egypt, and Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the Emir of Mecca. The correspondence was initiated during World War I as part of British efforts to secure Arab support against the Ottoman Empire, which had aligned itself with Germany and Austria-Hungary. It promised among other things a free and independent country for Palestinians.
The correspondence was later a source of significant controversy because it appeared to conflict with the Sykes-Picot Agreement (1916), a secret agreement between Britain and France to divide Ottoman territories in the Middle East into spheres of influence, and the Balfour Declaration (1917), which expressed British support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
So, the stage was set for the ongoing Palestine Israel conflict by a British Empire that had come under the control of people like Bejamin Disraeli and "Lord Rothchild" the Balfour Declaration was issued on November 2, 1917, and General Edmund Allenby entered Jerusalem on December 11, 1917, just over five weeks later.
With Palestine now occupied by the British, and the formal establishment of the British Mandate for Palestine in 1920, under the auspices of the League of Nations, was pivotal. The mandate incorporated the Balfour Declaration, committing Britain to support the establishment of a "national home for the Jewish people" in Palestine. This legal framework significantly facilitated Jewish immigration; the Zionists started the invasion of the now British occupied Palestine.
The United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine of 1947. The plan proposed by the UN General Assembly in Resolution 181 called for the partition of the British Mandate of Palestine into two separate states: one Jewish and one Palestinian, with Jerusalem under international administration.
This two peaceful nations side by side never occurred because you cannot just invade someone's homeland and demand half of it for yourself and expect the people to just bow down to your desire for an ethno-state, instead the Nakba took place 700,000+ Palestinians were displaced, and 500+ Palestinian towns and villages were wiped off the map by Zionists, the number of dead was hidden and denied but was in the millions followed by 75+ years of occupation where Palestinians are denied their basic human rights by their brutal, sadistic occupiers, every Palestinian remaining in Palestine is treated as a prisoner of war including infants. When the Palestinians resist, they are labeled as terrorists and the focus of the Hasbara (הסברה) propaganda program is to always keep the focus on terrorism to keep the Americans from focusing on the real problem which is occupation and violations of human rights.
If you're wondering why the Ottomans used to wear such large turbans, these were their kefens, the cloth that was wrapped around the deceased before they were buried. Remember death often said our Prophet a.s.
"Oh, so you're saying they were just ahead of their time in fashion and funeral planning? Talk about being prepared for the afterlife in style!"
@@PoisonelleMisty4311 ur channel Is goated
cucuk diken peygamber mi demis
Remember life often - me
@@DarkVeilNebula Allah seni iftiralarında boğsun
They made the best foot rests in history. Soft, elevating and practical.
Great presentation. 600 years of complex history explained in 20 min. 👍🏼👍🏼
Yeah left out a genocide or two or ten.
@@stephenhoward4665sure buddy
@@stephenhoward4665Not occupying and staging genocide in 21st Century zionist
We’re not westerners to commit genocide. That’s something you’re people are professionals at.
@@stephenhoward4665 wich one?
thank you for the clear explanation
Great work!
The history of the Ottoman Empire is a fascinating tapestry of ambition, cultural fusion, and eventual decline, illustrates the complexities of governance, military strategy, and cultural assimilation. The empire's legacy is particularly poignant in how it shaped modern Turkey.
Man, kids today have it lucky when it comes to history. Sure we had history books and teachers but they would break it down into every complex occurrence that happened and make it hard to see the big picture. Here we have it all summed up perfectly in 20 mins! Yes, there's a lot of crap on RUclips and the internet as a whole but thankfully there's some really good stuff, like this, as well. Thanks TIH 🙂
it's so fucking true man. I have learned so much in just a few weeks from random youtube watching
It's absolutely incredible; I like to use videos to get that big picture then read books to get more information, its best to have a mix of both because books are more accurate. You always have to watch for false information when studying history on the internet.
