Byzantine Sardinia AD534-1073 | 20,000 Subscriber Special

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2025

Комментарии • 147

  • @EasternRomanHistory
    @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +62

    When we did the poll, the Fall of Byzantine Egypt came in a close second, and as I myself am a lover of ancient Egypt I will make a video about it in the not too distant future.
    Thank you to everyone for helping me get this far and see you at the next milestone.

    • @goshlike76
      @goshlike76 Год назад +4

      That was fascinating. What about the city of Philadelphia though? I think itself has a most intriguing story.

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +4

      Indeed, the issue is trying to piece together its history, which is difficult.@@goshlike76

    • @LondonPower
      @LondonPower Год назад

      Is interesting to see how alexandria fell to Arabs with betrayal from the Bishop of the city

  • @Baibairs48
    @Baibairs48 Год назад +35

    Really hope you make more videos like this👍, like Byzantine Venice,Byzantine Crimea,Byzantine Corsica

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +7

      I did make a video about the history of Theodoro. which you can see here: ruclips.net/video/k0ZNgP7P7-4/видео.html

    • @rickyyacine4818
      @rickyyacine4818 Год назад +6

      plz do byzantine north africa or south spain byzantine@@EasternRomanHistory

  • @vitorpereira9515
    @vitorpereira9515 Год назад +131

    The fact that Sardinia has withstood numerous Arab invasions is incredibly admirable. The people of Sardinia are resilient and worthy of respect.

    • @Ameer-dj5gj
      @Ameer-dj5gj Год назад

      ...unlike (((Portugal)))

    • @bolkauerstad
      @bolkauerstad Год назад +6

      Like Ukrainians repelling the Orcs against the odds.

    • @vitorpereira9515
      @vitorpereira9515 Год назад

      @@bolkauerstad The Russians are not the enemy, Putin is the enemy. The Russians are forced to fight by that tyrant's megalomania and those who refuse to fight are executed as deserters. He stole his people freedom and now wants to do the same to the Ukrainians. He must be stopped!

    • @thetrueroman16
      @thetrueroman16 Год назад +12

      ​@@bolkauerstadUkraine is losing badly right now.

    • @dimitriygeorgievich1797
      @dimitriygeorgievich1797 Год назад +1

      @@bolkauerstad 🐖

  • @MegaTang1234
    @MegaTang1234 Год назад +20

    16:27 It's really interesting for me to be hearing the term "Hellenization" used outside the Hellenistic era.

  • @IlleScrutator
    @IlleScrutator Год назад +69

    6:05 The "Barbaricini" name doesn't come from the berbers (although etimologically related) but from "Barbaria", "Land of the Barbarians", a term the romans used since republican times for the rugged and mountainous interior inhabited by sardinians that never accepted roman rule, as opposed to "Romania", the coastal area of the island that was instead integrated with the wider empire. Instead, according to Procopius, berber rebels and raiders were relocated by the vandal king Gaiseric in the Sulcis coastal region (unrelated to Barbaria) to free his african possessions from inconvenient elements and to weaken wannabe sardinian rebels; a century later Solomon, domesticus of Belisarius, would crush their descendants in the Vandalic War.

    • @LondonPower
      @LondonPower Год назад +2

      You are correct in every aspect

    • @LondonPower
      @LondonPower Год назад +5

      We still call here in Greece the coast of North Africa except Egypt as Barbaria

    • @ban1176
      @ban1176 Год назад

      Balkan people were also called barbaric from both Romans and Greece's

    • @ban1176
      @ban1176 Год назад +1

      And what is more interesting is that we don't know what language were Sardinians using before Romans

