Napoleonic Wars: Retreat from Moscow 1812

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  • Опубликовано: 19 дек 2019
  • In 1812 Napoleon invaded Russia with the largest army Europe had ever seen. But after winning a costly victory at Borodino and occupying Moscow, Napoleon's invitation to Russian Emperor Alexander to make peace met with no response. Napoleon now found himself 500 miles from friendly territory, outnumbered, poorly supplied, and with winter approaching. What followed was one of the most harrowing and disastrous events in military history - the Retreat from Moscow - in which Russian attacks, freezing weather and starvation virtually wiped out the once-proud Grande Armée.
    Special thanks to Alexander Averyanov for kind permission to use his paintings 'Maloyaroslavets', 'At Gorodnya 25 October 1812' and 'Council of War at Gorodnya'.
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    📖The Napoleonic Wars by Todd Fisher www.ospreypublishing.com/uk/n... / www.ospreypublishing.com/uk/n...
    📖Combat: French Guardsman vs Russian Jäger 1812-14 www.ospreypublishing.com/uk/f...
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @EpichistoryTv
    @EpichistoryTv  4 года назад +1696

    I hope you enjoy the new episode in our Napoleonic Wars series. This one is a little longer as I wanted time to try and convey the sheer drama and suffering involved in this infamous and tragic episode of military history. Help us to make more videos by joining us on Patreon for early access and other perks, or shopping for EHTV branded merchandise! Leipzig and the 1813 German campaign next up, in the meantime I hope you all have excellent holiday seasons.

    • @ovilersmith5006
      @ovilersmith5006 4 года назад +7

      So sexy thank you some much!

    • @mehmetkransal2089
      @mehmetkransal2089 4 года назад +6

      Can you share a music where sings at the beginning?

    • @shubhambeniwal7146
      @shubhambeniwal7146 4 года назад +23

      Love visuals and Narration😍

    • @theblackmaster149
      @theblackmaster149 4 года назад +6

      What about battle of Dresden?

    • @EpichistoryTv
      @EpichistoryTv  4 года назад +32

      It will be covered as part of the German campaign but Leipzig will be the featured battle.

  • @notmenotme614
    @notmenotme614 4 года назад +2908

    “This is beginning to be very serious”
    The biggest understatement in history.

    • @cocotaveras8975
      @cocotaveras8975 4 года назад +8

      Not Me Not Me YEP!

    • @Darknessi3eckons
      @Darknessi3eckons 4 года назад +96

      Hahaha! So true. Took him that long to start taking things seriously. Uhm.

    • @VRichardsn
      @VRichardsn 4 года назад +104

      _The biggest understatement in history_
      I think I have a better one. And of course, it is coming from a British.
      So, it is 1942 and the Italo-Germans are duking it out with the Commonwealth forces in the desert. At Gazala, Rommel launched a pinning attack with the Italian infantry, while his mobile forces went in an all in flank. And when I say all in, I mean it. He threw his entire mechanised force - five divisions, thousands of vehicles, and virtually every Axis tank in the order of battle, comprising a solid block of armor nearly 15 miles on a side - against the British rear after a large flanking manouver. The Commonwealth forces woke up to an amazing scene: an enormous cloud of dust, the sign of a huge sandstorm. By now, they’d all seen strange weather patterns and storms blow up out of nowhere. This one, however, suddenly clarified into something worse: tanks, tanks, and more tanks, vehicles of every description, sailing out of the dust. Brigade after brigade fell with little fighting, completely caught by surprise. However, past the initial shock, Auchinlek's command stood firm to endure the onslaught, and Rommel's forces became hard pressed and had to make a fighting withdrawal _through_ the British lines. The onslaught left the British forces in tatters, and Tobruk now wide exposed. Until so far in the rear, the 2nd South African division garrisonning Tobruk suddendly found themselves on the front lines. Attacking at dawn, by nood there over 100 German tanks pouring into the perimeter of the fortress: the 2nd South African Division was begin cut to pieces, swarmed on all sides by Italo-German infantry and tanks. It was at this time that Mj. General Klopper radioed the understatement of the century: "Situation not in hand".

    • @billboardbraggins1443
      @billboardbraggins1443 4 года назад +17

      @@VRichardsn I think he actually was holding "situation" in his hand quite literally, but then "situation" fell to the floor and he radioed "situation not in hand". Because otherwise it wouldn't make any sense. As to what exactly "situation" is, i cannot say for sure. Maybe it was a picture of his lover called "situation".

    • @jebbroham1776
      @jebbroham1776 4 года назад +44

      Hitler said the same thing in December 1941 while his armies fled before the gates of Moscow. He had studied Napoleon's disastrous invasion of Russia, but because mechanized warfare was now possible he reasoned that it would be a quick campaign and the Russians would retreat as they had in Napoleon's time. This was proved to be correct, but Moscow was not taken and Hitler deeply underestimated Stalin's intent to fight the war to victory or death.

  • @ReplayButtonsReaper
    @ReplayButtonsReaper 4 года назад +2681

    Napoleon: "Peace lies in Moscow".
    Moscow: Yes, eternal peace.

  • @billknoderer8202
    @billknoderer8202 Год назад +694

    My ancestor, Christian Knoderer was a Captain under Napolean. He left Paris with nearly 400 men under his command and during the struggle of retreat return from Moscow with 3 of his men including himself.

  • @sarahpiaggio2693
    @sarahpiaggio2693 Год назад +527

    The army that fought at Waterloo was only a shadow of its former self. It's quite likely that it's the retreat from Moscow that destroyed napoleon. My grandfather died only a few years ago aged 99. He remembered seeing at home, when he was a child, his own great-grandfather's napoleonic rifle propped up against the wall of the family home. His great-grandfather was one of the 5% who survived the retreat and got home. But he got frostbite and lost his toes apparently. He was one of the engineers that built the bridges, and one who destroyed the bridges to prevent the Russians crossing on them, dooming many of his own people who hadn't got over in time. What a horrifying situation they found themselves in

    • @jout738
      @jout738 Год назад +25

      Yes did Napoleon ego get too big, because his previous succes in Europe. He thought he could just march to Russia and Moscow and make Alexander first sign peace treaty, but Alexander first never did that, when instead the Moscow people retreated further to east where its even harder to get them. It was mistake from Napoleon to go in late time of the year to Russia, when rather should have gone in spring to Russia, so you can return before November comes around, but I dont know what was the point to even go to Russia, when its so far away from France, so if Napoleon was able to conquer Russia. He would still not be able to hold on it, when its so cold and ao far away from France, when maybe Napoleon ego hit him, that he thought he could just take Russia like that, when its been so easy to take other nations in Europe. What I think Napoleon instead should have done is to hold on the territories in Europe he has gained by defending them with his troops, if for example Russia or Britain decide to attack them, because there is no point to go too far away from your home country, because suprises like that can happen and you cant hold on to that territory. Holding on to the territories he had gained would make them french, when some point its not good to go even more east, when its just too far away from your home country and Napoleon had gone too far, so made his big mistake, that lowered his army morale a lot, when his army was so annoyed by the cold weather, that they propably had not the fighting spirit left in them, when -30 celcius weather destroys your fighting spirit, so it was hugh blow to the french man power and this is why other nations sensed weakness in french military now and thats how french military started to crumble with lack of man power from now on, so the big 600K man power, that Napoleon had should have been rather be used to defend from all sides the territories he had conquered in Europe, than be sent to freeze to death in Russia or survive with low fighting spirit left on themselves, so this is why you should not get ego in your head as military general and think its too easy to conquer these areas, when at some point there is no point to go further, when even, if your were able to conquer thoese territories. You would not be able to hold them, so it would be wortheles to conquer thoese territories and the French cant hold Russian territories, because their not built to survive in Russian winter.

    • @WQuantrill
      @WQuantrill Год назад

      Very cool!

    • @user-bm1tl6sp8y
      @user-bm1tl6sp8y Год назад +4

      ну бывает... бывает... , приходи теперь ты в гости )

    • @user-ee8uu3zp3h
      @user-ee8uu3zp3h Год назад

      @@jout738 👏👏👍🏼

    • @lucasdamotta2931
      @lucasdamotta2931 Год назад

      The spanish was a even bigger mistake since unlike Russia, it was a useless and pointless invasion.

  • @lindainglis8506
    @lindainglis8506 4 года назад +968

    The paintings are glorious.

    • @JustYKnowY
      @JustYKnowY 3 года назад +46

      Alot of them are in the great patriotic war museum in red Square Moscow!! I saw them 😃

    • @danielwatson6529
      @danielwatson6529 3 года назад +8

      one is of alexander ney. its in manchester museum, England - its my fave, i knew the painting before the story - its a epic picture. the red in his eyes is crazy - oh its the thumbnail picture

    • @danielwatson6529
      @danielwatson6529 3 года назад +3

      Sorry its not the thumbnail, i dont think unless the thumbnail is a clip of it, but its the one that pops up - google "Marshal Ney Supporting the Rear Guard During the Retreat from Moscow"

    • @danielwatson6529
      @danielwatson6529 3 года назад +3

      @@chad4858 you have been in lockdown for months havent you?

    • @Romanotieu
      @Romanotieu 3 года назад

      Could anyone give me the name of the Young Guard Sacrifice in Krasny? Near 14:23 . I've been looking for it for a long time ...

  • @benjackson91
    @benjackson91 4 года назад +6634

    Can we take a minute to realise that the narrators voice makes this 10 times more epic

    • @yuppiefuggster4174
      @yuppiefuggster4174 4 года назад +102

      Ben Jackson it's incredible. Absolutely

    • @guarana6245
      @guarana6245 4 года назад +148

      Most "narator" voice of all times.

