Stalin: Britain's Unlikely Hero Of World War Two? | 1941 & The Man Of Steel | Timeline

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  • Опубликовано: 28 апр 2024
  • Presented by Professor David Reynolds. Historian Professor David Reynolds reassesses Stalin’s role in the life and death struggle between Germany and Russia in World War Two, which he argues was ultimately more critical for British survival than ‘Our Finest Hour’ in the Battle of Britain itself.
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @MyDogmatix
    @MyDogmatix 2 года назад +66

    The writing on this show with this particular narrator is fantastic. What a difference good writing is with documentaries. This is history. Any other show uses essentially the same back drop, but these shows are superior to a lot of others. Well done.

  • @jer5845
    @jer5845 3 года назад +511

    “History is a set of lies agreed upon.”
    ― Napoleon Bonaparte

    • @peace-now
      @peace-now 3 года назад +31

      Some history is true. Jesus died on the cross and rose again after three days.

    • @jer5845
      @jer5845 3 года назад +40

      @@peace-now ok then, others born again, or back from the dead; Krishna, Odin, Ganesha, Osiris, and many others...

    • @stuartmenziesfarrant
      @stuartmenziesfarrant 3 года назад +5

      No its not.

    • @peace-now
      @peace-now 3 года назад +2

      @@jer5845 True.

    • @sanjaypathak287
      @sanjaypathak287 3 года назад +6

      And napoleon never agreed to anything still he has a place in world history

  • @MrBITS101
    @MrBITS101 3 года назад +28

    16:24 a big factor which decided Hitler's decision to attack Russia was the poor performance by Russia in their war against Finland.

    • @teemukustila
      @teemukustila 3 года назад

      Yeah, kind of an oversight to not even mention this in the document..

    • @robertbennett9949
      @robertbennett9949 2 года назад

      The Germans did not seem to have been aware of the defeat of the Japanese in 1938 at Kalkin Gol.

    • @wolverine67044
      @wolverine67044 2 года назад

      and I thought it was the huge build up of red army forces on the border with huge stockpiles of supplies. Not too smart if you were only concerned with defense.

    • @ant7936
      @ant7936 Год назад

      And he might have succeeded, if he hadn't been delayed a month, by Crete.

  • @kindnessfirst9670
    @kindnessfirst9670 3 года назад +735

    Amazing how many people mistakenly believe he was Russian.

    • @Ktaurus26
      @Ktaurus26 3 года назад +117

      Well he changed his name from a Georgian name to Russian. Most people identify the USSR as Russian only.

    • @kindnessfirst9670
      @kindnessfirst9670 3 года назад +89

      @D B Then Gandhi was wasn't Indian and millions of people in Hong Kong aren't Chinese because they were born in the British Empire.

    • @kindnessfirst9670
      @kindnessfirst9670 3 года назад +68

      @D B His name was Georgian, his parents were Georgian and his name was Georgian. He was Georgian born in the Russian empire and became leader of the USSR.

    • @kindnessfirst9670
      @kindnessfirst9670 3 года назад +38

      @D B Speaking of "confuse"- African is not a race and Africa is not a country.

    • @ditodanelia1215
      @ditodanelia1215 3 года назад +26

      right he was georgian and people don't know muck about georgia and people think that soviet union was only russia also in fact even beria wasn't russian and he was georgian and only 60% of soviet union population were russians

  • @vicostea
    @vicostea 3 года назад +533

    The statement that Napoleon used the French Revolution to jump from corporal to emperor in grossly inaccurate. First, Napoleon newer was a corporal. His fist grade was lieutenant and by the time the French Revolution came to be he was already a captain. Second, when he become emperor the French Revolution was over for over five years.

    • @user-bo8eq7ki5w
      @user-bo8eq7ki5w 3 года назад +13

      Napoleon ended the Republic of "18 Brumaire" by Breaking up the Parliament and assuming dictatorial powers.

    • @Davidmuratore1
      @Davidmuratore1 3 года назад +13

      @@user-bo8eq7ki5w You are mistaken Napoleon with his nephew Napoleon the third... That was 70 years later and it what brillantly Marx explains in the 18 Brumario.

    • @user-bo8eq7ki5w
      @user-bo8eq7ki5w 3 года назад +18

      @@Davidmuratore1 I apologize, but I was referring to the real 18 Brumaire of 1799 by Napoleon Bonaparte #1 . Of course, there is such a work by Karl Marx "18 Brumaire" by Louis Napoleon. But in this case we are talking about the first Napoleon. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coup_of_18_Brumaire

    • @Davidmuratore1
      @Davidmuratore1 3 года назад +8

      @@user-bo8eq7ki5w Blimey! You are right... I was referring to the part of "the farce of the history".

    • @bubbaakatommyoso4119
      @bubbaakatommyoso4119 3 года назад

      Indeed

  • @mikefiford578
    @mikefiford578 3 года назад +404

    Lol! in the opening remarks, I thought our host was describing Churchill))

    • @feargach2107
      @feargach2107 3 года назад +18

      It's a pity the introduction was a lie.

    • @Kurwajegomac
      @Kurwajegomac 3 года назад +15

      @@feargach2107 please tell us the truth sir.

    • @peezebeuponyou3774
      @peezebeuponyou3774 3 года назад +11

      That was the idea...

    • @adamhbrennan
      @adamhbrennan 3 года назад +4

      Churchill was born into wealth, no?

    • @joselugo4536
      @joselugo4536 3 года назад +22

      😧Bengal famine?

  • @BaliesStories
    @BaliesStories 3 года назад +146

    Stalin never had a “breakdown”.
    The Kremlin logbooks, made available since the opening of the Soviet archives, confirm that Stalin worked full time from the start of Operation Barbarossa.

    • @e.s.6275
      @e.s.6275 3 года назад +11

      Yet he disappeared in the first days of the operation. It was Molotov who addressed the nation on the radio about the war.
      It should have been Stalin, of course.

    • @thearbiter3351
      @thearbiter3351 2 года назад +8

      @@e.s.6275 yes bc he was shocked and he went to his mansion

    • @thearbiter3351
      @thearbiter3351 2 года назад +16

      @Balies's Stories • he never said that stalin had a breakdown. He said that he BELIEVED that Stalin was on the brink of having a mental breakdown

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal 2 года назад +16

      The records will probably show that Boris Johnson didn't disappear for two weeks at the start of covid when half the country was flooded because he found out his missus was pregnant and was desperately trying to get her to have a secret abortion so he could avoid marrying her but we all know he did

    • @ryangibson2831
      @ryangibson2831 2 года назад +3

      @@GuinessOriginal Who cares, he was still vital to defeating the Naxis.

  • @callumbyrne3692
    @callumbyrne3692 7 месяцев назад +4

    I've seen a few documentaries from this guy and I just love the passion he puts into them. Another guy I really like is David Starkey.

    • @user-nd3wy3hc2g
      @user-nd3wy3hc2g 7 месяцев назад

      Peace be with you 💚
      We Invite You To Join The Religion of Islam, as you may find peace. Islam is the latest Revelation from Allmighty God (Allah) for All the Human & Jinn kinds WorldWide. Our suggestion just Study All Religions including Islam, then you're welcome to convert to the religion of Islam In order to successfully pass this Test of Life and be saved from Everlasting Punishment of the HellFire. We wish All The Best 🕊🌷❤❤

  • @whiterider1414
    @whiterider1414 3 года назад +53

    I do not agree with Mr. Reynold's particular perspective on Churchill and Stalin specifically, but I certainly do enjoy his passionate and unique interpretation of the leaders and their handling of the events of the Times. Mr. Reynold's enthusiasm perks my interest to study this content more closely!
    Love it!

