How Do They Teach the American Revolution in Britain?
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- Опубликовано: 10 дек 2024
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Sources:
jur.byu.edu/?p=... (Journal of undergraduate research, Brigham Young University)
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www.aqa.org.uk...
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allthingsliber...
Fagerstrom, D. (1954). Scottish Opinion and the American Revolution. The William and Mary Quarterly, 11(2), 252-275
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If only Boudicca hadn’t released those rabbits. If she hadn’t she might have won.
52nd State? I've heard 51st before, but 52nd?! Who's number 51?
So why do you call places (common wealth)
@@deborahpell3869 The term "Commonwealth" basically just means a political community founded for the public good. It's kind of similar to the original meaning of "republic" which just means "thing of the public". There's various US States that call themselves commonwealths - Virginia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and Massachusetts. A few countries have "commonwealth" in their full official names, like the Commonwealth of Australia. And there's also two large international political organizations that use the name - the Commonwealth of Independent States, which comprises most of the former USSR, and the Commonwealth of Nations, which comprises most of the former British Empire. (The Commonwealth of Nations does have a fairly inclusive membership policy though, and will accept countries which were never part of the British Empire, such as Mozambique and Rwanda.)
@@vitalspark6288 Never knew that, thank you very much.
The UK is the world’s largest supplier of independence days.
That would be rome
@@johnree6106 Rome is *the Mediterranean’s* largest supplier of independence days, The UK is the *world’s*
@@nroke1684 England won it's independence from Rome
@@johnree6106 England isn’t the UK. It’s part of the UK.
@@nroke1684 To be fair he was talking about the british empire, so I assume you were also and also Rome basically conquered most of the UK countries but honestly I probably only know a few countries in the UK.
UK: Who are you?
US: We declared independence and revolted against your tyranny!
UK: Do you have the slightest idea how little that narrows it down?
US: we have lots of natural resources...
UK: i want to say... Jamaica?
US: we're the democracy guys?
UK: greece is thst you, so sorry must have been drunk that decade...
US: who the fuck is Greece
This comment is underrated by a lot.
USA: You spent £20million and 7 years fighting a literal world war To protect us And a 10 year war To suppress our rebellion Which cost almost as much
U.K.: ohhhhh Canada how are you mate?
@@adamnelson4428 hahaha 🤣🤣🤣.
I've heard it best as "The sun never sets on countries that celebrate the day they told the British Empire to fuck off."
Unlike many countries that got independence from Great Britain, the American independence was unique. It was literally Englishmen vs the descendants of Englishmen living in a new continent. The American Colonists literally revolted against the country of their ancestry.
Very good point. I dont think he mentioned that.
It was also very unique as it had incredible battles and was a untrained army to the biggest empire in the world.
@@eaglethehulk8539 what does that have to do with anything
To further complicate it, many of the colonists fighting for independence still viewed themselves as British. It's like when you move out and your parents keep saying "As long as your living under my roof".
As an American I will make one correction they rebeled against the king and loyalists who enforced unfair taxes and laws they thought he had no business governing territories 1000's of miles away. The american colonists were taming the land and homesteading with little protection from the british government.
I grew up in London, and was actually taught in decent detail about the revolution. The big difference between my American schooling and my person experience in the UK was that my British history-lessons bounced all over the globe. We learned about Egypt, Greece, China, Rome, England, Germany, France, and yes, America. We didn’t cover it in great detail, but I don’t recall their being much beating-around-the-bush. It was pretty much “king George was rebelled against for taxation and religious persecution”. Because that was all true lol.
Yup, I’m in the same boat but in reverse; the USA first then England later. The USA taught it like the biggest underdog victory ever and an emphasis on battle, meanwhile England was like “Did you know ancient Egyptians would weigh their hearts on scales against a feather?”
It was parliament that has always had the authority to raise taxation, not the king. That is the key error Americans learn from taking the declaration of independence at face value and not as a partisan document. The king had no power to second guess the authority of the elected government of the day.
@@armand9404 the king had significant control over parliament. He approved of the Prime Minister. If George wanted to stop the taxes he could just have parliament nominate a new one
My American schooling bounced all over the world as well. We learned about everything from Ancient Greece to modern day. Even learned about the history of Korea, China, and Japan.
Thing is, as I’m sure you know, the US is 50 sovereign states with different curriculums that’s determined by the local governments. Some schools are better than others.
@@kayzeaza that's not correct. The king followed the policy of his government. That has been true since the civil war. The last king to attempt that was executed for treason.
When your first wife leaves you, maybe it's her, maybe it's you. When your fourth wife leaves you, it's probably you? When your 62nd wife leaves you... Yeah. It's you. It's definitely you.
@@RedWither04 okay imperialist.
What about when you get kicked out of 110 countries?
@@RedWither04 1
@@RedWither04 It started with India and was far from peaceful. After GB got humiliated by Gandhi they had little choice but to let their subjects go. When someone successfully paints you as the tyrant, you lose a lot of authority and legitimacy. Being a part of the Commonwealth is mainly a financial issue.
Great comment...
As an American, I'd love to hear a Today I Found Out about Brexit.
in short, us, the British people want it and dont regret it one bit but in the media here and all around the world its portrayed as the worst mistake ever made!
@@stevefox3763 yeah, based on the British people i watch that seems accurate
I'd say it's the definition of a wedge issue. The vote went 52/48. It's consistently been assessed by experts as having various negative consequences and is still unresolved in relation to the final deal or lack thereof with the EU with some suggestion they're waiting on the US election result with the presumption Trump will support a US trade deal compared with Biden.
@@stevefox3763 so you the people as in the slightly bigger than 50% of the even smaller percentage of citizens of the larger country that actually voted? Cool thanks for your input that helped a lot
@@nataliealphonse4634 we voted to leave, no matter why twisted way you want to play it, period. it was a democratic vote and thats that.
My funniest anecdote as an American about this is when a co-worker of mine once asked our boss how he planned on celebrating Independence Day. He was English. After an awkward silence, I reminded my co-worker that English people probably don't celebrate that day.
I made kinda the same mistake once, except I asked a Jew what he was doing for Christmas.
And on that day, a man died...
Just put a picture of George Washington on his door and watch as he shake his fist in anger at him
@@Labyrinth6000 He was probably thinking that George Washington was from an English family and served in the Royal Navy.....WTF
They curl up with their cup of tea and cry in their rooms while making fun of modern American politics in their ex wives cloths
I have British friends who have very little knowledge of the American Revolution and the War of 1812. When they have visited the US I have taken them to several battlefields and monuments. They say they have never heard of these battles. They tell me that the British have fought so many wars that it is difficult to keep them straight.
I am a huge history buff, so when I have visited Great Britain, my friends have taken me to Blenheim Palace, Trafalgar Square, and the HMS Victory, to name just a few places. I find British history very fascinating.
Most Americans barely know jack shit about our own history, let alone any other countries 🤣
In our centuries of history we've fought so many wars and battles that other then the ones that have a major impact on our nation even we cannot keep up with all of our battles.
As an American, it never dawned on me how little of the revolution would be covered, simply because of how much history the UK has. Thanks for the eye opener!
Frankly nothing gets that much coverage anyway, probably learn more about any event in history from a half hour documentary on TV then at school, most of its just a exercise in writing and research to answer specific questions that are swiftly forgotten.
My Swedish students learn very little, basically it was some that happened during the Seven Years war, one could argue that was the first world war.
That's the back half of the public classroom for you there.
What Simon is talking about is compulsory primary and secondary education (6-16 years old). At college (16-18 or senior high school for you chaps), it may be possible to specialise in a certain area of history and learn more about it. At University it is most certainly possible to specialise even further.
It’s because the Americans kicked us out.
As an American, I can confirm we are disappointed that we are not trapped in your thoughts forever.
Can confirm.
On the contrary, we’re usually trapped in yours 😂
@@isziahs5951 Agreed! I'm an Anglophile! ♡
British loosing 13 colonies was little lose. British empire was far bigger than 13 colonies.
@@Hamburglar96 ya but we was the uk down fall
"We don't angrily shake out fist at a picture of Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin"
I didn't think you did but the fact you brought it up makes me think otherwise
Then you are imagining things. He raised the question--and answered it--only because Americans asked him about how the British regard the American Revolution. I am a U.S.-based historian who knows many many British historians, and this video is absolutely accurate, although it politely neglected to mention that many Americans today exaggerate the relative importance of their Revolution on the world stage in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. There were other events more immediately important to Europeans then.
@@garyfrost7838 r/woosh
@@garyfrost7838 golly gee what was that gust of wind?
Yesss run dirt in my face harder...
Alright class, raise your arm as if you've just following through on a smashing bowl in you game of kriket. Timmy, a bit higher there, that's a boy. Now, clench your fist. Finally sway your fist gently and recite the passage from page 70 of your copy book. "Damn you, Yankees".
For Americans, it was the single most important date in the history of our nation. For the British, it was Tuesday...
😂😂😂
Chewsday
They like to say that but they fought 7 years to keep the colonies, they fought long and hard. 25,000 British soldiers died -that's a lot. And we fought them again in 1812.
They lost a lot on a tuesday 😂 They lost so much that they don't want to think about it. That's what's really going on. Imagine how powerful England would be if the british empire still held on to America . 🇺🇸
@@sabrinalanning1925 It's chewsday innit?
“History started on July 4th 1776, anything that happened before then was an accident.” - Ron Swanson.
Nice
Nice
Ye but it didn't tho lol 😂
@@LongdownConker Another job well done, Captain Obvious!
@@Dr_Alan_Grant OK u got me there lol, but it is a rather pig headed statement lol 😂
I’m impressed you got 11 minutes out of, “We don’t.”