    • @AvaTheFaeva
      @AvaTheFaeva 4 года назад +138

      That voice is one of the huge reasons I've played this video so much. Lolol

    • @Pedro-em3ik
      @Pedro-em3ik 4 года назад +57

      Yes indeed. The voice of the narrator is awesome

    • @cocotaveras8975
      @cocotaveras8975 4 года назад +10

      Peter Pen Agreed!

  • @HyperSonicX
    @HyperSonicX Год назад +249

    I can't get over how intense your portrayal of the Battle of the Berezina is. The music and the narration make it clear like no other documentary I've seen how desperate the situation was. It's epic and I come back to it constantly.

    • @hurri7720
      @hurri7720 Год назад

      The music is without any competition this, the 1812 overture.
      ruclips.net/video/ZrsYD46W1U0/видео.html
      Or why not this for an other retreat.
      ruclips.net/video/WGiz_qbViE0/видео.html

    • @leonardobrandaoeafitopatol7194
      @leonardobrandaoeafitopatol7194 8 месяцев назад +2

      Me too. I watch this video often, and never get bored

    • @doggydude2668
      @doggydude2668 5 месяцев назад +4

      it was making me feel some fear while i was watching it
      the same feeling i got when hearing about nutty putty but less anxiety

    • @WQuantrill
      @WQuantrill Месяц назад +1

      Same with holding open the road at Krasny

  • @leonpaelinck
    @leonpaelinck Год назад +206

    "The corridor was closing"
    Chills went through my spine

    • @alexanderthegreatoz5945
      @alexanderthegreatoz5945 Год назад +2

      Same tactics applied today by Russian offensive with the use of "Cauldron" tactic in Ukraine.

    • @deliciouscorn2663
      @deliciouscorn2663 10 месяцев назад +3

      Imagine the sense of doom they must’ve had. Wading through below freezing temperatures and waist high snow drifts knowing the Russians are coming to kill you

    • @F.R.E.D.D2986
      @F.R.E.D.D2986 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@alexanderthegreatoz5945only difference from 1812 is Russia can't move

    • @YourSocialistAutomaton
      @YourSocialistAutomaton 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@F.R.E.D.D2986bakhmut and avdeevka:

    • @NerickovaNoha
      @NerickovaNoha 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@YourSocialistAutomaton
      Yes, while loosing 1300 young man daily.
      Are you cheering for the aggressor, Arab ?
      Btw. people of Ukraine, cossacks etc.
      were Russia's best soldiers, did you know that ?

  • @modernclassicalmusic8942
    @modernclassicalmusic8942 4 года назад +5047

    And people say history is boring

    • @evanboyd1541
      @evanboyd1541 4 года назад +149

      Grenades and Bunnies people say a lot of stupid shit.

    • @freewal
      @freewal 4 года назад +250

      Only idiots say that. History our roots. I take note of Napoleon mistakes and what he achieved. We are millions to love what he tried in Europe : unify European nations and stop the dark ages of the unfair medieval system.
      One day I hope we will have a such great leader to unify the European people

    • @evanboyd1541
      @evanboyd1541 4 года назад +33

      Khaye Ayubann agreed my college Holocaust history class was very boring because the professor was pretty monotone in his lectures.

    • @beniaminosani2719
      @beniaminosani2719 4 года назад +9

      @@freewal beviti meno cazzate va

    • @freewal
      @freewal 4 года назад +3

      @@beniaminosani2719
      borsa di merda

  • @alexnickolaev
    @alexnickolaev 4 года назад +2402

    Napoleon entering Moscow: So, it is finally over
    Russians: It has just begun

    • @levangeorgi6974
      @levangeorgi6974 4 года назад +173

      this is why Russians will never lose against the West

    • @levangeorgi6974
      @levangeorgi6974 4 года назад +59

      @Biden’s_Bro 58 america have no friends this is the money and nothing

    • @williamle8300
      @williamle8300 4 года назад +29

      “And now it begins”
      “Nu...... nuwitends”

    • @roughnegg6615
      @roughnegg6615 4 года назад +11

      @Biden’s_Bro 58 there were no ''comrades'' in early 19th century

    • @darktemplardelta268
      @darktemplardelta268 4 года назад +14

      @@levangeorgi6974 didn't Russia lose against Napoleon in the war of the 4th coalition.

  • @YouKingofTube
    @YouKingofTube 6 месяцев назад +559

    I am Russian myself, but every time someone, in the context of a war with Russia, starts talking about winter, I want to tell the author - “Russians are the same europian people, Russians no have immunity from hypothermia, Russians also die from hypothermia.”

    • @ernestogastelum9123
      @ernestogastelum9123 6 месяцев назад +92

      thats a flaw statement, even though Russians do die from hypothermia. they can manage the winter a lot better than countries who arent used to it and have less casualties due to it. Its not a surprising thing that a country can manage a climate much better than other countries that dont experience it as much. for example British couldnt handle the "heatwave" in 2022 while other countries who are used to it were making fun of them

    • @OSTemli
      @OSTemli 5 месяцев назад +52

      No need to tell them, no wonder they will lose again if they attack Russia, too much arrogant
      Look at Vietnam they defeated american and their allies badly, but speak well of some of american unit who distinguished themselves

    • @sanjivjhangiani3243
      @sanjivjhangiani3243 5 месяцев назад +7

      But if you know what boots to wear, etc, you are better off.

    • @oldsingingstudentdougbillf1665
      @oldsingingstudentdougbillf1665 5 месяцев назад

      @@ernestogastelum9123russians he’d no chose to adapt to the cold just to survive because most of the population are dirt poor and drunk.

    • @tat.1299
      @tat.1299 5 месяцев назад +21

      Мой дед прошел Великую Отечественную с 41 по 45 год без единого ранения. Единственное он подвергался сильному обморожению ног.

  • @Lorgar64
    @Lorgar64 Год назад +133

    "I've made a grave mistake, but I'll have the means to repair it."
    You just lost a half a million soldiers for nothing. You can't repair that. No one can repair that.

    • @razlevi8238
      @razlevi8238 Год назад +10

      say that to stalin in the battle of kiev 1941.

    • @Lorgar64
      @Lorgar64 Год назад +21

      @@razlevi8238 Populations were a tad larger at the time. Napoleon was commanding the largest army of his time, a century later it was thirty or so divisions. France was fielding over a hundred after losing two thirds of their army in the Great War.

    • @RogueReplicant
      @RogueReplicant Год назад +3

      @@Lorgar64 Please remind us newbies how many men there are per division. 30 divisions is meaningless to most of us.

    • @Lorgar64
      @Lorgar64 Год назад +2

      @@RogueReplicant It was a little fluid, but a division numbered 10,000 - 20,000 men. 30 divisions could easily be half a million men.

    • @samueldougoud3289
      @samueldougoud3289 Год назад +18

      This shows accurately how he considered all this as a game.

  • @yesfed2730
    @yesfed2730 4 года назад +456

    Its Cold Outside...but after watching this video I’m not going to complain again.

    • @alanmalan3819
      @alanmalan3819 4 года назад +6

      18:40 Poland always tried to kill us and always helped our enemies without WW2 times

    • @geechyguy3441
      @geechyguy3441 4 года назад +12

      I had to sleep outside in rain and wind and cold weather but it only got to 27 degrees at the lowest. Taking into account how horrible that felt with decent enough gear - I can't imagine below zero without proper clothing for the weather. Jesus christ those men suffered.

    • @dude9318
      @dude9318 4 года назад +4

      Daniel Godoy ha true but remember those soldiers were tough and had spirit

    • @1972taco
      @1972taco 4 года назад +5

      @@dude9318 that's not true. Perhaps they where though and fit. But Napoleon forced young men in to his army. In my country, Holland, thousand of men where forced to go to Rusland. It was a though time for occupied country's and many died. Napoleon wasn't a hero, but instat a dictator and a massmurderer.

    • @dude9318
      @dude9318 4 года назад

      1972taco interesting well in some cases some soldiers joined because they wanted to but nobody exactly knew what war is my point is its unimaginable to know what they went thru and some survived they are strong in my eyes but on the subject of napoleon I don't know know much of him but his plan was to unite all of europe but he made a mistake by invading so many countries

  • @panagiotiskant5064
    @panagiotiskant5064 4 года назад +594

    I have watched all your videos... But I nevver left a comment.. In this video I couldn't resist.... You truly deserve that name for your channel... This video was breathtaking!!!

    • @EpichistoryTv
      @EpichistoryTv  4 года назад +29

      Thank you!

    • @vaggeliskantouris4980
      @vaggeliskantouris4980 4 года назад +2

      Indeed

    • @avant-garde-philippe9813
      @avant-garde-philippe9813 4 года назад +6

      I agree ! Same with me, I never wrote a comment but have been watching your videos and the quality is outstanding! 🔥

    • @Thomas194.
      @Thomas194. 4 года назад

      @@EpichistoryTv He says: "No problem cause you are very very well in history" :P

    • @michelechase3028
      @michelechase3028 Год назад

      I'm waiting in the movie with Danny Davito as him

  • @richardgregory3684
    @richardgregory3684 Год назад +132

    Napoleon found it very convenient to lay the blame on "General Winter" - it was one of the things that allowed him to return to France having lost practically his entire army in a humiliating defeat and retreat but rather than being deposed in a coup, he created a whole new army in short order. Such was his charisma (and skill at propaganda) that the French population were still willing to follow him, and to have their sons conscripted despite the fact that it was the Emperor who had, in effect, just killed several hundred thousand of them. Moreover, it is likely that Napoleon's ego would not allow him to accept it was his own poor decisions that lead to disaster - he was very naive in his trust of the Tzar, and delayed evacuating Moscow for many unecessary weeks. It is a common fate of dictators - they start to believe their own myths of invincibility. Hitler was the same. The initial string of victories by the Wehrmacht convinced him that he was unbeatable.