    • @uztulei
      @uztulei Год назад

      Mistificante, la Sardegna parla una lingua neolatina la più conservativa e nell'ambito sardo quella della barbaria è ancora più simile al latino , tutta la Sardegna venne governata dai romani esistono strade e abitato di epoca romana anche nell' interno della Sardegna, villaggi nuragici che dimostrano la romanizzazione di questi abitati, questo è avvenuto al livello culturale, perché la genetica ha dimostrato che hanno mantenuto una sostanziale continuità con le popolazioni nuragiche, inoltre, la cosiddetta dominazione vandala è durata appena 80 anni insignificante ,passando sotto bisanzio, ,dalla quale venne sostanzialmente abbandonata, da qui naquero i giudicati sardi regni autonomi sardi. Si può affermare che la Sardegna unica in Europa e nell' ambito dell' impero romano è rimasta sempre nella classicità.

  • @matijas7994
    @matijas7994 Год назад +34

    Imagine if sardinia remained well connected to byzantium to the point where they would try to legitimise themselves as succesors of rome after the fall of constantinopole

    • @Thebois753
      @Thebois753 Год назад +1

      Eastern Rome**

    • @matijas7994
      @matijas7994 Год назад

      @@Thebois753 its a handfull to write

    • @Thebois753
      @Thebois753 Год назад

      @@matijas7994 Fair

    • @majungasaurusaaaa
      @majungasaurusaaaa 2 месяца назад

      @@matijas7994 Just write ERE. Try to avoid the B word.

  • @a.s.7936
    @a.s.7936 Год назад +26

    This is very interesting. I thought that Sardinia simply drifted into independence after the loss of Sicily but the video suggests that the Romans still had some nominal authority over the island regardless of the harshness of making contact.

  • @porygonyt8014
    @porygonyt8014 Год назад +12

    LETS GO I ALWAYS WANTED TO LEARN ABOUT BYZANTINE AND JUDICATE SARDINIA

  • @digenesakritas
    @digenesakritas Год назад +12

    Great work, ERH!! Really appreciated the theme music from Age of Empires I..

  • @andreascovano7742
    @andreascovano7742 Год назад +15

    Comment for the algorithm!

    • @genfreed2338
      @genfreed2338 Год назад +2

      Engagement with comment and like

  • @Deailon
    @Deailon Год назад +18

    So basically Sardinia was part of a Roman Empire longer than Rome (almost exactly 700 years in the West and over 500 years in the East).

  • @viperking6573
    @viperking6573 Год назад +5

    So many things and places I didn't know about the island where I grew up 😊 thank you very much for the video! You have a new subscriber!

  • @Qwerty.240
    @Qwerty.240 Год назад +2

    Interesting channel. I hope your channel grows bigger very soon.
    Cheers from India

  • @Uzair_Of_Babylon465
    @Uzair_Of_Babylon465 Год назад +6

    Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things 😁👍

  • @coltonstrickland7750
    @coltonstrickland7750 Год назад +2

    Love these love this channel bro

  • @lauradekeyzer1945
    @lauradekeyzer1945 Год назад +1

    Thank you for bringing forward this fantastic topic!

    • @TukozAki
      @TukozAki Год назад

      Indeed enormously interesting 🙂👍 From an ex historian (in La Sorbonne, France) disgusted by the nombrilistic approach of history studies and research in European universities.

  • @michaeldunne338
    @michaeldunne338 2 месяца назад +1

    Great segment. I thought I read somewhere that even after the Byzantines were gone that Sicily, the Duchy of Naples and Duchy of Calabria had better economies and were better run than many other locales in Italy or around the Christian side of the Mediterranean? In contradiction to stereotypes of Italian inefficiency of the 19th and 20th centuries.
    Would be interesting to hear a video on each of those territories, especially the Duchy of Naples, and on Amalfi in particular (which still has a Capodanno, and possibly was one of the first sea-fairing Italian city states to get around in the Mediterranean).

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  2 месяца назад +1

      Definately worth investigating. Making this video about Sardinia was fascinating.

  • @Wakobear.
    @Wakobear. Год назад +18

    How did the Byzantines control Sardinia after the loss of Sicily in late 9th century?