    • @andreasandre4756
      @andreasandre4756 3 года назад

      "Better late than never".....

    • @lololomo5484
      @lololomo5484 2 года назад

      Perks you right up, eh? It piques my interest. I guess I'm different.

  • @m.a.118
    @m.a.118 3 года назад +132

    Not inaccurate- However, I'm always surprised how the Brits gloss over one thing that did save their skin in WWII... I'd argue Britain's colonies/dominions is what propped them up. They'd have 25% less pilots in the Battle of Britain, the U-Boat threat would have been MUCH worse with no Canadian Merchant Marine/RCN, the economic roles of Africa/Middle Eastern holdings, South Africa's role in the early African campaign, Indian manpower, Australian presence in the Pacific... The British really owe *A LOT* to their former empire for their freedom.

    • @je6874
      @je6874 3 года назад +29

      Exactly! Britain would be nothing without it’s empire and this applied even before WW2... it’s a shame that the commonwealth nations/colonies aren’t given as much light as they truly deserve.

    • @TheIceman567
      @TheIceman567 3 года назад +1

      J E are you British? Do you like the USA and Americans?

    • @RisusShorts
      @RisusShorts 3 года назад +10

      dont forget they stole indiand food and killed million of Indians

    • @je6874
      @je6874 3 года назад +2

      TheIceman567 I’m British and proud but that doesn’t mean I can’t acknowledge the pitfalls. Do I smell an ad hominem argument from you?

    • @TheIceman567
      @TheIceman567 3 года назад +10

      J E awww no , I was asking if you’re british and like the USA. My fiancé is English and I love the UK. We’re having twins in December. 🇬🇧🤝🇺🇸

  • @Soviet0005
    @Soviet0005 3 года назад +10

    11.19:
    Actually Tukhachevsky was one of the leading proponents of Deep Operations (the development of Special Forces) to operate behind enemy lines and he realised earlier than the West the advantages of ballistic missiles.

  • @dxrebel
    @dxrebel 3 года назад +107

    Correction: Molotov refrained fom voting on hiw wife's arrest, marking the only time the Politburo did not vote unanimously

    • @osamabinladen824
      @osamabinladen824 3 года назад

      Why

    • @thearbiter3351
      @thearbiter3351 2 года назад

      @@osamabinladen824 because you blew yourself up

    • @osamabinladen824
      @osamabinladen824 2 года назад

      @@thearbiter3351 No

    • @DarkKnight-wf3po
      @DarkKnight-wf3po 2 года назад +3

      @@osamabinladen824 because its his wife

    • @DevrimciOkul
      @DevrimciOkul 2 года назад +1

      This documentary is full of historical mistakes and manipulations. Anyone who is expert on the Soviet history would realize this.

  • @mathiascorvin9989
    @mathiascorvin9989 5 лет назад +79

    There are some inaccuracies. Napoleon was a second lieutenant and not a corporal at the beginning of his carrier.
    Molotov abstained from voting when his wife was condemned.

    • @johnblythe5021
      @johnblythe5021 4 года назад +4

      absolutly .correct
      a corsican who was not prepare to put up with frenc and english domination

    • @johnblythe5021
      @johnblythe5021 4 года назад

      Frences

    • @kdfulton3152
      @kdfulton3152 4 года назад +1

      mathias corvin It’s “career” not carrier but otherwise correct.

    • @mikelynch7271
      @mikelynch7271 3 года назад +1

      Ty for clearing that up

    • @niccolopaganini4268
      @niccolopaganini4268 3 года назад

      Wasn't he a captain or major during his first famous battles?

  • @MiKeMiDNiTe-77
    @MiKeMiDNiTe-77 3 года назад +65

    1941 was a very dark year for all the allies.

    • @Hans8814---
      @Hans8814--- 3 года назад +1

      @Karl Hanks what

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 3 года назад +4

      @Karl Hanks In what way was it racist? Is it because the German Europeans were in the ascendancy over the British and Soviet Europeans?

    • @Tiger_III
      @Tiger_III 3 года назад

      sadly not dark enough

    • @thorthegodofthunder9150
      @thorthegodofthunder9150 3 года назад

      @@Tiger_III Yeah certainly not as dark as it is for you.

    • @bahahaba
      @bahahaba Год назад

      1941 was the darkest year for the allies however it was her most important and crucial for the years to follow

  • @tonvanderzalm4612
    @tonvanderzalm4612 3 года назад +11

    Very interesting, I am very fascinated by these kinds of documentaries 👍👍👍

  • @hurbrowns5397
    @hurbrowns5397 3 года назад +24

    I got a feeling the title of the original documentary is different from the one the uploader put.

    • @gutzonborglum3654
      @gutzonborglum3654 2 года назад +2

      Yes, after watching the film the title doesn't match the contents

  • @atlantisboliviaorg
    @atlantisboliviaorg 3 года назад +17

    10.50. Napoleon Bonaparte never "Jumped from Corporal to Emperor". He was never a corporal but "Upon graduating (from military academy") in September 1785, Bonaparte was commissioned a second lieutenant in La Fère artillery regiment."

    • @scottleft3672
      @scottleft3672 3 года назад +1

      I'm no fan of Napoleon, but i don't make up lies about him, far to many myths are used as insult as it is....it is the very opposite of historical study.

  • @josron6088
    @josron6088 4 года назад +32

    I remember them interviewing a woman who live through the Stalinist regime. She said when he died she cried as bad as it was she thought I was about to get even worse.

    • @elhombredeoro955
      @elhombredeoro955 3 года назад +4

      Russia always changes for the worse.

    • @agul6287
      @agul6287 3 года назад +7

      The majority simple people of Russia like Stalin

    • @user-oe2cc3tc5t
      @user-oe2cc3tc5t 3 года назад +6

      She cried just as millions did because Stalin was a great leader who cared about his nation.

    • @josron6088
      @josron6088 3 года назад

      @@user-oe2cc3tc5t I'm in American.

    • @josron6088
      @josron6088 3 года назад +1

      @@user-oe2cc3tc5t I'm a American. And I understand British and American propaganda but did Stalin kill 25 million of his own people ?

  • @mecho68
    @mecho68 3 года назад +8

    Always a pleasure to watch such documentaries , thank you .Please keep them coming .

  • @TimaDheere
    @TimaDheere 3 года назад +5

    loved it thnx

  • @jesusisaliveannie3594
    @jesusisaliveannie3594 4 года назад +74

    This was excellent! The 'Warlords' series is also superb, well worth checking out.

    • @Prosper_Dean
      @Prosper_Dean 4 года назад +2

      Do you know if there's a Roosevelt vs. Stalin episode of 'Warlords'? :-( i assumed there was but couldnt find it..

    • @jesusisaliveannie3594
      @jesusisaliveannie3594 4 года назад +3

      @@Prosper_Dean
      ruclips.net/video/kykTy-yIkS0/видео.html

    • @Prosper_Dean
      @Prosper_Dean 4 года назад

      @@jesusisaliveannie3594 you absolute rockstar. thank you

    • @Prosper_Dean
      @Prosper_Dean 4 года назад

      @@jesusisaliveannie3594 ty

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 3 года назад

      RECCOMENDED

  • @charlesarmstrong5292
    @charlesarmstrong5292 3 года назад +506

    Utterly fails to make the point to which the title alludes.