    • @luna-oe2cs
      @luna-oe2cs 6 месяцев назад

      It’s amazing how Russia managed to cope with dictators who subjugated half the world. Truly a great story.

    • @metaloph1l
      @metaloph1l 5 месяцев назад +13

      Napoleon was a master of manipulation & propaganda. To this day people lay blame for his downfall on his personnel, when he himself committed many follies. He was the common denominator among all of the catastrophies that lead to his ultimate defeat.

    • @georgekren
      @georgekren 5 месяцев назад +4

      Not totally true: he did admit he made a grave mistake. An understatement if ever there was one. Probably only lost at waterloo because of marshall Ney, and untrained and untried new soldiers.
      Still took a continent to bring him down.

    • @potato88872
      @potato88872 5 месяцев назад +1

      He did say that a mystake but he had the the means to repair it, and he almost manage it to repair

    • @edgingjogo
      @edgingjogo 3 месяца назад

      The problem with Napoleon, in my opinion, was that as he got older, he became more cautious and tired, not unlike the energetic general just years earlier in Italy who had able to mastermind victories. As well as this, you'll notice that in all of his later battles, he suffers massive casualties due to his huge frontal attacks on the enemy line. Napoleon's genius was that he was a risk taker - he essentially did what other generals did not have the balls to do, but by becoming more cautious, he had devolved into the same state as his enemies.
      Don't get me wrong, he was an incredible commander and charismatic, much more better than most generals. However, his age caused cautiousness, and his reckless behaviour was no more, which could cause great victories.

  • @williamthomas5215
    @williamthomas5215 8 месяцев назад +22

    Those 90k that actually made it home must’ve been the hardest men on the planet

  • @mattsilberbauer3373
    @mattsilberbauer3373 2 года назад +988

    Napoleon's retreat needs to be made into a horror film. The narration alone gives one chills; a measure of thanks that we live not in such a brutal time and place.

    • @alexfriedman2047
      @alexfriedman2047 Год назад

      You would think so but women and children and men are dying and being trortured every day in Ukraine and Yemen

    • @jean3525
      @jean3525 Год назад +58

      there is books memories of french soldiers who retreat and escaped. you are rigth it was like horror film

    • @johnd3124
      @johnd3124 Год назад +20

      we live in very comfortable times, no world wars.. information at the tip of your fingers

    • @alexfriedman2047
      @alexfriedman2047 Год назад +29

      @@johnd3124 What does that have to do with anything?? All I said was you don't ned to go back in time to see war crimes and death.... It's literally happening everyday in Ukraine.

    • @nigermant6347
      @nigermant6347 Год назад +16

      A realistic movie about all this hell would be impressive at the same time than horrific. Aah little pot-bellied corsican, you better had been a hippie than a soldier.

  • @pavell712
    @pavell712 4 года назад +949

    Everything is good, but you didn't completely describe Kutuzov's behaviour when Napoleon entered Moscow. What he did was called "the Tarutino maneuver". He sent two cossack squads down the Yaroslavl road, so Napoleon's scouts would see the trails and think the whole Russian army retreated deeply. Whilehimself Kutuzov with army made a hook southeast and stood under the village Tarutino and there was waiting the whole time that Napoleon tried to negotiate with Alexander. Then when Napoleon went off to Kaluga, it was complete surprise for him to see Russian army at Maloyaroslavets, when he was thrown off the main passage and was forced to follow the abandoned Old-Smolensk road. So that was a kind of old commander's wisdom.

    • @user-yt8ic1tg4w
      @user-yt8ic1tg4w 4 года назад +97

      Молодец, похоже они пользовались только западными источниками. Часто цитируют французов, описывают их действия и положения изнутри. А русских совсем не цитируют и их действия описывают только в столкновениях с французами. Но всё равно, их работа очень объективна и подробна. Это лучшая документалка о войне с Наполеоном, гораздо лучше всех отечественных поделок и поверхностных халтур.

    • @pavell712
      @pavell712 4 года назад +29

      Да, согласен. Все отлично проработано.

    • @cityslacker6221
      @cityslacker6221 4 года назад +69

      Cutting off the Southern route was the most important aspect of all of Kutuzov's decisions since the day Napolean crossed the Nieman.

    • @pavell712
      @pavell712 4 года назад +68

      @@cityslacker6221 Kutuzov was put into command only a few days before Borodino. Before him Barclay de Tolly was commander-in-chief. He also acted decently not allowing Napoleon to squash three parted russian armies and rejoining them into one.

    • @TLOK1918
      @TLOK1918 4 года назад +7

      @@pavell712 That's interesting. I don't know how far Tarutino is from Moscow, but didn't Napoleon send any scouting parties regularly to see what Kutuzov was up to? Why was he completely caught off guard?

  • @benjaminbohannon4432
    @benjaminbohannon4432 10 месяцев назад +57

    For the past 7 months, I have been a slow, in-depth reading of War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy. I am nearing the end of this 1,300 page tome and have followed this series along the way. Thank you for providing such an in-depth presentation of this moment in history. It has been an invaluable resource for me during my reading, and has really revealed the brilliance of Tolstoy's masterpiece. Much gratitude.

    • @iavor3377
      @iavor3377 Месяц назад +1

      Best book ever, it`s not even close.

  • @ChessArmyCommander
    @ChessArmyCommander Год назад +78

    The amount of human suffering and the severity of it, pertaining to this conflict, is horrifying to think about.

    • @dvdortiz9031
      @dvdortiz9031 Год назад +10

      You forgot that was caused by the madness of one single midget!!! They were rewarded accordingly!!!

    • @dvdortiz9031
      @dvdortiz9031 Год назад

      Con la destruction del ejercito de napoleon, el mundo se libro' de mucha mierda!!!

    • @jussikankinen9409
      @jussikankinen9409 7 месяцев назад

      Dont worry about past, worry about future still russians killing babies and cooking

  • @cbviperess9319
    @cbviperess9319 4 года назад +259

    Halo 1812.
    New objective:
    *Survive*

    • @user-dc2hs9lt2m
      @user-dc2hs9lt2m 4 года назад +12

      "Now is the moment my campaign begins."
      (c) Tsar Alexander I.
      A scary thing to hear from your opponent, especially when you've fought half-way through the entire conflict. I felt a little cold at the phrase... And by the way, Russia also fought on another front with Persia (Russo-Persian War 1804-1813). Amazing.

    • @legionbowen1292
      @legionbowen1292 Месяц назад +1

      Lolololol 😅

  • @MIngalls
    @MIngalls 3 года назад +449

    The engineers are the real MVP

    • @mjvjohnson
      @mjvjohnson 3 года назад +71

      Yeah really. That was crazy. Chest deep in freezing water? Few lived?
      That is sacrifice. They gave their lives saving the army. What’s crazy is that in those conditions, cold weak hungry and tired, they were able to still get it done in extreme conditions. Between them and Ney, real heroes

    • @jasonfarrell00
      @jasonfarrell00 2 года назад +14

      As usual 🤷‍♂️ where the world be without engineers ☝️🧐

    • @jurgbangerter1023
      @jurgbangerter1023 2 года назад +10

      @@mjvjohnson The Swiss regiments covered the retreat under Ney, from 6'000 Swiss only 300 survived, they were the only ones still able to fight used to te cold temepratures also having an iron discipline they were famous for.

    • @fredericklee4821
      @fredericklee4821 2 года назад +2

      Just like the US Army Engineers during the Battle of the Buldge.

    • @MCohen28
      @MCohen28 2 года назад

      Nah. Marshal Ney was.

  • @guybroughton8572
    @guybroughton8572 10 месяцев назад +80

    I'm a history geek, so I really enjoyed this documentary. Thanks for making this long enough to tell the entire story as it deserves to be told.

  • @davianoinglesias5030
    @davianoinglesias5030 5 месяцев назад +20

    What we need right now is a movie series about this retreat

  • @riflemanalex3202
    @riflemanalex3202 4 года назад +427

    This was awesome the line from Tsar Alexander after Napoleon started the retreat “now my campaign begins” sent chills through me.

    • @l0remipsum991
      @l0remipsum991 3 года назад +20

      "chills" LOL

    • @MarvinT0606
      @MarvinT0606 3 года назад +21

      *"If you want to catch a mouse, leave the trap open"* -Frederick the Great

    • @cocotaveras8975
      @cocotaveras8975 3 года назад

      @@MarvinT0606 Exactly! Napoleon proved this again and again as this informative video on his campaigns in Italy repeatedly shows
      ruclips.net/video/oHg5SJYRHA0/видео.html

    • @user-tf4zo8ub7w
      @user-tf4zo8ub7w 2 года назад +2

      Император Всероссийский

    • @mrrandom9028
      @mrrandom9028 2 года назад +39

      @Floron Burn all your cities? They burned only Moscow and it was a personal decision of Kutuzov, who, like in a chess game, beat the naive fool Napoleon))

  • @VentiVonOsterreich
    @VentiVonOsterreich 4 года назад +3667

    Napoleon: "We captured Moscow, surrender now!"
    Alexander: "Or what?"
    Napoleon: "I don't know I never thought I'd get this far"

    • @allanjbucknol4414
      @allanjbucknol4414 4 года назад +63

      Arcuate

    • @charismatic1516
      @charismatic1516 4 года назад +119

      @aji har Megalomaniac! Let thousands to their deaths for his petty ambition.