@@BobbyBundlez so much information easily accessible. It's crazy that not many people use such opportunities to learn
Yet, we dont learn the lesson. How the empires fall and glory fades. The riots in the USA , political turmoil, etc. eventually, our great country will be divided into smaller provinces and won't b grandeur. The US might be the shortest lived superpower.
Well, I guess you could say we're living in the History for Dummies era. Who needs textbooks when you can get the TL;DR version in just 20 minutes? Thanks, technology!
Nicely written and presented. Great job THIS IS HISTORY.
it's funny how western depictions of the Ottoman empire always displays a minimalist approach to the borders, never coloring more than the essential cities they controlled when in actuality all of Arabia and most of north Africa was under complete control of the empire. You don't see modern Arabian/Egyptian maps only coloring the areas where most of the population resides in...
western sources will always try to downplay the Ottomans because they hated them lol
@@jamieoliver4267I like the Ottomans, they usually preserved all the good historical stuff while the Crusaders, Genoa, Venice, etc didn’t
The facts of the Ottoman Empire counter modern western propaganda about Israel and "Muslim terrorism" in general.
Which historic western country have exaggerate borders on textbook. From what I haven seen most are not exaggerated until WW1 and things got chaotic.
Beautiful visuals, and very well explained. I’m gonna binge watch all your videos now.
wow so well put together. Travelling through Turkey rn and this was just what I needed!
Turkey is such a great place to visit. I’ve never seen a more hospitable culture
@@ianlindsey1667they are mongols 😂
This vid deserves a lot more views!
Kids should have to watch one vid like this for every 2 or 3 asinine Tiktok or fake prank videos they watch.
thanks for all your 'empire'-videos! this channel is quickly becoming a favourite
Very well explained . Good job.
It’s amazing to see how this empire shaped the course of history for centuries, spanning continents with its incredible architecture, powerful sultans, and complex society. A great watch for anyone interested in learning about one of history's greatest empires!
This was an excellent summarization! Well researched, written, presented and paced. As a history buff, but not an academic, I found it thoroughly interesting and educational. 👍🇨🇦
Actually it's not that good. It only appeals to those who aren't much informed.
@@lauroandrea3241okay what wasn’t shown in this video then?
As somewhat of a research and learner of history in M.E I denounce your opinion
it would be too long to write n answer@@diren6298
Er zijn inderdaad wat genocide vergeten te vermelden 😂😅geschiedenis? 😮
Alleen wat je uitkomt vertellen😢.
Wonderful Documentation
Awesome information 😮
Thank you for this video
The decline of the Ottoman Empire is very important for setting the geopolitical stage in the levant in the 20th century. The British Mandate of Palestine after WWI preceded the nation of Israel in 1948 and the troubles now in Gaza since stem from the promises of Lawrence of Arabia to Palestinians quickly broken by Lord Balfour.
Indeed. Very accurate statement. This once was a part of history that got skipped over in secondary school history education (at least in my country.). That was a big mistake.
So bad we don't learn any of this in high school here in my boring country! The syllabus sucks like hell, is inaccurate and hardly highlights significant global events and issues. That's why as a fifteen year old interested in history, I'm thinking of leaving this impoverished nation (Malawi) and emigrating to the United States for tertiary education and to fulfill my career. Nice comment though, and why's your user name "cow eats man?" Good one.
@@Robespierre-lI we didn’t even talked about the ottomans and the events surrounding their fall in my HS WWI class(section) kinda sucks makes for a huge gap w little answers
I kind of blame the atheist Zionist for believing that God gave them that land, but you can blame the British also
The British never said Palestine was meant to be entirely an Arab state or entirely a Jewish state but they supported both
I'm quite astonished to see the extent of similarities of Turkiye history with Chinese in the past 200 years. Both countries used to have a glorious history and vast territory but failed in modernizing itself due to the currupted monarch rules. Then they experience an entire century of being humiliated, dissected and colonized by the west. However, the great people led by their leaders fought the bloody war that regained their foothold and independence, shaping what they are currently.
Thanks for making the video.
Salute to the great people
Except the fact that Ataturk was a puppet
Good analogy and summary but I'd like to mention that Turks were never colonized by the west mate.