    • @lukebissaker630
      @lukebissaker630 3 года назад +82

      I mean the first few sentences says in *1941* after which the Germans had already given up on operation sea lion to invade Britain. Therefore the entire documentary is pointless.

    • @Diwana71
      @Diwana71 3 года назад +54

      It's just a British propoganda documentary. The Brits did nothing in the war except run away and try and save their colonial empire. Even that they coukd not do at the end of the war and became a colony of America and then the EU. .

    • @imcustomized
      @imcustomized 3 года назад +51

      @@Diwana71 Don't know squat, do ya?

    • @benjaminhaslam3152
      @benjaminhaslam3152 3 года назад +73

      @@Diwana71
      So breaking the enigma, the Royal Navy, the African Campaign, half of D-Day and the bombing campaign of Germany was just...? What?

    • @oldfella3919
      @oldfella3919 3 года назад +38

      @
      Jaspal Singh Sindharh
      Being a bit of a troll are we? To paraphrase imcusto .... you know diddly squat.

  • @7vivec
    @7vivec 2 года назад

    Absolutely brilliant narration

  • @tiernanwearen8096
    @tiernanwearen8096 2 года назад +18

    "never intrupt a enemy while he is making a mistake"

  • @lhaviland8602
    @lhaviland8602 4 года назад +28

    That slow turn and stare in the title card. *Shudders*

  • @rupertsibelius7512
    @rupertsibelius7512 6 лет назад +18

    This is a truly wonderful documentary, only 10 minutes of watching and it has fantastically interesting info, the kind history books usually don't hand out. Who can I thank for this, the film commentator superior Professor David Reynolds(5 stars), the british producers and/or filmmakers or simply the greatest free university in the world: AKA RUclips?

    • @sadspud5499
      @sadspud5499 5 лет назад +5

      most of the quotes and conversations ect are completely false.

    • @stevecosmolove1045
      @stevecosmolove1045 5 лет назад +1

      It gets even better Rupert, check out the university lectures. Yale has a bunch with all kinds of disciplines. RUclips University forever!!

    • @timdegraw1784
      @timdegraw1784 4 года назад +3

      Agreed Rupert, you just have to ignore all the poorly informed in the comments section calling the whole thing lies from start to finish

    • @user-nd3wy3hc2g
      @user-nd3wy3hc2g 7 месяцев назад

      Peace be with you 💚
      We Invite You To Join The Religion of Islam, as you may find peace. Islam is the latest Revelation from Allmighty God (Allah) for All the Human & Jinn kinds WorldWide. Our suggestion just Study All Religions including Islam, then you're welcome to convert to the religion of Islam In order to successfully pass this Test of Life and be saved from Everlasting Punishment of the HellFire. We wish All The Best 🕊🌷❤❤

  • @lklivingstone7801
    @lklivingstone7801 3 года назад +1

    Loved this video

  • @calripson
    @calripson 3 года назад +127

    Stalin was 169 cm according to his arrest records. That is actually 5'6".6

  • @respjames590
    @respjames590 4 года назад +58

    Whenever this professor journalist speaks I nervously move to the edge of my chair!

    • @e-cuauhtemoc
      @e-cuauhtemoc 4 года назад +3

      Why is that???☻

    • @mikelynch7271
      @mikelynch7271 3 года назад +1

      What ? Why ?

    • @curtdenson2360
      @curtdenson2360 3 года назад +1

      Stalin at 23 1918 repeatedly raped women and young girls 12 to 15 years old, kind of a Joe Biden lookalike, but hey he too believed Marx had something, just remove the population's weapons then kill all opposition, wonder why Dummocrats want law-abiding citizens guns? Vote Trump-Pence November 3rd, 2020

    • @inhibited44
      @inhibited44 3 года назад

      @FredTheBread Typical response of a base democrat - prejudice and judgemental. as if you have a monopoly on ideas.

    • @serpens8
      @serpens8 3 года назад

      he has a damn annoying voice

  • @MPYarnall
    @MPYarnall 3 года назад +329

    Stalin had spectacular hair when he was young.

    • @andreasandre4756
      @andreasandre4756 3 года назад +25

      With his spectacular gaze he stole banks and later stole a chair and killed half of the country........Poor people were deluded with his spectacular features.....

    • @deezeed2817
      @deezeed2817 3 года назад +20

      He wasn't a man you wanted to cross. He deported my grandmother out of the Soviet Union and she never saw Russia ever again.

    • @josephstalin425
      @josephstalin425 3 года назад +37

      I know

    • @jonnysmallback3230
      @jonnysmallback3230 3 года назад +1

      @light bulb y

    • @andreasandre4756
      @andreasandre4756 3 года назад +1

      @War Thunder I had already mentioned it and the crimes that he did after as soon as he stole the chair....

  • @MoreToTheTruthThanMeetsTheEye
    @MoreToTheTruthThanMeetsTheEye 3 года назад +2

    Learned a lot.

  • @capisenior
    @capisenior 3 года назад +27

    I gotta respect the fact that he applied order 270 to his own son and his daughter-in-law. At least he was a honest tyrant.

    • @alexeyamosov664
      @alexeyamosov664 3 года назад

      Yeah, that’s true. I am pretty sure that he did this for the future of his people. Post-revolution period is always the darkest time in any countries’ histories.

    • @jglammi
      @jglammi 3 года назад +1

      @@alexeyamosov664 Stalin supported Hitler's attack on the UK and supplied material, raw materials in order to advance Hitler's attack on the UK

    • @alexeyamosov664
      @alexeyamosov664 3 года назад

      @@jglammi okay, but what about Czechoslovakia? The only country supported it was USSR, but Poland didn’t let soviet troops to go trough for help and France and UK betrayed them. So every single country tried to make profit of Germany. And yeah, continuation of trade was necessary because Stalin’s repressions completely destroyed its organization and fighting efficiency. So yeah, it was necessary, but only because of that.

    • @bluesy666
      @bluesy666 3 года назад +1

      @@jglammi so what , UK was not a saint more than that , the english empire is built on war crimes , winners write history

    • @vallecend6855
      @vallecend6855 Год назад

      True, even if Stalin is someone who would do anything for power, at least he played fair and didn't exempt X and Y just because they're family or friends. In that regard, he's way better than even the "democratic" (a.k.a 99% corrupt and unfair) leaders of the world.

  • @kesefang1526
    @kesefang1526 7 лет назад +17

    this narrator guy: u renew my hunger of new found information, strikes me hard with your "fact/research/opinion" hence makes me wanna *BUST* out and learn more:-) thanks for the upload!

  • @Gachalife2shorts
    @Gachalife2shorts 3 года назад +51

    The narrator lowkey roasting my man Staling when describing him😂

    • @edwindeaven2388
      @edwindeaven2388 3 года назад +2

      😂😂😂

    • @jglammi
      @jglammi 3 года назад +6

      Stalin supported Hitler's attack on the UK and supplied material, raw materials in order to advance Hitler's attack on the UK

    • @raydouglas7530
      @raydouglas7530 3 года назад +4

      @@jglammi Ha ha.

    • @ushiki2212
      @ushiki2212 3 года назад

      @@jglammi hm...

    • @ushiki2212
      @ushiki2212 3 года назад +1

      @@jglammi link to a page on this event? I would like to read about it.

