Arminius: Hero of Germania, Traitor to Rome - BARBARIANS DOCUMENTARY
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- The newest historical TV series on Roman history is streaming on Netflix and you can watch it here
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New Kings and Generals animated historical documentary on ancient history and history of Rome continues with a video on the Germanic leader Arminius, who in the times of emperor Augustus famously ambushed the Roman legions led by Varus at the Teutoburg Forest. This video will describe his life before and after Teutoburg.
Teutoburg Forest: • Teutoburg Forest 9 AD ...
Germanic Strikes Back: • Idistaviso 16 AD - Rom...
Cimbrian War: • Cimbrian War 113-101 B...
Roman History: • Roman History
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#Documentary #Arminius #Teutoburg
Consider watching Barbarians today and tell all of your friends - getting more eyes on that excellent show is the best way to ensure that we are going to get more historical movies and tv series down the line!
Love and good wishes from Bangladesh, South asia
I started watching it a couple of days ago! I'm liking it, watching episode 3 tonight. Bearing in mind it has to walk that line between historical authenticity and entertainment i thought it did a good job!
Unironiclly Netflix chose the perfect channel to sponsor, 90% of the comments are about how amazing the show is
Shame it's on Netflix only.
Too many innaccuracies
“Blitzed through Germania in a lightning campaign.”
Lets hope Germany won’t learn from that.
Well, they did learn after gustavus adolphus and Napoleon also used blitxkrieg in Germany
@@mattep74 it was a joke... But thats a nice fact tho
@@mattep74 mmm tbf, blietzkrig was kinda the modus operandi for the Vikings too - only with ships instead of cavalry/tanks
"Let's hope Germany won't learn from that" oh wait..
@
The Void Looks Pretty The reason Adolf's war was called Blitzkrieg was because of the "wunder drug" the medical company Bayer invented in the early 1930's.
Bayer scientist invented amphetamine and meth amphetamine, under the codename "blitz". Adolf knew about this "wunder drug" and before the 200k tank soldiers invaded France inn less then 2 weeks, he gave them over 35 000 000 doses for the operation. Stupid as Churchill was he said it would take Adolf's army over 6 months, but he ignored the effects of amphetamine and methamphetamine. Churchill didn't think it was possible to drive a tank for 2 weeks straight without stopping. The fact shows, it's easy.
America and the west didn't win ww2. The only one who won the war of ww2 was and still is Bayer... Still pushing their stim on children under the codename "Ritalin"
Many soldiers world wide and all of the world's active fighter pilots take some form or variation of Blitz or Ritalin or Stim, name it what you want, they all still use this "wunder drug".
I can't believe people let Bayer keep winning... Hitler was just a junkie puppet. Somebody to take the fall and cover for their "live testing on human kind".
Poor Augustus is still waiting for Varus to give back his legions 😢
We still waiting bruh😔
@Ryan Sharp i should invite you to one of my parties, you sound like you are fun at them
wow waiting longer than Jesus to return by about 20 years
mit Bärenfell am lagerfeuer feiern die stämme tief im wald bis die hohepriesterin das wildschwein bringt!!
Poor peoples still waiting for their loved ones to be returned from Roman slavery. Oh, wait...
Just finished Barbarians so this is perfect. The map showing the movement throughout the story is always the thing I'm missing in films or tv series.
Unfortunately, too much exposition is not the best.
"quintili vare legiones redde"
or more famously known as
"Varrus give me back my legions"
Damn you varrus!! Give me back my legion
@@archangel0123456 is that really what it means?
eh hm:
Roses are red,
Rome has many regions,
Quintilus Varus, give me back my legions!
(not mine)
@@jakemac1396 Nay, he's paraphrasing. "Quintili Vare" is Quintilius Varus, and "legiones redde" is literally "legions give me back", but means "Give ME back MY legions". The quote is traditionally attributed to the emperor Augustus by Suetonius in his "Twelve Caesars".
In English, we traditionally phrase it as "Varus, give me back my legions!"
@@Nikelaos_Khristianos thank you for explaining it to me buddy
"Hey Arminius, tell us again stories about the Romans."
"Ok. There's this famous Roman guy named Julius Caesar..."
"Tell us more!"
"Well, he was stabbed to death by other Romans for being too ambitious..."
