While Alexander the Great was one of the most successful military commanders in history, I have a sneaky suspicion that he tamed a ferocious stallion at the age of 10, just like Kim Jong Ill scored 11 hole in ones his first time playing golf.
you mean to tell me you don't think its realistic that a 10 year old tames a stallion that no one else can even touch? and how dare you question that Kim Woods is the untouchable god of golf
Perhaps, but it is always a matter of perspective. 5000 years of human history shows constant war and conquering, I believe this provides evidence of the nature of humanity. Alexander isn't exceptional in his desire for greatness, he is the rule.
Theoretically he "tamed it" because he was the only one who noticed the horse was afraid of his own shadow. I wasn't there, don't know shit about horses, just pointing it out.
Actually, the fact that he was a child might have helped, if men had been trying to bully the horse into submission We do know he was awfully close to that horse.
awwww Kristin 🥹 that is so wholesome. that makes me happy. made my evening. thanks for sharing that. you can tell him that a new video is dropping every Saturday 🥹
Amazing content and when u said "if u conquered from West to East you were called a great, but if u conquered East from West, you were called a barbarian" I just 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 Looking forward to the next one! :D
Loved this video and yes Philip II of Macedon played a huge part in bolstering Alexander's ego but his mother likely also did the same. Olympias was the daughter of Neoptolemus I and their family claimed descent from Neoptolemus, son of Achilles. This is probably why modeling himself after Achilles was so important. Olympias family also believed they descended from Eacus a son of Zeus. She would have likely reminded Alexander that the blood of gods and heroes ran through him, he was more than a prince or a Greek.
What, he literally stopped after realizing he couldn't conquer India. Don't give me the "omg becuz his army is tired" bs. He literally spend his last 5 years barely doing anything but drunk and depressed.
@@hamsolo5320 seems he liked the luxuries of Persian monarchy that he started forgetting his roots and he even executed some of his best commanders that dared to disagree with him .he might be the greatest Greek conqueror but not the greatest hero
@@Briefed_Mythologywe are all here for it mate! That would be amazing. Actually first video of yours that i saw was the one on Julius Caesar. I really love your work!
Damn the ending when you said Alexander was in charge of all of Persia and Greece before he died and all you are in charge of currently is your dog and you said you love him, that was real.
3:58 "She was not from Makedonia, she was Greek" it's like saying "She was not from Sparta, she was Greek" It was still an ancient Greek city state, speaking Greek, having Greek culture, acknowledging themselves as Greek etc. Philips name means Friend of Horses in Greek, Alexanders name means the One who pushes the men away (aka pushing warriors away, invaders), and Makedonia comes from Μακεδνός (Makednos) meaning to be tall. All these in Greek, not a Slavic language. Enough with separating Makedonia from Greece like it's something foreign because of Bulgaria's propaganda on FYROM. If you don't separate Athens or Sparta don't separate Makedonia either. Yes, the other city states called them barbarians because guess what, Greek city states mostly hated each other. Look through history how much destruction they caused each other and then only banding together when foreigners invade. p.s. I haven't gone through the whole video yet, apologies ahead of time in case you clarify it later on.