I'm impressed you posted such a useless comment
@@-Extra_Lives I’m surprised I have aids
To be fair, he only got six minutes out of it. The other four were an ad.
@@-Extra_Lives W
@@-Extra_Lives way to get ratioed!
Americans fighting for independence:”go ahead, try to take our muskets”
Irish fighting for independence:”go ahead, try to start your car”
This comment didnt get enough attention hahaha
That, that was good 😂😂
👀🔥🔥🔥
Dark
Oof
I'm British. The way I look at it is, the American Revolution is a massive part of Americas hundreds of years of history, and a relatively small part of Britain's thousands of years of history
Except Americans were the same until 1776 and then they went on to 2.0
Not 2.0 just a second version of europians
@@wrestlinginfodude2644 yes their saviors
Interesting way of looking at it) Greetings from KC!
Very true.
British history is just so much longer than American history that they can’t focus on any one subject for very long.
Interesting then, that I once met a gentleman who seemed to know more about America than many Americans do. He had also been to every state except Alaska and Hawaii
@@AusyG I feel like if you’ve been to every state but Hawaii and Alaska, your means and intelligence is a bit higher than an average stereotype of an American.
@@orangefox3285 American culture is dependent on state/region. We're way bigger than a neighborhood.
@@AusyG Damn son, I'm an American and I've only been to 4
USA : founded 1776
UK : founded 1801
In short: "dude, we lost so many colonies over the years, it's kinda hard to keep track of all of them""
To you it was the most important day of your life. To me it was Tuesday.
Great street fighter reference lol
But you forget about the most important one that turned into the biggest superpower in the world?
LOL love it
United States was not a typical colony. Americans were supposed to be a full British citizens. By the start of the war Americans were nearly a quarter of the British population.
So, basically... “For you it was the most important day in your life. For me, it was Tuesday.”
“Legendary fight with shia labeouf! Normal Tuesday night, for Shia Labeouf”
Lol the greatest line in hollywood history from such a bad movie.
i think you mean chewsday
I mean Britain is responsible for over 40 independence days, sooo.
Seems fair
Simply put, British history is substantially longer then American history and so British schools can't give the same level as detail on the American Revolution as America can
I once stayed in a house that was built before Sir Walter Raleigh (Roanoke Island) was born. Yep British history is "relatively" older ;-)
More importantly the US fought far fewer external wars than the British did and so most of our focus goes onto the few major conflicts we did participate in
Look at Simon, actually calling Japan out on it's war crimes
Unit 731
?
@@damianmontesinos8908 ??
Nanjing
"War crimes" is such a stupid concept lmao. It's a freaking war; do you expect to be given coffee and cookies? Anything should go in pursuit of victory.
Interesting. I was taught about The American War of Independence in detail in Ireland as part of the Junior Cert (~GCSE) history curriculum. It's seen as a direct inspiration for the French Revolution and by extension the Irish 1798 rebellion, which, despite failing, is hugely significant to the history of Irish republicanism.
It seems odd to teach about the significance of the French Revolution without talking about the major domino that fell before it. Even purely in terms of European history, it's surely an important step in the gradual transition from monarchical power to democratic republics?
The truth is often denied by those who fear rebellion
Correct!
Precisely. Started the "Age of Revolution". Im sure most modern Brits truly don't care but I'll bet the men in the past that had a hand in forming curriculum and writing history were bitter lmao. Not as relevant today but I'm sure you definitely wouldn't want to give your subjects any funny ideas.
Yes, if it were up to me, English Civil War, American Revolution, French, Haitian, Russian would be taught as one continuous movement.
@@chickenfishhybrid44 Honestly most British schools dont have this massive focus on the age of Revolution, so the focus is not needed on the American Revolution
A man walks into a -bar- pub in London and sees three portly women drinking.
"Are you ladies from Scotland?"
"It's Wales, you pidyn!"
"I'm so sorry. Are you whales from Scotland?"
@GazB a Welsh insult, 'd!ck' iirc
@@LolUGotBusted Thanks, I'm learning Welsh, guess I'll add that to my lexicon.
🤣🤣🤣
That was very politically incorrect, I love it.
👋😂👋
I am an American and a bit of a history buff. Many years ago a friend of mine and I went to Cowpens South Carolina to see the famous Revolutionary War battlefield there. We didn't even realize till we arrived there that it was the anniversary of the battle and was quite an affair. There was a contingent of elderly British gentlemen that flew all the way from Great Britain to take part in the anniversary and to pay their respects to the British dead from the battle. They had uniforms on and were obviously British military veterans themselves, they even had a group of bagpipe players with them. I was always impressed with that, they were such charming old fellows to have a meet and greet with but you really had to admire their love of country and dedication, and how they came so far to a place even most Americans don't know much of anything about to pay their respects in rural South Carolina.
The American Revolution is as much British history as it is American. Not long before hostilities broke out most of the Colonists considered themselves loyalists to the Crown. That war was a very complicated one from a political stand point. Perhaps it is a bit of an over simplification to say that when it started you had roughly 1/3 of the Colonists were pro independence where as another 1/3 remained loyal to the Crown and yet the other 1/3 really didn't give a shit either way but as the war dragged on the majority of that last 1/3 had to pick a side eventually. It became a combination of a Revolution a world war a rebellion and a civil war all in one and it was nasty. But even the most ardent of the seperatists that took up arms against the British in that conflict often considered themselves loyal to the crown at one point. This is why it is as much British history as it is American history as much as anything and I would argue that perhaps this is a possible reason why American Independence from Great Britain is often passed over in British history classes.
respect to those british soldiers, never forgetting the sacrifice of their fellow soldiers
The American Revolution is very relevant to British history, not least because of the intellectual and conceptual legacy. The Americans took a pre-existing language of liberty, previously largely restricted to cutting edge Enlightenment thinkers, and made it the creed of an entire people (to which Americans pay homage to this very day) and of course this immediately affected British political thought, even amongst those who considered themselves to be above raw democracy.
The thing is, that so many things really matter. British kids have enough time to do a core curriculum, followed by a variety of optional subjects. If, after 14, they choose to continue taking History, then their teachers provide more in-depth teaching about a variety of subjects chosen by the teacher.
Thus, a British kid could have the US revolution taught to them over a few minutes, or, by chance, in-depth over the course of a few months. Alternatively, the in-depth teaching might be about Weimer Germany, the Nazi's, the Soviet Union, British social history (in one given period), Vietnam, the Cold War (early or late), the Space Race, the Great Depression in the US, Roosevelt, the US Westward Expansion, the US Civil War, the French Revolution, the Russians under Peter the Great, the 30 Years War, the Wars of Religion, the Tudors, the Stuarts, the Wars of the Roses, the Industrial Revolution, or British domestic politics in any given period.
@@chrisbailey7550 That is very interesting and enlightening. Thank you for sharing how history is taught in the UK. I was not much of a student in my youth, to be honest I was a knuckle head that cut class a lot napped with my head on the desk and when not napping I was a class clown. I just had a rotten attitude towards school and a lot of things back then. I recall way back then hearing how in Germany they did things similar to how you laid out history classes in the UK. I always thought that sounded so marvelous! The idea of being able to somewhat more or less customize your education after a certain point to suit your needs and interests. Sadly we don't do it that way in the US, or at least we didn't in my day. I always thought perhaps I may have had a little more interest in my education back then if we had done things more that way here.
I had little to no interest in history till I got into my teens really. I went to a military school for a year which is I'm Camden South Carolina which by US standards is quite a historical town. The battle of Camden during the Revolution was fought there, you Brits embarrassed us good in that one lol. All of my teachers were Cold War era military officers and vets. It was very interesting learning about the Vietnam War and Korean War from teachers who actually were veterans of those conflicts. The school it's self had an airfield on the back side and I learned that during WWII the British RAF used the campus and airfield to train pilots because as you know the skies over Britain were rather dangerous at the time. It is through experiences outside of a class room u believe you learn far more of history. History becomes alive that way as opposed to just learning dates and names and places so you can get your multiple choice answers right on a mid term exam the way history is taught here. The people who lived through those events just become much more real to you which makes the history all the more fascinating outside of the class room.
I have never crossed "the Pond" to see the other side of it even though my ancestors come from all over the British Isles. One thing I have learned from other Americans who have done that is if we are not careful we begin to realize this country isn't that old and by comparison we don't have as much history to tell. I have heard Brits who have come here and learn our history say they find US history more interesting because so much of what you learn about here didn't happen so long ago lol. But it is all very interesting, oddly enough the parts we seem to find so interesting are the ones we should be glad we didn't have to live through. As I have heard it said "what makes for the best of history makes for the worst of current events".
@@thesultanofsaltines921 Yes, after a few decades of quite happy current affairs, we're now living through history! We had the 2008 crash, the lost years, the too-sharp political division of 2015-20 and then a pandemic and now a great inflation. In the UK, we're about to have a great recession!
We're living through history, again. It's an odd sensation.
I hate to think about the kids in 200 years time, being forced to learn this stuff.
@@chrisbailey7550 Yes, I was 16 years old when the build up to the 1991 Gulf War was taking place. Of course as always the news media sensationalized everything "50,000 casualties on the first day!" and I was dumb enough to believe it at the time. I tried to join the Marine Corps and was told "finish high school first and come back in a few years kid!" lol. I thought that was going to be the last great War and was foolish enough to want to go fight in it.
Things have been a lot more interesting since 1991 than I anticipated and far more interesting in more recent times than I would like. A lot of people here think we are headed towards a civil war these days. It does seem bleak admittedly but I remind people that the last one could have been prevented had people back then had just listened to voices of reason instead of rabble rousing hot heads with their own agendas on both sides. I am affraid that seems to be a recurring theme through out history.