Well that ended quickly
All i want... Is just a crown...
And all of my conquest being remembered by future generations, instead i get assasinated by a paranoid senator who wore a bath robe...
@@woeisme-mi9fr Yes, all hail the dictator that killed the republic! May you live forever for your tyranny!
@@woeisme-mi9fr
Cough cough Laurel wreath cough cough
@@woeisme-mi9fr
Cough cough Laurel wreath cough cough
Augustus: Don't expand the borders!
Every emperor after his death: What?
Securing Thrace and modern day Bulgaria was the right move though, Pannonia not so much.
@@senpainoticeme9675 dacia was sort of pointless too
@@jonbaxter2254 its all about those gold baby, but yes you are right. Or atleast it would make sense if they secured the entirety of the Carpathians as a sort of natural border
@@jonbaxter2254 dacia gave los of gold.....sould have pllundered it and came back.
@@senpainoticeme9675 Yeah the issue was more take all of it and have a new defendable frontier or leave it.
I like how Romans speak Latin, that's pretty cool. It's a bit weird that Germanic tribes are speaking modern Hochdeutsch, but I will let that one slide since it's super cool nontheless.
We have no idea how the Germanic sounded at the time. I think the first known example is 300 years after the events in question.
@@KingsandGenerals Try Dutch dialects or Frisian. Or compare which words the Germanic languages have still in common. The Cherusci lived close to the present Dutch border and the Eastern Provinces of the Netherlands share the same dialects in Germany.
Also, the series is a german production and from the german viewpoint. So the romans speak the foreign tongue, while the protagonists speak modern languages
@@KingsandGenerals They could've spit-balled an archaic Proto-Germanic in theory, like how they got a rough reconstructed archaic Latin in Romulus v. Remus. Though because it's a German production, I can understand why they went with the language choice if Arminius is a sort of national hero.
@@MMadesen Yes exactly. I put the english dub on which wasn't too bad.
'Varus, give me back my legions'
Arminius: Understandable, Have a nice day
Good thing the Legions were avenged in Dresden 1945. Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind.
@@KyoushaPumpItUp I don't think the Allies were Romans
@@KyoushaPumpItUp you realize that bombing raid was made by england, another Germanic country. Rome hasn't been shit since they lost those legions and collapsed thousands of years ago and now it's only surviving relevance is former glory and the catholic church.
@@whoswho1233don't forget Ferraris.
@@whoswho1233 LoL. wait yes they lost in Teutoburg but don`t forget Germanicus only 3-5 years later what he did to Arminius. Ah yeah 300 years later even more in the center of Germania (Harzhorn) still the Romans won battles. Oh wait our actual civilization is based on the Roman laws etc. Forgot the Italian Renaissance, Da Vinci, Marco Polo, Medici, Columbus etc. Yeah unfortunately after the Fall of the Roman Empire the big cities choose to create their own city states in Italy. Sad but immagine Venice, Florence, Naples, Milan, Genova, Siena etc. would have worked together instead against each other.
If Netflix sees this. Please make a season 2 with Germanicus coming back in 15AD, I would pay money to see it. - Everyone
Shut up and take my money
To see him losing?
They are too busy abusing children.
@Robzah exactly.. and Arminius lost
@Robzah I don't think germans would make a show about their national hero defeating a Roman army only to make the romans win in the next season
iam from kenya, greetings to all history lovers
LoL 😂
No, You're from Planet Earth.
Lost history of sub Saharan Africa.
@@toomuchdebt5669 I'm from Nigeria, and just like in other parts of the world there are ancient stories of intrigue, battles and kingdom/empire building in Sub-saharan Africa. Unfortunately, a good deal of it is based on oral history rather than written and archaeological evidence.
Hello Abdul!! 😀
20:31 An unimportant but, perhaps, mildly interesting coincidence: September 9th 9AD is 09/09/09.
DAS WAR EIN BEFEHL!
very interesting... very peculiar...
Sick!
Funnily one of the few dates that all who follow the gregorian calendar write the same
Schroedinger's Dog release of the Sega Dreamcast.
Watched Barbarians all in one night. Was great, make sure you watch it in the original language with subtitles on. Really cool to see the romans speaking Latin and the Germanians speaking German.