    • @ilyotahuri4827
      @ilyotahuri4827 4 года назад +58

      @@charismatic1516 Napoleon wanted peace but alexander did not. So who is the real meglomaniac?!

    • @FluppiLP
      @FluppiLP 4 года назад +376

      @@ilyotahuri4827 Napoleon wanted a ridiculous peace that he was unable to enforce. Alexander did not consider Russia beaten and rightly so. He would not accept any peace that considered Napoleon to be the winner.
      If someone wants peace in an undecided war he makes concessions. Napoleon was not willing to do so. You can't be naive enough to call that "wanting peace"
      Napoleon proved on multiple occasions that he was willing to sacrifice everyone and everything for his ambition. Far and foremost he wanted to sacrifice Germans and Poles but if necessary also waves and waves of french soldiers. It is pretty clear to everyone who the real melomaniac was ;)

    • @ilyotahuri4827
      @ilyotahuri4827 4 года назад +60

      @@FluppiLP If Napoleon really wanted war, he would have pursued the Russians right after the battle of Austerlitz in 1805 or after the battle of Friedland in 1807 when Russians were crashed and Napoleon was right at the border and could have pushed into Russia with better results. That is when Alexander said tilist treaty is just a break for the next war. Alexander threw Russia into wars that personally benefitted him, not Russia because he could not get over the shame after losing Austerlitz. Alexander wanted to be the great Napoleon and envied him. Most wars were declared on Napoleon, thereby they made him great for losing to Napoleon after they declared wars on him as British puppets. It should be called Monarchic wars, not Napoleonic.

  • @abdaloser
    @abdaloser Год назад +55

    Theres a good book called "diary of a napoleonic footsoldier" that follows the events of the retreat. Real crazy how it became every man for himself. Theres the account where if you fell your body would be stripped before you were dead.

    • @Galejro
      @Galejro Год назад +10

      You know what they say, we are only 3 meals away from being savage animals, terrible reality and one that was later shown in WW1

    • @JarthenGreenmeadow
      @JarthenGreenmeadow Год назад +4

      @@Galejro And only 9 from complete societal collapse.

    • @dethray1000
      @dethray1000 Год назад +5

      700,000 came in,only 5,000 returned

    • @timvandenbrink4461
      @timvandenbrink4461 Год назад +1

      Thank you, I’ll check that out.

  • @svenerikjohansson8130
    @svenerikjohansson8130 Год назад +22

    Kutuzov, tsar Alexanders commander, is one of my heroes. So is Aleksandr Suvorov, skilled commander in Alexanders fathers, Paul I:s army that drove the forces of revolutionary France out of northern Italy after his legendary march over the Alps. Best wishes fro Sven in Sweden. ( By the way our Swedish king happenes to descend from, ammong others, one of Paul I:s daughters. 🙂)

  • @juliosunga3530
    @juliosunga3530 4 года назад +1008

    everyone who crosses Russia's western borders ends up eating their own horse.

    • @Buildbeautiful
      @Buildbeautiful 4 года назад +32

      Napoleons army defeated the russian army when hitlers 3 armies groups entered the soviet union the whole army led by coward stalin fled east out of conflict only to invade nazi germany backed by the usa with odds of 80 to 1

    • @combatspor
      @combatspor 4 года назад +336

      @@Buildbeautiful Napoleon lost 80% of their Army in Russia and soviet flag raised in Reichstag in 1945 at the end ( in just one battle of Stalingrad germans lost 500.000 mans ). So don't write stupid thinks and stop crying about the russian winter as an excuse.

    • @juliosunga3530
      @juliosunga3530 4 года назад +195

      @@Buildbeautiful are u implying stalin and the soviets chickened out? u do know the Red Army was destroyed and reconstituted several times in 1941 and 1942 campaign season? no one fled east, they were pushed east early in the eastern campaign. 80 to 1 myth. germans never faced those odds in the east. the extreme was 10 to 1 during the last days of ww2 when Germany has practically exhausted herself. At the start of Barbarossa the germans even outnumbered the Soviets along the frontiers.

    • @ontheline3077
      @ontheline3077 4 года назад +73

      @B A In Budapest operation Germans had 2.5 to 1 superiority, because they wanted to protect Vienna no matter what, and Soviet troops were foxused on Kenigsberg and Warsaw. The result- they failed to break the front, lost their defensive Attila line and ran into the city. It was their last attempt of offensive in the east that ended in disaster despite numerical superiority, because at 1944 Soviets got so much battle experience, they were literally unstoppable. They even had lesser casualties in offensive, which wa unheard of.

    • @audax5476
      @audax5476 4 года назад +79

      Anthony Redmond, why you so butthurt about Russians, what wrong have they done to you?

  • @Mastakilla91
    @Mastakilla91 4 года назад +382

    "This is beginning to be very serious" - Napoleon

    • @nikitaspytsyn8063
      @nikitaspytsyn8063 4 года назад +12

      very serious

    • @HeroHoundoom
      @HeroHoundoom 4 года назад +20

      General Kutuzov- "Beginning?"

    • @Iason29
      @Iason29 4 года назад +36

      Yea when that popped up I died from laughing

    • @nomooon
      @nomooon 4 года назад +1

      british stiff upper lip

    • @l0remipsum991
      @l0remipsum991 3 года назад +1

      "nervous sweating"

  • @elliotchinneryhinks8554
    @elliotchinneryhinks8554 Год назад +41

    I've only begun watching this entire series last week and this one episode has had me in awe and moved me more than any TV show has ever done....utterly incredible...I nearly teared up at Marshal Ney's utter badassery....I'm still learning my history the Napoleonic wars and his russian campaign was something I didn't know much about but this series has filled my head with inspiration and perspective....10/10

  • @jacquesrenou2850
    @jacquesrenou2850 Год назад +18

    A Latvian friend of mine,his family took in one of Napoleon soilders.A deserter,or whatever his circumstances,and that person married into that family and became part of as well as a Latvian.For any soilders, returning back to France ment a certain death as a deserter.

  • @Observer29830
    @Observer29830 4 года назад +187

    "Now is the moment MY CAMPAIGN begins."
    A scary thing to hear from your opponent, especially when you've fought half-way through the entire conflict.

    • @ihl0700677525
      @ihl0700677525 4 года назад +25

      *especially after you already spent half of your army.

    • @cocotaveras8975
      @cocotaveras8975 4 года назад

      Observer29830 Indeed.

  • @cronobactersakazakii5133
    @cronobactersakazakii5133 4 года назад +169

    In France, to sum up something that went really bad, we still use the expression "c'est la Berezina".

    • @shawngilliland243
      @shawngilliland243 4 года назад +28

      @Cronobacter Sakazakii - Thanks for sharing that French expression with its origins in the retreat from Moscow with us!

    • @Jesus.purple
      @Jesus.purple 4 года назад +6

      Very poignant.....

    • @cronobactersakazakii5133
      @cronobactersakazakii5133 4 года назад +29

      @Lans Quenet The average french won't tell you details about this campain or even the year it occured. They have no idea of what are Minsk or Smolensk, but la Berezina yes. You talk about tactical success from a military point of view, people generally don't. The french army crossed the Berezina like an Arch of Defeat. As heroic as it was, still a catastrophy.
      Ps: I work near la Place de l'Etoile, I ride down L'avenue de Wagram on my way home ;-)

    • @impaugjuldivmax
      @impaugjuldivmax 4 года назад +2

      @Lans Quenet the fact that Napoleon excaped does not mean that Berezina is success. Frenches lost more than 20K troops that day, including relatively fresh 4000 from 4th Corp under Eugene..

    • @VvVActiviX
      @VvVActiviX 4 года назад +10

      @Lans Quenet it's like Dunkerque, we're so glorious in the defeat x)

  • @Wackoart1995
    @Wackoart1995 Год назад +7

    You can really tell how much effort goes Into making these videos. Theres never been a better time to self learn thanks to channels like yours.

  • @TheSports50
    @TheSports50 Год назад +11

    Great Narration and the music in the background is terrific. Suspenseful .
    History repeated itself when in WWII Germany tried to t
    Conquer Russia but again determined Russian army fought hard and when horrible weather of cold and snow came, the German army suffered huge losses and failed to take Russia like it had done to many countries

  • @shadowapple8890
    @shadowapple8890 3 года назад +2058

    Imagine being a Russian criminal imprisoned for your crimes and then suddenly your own guards spring you and your buddies from prison and are told "The French are coming, set the whole place on fire. Go nuts!"

    • @impaugjuldivmax
      @impaugjuldivmax 3 года назад +161

      but try to survive during completing this task

    • @Jmzz542
      @Jmzz542 3 года назад +271

      like Napoleon, you misinterpret the Russian culture. the sense of duty and patriotism of those prisoners led them to follow orders burn the city and die in the process all for the Fatherland.

    • @impaugjuldivmax
      @impaugjuldivmax 3 года назад +82

      @@Jmzz542 lol 'duty and patriotism of a prisoner'

    • @Jmzz542
      @Jmzz542 3 года назад +171

      @@impaugjuldivmax again, no idea how a Russian thinks. Prisoner or otherwise

    • @impaugjuldivmax
      @impaugjuldivmax 3 года назад +41

      @@Jmzz542 every gangster in every country hates the government and police

  • @snekov1242
    @snekov1242 4 года назад +739

    Napoleon: "Peace lies in Moscow"
    Kutuzov: "Sorry Napoleon but Peace is in another castle"

    • @TheCaptainZodo
      @TheCaptainZodo 4 года назад +18

      That would have been a badass response.