"Hard times make hard men and hard men make softer times. Soft times make soft men who make hard times.".
I’m an American historian who particularly enjoys English history, perhaps because it’s easy to understand the source material as an Anglophone. From time to time I get lost in trying to narrate the whole history of Britannia in a punctuated style. Britain seems to always be in the middle of some hugely epic and consequential debate, war, discovery, invention, or experiment. It’s really hard to say when an event should be ignored in order to focus on the most important British history. My hats off to whoever is being given the task of making the curriculum. It’s an impossible task.
Interesting. I personally find the Iberian (Spanish and Portuguese) history more interesting. I guess everybody has interests in their own ancestral past.
@@angelgjr1999, well, I don’t consider myself a British descendant. My paternal grandparents were from Poland and my maternal grandparents were from Sweden and they both emigrated around 1900. I’ve been trying to research Poland and Sweden more than Britain, but largely due to a lack of translations, it’s much harder to get Polish and Swedish history literature than to get British history in America.
@@AV57 Interesting. We Poland and Spanish are brothers who defended Europe for 1000 years from Arabic invasion. Greetings brother. I suggest you research your history it may be very interesting. Polish fought against Hitler and Stalin too.
The best description of that period of time, from the Empires perspective is...... 'America rebelled, India yelled Squirrel'.
The opposite for me I find American history fascinating though it’s true what he says it’s just a tiny part of the history of the UK. It’s seen more as cousins got a bit rowdy and left.
To be fair, we just skip some American History here in America too, but for other reasons. *cough* The Philippines War *cough*
what happened during that war I know it was for independence but that's all I know
The Philippine-American War,[11] also referred to as the Filipino-American War, the Philippine War, the Philippine Insurrection or the Tagalog Insurgency[12][13] (Filipino: Digmaang Pilipino-Amerikano; Spanish: Guerra filipino-estadounidense), was an armed conflict between the First Philippine Republic and the United States that lasted from February 4, 1899 to July 2, 1902.[1] While Filipino nationalists viewed the conflict as a continuation of the struggle for independence that began in 1896 with the Philippine Revolution, the U.S. government regarded it as an insurrection.[14] The conflict arose when the First Philippine Republic objected to the terms of the Treaty of Paris under which the United States took possession of the Philippines from Spain, ending the Spanish-American War.[15] - copied from Wikipedia
Learned it in college at least
@@kysnaros World War 1 had little to nothing to do with the US. The US was simply in a state where the majority of people were ready for the country to be a world power rather than focused on themselves as they had been for the majority of the past century. The reason we don't learn much about it is because we were only allies who went to help out... It has little if anything to do with American histories outside of it's outcomes.
@@cassiewebb1920 ok but what does ww1 have to do with any of this?
Britain loses most of a continent, slightly larger than Australia: "It's just a flesh wound!"
France: "You're a loony."
Then france proceeds to sell us the other half of the continent.
The american Colonies were quite small at the time.
@@wpjohn91 Well, the American colonies consisted of everything from the Appalachian Mountains over to the sea, so an area much larger than Britain already. And Britain didn't control all of Australia at that time, either.
@@theashenhunter8361 Hurrah for France! And Thomas Jefferson for coughing up the cash and having French buddies.
Canada exists.
My ex-mother-in-law is British, and described her education on the American Revolution as "Ungrateful colonists were'nt worth the effort to keep in line."
Knowing what all the acts(and how they affected people)did and how the colonists were treated it really sounds like abuse.
The greatest extent of the British colonies was in the 19th century. The earlier US13 did not really figure in the greater scheme economically. The 'Empire' was a later honorary title bestowed upon the ageing Victoria.
So they fought for 7 years and lost 20k+ soldiers over it?
"a handful of terrorist.." , oh dear, "Honey go grab the muskets and saddle the horses"
I was stationed in Great Britain during the late 80's. One day a Jamaican in my unit raised his coffee and stated that this was Jamaican Independence day and the British had left his home island some ten years earlier. I asked how well things had gone for his country since their break with England. He said, "Went straight to Hell, man. Jamaicans can't run anything." I laughed and raised my can of pop, joined in the toast.
Things were good in the late 80s in Jamaica, he should see Jamaica now. Nearly all the colonized countries in that area and most areas are struggling whether English, French or Spanish based. Only Canada is doing ok.
@@annmariebusu9924 because alot of the colonies were designed from the get go to be somewhat dependant on their home country to ensure loyalty.
Once they got independence they didnt anticipate all of the added costs.
Like a 16yr old getting a part time job, flipping off their parents only to find that while they can barely pay rent they cant afford any other bills
Why would you celebrate the alleged failing of an independent county?
You should be sad and for the best for others as you would want the best for ourselves not to be the imperial dominion of others!
@@fuckfannyfiddlefart I was toasting their independence.
@@hankw69 I'M Jamaican. Its true! EVERYTHING WENT TO SHIT AFTER THE 80s! Corruption and Nepotism ruined the economy.
As an American, I think the way Brittain teaches their history, seems to make perfect sense for the British.
Focus on the fine details your own history first, and the USA should do the same for ours.
yup
How does Americans get taught history?
@@simongrefstad7410 I dunno about anyone else, but growing up for me, it was always split into "world history" and "American history".
@@simongrefstad7410 When I was in 5th grade (year six) I was taught some basic history and information about my local state (Minnesota). In the 6th grade (year 7) we were taught about a couple of ancient civilizations: Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece, and Rome. In 7th grade (year 8) we learned world geography along with social studies. In freshman year (10th year) we had a class about demographics, major cultures, and religions. In sophomore year (11th year) we learned broad strokes world history. Neolithic period to 1490s for one half of the year, and up to the end of WW2 in the other half. In Junior year (12th year) we got taught American history which was more detailed. Late 1600s to 1918 for one half of the year. The other half of the year went up to the 1990s.
I went to fairly well off suburban public schools. American education varies wildly by state and local area. I graduated in 2020 btw.
@@veemie8148 yeah, it's gotten to the point to where I know way more about the world, then our own country. I'm a junior, and should be taking American history this year. If I don't, then this will be my 4th year in a row learning world history.
I am in my 80s and learned history mainly in a British grammar school (a "secondary" or age 11+ school roughly corresponding to junior high + high school in America) back in the 1950s. We had a curriculum based on wide stretches of time: year 1 was the ancient world (particularly Greece and Rome); 2 was the Middle Ages (to late 15th Century); 3 was the Tudors through the Stuarts; 4 was the Hanoverians and Victoria, roughly 1700 to 1901; 5 was European history 1815-1914. (After that wasn't old enough to be historic!) A big emphasis on wars, government,, technological advancement.
You can see that the American Revolution (which we called the War of American Independence) had to fight for lesson time during year 4 with such topics as important to an English/British child as: two Jacobite revolutions; the development of the United Kingdom; the development of a constitutional monarchy with power passing to Parliament; various long wars in Europe and elsewhere in the world, such as the Seven Years War,; the Industrial Revolution; the French Revolution, which led to the wars with the Revolutionary Government of France and then the Napoleonic Wars; a lot of scientific advances; the Crimean War and the Boer War (and various domestic turmoil, such as the Chartist movement, that never quite rose to the level of revolution or even revolt); exploration of the world and the acquisition of lands for a growing empire (Canada, India, parts of Africa, Hong Kong, several West Indies islands, etc.); And social topics such as the rise or urbanization, the fight for Catholic emancipation, the abolition of slavery, the expansion of education, and setting minimum ages for children working in factories and down the coal mines somehow had to be fitted in too! And we didn't have a daily history lesson; we worked on a seven-day calendar in order to fit in all the subjects (English, Latin, French, math, science, history, geography, art, music, religious instruction [Old Testament and New], gym, outdoor sports ... I think we got a history lesson three or four times in that seven-day span.
What I remember about what I learned about the American Revolution was that the British were mostly to blame for the outcome by not taking it seriously enough. (Well, it coincided with a period of war or almost war with France, Spain, etc.) The British didn't believe this little squabble with the uppity colonials would amount to anything much. One anecdote I remember--it came with a moral lesson, of course--was that at a particularly critical point, there was an important memorandum needing speedy attention sitting on the desk of a senior government official, I think to do with army movements or essential supplies. The bureaucrat went off for the weekend (probably a long weekend) without dealing with the matter, and the delay proved crucial. I have no idea whether this was historical fact, but it was sure impressed on us that you did your work before indulging in the luxury of leisure!
Given the length and complexity of the history of England and the U.K., plus fitting in "Western civ." and a good bit of at least Western European history, plus some of the history of the British Empire countries, I'm guessing that the American Revolution got about as much time as could be allocated. In roughly the same time period, the Napoleonic Wars were far more crucial to the survival of Britain as an independent country than was the American Revolution. The development of steam power and the growth of the mechanized textile industry and the railways, the coal and iron industries, the slow progress toward universal literacy, all had more effect on the country (not to mention the world) than the loss of some colonies--which were being in effect replaced by Australia and New Zealand and other colonies--that cost a lot of money and resources to protect and administer. The costs might be offset by raw material imports, such as tobacco and cotton, but it wasn't a simple matter of the home country just plundering the colonies. And I don't think that in the late 18th century the ideas of freedom/liberty and no taxation without representation resonated back in Britain, where the bulk of the population couldn't vote and the nobility, upper class, and upper middle class were pretty firmly in charge. Maybe a myopic view, but an understandable one.
The irony being that everything during and after WWI directly affects you, the world, and how things are playing in this world as we speak... History isn't history just because its "old". (Its not a jab at you.)