German, as spoken in the movie, has nothing to do with the germanic languages back then. This German language developed long after the middleages and into modern times.
Roman Soldier: "General, we are under attack!"
Varus: "Aight, Imma head out."
General public opinion in Rome at the time, according to the writers, was that: "Varus had more courage to die than to fight."
@@allennguyen4456 yup, but every Roman governor was expected to defend his office and assigned province to the death. Varus didn't do that, and even though it wouldn't make a lick of difference if he did, he was posthumously dishonoured in the senate.
@@SlayerRiley since when do you know romans for being brave?? Guys only fought undershield, there are accounts of roman soldiers on idistaviso battle waking up scared from nightmares of the horrible stuff the germans would do to them if they lost the battle again
@@atheistsgranddaddy5653 I don't think you understood the irony of the comment, or Roman statements concerning Varus' defeat.
@@SlayerRiley im saying that romans were a civilization with inferior individual soldier prowess who only achieved victories using ultraprotective shield formation and siege weapons so u cant expect too much bravery from Their soldiers much less theire officials anyway wheter its varus or someome else cuz they didnt have trust in theire own arms but only Their tactics, once Their formation broke or couldnt be put back togheter or like when they found themselves into uneven terrain they were like a bunch of startled chickens
Segestes: Arminius is a traitor and he plans to kill you all!
Arminius: ...........man you just pissed because I'm sleeping with your daughter.
Varus and bois: LoL our boi Armini slaying.
Arminius: you're damn right
@@HH-ni5hm ye ma niqa
Arminius: but low key he was right, now die😂
Varus: *surprised pikachu face*
The eloquence of a barbarian
@@HH-ni5hm priceless 🤣🤣
Here a passage of Tacitus on the discovery of the battlefield by the legions of Germanicus, 5 years after Teutoburg.
"Then the army advanced to the last limits of the Bructeri, and everything was ravaged between Ems and Lippe, not far from the forest of Teutoburg, where, it was said, lay without burial the remains of Varus and its legions.
Caesar felt the desire to render the last honors to the chief and the soldiers; and all the warriors present were seized with a painful emotion as they thought of their loved ones, their friends, the chances of war and the fate of humans. Cécina is sent forward to probe the depths of the forest, and build bridges or causeways on swamps and deceptively solid grounds; then we enter these places full of sinister images and lugubrious memories. The first camp of Varus, with its vast enclosure, the dimensions of its place of arms, announced the work of three legions. Farther on, a half-ruined entrenchment, a shallow ditch, indicated the place where their feeble debris had gathered. In the middle of the plain, whitened bones; scattered or piled up, according to whether one had fled or fought, littered the earth jumbled up with the limbs of horses and broken weapons. Human heads hung from the trunks of trees; and in the neighboring woods one saw the barbarian altars where the tribunes and the principal centurions were immolated. A few soldiers who had escaped this carnage or who had since broken their chains, pointed to the place where the lieutenants perished, where the eagles were carried off. "Here Varus received a first wound; there his unhappy arm, turned against himself, delivered him from life." They said "on what tribunal Arminius harangued his army, how many gallows he raised, had pits dug for the prisoners; by what insults his pride outraged the Roman signs and eagles."
Tacitus, Annals, LX-LXI.
Hey, thanks for putting this up.
It's sad to think that modern Germans are mostly unaware of Arminius' story due to textbooks omitting him because of his "association with militaristic nationalism". The 2,000th anniversary of his victory at the Teutoburg Forest was only lightly commemorated in Germany... It was a watershed moment for German history yet was only commemorated lightly. That's sad.
Thats what happens when you're on the losing end of two world wars lol.
Self guilt ridden bastards can’t even study history
Flavus>>>>>
That’s what happens when you are ashamed of your culture/identity. I’ll never forget when a German exchange student apologized on behalf of her country for hitler. I told dat schlampe APOLOGY NOT ACCEPTED! 😂
@@trillionaire8886 Germany under the Holy Roman Empire having Habsburgs and Austria in power was its best moment.
Germanicus' story should be given at least a part in the end of the series.
