The Battle of Culloden - Scottish History - Extra History

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 729

  • @extrahistory
    @extrahistory  2 года назад +147

    Want 24 hr early access to our videos, Wallpapers, Music, voting, behind the bean, live Q&A's and more??? Then why not check out Pateron. bit.ly/EHPatreon

    • @totalynotcatherine
      @totalynotcatherine 2 года назад

      "behind the bean" sure is a good incentive.

    • @marcus4046
      @marcus4046 2 года назад +2

      Love to see an episode on the norse geals on the highlands and the gallowglass.

    • @RK-cj4oc
      @RK-cj4oc 2 года назад +1

      Dont forget to mention the time traveling pregnant English woman who took part in this battle and had sex with her husband in that timeline nefore he send her back to her husband in out current timeline.
      Outlander-netflix its a crazy show

    • @ayvasovskiy6726
      @ayvasovskiy6726 2 года назад +1

      Pardon me, but at 0:41, are the soldiers shooting out of their bayonets or something?

    • @D1Trini4u
      @D1Trini4u 2 года назад

      I liked this video because of your amazing ad! Great work! Love Zoey!

  • @CliffCardi
    @CliffCardi 2 года назад +1268

    Fun fact: Many Scots moved to America, and specifically in the Appalachian mountains, the American frontier in the 18th century just so they can have their little clan wars. Two of those feuding clans were the Hatfields and the McCoys.

    • @Kaiyanwang82
      @Kaiyanwang82 2 года назад +71

      Boy, I HATE the McCoys.

    • @bigchum3984
      @bigchum3984 2 года назад +8

      Nfw

    • @zachtaylor8222
      @zachtaylor8222 2 года назад +62

      which is also where we get the term "redneck"

    • @CliffCardi
      @CliffCardi 2 года назад +9

      @@zachtaylor8222how so?

    • @zachtaylor8222
      @zachtaylor8222 2 года назад +149

      @@CliffCardi "redneck" came about because Scottish people who were living in Ireland before being shipped to the US after the last jacobite rebellion wore red scarves to set themselves apart from the Irish. They continued doing so when they got to the colonies (as you say, largely in Appalachia), so the term stuck. Since southern culture is largely dececended from highland Scottish culture, the term began to be applied to all southerners after a time.

  • @raynitaylor1912
    @raynitaylor1912 2 года назад +449

    In high school my history teacher wanted us to do a research paper (the ones with resources listed) on a historical battle. Most students did Civil War battles like Gettysburg and Manassas because there were easy to do. A few rebellious types did battles in ww1 or 2.
    I was determined to not do an American military battle. At the time I was reading a Scottish historical fantasy book and read a line referring to the Culloden.
    Before the internet was if any real use and way before Wikipedia was conceived, finding information on it was nearly impossible. I combed every vhs tape, book, and cassette tape available, but there just wasn't any information. Then 2 weeks before the due date I decided to try my luck at a local Scottish Fest and came across a historian from Scotland. That dude was ecstatic at my interest in Scottish history and got to work asking folks on the phone to get books sent over.
    I was late on my due date but had all my resources and a pretty darn lengthy paper! Got a 120 A+
    Still got all the books. Had lost the vhs document years ago though.

    • @dominicguye8058
      @dominicguye8058 2 года назад +1

      👏🏿 👏🏿👏🏿

    • @fearanger1
      @fearanger1 2 года назад +3

      Aww, that's fantastic!

    • @raynitaylor1912
      @raynitaylor1912 Год назад +6

      @@redred7289 that was one of the sources I used! Thanks for leading me back to it!

    • @chriskimber6537
      @chriskimber6537 Год назад +2

      The books/show outlander is also good historical fantasy

    • @justincase3230
      @justincase3230 Год назад +2

      Fuckin legend of a historian

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. 2 года назад +172

    Fun fact: the other (maternal) grandfather of "Bonnie Prince Charlie" was John III Sobieski. You know, the one of the battle of Vienna fame.

  • @aidanrogers4438
    @aidanrogers4438 2 года назад +978

    I’m glad this highlighted the fact the Jacobite Rebellions weren’t just Scotland vs England, but had complicated political allegiances on both sides.
    And just an extra note on Bonnie Prince Charlie, years later he secretly made his way to London for a brief visit but the government didn’t do anything about his presence there because they just did not see him as a genuine threat anymore.

    • @nugo520
      @nugo520 2 года назад +66

      Right? I love how EC cover all of what happened and don't just boil it down to "Ireland/Scotland good, England bad" like we often see, they highlight the fact that it is far more complex then that while still covering all the bad stuff done by both sides. I'd really love to see them take on something like the Harrying of the north.

    • @pendragonxt3674
      @pendragonxt3674 2 года назад +13

      Yeah, and Prince Charlie disguised himself as a woman to get there.

    • @aidanrogers4438
      @aidanrogers4438 2 года назад +1

      @@pendragonxt3674 I believe that was after Culloden, when his cause was lost and was fleeing Britain and disguised himself with woman’s clothing through the Highlands until he was smuggled out of Scotland.

    • @Furzkampfbomber
      @Furzkampfbomber 2 года назад +3

      @@pendragonxt3674 I thought this was when he had to flee from Scottland?

    • @pendragonxt3674
      @pendragonxt3674 2 года назад

      @@Furzkampfbomber yeah. And here’s another fact.
      After Charlie’s rebellion, a law was passed to make it illegal for Scotsmen to wear kilts.

  • @abigailcollins8443
    @abigailcollins8443 2 года назад +148

    Love that they show the basket-hilted claymores of the scots rather than the greatsword. One of those little touches that is so over overlooked.