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +34

      Since the island was already culturally Roman and sought their authority from Constantinople, the islanders were keen to maintain their link to Constantinople. Equally it seems that the empire, using ships, could send letters and communicate, possibly appoint locals as the Archon and bestow honours and titles from Constantinople. There was also a military garrison on the island of perhaps some 1000 men and a fleet so it could protect itself, and possibly was used from western Mediterranean sea operations. Although the empire had lost Sicily they still owned Calabria and much of southern Italy, so communication was not suddenly cut off. It is notable that it is around the time that Byzantines lost Italy that Sardinia also slipped into independence.

    • @ΑναστασηςΜποτσας
      @ΑναστασηςΜποτσας Год назад +12

      Αξιοθαύμαστο....επειδή στην ιστορία δεν γνωρίζαμε τίποτα για την βυζαντινή ιστορία της Σαρδηνίας....

    • @rickyyacine4818
      @rickyyacine4818 10 месяцев назад

      @@ΑναστασηςΜποτσας Byzantine north Africa and Byzantine spain too

  • @PrinceofThessaly
    @PrinceofThessaly Год назад +1

    Love more obscure history like this-still looking forward to a byzantine egypt video!

  • @TH495
    @TH495 Год назад +1

    What an amazing topic! Thanks a lot!

  • @LondonPower
    @LondonPower Год назад +2

    That's very interesting topic here in Greece we still call ourselves byzantines and considered Eastern Roman Empire our country.

    • @fegeleindux3471
      @fegeleindux3471 Год назад +2

      Ok but the term Bizantine is a more recent invention, they probably called themselves Romans.
      If you considered yourselves to be Romans you should have surrendered to Mussolini-s army and be ruled by Rome once again ....... OK I-m joking.

    • @LondonPower
      @LondonPower Год назад +1

      @@fegeleindux3471 To be precise the older generation untill the 70s they used to call themselves Romios or Romaios, Romioi plural and Romeiko Romiosini Romania the Greece

  • @tedn6855
    @tedn6855 Год назад +3

    Always learned bari was end of byzantine ryle in italy. Sardinia never gets mentioned even though it lasted 2 more years. Thans for the informative video.

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +9

      1073 is when we know Sardinia was independent and fallen into the role of the four Iudices so it is not quite accurate to say Sardinia lasted until 1073 just that it was independent by then. It is likely that Sardinia slipped into independence at an earlier time, unfortunately, we just don't know exactly when.

    • @tedn6855
      @tedn6855 Год назад

      @EasternRomanHistory wiki has byzantine rule ending in early 9th century with no source posted of course.

  • @ralambosontiavina7372
    @ralambosontiavina7372 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent work !

  • @azariahisrael5632
    @azariahisrael5632 Год назад +13

    My mother's mtdna is T2B2 and says it most commonly found in Sardina. I joke with my very religious grandmother that she is the decendant of the Vandals...Could be a Roman tho. My great grandmothers surname is Belknap which is Norman surname and is haplogroup U106 but who knows where the maternal line leads to ultimately. Probably Gallo Roman ancestors.

  • @LuizfTri99
    @LuizfTri99 10 месяцев назад

    Meus parabéns pelo ótimo vídeo, seu canal aborda todos os tópicos aos quais eu tinha muita curiosidade, você consegue satisfazer minha curiosidade em todos os temas sobre os Romanos Orientais... parabéns pelo trabalho, me tornei mais um inscrito!

  • @dyasion
    @dyasion Год назад +5

    What was going on in Corsica at the time? Great video btw.

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +10

      The Franks conquered Corsica in AD774. Thank you , I am glad you enjoyed it.

    • @SDArgo_FoC
      @SDArgo_FoC Год назад

      Likely more peaceful because it’s very mountainous and has decent location.