Germanicus deserves his own series, to be honest. The darling of the empire, the likely successor and really the last true Roman, as many would say, deserves to have his own series. I think Netflix should, instead of grand narratives, tell specific stories of characters from history. It actually fits the series model very well. The ones I want to really see: Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus and Marcus Furius Camillus
he should be the main character in the next series if there is one. Although I'm sure they will portray him as if he is Reinhard Heydrich...
SEASON 2
@@AmeyaVaidyaExEcutESC2 Bellisarius, though from another century, would be great as well.
And Aetius. Of course Aetius. A story of heroism, epicness, bravoury, dedication, betrayal, and all with the best and surprisingly most cultivated and savage antagonist at the same time, Attila.
@@Cancoillotteman Belisarius is a good shout, Aurelian would be amazing, Julian- the last pagan emperor, man of arms and letters. Majorian would be good. Both Scipio Africanus and Scipio Aemilianus could have awesome shows.
I actually started watching Barbarians today, and all I have to say is WAOOOOO ! I've always been and always will be a history fanatic, so when show like this one comes out (and is as authentic and original) I can't help but get butterflies all inside me. Well done Netflix, keep it up PLEASEE ! And of course you guys Kings and Generals since day one 💯
Provides a clear broad overview (unlike some other videos on this topic) that puts the battle in its historical context.
You mean like the infographic show?
infographic??? Probably america
What an amazing timing of this notification. I literally just started watching the first episode of this series.
Me to.
@@toutestvanite350 yeah, indeed someone who waches this Chanel would probably have a higher change of waching the series too.
But the timing was unbelievable. The notification came a couple seconds after i had started the first episode
Before watching the video, I have to commend you for making one on Arminius.
Not too many people know of him, sadly. From what I hear, the 2000th anniversary of his victory at Teutoburg forest was celebrated lightly. Kinda underwhelming considering that he was, I think, one of the main national figures during the German unification in the 19th century.
So, I'm glad you covered him. Guy needs some love. :)
@Vegetable Gremlin I did actually learn this from Wikipedia! I did a pretty bare-bones work on him in HS when writing about the fall of the Roman empire, so Wikipedia and some other stuff is where I got info about him. Only remembered the basics, though.
I just started watching Barbarians! I was planning on pacing myself and watching 1 episode a day, but after watching this, I might binge watch it all tonight xD
@@James-sk4db That blonde girl is Arminius' wife, who in real life married him after the events at Teutoborg and actually got captured by Germanicus and paraded around in Rome xd
I watched it in one night and finished the last episode the next day
@@jdekkers3262 Thusnelda
I watched everything in one day.
Wow, the Barbarians second season is going to be amazing. Especially with his brother fighting for the Romans 🤣
Can't wait!!
I hope they reenact the shouting match between Arminius and Flavus prior to the battle of Idistaviso.
There is no second season coming
@@orkabich9838 there is
@@orkabich9838 it's actually out now
I've watched the series yesterday. Amazing video after that. And the fact that the Romans spoke Latin in the series is just amazing.
I think we need Germanicus docudrama after Barbarians.
Same!!!!
Barbarians is getting a Season 2, but maybe a spinoff season 3 could be focused on Germanicus.
@IRONHILLdwarf * Well every commander back then were butchers, Arminius was no better. No quarter asked, none given, steals wife, and presses for his own authority. Germanicus can easily be made into a new protagonist, one out to avenge his fellow ROmans.
The easiest emotionnal way to tie this together is to use the eagles as symbols of friends he "had" within the legions and the equites that were exterminated. Play it with flashbacks during quiet scenes to build up his relationship, including with Arminius who could be played as a military school friend (I know schola militarum was only invented a few centuries later). Have it "up close and personnal". And trust me, except for Germans (who can blame them), all will cheer for Germanicus.
@IRONHILLdwarf * Vae Victis!!
@IRONHILLdwarf * After the Germanic tribes crushed the Roman legionaries at Teutoburg Forest, the Germans butchered any survivors or used them as human sacrifices to their gods.
Saw the Series and was really impressed.. Your work is a good complement to fully understand the context..
*Germanicus exists*
Arminius: *why do I hear boss music?*
Shut up
@ shut up u failure, let the bruce do the talking
Not sure how Arminius could be responsible for the decline and fall of Rome. Dude lived during the reign of the first emperor. That's like blaming Harold Hardrada for the decline and fall of the British Empire.