Right after the defeat of the Ottomans in WWI, the Turks under the leadership of Ataturk refused the humiliating terms dictated on them by the treaty of Sevres and started the war of liberation which resulted in victory and led the way to the establishment of the current modern Turkiye.
@@lonelywolf1480An unfortunate event if I say so myself
They literally talked about how the Mongols and inception of the empire/that was done through the Mongol invasions and they were pushing west and were trying to fight and capture different lands. Istanbul was previously Constantinople and the church was converted to a mosque.
Also the Chinese were also invaded by the Mongols. The great wall of China was built to discourage the Mongols from invading. Chinese rule was for a time taken over by the mongol rule for some time. So this is not an east vs west thing.
Thank you for educating me on this topic. I particularly enjoyed the annotated maps.
Sir, it was a period of a long series of battles, bloodletting,harem and intrigues and of course fall of Constantinople becoming Istanbul ,and the discovery of new worlds,industrialization/colonization.
I can't believe you didn't mention the portuguese-ottoman wars
You can't narrate history of a 600 year old empire without cutting many important parts alongside with some less important parts.
Sadly yeah the portuguesse ottorman war was more important then the siege of viena
Don't expect so much from brief summaries.
There were 13 Ottoman-Russian wars. It's impossible to explain it all in 20 minutes. For example, Napoleon's Egyptian expedition. It is impossible to explain in a few minutes.
@@diren6298 battle of buda beat habsburg ottomans beat portugese both
great video
The Ottoman empire, was so beautiful architecture, the gardens , the markets, constanaple. They even kept their own language. Thank you for so much info into a short time. Such a wonderful historical experience. Please consider making more docs on the Ottoman Empire. ❤😊 7:35 7:37 7:38
Here because of the isreal and Palestine war
Not cause by ottoman empire but cause by british and UN
@@reefmohammed3553thank you yes. They created it.
Jewish people wanted to stay in their homes and some didn't want to force gods hand.
Israel should be a place. Palestine too.
Israel was just created and then the british left them. They were both angry about the way it happened.
Churchill was antisemitic.
Me to because everyone yells colonization but they don't understand that all nations take land and colonize it it just depends on whether they can hold it
@@renegadeknows1776No...
the West have taken more land and are the biggest colonisers...please check your history.
Me as well
G work
"I was seeking a cure for my trouble; My trouble became my cure"
- Ahmed Nedim (Ottoman Poet)
Nisi stulti resspondere ad omnem quaestionem 😂😊
Interesting. Informative. I will watch a second time. (I do appreciate the brevity.)
Great video.
Excellent presentation. Enjoyed it very much.
I was just looking to buy a couch
😂
After the places where the Ottomans had to leave, they fought each other in war after war, the Ottoman Empire was the security of those lands.
And now in turkey some peoples says that we have to help them you know syris, pilistiane(idk how to write in eglish but we say in turkey filistin) and the other arabian country . They thought we help them, give them some money and soldiers . But why. They betrayed us during ww1 and after . You know for us 19. And 20. Century they were so Hard times . Russian, ottoman war , balkan wars and some rebellion and finally ww1 and they betrayed us during ww1 . And we have this sentences to tell their therechery " arabian country have much more traitor than their sand " in turkish (arabın kumundan çoktur haini) . So i am very sorry about syria and filistin but this was their choice . And we lostes almost everything after ww1 . Even they wpuld have taken(english, greek , french)big part of our country (istanbul and medittraion side of turkey and southeastern turkey )but ataturk and his friends saved us . But should never forget and we concentrate ourselves. We should teach us , make more science and have more power . But should.not help them . Let them do it , this is not our issue , this is their issue. And i will finiş my words with ataturk's maxim ' war is murder unless for self defence' we are gratefull to ataturk and his friends and our bravo soldier who gave their life for next generation without hesitate .