  • @michaeladu6120
    @michaeladu6120 Год назад +1

    Great video

  • @braedenallen7013
    @braedenallen7013 Год назад

    Amazing video, amazing channel

  • @1992zorro
    @1992zorro Год назад

    Nice video, Keep them coming.

  • @deadnextdoor1
    @deadnextdoor1 Год назад

    Great video, Id love to see Byzantine Sicily if you haven’t already touched on that.

  • @Thenewbronzeagecollapse
    @Thenewbronzeagecollapse 8 месяцев назад +3

    The “Barbaricini” of whom the ruler was Hampsicora, weren't berbers. Rather, they were the native Ilienses/Sardinian tribes who resided in the modern geographical regions of Barbagia di Seulo (around the villages of Seulo, Seui, Meana Sardo, Ortueri), Mandrolisai (Belvì, Desulo, Aritzo, Atzara and Sorgono), Barbagia di Ollolai (where the ruins of the ancient settlement of Tiscali are located and you can find the modern towns of Oliena, Orgosolo, Mamoiada, Fonni, Ollolai and so on and so forth) Alta (High) Ogliastra (especially the towns of Arzana, Talana, Urzulei and Ilbono) and Bassa (Lower) Baronìa (where the villages of Galte - now Galtellì - Orosei and Onifai were located).

  • @Kyle_Schaff
    @Kyle_Schaff Год назад +3

    Have you done a video on what ERH means to you? Like, what you emotionally get out of it. What stories stick with you the most. What draws you here

  • @Rocinante2300
    @Rocinante2300 Год назад +7

    If you could live in any Byzantine province at it’s height, which would it be?

    • @wohendumwing3ee9
      @wohendumwing3ee9 Год назад +3

      Pontus Polemoniacus province

    • @MegaTang1234
      @MegaTang1234 Год назад +5

      Peloponnesian province ( arguably the province that saw the least action)

    • @mojewjewjew4420
      @mojewjewjew4420 2 месяца назад +1

      Constantinople undoubtedly

  • @TrajGreekFire
    @TrajGreekFire Год назад +6

    reupload?

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +5

      Yes, I had not noticed that one of the quotes was completely wrong and redid it.

    • @TrajGreekFire
      @TrajGreekFire Год назад +1

      @@EasternRomanHistory what about that Justinian statue with Theodosius written on it

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +3

      ​@@TrajGreekFire The equestrian statue of Justinian was put on the top of the column of Justinian I. The horse was probably reused from an earlier statue but it is most definitely Justinian I.

  • @chris-lk4ml
    @chris-lk4ml Год назад

    Thanks. Great work. For some reasons I ignored sardinia in my studies. After this video I ask me why i did that... O.o

  • @andreslebon3869
    @andreslebon3869 Год назад +3

    From my readings Alghero's name does not come from Al'hgar or Al-Jazāʾir as for Algeria but from Aleguerium, which is a mediaeval Latin word meaning "stagnation of algae" or in Italian "alghe"="seaweeds" for the considerable quantity deposited on its sandy coast. Un saluto from Sardinia.

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the comment. That is interesting. I was following the research of professor Cosentino for the etymology but I am sure multiple factors had a hand in making the place names of Sardinia. Just look at York.

  • @WarDogMadness
    @WarDogMadness Год назад

    The sardinia kings early medieval silk stockings and trousers chefs kiss gear.

  • @shaifunnessa7816
    @shaifunnessa7816 Год назад +3

    Byzantine empire clothing and fashion history please make video

  • @BernasLL
    @BernasLL Год назад +3

    Now do Byzantine Spain (and a bit of Portugal) :D

  • @dvrsify1
    @dvrsify1 Год назад

    You’re awesome

  • @HistoryandEngineering
    @HistoryandEngineering Год назад +7

    Fascinating! The History of Byzantium Podcast skipped most of these parts of roman history. Much like how the History of Rome Podcast ignored the roman invasion of Arabia Felix and Meroe in modern day Sudan during the reign of Augustus. Obscure frontier roman provinces are always interesting. Good examples are the roman province of agre decumates, roman colchis, modern day wales, modern day Brittany in the late roman empire, Nabataea, Byzantine Spain, Sardinia, corsica, Balearic islands, and that small upper part of the old Mauretania Tingitana. Makes you wonder what happened to those provinces and when did they fell to enemy invasions?
    I'm currently listening to the civil war between Thomas the Slav and Michael of Amorium in the History of Byzantium Podcast. Patiently waiting for your 9th century episodes