@Slade Wilson no no he didn't. The Roman empire lasted over a thousand years.
@Slade Wilson even if you're just counting the fall of the Western Roman Empire. That was over 400 years after his death. His didn't contribute to it. From the time Ariminius died to the next 250 to 300 years Rome only became more powerful. It's a silly conclusion to draw. The Germans who eventually sacked Rome had almost nothing to do with Ariminius. After Ariminius' death the Roman Empire would eventually conquer big chunks of Germania. It's not a sound connection to say that Ariminius contributed meaningfully to the fall of Rome. He was ultimately a speed bump to the rise of Rome.
@Slade Wilson which is not the same thing as contributing the empire's collapse. Arguably expanding across all of Germania that early in the empire would have created much bigger problems than hitting a speed bump. Ariminius didn't contribute to any of the underlying problems that actually lead to the collapse of Rome. The 4th century tensions between Rome and various German tribes are not directly related to the events of the 1st century.
You really don't know what you're talking about.
@Slade Wilson you're really dedicated to validating a bad argument made as a throw away comment. Perhaps you should stop being a fanboy.
Lol exactly
I love how you have used the actors faces in the artwork. I finished the show this week and I thought it was very good and I welcome more historical additions from Netflix
"I love Treason but hate a traitor" haha
I wanted the Centurion to have a larger role. A shame.
I have been binge watching Barbarians for the last 2 nights. Thoroughly engrossing and so well done. Thanks for this history overview. It is a German language production but the subtitles do not diminish this in any way.
True Barbarians is decently historically accurate. Like its as accurate is a film can get without having the entire production from the director, to the cast, to the set designers and costume designers all being historians themselves. It’s definitely refreshing and a step in the right direction. I’m sure us huge fans of history can tell you, there is so much history out there that doesn’t need to be romanticized, dramatized too much, or over fantasized. There are plenty historical accounts that are deserving of well produced shows.
Just saw the whole series in one night, the following day i see “Arminius” in kings and generlas! Oh hell yeah what a coincidence 👌🏻
Cant wait for the next season now
Wait.
Germanicus recovered two eagles, the third was recovered by Claudius
Perfect timing just finished the show on Netflix loved it
Finished Barbarians, bloody good show. Can't wait for season 2 when the Empire strikes back and looking forward to see Germanicus
I don't think they will show that it would ruin their love for the barbarians as their is no winning or happy ending their for them characters. Unless they make the romans the main characters.
They might bring in Flavus as a foil for Arminius for season 2 i think. That didnt happen but it would be perfect for Drama.
@@ArmouredProductions nah because after this event Arminus does not really have real victories anymore, nothing as grand as Teutoburg and he loses a lot.
@@RomanHistoryFan476AD Yeah
@I don’t exist For tax and insurance purposes only took 5 centuries
This was an awesome video, it’s great to see more youtubers making history documentaries
This. This right here is the quality shit I love you guys for. Seriously job well done. Glad to see Netflix putting out good ancient history stuff like Barbarians. A decent peace offering after the Cuties debacle.
Brilliant video! Getting sponsored by Netflix now....you guys have hit the big time! Proud to be a patron of you all!
I hope there is a season 2, this show was so great.
There is a 30m statue of Arminius on top of a 380m hill close to the Teutoburg Forest.
That's awesome
Ah, Teutoburg forest, the area of so many battles involving the Germans.
Should be torn down if you ask me
It is quite impressive. I have only seen it in the distance from the Autobahn, near Detmold.
@@Newidhan what is wrong with you?
Every single one of these videos always grabs my attention and I have to watch it multiple times to see all the animations and maps
Roses are red, Italy has many regions, Quintilius Varus give me back my legions!
This was good
"It was only four centuries later..." Back when Germany was ruled by Ents.
I know! Only four short centuries later... :D A direct result!
"Don't be hasty"
From the same people that later would envision the blitzkrieg
Lol entmoot
@Tom Bruise They definitely weren't used to create this dining room set and wall panels.
Do an episode on Rome's Dacian wars and Decebalus, the Dacian king hero. To this day, there are more statues of Dacian warriors in Rome than there are of any other foe to the empire, which shows how much respect the Romans paid to these people north of the Danube.