@@JohnDoe-wt9ek You are so right! It's part of my life, sure. My grandparents (maternal) were married in the summer of 1914, after the assassination of the Austrian Archduke by the Serbian revolutionaries, but before Britain got pulled into the war. My grandmother told me how she found herself standing quite alone on the lawn of her parents' back garden, where the reception was held, because everyone was busy talking about the coming war and ignoring the bride! My grandfather, who was very interested in history and was born in the 1880s, once told me that there were probably veterans of the Battle of Waterloo still alive when he was born, since drummer boys were enlisted sometimes in their early teens.. So three long lifetimes from the Battle of Waterloo to now. The novelist and poet Robert Graves (fought in WW I) "met" the poet Algernon Charles Swinburne when he (Graves) was being wheeled in his pram in a London park and Swinburne passed by and admired the baby, Swinburne as a child had met Dr. Samuel Johnson, and he in turn had been taken as a child to Queen Anne, to be touched by her in the hope it would cure his scrofula (known as the king's evil, or in Anne's case, the queen's evil, I suppose). On the other end of the chain, I attended an event in London in the early 1960s called "Songs of Love and War," at which Graves recited some of his poetry and sang "Hanging on the Old Barbed Wire," an anti-war song of the trenches in WW I. So four long or longish lives to take us back to the last of the Stuarts. That's more than three centuries. So history to me is practically yesterday, and certainly the events of my childhood seem like history. Time is very flexible.
My grandfather was born before the airplane, before automobiles became everyday possessions, before most advances in medicine. My grandmother's home was gaslit. My father was born before radio, and the Titanic. My mother was born during WW I, before women got the vote in England I was born before the polio vaccine, nuclear bombs, the computer. I worked with a woman only slightly older than I, who left school at the age of 14, then the legal school leaving age in England. An enormous number of changes in really a blip in time in the history of the human race!...
@@elainechubb971 Wonderfully put. I love history and the people who are touched by it.
Well the American Revolution doesn’t have to fight for time with the 7 Years’ War since The American Revolution was a consequence of it and French Revolution is linked to the American Revolution
"If Americans don't own kettles, how do they make tea?"
"They throw it in the ocean."
Always loved that one.
Something I learned recently about that, It was a bigger a deal than most would expect actually. Tea was money, and that was a lot of money they just threw in the ocean. In today's currency that shipment was worth at least 1.5 million dollars.
@@CompletelyNewguy Yeah many details are looked over. Like how the Americans dressed as “Indians” to put the blame on them. America didn’t want independence just because of taxes. America wanted independence to expand west of the Appalachian mountains. The UK had treaties with the natives so the crown didn’t allow for colonists to go into native Americans territory.
I love history. :)
As my (English) mother always said about iced tea: "these Americans have been drinking cold tea since they threw it in Boston Harbor, so of course you can't expect them to know how to make a _proper_ cup of it."
@@angelgjr1999 There would have been westward expansion regardless, the question being how fast. It's not like Canada west of Lake Huron is populated and governed by natives today. In 1670 former indentured servants staged a rebellion in Virginia. At the time settlement was only allowed in coastal lowlands. Then the French and Indian War/Seven Year war moved the frontier west. I think the settlement of the Ohio Valley was inevitable even if the War of Independence was lost, but it might have been delayed a decade or two.
Wonder what would have happened if in the early 1770s the colonies were offered seats in Parliament.
@@piperar2014
I agree with both of you. The Anglo-American colonists had been squeezed between the coastal areas and the Appalachian Mountains to the west. Frontiersmen had scouted into Ohio and Kentucky already... There was an expanding population that needed to... Well... Expand!
"it's only covered briefly and them we go on to cover more important topics like *ourselves* "
to be fair that's every country, including here in America. hence why most history classes are named "US History" here. of course we also have world history but that is more a broad overview of human history.
@@degenerate7505 and US History is split into 2 years in most school systems (which got me since in the high school I went to before transferring)
@@aiodensghost8645 yeah, you usually learn early American history all the way up to about the end of slavery (maybe a little after) around 7th grade and then it picks up right where you left off all the way to modern day around 11th grade
We Americans do the same with anything dealing with this non-important countries in europe
It's not even covered at all lol. I only vaguely heard of it on the internet after a while.
Always got confused when Americans made jokes about 'boston tea party' after hearing my accent and I had to google it lol.
“We had colonies over there, now we don’t. Moving on...”
More like: “We had colonies over there, now we just have Canada. Moving on...”
@@nomdeplume5446 canada is a better country, they aren't always shooting each other and rioting. Sorry but thats how we view America, violence, racism and out of control consumerism.
@@GreatSageSunWukong never have I been so offended by somthing I 100% agree with.
@@GreatSageSunWukong As a US citizen, you are 100% correct but where I grew up, we saw Canadians as snooty individuals happy to benefit from US trade and protection. Since moving to FL, the canadians I have interacted with reinforced that belief. Some of the rudest people I have ever heard were snow birds from Ontario.
@@TheJMBon all my relatives are lovely, mostly from Toronto and the north west territories, maybe its just you and your upbringing? I tell you what most British people can't tell the difference between Canadian and American accent but you can certainly tell on attitude, Canadians are more like us, perhaps its all down to perception but you lot seem arrogant and in your face to us.
Did you know smiling is seen as disingenuous in Russia, thats why they never do it, makes you look like your upto something, different strokes for different folks
I’m not surprised that it’s not a major focus in Britain. You’ve got thousands of years of history to cover.
P.S. thanks Britain for the Magna Carta
English history isn't particularly a major focus either, at least when I was at school. We studied European history as a whole, with history of other cultures from further away occasionally looked at.
American history isn't really mentioned at all because it's not particularly interesting or relevant aside from being on the long list of countries that used to be under the British Empire.
France Spain and Poland: "I DON'T CARE IF I WIN! I JUST WANT ENGLAND TO LOSE!"
Switzerland: …mmm yes… “war”..
@@sillygoosetaur they dont even know what war is lol
@@SAD1034 On the contrary, Switzerland managed to come out on top of all recent major conflicts by maintaining neutrality. While the surrounding nations warred, Switzerland grew rich and remained unscarred. Switzerland is aware of war, and so avoids it.
True loool they ducked themselves so hard for trying to ruin our fun lol
@@astro6009 I mean when you rig your own country to explode to deny an enemy's advance, and you don't have the resources to help a war machine, yeah you're kinda left alone
And given your only resource is the world banks, which if you taken them, is basically declaring war on the world at once
When I was in high school in England 15+ years ago we had a single lesson on the revolution and it focused on "Taxation without representation"; how it started and how both sides responded, if anything it gave me a huge respect for Thomas Paine.
Here in the US, Thomas Paine plays a key role as a founding father and then after the revolutionary war he simply fizzles out of our history... One must learn as to why on your own.
Thomas Paine "I pity the fool".
I left England at 16 in 1966 and that's the way I remember being taught about the revolution. Then I came out to the States and was taught a totally different perspective. How greedy and oppressive the English were.
@@brendacampbell2340 history is a study of context. That being said the colonies were seen as an investment...and not just north American ones.
Honestly I don’t even remember learning about it, our teacher just went, “Yeah, they didn’t like how much we taxed them so they left.”
Edit: We do learn about the American revolution, but only in higher education. This was my eighth grade (?) teacher brushing it off. She’s a highly educated woman with great and in-depth knowledge of the history of the United States, we were just busy learning about the slave trade which, in my opinion at least, is far more relevant to the modern day and far more worthy of being taught to our youth.
Either you or your teacher was stupid.
@@firstlast189 we have more than 300 years of history so it’s literally such a small moment for us
@@Fifa101Guy I would say a moment you people would like to forget.
@@firstlast189 you are whats wrong with Americans 🥰
@@wuhoho4687 Lol. Of course you would say that.
I am American, but, it's easy to understand that gaining your independence the one and only time you did so in history is monumentally more notable than relinquishing one of a numerous Nations relinquished.
I believe we are taught the history of the Revolution fairly accurately, because we by no means see achieving our independence as an event where we just beat down and defeated the British military. Americans are fully aware that we had a lot of help from France and more importantly, we know that the British could have defeated the Colonies if they would have really wanted to put everything they had into it.
There is an old saying, "The sun never sets in Great Britain", this is because Great Britain has controlled virtually the entire planet at different times throughout history. In addition, I almost see the Revolutionary War more as a Civil War than a Revolutionary War, because we were virtually all British fighting one another, this is why we are still like brothers.
Well said
The US founding is unfortunately very mythologized, to the point that "the Constitution" is venerated as an almost holy artefact that is of course perfect and untouchable (apart from all those dozens of times it was amended). A great deal of the problems America faces is because it is saddled with fairy tales about the perfection of its founding and the opinions of its slave-owning founders.
"The sun never sets in Great Britain" is not an old saying, or a new saying, or any saying at all.
@@MrQuakeroat Yeah the saying is "the sun never sets on the british empire" but they're a yank who repects the true nature of the american revolution so cut them some slack
@@KingFancyson Haha, yes, OK you're right. But I'm a pedant; don't I get any slack?
Daven: OK, time to research how the British teach the American Revolution...
Simon: No need. I have this, actually.
The first time Simon actually knew something and wasn't reading a script thinking " I have no idea what they are talking about."
Ooh somebody better get Simon some burn cream...oh never mind, he's used to the heat. He's the Boi With the Blaze(TM)!
Unite Ireland
I think we've found Daven's personal account.
I asked a Brit if they celebrated 4th July in England. He said Yes, but the Brits call it Thanksgiving Day.
In an English primary school, we studied:
The Stone Age to Iron Age
The Romans
Ancient Greece
Anglo Saxons
Vikings
The Shang Dynasty of China
World War 1 and World War 2
In an English secondary school we studied:
The Normans
The Tudors
The Stuarts
The Renaissance
The Victorians
Industrial Revolution
Mughal India
British Empire in-depth studies
World War 1 and World War 2
20th Century America
We also studied a lot of local history. There's so much history to teach we can't teach everything.