And the most important things about ataturk is not his war capanilty and being big commandary. He was very succesfull politician , scientist if hed had not exist maybe we would save us somehow but we would Be like egpty or syria. If now we have civilization (comprate to the other middleeast country) i
It's the same in every country
Thats easy to say in retrospect
@@alpturkel7762 well written!
One thing not mentioned here is that the Ottomans did not “colonize”, enslave, or even fight the civilian populace of the countries they invaded. There was a “jizya” tax of 2%, which was a fee for protection as non-Muslims were not required to serve in the military (unless converted as children to become Janissaries). Through the Millet system, Christians were judged by Christian law/court systems, and Jews were judged by their own law and court systems.
The Ottoman empire ran extensive slave markets & sponsored many slave raids across the Mediterranean & African continent. The empire also colonise its subjects within its sphere of influence, the reason they never colonised elsewhere was simply due to them being out competed by rival European empires.
However you are correct about the taxes. Non-Muslims ended up becoming a sustainable part of the empire's income which was used to maintain both the state & military expenditures. When the European sections of the empire broke off, it created a large financial blackhole which necessitated the need for political & economic modernization.
Even the ottomans knew the European man was a better fighter then the rest of their diverse populations.
Elite janissaries.
Quran 9:29
Fight those who do not believe in Allah and the Last Day, nor comply with what Allah and His Messenger have forbidden, nor embrace the religion of truth from among those who were given the Scripture,1 until they pay the tax,2 willingly submitting, fully humbled.
Islam tells Muslims to fight disbelievers and the context behind the verse is so that the Muslims can get money.
@@SUPERDUPER_WingalingChristianity also has verses about fighting non-believers. That’s kind of the point of religion lol
@@lukesullivan9344 There’s a difference between the two. The Quran is telling to fight because of money and this is a command for Muslims for all time not just at that time. In the Bible specifically the Old Testament, God told the Israelites to fight the nations around them because they were practicing evil, not simply because they were non believers. Duet. 9:3-5 Gotta do better research than that not just say what everybody else says. Killing is definitely not the point of Christianity idk where you get that from lol and you don’t have to be a Christian to know that.
I never get tiered of learning about this topic. Great video
Amazing documentary!
Excellent documentary
You're forgetting why the Selijuk Empire ultimately collapsed:
The invasion of the Mongols.
With the defeat of the Selijuks by the Mongols,the Selijuk state in Anatolia broke down into several smaller states/principalities,one of them eventually becoming the Ottoman Empire.
Had the Byzantine Empire been stronger and more competent, they could've taken advantage of the Selijuk disarray in Anatolia and regained control
I still don't understand why only the Selijuk in Anatolia spoke Turkic, the narration of this video even says that after taking over Persia, the Selijuk adopted their language ...
@@zy9662 No, Turks never abandon their language wherever they go. You can see it in Mamluk, Mughal etc. dynasties too. Their subject can speak their native language, but the Khans or later Sultans speak Turkish along with the language of that land.
@@Runo1923 so why they don't speak Turkish in Syria, northern Iran and Iraq?, if those regions were similarly conquered by the Turks even before Anatolia. If you check the DNA of modern Greeks and Turks is very similar, as if the Turkish are ethnic Anatolians that happened to change their language from Greek to Turkish
@@zy9662 First of all, Greeks was not that common in Anatolia. There were already many different ancient people. Greeks came from modern-day Greece and colonized mostly the coastline cities. Second, the similarity btw DNAs is the result of population exchange after the WW1 from both sides. Greeks in Anatolia and Turks in Greece exchanged. After living centuries together, of course a genetic bond occurred. Finally, Turkic people in Syria and Iraq are called Turkmen and they can still use many old Turkish words. But unfortunately the nation state age began and familiarized every ethnic group outside their majority population to adopt the new rules. The things I said above were about before these changes in world politics.
@@Runo1923 OK even if Greek was not common in anatolia, there were other languages before the turks arrived. So why of all places where turks (and later the Ottomans) conquered in the middle east only in Anatolia they speak Turkish...