Even more remarkable is what happened afterwards. Dacia is still called Romania and speaks the only Romance language in the region, and people are proud of the Roman connection. Who else adopted their conquerors like this?
@Kancelar Bismark google the Arch of Constantine and notice the huge statues of Dacians sitting on top of it. I rest my case.
Vercingetorix was marched to Rome to be killed. Arminius was marched from Rome to Germania to kill the Germanic culture. He closed the circle. Arminius, Avenger of Vercingetorix, hero and liberator of the Germanic tribes.
The fact that they used german and latin just makes it more authentic 😁
Except the German part. There were various dialects and they all probably sounded distictively different than modern day German
Thank you. Fantastic channel, am happy to support this particular history channel
Ok, so I just got through two episodes of Barbarians and am now on the third. Watching it with subtitles and really liking it so far. For one thing, being half-italian it's really nice seeing romans as the ''bad guys'' for a change. I think the show does a really good job of showing the difficulties and the trauma a tribal society must have felt when coming up against the roman juggernaut. I also really like the character of Arminius, they do a good job of showing him as caught between two cultures. I thought the pacing was really good too, the way tensions slowly escalate between the two sides is well done. As a history student and dabbler in anthropology I particularly liked the fact they show the clash between the roman and the germanic concept of Law, since it would play such a large part in forming what would later become the european kingdoms and eventually nations.
It hasn't got the same feel to it as the HBO series 'Rome', but in my opinion it doesn't need to. Rome was totally fixated on roman politics, life and culture. With Barbarians they focus a lot more on this violent clash between the roman world and the non-roman world and so far I think they do a good job of it, particularly since most of what we actually know about the Germans of the time is through roman and archeological sources. It also doesn't go full on into dick-swinging ubermensch Vikings mode, which is appreciated.
Pretty good story too so far.
8+/10, would see a second season. Maybe one focusing on the changes that happened when the Germans got the upper hand and took over the Empire.
Too nice historic video with clear explaining of events and behind facts which producing these events
Teacher :- How do you manage to score 100/100 in Roman History ?
Me :- I watch Kings and Generals
It's history studying in the age of the internet! RUclips is completely valid.
Great video as well. Proud of Netflix for actually releasing Barbarians, the show was done very well. Enjoyed it a lot watched the whole thing in one day.
18:27 oh my god. Segestes looks exactly the same from the show
Love the channel and the content, your channel is clearly the best on RUclips! 😍😍😍😍
Just finished watching Barbarians on Netflix, really cool show! Here's hoping for a season 2!
Was watching Barabens in Netflix and now KNG drops the video. Awesome timing.
Or...you know, it probably wasn't that😐 they do be spying on our search history
Great video about German hero Arminius! Well done! Would be good to create a video about his great adversary, brilliant general Germanicus!
Caesar: gets murdered by his fellows
Arminius: First time?
I believe these should be backwards
It's backwards you stptodjhee
Thanks for all your hard work. Your channel is one of the best on RUclips! If I may offer a suggestion/correction ... you use the word "historiocity" in some of your videos - the word is historicity.
Honestly, if I were someone who knew Arminius, I would always sleep with one eye open.
Alway stunning and always get better and better, can’t wait for the next video 👍🏻
Arminius did more damage to the roman nation than most people understand, the province of magna germania was a vital buffer zone between the barbarians and the roman heartland in Gallia, having lost it and having set the border on the Rhine itself was the main reason of all the problems with barbarian raids in the centuries to come. That's why Augustus was so desperate he almost died of anxiety.
This channel just keeps Giving us quality content 🙌❤️
The Roman troops had a weak point, and Arminius knew it: they were unbeatable when they could be deployed in the open, but not in wooded and muddy terrain. By entering the thicket by columns, the Germans unleashed isolated attacks with guerrilla tactics. And that was a massacre. That battle led to a seven-year war that ended up defining the Empire's frontier for the next four centuries.
You could argue that Arminius's decisive choice preserved Germanic cultures for 2000 years. Rome was very much on pace to conquer Germania like they would in Britain and Dacia but after 16 AD they only ever crossed the Rhine to retaliate. The Germanic and Nordic peoples are more directly responsible for the modern cultural developments of Europe than the Romans and that would have been different if Rome conquered to the Elbe.