Why the shang dinasty?
@@changito4625 Ikr
For gcses learnt about the american west. That was a great topic.
Fr isn’t Britain one of the oldest countries
We also learn the English civil war
Someone said that the American War of Independence was: "A victory of British soldiers under a British general against German soldiers under a German king."
I've read something relating to this before... but can you elaborate?
Who is the 'someone'? They were clearly an idiot without any literary credence. If it was you, then my point still stands.
@@CarsGettingHurt Unfortunately I can't find who said this and the original quote was probably "English soldiers under an English general." It refers to the fact that most " American patriots" thought of themselves, to begin with, as Englishmen (or Britons) whose "God-given English rights" were being trampled on by a tyrannical monarch (shades of the English Civil War.) Such things as Paul Revere shouting "The British are coming" would have made no sense to people who thought of themselves as British (the poem was written by Longfellow over 75 years after the event.) George Washington certainly thought of himself as, and referred to himself as, an Englishman. Further, much of the lead up to the war was the assertion of rights won by the English Civil War, the Glorious Revolution (1688) and Bill of Rights, as well as older rights such as those claimed by Magna Carta (1215), still a central document in both American and British law.
On the other hand, King George III was still considered a German even though he was born in England and spoke English as his native tongue (unlike George I and II.) There were fears that he was trying to impose tyrannical rule as practiced in the German states. This, of course, was made worse by the use of many thousands of German mercenaries in the American Colonies.
You can see that even though the quote is humorous there is truth in it.
@@Zach-ku6eu Unfortunately I can't find who said this and the original quote was probably "English soldiers under an English general." It refers to the fact that most " American patriots" thought of themselves, to begin with, as Englishmen (or Britons) whose "God given English rights" were being trampled on by a tyrannical monarch (shades of the English Civil War.) Such things as Paul Revere shouting "The British are coming" would have made no sense to people who thought of themselves as British (the poem was written by Longfellow over 75 years after the event.) George Washington certainly thought of himself as, and referred to himself as, an Englishman. Further, much of the lead up to the war was the assertion of rights won by the English Civil War, the Glorious Revolution (1688) and Bill of Rights, as well as older rights such as those claimed by Magna Carta (1215), still a central document in both American and British law.
On the other hand King George III was still considered a German even thought he was born in England and spoke English as his native tongue (unlike George I and II.) There were fears that he was trying to impose tyrannical rule as practised in the German states. This, of course, was made worse by the use of many thousands of German mercenaries in the American Colonies.
You can see that even thought the quote is humorous there is truth in it.
American independence is about British people who came to America and overthrown the British monarch- because of taxes. Then they became our forefathers and formed the U.S.
This has been both a great video overall and an informative one. It is interesting to see what other nations teach historically about my home country. It does make sense for a country as old as the UK that something minor as a revolution and separation would be a footnote.
So basically Britain is the M. Bison to our Chun-Li?
_The day you left us was the Greatest Day of your little lives. For us, it was Tuesday._
Actually, it was a Thursday
:P
@@Tarotb My apologies :-D
So chun-li, what about chum Lee? Wont pawn stars reign Supreme?
You are probably not far off, America had like one revolution and civil war, we've been at that kind of thing for thousands of years so just having a revolution or civil war doesn't make you special unless they particularly rocked the boat in ways still felt today worldwide and I don't think anyone thinks thats happened, its not like America vastly changed like when Russia turned communist, same shit different government all the rules etc still based on what went before all very European in the way things are done, apple didn't move far from the tree.
I have been basically telling my american freinds this for years lol
Simon: It's just a footnote, and they quickly move onto more interesting British history
British History Teachers: Please memorize the names of every single monarch in British history
There the same number of monarchs since 1066 as there have been presidents since 1789, so asking that the list be memorized isn't that big a deal.
With all the repeats it shouldn't be that bad. Memorizing the names of the US presidents(which granted also had a few repeats) would be at least a comparable challenge.
Granted, we have weirdos who take pride in memorizing every president we've had as if it means something beyond increased chances of winning a game of trivial pursuit.
@@garethbaus5471 There are only 10 Regnal names in English history. The names are easy. Now their regnal dates and some key events they presided over, were responsible for or influenced?....
Maybe Warren Harding, Chester Arthur, and Rutherford Hayes are looking down on the weirdos and smiling that *somebody* remembers their names.
"England is just the part of the island that... is England." Best sentence in the video.
It’s like the Island of Hawaii (also called The Big Island) is part of Hawaii.
"The UK sees American independence as a lucky escape" - Al Murray, a man with a big brain, I recommend you watch his comedy!
"seperated by a common language, and a gaint fucking ocean thank christ"
Only reason we lost is because we were fighting fellow brits 😅
@@dylanmurphy9389 True true, 🧠
UK became an american puppetstate may be he is mad
America: “Freedom! We shall teach our kids and grandkids all about this great day of freedom!”
Britain: “Oh, look. Another colony is gone. Better write this off on our taxes as a loss”.
It was a tax gain, at least in the short term. Britain stopped having to pay to defend the US but trade was almost unaffected.
And yet the British is still crying about it and act like they don’t care. When they’re actually still pissed off about it 😂😂😂👏🏻
@@randomeastasian347 Eh I doubt anyone in UK, other then some older people, really care about the American's revolt. Most people I've seen who have talked about America seem to actually respect us and most people here respect the UK now.
@@razier5299 older people probably respect the Us more than any other considering they could’ve fought along side them in WW2, or were at least alive for most of the Cold War. Most British people who are salty about it are probably young teenagers who don’t know how the world works yet
@@smirkitrovfrownitrov5808 Literally no one in the UK cares we lost the American colony. We dont mope about the streets wo dering what could have been. The older generation's respect for the yanks though is true. The USA did save Europe's arse twice from the Germans though the second time around it was in their interest to join in come the finish regardless as Hitler would have set his sights on America once he had nuclear technology.
As an Australian: So it was that the UK needed a new place to send their convicts and other undesirables. Yey for us! 😏
Yup
@GazB do ya mean the originals or the ones that came and killed them all then claimed that title? Just for clarification
Bad for the letter "r" though. You guys steal them from other words and then add them where they don't belong
I don’t think undesirables were sent to America but America was seen as be8ng nothing but undesirables
@@MustacheDLuffy actually a lot of criminals were sent to North America and even pirates settled the areas to. Though most called themselves privateers.
When I was in school there was passing mention made to it, but it wasn't really covered. I think the reason it wasn't covered is the same reason we didn't learn about the anglo-zanzibar war, it wasn't a defining moment for the UK. To the US this war was the birth of their nation as we know it. To the UK it was just another war to add to the pile of other wars with no real lasting impact on the UK in comparison to, say the Napoleonic wars or the English civil war etc.
I did do some reading about it outside of education though so I know a bit about it.
That is an outstanding point.
Makes sense. Here in America the Napoleanic wars are just mentioned in passing, mostly in relation to the Louisiana Purchase, which was America buying up French territory on the American continent. Napoleon needed money and was too busy in Europe to care about America. America wanted the room to expand and for France to not have a foothold on our side of the pond in case Napoleon won and decided that we were next.
Here in Canada it defined our policy a bit (basically as don’t fall under the American boot) and it’s taught quite neutrally where the main causes aren’t the want for freedom, but more acknowledged as them unwilling to pay the taxes to cover the war debt Britain gained by fighting the 7 years war to protect their colonies. Also another fact that contributed heavily was that they were prohibited from further westward expansion because of treaties signed with the natives and the American colonists didn’t care about the treaties and wanted more land
Most countries don’t cover wars that they lost in so that’s the main reason.
Long story short y’all messed with us we didn’t like it so we revolted which you didn’t like and we didn’t like that you didn’t like our revolt so we fought and you didn’t like that so you fought which we didn’t like so we got France to fight with us and the tide changed at a slower pace then the molasses travel speed.
I am English and can confirm your assessment is 100% correct. The American Revolution was barely mentioned. Focus was on the areas you stated, plus men and women obtaining the vote.
Americans in the late 1700s: hey England can we have less taxes and freedom?
England: yeah, from our cold dead hands
Americans: *your terms are acceptable*
Going to guess you are American. In reality, the proximate cause* was expecting the colonies to pay the bill they incurred in triggering the French and Indian war. Rather than pay, the colonies rebelled.
*There are other causes as well. For instance, the colonists were angry that the crown wouldn't let them steal more native land.
@@ltlbuddha the funny thing is that the colonists weren’t even being taxed as much as Britain was taxing it’s own citizens. In fact, America almost failed because they didn’t really want to be taxed AT ALL. They created the articles of confederation which had a weak central government, and anytime said government asked if the states could pitch in to help fund the WAR FOR LITERAL INDEPENDENCE, the states collectively said, “nah we’re okay.” The government had to print so much money as a result, to the point where George Washington resorted to looting his own lands in order to feed his army lol.
@@ltlbuddha The main cause wasn't necessarily taxes. It was taxation _without representation_ . No seats in Parliament, and thus no voice, ultimately resulted in rebellion. In fact, many people who would go on to be popular founding fathers of the US really wanted reconciliation with GB, and a seat at the table as British subjects.
BTW, up to the actual Declaration of Independence, "wars triggered" and "stolen land" was started, and supported, by GB as there was no US.
EDIT: a comma
@UCYXYLGatV3aPR7ZFo4vb0wg Being subjects to, but not full citizens of, a government so distant only makes it seem more so. It was indeed objective; there were no seats in parliament set aside for colonists. Colonists were dictated to, and expected to follow, regulations and taxes they could take no direct part in. The Amendments listed in the Bill of Rights highlight this, as these were safeguards against what GB did, so they wouldn't happen again.