My favorite revision of history is European Jews saying that Muslims exiled them and they ended up in Europe when really they converted to Judaism while in Europe and was protected by Muslims against European Christian’s who were out to murder them.
Correct. I have Sephardic ancestry. The Ottoman empire welcomed the Jews who were kicked out of Spain. Fact.
At the time of Salim the Ottoman already had conquered Mecca and Madina
The Central Powers were Austria-Hungary Empire, Germany, Bulgaria, and the Ottomans
Great synopsis, thanks for the history lesson.
really nice vid. suddenly I get a load more history. thanks
A video about the history of the Jasudowicz family would be awesome since there isnt much information about them
The what
Thank God we had a wonderful leader like Ataturk. saved us from the brink of disintegration and exploitation. He was a courageous, visionary and intelligent leader. He gave us the human rights that most countries had to fight for, on a silver platter. He gave us the right to vote and be elected, equality, justice... everything. I wish he had lived longer, our country still needs him.
Ataturk was a crypto jew of Greek ancestry who hated Turkey as it really was and was a Francophile who touched children just like french philosophers. He continued genocide against kurds and came from the same faction as those who committed genocide against the Armenians. He followed barbaric nationalism and was good only as a general. He didn’t modernise anything, apart from committing cultural suicide which still has unfortunate consequences to this day. The ottomans had a parliament much before Ataturk. He is complicit in genocide and should not be worshipped for his only good feat which was saving turkiye from invaders.
😂 you missed the point of the video.
gecmişiyle gurur duymayan bizden degildir gecmişide yoktur ne ataturku lan cumhurbaskanlıgında 17 bilinen devlet kurmus yıkmısız hepside bizim nedir bu gecmiş dusmanlıgınız hainliginiz ilamdan dolayı
Ottoman Empire’s lands in Europe and Africa were bigger than its territories in the middle east. Therefore Ottoman Empire was not a middle east empire. Also the origin of Ottomans was not from middle east. It was from middle Asia, Caucasia… Nothing to do with middle east…
Well constantinople was there capital which is like a bridge between Asia and Europe
Brilliant presentation
This was excellent. Well-told.
nice video. This was a good overview although the maps should be more accurate next time
What do you mean directly?
what are you confused about?@@CiCiTemizlikHizmetleri
Great presentation... 🎉
The reason for the turmoil in the early 15th Century was Timur The Lame,who very nearly destroyed The Ottoman Empire before it got off the ground
What saved it was Timur's sudden death at 35.
Wtf? Timur died when he was 68 years old.
This video on the history of the Ottoman Empire is well narrated. Your channel which I follow is an emerging channel on RUclips, but with support from viewers like me and creation of such nice well-explained videos, This is History will surely rise and become a great channel on RUclips. Best of luck!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Enjoyed the video, however one point of criticism I’ll give is you didn’t mention Cyprus
There is so much more of the Ottomans before Osman.
so the Ottoman Empire just like Byzantine Empire and Latin Empire had end up surrounded by all sides in Constantinople as last city remaining?
Great video. Love it.
video great!
The Seven Years' War truly was a pivotal moment in history, shaping nations and global dynamics in profound ways
8:35 although the main religion in the Ottoman Empire was Islam, ottomans didn’t force anybody to covert to Islam and gave everyone freedom to practice their religion.This is false. You can also see it portrayed in many Turkish dramas that are made about the Ottoman Empire and Turkish history, that religion was never forced upon anyone.
Thanks for summarizing The Ottoman Empire, which was always a weak link in my education, although very important. I hope that you shall create a video on The German Empire, which will be much more tricky than with the other empires. Sometimes it looks to me that the Germans colonized the USA (instead of emigrating there) in the 19th century, which may be the tricky card of their imperial power ...
🤣🤣🤣 STOP LİE YOUnİDİOT
@@SRAMLiraiumwhat lies
@@furkanbozdag8198 OTTOMANS ALWAYS WEAK ??🤣.
@@SRAMLiraium they were never weak
He said it was a weak link in his education!