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +3

      I hope you enjoy the history of Byzantium's podcast. I was largely able to do a video on Sardinia because there have been several recent books and articles that allowed me to do so, if I was having to do it from scratch I doubt I would know where to start. I plan on making a video on Leo V in the not too distant future. Then I can cover the Amorians.

  • @ChaoticmessDepagus-c9p
    @ChaoticmessDepagus-c9p 24 дня назад

    There was also an embassy to Cordoba from the lord of Sardinia in 942 AD, suggesting that during the 10th century there was a sole ruler of Sardinia. In the Liber de Cerimoniis (10th century AD), among the hymns sung by the army of Byzantium in the palace of Constantinopolis, a euphemia sung by the Sardinians (likely working as soldiers/guards at Constantinople) is mentioned. Sardinians at Constantinople protesting about having to eat unleavened bread after the great scism of the Latin church, are mentioned by Theophylact of Ohrid in the late 11th century AD, in his letter to the archdeacon of Hagia Sophia in Constantinopolis: "I know that you hear the Sardinians too witnessing against you concerning the offering of unleavened bread, but you pretend to be deaf. I, however, hear them clearly - both the old proverb which proclaims ‘a witness from home’ and the one which gives me the white stone tablet."; "“You hear, I know, the Sardinians, yours (those of your Church), who testify against the offering of unleavened bread, but you turn a deaf ear.”"

  • @nikolamilinovic1230
    @nikolamilinovic1230 Год назад +1

    Wow! I didn't know that ducks were so powerful then. PETA aproves.

  • @OrthoKarter
    @OrthoKarter Год назад +7

    Medieval greek history!

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Год назад +1

    I thought I'd watched this video already

  • @fritoss3437
    @fritoss3437 Год назад +1

    Would be cool if you do the same with spain and N.A

  • @noneednoneed5752
    @noneednoneed5752 Год назад +1

    Who the hell is lacuna ?

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад +4

      A Lacuna is the name for a lost part of a text. My saying lacuna indicates that the next part of the text no longer exists in a legible form.

    • @noneednoneed5752
      @noneednoneed5752 Год назад +1

      @@EasternRomanHistory Thanks, actually it provides importante context, for without saying this I would imagine the text was complete and maybe atribute excecissve authority to the parts we have, so there is so much we don't know

  • @christianorthodoxy4769
    @christianorthodoxy4769 Год назад

    🔥

  • @Ggdivhjkjl
    @Ggdivhjkjl Год назад +1

    Our country's ruled by Vandals too.

  • @Storm-1.
    @Storm-1. Год назад +2

    This wonderful empire have the right to call every other empire babaric.

  • @triluve
    @triluve 3 месяца назад

    music is too loud

  • @Georgieastra
    @Georgieastra Год назад

    Corsica is very close to Sardinia.
    Did Corsica also remain under Byzantine authority?

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад

      In the late eighth century Corsica was conquered by the Franks, so it did until then.

  • @larry3591
    @larry3591 Год назад

    Awsome

  • @Ggdivhjkjl
    @Ggdivhjkjl Год назад +1

    6% tax! That's ridiculous! They should protest.

  • @JoeSmith-sl9bq
    @JoeSmith-sl9bq Год назад +3

    Not a fan of using the word Byzantine but amazing video

    • @maru-dy5ld
      @maru-dy5ld Год назад

      why's that?