If you disagree, then simply think about _why_ seats weren't granted to colonists to shut up their very accurate and successful "marketing slogan".
@@georgea5991 but they were represented. The colonial representative to the crown was *gasp* Benjamin Franklin. If I remember correctly he had an audience with the king who wanted to know the state of the colonies as well as any grievances and Franklin said everything was cool in the colonies. He then returned to America and promptly proceeded to scheme against the crown. Which is why the revolution caught the crown off guard, they had just asked the representative and he said had said that everything was fine.
During my A-Levels, we were taught a little on how the American War of Independence affected political thinking in England at the time. Stuff like how many Whigs supported the revolution, and the work of John Locke and how the revolution fits into all our other wars at the time. Stuff like that. The French Revolution was taught in greater depth, and I did a whole topic on the Russian Revolution.
I'm going onto to my A-levels now and they're only teaching the Russian revolution from what I've read. Is it interesting or boring?
@@pecadodeorgullo5963 I found it pretty interesting, but with all coursework I had to do I grew pretty sick of it by the end of year 13. Still, if you like history you'll be fine mate.
@@CessBee123 thanks for the information mate.
@@pecadodeorgullo5963 no problem
What inspired the French Revolution I wonder? 🤔
It’s like when a disgruntled ex says the break up was their idea.
Spot on ole chap
@@tbishop4961 please never talk like that in the real world.. for your own safety.
@@claymore7315 blimey mate bugger me whose pissed in your cornflakes
It's like when your adolescent kid slams doors and screams "I hate you, I hate you" at their mum and dad. One day when they grow up they will realise how stupid they looked.
We gave them a bloody country, the ungrateful bastards.
@@claymore7315 in the real world dont get so easily triggered
I think the British view American independence the way parents privately admire their kids when they decide they've had enough of mum and dad's house rules and move out to build a future on their own terms.
But really British and Americans aren’t father, son but cousins. America was founded and established before great Britain was formed so technically we would be the older brothers
It wasn't even taught at my school lol. I only found out about it through assassin's creed 3.
Me too buddy, me too.
I just started playing assassin’s creed three and Jesus, parrying is broken
Mate, this is basically almost identical to me.
I'd heard of it vaguely before playing AC3, but that game was my main intro to it.
I didn’t learn any UK history from UK schools, I only learned about Russia and China
@@blake4249 yeah
The story is really poetic and good to me but the mechanics ruin a lot of gameplay and it’s just very frustrating to want to finish ( I eventually finished thanks to my sisters and RUclips lmao)
To be fair, we learned some British history, but never really covered British history the way you guys were taught. I took it upon myself in later years to learn your history, and there's lots of it! Fascinating stuff, never gets boring, glad we're friends 😁🇺🇸🇬🇧
“Many of the other Irish counties decided to leave”
that’s one way of putting it.
Yes, it's Irish history glossed over in a video about how US history is glossed over.
edit: I knew a retired Irish carpenter whose father was tied to a tree and beaten within an inch of his life. It was apparently an English practice to employ violent convicts as police in colonies.
"One way"? That's like the most british way of putting it.
"Oh dear it seems that irish wish to leave."
"Oh bother, we can't have that, we'll have to redesign the flag."
That said I do like these little glimpses into other cultures. I love stuff like this. Seeing how to countries that were at one point enemies and how they get along and celebrate different aspects. Like how here in america Benedict Arnold is a reviled traitor and enemy to Washington while across the pond he's seen as a hero, a patriot and loyalist to the crown yet neither depiction is _entirely_ inaccurate depending on where you look from.
Or like how in canada they teach in school about the war of 1812 where america tried to annex canada and take their land and over here we just flat out ignore it and when people bring it up go "Huh? What do you mean? Nah nothing happened. We're americans, we've never lost a war. We certainly wouldn't lose to canada of all people hahahaha. Nope. that didn't happen."
Irish youtube gal said
Ireland has 5mil Irish
but America has 30mil Irish
The British Understatement at its finest 😂
@@glenngriffon8032 hay if we decide it wasn't a war it wasn't a war. 1812 was just a scuffle over some maple syrup and some native american tribes happens to get in the way. So of course we had to kill those trailers they wouldn't go to there reservation.
I'm British but studied at university in the US for a year. I once got asked by an American in an American history class "how does it feel that we beat you?". I replied with "how does it feel to be saved by the French?".
Especially the prussian!
Also, that sounds weird to me considering that he didn't participate in the war
Exactly and the Spanish helped them with supplies.
Typical british. Cant handle a loss so you have to play revisionist historian.
The French didn't help us in the Revolution until we had already beat you by ourselves a few times. The French didn't want to help us if we couldn't prove we had potential first. Also, the US returned the favor in WW2 and helped liberate their country from German control. The debt is paid
Weird, because in the 1940's, without the United States, ya'll woulda been eating schnitzel, drinking warm beer, and speaking German.....
“Ireland decided to join up” I’m not Irish, but I suspect some Irish people might query your wording there.
Yeah, it was definitely was more a case of “England decided that Ireland would join”.
I mean it’s probably *technically* true, in that the English who had already invaded Ireland and subjugated it decided to join their land up, regardless of what the native populace living on said land wanted...
"Yes, we would *love* to be part of the United Kingdom. Please don't shoot."
Yeah, he seemed a little light on Elizabeth I there... 🙄
@@Tustin2121 Sort of reminds me of what happened in Hawaii tbh
As an American I'm proud to say our country was founded on tax evasive and gun ownership along with a healthy disdain for stamps and tea!
Funny how history repeats its self, no?
And our postal system is bankrupt. Texas greated Biden with guns, and we're trillions of dollars in debt.
@@chrisb.7787 Just as the Founding Fathers intended!
It was a 2% tax too 😂
@@adamlynch9153 EXACTLY....What were they trying to build a Space Shuttle and a moonbase or something? Look... if I'm giving up my hard earned cash I want some representation! I bet if they had put some tasteful nude drawings on those stamps they would have sold themselves.
“Americans may be surprised to know that the UK doesn’t hold any grudge for leaving the great British empire, MAY IT REIGN FOREVER!” I died 😂
The UK probably doesn't hold a grudge because they remember who saved their bacon in WWI and WWII (unlike the French! :-p)
@@RobertMarshall yeah, but the French are our OLDEST ally, as well as spain and the Netherlands, though we did fight Spain in the 1800s but lets forget about that
Even Scotland is trying to leave it.
@@RobertMarshall kicking your arse in 1812 helped soothe the wounds.
@@theubiquitouspotato Acrually, nos scholars, European and American consider the War of 1812 a draw.
Sure, you may have burnt the capital. But, you damn near lost Canada, not to mention that you did loose New Orleans..
We kicked British ass in the Revolution! We weren’t terrorists! We wanted independence and we love Britain now!
Nah
A story as often told by American President Abraham Lincoln:
Ethan Allen returned to England after the war, and the British made fun of him. One day they put a picture of George Washington in an outhouse where Allen would be sure to see it. He used the outhouse but said nothing about the picture. Then the British asked him about it and Allen said it was a very appropriate place for an Englishman to hang the picture because “nothing will make an Englishman shit so quick as the sight of General Washington.”
Lol!
Only when they are out of ammo, there's a reason we never let that meat grinder be a general. ;)
Good ole Honest Abe!😂
oh yeah that's in the Lincoln movie
Awesome. Both funny and makes a point.
Short answer - We don't
Long answer - For you it was the the great war of liberty, for us it was Tuesday.
Because you've managed to lose damn near all of your "great empire" so this is just one in a long list of failures?
I love how it was just a normalish Tuesday for the English
@@winkletsdad Every empire in human history has fallen friend. it's just how the annals of humanity goes.
@@winkletsdad Just because the Empire is gone, doesn't mean the influence has. You still have Christianity? That was a Roman invention (Emporer Constantine to be exact). You have Democracy? Greek. Just 2 examples still in use thousands of years after the civilisations' demise.
I'll leave you to work out the British influence for your self.
For us it was chewsday
As a Brit, I have learned more about the American Revolution from Hamilton than I have in school.
As an American so have I.
Kind of like learning British history from Blackadder.
Did you know that a guy from us landed on british soil in the american rev war?
Yeah it’s an interesting topic neither sides we’re all right or all wrong
I learned more about British history from Doctor Who than I did in school
A piece I want to share is about 10 years ago when I was in middle school, we studied about WW2 about 10 minutes as it's only 2 pages in our history textbook.
Surely not? What grade or year and country was it.
What?i had to do a whole powerpoint thats like 50 pages and is translated to my countrys secondary language
This makes perfect sense. You have thousands of years of history. We don't have that much history
The UK was founded in 1801. The USA was founded in 1776. Unless you're talking about previous nations in our respective lands. We had the Saxons and Celts and Picts and Beaker People. You had the Native Americans.
@@neuralwarp what about England specifically? when was that founded?
And yet we have a whole history class set aside for it.
To be fair it’s also not a massive war for them. It was a country across an ocean that was relatively separate at that point that was trying to (and to some extent already had been) rule itself and therefor at the point of the revolution there wasn’t a huge change for England. It’s not like they had a major drop in standard of living, like the Americans had a very large increase in self rule. Essentially, it really isn’t as important for them because it was a long time coming and they didn’t really lose a ton.
@@TheMogul23 You seem to know a lot about what they teach in America despite probably never setting foot here. I remember having Native American studies as an entire subject in grade school.
But yes I'm sure you Brits learn soooo much important stuff about your empire. Like the Bengal famine perhaps? Or the founding of the Atlantic slave trade maybe? You guys learn anything about that? You know you also colonized America 200 years before the USA was founded. I don't think the Native Americans were treated as first class citizens by the British... Do you guys learn about the Native Americans? By your logic you certainly should know a lot about them, and your conquering of their lands, and genocide of their people. Hmm?
