A Lost World (1600-1680) - Philadelphia: The Great Experiment
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- Опубликовано: 17 июл 2024
- For free educational materials, visit our website at www.historymakingproductions.com/philadelphia-the-great-experiment
An episode of PHILADELPHIA: THE GREAT EXPERIMENT
For centuries, the land that will become Philadelphia is home to the Lenni Lenape people. The rich soil and rivers support a peaceful civilization, but in the 1600's Dutch settlers assert their rights to the territory, and a bloody confrontation erupts. Swedish farmers arrive next, but their colony is torn apart by the tyrannical rule of Governor Johan Printz. By the late 1600's, persecuted English Quakers seek a safe haven in the area just as outbreaks of European disease devastate the Lenape.
Watch more at www.historyofphilly.com
Check out our website! historymakingproductions.com/
Created and Produced by SAM KATZ
Directed and Produced by ANDREW FERRETT
Written by DEVON MCREYNOLDS, NATHANIEL POPKIN, and ANDREW FERRETT
Segment Producer WENDY COX
Edited by RACHEL SOPHIA STEWART
Director of Photography PAUL VAN HAUTE
Music Composed by PATRICK DE CAUMETTE
Associate Producer JONATHAN KOHL
Creative Director GINNY LASCO
Sound Design by DAN LA PORTA
One of the best historical series I’ve seen. Well done and very interesting.
Excellent graphical presentation of the early history of the initial European settlement of this area. I know all too well how difficult it always was to interest young people in the history of the region as reading about this in a history book doesn't exactly ignite too much interest. This helps to fill a big void.
Nice video. Good series. Any new ones coming out?
Very good 💯
Excellent production. I had absolutely no idea that Sweden had any colonies in the "New World". Neither did I know the origin of the name Quaker.
Why did Quakers quake? Bacause of the holt Spirit like pentocostals.
Interesting from a historical perspective. I wish the perspective had been more strongly focused on the people. It appeared to me that their participation in the film was mainly as a backdrop of yet another story about pilgrims.
Makes you sad. Makes you angry.
💯
99000 views and only 849 likes, what's wrong with that picture? Thank you and thumbs up for the video. Content was hard to watch considering the plight of the Indians in the story but it is a very well-done documentary.
It is nice such an effort was made to document this aspect of American history, but it really lacks coherence, which may indicate not much is known or a lot has been lost. Or maybe it is the state of historiography on these topics. I'm from the West and generally would agree the Native Americans have suffered a raw deal at the hands of colonial powers, and later (even today) the US government, but the information presented here seems incomplete, speculative, and contradictory. It states the tribe's women owned the land and explains battles fought over land; then it explains how the "peaceful" tribe didn't understand the ownership of land. It says the Dutch who somehow thought they purchased the land expected the natives to follow their custom and rules; then one of the native decedents explains that the Dutch weren't following their customs on 'their' land in an explanation of why the Dutch settlers were massacred. I don't blame the participants who took the time to tell these stories
Craig Moreschini vhaxnlaanza
I had the same thoughts watching this...very loosely fit together at best
My thoughts exactly.
This could have been a great informative, educational series... if it hadn't been for the TOO LOUD, and needless background music.
Mr. Hampton class 2019
this makes me feel so sad. it seems it had to be, but it's still sad.
It didn't have to be
Yeah why did it have to be?? It didn't have to be.
LoL, it had to be? What does that mean? I guess you are thankful for the slaughter and deaths of millions of Native Americans?
34 views was from my class
Were
Henry Hudson leaves the Lenapewihittuck for Manahatta: the original snub of Philadelphia for Manhattan. Terrible.
I'm from philly
Wow I just shit my pants from how shocked I was
@@farisd2187 can I see?
Is it really, always sunny?
Didn’t even include the federally recognized Lenape Delaware tribes. Just reached out to the self proclaimed descendants who haven’t even proved their related to the Delaware tribe of a Indians or Delaware nation in Oklahoma, or the Moraviantown Indians in Canada or the Wisconsin group
I was taught how to mount bareback at age 4 by my mom who is a national champ for equine, this is exactly how u mount anyone who say’s different never truly owned and rode a horse naturally. How do you think people rode before saddles they rode bareback like this using the main as ur rains and ur hips to control. Just cause u can google and watch videos doesn’t mean ur right. And if u says it’s abuse trust me that horse is more then capable enough to throw her or even bite her off.
I teacher want me to watch this what is 3 fact about this video please tell me I don’t understand
@Santo Miguel thanks
Mr. Milton anybody
👀 LMAOOOO
Are you a senior now or graduated ?
Hi people my question is when the land of Philadelphia took officially this name?
Long story short. When the elder William Penn died, the British King owed him a debt. William Penn, the son of the late William Penn, was repaid the debt in land to basically get him and his Quakers out. Penn wanted to call the state Sylvania, for the trees, but the King wanted it to be named in honor of his father, the senior Penn. William Penn decided to found a city he named Philadelphia after the ancient city mentioned in the Bible. He dreamed of a place where all religions could practice in peace, and where the peoples would live in harmony with the natives. Philadelphia was one of the few cities in the Colonies to lack a defensive wall for that reason. The name stems from the Greek terms for Brotherly Love - philos, love; adelphos, brother.
@@PandoraKyss thanks for those info it's a chains connections of amazing crimes against humanity. Including my whore country Greece. 12 international mafia
18:00 there's totally smallpox in those blankets
3:42 shows what we really looked like.❤❤❤
✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾
10:15 - Looks like the Lenape really didn't like that dog.
mr brown anybody
The Dutch got what they deserved! I wouldn't call it a massacre, it's defending your land.
We were already here🤷🏽♀️
Ms.jazz anybody
can sombody write a summary about this for me just reply and tell me
Figures
Okay damn! I like these Lenape women. They had the right idea!
How'd that work out for them?
@@johnwayne3085 wonderfully
Like you said your people consider it a victory very short-lived my European heritage took this land and now it’s mine
False it was always Philadelphia
Indians fought for territory amongst themselves?
Yup. Because there were different native American nations. They did not always get along with each other.
Forced by the colonizers.
@@justarandomgal2683 💯
The so-called African slaves were actually Indians we’ve always been in this land copper color native people
Still lying about the history 🙄
SO WAS THE VACCINE - YEA TRUMP - MODERNA
Not bad when you can filter out all the politically correct stuff. 🙄
There was no actual making from the start,it was built up going along ,no actual settlement,germantown was the first actual settlement,than the english speaking separated knowing it was british tried to destroy it,knowing Penn was english,philadelphia gradually evolved into defending yourself for no cause,a making of an imaginary cause so you have to listen to it,but it hasn't changed,only new buildings,but the food is of the best on the planet,philly cares %100 on the food,the rest who dont care haven't come in with old world recipes,when you go to a restaurant expect good food,Expect only history.
This is soooo disrespectful too keep showing mixed breeder Asians as my ancestors that do not represent the copper colored Niji....
Very Marxist revisionist description of Native American politics etc