Thank god for this channel, honestly. I've tried some other youtube "lecturers" and some are dry with horrible audio quality, and others seem like they're trying too hard to appeal to the masses with over-exaggerated energy. I keep coming back to you because your balance is just perfect. Thanks Tom. --- BA Hist. and Engl. student trying to cram for exams.
In British terms corn refers to any grain, wheat, barley, rye or oats. Your American version is maize which yields what we now know as corn on the cob.
Also, watching you from Southern France. Thanks for your great videos! I am preparing for a degree in English, and we have two themes this year in modern history: 1-Protest movements, political dissent, and social struggles in Great Britain (1811-1914) 2-The United States and Latin America, from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Barack Obama (1933-2017) If you'd like to make videos on these topics, please know that French students will be delighted!
Corn is the germanic word/cognate to represent grain, of any kind. Specifically the grain itself. For instance, here in Sweden we call Corn(american vernacular) Majskorn or Maize Corn (maize grain). We also refer to rye corn, wheat corn, and so on.
I've also heard that there was also a bit to do with the American Revolution, as the revolutionaries had largely demanded many of the same things that this reform had actually managed to change.
Hey! This is Ethan Magnuson from Southside. I saw you at the Dorman tournament today, and after missing the question about Robert Peel I decided to review the Corn Laws. Thanks for all the great content!
thank for this video, i'm from peru, I have learnt to speak english and right now I have to do a historical research, and i decided to focus on this topic.
Thank you so much, youve just summed up a chapter in my study book for my history degree in a way that is digestible, instead of the word salad that is presented i my study book!
Oh I loved this - especially the way you say boroughs! It sounds like we all live in little Hobbit burrows.....anyway really helpful. I like learning my history from an American!
I think some context around the concept of a politician's role at this time would help. Part of the reason for the issues with the House of Commons was that being an MP was seen as a service of sorts, and they were unpaid as it was assumed that any Member of the House of Commons would be independently wealthy, and thus be able to rely on passive income.
I am not convinced that it’s “unfair” that rural areas would get more representation than urban areas. I don’t see how we can prove that “one man one vote” is an absolute truth of the universe. That’s a value judgment
Also, still no suffrage for women at all, it's not that the middle class as a whole gets more votes, it's just middle class men, which is important to not overlook.
"Corn" refers to "whatever the local cereal is" and may be wheat, barley, oats, rye. In much of the US, the local cereal is maize, so you call that "corn"
This video provides details on events that are not necessarily well informed. Thank you for your time, work and share 👍 Can I put it in a link in a voluntary work on the history of the revolutions in France and in the world since 1789? Cette vidéo apporte des détails sur des événements pas forcément bien renseignés. Merci pour votre temps, votre travail et le partage👍 Puis-je la mettre en lien dans un travail bénévole sur l'histoire des révolutions en France et dans le monde depuis 1789?
In western eEurope staple foods like wheat, rye, barley and so on is known as corn, korn or some derivate. Americans call maize "corn" because it fills some of the same functions. Adam Smith mentions this in book III of his "Wealth of Nations" IIRC.
Yeah... The funniest thing about this one is that I'm thinking as much about my British audience here as I am about my American audience as I make this series. Went a little more in depth than what my American audience probably wants but then again, it's not their history. Thought I'd start strong with a s/o to Shetland but then I said England right before the s/o instead of Britain! Honored that people in the UK are watching these lectures. Definitely plan to do a few more British history lecture series before it's all said and done!
To comment on your corn spiel - the Latin word "frumentum" means both corn and grain interchangeably in Laitn texts, which eventually evolved to the British usage commonly being termed corn, while Americans would refer to it as grain. Glad my AP Latin usage is doing me some good even if its for Euro lol
thank god i've found this . i'm Big procatinator . thank you , you always save my life . have you done a video of the 20th century too ? also do you know a quiz app of the 19th and 20th century british history ?
The House of Lords is out of date and should, like the electoral college, be abolished. Instead we should have a chamber of elected members based on the recommendations of a Parliamentary investigation of how best to create the new chamber. Also the House of Lords doesn’t just consist of hereditary Lords and the Church but also life peers given the honour as a reward for service to the country in some way such as successful businessmen, union leaders, politicians, scientists and others.