  • @jgdooley2003
    @jgdooley2003 3 года назад +10

    Napoleon was commissioned a second lieutenant after graduating from the French Ecole Militaire. He was never a Corporal.

  • @marimbadearco
    @marimbadearco 3 года назад +28

    uh, looks like 3:35 is footage from France: the words on the signs are clearly not in Russian. Oh well....

    • @MrGunzoller
      @MrGunzoller 3 года назад

      True lies as a normal phenomenon ) Also there is too much 'I think that bla bla bla' in here

  • @Qoorky
    @Qoorky 3 года назад +27

    Stalin May Be Terrifying and Ridiculously Cruel, But He is Extremely fascinating To Learn About.

    • @whatsup6797
      @whatsup6797 3 года назад +2

      Yes indeed... He kills milions of people more than Hitlers regime did

    • @whatsup6797
      @whatsup6797 3 года назад

      @Sam Houston yes

    • @RIDE_26
      @RIDE_26 3 года назад +2

      Yea, very fascinating. Tell me what is so fascinating than about him?

    • @FirstLast-cf4uw
      @FirstLast-cf4uw 2 года назад +1

      Stalin was a rat who was always scared shitless. He reminds me of Orochi in One Piece 😆

  • @je6874
    @je6874 3 года назад +67

    This video didn’t really explain what the title alluded to... disappointing if that was the intention of the makers of the documentary but frustratingly misleading if the channel decided to title it that!

    • @osamabinladen824
      @osamabinladen824 3 года назад

      Why

    • @pcprinciple3774
      @pcprinciple3774 3 года назад +6

      Because it's not true. What he means is that most the allied deaths were Russian, a fact taught in British schools to all teenagers.

    • @ice843
      @ice843 3 года назад +1

      Yeh it’s well known in Britain that the Russian sacrifice and destruction of the motherland was unfathomable to us even after what we went through
      But I was really hoping for a ploy or a plan of some sort between the British and Russians or some great act sad I’m only half way through

    • @pcprinciple3774
      @pcprinciple3774 3 года назад +1

      @@ice843 it's not coming. He's basically making the argument that if Operation Barbarossa hadn't failed, then Britain would have fallen next. As a Brit I can accept that logic. But l can also counter that if Europe fall to the Nazis then America was next. Let's also not forget about the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.

    • @ice843
      @ice843 3 года назад

      PC Principle I dunno that Britain would’ve fallen even then the royals and goverment would move to Canada and the nazis would then have to face the Americans Canadians and governments navy’s in exile so I don’t know that USA could ever fall not with the brits navy on there side and there ability to build more
      Maybe some trade war if some sort famines and such potentially they could get America
      Have to get rid of the British navy tho

  • @georgiewalker1069
    @georgiewalker1069 2 года назад

    Just really interesting. Thank you

  • @patriceortovent3337
    @patriceortovent3337 3 года назад +37

    A sample of world history amongst many. This one with a zest of British flavour and a Christmas pudding decoration on the top. Even Napoleon didn’t escape a titled he never had in the first place except as a familiar name by the troops of Napoleon while in campaign. What is not known or impossible to know is easily filled in with the imagination of the commentator and called history. The real name is human imagination and the human race is extremely good at it.

    • @mridulk81
      @mridulk81 3 года назад

      Can you plz elaborate with an example

    • @patriceortovent3337
      @patriceortovent3337 3 года назад

      An example about what? That millions of things are happening every hour in this so called humanity and we pretend to know about it and if we don't we invent to make it right. Well, let's ask for example to anyone if they remember or known what they were doing precisely at such time of such a year. Hardly would they know, no one could, but let's imagine such person is writing a kind of autobiography years later about what they think they were doing at such a time, such a place. Well, imagination will set in to fill the gaps to make it right. Books on history are full of contradictory statements about the same period under consideration from various archives. Sure, some events were dramatic enough to be recorded one way or the other, yet, nothing can be known with complete objectivity. Subjectivity rules most of the time with humans. History is always written by the winners, not the defeated ones. Indeed what is not known or partially known end up been described through the imagination. Tells of many legends keep circulating and taken for real. Repeat a lie long and loud enough it will become the truth. The greatest majority of humans don't even know themselves, they think they do but they don't and as a result continue to act against there own interests. So, when it was said that such so call documentary is one sample out of many about world history, there is nothing much to argue. This one with British flavour, and a zest of propaganda, like so many. A piece of entertainment no more no less. As for Stalin, the only book with some value regarding his role and position in politics is still the one written by Trotsky, not easy to get a copy of it. There was one in1982 in the public library in Copenhagen, in English. I was able to read it while I was there, no way such book is to be find anywhere these days although nothing is impossible in this world.

    • @nordan00
      @nordan00 2 года назад +1

      @@patriceortovent3337 I thought you were in your first post referring to the fact that Napoleon, contrary to the narrator’s claim, had never been a corporal, since his first military rank was that of a second lieutenant posted to an artillery regiment. As for the rest of your posts, I couldn’t make hide nor hair of them!

    • @kqm888
      @kqm888 Год назад

      @@nordan00 lol hide nor hair, yeah thats a nice way to put it🤣🤣

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      @user-nd3wy3hc2g 7 месяцев назад

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  • @sirlordhenrymortimer6620
    @sirlordhenrymortimer6620 4 года назад +104

    Young Josef Stalin resemble a lot like Sergio Ramos

    • @dengbona4406
      @dengbona4406 4 года назад +7

      SIR Lord Henry mortimer hala Madrid, thats why Ramos is dominating as well

    • @ViralManiaTV
      @ViralManiaTV 4 года назад +8

      Ramos has a scumbag mentality - I am a Liverpool supporter ... Could say alot worse about him

    • @mehdidavid2342
      @mehdidavid2342 3 года назад +6

      @@ViralManiaTV stalin and ramos 2 scumbags

    • @G_G_G_G_
      @G_G_G_G_ 3 года назад +3

      Ramos ain't a midget.

    • @thebichocr7659
      @thebichocr7659 3 года назад

      Bru....

  • @petert9110
    @petert9110 4 года назад +10

    At the start where he said the invasion of Russian started here you saw remnants of a bridge then in the footage you see what looks like that exact same destroyed bridge as the Germans drove past it at first in color. So first at 3:13 then in B & W at 3:20 it definitely looks like the same blown bridge is still there.

  • @TheAgProv
    @TheAgProv 3 года назад +53

    "We have to fight this war, comrades, and our first priority is to save the British!" - Yes. Right.

    • @bigstretchdaddy
      @bigstretchdaddy 3 года назад +10

      You either didn’t watch this or are completely clueless about the war!! What you just wrote is just silly. No he didn’t intentionally save Britain.

    • @sarthe_soviet3194
      @sarthe_soviet3194 3 года назад +3

      does not make sense

    • @nguyenhoanglong420
      @nguyenhoanglong420 3 года назад +2

      @@bigstretchdaddy YES YES HE DID! BUT BRITIAN EMPIRE FALL APART ANYWAY ! THAT'S WHY STALIN HATRED ON CHURCHILL

    • @abhishekrai33
      @abhishekrai33 3 года назад +4

      Stalin's spectacular military blunder crushed nazis and saved Britain.

    • @limedickandrew6016
      @limedickandrew6016 3 года назад +4

      I think the point is that at this time, 1941-2, both Britain and the Soviet Union needed one another. Both of course had their own unique reasons.

  • @BossDelta38
    @BossDelta38 3 года назад +62

    Documentary title: "How Stalin Saved Britain"
    Documentary content: "Britain who?"