    • @edwardhardwick2180
      @edwardhardwick2180 2 года назад +11

      Both uses are correct though. Claymore is just an anglicisation of the gaelic claidheamh mór which translates as big/great sword.

    • @dungeonsanddobbers2683
      @dungeonsanddobbers2683 4 месяца назад

      @@edwardhardwick2180 It correctly translates to "broad sword". "Claidheamh dà làimh" (two handed sword) is the correct Gaelic for the Highland claymore.

  • @stevencooper4422
    @stevencooper4422 2 года назад +182

    “A day to come seems longer than a year that’s gone.”
    - Scottish Proverb

  • @KesselRunner606
    @KesselRunner606 2 года назад +372

    Thanks for showing the multi national factions in this war. One of the biggest misconceptions, even here in Scotland, is that the Jacobite Uprising was a Scottish war for independence. You would not believe the number of Scots who,when the subject of Culloden is raised, start going on about "The bloody English." In the Battle of Culloden, there were almost as many Scots in red coats as there were under Charles' banner, and the aim of the war wasn't to establish a monarchy in Edinburgh, but to put a new one in London. The Scottish Highlanders - many of whom were forced to fight - were used as cannon fodder for people whose ambitions couldn't care less about the nation of Scotland.

    • @patraic5241
      @patraic5241 2 года назад

      There were certainly more Scots in Cumberland's army than in Prince Charles's.

    • @ericsandrade
      @ericsandrade Год назад +5

      I get what you mean but In my opinion It matters not if there were Scots fighting for the English. It’s still the English that are the invaders. It was still them that treated Scots as second class citizens. There’s a reason why even after hundreds of years they still want independence. This might not have been a war for independence but had they won it would have led to that result.
      As for the generals. War is ALWAYS worse for the poor. There’s not a single war between two countries where the poor suffer less than the rich. Both world wars saw generals sending thousands of men to their death with stupid plans.

    • @BadgerOfTheSea
      @BadgerOfTheSea Год назад +34

      ​@@ericsandrade you have completely and utterly hiden historical fact under the fog of your personal, modern, political ideology.

    • @ericsandrade
      @ericsandrade Год назад +1

      @@BadgerOfTheSea what exactly do you disagree with ? What exactly is it that you believe isn’t correct?

    • @thomsboys77
      @thomsboys77 Год назад

      @@ericsandrade The Scots gits were literally given the opportunity on a plate to vote for their independence in 2014, which they voted against, and are yet still bitching and moaning about “the English!”. I take it you’re a yank

  • @euansmith3699
    @euansmith3699 2 года назад +44

    At Culloden, a bayonet is a weapon with a Scotsman at each end.
    I love the drawings of horses on this channel.

  • @abcdef27669
    @abcdef27669 2 года назад +96

    I can’t stop being amazed at how Matt describe battles during Extra History episodes. Simply perfect!

  • @_Hoagie
    @_Hoagie 2 года назад +65

    I just got back from a UK trip, including a guided tour through the HIghlands to Skye. We stopped at Culloden on the first day, and our Scottish guide emphasized the fact that despite the assumptions of many, this was not another Scottish-English brawl, and was in fact a Scottish vs Scottish & English uprising, known by both sides to be treasonous, and punishable by death. The Jacobites who were killed or executed that day were unceremoniously dumped into mass graves without being identified, and now there are simply stones with the clan names and estimated body count for each one where they were roughly buried.

    • @Oxnaforda
      @Oxnaforda 9 месяцев назад

      That's the way it was even for British soldiers until really the first world war, dead ordinary soldiers at the end of battles were thrown in a big hole and that was it.

  • @jeremy1860
    @jeremy1860 2 года назад +77

    This battle is one of those events that I've always heard of as being a pretty pivotal moment in Scotland's history, but I never really delved much deeper into it beyond that. Thanks for making a video on it 😊

  • @abhishekchaudhry80
    @abhishekchaudhry80 2 года назад +18

    I am in Glasgow right now, Scottish people are the most polite and kind people I have ever encountered. I love Scotland ❤️

    • @lasakau272
      @lasakau272 Год назад

      Glasgow aren’t highlanders. They are lowlanders loyalist to London

  • @gibiuswrecks5215
    @gibiuswrecks5215 Год назад +9

    What a great video on a historic battle. My family’s clan didn’t officially take part in the conflict under the direction of the clan chief, but his brother and a smaller fighting force joined the Jacobites. It was fascinating to visit the site of the battle and the museum set up nearby. One thing that I remember from the museum (that I haven’t fact-checked, mind you) is that British infantry were ordered to attack the rebel to their right rather than the one directly in front of them, so that the highlanders (who we can assume were mostly right-handed and carried their shields in their left hands) couldn’t use their shields as effectively. In previous battles where the government infantry had defaulted to squaring off with the foe directly in front of them, the highlanders were able to move their bayonets aside with their shields before attacking with their swords.

  • @rometheawsome
    @rometheawsome 2 года назад +424

    Love the Celtic themed videos lately, as a descendent of people of the Celtic diasporas both Irish and Scottish I love learning about history of the Celtic peoples in all eras

    • @themanhimself1229
      @themanhimself1229 2 года назад +22

      I'm hoping we get something Welsh soon

    • @robertb6889
      @robertb6889 2 года назад +8

      If you want good Irish history - Fin Dwyer’s Irish History Podcast is really good!

    • @idleishde6124
      @idleishde6124 2 года назад

      Never remember us fckn Cornish though. "The Celtic People's, Welsh Irish and Scottish!"
      Fckn mainstream bs.
      KERNOW BYS VYKEN

    • @isaachunt7760
      @isaachunt7760 2 года назад +3

      @@themanhimself1229 most of it has been co-opted or censored by England once upon a time. I mean in Welsh courts you couldn't speak Welsh until the 1970s.