Hey thanks for this series of videos, I learned about quite a bit of this stuff at school over a decade ago here in England however in the course of time I have not remembered much of it in detail. Not that it means much and in a way it is superficial but my home town of Newcastle Upon Tyne in the North-East of England was the birthplace of Charles Grey 2nd Earl Grey, in the city centre we have a whacking great big monument to the 1832 Act. If your driving to Edinburgh its worth a look. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey%27s_Monument Thanks,
You blew your credibility within the first two minutes. 00:20 You are not talking about "English" politics, you are talking about "British" politics. 01:26 The House of Lords is not "Still made up of hereditary Nobility and Church Leaders". Some do sit there but the majority of the House is now made up of Lifetime Peers.
Okay, Professor Tom, here's the skinny on "corn" as in the "Corn Laws." Historically, sometimes a word goes from a general meaning to a very specific one. For example, "deer" at one time meant any wild animal - as its German cognate, "das Tier," still does - but over the centuries came to refer specifically to "Bambi." Likewise, right into the 19th century, "corn" was a generic English word for grain - wheat and barley were corns, for example - but in America was already limited in meaning to the grain that the rest of the world still tends to call "maize." I hope that helps.
Thank god for this channel, honestly. I've tried some other youtube "lecturers" and some are dry with horrible audio quality, and others seem like they're trying too hard to appeal to the masses with over-exaggerated energy. I keep coming back to you because your balance is just perfect. Thanks Tom. --- BA Hist. and Engl. student trying to cram for exams.
Currently reading Middlemarch by George Eliot and this video helps a lot towards my understanding of its historical context. Thank you so much!
also coming from Middlemarch, it's hard for me to fully understand the novel without any historical knowledge
Me too!!!
"I am no farmer, I am a historian"
Cow moo in background 😂. Loved it
S Si 😂😂
10/10
I looked outside my apartment in surprise, how on earth did a cow landed in such an urban town
This series is a lifesaver - thank you so much! Greetings from England :)
+scrambledmeg A pleasure to teach English history to people in England!
I have an exam on British politics in the 19th century tomorrow. This was very helpful, thank you!
Was it Britain 1780-1880 a level?
Here from India for my upsc cse examinations, love everything about this video!❤️❤️❤️❤️
In British terms corn refers to any grain, wheat, barley, rye or oats. Your American version is maize which yields what we now know as corn on the cob.
Also, watching you from Southern France. Thanks for your great videos! I am preparing for a degree in English, and we have two themes this year in modern history:
1-Protest movements, political dissent, and social struggles in Great Britain (1811-1914)
2-The United States and Latin America, from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Barack Obama (1933-2017)
If you'd like to make videos on these topics, please know that French students will be delighted!
u explain this really well. as a bachelor student in history, i find this really really helpful. half-semester exam in 2 days! ! !
Corn is the germanic word/cognate to represent grain, of any kind. Specifically the grain itself. For instance, here in Sweden we call Corn(american vernacular) Majskorn or Maize Corn (maize grain). We also refer to rye corn, wheat corn, and so on.
I've also heard that there was also a bit to do with the American Revolution, as the revolutionaries had largely demanded many of the same things that this reform had actually managed to change.
Just wanted to say Hi from ALBANIA!
I am an Aussie teaching at a school here and we often use your great videos!
Hi! Glad to hear my videos are useful to students in other countries.
Can't believe nobody in the comments has made a Blackadder reference yet
+TheBespectacledN00b IKR
You are reading my mind omg. We just got done studying this. This will help me so much with my test on Monday. THANKS!
Part 2 is uploading now and I plan to edit Part 3 tomorrow to finish the series.
Andrea Madsen pliz why was the social reforms gradually introduced ??
Hey! This is Ethan Magnuson from Southside. I saw you at the Dorman tournament today, and after missing the question about Robert Peel I decided to review the Corn Laws. Thanks for all the great content!
+Ethan Magnuson Nice meeting you today!
thank for this video, i'm from peru, I have learnt to speak english and right now I have to do a historical research, and i decided to focus on this topic.
Thank you so much, youve just summed up a chapter in my study book for my history degree in a way that is digestible, instead of the word salad that is presented i my study book!
Thankyou for this video I have my history GCSE exam tomorrow and this really helped solidify my knowledge. I’m from England by the way :)
Charlotte Mosley I have mine too good luck for tomorrow❤️
Oh I loved this - especially the way you say boroughs! It sounds like we all live in little Hobbit burrows.....anyway really helpful. I like learning my history from an American!
Note also that "corn'" in those days was a catch-all term for grains, and covered wheat, barley, rye and the like, not just wheat.