    • @peace-now
      @peace-now 3 года назад +1

      They mean England.

    • @noegiducos5609
      @noegiducos5609 3 года назад

      It seems the attack of Germany toward Russia had save Britain from another attack.

  • @SeanRCope
    @SeanRCope 4 года назад +328

    Soviets motto: “ then it got worse”

    • @scottyfox6376
      @scottyfox6376 3 года назад +2

      Oorahhh Stalino..

    • @MsNaplin113
      @MsNaplin113 3 года назад

      Lol

    • @KZia8
      @KZia8 3 года назад

      😂

    • @pappachan7267
      @pappachan7267 3 года назад

      Unfortunately history repeated itself 3 years ago in heart of Peking! This Xi declared he would be the life time emperor of China !

    • @antoindearg5614
      @antoindearg5614 3 года назад +1

      Ah, a deluded Unionist who thinks the Soviets did Chernobyl deliberately. Jesus Christ almighty. Even before the recent drama (loosely) based on that tragedy came out, some of us who actually study history knew that the Khrushchevite leadership in the USSR cut corners and ignored safety advice when the reactors of their power plants were built, amongst other failures. While I am no fan of that particular Soviet leadership, it's quite clear it was that, rather than a pre-conceived murder plan that led to the accident. The 1956 leadership were culpable, and the ones who came after also can't deny at least partial responsibility, including that great hero of the West, Mikhail Gorbachev, who could have dealt with it, but was too busy introducing liberal reforms to be bothered. Chernobyl was the final nail in the coffin of a great nation, one that deserves to be remembered for the positive contribution it made, rather than it's failures, both real and fantasy.

  • @ruleten9575
    @ruleten9575 4 года назад +63

    Molotov "abstained" from voting against his wife.

    • @readynow12345
      @readynow12345 3 года назад +1

      Here is a little history for you, the Molotov cocktail came from his name.

    • @e.s.6275
      @e.s.6275 3 года назад

      @@readynow12345 do you know the circumstances how this "cocktail" name appeared?

    • @w0rmblood323
      @w0rmblood323 2 года назад

      Pretty sure it had something to do with the USSR's war with Finland but I don't remember which side actually first referred to them as that.
      I would think it would be the Finnish, given a Molotov Cocktail is also known as a poor man's grenade, wouldn't make sense for the Soviets to turn a weapon into a pejorative for a high ranking Soviet politician.
      Although it's possible that is wrong and the name is of Soviet origin.

    • @e.s.6275
      @e.s.6275 2 года назад

      @@w0rmblood323 what I learnt is as follows.
      When Soviet aggression started, it went along with a bs propaganda cover for Western media. Much like modern Russian hybrid wars.
      So, while Soviet planes were bombing timber-built Helsinki with incendiary bombs, the Soviet officials (Molotov being the main spokesperson) in the newspapers claimed that they were "dropping humanitarian supplies and Christmas presents".
      Finns learnt about this sheer lies and they had big enough balls to make fun of that. It could have been called "Christmas cocktails sent by Molotov", then quickly reduced to Molotov cocktails.
      I'm not sure though how the name transferred from the incendiary bombs onto the hand "grenades".

    • @thearbiter3351
      @thearbiter3351 2 года назад

      @@e.s.6275 very interesting. Such a coincidence bc i just wondered today why it was named after molotov

  • @micksherman7709
    @micksherman7709 3 года назад +21

    A friend of my Dad's told me that on the morning of 22nd June 1941 he was leaving an army camp and just as his jeep reached the barrier he saw someone burst out of the HQ building frantically gesticulating to him. So he turned back and got the news that the Germans had invaded Russia and his reaction was 'THANK GOD!'

    • @user-qj5dj5hk1y
      @user-qj5dj5hk1y 3 года назад +9

      God did not hear him. God sided with Russia.

    • @user.0704
      @user.0704 3 года назад

      @@user-qj5dj5hk1y god is a fantasy. So "he" sided with nobody.

    • @Elmaestrodemusica
      @Elmaestrodemusica 3 года назад +2

      Such a shame you get such rude remarks for an interesting story. I could imagine how happy he was!

    • @ehismichael6917
      @ehismichael6917 2 года назад +3

      @@user.0704 You are a fantasy

    • @user.0704
      @user.0704 2 года назад

      @@ehismichael6917 pathetic try at insulting me 😆

  • @DavidMacDowellBlue
    @DavidMacDowellBlue 3 года назад +43

    Germany misjudged the Soviet state on many levels--the size of their military, for example, and their industrial capacity, as well as the devastating T34 tank and other very fine weapons systems (which took time to generate in mass numbers to be sure). That the gauge of Soviet railroads was different meant German logistics (never their strong suit) became a nightmare, depending upon horse-drawn transport. More, they simply did not properly consider the impact of the weather (although they thought they had) nor realize their estimates of Soviet strength were almost entirely guesswork.

    • @edmondlonergan9915
      @edmondlonergan9915 3 года назад +1

      . Street fighting stopped them..

    • @akeeMM
      @akeeMM 3 года назад +1

      The T34 tank was literally scrap metal, ESPECIALLY when against the panzer divisions of the Wehrmacht. The issue was the number of them. Furthermore, the German Logistics were incredible, i don't know where you did your research, the issue was the allied were consistently bombing the Germans way of transporting supplies. Again the Germans actually did consider the impact of the weather, they went 300 miles into soviet territory, the issue here was the lack of support these invading troops had, since going up against the majority of the world isn't easy. You sound look at more unbiased documents. Including the not well known fact that the last soldiers defending Hitlers Bunker were actually French.

    • @masaukochitsamba7808
      @masaukochitsamba7808 3 года назад +20

      @@akeeMM The T 34 was not scrap metal. It was better that any of the German Tanks at the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, which were the Panzer III and IV. It was only in 1943 when the Germans started introducing the Tiger and the Panther that they had a tank that could take on the T34

    • @akeeMM
      @akeeMM 3 года назад +1

      @@masaukochitsamba7808 The t34 was scrap metal. Thats how the russians managed to make so many in such a short period of time.

    • @mkimask
      @mkimask 3 года назад +7

      @@akeeMM wtf? The t34 when first introduced was THE BEST tank in the world. It was the reason why Germans had to develop tigers and panthers, also to upgrade t4 tanks, because 41 to mid 42 t34 was superrior to any german tank (or should I say to any tank in the world).

  • @timdegraw1784
    @timdegraw1784 4 года назад +32

    What a FANTASTIC documentary! Filled with fascinating anecdotes while telling the story in broad strokes alongside film footage from the time, this is a gem of a historical perspective on the tyrant. Loved the host, his flair for drama is much appreciated.

    • @Medway1900
      @Medway1900 3 года назад +1

      Oh yes it's good but .
      Who is this tyrant

  • @wr1120
    @wr1120 2 года назад +7

    Professor Reynolds has a great way of presenting and a typical British sense of humour. Rated 9.6/10!

  • @W.A.T.P...55
    @W.A.T.P...55 3 года назад +8

    From 🇬🇧 with love

  • @laurahoward5426
    @laurahoward5426 6 месяцев назад

    I love the remark about Beria..." he liked to keep his hand in, by doing some of the torture himself"

  • @sisyphusvasilias3943
    @sisyphusvasilias3943 4 года назад +10

    Churchill wasn't "ready to meat Stalin halfway".. he was on his knees begging, as he had been for the last 12 months.