    • @cem7283
      @cem7283 2 года назад +6

      As a descendent of the pre-celtic peoples i'd love to learn about the history of uk and ireland before the celts tookover.

  • @statelyelms
    @statelyelms Год назад +7

    I actually have been to the site of the Battle of Culloden, there's a very good museum there. So many mass graves. They have exhibits with a 360 degree battle immersion room where soldiers charged st you screaming, grapeshot fired from cannons whizzed over your head and musketsmoke everywhere. They also had a top-down map that shower the battle sped up.
    But most impactful for me was the brick wall on the outside of the museum which showed casualties by a brick jutting out a smidge. The Government casualties took up something like to sparse four metres. The Jackobite casualties took up the REST OF THE WALL.
    Yeah turns out fighting your enemy exhausted while they they're better equipped, organized and were just trained into reloading muskets lightning fast doesn't end well for you

  • @berdyie
    @berdyie 2 года назад +8

    I really love seeing this deeper dive into the actual combat and tactics of this one battle, as opposed to the normal, more generalized, overview that Extra History keeps to (to save on time, of course, not every battle in their history episodes can be explored as thoroughly). I have a love for history and historical battles, but being able to get a better view on what it was like for the soldiers on the battlefield is a great thing to understanding how these battles transpired. Not to say this is some perfectly in-depth discussion of this particular battle (or even musket warfare in general), but it's definely a nice breath of fresh air than the normal Extra History episodes that are usually much more "zoomed out".
    If the Extra History team reads this, it would be awesome to see more single episodes (or, heck, even RUclips Shorts) like this!

  • @iapetusmccool
    @iapetusmccool 2 года назад +45

    People say "history is written by the winners", but the Jacobite Wars are probably a good example of the reverse happening.
    They were fighting to restore a royal dynasty that was notorious for asserting a divine right to rule, a religion that was rejected by most English and Scots, and (in the clan system) the last remnants of feudalism. But popular history presents them as romantic heroes, and the war as a war for Scottish independence.

    • @saraa.4295
      @saraa.4295 6 месяцев назад

      That truism was very true back in the day when most ppl couldn't write, so history was written to flatter the winners.
      It also applies to immediate writings, as in so far as the jacobites were condemned as traitors, but if they had won they would have been heroes.
      As for feudalism...england still has lords...
      As for whether it was for scottish independence i guess a lot of that narrative comes from what Cumberland did after...

  • @GabrielForth
    @GabrielForth 2 года назад +28

    Well done pronouncing Gaelic correctly, my aunt is from Skye and always made sure we pronounced it correctly so now when I hear it incorrectly it has a "nails on chalkboard" effect for me.
    It's a small thing I know but when informational channels get it wrong it always makes me cast doubt on their research regarding the rest of their content so I was very happy to hear you get it correct :)

  • @halrd2651
    @halrd2651 2 года назад +290

    Love how you went from Irish war of independence to this, starting to see a trend here

    • @selahanany5645
      @selahanany5645 2 года назад

      (the trend is that the british are the worst)

    • @lepingas2401
      @lepingas2401 2 года назад +56

      Of course, who doesn't hate England

    • @lord_ozymandias
      @lord_ozymandias 2 года назад +42

      as a person with primarily irish, scottish, and french history, watching extra history focus on ppl who fucking hated england is kinda cathartic to me LOL

    • @migglesism
      @migglesism 2 года назад +48

      Superiority does breed controversy

    • @hhproductions8254
      @hhproductions8254 2 года назад +3

      @@migglesism indeed

  • @Prederick
    @Prederick 2 года назад +13

    Shoutout to Extra Credit's artists indeed, they do absolutely amazing work and their horses never, ever fail to make me LOL.

  • @rditullio
    @rditullio 2 года назад +14

    My favorite fictional highlander, Jamie McCrimmon, was at Culloden. Odd as it sounds, I have been avoiding watching this because I did not want to hear how likely it was for him to have perished there.

  • @reginaldinoenchillada3513
    @reginaldinoenchillada3513 Год назад +6

    The ARTWORK and the Writing consistently are the two things I love about everything you do.

  • @andrewroberts8959
    @andrewroberts8959 2 года назад +8

    You can visit the battlefield. They have done their best to make the ground similar to the conditions at the battle. The idea of running across that ground into musket and cannon fire seems nuts.

  • @alc3biades262
    @alc3biades262 2 года назад +33

    When I heard “jacobites” I immediately remembered the south sea bubble series and knew how it would end

    • @Mechawizard
      @Mechawizard 2 года назад +1

      Think I spotted Walpole in there somewhere.

  • @Zveebo
    @Zveebo 2 года назад +93

    Glad you delved into the complexity of this a bit - Americas usually gloss over this in pursuit of the myth, which is REALLY annoying to Scots. When Bonnie Prince Charlie was defeated there were huge celebrations in many parts of Scotland, so hated was he - while parts of English society were entirely behind him.
    Would love love love you to do a Mary Queen of Scots series at some point - her story is so completely crazy, she would be absolutely perfect for the Extra History treatment.

    • @danielboggan2479
      @danielboggan2479 Год назад +7

      Don’t blame Americans for not knowing this. A lot of Scots don’t know this, and Scotland doesn’t come up much in American history classes.

    • @user-wr4eh7gh4b
      @user-wr4eh7gh4b 10 месяцев назад

      Were the Scots who hated him Protestant and the English who were behind him Catholic?
      Trying to make sense of this

    • @dungeonsanddobbers2683
      @dungeonsanddobbers2683 4 месяца назад +2

      "Americas usually gloss over this in pursuit of the myth"
      TBF, so do a lot of Scots.