    • @Mizelei2012
      @Mizelei2012 4 года назад +6

      But it might have convinced Napoleon to leave right away rather than stay in Moscow for a month.

    • @SomeGuy-lr7ms
      @SomeGuy-lr7ms 3 года назад +14

      Probably located in St. Petersburg

    • @abhabh6896
      @abhabh6896 2 года назад +6

      Peace lied in Paris....

    • @Cheirador123
      @Cheirador123 2 года назад +2

      Mount and Blade dialogue

  • @Po-pol-vouh
    @Po-pol-vouh Год назад +18

    Two years later Russian troops entered Paris. No violence to civil people at all. No one case.

    • @Ursulk
      @Ursulk 8 дней назад

      Most moral army in the world to date .

    • @DakkTribal
      @DakkTribal 7 дней назад

      Too bat Kutusov had died before his men got there

  • @liranavitan8712
    @liranavitan8712 Год назад +3

    Outstanding video!! I enjoyed learning from it so much i watched it 3 times!! You guys are doing a great job - The paintings, the audio, the lyrics....everything.

  • @TheSuperDerpyGamer6
    @TheSuperDerpyGamer6 4 года назад +375

    When your mum tells you to wear a jacket and you say no

    • @nomooon
      @nomooon 4 года назад +65

      when your mum is Mother Russia

  • @DtotheK88
    @DtotheK88 3 года назад +339

    The engineers building that bridge in the freezing water with most dying is incredible.

    • @phillawrence5148
      @phillawrence5148 2 года назад +28

      Horrible way to go

    • @nickgermanic8505
      @nickgermanic8505 Год назад +36

      They had no choice! If they did not build the bridge they knew they'd die anyway!

    • @dvdortiz9031
      @dvdortiz9031 Год назад

      Stupid men

    • @dvdortiz9031
      @dvdortiz9031 Год назад

      @@phillawrence5148 stupid men

    • @dvdortiz9031
      @dvdortiz9031 Год назад +3

      They wanted "to become" nobility and kings!!! Hahaha

  • @kostakosta5352
    @kostakosta5352 Год назад +77

    «Кто с мечом к нам прийдёт, тот от меча и погибнет» Александр Невский

    • @dvdortiz9031
      @dvdortiz9031 Год назад +3

      Who comes to us with a sword, will die by their own sword...

    • @user-ee8uu3zp3h
      @user-ee8uu3zp3h Год назад +5

      Russia has two forces, a human army and a weather army 🌨🤺❄️🥶

    • @kostakosta5352
      @kostakosta5352 Год назад +10

      @@user-ee8uu3zp3h my friend, you are right, but also vast territories and God’s will.

    • @user-ee8uu3zp3h
      @user-ee8uu3zp3h Год назад +8

      @@kostakosta5352
      Exactly, Russia owns a vast land, which is always the graveyard of invaders. How foolish it is to try to conquer it.

    • @kostakosta5352
      @kostakosta5352 Год назад +4

      @@user-ee8uu3zp3h Sadly, ordinary people have died and will be dying because of rulers‘ mistakes.

  • @ModernDayRenaissanceMan
    @ModernDayRenaissanceMan Год назад +16

    Napoleon: It's over! I've taken your capital!
    Alexander: That's 1% of Russia. We good brah.
    Napoleon: Sh*t!!

    • @CardMagicish
      @CardMagicish Год назад +3

      😂 but the capital of Russia from 1712 to 1918 was st. Petersburg, not Moscow

  • @enesbilgin937
    @enesbilgin937 4 года назад +449

    I added Turkish subtitles accept it plz.Worked pretty hard on it.

  • @spicymeatball3807
    @spicymeatball3807 4 года назад +864

    Meanwhile in Austria:Beethoven just made symphony no.7

  • @loboplateadostacker
    @loboplateadostacker Год назад +46

    19:20 There were lots of epic moments during Napooleon's retreat, a moment of respect to the dutch engineers.

  • @stian6390
    @stian6390 Год назад +3

    I actually get mad that Epic History TV doesn't have more subscribers than 1.6 mill.
    He deserves so much more

  • @SomeGuy-lr7ms
    @SomeGuy-lr7ms 4 года назад +362

    Napoleon: let's peace m8
    Alexander: *seen*

    • @cocotaveras8975
      @cocotaveras8975 4 года назад +1

      Some Guy ?

    • @tahahadada1936
      @tahahadada1936 4 года назад +3

      Loool

    • @dsheshin
      @dsheshin 3 года назад +7

      Last seen online 40 days

    • @Iason29
      @Iason29 3 года назад +2

      Everytime I would get that from a girl, I would think Napoleon went through much worse. But hes luckier to have lived in days that made more sense than today

  • @shubhambeniwal7146
    @shubhambeniwal7146 4 года назад +368

    Those engineers in Berezina river saved Napoleon's Army. It was too cold ice water and I am astonished to see there resolve to build the bridge.😌

    • @ElBandito
      @ElBandito 4 года назад +38

      Better to freeze than to fall into Russian army's hands.

    • @LauftFafa
      @LauftFafa 4 года назад +6

      Usually building such bridges doesn't need jumping on water .

    • @darknativity42
      @darknativity42 4 года назад +49

      Well, you know how the Dutch and their water management skills are...

    • @Helghast470
      @Helghast470 4 года назад +40

      Glad he mentioned the Dutchmen who gave their lives!

    • @iagosevatar4865
      @iagosevatar4865 4 года назад +5

      Reals Heroes

  • @vvp_rus
    @vvp_rus Год назад +10

    Invading Russia is not a much better idea than invading Pluto or Venus

  • @ramazanozdamar2694
    @ramazanozdamar2694 7 месяцев назад +3

    Epic History TV, your documentaries of historical events is excellent and extremely well presented. It’s like watching a thriller. Keep up the amazing work.

  • @PaulV.
    @PaulV. 4 года назад +263

    "Now is the moment my campaign begins..." Emperor Alexander of Russia.
    Fck that gave me chills

    • @nathanseper8738
      @nathanseper8738 4 года назад +22

      It also gave Napoleon chills (put on sunglasses) if you know what I mean. ;>)

    • @user-eb2mg9lb2f
      @user-eb2mg9lb2f 4 года назад +2

      Merde😂

    • @keeganmoonshine7183
      @keeganmoonshine7183 4 года назад +6

      @Niko Gambino Russians would have been better off themselves if their entire system had been dismantled by Napolean rather than continue with the Tsars. Russia may have modernized a lot faster. It would have been divided into different regions perhaps though.

    • @gunzburg2233
      @gunzburg2233 4 года назад +1

      When you know that Alexandre died of cold, yeah it's give chills xDD

    • @alexanderchristopher6237
      @alexanderchristopher6237 3 года назад +3

      Keegan Moonshine “Russia would probably be divided into different regions perhaps though”
      And how is that better? It was the division of the Russian princedoms that forced the Russian people to bow down and pay tribute to the Mongols. And you think the implementation of the French Revolution (which would inspire so many nationalist revolts within ethnic groups in empires like Austria and Russia) would benefit the Russian people? What good are free peasants if their state is weak?

  • @housesports000
    @housesports000 3 года назад +516

    Russia: Can’t take Moscow, *if there is no Moscow.*

  • @usualsuspect5173
    @usualsuspect5173 Год назад +2

    Excellent narration...I can't get enough of Napoleon

  • @Nowis45
    @Nowis45 Год назад +1

    Thanks to your amazing work I finally learnt where the french expression « c’est la berezina » comes from. Thanks again for your epic teaching of history !

  • @markopetrov6670
    @markopetrov6670 4 года назад +1184

    Your greatest video so far! There is nothing better than a 27 minute long Napoleonic video from you after a long day... I appreciate the work you do and i can say without hesitation, you are the best channel covering this period out there. I would like to see napoleon's conquest of Egypt and Italy with the Marengo campaign after you finish the Leipzig and the 1813-14 war. Again, keep it up you are the best!

    • @thomascatty379
      @thomascatty379 4 года назад +4

      PRO HUNTER marengo would be great

    • @EpichistoryTv
      @EpichistoryTv  4 года назад +79

      Thank you! There'll be a vote on Patreon at the end of the series to see what's next - more Napoleon will likely be one of the options.

    • @markopetrov6670
      @markopetrov6670 4 года назад +8

      @@EpichistoryTv
      Yeah, well; when you say ,,at the end of the series" i meant it would be nice to completely cover the Napoleonic wars as the early stage of the wars played a major role placing the foundation of napoleon being one of the greates generals and strategists because those were planned and executed in his best performance. They definitely do deserve attention! Thanks.

    • @Jtizz111
      @Jtizz111 4 года назад

      Couldn’t have said it better myself!

    • @Max-gh4zy
      @Max-gh4zy 4 года назад +6

      @@EpichistoryTv a 30 years war series would be epic

  • @havannaGS
    @havannaGS Год назад +515

    One of the returning soldiers was my great great grandfather. His uniform and his diary of the wars brutality is kept in a museum. All this gives me goosebumps.

    • @splifstar85
      @splifstar85 Год назад +85

      Yet you people still want to put your military bases on our borders and start a new war..
      Go to that museum and read the diaries of your grandfather..
      Today the French weapons are shelling Donetsk and killing civilians!
      We are still the same people as our grandfathers and will fight just as hard!
      Are you..?
      Will you be able to endure what your great grandfather did and return alive as he did..?
      Why are you here on our doorstep?!?

    • @alpachino7659
      @alpachino7659 Год назад +16

      @@splifstar85 History repeats itself over and over again.