Makedonia wasnt a greek city state. It was a greek kingdom. After the King's Peace of 387 BCE, the Greek cities continued to be non-unified, and consequently the northern Greek kingdom of Macedonia imposed its authority all over Greece.” (Frank L. Kidner et al, “Making Europe: The Story of the West”, Wadsworth Publishing, 2013, p.96) “In less than four years he had transformed Macedonia from a backward and primitive kingdom to one of the most powerful states in the Greek world.” (Peter Green, “Alexander of Macedon, 356-323 B.C., A Historical Biography”, p.32) “In the first half of the second century BC he wrote the first historical work in Latin, beginning its composition in 168, when Rome was poised to destroy the Greek kingdom of Macedon.” (Greg Woolf , “The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Roman World”, Cambridge University Press, 2003, p.176) “Alexander was born the heir to the throne of one of the Grecian kingdoms.” (Jacob Abbott, “Alexander the Great”, WLC, 2009) “King Philip of the northern Greek kingdom of Macedon perfected this system, and his son, Alexander the Great, used it to conquer Greece and the Persian Empire.” (Archer Jones, "The Art of War in Western World", University of Illinois Press, 2000, p. 21) “Eventually he left Athens and settled in the northern Greek kingdom of Macedonia, where he composed his final plays.” (Jim Whiting, "The Life and Times of Thucydides", 2010, p.35) “Unity would come to Greece, but it would come from outside the polis world. It would be the Greek kingdom of Macedonia that would finally enforce order on the Hellenic world.” (Stefan G. Chrissanthos, “Warfare in the Ancient World: From the Bronze Age to the Fall of Rome”, Praeger, 2008. p.72) “Along with Silas, and later, Timothy and Luke, Paul travels into the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia.” (Larry D. Alexander, “Home and Church Bible Study Commentaries from the Book of Acts”, 2016) “The Greek kingdom of Macedonia and the Macedonians appear at Add Esth 16:10.14; 1 Mace 1:1; 6:2; 8:5; 2 Mace 8:20.” (“Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible”, Brill, 1999, p.538) “On the ancient Greek kingdom of Philip II and Alexander the Great.” (Derek R. Hall, Darrick R. Danta, "Reconstructing the Balkans: A Geography of the New Southeast Europe", Wiley, 1996, p.94) “The dispute between Greece and [North]Macedonia, dating from 1991, originally focused on the republic's flag, which incorporated the Vergina Sun, associated with the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon.” (Andrew Geddes, Charles Lees, Andrew Taylor, “The European Union and South East Europe: The Dynamics of Europeanization and Multilevel Governance”, Routledge, 2012, p.65) “Macedonia is a Greek-speaking Kingdom in northern Greece, populated by people using Greek names, Greek months of the year, worshipping Greek gods. Those who live in Skopje [North Macedonia] and say that that is Macedon and Alexander's homeland, are as ignorant and outrageous as if someone was to say Oxford University was really in Belarus and Oxford was Minsk!” (Robin Lane Fox, Oxford University, UK, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 29/08/2011)
@@matztz_4560 no they wouldn’t have and they still don’t. They have pride in Macedonia and Macedonia alone, at least all the ones I ever met, including my family there
Bro I can not tell you how pumped I am to go through all your videos, I just watched the Cesar video and saw this as a recommended, I then went to your channel and saw all the videos titles and I can say with certainty that I will be spending the next few months watching every video. After watching that Cesar video, I know that all these videos are gonna be awesome since they are like all things I’m really interested in ! Thank you!!!
The first great conqueror was Sargon I of Akkad (way before Alexander). Alexander was the first of the Classic period. And both Alexander and Ghengis lead from the front lines (and injured by every known weapon from the time). Both men had the brightest minds available to them.
I agree with all your viewers. Your delivery of historical content is extremely entertaining. What some might think of as boring comes to life. Please keep up with your great work.
3:58 Macedonia was also Greek, so both his parents were Greek. Macedonians spoke Greek, worshipped Greek gods, had Greek names, originated from Doric tribes, who were Greek.
I’ve always been interested in war and conquerors and the mindsets of them. Love these videos, please make more in this genre/topic. Thanks for what you do.
"Alexander came before all the others" "Alexander did it first" Cyrus The Great (literally a conqueror admired by Alexander) : Allow me to introduce myself
Alexander is a topic I'm studying now. Your take on is story interesting. Philip doesn't get enough credit. Alexander's head was big, though and that head was a bottomless pit.
You know your dogs just sitting there to make sure that you don't hurt yourself? He thinks you're a little bit crazy..... he can't get dinner all by himself😂
Shout out to you dude i love your videos theyre something to aspire to. Always teach me new things. Cant wait for the Julius Caesar documentary i love hearing his story🤝🏿.
Hey man i love your channel your style of storytelling your vibe everything would you mind making a video on chatrapati shivaji maharaj he was an indian king he is quite a big deal here it would mean alot thank you
Those were like such impossible odds. I didn’t know the whole story of him so I thought that was the end. But woah plot twist. And then again plot twist! Being outnumbered in the battle in India. What a wild ride that was!!!!!
First time commenter somewhat new subscriber. . . First off I dig your voice. All the Anime references friggin' slay me. It was cool, I knew em' all. The anatomically correct way you describe it is a refreshing twist on history. Kudos 😜
Philip and the Macedonias where also Greek but at that time in Greece every proven was independent and they were called " polis krati ". The mother of Alexander was from the proven of Epirus so she was Greek but she wasn't Macedonian. That was the problem with Alexander's legitimacy to the throne of Macedon not that the Macedonias weren't Greek.