    • @Ntopios
      @Ntopios Год назад +3

      ​@@maru-dy5ldIt's not the real name.

    • @maru-dy5ld
      @maru-dy5ld Год назад

      then what is?@@Ntopios

    • @Ntopios
      @Ntopios Год назад +4

      @@maru-dy5ld The term "Byzantine " came up many years after the fall of the empire. The real name is the Roman Empire, as it's the same Empire that was founded in antiquity. It never seized to exist. Another name for it is the Eastern Roman Empire, used to distinguish it from the Latin western part that fell at 476.
      I understand that the word Byzantine is more common & easy to use, but it's just not right. The people called themselves only as Romans. The empire overall was know as the Roman Empire, Romania, or empire of the Greeks in the West. Never as Byzantine.

    • @maru-dy5ld
      @maru-dy5ld Год назад +1

      @@Ntopios oh okay makes sense that they would still call themselves roman, thanks for the answer

  • @latronemastrucato7288
    @latronemastrucato7288 Год назад

    I'm not certain saint Sophia is an eastern saint. Saint Sophia means Holly wisdom and usually pretains to Christ, if I'm not mistaken. But a name like saint Sophia, like the most well known Hagia Sophia, is a typically eastern name, other ones are for example in Sofia, Bulgaria, named after the Hagia Sofia, present in that city.

    • @LeutherGreengager-ip1uw
      @LeutherGreengager-ip1uw Год назад +1

      Sofia/Lat. rendering 'Sophia' is Wisdom in Gk. 'Ayia Sofia' literally means Holy Wisdom in the same language. It is in this sense as 'the Holy Wisdom' (of God) that the Basilica in Constantinople was built and dedicated. The personage St. Sophia was a Roman-born Greek woman who endured in witnessing the martyrdom of her three young daughters Poistis (Faith) Elpis/Elpida (Hope) and Agape (Love). She herself gave up her spirit at the tomb of her Virgin Martyr daughters. Feastday: 17th. September.

    • @dimitriosvlissides5781
      @dimitriosvlissides5781 Год назад +1

      There is a Church of Agia Sophia and her three daughters just across the Parthenon in Athens Greece
      The street name is Dyonisiou Aeropagitou if you ever go there is a very nice little church

    • @LeutherGreengager-ip1uw
      @LeutherGreengager-ip1uw Год назад

      @@dimitriosvlissides5781 thank you ever so much, Dimitry! I'll relay this to a Sofia who is hoping to visit the Greek capital. ☦️ Bless.

  • @w0lfgm
    @w0lfgm Год назад

    Still there is no good video about monetary history - so here an idea for You. (It would be nice to have it in next year)

  • @rickyyacine4818
    @rickyyacine4818 Год назад

    l thought it was abounded in 830s ad

  • @Thebois753
    @Thebois753 Год назад +1

    Eastern Roman sardinia*

  • @Killerqueen69420
    @Killerqueen69420 Год назад +2

    algorithm comment

  • @elsahida5
    @elsahida5 Год назад +1

    Who were these vandals that ruled sardinia?
    What's the dialect they speak?

  • @strahinjastevic7480
    @strahinjastevic7480 Год назад +5

    Would love to head your opinion on the use of the name "Byzantine" It has been proven that it's a sham and a fabrication yet people still insist on calling that state by that name even though it iwas called the Eastern Roman Empire, by greeks and everyone around them.

    • @bennygohome4576
      @bennygohome4576 Год назад +1

      It’s useful to distinguish between the Latin speaking Mediterranean empire and its Greek speaking eastern Mediterranean rump state

    • @strahinjastevic7480
      @strahinjastevic7480 Год назад +5

      @@bennygohome4576 we should never endorse a fabrication that was made to belittle the state.