    • @johnwilliamson9657
      @johnwilliamson9657 Год назад +20

      @@splifstar85 Russians have degenerated too, and so do not fight as hard as in the early 1800s; however, the French have degenerated more. But these days military technology is more important than before and more likely to decide who wins, unless it's nukes, in which case everyone takes a historically-unprecedented loss.

    • @russkayaimperiya4918
      @russkayaimperiya4918 Год назад +22

      @@johnwilliamson9657 Yeah no, love for the Motherland outweights everything else.

    • @splifstar85
      @splifstar85 Год назад

      @@johnwilliamson9657 yeah.. Russian army sucks these days...
      All of nato fighting in Ukraine and at this point has depleted their arsenals..
      Tens of thousands of nato soldiers are compost in Ukrainian fields..
      But yeah.. your propaganda tells you that you are winning 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🙈

  • @MWM-dj6dn
    @MWM-dj6dn Год назад +1

    A wonderful channel that deserves all respect, appreciation and pride. Accurate and useful information in a sophisticated and beautiful manner. I wish you lasting success. I have the utmost respect and admiration for your great honor for these wonderful works. I hope you success

  • @GrislyAtoms12
    @GrislyAtoms12 2 месяца назад

    This was a fantastic video! Well done! What a horrific campaign this was for the Grande Armee soldiers.

  • @mukhamejan.
    @mukhamejan. 4 года назад +1324

    In Russian history books: “Total rout of Ney’s corps at Krasny!”
    In French history books: “Marshal Ney’s miraculous breakthrough at Krasny!”

    • @command_unit7792
      @command_unit7792 4 года назад +166

      Well his army was mostly crushed...Only a small number of struggelers escaped...

    • @aclock2
      @aclock2 3 года назад +187

      @@command_unit7792 So historians can interpret the same event in both ways without totally lying ? Interesting.

    • @kokologix9834
      @kokologix9834 3 года назад +214

      Well just look 6000 against 65000 that also under Kutuzov. Still brave of him to fight and come out alive out of situation

    • @ZacharyReaper
      @ZacharyReaper 3 года назад +34

      Well neither were wrong. They were enemies.

    • @nekhlioudovbolkonsky2901
      @nekhlioudovbolkonsky2901 3 года назад +30

      Yes... But you know, in France we don't learn about Napoléon ahah.

  • @isprikitikburkabush6200
    @isprikitikburkabush6200 4 года назад +254

    So both France and Russia fought a brilliant fighting retreat againts each other in a single campaign. How epic was that

    • @jeremyyau9022
      @jeremyyau9022 4 года назад +55

      Hona Hona Nice. I'm browsing comments and I saw you calling other people "fools " and "idiots" . You must be so proud of yourself

    • @user-wl9cn5kw1e
      @user-wl9cn5kw1e 4 года назад +3

      best comment.
      With one exception, this was the worst retreat against each other.
      This war extended slavery in Russia.
      While Prussia, having been defeated by Napoleon, began the liberation of the peasants.
      лучший комментарий.
      За одним исключением - это было худшее отступление друг против друга.
      Эта война продлила рабство в России.
      В то время как Пруссия, потерпев поражение от Наполеона, начала освобождение крестьян.

    • @lexejoris4756
      @lexejoris4756 4 года назад +25

      @@user-wl9cn5kw1e I wish you could travel back in time and ask the Russian peasants, who got murdered and plundered in thousands upon thousands by the French army, what they thought of Napoleon's progressive ideas and his desire to bring "freedom" to Russian people. French army came to Russia to plunder and murder, just as did the germans in WW2, despite showering sieged Russian cities with leaflets from planes claiming they come in peace to free the Russian people from the communist slavery.

    • @Endremael
      @Endremael 4 года назад +4

      @@lexejoris4756 Communist slavery and Holodomor. Never forget Holodomor as one of the key successes of Communism.

    • @Itoyokofan
      @Itoyokofan 4 года назад +13

      @@Endremael Exactly, the two nonexisted Goebbels's creations.

  • @timeisapathwalkingtounderstand
    @timeisapathwalkingtounderstand Год назад +9

    Thank you for the history lesson and thank you to the narrator for explaining it. Here in New York City listening and learning Russia and France has a beautiful long history, but war is very very ugly.

  • @sergioalmeida2370
    @sergioalmeida2370 11 месяцев назад +4

    Amazing. Best documentary ive ever seen!

  • @stevewozniak223
    @stevewozniak223 4 года назад +301

    Marshal Ney was such a bad ass. Cant wait for the 1813 campaign and 6 days campaign. Understandable after their performances in Russua that Napoleon picked Oudinot and Ney to invade Germany in 1813 but man what would have happened if he had sent Davout instead.

    • @sirgray2322
      @sirgray2322 4 года назад +6

      Oudinot and Ney both will loose battles of Grossbeeran and Dennevits. This shows that they are bad, very bad commanders, while Napoleon is not near

    • @shubhambeniwal7146
      @shubhambeniwal7146 4 года назад +10

      @@sirgray2322 Yeah Lannes was much better, had he been alive, he would have served Emperor better.

    • @shubhambeniwal7146
      @shubhambeniwal7146 4 года назад

      @@lsatep Yeah on Economic level he was not so good, I agree as we can see there was a heavy debt on French Navy as well.

    • @jant.carlsson5061
      @jant.carlsson5061 4 года назад +3

      @@lsatep Napoleon, an early version of the next madman in line to invade Russia. "Kick in the door and the whole rotten building will come crashing down!" Yeah, right! Who will be the next one to burn his plans of world domination in the snow and ice?

    • @TaylorPrem
      @TaylorPrem 4 года назад +20

      lsatep didn’t Napoleon sell Louisiana to the United States because he wanted nothing to do with colonialism after his failure in Egypt. And also cause he needed money. And because he thought it was better that the US got it rather than Britain or Spain.

  • @neckabuser
    @neckabuser 4 года назад +424

    Hello from the actual Borisov! It is a small industrial town. Most of the population here is arrogant about its own history and doesnt care much about the heritage. I remember when I was a teen we used to go to the Berezina river near the Studienka village where the infamous Berezina-crossing took place. We went there in summers to swim and take a tan. It was a breathtaking moment when I entered the river's waters for the first time, looked back and realized that behind me are the fields where 200 years ago legendary events took place. Where thousands fought bravely and died. Hell, The Emperor himself walked this ground. *And it all is just within your arms reach*
    Damn, history is interesting.

    • @szablotukpolski5201
      @szablotukpolski5201 3 года назад +8

      Nice applause :) if anyone would like to hear about the great history polish saber in napoleonic era ... szablotłuk polski

    • @Quintus_Sertorius
      @Quintus_Sertorius 2 года назад +18

      @@szablotukpolski5201 This story is short. The poles served the French, but out of habit they sucked everyone away.

    • @szablotukpolski5201
      @szablotukpolski5201 2 года назад +2

      @@Quintus_Sertorius Especially the Russian army sucked in 1812 when the Polish cavalry was the first to enter Moscow :))

    • @dorukumuttuksal
      @dorukumuttuksal 2 года назад +7

      needless slaughter

    • @jean-louislalonde6070
      @jean-louislalonde6070 2 года назад +2

      It is!

  • @Wilhelm-100TheTechnoAdmiral
    @Wilhelm-100TheTechnoAdmiral 8 месяцев назад +5

    Always save your game before invading Russia

  • @georgeioannou3052
    @georgeioannou3052 8 месяцев назад

    A fantastic video! Congratulations to all in making this masterpiece.

  • @hughdancey9280
    @hughdancey9280 4 года назад +434

    Interesting note: Napoleon's chief doctor, Larrey, stayed in the straggler camp until the last minute, treating the wounded. When the Cossacks came he finally agreed to leave. He was held in such estime by everyone that only 1 grenadier escorted him across in the middle of the chaos, and everybody stood aside to let him through.

  • @wach9191
    @wach9191 4 года назад +184

    My grandparents have a farm in Lithuania near forest were French was retreating during winter and many of them froze to death, people used to find swords, coins, metal buttons, belt buckles and so on.

    • @coronavinny5886
      @coronavinny5886 4 года назад +21

      Amazing story. I think it is amazing too think this was over 200 years ago and the distances covered. It reminds me of Alexander the Great in 350BC going from Macedonia to Persia and Hindu Kush mountains in India. Only a fool attacks the Russians LOL. they always pull back pull back huge country then hit hard when supply lines are too long. Pretty amazing stuff. But very sad too and must have been horrible the deaths the millions dying. Phil UK.

    • @splifstar85
      @splifstar85 Год назад

      And now there are hardly any people left in Lithuania to make those discoveries..
      How is that (fake) “freedom” and alliance with the west working out for you..? 😏

    • @wach9191
      @wach9191 Год назад +1

      @@splifstar85 Don't talk shit. Most of developed countries are in population decline. Also economy of Lithuania rose tenth fold since 90' EU and NATO were the best thing that ever happened to this country.

    • @splifstar85
      @splifstar85 Год назад

      @@wach9191 mate we live an age when it’s easy for anyone to learn about anything, as such FACT that population of Lithuania has declined by about 3 fold since 1990 🙈🙈
      (I mean I understand that you are non to smart and think just blabbing a blatant lie is some sort of an argument, but imagine someone with half a brain cell, which is half more than you have, googles “population of Lithuania” - they will learn right away that you are talking 💩)

    • @victor_lar
      @victor_lar Год назад +1

      @@wach9191 After Ukraine it is your turn

  • @user-ke8wv9lo6w
    @user-ke8wv9lo6w 4 месяца назад +4

    I watched this video 4times, the narrator was so good and also the illustrations 👍

  • @jackryan5214
    @jackryan5214 Год назад

    Nice video, felt like this was the history channel back in the late 90s and early 2000s before. Before, it became more concerned with entertainment and profits. Thanks, well done.