Anyone else here for A level history ??¿?
how'd yours go?
How'd yours go?
HOW'D YOURS GO?
HoW'd YoUrS gO?
How'd yours go?
I think we need a seperate video on the intricacies of Corn Vs Corn.
(Loved the video!)
I think some context around the concept of a politician's role at this time would help. Part of the reason for the issues with the House of Commons was that being an MP was seen as a service of sorts, and they were unpaid as it was assumed that any Member of the House of Commons would be independently wealthy, and thus be able to rely on passive income.
I am not convinced that it’s “unfair” that rural areas would get more representation than urban areas. I don’t see how we can prove that “one man one vote” is an absolute truth of the universe. That’s a value judgment
Also, still no suffrage for women at all, it's not that the middle class as a whole gets more votes, it's just middle class men, which is important to not overlook.
And when some richer women do start to gain the vote some, and not just men, want to stop poorer women and men gaining the vote.
@CrashCourse get this guy to teach something he is great
"Corn" refers to "whatever the local cereal is" and may be wheat, barley, oats, rye. In much of the US, the local cereal is maize, so you call that "corn"
This is great im writing and essay about this reform! I'm from Argentina!! Thank u so much!
Such an informative series, thank you! Greetings from France!
Can we talk
Mail me
Hello from Colchester, Essex, UK.
This video provides details on events that are not necessarily well informed.
Thank you for your time, work and share 👍
Can I put it in a link in a voluntary work on the history of the revolutions in France and in the world since 1789?
Cette vidéo apporte des détails sur des événements pas forcément bien renseignés.
Merci pour votre temps, votre travail et le partage👍
Puis-je la mettre en lien dans un travail bénévole sur l'histoire des révolutions en France et dans le monde depuis 1789?
Watching from india. Nice explanation
Excellent channel, really informative and entertaining
Hi from Algeria. It is very nice to find, sir, believe me! please keep going.
In western eEurope staple foods like wheat, rye, barley and so on is known as corn, korn or some derivate. Americans call maize "corn" because it fills some of the same functions. Adam Smith mentions this in book III of his "Wealth of Nations" IIRC.
+Are Riksaasen Thanks!
Saving my A level history grades! Thank you
Can you make a video about the Industrial Revolution please ?
Nicely weird to hear Americans talking British history 🇬🇧
Yeah... The funniest thing about this one is that I'm thinking as much about my British audience here as I am about my American audience as I make this series. Went a little more in depth than what my American audience probably wants but then again, it's not their history. Thought I'd start strong with a s/o to Shetland but then I said England right before the s/o instead of Britain!
Honored that people in the UK are watching these lectures. Definitely plan to do a few more British history lecture series before it's all said and done!
dude.. people from india.. also try to make some sense..
no more strange than BBC making better historical American fiction than America. Things work out well.
Watching from the Isle of man UK, very helpful for my assignments thank you!
I am watching this video on my exam day 😅
Great video! Greetings from Sheffield, England!
To comment on your corn spiel - the Latin word "frumentum" means both corn and grain interchangeably in Laitn texts, which eventually evolved to the British usage commonly being termed corn, while Americans would refer to it as grain. Glad my AP Latin usage is doing me some good even if its for Euro lol
Thank you very much for the Latin lesson. As an AP Euro teacher, I'm always up for a bit of humanism!
Tom Richey Lol glad I could offer something, you've saved me on every Euro test I've taken this year so my mediocre Latin knowledge is all I've got
Thank you sir for explaining this perticular topic 🙏
Tom! thank you for your videos they are really helpfull! Greetings from swedish :P
Glad to hear it! I appreciate my Swedish audience. Your country is in my top ten for viewers which is impressive for such a small country.
+Tom Richey that sneak diss haha
Great video for my A level politics in the UK. Thanks!
Exactly what I'm watching it for :)
thank you so much - this is so helpful
Hy
For use of “corn”, see Percy French’s “Emigrant’s Letter” (Cutting the corn in Creeslough) 🙂
Great video! Thank you from France!
The 1832 Act was the first act to specify "male" electors. Before 1832 there were some women who could vote.
Thanks for your video. Your lecture is so much better than my professors'.
Thanks for the video! Exactly what I needed for my 8th grade history class.
You save my British History finals, greetings from France :)
Did you know this vids on a playlist covering a history course in the UK
Awesome as I understand the relationship between the countries!