  • @Lowlandlord
    @Lowlandlord Год назад +5

    Loved how you used broadsword and claymore interchangeably. People tend to wrongly use claymore only for two-handed swords ("twa-handed swards" in Scots, it is a sister language to English after all), and that in Gaelic would be called claidheamh da laimh (something like "clay da lie(v?)", Gaelic is complicated language and I am by no means fluent or even conversational. Big thing to remember is consonant+h means you're gonna get a different sound than you would expect in English. Bean sith/sidhe is banshee, and claidheamh-mor is claymore, as examples).
    Also the correct flag, before the red of St. Patrick get's added in in 1801.
    Anyways, good on ya!

  • @hallamhal
    @hallamhal 2 года назад +68

    I'm glad you looked at the nuances of this, a lot of histories simplify this to battle of highlanders vs lowlanders/brits, when it's really a tangled mess of different clans and regiments fundamentally fighting for a regime change.
    (Ps its pronounced Edinburgh, like how it's spelled 😝)

    • @Nostripe361
      @Nostripe361 2 года назад +13

      It’s a common fallacy that people seem to think that it’s easy to divide forces by nationality or homeland. For example take my home state of Tennessee. A lot of People don’t seem to know that there was a bunch of unionist supporters in the region despite the secession in the us civil war

    • @ernestvanophuizen461
      @ernestvanophuizen461 2 года назад +1

      Embra!

    • @andrewklang809
      @andrewklang809 2 года назад +3

      @@Nostripe361 Eastern Tennessee was staunchly pro-Union. So was Western Virginia. Funny how those areas whose economies weren't conducive to large-scale slave plantations weren't so keen on "state's rights".

    • @robzonefire
      @robzonefire Год назад

      Yo it's not pronounced Edinbruh?

  • @rossjohnstone4689
    @rossjohnstone4689 2 года назад +5

    I visited this place back in 2008 when I went to Scotland with my dad. It's absolutly amazing and if you ever go to Scotland I highly recommend checking it out

  • @Vanic00
    @Vanic00 2 года назад +84

    "Non calaburn noctioni, pritsa torinok!!"
    "Take your sword, spill my blood, and make this ground holy!!"
    Been hoping you folks would get into the Jacobite Rebellions. I hope you do all of them, AND the English Civil Wars.

    • @PyrusFlameborn
      @PyrusFlameborn 2 года назад

      Would you mind sharing where that quote is from? Google is not returning any results for me

    • @GallowglassVT
      @GallowglassVT 2 года назад +3

      @@PyrusFlameborn it's from that King Arthur film with Clive Owen and Keira Knightley.

    • @Vanic00
      @Vanic00 2 года назад +1

      @@GallowglassVT ya got it!!

  • @LudicrousPlatypus
    @LudicrousPlatypus 2 года назад +8

    Wow! I'm really glad you covered this topic. I would love to see more Scottish history on this channel!

  • @lakelandbuzz2252
    @lakelandbuzz2252 2 года назад +7

    "Aghh! My hand. It's been cut off!!!"
    "But captain, how can you tell? We don't have arms."

  • @louthegiantcookie
    @louthegiantcookie 2 года назад +23

    Ooh, new video! Catching these is now a pretty nice part of my regular Saturday night. And Scottish history is so fascinating, so I am really excited to watch this.

    • @sarasamaletdin4574
      @sarasamaletdin4574 2 года назад +1

      This is actually first time they have done Scottish history which is fun. I think from English speaking regions New Zealand is now alone with no episodes (Canada was insulin so it doesn’t have dull series either, and I count Zulu’s for South Africa).

  • @Ardanel68
    @Ardanel68 2 года назад +3

    I had the chance of visiting the battlefield of Culloden and the museum back in 2011. That episode brought great memories !

  • @GallowglassVT
    @GallowglassVT 2 года назад +17

    If anyone hasn't seen it, Peter Watkins made a film about Culloden, but he did it in the style of a documentary with interviews and everything. Keep in mind that he made it in the early 60s, before the concept of docufiction was common parlance.

    • @iapetusmccool
      @iapetusmccool 2 года назад +3

      A very brutal docudrama.
      "This is grapeshot. This is what it does".

  • @Munchkin.Of.Pern09
    @Munchkin.Of.Pern09 2 года назад +48

    I’m a Canadian descendant of Clan MacLeod. My mother and I visited Scotland back in 2015, took a bus tour of the highlands and Skye - we visited the ruins of Trumpan Church and, of course, Castle Dunvegan itself. But one of the most emotionally impactful things we did on that trip was visit Culloden. I remember walking the paths around the battlefield, looking at the moss gilding the gravestones, and thinking “this is what a haunting feels like”. By the time we got back to our hotel in Edinburgh I was shaking like a leaf in a thunderstorm, and I spent the rest of the day in bed with a fever. To this day I’m still half-convinced that it was the echoes of Culloden’s dead clinging to me.

    • @Munchkin.Of.Pern09
      @Munchkin.Of.Pern09 2 года назад +4

      Many’s the lad
      Fought on that day
      Well the claymore did wield….
      When the night came
      Silently lay
      Dead on Culloden’s field…
      - The Skye Boat Song by Sir Harold Boulton, 2nd Baronet

    • @stephenbrooklyn7945
      @stephenbrooklyn7945 2 года назад +1

      Castle was called dunvegan because they caught a deer and had meet

    • @DeepFriedDoom
      @DeepFriedDoom 2 года назад +2

      Probably too much Irn Bru

    • @Munchkin.Of.Pern09
      @Munchkin.Of.Pern09 2 года назад +2

      The “Dun” in “Dunvegan” means ‘castle’ or ‘fort’. The “vegan” part (pronounced vey-gan, not like the diet) doesn’t have a discernible translation, but most sources agree that it was likely derived from a person’s name.