Brooo this is so fucking good. You ever considered doing a video on the march of the 10,000 (the anabasis). The movie ‘the warriors’ is based on the anabasis.
Fantastic video. I love the combination of visuals, the straight-to-the-point history takeaways, the music, and the injection of humor every once in a while. Definitely earned my subscribe, my friend
No problem at all. Came across your channel not long ago, and it is my go to. You do good research, and your point of view and delivery are spot on. Keep it up 👊🏼💪🏻
I've been bingeing your channel all day and the artwork. Chefs kiss. How long does it take you? I can't believe you do this twice a week, thats wilddddd
Hey bro, I just discovered your channel. I've recently started learning more about Alexander the Great and I'm getting more and more fascinated. This is one of the best videos I've watched on the topic, with super good information combined with funny memes and anime comparisons, making the video a super interesting watch. - another subscribed, keep it up.🙏
I really love your Videos and your Style (aesthetics in vid and how you explain everything) :D You make some good points on why Alexander achieved so much in his young life and how he was put on that path kind of from a very young age and had so much advantages and took it to the next level. Like you say: Philip was already a legend himself. As someone who loves history as much as you do and having studied it, I noticed a few aspects that might benefit from further clarification or a second look. I though I'd share them, as they could enhance the historical accuracy of your already fantastic video: - "Greek Empire" is a bit of a misnomer. We do not use that term in Scholarship as the Greek Empire never existed. Ancient Greece (from the Bronze Age until Philip put most of Greece under his Hegemony) consisted of a collection of independent city-states and never unified into a single empire. Each Polis had their own government & culture, which makes it so unique compared to empires like rome or Persia. - Philip never ruled over all of Greece. Actually Sparta and therefore half of the Peloponnese never came under his rule as a hegemon and they remained independent even under Alexander - Olympias was an Epirote Greek: this is quite complicated as although the Epirotes were greek speaking people and probably also ethnically greek, most greeks saw them as barbarians (like the Macedonias). They actually were closer to the Macedonians and their Illyrians Neighbors than the Greek Ctiy-States - nice detail from the movie Alexander is when they call Olympias a Barbarian (as a greek she would never be called like that). In Contrast to the Poleis Epirus was a kingdom. Even though they were traditionally macedonian allies, they were never part of the Macedonian kingdom. They remained their own distinct kingdom. - Alexander did not flee to another part of Philip's territory. Olympias and Alexander went into exile to Epirus, which was not under Philip's rule but actually Olympias' brother (who was also named Alexander) was the king during that time. Alexander is even said to have went to exile to the Illyrians, who were traditional enemies of the Macedonians for a long time and never part of the Macedonian Kingdom. I believe these points could add even more depth and accuracy to your video, offering viewers a comprehensive picture of Ancient Greece, Greek ethnicities & their neighbors :) Of course, history is vast and often open to interpretation, and I appreciate the challenge in condensing such a rich period into a short video. Your work is inspiring and makes a significant contribution to history education on this platform. Thank you for your dedication to creating educational content. I'm looking forward to your upcoming projects and the continued exploration of history and mythology on your channel :)
my favorite mythology channel.....dude really said, "inherited Chad genes were strong in young Alexander, so Phillip had high hopes that his son would one day become a legendary super saiyin"
Briefed. Yes should make a video about the real Dracula. I've heard twice that he was a redhead, like Ghengis Khan. Interesting does you think? I've heard they both did that same thing.
The only reason I hate how new your channel is is because I've already watched all of your videos and I absolutely love your storytelling Style
While Alexander the Great was one of the most successful military commanders in history, I have a sneaky suspicion that he tamed a ferocious stallion at the age of 10, just like Kim Jong Ill scored 11 hole in ones his first time playing golf.
you mean to tell me you don't think its realistic that a 10 year old tames a stallion that no one else can even touch? and how dare you question that Kim Woods is the untouchable god of golf
@@Briefed_Mythologyline Greek hero he did great but terrible things amazing to look at outside but personally we would hate him
Perhaps, but it is always a matter of perspective. 5000 years of human history shows constant war and conquering, I believe this provides evidence of the nature of humanity. Alexander isn't exceptional in his desire for greatness, he is the rule.
Theoretically he "tamed it" because he was the only one who noticed the horse was afraid of his own shadow. I wasn't there, don't know shit about horses, just pointing it out.
Actually, the fact that he was a child might have helped, if men had been trying to bully the horse into submission We do know he was awfully close to that horse.