Me as a Bulgarian! I have always been cultural, respectful and educated. History hours were great to learn more for our enemy Ottoman Empire. Bulgaria was one of the first three empires declared as such in Europe. The period in which ottoman slowly and gradually become powerful we didnt had such a presence for it and we paid for it. I have always been inspired by Balkan countries and how we influence each other. Thats why I am a little arrogant towards other countries since Balkans exist from so long. Only a real man will respect his enemy and consider him a friend. I have friends who are Turks. They will sacrifice a lot to help me if I have need and I will do it the same for them. Many nowadays kids have some hate towards Turkey but they never been interested in honour, code, discipline, respect etc. I know a lot for history. Balkan nations are really magnificent.
Mashaa Allah
Allah 🐖🐖🐖🐖
I really recommend looking into historical maps before making these videos
I’m in turkey. That’s why I’m watching this. FACINATING VIDEO!!
I have to say one thing "the sun will never sets on the British empire"
British empire was weak compared to these Men. These were Men who didn’t hide behind their religion for personal gain. The conclusion at best of the British empire is “Pax Romana”. A bunch of dudes with washed out Roman blood arguing of who the rightful rulers truly are. All while bathing in filth and drinking wine to stay hydrated because those dunces as they call other people couldn’t well water. Didn’t know how to properly make soap and bathe themselves for Christ sake until The Ottomans showed them what’s up. Another conclusion of them as a whole. Besides a very small percentage of their knights/soldiers/Nobles who walked an honorable path. Most of them were weaklings hiding behind a gun. Attacking people nowhere near as armed as them. Which cutos to them a win is a win these days. But cut out that crap like they added any fruit to society. They simple took the fruit from the trees others planted. That the dunces stumbled upon. All of that garbage. Like in school you learn about Rome. WOW. So fascinating! Until you realize they were a bunch of child f*cking weirdos. Many nobles and men and women with “royal” blood but riddled with disease. Repugnant. Go lie elsewhere.
Hadi ordan!!!
It was never called the Byzantium Empire. That was a title assigned by historians hundreds of years later.
Byzantium is a universally accepted historical term. So is "Byzantine Empire.".
@@Robespierre-lIit’s accepted but not accurate
@android175 Words convey a meaning and understanding. If when I speak of something. You understand what I am saying referring to. That's what it becomes and is.
Maybe you can make a push for the global conscience of the "accurate" name.
@@Bustaperizm the accurate name is what they called themselves. Everything else is an artificial label. You may know what it means, but its a corrupted image of the real historical name.
@RobespierreThePoof that's not true. He is right. It's a made up term to cover the fact that the Romans were defeated. It sounds better to say the Byzantine empire was defeated. All it is, is historical revisionism and has no truth in it
Bugün İsrail ve Filistin olan yerlerden biz 600 sene boyunca barış ve kardeşlik içinde yaşadık ancak İngilizler geldi ve Osmanlıyı yıkıp orta Doğu'da savaşların bitmediği Bir yer olarak dizayn etti.. Filistin'e Özgürlük.. Türkiye'den selamlar
İngilizce yazsan daha mantıklı olur
History documentaries often explore the Ottoman Empire, founded in 1299 by Osman I and lasting until 1922. At its peak, under the rule of Suleiman the Magnificent (1520-1566), the empire became a dominant global power, stretching across Southeast Europe, Western Asia, and North Africa. The conquest of Constantinople in 1453 by Mehmed II marked a significant turning point, ending the Byzantine Empire and establishing Istanbul as the Ottoman capital. Documentaries frequently delve into the empire’s rich cultural and architectural contributions, military conquests, and complex administrative systems that left an enduring legacy on the regions it ruled.
May all the people who have died in different empires, rest in peace🕊️🙏🏻
8:35 doesnt make sense the ottmans didnt force them to accept islam
Why didn't u mention the defeat of Beyezid by the Timurids and the civil war
Trying to figure out why the Ottoman Empire was not called a continuation of the Eastern Roman Empire?