You seem to forget that we were just you guys at one point. Our history is just English history pre-Jamestown. Knocking America's lack of history because we've only been around for a couple hundred years isn't the sick burn you brits think it is.
"We don't teach about the American Revolution because from our point of view it was basically just another tax write off."
I’m still salty about 1812. I call rematch.
They burn our white house we burn their country. YES REMATCH!
@@supercomputer0448
We need to wait for a year that ends as XX12 so we have 91 years to go
The only war that Canada fought against the US and won...
You guys wanna get together and go over there? We can start some shit and paint our faces red, white and blue, and walk around screaming "1812! 1812!" And start fights, and burn stuff.
@@babayagaslobbedaknobba
They went for the White House, we go for the Queen herself
This video could have been 30 seconds long
"American independence is not a major deal for Brits, because it didn't matter to them very much.
The UK isn't hiding that history, it just isn't very important."
Ireland didn’t “decide” to join the Union. The Anglo-Norman invasion led to a British invasion, which saw us conquered in 1198, which lead to an almost 800 year occupation of British Military and Government.
Fun fact: In Irish, the words we now use as King and Queen used to be interchangable between men and women. i.e. whomever had power was a “King”, and whomever was their romantic partner was their “Queen”. They used to mean “Ruler” and “Consort”
Not exactly, yes the Norman conquest of Ireland in 1169 from England & Wales lead to regional as political changes in Ireland but it was nothing like the 1066 invasion of Norman’s into England & Wales. The 1st reference of Ireland being part of England & Wales was when Henry VIII in 1541, during the Tudor conquest of Ireland between 1534-1603. This lead to many conflicts between the Norman Irish & Gaelic Irish with the English & Welsh crown and government in Ireland the 11 year war. And yes Cromwell used the division of Protestant and Catholic’s in the region to justify sending the “new model army” to protect the Protestants from the “rebellious” Catholics (who had supported King Charles in the civil war) Cromwell recognised that without this conflict the “new model army” would be disbanded and he would loses his power base. As a footnote the real actions taken by Oliver Cromwell where heinous, sacking more parliaments than Charles 1st did, even using his soldiers to enforce his will upon them physically in parliament, oh how ironic the man who fought against the tyranny of the monarchy would behave even worse, the English & Welsh knew this and upon his death was treated just like William the conquer was a “TFFT the twat is dead” but the damage between the Catholic and Protestants in Ireland had become cemented (my grandparents on my fathers side where a mix of Grandfather Protestant, Grandmother Catholic both from Limerick and even this was considered taboo for a very long time) the aftermath of the Republican United Irishman rebellion in 1798 (which included French soldiers sent from France to fight) by 1801 the Irish Parliament was abolished and power centralised to the U.K. government of the time. It is worth mentioning the French involvements within Ireland over a prolonged period.
I find Irish history to be a fascinating as well as the relationship between GB and Ireland it is a subject that, I feel, should be covered more in the U.K. education system. So intertwined is the history of the 2 islands with such significants and consequences on the international history table whilst simultaneously adding weight to prospectives of heated debates (internationally) to this day. My concern is that it is not so widely know or understood it can be manipulated for nefarious reasons.
síocháin agus rath 👍
@@WreckItRolfe "Anglo-Norman"
Just Norman, Angles had very little say in the matter
I think he's referring to the Irish parliament vote in 1800. The Irish vote was very close, but Ireland did vote to join the union.
:)
The Norman's weren't Britain so quit fabricating your anti-British sentiment with disingenuous garble about how you have been GB's whipping boy since early medieval history. You want reasons to bitch? Keep it to the period the UK actually existed in.
Assassins creed 3 taught me more about the American revolution than school did. We Brits spend too much time arguing with Europe and laughing at France to care much about how the US declared independence.
US: "we declare independence."
UK: "if you say so."
US: "we are willing to die for it."
UK: "OK, good to know."
US: "And we're receiving help from the French."
UK: "Those slimy bastards!"
@@cannedsquasher5923 stay in school please. That was quite possibly the dumbest comment I’ve seen today.
If anything, I did learn that there were greys to this whole thing from Assassin’s Creed III. Apart from one egregious historical inaccuracy that was the low point of the game’s story, for the most part, the game did a great job of representing the greys and conflicts of the American Revolution.
When the Revolution succeeded, it wasn’t necessarily the greatest thing for the Native Americans. They actually would end up being forced off their land.
Connor thought that the colonists and the Natives could coexist and that getting independence from the crown would benefit both parties. Unfortunately, he was wrong, and he had to learn that the hard way.
USA has the powers of freedom, haha noob
I use to laugh at the French. Then I found out my wife's aunt was 92 percent French. First, the shock of finding out your kids are half French. More troubling, is how can your ancestory be 92 percent French when your family lived in this country for two hundred years! I decided i don't want to know. Had to break it to my son he was half Frenchman. "You remember all the jokes we told about the French? Well, sorry buddy".
As a colonial rebel I've always wanted to know this!! I find that being a footnote is fair. It is more American history than British as there were probably other things going on at the same time that were more important.
"Look we British have lost a lot of colonies, we can't be arsed to teach our kids about every single one."
We covered this briefly but i did A level history (17 and 18 year old.) I asked my teacher why when we were the biggest empire why we didnt take the usa back. Was told we had allot on our plates at the time and it wasnt worth it. Any who, have a good one mate.
William, didn't you try to take it back in 1812?
I'm sorry, I'm stuck on "as a colonial rebel". Huh?
What you also have to remember is that if US citizens, on say Hawaii, did what Washington and other founding fathers did today they would instantly be labelled traitors to the US. This is in effect the case Washington and many others were British citizens and Washington’s siblings were educated in England and there was some discussion of him joining the British navy before he turned instead to surveying.
Although present days Americans think the revolution is a big event, at the time it was a sideshow for the British who were concentrated on conflicts with the French and Spanish, as always, and the Dutch, and who decided to prioritise India (seen as more important at the time) and therefore never sent the best troops or commanders to the colonies. It is probably quite ironic that had we not had so many other conflicts on at the time there would have been less need to raise taxes and he colonies may never have revolted.
The circumstances surrounding the rebellion are so weird, the Americans didn’t like getting taxed by the monarchy, however the British went bankrupt defending the colonies from the French. And now Full Circle hundreds of years later the taxes are 1,000% worse than what they were
I can't even think of a single time the American Revolution was brought up, its not relevant to us.
In Primary School I was taught about the Romans and we touched on the Holocaust when we were old enough
In High School I was taught about the Bubonic Plague, the founding of my home city, The Atlantic Slave Trade, World War One and Hitlers rise to power.
If we had to learn about every war for independance from the British Empire we'd be taking history classes well into our 30's lol
True true. England has fallen far and swandered nearly every foreign asset in the past half millennium through political and military mismanagement.
@@Zach-ku6eu imperialism is dead, and it needs to stay dead.
Hey, exactly the same for me! Although we did also cover Jim Crow laws and the 30s economic crash. Its normally in regards with books we study like Mice and Men or in history
@@Zach-ku6eu Which was for the better! Imperialism is shite and the UK is better off
I had the same experience
“Ireland decided to join” “Ireland decided to leave” because that’s accurate
That's an entire series of videos he can make. But it would take a lot of explaining for it to fit into a bonus fact section.
A British friend of mine, whenever he talks about his US son in law, never forgets to weave in: "He´s from the colonies".
Ironically, The U.K. has long been a client state of it's former American colonies.
@@Baron-Ortega you don´t say!
They say that to any one from US, Can, Aus, NZ, India etc. to wind them up / banter / trash talk.
This is true in my experience. We learned a lot about the French and Russian Revolutions when studying history at school and college, but almost nothing about the American Revolution, except briefly as an example which had inspired the French. As an undergraduate student doing a history module on revolutions, the American Revolution was only mentioned in passing.
So TL;DR: the whole Europe is so bloodsoaked that there are far more terrible, interesting but as well uplifting and inspirtional things that happend here....
The funny thing is that the USA actually has a special place in British history for only one reason, we generally know when it is celebrated unlike the other sixty or so independence celebrations.
Only because of the movie
Yeah the guy in the video is downplaying it. We’re each others closest allies for Christ sake. I guarantee they don’t take about it in school because they’re either jealous if what the US has become or maybe because they don’t want to spark anger for the US in the youth.
I learnt about it in school, not in great depth, but enough to know the basics and I later did some reading on my own. The US talk about it enough (because it's important to you) that we learn stuff culturally from Hollywood too.
I'm actually curious why you think it would anger the youth? We know that the British Empire was great at one time, and no longer is. Which IMO is a good thing. We were taught about how we exploited lands, like other European nations did. Why on earth would any sensible person be upset about independence and liberty from the Crown? Historically, monarchys have rarely been good.
@@adamlynch9153 why are you so desperate for people to love your country. We don't care about your history because it isn't that important to ours. At least when you compare it to other things we learn about like the vikings raids and the roman empire
@@leagueofdead569 I agree they should make British history one page in world history instead of a whole unit. Don’t know why we go so deep into it.
"Ireland decided to join up in..."
Yup, that sure seems like the way an Englishman would describe it...
the english 🤢🤮
Ah I cringed when he said it haha
And NI is "literally the red headed step child".
"in 1922 many of the southern counties decided to remove themselves from the union" really more like one dude didn't get a reply fast enough and decided to leave and then proceeded to get shot in a valley of flowers
I often joke that I live in Northern Ireland or the six occupied counties of Ireland, just depends who your talking to.