"Wal-Mart Cleopatra" was all I needed to make my day.
My name is Alexander and I was named after Alexander the Great and I’m barely in command of my Minecraft world 😂😂
you have a second family name, thats in what you are an alexander in
My son actually asked if you had any new material out yet. You made him interested in history. We watch together. Love your work. ❤
awwww Kristin 🥹 that is so wholesome. that makes me happy. made my evening. thanks for sharing that. you can tell him that a new video is dropping every Saturday 🥹
Amazing content and when u said "if u conquered from West to East you were called a great, but if u conquered East from West, you were called a barbarian" I just 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Looking forward to the next one! :D
Loved this video and yes Philip II of Macedon played a huge part in bolstering Alexander's ego but his mother likely also did the same. Olympias was the daughter of Neoptolemus I and their family claimed descent from Neoptolemus, son of Achilles. This is probably why modeling himself after Achilles was so important. Olympias family also believed they descended from Eacus a son of Zeus. She would have likely reminded Alexander that the blood of gods and heroes ran through him, he was more than a prince or a Greek.
great comment - great input. thank you for adding that
what he achieved was insane but he wanted more and didnt know when to stop that was his mistake
What, he literally stopped after realizing he couldn't conquer India. Don't give me the "omg becuz his army is tired" bs. He literally spend his last 5 years barely doing anything but drunk and depressed.
@@hamsolo5320 seems he liked the luxuries of Persian monarchy that he started forgetting his roots and he even executed some of his best commanders that dared to disagree with him .he might be the greatest Greek conqueror but not the greatest hero
Literally died after stop
@@hamsolo5320learning history from India toilets
@@solonaskypros3263it was hero for the Egyptians
This channel is just fantastic! In anticipation of a new episode, I have been watching them all over again.
I love that 🥹 thanks
We’ve got Napoleon and Alexander, now do Julius Caesar and Augustus and we’ll be good haha - also, the editing and art is magnificent!
haha they're all planned. might just do a roman emperor series of its own actually
@@Briefed_Mythologywe are all here for it mate! That would be amazing. Actually first video of yours that i saw was the one on Julius Caesar. I really love your work!
Vespasian!
@@nicolasoltonHeraclius, Diocletian and Domitian>>>
Damn the ending when you said Alexander was in charge of all of Persia and Greece before he died and all you are in charge of currently is your dog and you said you love him, that was real.
3:58 "She was not from Makedonia, she was Greek" it's like saying "She was not from Sparta, she was Greek" It was still an ancient Greek city state, speaking Greek, having Greek culture, acknowledging themselves as Greek etc. Philips name means Friend of Horses in Greek, Alexanders name means the One who pushes the men away (aka pushing warriors away, invaders), and Makedonia comes from Μακεδνός (Makednos) meaning to be tall. All these in Greek, not a Slavic language. Enough with separating Makedonia from Greece like it's something foreign because of Bulgaria's propaganda on FYROM. If you don't separate Athens or Sparta don't separate Makedonia either. Yes, the other city states called them barbarians because guess what, Greek city states mostly hated each other. Look through history how much destruction they caused each other and then only banding together when foreigners invade.
p.s. I haven't gone through the whole video yet, apologies ahead of time in case you clarify it later on.
Makedonia wasnt a greek city state. It was a greek kingdom.