It was. The Ottoman sultan called himself "Sultan al Rum". Rum means Rome. So they saw themselves as the continuation of that.
People from Turkey were called "Rumi" (from Rome) like the famous sufi poet Rumi.
But the west only saw them as a muslim empire
A different dynasty. A different language. A conquest. A different religion.
A major historical shift, in essence.
But historians do discuss and research the ways in which the Ottomans did, partly, continue to carry on elements of the Eastern Roman Empire.
It's also important to acknowledge that the Greek nation and, in some ways, the Bulgarians can claim to be heirs to that tradition. Furthermore, Moscow soon claimed to be the real inheritors of "Rome"
So .. yes. Ottoman. That's the accepted historical term in English. Historians try to avoid biasing or explicitly political terminology, at least when possible.
ottoman rulers were title hunters back than, they first started as Khagans, then became Sultans, followed by Padishah & caliph and Kaiser of Rome
Not as a continuation, but we can talk about "incorporating" it. Sultan Mehmet II introduces himself as both sultan and "kaiser of Rome."
Unearthing the Past: A Journey Through History
i've learned so much in 20 minute of your video, the narrator , writing and image is perfectly done 🫵🏻🫡
I finally know why it's Istanbul and not Constantinople
I was completely agape when I realised Istanbul was formerly ( before the takeover by Memet )... astonishing history... Constantinople.....
The representation of the Ottoman Empire map is innacurate. The Valachia & Moldova were NEVER part of the empire (that is a big chunk of land north of Danube River, west of the Black Sea. The 2 Romanian contries were NEVER lead by a Pasha. They paied Haraci, but they were not under islamic legislation. Also their rullers constantly seeked aid to fight the Ottomans, from their Christian neighbours. Suleiman the Magnifiscent never conquered Moldavia and Valachia. I wonder how many other errors are squised into the narative.
I would have enjoyed a more neuthral tone of the narator, instead of the open admiration to an oppressive force that held 1/2 of Europe under threat, especially in the first part of the clip.
17:48 what is with his eyes??
Great video, thank you very much , note to self(nts) watched all in it 21:00
How much harder is it to say the eastern Roman Empire than to say Byzantine Empire?
Byzantium has been an accepted historical term for a very long time.
Why are you being so petty?
“The history of the Ottoman Empire is a fascinating journey of conquest, culture, and power that shaped the course of civilizations. Are you ready to uncover its remarkable legacy
It's absurd to call the Ottoman Empire religiously tolerant when your only other examples are Christianity and Judaism. They along with Islam are just sects of the same Abrahamic tradition. The Circassians and Ossetians and I'm sure many more examples were pushed into Abrahamism by the Ottomans.
Well they were going to be pushed by the ottoman influence or the Russian encroachment which lead to a reasonable genocide of the circassians in the Caucasus
There were barely any non-Abrahamic peoples in the Ottoman empire.
It was the empire you could see and where the most freedom and religious freedom was enjoyed. When Fatih conquered Istanbul, he founded the first Armenian orthodox church. Dozens of churches were built in the Ottoman Empire. He embraced the Jews. He embraced all nations. Otherwise, the Ottomans did not try to Turkify the people under the Seljuk rule for 600 years and 400 years. And in their time there was peace in the orthoeast, except for minor incidents. Until British agents provoked different ethnic groups because of oil.
@@bir_cumlereligious freedom where?from what i know at least in balkans at the time,they weren’t really good towards Christians,and destroyed churches?
@@Im_here_lolWhen Fatih conquered Istanbul, he founded the first Armenian orthodox church. Dozens of churches were built in the Ottoman Empire. He embraced the Jews. He embraced all nations
can you tell about Amazighian Saadi dynasty ?
As the 15th-century palace historian Aşıkpaşazade mentions in the *Menâkıb-ı Âli-i Osman* (The Story of the House of Osman), the dynasty is traced back to Oğuz Khan, the mythical Turkish ruler.
it is so good.
Love it.