    • @sisyphusvasilias3943
      @sisyphusvasilias3943 4 года назад

      @England for English All Russians were either Christian or Muslim during the Civil War. The "Red Terror was a response to "White Terror". Czarist Imperialist (white) military policy was to kill every Red. Stalin never had any policy of genocide....and Stalin had no say over Red strategy during the Civil War.

  • @agul6287
    @agul6287 3 года назад +8

    Both of my grandfathers fought in the WWII. One was died the other was badly injured

    • @agul6287
      @agul6287 3 года назад +4

      I'm from Russian

    • @agul6287
      @agul6287 3 года назад +2

      My dad guarded POW's in the camp during the war

    • @johnleidle9910
      @johnleidle9910 2 года назад +1

      @@agul6287 So did my dad,,,,

  • @pariscommune9742
    @pariscommune9742 3 года назад +3

    Greatful to all comments as
    my teachers teaching me
    valuable variations and
    comparative analysis

  • @crucesignatis7922
    @crucesignatis7922 3 года назад +54

    “You only have to kick in the door and the whole rotten structure will come crashing down.”
    Bro

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 3 года назад +9

      @Pep No, it would've just taken longer, that's all.

    • @bogdanvojnovic989
      @bogdanvojnovic989 3 года назад +7

      @Pep Ships of supplies that came 2 years too late. But its not to say that some of that food ration and jeeps did do a great service for the USSR morality, but it was inconsequential to their war effort. The most important import was probably aluminum used to make the tanks in the USSR.

    • @bogdanvojnovic989
      @bogdanvojnovic989 3 года назад +3

      @Pep The British received much greater land lease, three times that of the USSR (from the US). Which is logical, they were Allies after all.

    • @bogdanvojnovic989
      @bogdanvojnovic989 3 года назад +1

      @Pep This German analyses this controversial and unclear, complex topic ruclips.net/video/IJ9PiDvI4pY/видео.html

    • @calripson
      @calripson 3 года назад +11

      @Pep Total nonsense. 90% of Soviet war supplies were domestically produced. I asked the question directly to US Army Colonel and War Historian Dr. Glantz if in his opinion the USSR would have defeated the Axis without Lend Lease aid. His answer was yes, but it would have taken longer and cost even more lives.

  • @hneil402
    @hneil402 4 года назад +10

    43:26 that battle was like a mini Khe Sahn

  • @davidworsley7969
    @davidworsley7969 7 лет назад +12

    Yet another excellent documentary-Well done "Timeline"-and thank you.

    • @ivanmico1
      @ivanmico1 7 лет назад +4

      yet another western propaganda....

    • @davidworsley7969
      @davidworsley7969 7 лет назад +1

      Hmm-wonder what a highlighted reply means.

    • @jaysenst.charlesthelakehea9327
      @jaysenst.charlesthelakehea9327 4 года назад +4

      Isn't all forms of history, told by any side who may have participated , propaganda anyways? It's up to the viewer to use their minds to separate fact from fiction. Don't be so depressed on your luck mister terrible, turn that frown upside down. :-)

    • @timdegraw1784
      @timdegraw1784 4 года назад

      Agreed!

    • @user-pu2om3wl8o
      @user-pu2om3wl8o 3 года назад

      What a capitalistic and grotesque propaganda !

  • @dhanjeepandey4252
    @dhanjeepandey4252 Год назад +1

    Good one...

  • @robwenman8179
    @robwenman8179 3 года назад +1

    do you have many sailboats in the Tacoma area? Any plans to add more?

  • @yonathansetyawan9276
    @yonathansetyawan9276 6 лет назад +11

    34:26 that's how we usually use cannon...as an instrument 😈😈😈

  • @kaseybrown7664
    @kaseybrown7664 3 года назад +35

    Right at the start: "Britain likes to think their survival came from their finest hour" -- you already lost me with that kind of smug condescending frame and tone.
    Everyone in that war fought their best. Britain in particular was one of the only allies to declare war out of a sense of obligation, rather than as a response to being attacked, and was also the last and final one out from the war. Their "finest hour" was exactly that, and "never before in history have so many owed so much to so few". If you're going to start off downplaying this in the first 2 minutes of video then I have a bad feeling about the rest from this point on.

    • @mariarice4916
      @mariarice4916 3 года назад +8

      couldnt agree more..the battle of britain was highly significant in hitlers decision to turn east. The english channel also helped somewhat. The contributions of the commonwealth/empire are never under-estimated in britain....nor the numbers of foreign pilots who helped greatly to defeat the german airforce in 1940.

    • @nicolemaddison2945
      @nicolemaddison2945 3 года назад +10

      What about Australia, NZ and all the other commonwealth countries. I do believe we Aussies May have been the last to go home. We joined Britain and it was a long way from us.

    • @kindnessfirst9670
      @kindnessfirst9670 3 года назад

      @@mariarice4916 More than somewhat.

    • @kindnessfirst9670
      @kindnessfirst9670 3 года назад

      ​@Min Tin Enslaving the world was Hitlers reason. What was he speculating about?

    • @Mollineaux
      @Mollineaux 3 года назад

      @@nicolemaddison2945 When people speak of the Battle of Britain I think most remember that there were, as you say, pilots from the Commonwealth, Australia, New Zealand, S Africa, Canada, a few volunteers from the US, unofficially, Free French, Czechs, Poles and others. The Poles played a major role in the B of B (& in other theatres of war, N Africa, Italy, D-Day, Arnhem) yet in the Victory Parade in London in 1946 they were excluded by the Labour Gov't, so concerned were they not to upset the mass murderer 'Uncle Joe' Stalin

  • @bullishpaulmccarthy3228
    @bullishpaulmccarthy3228 2 года назад +40

    Early already know that Stalin was a monster. Love these documentaries. Wonder if they're going to touch on how much Stalin was a monster, starving his people

    • @Jinka1950
      @Jinka1950 2 года назад +1

      30 million…….

    • @joefoley1480
      @joefoley1480 2 года назад +2

      yes he was a cuxt however Russia saved the west not Stalin but the Russian people

    • @goldenagegolf9874
      @goldenagegolf9874 2 года назад +13

      He never starved his own people nor did he commit any genocide against any of people. There is absolutely no proof of this, only witness accounts from Ukrainian nazis, fascists and other ultra nationalist people.

    • @jordanmorris5827
      @jordanmorris5827 2 года назад +6

      @@goldenagegolf9874 holodomor deniers are no better than holocaust deniers

    • @MrFerrell55
      @MrFerrell55 2 года назад +8

      @@jordanmorris5827 The “holodomor” was a famine that affected the whole of the USSR, not just Ukraine, and there is absolutely no evidence that the Soviet deliberately caused it in order to commit genocide, which is not a term to throw around so carelessly. The name “Holodomor” was coined by Ukrainian Neo-Nazi’s to specifically resemble the Holocaust. Using the worst genocide in human history to fuel your own ideological agenda is disgusting and reprehensible, you ought to be ashamed of yourself.

  • @formalbug5716
    @formalbug5716 2 года назад +21

    Literally every one of those opening remarks is true of Churchill too 😂

  • @1xoACEox1
    @1xoACEox1 4 года назад +30

    Say what you want about Churchill but the lines he came out with were great. Like corny movie lines but he actually said them.