  • @DeathcastGaming
    @DeathcastGaming 4 года назад +117

    At first I doubted that my 27 minutes would be worth the time. And yet here I sit, absolutely dazed by the pure quality and, admittedly, the craftsmanship of this video. Heroic acts and a masterful way to convey them is what history is all about. I salute you from the Syberian depths where I am now. Всех с наступающим!

    • @deno202
      @deno202 2 года назад +3

      Every video of Epic History and Kings&Generals are worth your time

    • @martineden7478
      @martineden7478 Год назад

      Победили Французов, сжигая все на своём пути и оставив в пылабщей Москве 20 000 своих же раненных солдат. А да, это величие, как и приписывать заслугу ранней зимы, которая мало того, что наступила внезапно в ноябре, так ещё и термометр показывал ниже 25 градусов! И где тут героизм?

    • @fernandofernandez8067
      @fernandofernandez8067 Год назад +2

      Are you really in Siberia? Is it work or did you behave bad and this is a punishment? Just joking.

    • @user-wc7dx3ko6u
      @user-wc7dx3ko6u Год назад +1

      @@fernandofernandez8067 we were born here and live happily

  • @lelouche25
    @lelouche25 4 года назад +145

    Once again, Marshal Nay proves himself a badass. Even against all the odds. That man was a soldier true and true.

    • @Hashishtani
      @Hashishtani 4 года назад +3

      He did a fatal mistake on Waterloo, good soldier does not make good general. But I guess he was probably a good commander, it was fate that he ruined all the battle by acting prematurely.

    • @lelouche25
      @lelouche25 4 года назад +14

      @Hona Hona he broke the encirclement, or rather he was able to void the russians and reunite with the main army. I ain't saying hes inflatable, but he earns his command quite well. Given Napoleons tendency to value skill more than social standing. Plus I'm willing to bet Nays really did stay until the last man crossed.

    • @Retard634
      @Retard634 4 года назад +2

      @@Hashishtani everytime i hear about him i either hear about his great defensive battles or failures at the battle of the nations/waterloo
      Maybe he was just a better defender then an attacker

    • @heavenlytroopers4081
      @heavenlytroopers4081 4 года назад +1

      I was in awe when it reached the part that showed him making the crossing to avoid the blockade.

    • @hoatattis7283
      @hoatattis7283 4 года назад

      Yuki Terumi: No when he gave his word to King Louis that he would bring back Napoleon in chains But went over to his Army That is NOT a true man that is a traitor

  • @aansvar
    @aansvar Год назад +7

    Charles XII (of Sweden) did it, Napoleon did it and Hitler did it.
    They all got absolutely destroyed.

    • @sergantDon
      @sergantDon Год назад +1

      Correct. And so be destroyed those who do it today.

    • @GothicKnight81
      @GothicKnight81 Год назад

      But Biden, Macron and other liberal clowns will succeed. Have faith. :)

  • @leonardobrandaoeafitopatol7194
    @leonardobrandaoeafitopatol7194 10 месяцев назад +1

    The most awesome video of this channel!!!

  • @sandrosaladze8095
    @sandrosaladze8095 4 года назад +591

    Ney, such a badass. After all those great deeds for France the monarchy still executed him!
    When he was put on trial for treason, his lawyer tried to defend him by saying that Ney could not be judged by a French court, because the hometown of Ney was annexed by Prussia and hence he was now Prussian, but the Marshal interrupted him and proclaimed that he was French and would remain French. On the day of execution, as he stood against the firing squad he said these words:
    "Soldiers, when I give the command to fire, fire straight at my heart. Wait for the order. It will be my last to you. I protest against my condemnation. I have fought a hundred battles for France, and not one against her ... Soldiers, fire!"

    • @hasnan7
      @hasnan7 4 года назад +40

      Lol you know most of these stuff are just myths who fellow countrymen or fans made up or become popular because it seem such a badass move. It's OK if you want to believe it but it is most probably just a myth.

    • @sandrosaladze8095
      @sandrosaladze8095 4 года назад +163

      Why are you guys so concerned that this is a myth? What's so unbelievable in that a man called "bravest of the brave" would tell a firing squad to shoot at his order?

    • @ohpatriote5622
      @ohpatriote5622 4 года назад +35

      @@Reichsritter certainely not...born in city of Sarrelouis Lorraine in France in 1769.

    • @ohpatriote5622
      @ohpatriote5622 4 года назад +44

      @@Reichsritter his father is Pierre Ney and his mother was french too (part of France is with germanic names...its history).
      Born in the kingdom of France in a territory where peoples spoke french...definitely 100% french.

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 4 года назад +31

      @@hasnan7 who cares. Plenty of heroic deeds are not recorded. He was clearly a brave man and it's ok to have such majestic lore.

  • @justintimbersaw3934
    @justintimbersaw3934 3 года назад +306

    Napoleon entering Moscow: "Did we just win?"
    Russian: "Well yes but actually no"

    • @35rpcorporation49
      @35rpcorporation49 3 года назад +1

      30k wounded russians soldiers*

    • @lunchingtangpua2415
      @lunchingtangpua2415 3 года назад +35

      @@35rpcorporation49 still get the job done napoleon have to retreat and lost most of soldier doing it

    • @haleloop963cortex4
      @haleloop963cortex4 3 года назад +2

      @@lunchingtangpua2415 and considering how many people Russia has it is not that severe as it sounds like

    • @demonfighter4476
      @demonfighter4476 Год назад +3

      @@35rpcorporation49 Out of 5lakh only 90k made it alive 🥴 from napoleon side

    • @user-rj4gu5oh3k
      @user-rj4gu5oh3k Год назад +3

      @@35rpcorporation49 i hope you know Napoleon attacked Russia with 650.000 soldiers and left only with around 100.000~

  • @jameshare1537
    @jameshare1537 9 месяцев назад

    I absolutely love your documentaries! Especially with this narrator. Please keep them coming!

  • @scottprather5645
    @scottprather5645 Год назад +1

    Truth is stranger than fiction
    Very well done video 👍

  • @Dumadunala
    @Dumadunala 4 года назад +390

    Please, Swiss/Italian campaign of Suvorov. It's such an amazing thing, and almost without any coverage on youtube

    • @doeweeyah1236
      @doeweeyah1236 3 года назад +8

      I Wish that suvorov fought longer in italy and fight napoleon

    • @TallDude404
      @TallDude404 3 года назад +2

      @joanne chon Suvorov never fought any important battles so nobody outside of Russia has ever heard of him.

    • @Harbinger_1987
      @Harbinger_1987 3 года назад +21

      @@TallDude404 he mainly fought with Turkey. The Turks must remember him well. well, the Poles probably too

    • @desnicar
      @desnicar 3 года назад

      @@TallDude404 I have.

    • @gameer0037
      @gameer0037 3 года назад +4

      @@TallDude404 *shouts in swiss german*

  • @guusd8898
    @guusd8898 3 года назад +584

    One of the engineers who constructed the pontoon bridge at Studienka is my ancestor. He and several young men from his home village died in this battle or somewhere else during the retreat. I cannot imagine the horrors they must have faced, no one even wanted to be there since they were all drafted. This video gives me an insight in how horrible it must have been for them. Thank you for your work

    • @jean3525
      @jean3525 2 года назад +13

      si tu veux en connaitre plus sur cette periode il y a les mémoires du sergent Bourgogne et celles du capitaine Coignet

    • @guusd8898
      @guusd8898 2 года назад +11

      @@jean3525 merci, mais je ne peux pas parler la langue francais tres bien. est-il disponible en anglais ou neerlandais?

    • @jean3525
      @jean3525 2 года назад +6

      @@guusd8898 ok very interesting what was the nationality of your ancestor ? i said in my comment that french soldier that have done 1812 russia retreat wrote their memories in books i read in this days

    • @guusd8898
      @guusd8898 2 года назад +23

      @@jean3525 I was able to understand that, i can read a little bit but an entire book in french would be too much. My ancestors are Dutch, they were conscripted for the grande armee and served in the 77e cohort and 51e line regiment

    • @jean3525
      @jean3525 2 года назад +11

      @@guusd8898 it seems that the engineers of the bidge were all dutch have you got more information about ... i know that the general eblé come from lorraine but wikipedia told about 400 dutch engineers man only 8 survives i heard

  • @MrMetin67oktay
    @MrMetin67oktay Год назад +4

    Gayet güzel hazırlanmış bir belgesel olmuş. Teşekkür ederim.

  • @ANONYMOUS-dz9zc
    @ANONYMOUS-dz9zc 9 месяцев назад +2

    *It's amazing how after that colossal defeat he still thought he could reverse the situation, I think anyone in his place would have given up.*

  • @steve5123456789
    @steve5123456789 4 года назад +68

    19:40 Random but Napoleon gave the last of his wine to the engineers who built the bridge in the freezing water.

    • @nathanseper8738
      @nathanseper8738 4 года назад +5

      That was pretty (put on sunglasses) chill of Napoleon.
      ….I'll leave now.

    • @gannonfrank
      @gannonfrank 4 года назад +1

      probably to get them drunk enough to help with the sub zero conditions the knew they were going to die to save the army why not be wasted when you go down

  • @prospecial
    @prospecial 4 года назад +48

    last workday this year, a cold beer and a new epic history video up
    today is a good day

    • @Erik-zd2oi
      @Erik-zd2oi 4 года назад +6

      @BH Soldier thats cool and all, but show me literally one person who asked

  • @morden279
    @morden279 Год назад +8

    According to Zamoyski, Napoleon left Moscow two weeks too late. That was the meta between survival and disaster. Fourteen days.