    • @yourgrandmotherspimp1280
      @yourgrandmotherspimp1280 Год назад +2

      Grow up

  • @pastlesandfish
    @pastlesandfish Год назад +9

    As a Scotsman, this is one of my favourite parts of British history and Bonnie Prince Charlie is one of my favourite historical figures. So this was a cool video to watch.

  • @GreatBumbino
    @GreatBumbino 2 года назад +3

    If you ever have a chance to visit, the museum at Culloden is excellent

  • @madskristiansen
    @madskristiansen 2 года назад +4

    In Fort Augustus at Loch Ness, there is a souvenir shop. Last time I was there, which was many years ago, there was a noose on a wall inside with a sign saying: "If a Campbell walks in, hang him with this noose for treason at Culloden." (A jest for tourists, nothing more).

  • @molecatcher3383
    @molecatcher3383 27 дней назад

    This is probably the most historically accurate description of the battle of Culloden that I have seen. I am Scottish and have studied this battle over many years.

  • @alanpros6950
    @alanpros6950 2 года назад +3

    There was an argentinian rock band named "Sumo" that make a song in english about this fight is call it "Cru a chan" and tell the same history of this video.

  • @thomasrinschler6783
    @thomasrinschler6783 2 года назад +9

    While it's good that you mentioned that in some ways it was more a civil war than invasion, one thing passed over is that sending Charles to Scotland was a gambit by the French in the ongoing War of the Austrian Succession (only hinted at by saying there were French troops in Charles' army). The French wanted to create a major distraction for their British foes, which it definitely did, probably coming closer to succeeding than they had actually thought when planning it.

    • @tremendousbaguette9680
      @tremendousbaguette9680 2 года назад +1

      Cumberland's ego being badly bruised at Fontenoy did nothing to arrange the mood of the victors, it seems.

    • @watcherzero5256
      @watcherzero5256 2 года назад

      @@tremendousbaguette9680 If you visit Northern England much you will find loads of communities still affected and buildings rebuilt in more defensible locations after the bloody Scottish invasion attempts.

  • @dzmcroy
    @dzmcroy 2 года назад +35

    I'm just going to pretend I totally knew about Culloden before binge-watching five seasons of "Outlander."

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Год назад +1

      Never had Tunes of War album by Grave Digger? One of the best Power Metal records of all time.

  • @Nostripe361
    @Nostripe361 2 года назад +6

    It’s interesting to see how messy and complicated the loyalties and desires were of the two forces

  • @olcooksy6132
    @olcooksy6132 2 года назад +16

    This is an excellent description of an often overromanticized event.

  • @MichaelSmith-ij2ut
    @MichaelSmith-ij2ut 2 года назад +25

    As a dastardly Jacobite myself, I'm glad to see this battle getting some recognition

    • @spartanx9293
      @spartanx9293 2 года назад +4

      How exactly are you a jackabite I'm fairly sure their line doesn't exist in the modern day much less is anyone willing to fight for it

    • @ej7416
      @ej7416 2 года назад +7

      @@spartanx9293 it’s actually even better, there’s two separate lines you could follow. One leads to the current Duke of Bavaria and through him the heir to the throne of Lichtenstein. But the other line of leads down to Princess Diana and then to Prince William meaning that there’s a strong case for William being the heir to both the Offical and Jacobite lines of succession

    • @spartanx9293
      @spartanx9293 2 года назад

      @@ej7416 to my knowledge neither of them are the next in line and even then there's no real point in replacing the house of Windsor they are purely ornamental if the monarchy actually had a point in the governance of the United Kingdom you might have good reasoning for it but they don't

    • @camefaceh8380
      @camefaceh8380 Год назад

      @@spartanx9293monarchs don’t govern and haven’t for centuries. They appoint people to govern

  • @serviusm9523
    @serviusm9523 2 года назад +3

    Love it how you show it is not Scotland vs England that some like to portray it as. Rather it is different factions of Scotland/Britain fighting over the political future

  • @Korge100
    @Korge100 2 года назад +16

    This was great but I would have liked to see you go into the Highland Clearances after the battle.

    • @scottanos9981
      @scottanos9981 2 года назад +1

      An absolute atrocity.

    • @Zveebo
      @Zveebo 2 года назад +4

      It’s a pretty separate topic really. The two aren’t particularly linked.

    • @Rert
      @Rert 2 года назад

      @@Zveebo I'v seen it argued that the disempowerment of the clan system after the battle enabled it.

    • @philstothard8333
      @philstothard8333 2 года назад +6

      @@Rert It was the clan Cheiftains themselves who carried out the clearances, for their own financial gain .

    • @MsJaytee1975
      @MsJaytee1975 Год назад

      I think you mean the Scottish clearances.

  • @causantinthescot
    @causantinthescot 2 года назад +6

    Hey! I am learning Scottish History in the University of Glasgow and have written an essay related to this battle.

    • @bilals.8116
      @bilals.8116 2 года назад +3

      Who cares???
      JK I love history is there somewhere I can read it? 😅

  • @cadileigh9948
    @cadileigh9948 2 года назад

    Scottish History tours on YT is a great way to learn enough to take you on a deeper travel through the past with real countryside too

  • @teucer915
    @teucer915 2 года назад +3

    I would be interested in a series on the highland clearances

  • @Moto-jn2ef
    @Moto-jn2ef 2 года назад +3

    I’ve been waiting for the Jacobite rebellions

  • @barneythepurpledinosaur7002
    @barneythepurpledinosaur7002 2 года назад +6

    Great video! I’d like to see more videos of this type, first it was the Easter rising. Now it’s the Jacobin Uprising!