Please I want you to explain Parliamentary Reforms
Shetland isn’t in England its in Scotland 🏴
can you please link the source material. video on it's own will not do for college any more.
thank you sooo much that was SOOOOO helpful thank you
greetings from Algeria
Cheers for helping me out from Essex, England
thank god i've found this . i'm Big procatinator . thank you , you always save my life .
have you done a video of the 20th century too ?
also do you know a quiz app of the 19th and 20th century british history ?
would u give me the answer to this question ??? why was the social reforms gradually introduced ???
Who else is here after elona Holmes
😂😂😂😂😂
Yes lol
I feel like an investigator 🕵️♂️
Yess!
why did reforms was done through peaceful means not through revolution !? i need answers plz
Tell me about reform act 1867 and 1911..
a yes my saver before an hour of the exam
thank you
your accent is so strong!! im from cumbria, england!
for purposes of voting what did they consider "adult?"
21 at that time. Check out the next segment on the Chartists.
Hello from Northumberland (where Hadrian built his wall and the border collies come from). If Scotland leaves the union, may we li to come with you?
English corn: wheat
American corn: sweetcorn
Rural areas over represented?
Sounds like America today.
How do the corn laws fit into this again?
Like how do they work?
I will elaborate more on the Corn Laws in the third segment of this three part lecture.
I will post part 3 very soon (likely tomorrow) which will have a more in-depth explanation.
The House of Lords is out of date and should, like the electoral college, be abolished.
Instead we should have a chamber of elected members based on the recommendations of a Parliamentary investigation of how best to create the new chamber.
Also the House of Lords doesn’t just consist of hereditary Lords and the Church but also life peers given the honour as a reward for service to the country in some way such as successful businessmen, union leaders, politicians, scientists and others.
The 1688 Revolution is the reason the 1848 Revolution didn't reach Britain
US Corn = Maize, Sweetcorn, Corn-on-the-cob
UK Corn = Wheat, Grain
It’s a bad start referring to “English” politics, the United Kingdom is more than just England. Shetland is not in England.....
just shut up.
Watching from Bristol!
Hey thanks for this series of videos, I learned about quite a bit of this stuff at school over a decade ago here in England however in the course of time I have not remembered much of it in detail. Not that it means much and in a way it is superficial but my home town of Newcastle Upon Tyne in the North-East of England was the birthplace of Charles Grey 2nd Earl Grey, in the city centre we have a whacking great big monument to the 1832 Act. If your driving to Edinburgh its worth a look.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey%27s_Monument
Thanks,
Thanks a lot!
Omg his came up while I was outlining this chapter.
I live in Shetland !
Woop Woop
+Eleanor Ross YAY! Say hello to the ponies for me.
You blew your credibility within the first two minutes.
00:20 You are not talking about "English" politics, you are talking about "British" politics.
01:26 The House of Lords is not "Still made up of hereditary Nobility and Church Leaders". Some do sit there but the majority of the House is now made up of Lifetime Peers.
What's an England?
Thank you🌸🌸🍃
Hi Tom
+TheSilentStorm Hi... Whoever you are!
+Tom Richey Well he's +TheSilentStorm obviously!
Point well taken!
Sounds like "landed gentry" = Federal Reserve today!!!!
God save the Queen!
WE MEAN IT, MAN!!!
fuck the royal parasites
Tv is now the opium of the British people.
They believe Downton Abbey and The Crown is real.
..."and all of that kind of stuffs" LOL
Anyone is here after watching anola Holmes 😅
I love this
thank you .
I'm from Aberdeen North East Scotland Man
great video thanks for doing my hw
+nathan eson-benjemin Thanks and you're welcome!
I’ve watched this three times. Great videos and sounds better coming from an American 🤣
I love you Tom
Hi. Nice but understand that when you say England you mean Britain. PLEASE get it right. It is important. (Shetland is in Scotland, not England).
Good for optional history 😃
Okay, Professor Tom, here's the skinny on "corn" as in the "Corn Laws."
Historically, sometimes a word goes from a general meaning to a very specific one. For example, "deer" at one time meant any wild animal - as its German cognate, "das Tier," still does - but over the centuries came to refer specifically to "Bambi."
Likewise, right into the 19th century, "corn" was a generic English word for grain - wheat and barley were corns, for example - but in America was already limited in meaning to the grain that the rest of the world still tends to call "maize."
I hope that helps.
Is this helpful for a - level history
Reign of Queen Victoria 1837-1901.
Nice one love from india