  • @randyhavard6084
    @randyhavard6084 2 года назад +7

    Saying Stalin was looking out for "national interest" seems a bit of a stretch. He was interested in keeping his power and control over the Soviet Union, no matter what the cost

    • @AT-AT26
      @AT-AT26 2 года назад

      true, even many members of the soviet union hated him and thought he was a terrible leader e.g. Khrushchev, Zhukov and many many others

    • @HansDunkelberg1
      @HansDunkelberg1 2 года назад

      @@AT-AT26 I just wonder why Khrushchev called him one of the really great, after his death.

  • @curtiscarpenter9881
    @curtiscarpenter9881 3 года назад +40

    Starlin didnt say 1 death is a tragedy 1 million is a statistic it was a German pacifist.🤯

    • @MrDgo4life
      @MrDgo4life 3 года назад

      Name plz
      So I can debunk the libs

    • @Convees
      @Convees 3 года назад +2

      Yes, this phrase is a slightly paraphrased quote from Remarque's novel "The Black Obelisk": "But, apparently, it always happens this way: the death of one person is death, and the death of two million is only statistics."

  • @robertewing3114
    @robertewing3114 3 года назад +6

    From crisis to crisis and almost had a nervous breakdown, yet saved the UK, that was Chamberlain.

  • @sigmundfreud7903
    @sigmundfreud7903 4 года назад +17

    You know it’s bad when working in Soviet mines was considered to be a better alternative than the collective farms.

    • @LillPoss
      @LillPoss 3 года назад +1

      you know it is bad when Australian farmers opt for going to war rather than working on farms

  • @liamobrien4767
    @liamobrien4767 3 года назад +54

    Corporal to Emperor ?Napoleon trained as a cadet officer(Artil)

    • @scottyfox6376
      @scottyfox6376 3 года назад +6

      I think they've confused Adolf baby with Napoleon somehow..🤔

    • @AndreAndFriends
      @AndreAndFriends 3 года назад +1

      Robert Bonneau so right mate!!!

  • @dirtyharrydefeatsislamblmt6900
    @dirtyharrydefeatsislamblmt6900 7 дней назад

    RICHARD SORGE , GREAT SERIES BY THE WAY

  • @chillz8422
    @chillz8422 3 года назад +1

    This taught me more than school.

    • @dbdb9334
      @dbdb9334 3 года назад +2

      This taught people nothing.

  • @BEPXOB13
    @BEPXOB13 4 года назад +6

    Каждый мнит себя стратегом видя бой со стороны...Everyone thinks of themselves as a strategist seeing the fight from the side...

  • @brahim119
    @brahim119 4 года назад +11

    @40:50 Thanks to the master of the masters spies *Richard Sorge* meticulous intelligence work in Japan.

  • @amardeep_singh_chauhan
    @amardeep_singh_chauhan 3 года назад +30

    The Greatest Pep Talks Ever:
    If Moscow Falls, Heads will Roll

  • @ashishrs
    @ashishrs Год назад

    Does anyone know the name of the background score that we hear around the 2:10 mark? It plays for nearly a minute.

  • @Mishik77
    @Mishik77 4 года назад +13

    The soldier who defeated fascism returned from the war. He returned to the destroyed, scorched earth. All his property fit in a duffel bag. From clothes - only what is on it, from food - what is in it. His son doesn’t even have shoes. And after twelve years, we were the first to conquer space ...
    The memory of the feat of our people in the war is still, thank God, still alive. But few today speak of the second feat of our people, which he performed immediately after the first. Veterans and yesterday's rear workers not only rebuilt a huge country from scratch after such a terrible war, but also overtook many countries that did not fight. How could this happen? What a miracle?
    Many who returned from the war simply had nowhere to return to - neither at home, nor relatives, nor work, nothing. Many, moreover, were taken to the front right after school and did not have any specialty or any skills.
    And the war, to put it mildly, did not increase physical health. For good reason, so many veterans died in the sixties and seventies, before they reached old age.
    And despite this, people not only did not give up, but completed another titanic feat, immediately from the front taking up the restoration of the country. Veterans at the factories replaced teenagers who worked there throughout the war, began to rebuild the destroyed cities, bridges, roads, power lines, factories, factories, schools and hospitals. Everyone went to where he could bring the greatest benefit to the country. Without any holidays and many days of celebration
    The people lived in poverty. But somehow new houses gradually got up, factories and factories started working, the children went to the newly built schools, free medicine started working in the normal mode, food appeared in stores, hunger disappeared.
    In 1947, food cards were canceled! Europe could not believe. And a year before, in 1946, when the cards were still valid, Soviet athletes at the European Championships in Oslo in 1946 won six gold medals. And at the Olympic Games in Helsinki in 1952, the USSR took second place! Yesterday’s war veterans, with the consequences of serious injuries, including former prisoners of fascist concentration camps, defeated their healthy rivals.
    By the mid-fifties, there were no longer any streets destroyed by the war, left on the sidelines of roads of broken military equipment, uncontrollably staggering street children. The country recovered simply in fantastic terms, and what efforts veterans had to make for this - only they know. And already in 1957 we went around the United States in a space race, and in 1961 we launched a man into space.
    Remember this when you see a veteran. He not only defeated fascism, he rebuilt our country from scratch. Wounded, half-starved, having lost his home and relatives, he built it for you and me.

    • @dengbona4406
      @dengbona4406 4 года назад +3

      Mishik77 you have the capabilities to be a propagandist

    • @aldos2795
      @aldos2795 4 года назад +5

      Glory to a Soviet Soldier!
      In late 40sand 50s and 60s Soviet Kyrgyzstan was rebuild beyond recognition.
      Free schools,universities,hospitals,roads,hydro electric stations,factories, agroculture, avia schools etc etc.
      Truly progressive decades for our country and whole of Central Asia.
      My grandpa and dad always spoke about those years with warmth.
      Those were the days people were confident about tomorrow.
      Even though after WW2 country laid in ruins and bloodless.
      You could rarely see fit healthy men,because they all died in WW2 or were injured.
      Lots of single woman,working working and working day and night.
      Those memories should never fade away!
      Greetings from Kyrgyz man!

    • @Mishik77
      @Mishik77 4 года назад +3

      @@aldos2795 Glory indeed ! I was born in Kazakhstan. Republic that did a lot for our victory. In the heart of ex capital Alma-Ata stands monument that dedicated to 28 Panfilov's soldiers.
      All Soviet nations fought as one !!

    • @HansDunkelberg1
      @HansDunkelberg1 2 года назад +1

      It's quite interesting that you do not (have to?) mention Stalin.

  • @lauralishes1
    @lauralishes1 3 года назад +12

    "A withered arm and a club foot, scars on face, and who was regularly beaten by his shoemaker father"

  • @benrichardson8417
    @benrichardson8417 2 года назад

    When is the next part being uploaded?

  • @spyrosspyratos654
    @spyrosspyratos654 3 года назад +18

    Documentary stated that Stalin was not an intellectual like other Bolshevics. In fact, considering literature and history terms was the most educated (he was reading constantly). In philosophical terms he was not as advanced as Lenin or Trotski but he had the ability to transform complex philophical terms in simple words that everyone can understand. To estimate his intellectual capability there was an interview to H.G Wells in 1934 www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1934/07/23.htm

    • @heyabusa1
      @heyabusa1 3 года назад

      Whatever, still a psychopathic killer.

    • @elizabethisaverdian9707
      @elizabethisaverdian9707 3 года назад

      @@heyabusa1 excuse me, but Moriarty was British creation.
      P.S. watched several British Sherlock Holmes movies - the best one is ... the Soviet version - most humane! 1979 - enjoy

  • @steveturner5656
    @steveturner5656 3 года назад +88

    Odd how this video 'missed' the fact that the Germans fought the Battle of Britain with their planes largely run on Soviet fuel.