HELLO KING AND GENERAL , THANKS FOR THE VIDEO
IT'S POSSIBLE TO MAKE A VIDEO ABOUT JUGURTHA WHO WAS A KING OF NUMIDIA AND HERO OF IMAZIGHRAN , AND WHO LED THE JUGURTHINE WAR AGAINST ROME
AND TACFARINAS WHO DESERT THE ROMAN ARMY AND HE LED HIS PEOPLES AND HE MAKE A WAR AGAINST ROME
You should get a new keyboard. I think your caps-lock button is broken.
Ah, Jugurtha, that prize of Marius and Sulla. Not the most savvy of political opponents considering he was prone to bribery and running away.
Nicholas Christiaan Scheckter exactly
@@amanda.collaud aye an underrated peoples throughout history
U on cocaine bro?
Vetera, the Roman main base of operations at the time, has actually been excavated and reconstructed in Northwest Germany, next to the small town of Xanten. It hosts a large museum absolutely worth the visit, if you ever are in the region by chance.
A shame that the battle did not get more attention. It lastes for days, with even more cunning tricks. I guess you guys dont want to spoil it for the netflix viewers
Although I loved Barbarians in Netflix, your series and videos are way cooler K&G. Keep up the good work.
Arminius a badass like Spartacus that dare to punch an Empire
Awesome episode! Hopefully you’ll do one about Theodoric the great and even Odoacer as they both pretty much ruled as Roman style leaders after the fall and maintained much of Roman culture. One arguably at his peak had the power of a Roman emperor.
"only four centuries later..." Seriously? What modern country have lasted longer under one government? Saying that Arminius caused the eventual downfall of Rome in the area is a stretch given what was shown in this video.
Thank you
The Romans came to view Germania as more trouble than it was worth. They decided to leave them alone and trade slaves, for weapons and the like, leaving a gaping whole in Rome's defense. If you ask me, losing control here was the beginning of the end.
@@joecarter1486 You never heard of the limes? I though so go read a bit about Roman history you might find it ìnteresting.
@@TorianTammas What are the limes if you don't mind my asking.
You're misunderstanding him. He didn't mean "only four centuries" as if that wasn't long. He's saying Arminius had such a lasting effect on the Roman-German border that only the passage of a great length of time would eventually change it.
Very well done. You should consider doing a video on Germanicus at some point. He was a great general who is often overlooked by historians. Please keep the outstanding videos coming and God bless you, my friend!
I gulped down the series in an afternoon. When series 2?
i am continually impressed by the ever improving production quality here.
I love your style and map art fo this video.
Cant deny this was one of the best planned and executed ambushes in history but I think the proceeding results of it were quite exaggerated.
Arminius couldn't stop the Romans when they came back and the empire survive for centuries after.
Totally ironic that Arminius went out like Caesar.
Then why did Rome never expand past the Rhine EVER again?
@@dubuyajay9964 they had enough territory and there was really nothing to take from greater Germania.
@@dubuyajay9964 Because the people were hostile and might attack again and it just wasn't really worth it economically speaking. Romans DID come back and obliterated the Germanics in the area after Arminius' treason.
@@dubuyajay9964 Because the Germans weren't worth the effort?
Great stuff. Love all of your videos. This one is excellent!
"Varus, giVE mE BacK mY lEgiOnS!"
Varus: Have you guys seen my head?
@@SimonAshworthWood so dark
Just found out Netflix's Barbarians came out. I'm so excited, been wanting a movie or series on this event for so long. Seen this and clicked instantly! Love this channel and glad yall did this, watching this before the Netflix series
I genuinely can't wait for netflix to bring out more series like this. Already seen last kingdom, vikings, marco polo and barbarians. Would love one on vlad the impaler, or mihai(michael) the brave, 2 extremely interesting characters who led very intense lives
Theres one on Ottoman Empire too
@@YourBrotherAbdul911 but that was more of a documentary series. Although it was still very good
Too bad Marco polo was cut short , I really like the show
@@vj_great551 same tbh I don't know which I preferred out of all of them... But marco polo was fucking great and would've loved to see it carry on
@@traitorfang1416 yep, Marco polo had a great story. I wish the studio would start making the next season. There is a spinoff tho about the kungfu teacher in the series, one hundred eyes watch it is good
Thank you for your incredible channel.