  • @alvinsaat2943
    @alvinsaat2943 2 года назад +1

    Love your more general history videos, but I gotta say I do miss these war/battle focused videos. The battle storytelling was superb

  • @misaelvillatoro6121
    @misaelvillatoro6121 2 года назад +1

    Props to the artists. Two tons worth.

  • @helenafarkas4534
    @helenafarkas4534 2 года назад +1

    i"ve walked the field, and at least when I was there, there was this low level of growth raised JUST far enough off the ground to snare and trip any carelessly placed foot. just imagine trying to charge through that. being there adds a level of understanding that is hard to convey via written sources. if anyone has the chance to visit a historical battlefield, take it. doesn't matter which one.

  • @DC-hy2rg
    @DC-hy2rg 2 года назад

    "...a volley of lead, crashing with the regularity of ocean waves." Daaaamn 🔥

  • @ravensmith8614
    @ravensmith8614 2 года назад +1

    Your artists have hats that make the pope jealous. You have marvellous, magical, sparkly hats and I love them.

  • @BlueManIan
    @BlueManIan 2 года назад +2

    🎵Come through the heather, around him gather
    Ye're a' the welcomer early
    Around him cling wi' a' your kin
    For wha'll be King but Charlie?🎵

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 7 месяцев назад

    As a Brit from England, I've always been interested in Scotland and it's history in our union. Very interesting video 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @shaneraymer5147
    @shaneraymer5147 2 года назад +1

    I visited Culloden last year. It’s a very surreal and beautiful place.

  • @jtcsderp9250
    @jtcsderp9250 2 года назад

    This battleground evokes a great feeling when you stand upon it.

  • @THEhorse137
    @THEhorse137 2 года назад +1

    You should take a look at the Highland clearances, it's definitely something that would be really up this channels alley. Especially an in depth look.

  • @sjrmac3
    @sjrmac3 2 года назад +8

    My clan was part of the Jacobites, and I've been to Culloden. It's quite an experience.

  • @premierbin4372
    @premierbin4372 2 года назад +15

    As a proud member of Clan Campbell, it’s great to see my ancestors in an EH episode

    • @edwardhardwick2180
      @edwardhardwick2180 2 года назад +11

      And as a proud member of Clan Lamont I say bugger the Campbells.
      Still salty about the Dunoon massacre.

    • @MrHDE-ex6xl
      @MrHDE-ex6xl 2 года назад +1

      Be prepared to be called a “traitor” by MacDonalds, MacGregors, MacLeans, Stewarts of Appin…WOW! Your ancestors sure made a LOT of enemies!

    • @premierbin4372
      @premierbin4372 2 года назад +3

      @@MrHDE-ex6xl “made?”
      Who said we stopped

    • @MrHDE-ex6xl
      @MrHDE-ex6xl 2 года назад +1

      @@premierbin4372 😂

  • @OfutebolistaOF
    @OfutebolistaOF 2 года назад +6

    FINALLY ONE OF MY FAVORITE BRITISH HISTORICAL EVENTS!
    THANK YOU SO MUCH EXTRA CREDITS !

  • @Dragonite43
    @Dragonite43 Год назад +6

    Fun fact, this is the only battle field victory for the Duke of Cumberland. XD

  • @BBoy-te1cb
    @BBoy-te1cb 4 месяца назад

    My family is Shaw and still carries the crest. I have a painting from 1868 by Mary Shaw too. I’d say they were beaten pretty bad, but we are still here. I have records leading all the way back to John and Mary and my aunt and uncle still carry the name.

  • @jackbelinski2661
    @jackbelinski2661 6 месяцев назад

    One of these days I’d like an extra credit series that explores the history of gunpowder and fire arms, as well as how such were used alongside traditional melee weapons, for example “Pike & Shot Warfare”.

  • @typacsk
    @typacsk 2 года назад +1

    My great-(great-great-great-not-sure-exactly)-great-uncle didn't fight at Culloden, but he was exiled for his involvement in the '45 uprising. Family lore says he's buried in Andalucia somewhere.

  • @GA.1022
    @GA.1022 10 месяцев назад

    My some of my mom’s ancestors fought and died at Culloden and I visited there earlier this year it was just the strangest feeling knowing I was standing on the grave of my ancestors who fought and died for their beliefs

  • @kingsleyedge304
    @kingsleyedge304 9 месяцев назад

    For those who dont know, the book and tv series Outlander is based around this time period. And the battle is very very important withitn thr story

  • @euanduthie2333
    @euanduthie2333 2 года назад +43

    The later romanticising of the highlands and the clan system that the video mentions was no accident.
    Just about everything that's part of that "Romantic Highland Lifestyle" that people associate with Scotland, was all promoted and popularised deliberately by people like author and campaigner Sir Walter Scott (Whose "Waverley" series of novels, and his Highland-themed organisation of a royal visit to Scotland did a lot of the publicity work ). This was done with an explicitly political aim- to save Highland and Scottish culture from the campaign of suppression that followed the '45 risings- which was what we'd now call a campaign of cultural genocide.
    By re-making Scottish culture as something Romantic, they sought to make it appear non-threatening, and update the nation's image into "a place of wild beauty" rather than "a rebellious colonial province that needs to be dealt with". In doing so, you can argue that they saved the idea of Scotland as a nation (There having been an attempt to rename the place as "North Britain" in the wake of Culloden).

    • @watcherzero5256
      @watcherzero5256 2 года назад +9

      Though they mistakenly adopted many English foods and clothing as traditional highland culture like the Kilt worn about the waist rather than over the shoulder which was traditional Northumbrian dress, and Haggis which had been eaten in England for centuries before (probably Lancastrian in origin) but was mistaken as Scottish because of Burns Address to a Haggis. You also had them romanticizing Celtic Gaelic as the language of Scots rather than the Northumbrian dialect English they traditionally spoke which had been displaced by Irish settlers speaking Erse invading the islands and displacing the native Scots.