Who else is here to understand the history of how Israel became what it is today? So from my understanding, Palestine was an Ottoman empire which then became affiliated with Germany after the Ottoman's decided to join forces with them during WW1. They lost control after Britain and other countries defeated Germany and its allies- leaving Palestine under control of Great Britain.
it says in video palestine was safe under ottoman but what they did they rebellion with british and now they f*cked so they did themselves
Please dont try to understand history from videos, whose main intent is to get clout. Instead, read academic or encyclopedic sources which are very common thanks to the internet. Palestine was under Ottoman dominion, and Arabs sided with the Allied forces against the Ottoman Turks, and Brits betrayed the arabs after defeating the Axis powers in WW1
Genesis 12:1. The LORD appeared to Abram and said, "To your offspring [or seed] I will give this land." -
Exodus 5:22 6:12
Therefore, say to the Israelites: ‘I am the Lord, and I will bring you out from under the yoke of the Egyptians. I will free you from being slaves to them, and I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment. 7 I will take you as my own people, and I will be your God. Then you will know that I am the Lord your God, who brought you out from under the yoke of the Egyptians. 8 And I will bring you to the land I swore with uplifted hand to give to Abraham, to Isaac and to Jacob. I will give it to you as a possession. I am the Lord.’”
Israel was given by God to the jewish people thousands of years ago. Before the existence of Palestine. Who are you to say what God can do. Until you agree with God about isreal belonging to the jewish people. God will never forgive any of your sins for undermining his authority and position
The color you used for their origin made me second-guess my understanding of geography
Oh god, the background music is so beautiful. Does anyone know whats the name or where to find it?
you can find similar musics by searching for 'Ottoman Musics, Saray Müzikleri, Ud Taksimi, Tanbur Taksimi, Ney Dinletisi' etc.
@@fatihozturk6300 Thank you!
I just wanna know what was israel original size
Non existent
By the time when ottoman empire collapsed, there were no Palestine or Israel state
@@DucDigitalthere was a protectorate off Palestine and it was shown on old British documentaries, maps,…. Etc
@@diren6298 That's most likely the name of a region. It's like calling Berlin a city. But as a state, Israel and Palestine do not exist.
At what point in history? You can look for the Iron Ave map of Judea and Samaria or the Roman Province of Judea. After that, it's an administrative area of various Islamic empires, briefly a crusader state, then a province of the Ottoman Empire, then a British Protectorate which is where the current shape mostly comes from.
You aren't actually asking a simple question.
Don't mention the sultans as warlords tho, If you name them war lords them name all of the others as war lord too.
18:33 Italy were with the Entente not the Central Powers
The Triple Entente was formed through three agreements:
Franco-Russian Alliance: Formed in 1894
Entente Cordiale: Formed in 1904 between France and Britain
Anglo-Russian Entente: Formed in 1907
The Triple Entente was a response to the Triple Alliance, which was formed between Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy. The Triple Entente was the core of the Allied Powers in World War I.
The Ottoman Empire, founded in 1299 by the visionary Osman I, rose from a small principality to dominate three continents. With the glorious conquest of Constantinople in 1453, the Ottomans transformed it into Istanbul, the heart of an empire that led the world in military might, cultural brilliance, and religious tolerance. Under the leadership of Suleiman the Magnificent, the empire reached its zenith, embodying strength, unity, and honor. Though the empire faced challenges in later centuries, its legacy endures, and from its ashes, the proud Republic of Turkey was born in 1923, continuing the spirit of Ottoman greatness.
I thought I busted you when you kept referring to Istanbul as Constantinople. But it's name changed around 1920 according to Poe AI. Never knew that.
What's the music in the background?
🇹🇷 Ze Power! 😎 The Rise!! 👑
after concurring south Caucasus and northern Iran it was re-concurred by Iran in the beginning of 17th century
so you forgot to update the map..
This ottoman is a little bit wrong. North african borders (libya) were bigger than that.
I mean straight lines never existed in borders back then so alot was wrong
Does anyone know the release date?
This doc is just glazing Europeans, I'm trying to learn about the ottoman empire