Altough I enjoyed Barbarians season 1, historical accuracy is not something this serie Aims to translate to the screen.
I was absolutly dissapointed by the way they handled the battle.
If only the creators of Rome could have produced a serie regarding these events.
Now that is something I would love to see.
First congratulations on the Netflix sponsorship im happy for you guys although I hope they make a barbarians season 2 set in 15-16 ad showing germanicus and romes revenge and the history before drucus the elder etc but why do you guys think arminus did what he did was it because he thought he could set himself as a king of Germania or simply he feared what Rome would do to his homeland i tend to lean towards he wanted kingship because his tribe being allied to Rome would have great benefits for them but being king of Germania had more benefits for him
I think Arminius thought he could unite the Germanic peoples under his banner. That would have been a major power. It was probably his Roman training that led him astray. Rome was strong because of its administration.
Germania, if it wanted to stay free, would need to be united, and have similar good administration. But his fellow tribesman didn't want that, and killed him for what they saw as tyranny, and what he probably saw as what needed to be done.
Excellent! Thanks guys!
Thank you for this. Also I thank you for describing Germanicus' victories has "minor". The Roman historian Tacitus basically turns Germanicus into his "Golden Boy", in contrast to the Emperor Tiberius who Tacitus loathed. Thus Tacitus' account of Germanicus' campaigns in Germany and his victories there are likely embellished and nowhere has conclusive victories has Tacitus describes for the Romans. In fact Germanicus' campaigns in Germany seem to have been expensive, costly and ultimately fruitless. A fact Tacitus doesn't quite successfully hide. Oh and given the very large Roman Armies commanded by Germanicus, (all together 60-80.000 men), Arminius' ability to, it seems, fight them to draw is rather impressive.
Note: Arminius is the name the Romans gave him what his actual name was is unknown.
Excellent breakdown of Arminius’ magnum opus.
Barbarians went from semi-accurate in season 1 to a fantasy show in season 2.
Excellent video full of fresh details that are not common knowledge. Thanks!
Awesome video!!
0:20 Now now, his duplicity is legendary yes, but you overestimate its historical importance...
I agree
This border and all its wars did play a significant role in Rome's fall, and it is not unreasonable to assume that with Germania as part of the Empire the stress on Rome on the NE border would have been significantly less.
I sort of understand the Tribal way of thinking, but why was the idea of Arminius being king so awful to them? It was because of him being able to unite all the clans that they dealt such a devastating blow to their subjugators. Imagine what may have happened if they had properly united under a single banner, all with the same goal in mind. To destroy Rome. Also I am kind of disappointed that Arminius only used the fire during battle to separate the enemy in the show lol, that was awesome.
@@tornado4708 And if the Romans continued to subjugate them that wouldn't be the case?
So awesome, especially after watching the Netflix series.
Can't blame Varus for ignoring Segestes. He probably needed a translator just to understand the man's rantings. With Arminius he just had to ask in Latin and get the answer, "Oh, he's my father-in-law. Never agreed to the marriage. You know how these things go."
Segestes was able to speak Latin many tribes even in Germany have maintained at the time commercial relations with the empire particularly in Gauls
The man never forgot his routes and went back when they needed him.
Respect.
Awesome video. I've been watching your channel for very long time, great progress in skills and choice of topics. Everything in this episode was so good and epic except one thing, actually last sentences: "it was only four centuries later when Roman boundaries on Rhine changed again". ONLY FOUR CENTURIES? In 400 years nations could rise, flurish, fight battles, fall and Rome was still standing.
Don't you think you are nitpicking?
@@KingsandGenerals No, I'm sure I am not. Its big. It's opinion about 4 hundred years. Also placed in the end of the video, it's point, it's summary! Conclusions should be like crystal, because otherwise guys like me appear
Quintilius Varus, give me back my legions!
Was going to comment this but you beat me to it.
I started watching barbarians from your channel , one of the best web series I am watching now...
"Barbarians" is nowhere near the accurate show portrayed by the commercial
No TV series will ever be 100% accurate
@@Matthewgriffiths18 From "nowhere near" to "100% accurate"?
I believe this man deserves a a movie with a gigantic budget, and lots of practical effects.