    • @robokill387
      @robokill387 4 месяца назад +1

      Well, actually, those Irish settlers had lived there for longer than the Northumbrian English, total bias there. "Native Scots" is also a misnomer because the Scots WERE those Irish settlers. The Scoti were a tribe from Northern Ireland. Also, Northumbrian English was only really "traditional" in southwest Scotland where Edinburgh is. For most of Scotland, the native language was originally Pictish/brythonic.
      TL;DR really shows your bias when you insinuate that one language that arrived in the area in the 6th century as "foreign" and another language that arrived in the area in the 6th century as "native" or "traditional". What's definitely not true is your assertion that gaelic "displaced" Northumbrian English. It never did that. It displaced Pictish and Norn, and was itself later displaced by English.

    • @dungeonsanddobbers2683
      @dungeonsanddobbers2683 4 месяца назад

      ​@@robokill387 "those Irish settlers had lived there for longer than the Northumbrian English"
      We don't actually have any evidence of when different cultural groups started showing up in the area due to the lack of contemporary sources. All we really know for sure is that Ulster Scots, Cumbrians, Picts, and the Anglo Saxons of Northumbria were in those areas as early as the 6th century. But I do agree that there's some weird bias happening with watcher's post.
      "What's definitely not true is your assertion that gaelic "displaced" Northumbrian English"
      Semi-true. Anglo-Saxon wasn't really spoken in the area, the southern regions spoke either Cumbric or Galwegian Gaelic (which was mostly isolated to Galloway and Carrick), with Pictish being the majority language and Scots Gaelic being isolated to Dal Riata (later Innse Gall) until about the 9th century when Gaelic started to supplant the other language groups after the Scots usurped the Pictish throne.
      "It displaced Pictish and Norn"
      Pictish, yes. Norn, no. In fact the widespread promotion of Scots Gaelic by the Scottish Government is met with some hostility by the Northern Isles due to the fact that the Gaelic was _never_ spoken in that area as it had been mostly supplanted by Scots by the time that Norway ceded Orkney and Shetland to Scotland as a dowry payment (in fact, unlike the rest of the "indigenous" Scottish languages, Norn was still spoken as late as the 19th century).

  • @robertb6889
    @robertb6889 2 года назад +6

    Following the Battle of Culloden my lowland scots ancestors got transferred or emigrated to the colonies. We’re not sure, but we suspect it was part of the clearances that would follow the loss.

  • @stuartforbes6022
    @stuartforbes6022 2 года назад

    I grew up on Culloden Battlefield, so nice to see this

  • @rhett1029
    @rhett1029 2 года назад +2

    My ancestor Archibald Campbell and his brother General John Campbell fought in the first Jacobite Rebellion of 1715 for the British. Archibald’s grandson my 6th Great Grandfather fought the British in the American Revolution

  • @kaitlinvaughn2060
    @kaitlinvaughn2060 Год назад

    Outlander really had me crying watching the episodes where this was covered

  • @michaelmaclean6965
    @michaelmaclean6965 3 месяца назад

    On my secondary school history trip the battlefield was the only piece of actual history we did as the teachers decided it would be easier to go to the trampoline centre and bowling alley because the kids who had opted for the history trip to get out of school were annoyed that there would be history. Me and 3 friends were the only ones who actually gave a crap and the lead teacher was so grateful that he got a guide and took us round on a smaller, more in depth tour because he was just happy to be able to teach history. We were allowed in the 360' room and got to hold some of the weapons which nobody else got to. As we were the history appreciating crowd we were given the hand in the water bowl treatment at the hostel that night, were given the full roller derby experience at the trampoline park where 2 of us had our glasses broken due by rogue dodgeballs and one troublemaker was sent home early to face a slap on the wrist for rolling a bowling ball at me and spraining my ankle. He was the rugby captain so faced nothing more than a compliment from the deputy rector for his accurate throw.

  • @JulianEchevarria-m9l
    @JulianEchevarria-m9l 8 месяцев назад

    The italo-scottish singer and songwritter Luca Prodan (later nationalized argentinian) wrote a song about the rebelion of 1745 called "Crua Chan". It became very popular here in Argentina in a time were most people didn't know a bit of English only for it's rythm and sound. Luca is still remembered as a rock and post-punk icon in argentinian culture.

  • @freddieallen7842
    @freddieallen7842 Год назад

    A good novella to read is Sir Walter Scott's The Highland Widow, which explores the post-rebellion life of a highland family

  • @jeremiasrobinson
    @jeremiasrobinson 2 года назад +2

    "His hand was chopped off"... but they all of disembodied hands.

  • @chicagotypewriter2094
    @chicagotypewriter2094 2 года назад +4

    Can we just talk about how awesome Scottish uniforms are?

  • @dylanlauber
    @dylanlauber 2 года назад +8

    One of my ancestors was exiled to the Carolinas after the 1715 Jacobite uprising. His grandson later fought in the American revolution. It must have been a family tradition.

    • @typacsk
      @typacsk Год назад +1

      Yoooo I had an ancestor who died in exile in Williamsburg :D
      (I haven't found any information on the family's involvement in the Revolutionary War, but a couple of distant cousins served in the New Orleans campaign.)

  • @kadeadams2308
    @kadeadams2308 4 месяца назад +1

    Jacobite Scotland had the best music I ever heard. I reccomend dongs like "Cam' Ye by Atholl". The song is amazing.

  • @terrortalks3037
    @terrortalks3037 Год назад

    Nothing I've read has explained the Battle of Culloden so well, most just say "Jacobites from Scotland nearly got to England, but were defeated, but moving on..."
    So thank you!