  • @stevencalchi8680
    @stevencalchi8680 Год назад

    I'm addicted to this channel! I love it!

  • @TLOK1918
    @TLOK1918 4 года назад +263

    This was a breathtaking episode, and I've been waiting for it all day. The plain narration at the beginning with no music really fits the somber tone of the video, and, as always, listening to the narrator is a blast. Loved watching the bravery of marshals like Ney, one of the MVP's of the Russian Campaign, and Oudinot, who'd be wounded 34 times in his life--the most out of all the marshals.
    I don't think Napoleon should've left his men behind no matter what happened in Paris. The Grand Armée was his lifeblood. Without them, he'd be like a cannon with no powder. But then again, there are a lot more which I think he shouldn't have done.
    And lastly, no matter which side one takes in this conflict, one cannot help but wonder at the tenacity shown by the brave men of the Grand Armée itself. After seeing what they went through, it's a miracle any of them managed to return alive at all. And, while many people label the Russians cowards for their strategy of scorched earth and constant retreats, we can all agree that it was the correct choice against the overwhelming numbers of the French in the beginning. Giving battle would''ve been madness. When the time came, they showed plenty of courage.
    This one leaves me with a melancholy feeling. When men are reduced to near-beasts by cold and hunger, they rightly no longer have the luxury to think about either Emperor or ideals. Anyway, I feel like I may have rambled on too long: Hats off to you once more, Epic History TV. Can't wait for the next episode!

    • @omarbradley6807
      @omarbradley6807 4 года назад +1

      Yes it's true, but he do not "left" his men, at that stage they were relatively safe already,

    • @maxmagnus777
      @maxmagnus777 4 года назад

      Wow, the time passed so fast. A great episode.

    • @hoatattis7283
      @hoatattis7283 4 года назад +4

      Ferat: Grand Armee yes an army of Rapists plunderers looters and Murderers
      Why this adulation of a man who caused 3 to 6 million deaths, condoned looting, Murder,Rape is beyond me.

  • @karakondzula1388
    @karakondzula1388 2 года назад +223

    Napoleon: I will make peace in Moscow!
    Russians: Rest in peace Napoleon!

    • @user-fo8wh8mb6f
      @user-fo8wh8mb6f 6 месяцев назад +2

      😂😂😂

    • @AlexC-ou4ju
      @AlexC-ou4ju 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@user-fo8wh8mb6f
      Nicholas: I will take Constantinople and replace french influence in middle east!
      Napleon III: Rest in peace Nicky!

    • @YourSocialistAutomaton
      @YourSocialistAutomaton 5 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@AlexC-ou4junapoleon the III:
      I will take berlin!
      Bismarck: rest in peace nappy!!

    • @AlexC-ou4ju
      @AlexC-ou4ju 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@YourSocialistAutomaton Bismarck: I will Keep Alsace Lorraine!
      Foch: 'Rest in peace German ambitions don't make us take Berlin in a month again!'

    • @Boomhauersdad
      @Boomhauersdad 5 месяцев назад

      Nice you copied this comment smh

  • @malihehsaraj1588
    @malihehsaraj1588 Год назад +12

    How many times European lost war with Russia
    they don't get it

    • @worfoz
      @worfoz Год назад

      Russia is an European country, the other European countries now are the NATO so we do not fight each other anymore.
      Russia still acts like an empire, they do not get it but they will lose this WAR and the RF will collapse.
      Just like the USSR did

    • @mikestauffer7033
      @mikestauffer7033 Год назад

      russian is a military loser tbh, at least for the last century, lost to japan, poland, germany, finland, and so on

    • @ExcitedAnacondaSnake-hg8ec
      @ExcitedAnacondaSnake-hg8ec 4 месяца назад

      When Russia had great leaders…

  • @MWM-dj6dn
    @MWM-dj6dn Год назад

    Much respect and appreciation. For your wonderful channel that presents the most amazing documentaries full of accurate and useful information. I thank you with the most beautiful words and the most sincere feelings of pride for your sincere efforts, and I thank you very much for the translation into Arabic. You are distinguished in your work. I wish you success and goodness

  • @fcalvaresi
    @fcalvaresi 4 года назад +331

    The marshals of Napoleon were really incredible men. They are legends in their own name.

    • @TheTariqibnziyad
      @TheTariqibnziyad 4 года назад +3

      @denny saputro the hell ?

    • @freewal
      @freewal 4 года назад +13

      Davout was the most brillant tactitian.

    • @ninjawarrior4130
      @ninjawarrior4130 4 года назад +11

      War criminals

    • @stevewozniak223
      @stevewozniak223 4 года назад +5

      Massena definitely was

    • @princeeugeneofsavoy7400
      @princeeugeneofsavoy7400 4 года назад +11

      Sadly most of them couldn't hold independent commands and squabbled with each other when Napoleon was not around. In 1806 Bernadotte almost sabotaged the entire campaign by not reinforcing Davout at Auerstedt out of his own pride, luckily for Napoleon Davout won.

  • @htrland
    @htrland 4 года назад +327

    The survivors of this retreat probably all suffered severe PTSD, including Napoleon himself. None suffered worse than Ney, after his incredible acts of valor as the rearguard. The experience wrecked his ability to exercise judgment, which some hypothesize to be a major factor in his poor performance at Quatre Bras and Waterloo.

    • @doug6500
      @doug6500 4 года назад +24

      Every dog has his day.... until he doesn't.

    • @TheFiresloth
      @TheFiresloth 4 года назад +59

      On the field of Quatre Bras itself, he did good... He just didn't follow with an ordered pursuit. Basically, the Retreat left him with his bravery and cunning intact, but it ruined every bit of subtlety he once possessed. That made him an asset tactically, but a burden strategically.

    • @pfcreiben5244
      @pfcreiben5244 3 года назад +9

      there were reports of net hitting cannons and acting crazy at waterloo, maybe that could have been from borodino

    • @chibiromano5631
      @chibiromano5631 3 года назад +7

      Ney sending cavalry by themselves against a Square formation is the biggest NOOB move ever. Go play Napoleon Total War online and find out why. It amazes me that somebody online would every do such a thing. Ney of all people did this, pure insanity. I do believe that your theory is correct, there is no way a SANE person does that.

    • @edwardsharpe6234
      @edwardsharpe6234 3 года назад +13

      @@chibiromano5631 The French were in a valley from which they could not see the massed squares on the other side of the hill. I read that Ney saw some British troops move back over the hill and thought the British were in retreat so his natural inclination was to charge with all the cavalry. When they got over the hill they were confronted with the infantry squares and were already committed to the charge. When Napoleon, who was ill and later returned to the battle, learned that Ney had wasted the cavalry he was furious. Had the cavalry not been lost, it could have checked the later arrival of the Prussians.

  • @skillgannon6844
    @skillgannon6844 Год назад

    This is the best thing on RUclips so refreshing

  • @FAKos-np7rh
    @FAKos-np7rh Год назад

    amazing video. thank you so much.

  • @paranoidandroid6095
    @paranoidandroid6095 4 года назад +80

    7/10 dead were killed by disease, primarily in summer. Truly insane

    • @anthonyjameson7129
      @anthonyjameson7129 4 года назад +33

      Before WW1 or WW2 ( I have forget a litle) sanitary loses always was more than combat loses

    • @jimibay
      @jimibay 4 года назад +8

      @@anthonyjameson7129 All Before Louis Pasteur made his epic mark in biological science. Too bad it was decades too late; the death rate (on both sides) probably would've been cut at least 80% if knowledge about microorganisms was documented back then. He was the one Frenchman who Bonaparte would've hung a relatively best deserved medal on .

    • @anthonyjameson7129
      @anthonyjameson7129 4 года назад +1

      @@jimibay I hear he worked on progect to save vine and bear from bacteries

    • @anjusanal
      @anjusanal 4 года назад +3

      7/12 not 7/10

    • @dude9318
      @dude9318 4 года назад

      Anthony Jameson technically it was combat because they got wounds that got infected from it wich killed most of them

  • @spencernelson1560
    @spencernelson1560 4 года назад +324

    R.I.P Dutch engineers who died building the escape bridge over the river. That is serious dedication

    • @leone41ll
      @leone41ll 2 года назад +23

      Indeed; unspoken heroes.

    • @gijsschubert7901
      @gijsschubert7901 2 года назад +14

      I’m proud of my fellow countrymen who passed away in that ice cold rivier, 199 years ago

    • @freewal
      @freewal 2 года назад +11

      @@kayvan671 you are wrong. Napoleon is just the first element that allowed the unification of Germany by weakening the HRE and the Habsburg.
      The Grande Armée was an incredible adventure with Multi National soldiers and the Napoleon reforms were crucial. Just read Hegel.
      It ended badly because of the reactionary forces in Europe and British gold.

    • @lorenzomagazzeni5425
      @lorenzomagazzeni5425 Год назад

      Connect all the dots and the war mongers are still the same.

    • @pepela8214
      @pepela8214 Год назад +3

      Trust a dutch person to pull up some bridges in the middle of the Russian winter. Can't go wrong.

  • @Knudjensen54
    @Knudjensen54 10 месяцев назад +1

    I must admit that I was crazy with history in school,but there was a lot I did not know about Napoleon,thank you very much! :-)

    • @StrawHalo
      @StrawHalo 9 месяцев назад +1

      Google unit 732