    • @bb1111116
      @bb1111116 Год назад

      @@strahinjastevic7480 ; ​​I agree with your comments.
      While it existed, the divided Empire in the east was called the Eastern Roman Empire.
      The term Byzantine Empire was not used for the Eastern Roman Empire until 1557 when the book, Corpus Historiae Byzantinae, by Hieronymus Wolf was published.
      * The Greek language was spoken in many parts of the Roman Republic and Empire. When southern Italy was absorbed by the Roman Republic, much of it was Greek speaking.
      The New Testament is written in Greek. The Roman citizen, the apostle Paul/Saul, could speak Greek and he wrote in Greek. His letter to the Romans was written in Greek and educated Roman citizens could understand it because they spoke and read Greek.
      * The city of Rome did not need to be in the Roman Empire. The capital of the Empire could be moved.
      In AD 408, Emperor Honorius transferred the capital of the Western Roman Empire from Rome to Ravenna.
      Constantinople served as the capital when Justinian I took back the city of Rome.
      - Greek speakers were in Anatolia/Greece and also in Persia all the way to the border of India because of Alexander the Great.
      - Greek speakers were in the Middle-east and Egypt. That’s why in Egypt there was a great city and library in Alexandria named after Alexander.
      - Greek art, philosophy and culture spread throughout the educated society of the Roman Republic and Empire.
      - Even with the interruptions from the 4th Crusade, the Eastern Roman Empire finally ended with the fall of Constantinople.

    • @viperking6573
      @viperking6573 Год назад +1

      It wasn't actually called Eastern Roman Empire, but just Roman Empire, Empire of Romania or other names depending on the people ( empire of the Greeks by the pope iirc )

    • @strahinjastevic7480
      @strahinjastevic7480 Год назад +1

      @@viperking6573 yeah, my mistake

  • @Mehdinachky
    @Mehdinachky Год назад +1

    Can you do a video about Byzantine Balkans or Bosnia. I know its complicated but there is no real knowledge on it.

  • @genfreed2338
    @genfreed2338 Год назад +2

    Bump

  • @rizzochuenringe669
    @rizzochuenringe669 Год назад

    It's called DUX, not dax. DUX like duke.

  • @uztulei
    @uztulei Год назад

    Sardinia no est italia de facto

  • @fabriziopastorino3792
    @fabriziopastorino3792 Год назад +2

    when you make these videos on the history of other peoples, it would be simple to buy a history book, it starts the history of Sardinia from 235 BC with the Carthaginians, a pity that the oldest western civilization existed on the island 1800 years earlier called nuragic, to make you understand 3500 years ago my ancestors built more than 7000 towers or castles 30 meters high, the tallest buildings after the pyramids of that era, not only did they build the oldest life-size statues in the West look at them, they are called giants of monte prama, there was an older civilization that built a pyramid 6000 years ago, and concluding the city of alghero its name is of greek origin, the arabs have nothing to do with it, the fixation of foreigners is to ignore that the Arabs have not influenced our culture at all, but have forced us to fight them for centuries, study please

    • @EasternRomanHistory
      @EasternRomanHistory  Год назад

      I see

    • @viperking6573
      @viperking6573 Год назад +1

      There is not enough consideration on our ( sardinians ) part to research the nuragic civilization and come up with actual, realistic, evidence based knowledge on them. Because of this many loud pseudo-archeologists just give a bad rep to this still pretty unknown civilization, and we end up looking like the loud child in the corner screaming how good they are without actual evidence for it. So let's just do our part and be scientific. Same for the judicate period, the punic period, the spanish period, and so on. Comuncas, video bellissimu EasternRomanHistory ❤ grattzie pro aer contatu sa istoria nostra! ( Anyway, super video ERH ❤ thanks for having told our history! )

  • @andrei-mn2nc
    @andrei-mn2nc 6 месяцев назад

    La herencia del latin popular esta enSardinia,i su dialecto,total diferente del italiano,i muy cercano al provenzal,catalan, i rumano.