As an italian im surprised it isnt even a LITTLE bit more important. Sure Britain has an infinite number of countries from whom it colonised and would gain independence, but America is THE premier power of the globe and shaped an entire century. That's gotta be talked about as being somewhat more notable than say Jamaica. I'd think Indian and American independence would specifically be covered somewhat in British schools.
Never taught it.
We did tend to focus on European history
It’s is European history
@@JimmyJames10-k7v it's American history, we (the British) learn more about the battle of Hastings in 1066 then anything
@R T ...wtf lol
@R T Oof, if that sentence is representative of your language skills, it looks like those kids are getting a much better education than you ever did.
@@louisamoon5175 We didn't cover Africa and China at all. We feather-touched India in primary school, but that was more as a part of Humanities (we didn't have history or geography in primary, humanities covered both) so it was less about history and more about culture
As an American I didn't even remotely think that the Brits would still angrily look back on the American revolution.
I've never even imagined that England gave it thought. 😂
It makes sense that they have to at least give some sort of mention of it. A footnote maybe.
maybe no you but this vid is addressing the surprising number of people who do
Yeah I was never under this impression either. I mean outside of France Britain is one of our oldest allies so the idea made no sense to me. Heck I’ve seen more Canadians annoyed by the Revolutionary War than I have Brits.
Getting rejected of the dominion of their monarchy is their entire history
@@kathryngenn-winkler8170 The French were uppity at the time and the King's pee was purple. We had a lot on.
“...and both follow similar policies”
American: *Laughs in 2A*
Remove the monarch and the Parliament is very similar to the Senate and House of Rep's with a prime minister rather than president.
Also America: Laughs in 13A
@@gumbymofugga It means that the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed, wtf else could it possibly mean?
@@constitutionaldennis Brits can owns guns. They just have better regulations.
@@gumbymofugga it would
If the American government tried to get rid of the second amendment there’s be a second American civil war
Could you do a video about the rules of warfare during the 18th century? Like how the armies treated their enemy armies and the sportsmanship and honor while waging war?
As an American, I have great memories of the three years I spent in the UK. It did mess my driving up a little when I got back to the States. I still remember my friend, "you're on the wrong side."
10:25 “decided To remove themselves” that’s a fancy word for after five years of a bloody uprising against Britain’s oppression of Ireland but then again with the way they teach about the American revolution I’m not surprised the Easter uprising isn’t covered As Throughly by English schools, that another not so important moment in English history?
The French Revolution is more important because it didn’t happen to the British
No, it’s not that important actually, for the same reason the American revolution isn’t important. Independent Ireland has had a very minor impact on the UK, mainly because it’s been neutral in all affairs for its entire existence.
As someone from the UK, I can say we were never "ever" taught about the Revolution in school, or even any of the history of the British Empire, you'd never be aware if not learning it from outside sources. If you want to learn, it would be through movies, speaking to historians, documentaries, or speaking with people from other countries of where they "do" teach it (ie Americans, and more so today with how common the internet is in most households).
In history, we personally in the schools I went to only learned about:
Celts & Romans
(Possibly the Anglo-Saxons, but I can't recall)
Tudors & King Henry VIII
Victorians & Queen Elizabeth I
WW2
And that's it. To the UK, the whole colonies thing, and the Revolution is considered more of a "footnote" in history in the grand scale of things. Whereas to Americans the Revoution is their version of "ancient history" and is the holy grail of their education (and understandably as it was the foundation of their nation).
You know, Britain lost many soldiers in the American revolution. Its very sad that all those lives lost is only a foot note in history. The honored dead deserve better than that.
@@blueduck9409 when I was at school we where not taught about the Boer War yet it was a turning point in British rights as their pool of potential recruits where so malnourished that they had to drop standards to recruit and in turn led to greater wages and more rights. Plus they also neglected to tell us about all the evil things the British empire did around the world. Although I do recall learning about the American West and manifest destiny and finding it incredibly interesting.
@@blueduck9409 Lots of soldiers lost in lots of wars around the world, but those losses rarely get a mention in history. You tend to learn who lost which battle, but not how many killed or even how many fought. Also, remember that British families would have had people fighting on both sides, so the personal losses would have been more.
@@nlwilson4892 Thats true. The American revolution was a war between families, so to speak. I know other than the English were involved, but at its core, it was a war between English men. I am glad that relationship has been repaired over the centuries.
@@markwoods2456 many found it appealing, and thats why many immigrated here. I grew up and am from the American west. It still has its appeal, and, in my opinion has not lost its charm. If you are from England / UK, i sincerely hope that some day you are able to visit. The cost for you to do so would be much cheaper than visiting any of the costal states. I recommend you start at Texas, and work your way west from there. People in the heart land are infinitely more pleasant than those on the coasts.
The painting shown (5:15) shows an American flag with more than 13 stripes. Just found the inaccuracy interesting.
Love your work !
Its sounds like a break-up. Like “I didn’t even like him that much anyway, he’s like every other guy ive dated” 😂
Then drunk dials asking for help anytime something go wrongs.
While downplaying the fact that he went on to be far more successful without them and was still forgiving enough to come to their rescue. How many exes would do that? LOL
@@shawnj1966 lol "come to their rescue"
@@ThereIsNoDog96 Post WW2, yeah.
@@ThereIsNoDog96 WW2 lend lease Britain couldn't have survived without it
So I lived in the U.K. for about three years and as an american, proud of everything we've accomplished, i was surprised to see how much they understood why we left and how they don't really hold any grudges about it. The U.K. has sooo much history that they teach in schools that the day of america's independence isn't really a topic of discussion.
Britain: No hard feelings.
Britain, internally: All that wealth and power could have been ours. GOD DAMN IT FRANCE!!
Lol
So basically the biggest coping, seething, and dilating.
;)
@@Nevergofullretard321 I think Ireland and India had much more long lasting direct consequences for us. America was neither the centre of the Earth or the Empire.
@@paulcarroll6995 And if not for America, the "New World" wouldn't have been inspired to gain independence from the European powers. Actually not just the New World, France toppled its monarchy as well, didn't they? Which lead to Napoleon wrecking havok across Europe, and the USA gaining more land. Napoleon starting trouble with Europe gave chance to central American and South American countries gaining independence from Spain. So yes, the USA was HIGHLY influential, and to this day continues to be for better or worse. You're just downplaying it because you're a Brit and got taught to act like you don't care.
@@Nevergofullretard321 Ofc the USA was highly influential, but you are overstating the importance of the USA in global/British history.
USA history is not taugh as a central factor of English history because its incredibly recent. We have to study the conquest of Britain by the Romans, Boudica, the Vikings, The Dane-law, the Anglo saxons, The Normans, Hadrians wall, The Scottish, the Union, Christanity, Protestantism/catholicism,the 100 year war the 3 Anglo dutch wars, the Hapsburgs, the Plague, the Great fire of London, the 7 year war ETC... ( The list goes on and on)
We have over 2000 years of History and relations to learn, the American revolution and the events proceeding represent a part of a whole.
Americans are only really taught about their own history and there is so much more at play in Europe and the middle east. It is the most important part of your history but it is not the most important part of Europes.
I find this really interesting about Britain and the British in general. Most of them don't seem to hold much of a grudge against countries they had fighted before.
From what I've seen in the Internet, I think this is because it's such an old country that it has gone through more wars and conflicts than ony other in the face of the planet. They simply don't care much about their military history.
Lets compare that to my own country, Argentina. Here in school they teach you since little the troubled history of out country, and they make quite the emphasis when it comes to militar conflicts. Ask an Argentine about the history of the country and they surely will mention a war or two. Most likely, they'd bring up the Falklands War, wich was coincidentally a war we fought sgainst the UK.
This war in Argentina is the center of focus of a good chunk of the country's historical culture. It's a constant source of discussion, with parks, monuments, buildings naned after it. The main topic of many documentaries, books, shows, and movies. The subject for parades, conmemoriations and nationalisms.
The same conflict in the UK, however, seems to be treated very differently. I've seen some videos about guys interviewing random british citizens about it and most of them couldn't even say wich was the country they fighted against. Hell, some of them didn't even knew about it, less that those islands exist!
It is very fascinanting to see two different sides' approach to a common conflict, gives a lot to think about how different their societies, cultures and histories are.
Oh, the Falklands War is actually quite well known. Even though it's far from the biggest war in our history, we see it as quite culturally significant, because it marks one of the few times in "recent" memory that we've actually had to defend, and felt justified in defending, an overseas territory. Hi from the UK, by the way. :)
@@DavidM_10 Well thanks for the insight, mate! That was all just based on what I've seen on the internet, hearing about it from an actual Brit really does help. Cheers from the other side, my guy!
@@marianxendor3974 No problem. Much love and respect to Argentina.
I was in the Falkland war. I've never had any dislike or ill feelings to the Argentine or the people. The Government at the time started the war for Political reasons and we understand that. In Britain we tend to support our armed forces "even if we think a War is wrong ". We know that it is really the Government that decides to fight.
It might be this that helps us not hold a grudge or bad feelings.
After the war, Spurs football club bought two Argentine players to play in the English League. Of course the opposition supporters would boo and hiss and try to put them off their game. But both had long careers here.
Osvaldo Ardiles was one of them.
Good Luck to you and your family in the difficult financial times we are told the Argentine people are having !
As an American watching this video, all I can say is, "yeah that's fair"
Teaming up with the French against your ancestors. Gross country
Y’all ever think the UK was just more modern Rome
which era of Rome exactly
*HRE staring intensely*
@@MajinRixch the awkward part where they stated messing up and then the empire lost half the empire and turned into the Byzantine empire.
Y’all ever think the US is just a more modern Rome?
@@macsarcule lol no.
As an American I never really thought of it this way. Very interesting