  • @justsomerandombirdwithinte5896
    @justsomerandombirdwithinte5896 2 года назад

    Holy Moly, I didnt expect to see a video on this, good job EC crew!

  • @pedrorombi3074
    @pedrorombi3074 2 года назад +1

    Would be nice to have a series about the Unification of England

  • @Tototoo88
    @Tototoo88 2 года назад +2

    SING ME A SONG OF A LASS THAT IS GOOOONE!

  • @BritianPerson
    @BritianPerson 2 года назад +2

    Overall a very refreshing and balanced take on battle and it’s effect, studying the Jacobite rebellions at Edinburgh uni was a treat however some omitted details I found really interesting are as follows:
    - although Prince Charles was in fact a Catholic only about 2% of Scotland at the time was so and a majority of the Scottish troops in the battle were in fact Protestant showing that the rebellions by the 1740s were much more than about religion
    - the government army was made up not only of Scots and Englishmen but also swedes, Dutchmen and Germans truly an international force
    - on of the deciding factors of the battle was the use of grape shot by the government which was devastating at mid-close ranges
    - although some Jacobite cannons were fired many a majority of them were unable to because the wagon master for the Jacobites was a raging alcoholic and didn’t consider wether the cannon balls he had brought even fit his cannon, cannons that were manned in large part by inexperienced civilians
    - and finally the reprisals that followed the battle went way beyond executions whole towns were butchered, livestock was confiscated forcing thousands into starvation some historians have compered it to state sponsored genocide. It even occurred in pro government territory
    - also before the battle commenced the Jacobites were starving, badly, whilst the government forces were well wintered in Aberdeen being well fed and rigorously trained on the orders of Cumberland

  • @fogkard2913
    @fogkard2913 2 года назад +7

    Poor Clans the Scottish I cant belive he died like this 😭

  • @Luke-nt1eq
    @Luke-nt1eq 2 года назад +4

    I live in Inverness which is right outside of culldoen so I know this history inside and out but I’ve always wanted you guys to do an episode of this topic

  • @remandstimpy
    @remandstimpy Год назад +1

    Firing one round every twenty seconds.
    Now that's soldiering

  • @amandalorian4973
    @amandalorian4973 2 года назад +2

    My grandmother was a campbel which was actually one of the most powerful clans during this time

    • @noahtylerpritchett2682
      @noahtylerpritchett2682 2 года назад

      Campbells are one of two clans in Scotland who claim descent from the Briton King Arthur Pendragon

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv 2 года назад

      @@noahtylerpritchett2682 Wasn’t King Arthur supposed to be Welsh?

    • @noahtylerpritchett2682
      @noahtylerpritchett2682 2 года назад

      @@ferretyluv yes. But when one says Welsh. Broadly it means any family south of the Antonine wall.
      Wales Welsh today wasn't a thing back in Arthur's day.
      Different families across Northwest Europe claim Brythonic or Arthurian descent without it being Wales Welsh. But rather other kinds of Welsh.

    • @SonofSethoitae
      @SonofSethoitae 2 года назад

      @@noahtylerpritchett2682 "Welsh" i believe, was an Anglo Saxon word for "celt", so lots of non-Germanic groups in Britain were referred to as "Welsh" at various times, regardless of their relation to the modern day people of Wales

    • @noahtylerpritchett2682
      @noahtylerpritchett2682 2 года назад

      @@SonofSethoitae ding ding ding you hit the head of the nail with a hammer.
      Yes you are correct.

  • @DannyIO
    @DannyIO 11 месяцев назад +1

    im from the the Macdonalds of Clanranald and to this day some of my relatives hate those with the last name campbell.
    the ripples of the past echo even to this day.

  • @TimMatterSnorri999
    @TimMatterSnorri999 2 месяца назад +1

    Im Swiss but i know Scotland very well. Letd Remember those Brave Scots who give their Lifes for their Dream of Freedom and Independence...
    FREEDOM FOR SCOTLAND!

  • @jamesweikel2594
    @jamesweikel2594 2 года назад +1

    Love to see a series on the war of Austrian succession or Friedrich the great

  • @ferretyluv
    @ferretyluv 2 года назад

    I’ve always wondered why there was a song about this Bonny Prince Charlie. That’s all I’ve ever known about him.

  • @GuitarRocker2008
    @GuitarRocker2008 2 года назад +7

    As someone who’s done some Jacobite reenactment I’d love to see a full series on it.
    I even have my broadswords and claymore by me right this second.

  • @michaeljohn2826
    @michaeljohn2826 7 месяцев назад +1

    Was told the last pitched battle on UK soil was actually somewhere around the Bristol countryside in the 1960s between mods, hippies snd i think teddy men with flick knives and apparently even some with WW2 lugers and flare guns. It was actually not reported on to widely but it did constitute a battle in its scale and deadlines. Think the whole thing has been kept under wraps since because some key players and instigaters where sons of aristocratic families and political figures, some bodies have still not been found or recovered, despite the few that know about it doing metal detecting and digs on the site.

  • @TheHorzabora
    @TheHorzabora 2 года назад +2

    What is this? A history of why the United Kingdom will is anything but?
    And a lovely touch on why ‘Scottish’ Highland culture is in-fact an invented culture there at the end.
    The tale of the re-invention of Scottish culture in the Victorian era for (mainly) London-dwelling Scots and how that contributed to Scotland’s role in Empire would be awesome.
    As would an investigation of Scotland’s own Imperial aspirations in the early colonial era, and precisely how and why the leaders of the time bankrupted the country.
    Because they’d make amazingly useful tools for educating people on the history behind the shape of modern politics.
    Although the story of the ice-cream truck drug wars in Glasgow would, I think, entertain the world audience more.
    No, I’m not kidding. They still exist today in Edinburgh and Glasgow.