    • @user-wt4ef9ss7v
      @user-wt4ef9ss7v 3 года назад +8

      @Ornate Orator Soviet oil? Strangely, I kept thinking that it was Romanian oil or Mexican oil (which a certain businessman from the United States, named William Rhodes Davis, supplied to Germany).

    • @delgermuruntsagaankhuu6951
      @delgermuruntsagaankhuu6951 3 года назад +3

      Владимир Романенко getting oil from mexico would been a retarded move considering the fact that the english had full naval supremacy in the atlantic and the mediterranean also a considerably huge presence in the north sea

    • @user-wt4ef9ss7v
      @user-wt4ef9ss7v 3 года назад +4

      @@delgermuruntsagaankhuu6951 If you had even read about William Rhodes Davis, you would probably have known that it supplied Mexican oil to Germany and Italy before the war. And he did this before the British put a naval blockade, so that at the beginning of the war, Mexican oil was already in Germany.

    • @delgermuruntsagaankhuu6951
      @delgermuruntsagaankhuu6951 3 года назад +1

      Владимир Романенко fuel isnt an equipment you can’t tell me that the mexican oil supplied the battle for Britain because at that point the polish and the french offensive had already happened. More likely is that the mexican oil had already started to dry up so they had to switch to romanian and russian oils

    • @user-wt4ef9ss7v
      @user-wt4ef9ss7v 3 года назад

      @@delgermuruntsagaankhuu6951 Yes, I agree, but I personally have not seen any documents that say where Germany used this fuel. We only know that oil was supplied to Germany, and we know where it was supplied from. But in what battles this fuel was used, we do not know. So the fuel used during the battle of Britain could have come from anywhere. After all, during the war, the most important thing is to have fuel, and where it comes from doesn't matter.

  • @scorpionWhite
    @scorpionWhite 3 года назад +8

    Molotov - Ribbentrop pack included Finland too" The only country oh the back staying independent (and fighting for it).

  • @laurahoward5426
    @laurahoward5426 6 месяцев назад

    I recommend Kruschev's 2 volume memoir....which even he had to smuggle out

  • @xavierghazi4939
    @xavierghazi4939 3 года назад +9

    Why do you add music? It only makes watching and listening so much more strenuous. FFS..

  • @paxwallacejazz
    @paxwallacejazz 3 года назад +9

    I think this historian is top notch of course it's his particular take on the subject that's it's value.

  • @SCHMALLZZZ
    @SCHMALLZZZ 3 года назад +10

    The OST front was larger than any other war ever, bigger than WW1 or the rest of WW2.

    • @JM-ji9kx
      @JM-ji9kx 3 года назад +2

      Neither of those statements are true

    • @tanerkaplankiran
      @tanerkaplankiran 2 года назад +2

      @@JM-ji9kx true, 27 million Soviet citizen lost their lives

    • @davidhamilton6612
      @davidhamilton6612 2 года назад

      I would say that the Battle Of The Atlantic was bigger than any other campaign in any war.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 2 года назад

      Yes, broadly true, at least counted in the number of soldiers involved (and civilians fighting as partisans) and the amount of equipment; tanks, airplanes, guns, etc. The land war in eastern Europe/USSR was longer, bigger, harder, more intensive in soldiers and more gruesome than any other war theatre. Also, Soviet civilians were exposed to routine brutalities and genocidal methods by the Nazis that were practically never used against ordinary people in occupied western Europe (except in the deportation of Jews).

  • @fredwein6953
    @fredwein6953 2 года назад

    Thank you…

  • @jamescarel5520
    @jamescarel5520 Год назад +8

    Staline didn’t care to look good or make mistakes and certainly couldn’t afford the luxuries of the west.that gave him a sharp edge over the rest.

    • @bazooka712
      @bazooka712 Год назад +2

      He also didn't care to throw more people at the problem.. statistics.

  • @ianfirth33
    @ianfirth33 2 года назад +176

    I thought when, the narrator said, "....and he was one of the biggest mass murderers of the 20th century", he was going to say Churchill. Churchill was responsible for 3.5 million indian deaths by neglect in a terreble famine. He callously diverted food away from India, even the home office asked him to explain his callous disregard, to which he wrote, "I haven't killed Ghandi yet".

    • @jannatulferdous8846
      @jannatulferdous8846 2 года назад +1

      The irony is almost all of the leaders during WWII despite which side they belong are mass murderers 🙂 Churchill, Roosevelt , Stalin , Hitlar and later Mao...all killed millions of innocents🙂 still some just called as savior and other enemy of humanity! It's heroic when western countries killed others in the name of humanity and western value but dictatorship or mass murderer for other leaders🙂

    • @mattia8327
      @mattia8327 Год назад

      Stalin killed more than 22 million of his own people

    • @geoffreybentley5619
      @geoffreybentley5619 Год назад +33

      Still doesn't compare to Stalin.

    • @ant7936
      @ant7936 Год назад +1

      And we might also judge a man by the friends he chooses, to accomplish his wicked plans.

    • @tackywhale5664
      @tackywhale5664 Год назад

      You are either a genuine idiot or an Indian ultranationalist.

  • @mommachupacabra
    @mommachupacabra 3 года назад +21

    "In the footsteps of Napoleon, the shadow figures stagger through the winter..." Al Stewart's "Roads to Moscow" tells about this from the viewpoint of a simple Russian soldier.

  • @joecook5689
    @joecook5689 3 года назад +2

    This is interesting

    • @joecook5689
      @joecook5689 3 года назад +1

      I commented too early. Still watching.

  • @gargibose7497
    @gargibose7497 3 года назад +2

    Very well explained with detailed information.

  • @kattiemeat5405
    @kattiemeat5405 4 года назад +12

    Always wondered why you never saw Stalin and George Formby in the same room. For the majority of the Russian people it certainly did not "turn out nice again"

  • @hannibalcosta
    @hannibalcosta 3 года назад +9

    How a Click bait saves Timeline Documentaries.

  • @pratibhasingh7684
    @pratibhasingh7684 3 года назад +1

    Incredible documentary !!

  • @FailedAragorn
    @FailedAragorn 2 года назад +6

    Lol when you said "one of the biggest mass murderers in history" I was still going "yup, Winston Churchill."

  • @RoseSharon7777
    @RoseSharon7777 4 года назад +12

    Wars and rumors of wars....

  • @brianw612
    @brianw612 4 года назад +24

    24:05 No, I think they knew, somehow, no one was as brutal as him, and he was exactly what Russia needed at the time.

    • @curtdenson2360
      @curtdenson2360 3 года назад

      Stalin at 23 1918 repeatedly raped women and young girls 12 to 15 years old, kind of a Joe Biden lookalike, but hey he too believed Marx had something, just remove the population's weapons then kill all opposition, wonder why Dummocrats want law-abiding citizens guns? Vote Trump-Pence November 3rd, 2020

  • @surinderjitsingh8954
    @surinderjitsingh8954 3 года назад

    His brown overcoat is nice

  • @AlexandraBryngelsson
    @AlexandraBryngelsson 2 года назад +7

    Trotsky had built up the red army after the revolution so many of the officers respected Trotsky and liked him Tukhachevsky was especially close to Trotsky, that's why Stalin fears the army so much.