After the King's Peace of 387 BCE, the Greek cities continued to be non-unified, and consequently the northern Greek kingdom of Macedonia imposed its authority all over Greece.” (Frank L. Kidner et al, “Making Europe: The Story of the West”, Wadsworth Publishing, 2013, p.96)
“In less than four years he had transformed Macedonia from a backward and primitive kingdom to one of the most powerful states in the Greek world.” (Peter Green, “Alexander of Macedon, 356-323 B.C., A Historical Biography”, p.32)
“In the first half of the second century BC he wrote the first historical work in Latin, beginning its composition in 168, when Rome was poised to destroy the Greek kingdom of Macedon.” (Greg Woolf , “The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Roman World”, Cambridge University Press, 2003, p.176)
“Alexander was born the heir to the throne of one of the Grecian kingdoms.” (Jacob Abbott, “Alexander the Great”, WLC, 2009)
“King Philip of the northern Greek kingdom of Macedon perfected this system, and his son, Alexander the Great, used it to conquer Greece and the Persian Empire.” (Archer Jones, "The Art of War in Western World", University of Illinois Press, 2000, p. 21)
“Eventually he left Athens and settled in the northern Greek kingdom of Macedonia, where he composed his final plays.” (Jim Whiting, "The Life and Times of Thucydides", 2010, p.35)
“Unity would come to Greece, but it would come from outside the polis world. It would be the Greek kingdom of Macedonia that would finally enforce order on the Hellenic world.” (Stefan G. Chrissanthos, “Warfare in the Ancient World: From the Bronze Age to the Fall of Rome”, Praeger, 2008. p.72)
“Along with Silas, and later, Timothy and Luke, Paul travels into the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia.” (Larry D. Alexander, “Home and Church Bible Study Commentaries from the Book of Acts”, 2016)
“The Greek kingdom of Macedonia and the Macedonians appear at Add Esth 16:10.14; 1 Mace 1:1; 6:2; 8:5; 2 Mace 8:20.” (“Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible”, Brill, 1999, p.538)
“On the ancient Greek kingdom of Philip II and Alexander the Great.” (Derek R. Hall, Darrick R. Danta, "Reconstructing the Balkans: A Geography of the New Southeast Europe", Wiley, 1996, p.94)
“The dispute between Greece and [North]Macedonia, dating from 1991, originally focused on the republic's flag, which incorporated the Vergina Sun, associated with the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon.” (Andrew Geddes, Charles Lees, Andrew Taylor, “The European Union and South East Europe: The Dynamics of Europeanization and Multilevel Governance”, Routledge, 2012, p.65)
“Macedonia is a Greek-speaking Kingdom in northern Greece, populated by people using Greek names, Greek months of the year, worshipping Greek gods. Those who live in Skopje [North Macedonia] and say that that is Macedon and Alexander's homeland, are as ignorant and outrageous as if someone was to say Oxford University was really in Belarus and Oxford was Minsk!” (Robin Lane Fox, Oxford University, UK, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 29/08/2011)
I think that makedonia was more like magna graecia, it is like Epirus and pontus, Greek but not Greek core
Call a Macedonian a Greek and see how they react, go on, I dare you
@@kaleanaking5292 a ancient Macedonian would just agreed, that Slavic Macedonian pretenders would probably not
@@matztz_4560 no they wouldn’t have and they still don’t. They have pride in Macedonia and Macedonia alone, at least all the ones I ever met, including my family there
Best storyteller ever returns
Favorite channel rn
awww man, thanks 😊 that makes me happy to hear
Yo! That was dope! I'm ready for the next one!
see you next Saturday
Awesome Video per usual!
I really appreciate learning about King Phillip II during this convo about Alexander. Keep up the fantastic work
thank you for watching chi chi 😊 glad you liked it too
The artwork with the historical story telling is the best on RUclips
thank you thank you 🥹
Alexander the Great is my role model. Its a blessing and a curse that I put upon myself for no reason.
big shoes to fill
You'll surpass him, mark my words
@@7yep4336dfgvvhDon't give him ideas I'm too old to lug a 20 foot spear around.
Your delivery and cadence is unique, but in confluence with your knowledge and ability to keep someone engaged... absolutely singular.💯
damn, thank you. such kind words - thanks, thanks
You're underrated you should definitely have wayyy more subscribers, top tier content
I've seen this story told a dozen times, but you put a different spin on it. 'Great' format, great voice. Loved it.
thank you marcel 🫡
Bro I can not tell you how pumped I am to go through all your videos, I just watched the Cesar video and saw this as a recommended, I then went to your channel and saw all the videos titles and I can say with certainty that I will be spending the next few months watching every video. After watching that Cesar video, I know that all these videos are gonna be awesome since they are like all things I’m really interested in ! Thank you!!!
Just watched your Caligula video and now seen your Alexander the Great Video and you got my Sub man. Amazing awesome content and so funny also.
thanks Alexander 😊🥹 happy to have you on board 🫡
@@Briefed_Mythology hey I’m glad to be onboard captain 👨✈️ 😉☺️
Man. I am rewatching your videos multiple times for weeks now. Amazing work!
thank you Arvis 😊🥹
That "It doesn't matter" killed me 😅😅🤣🤣😂😂
Love this channel so much ! I’ve been re watching every episode just waiting for a new one 🔥
The first great conqueror was Sargon I of Akkad (way before Alexander). Alexander was the first of the Classic period. And both Alexander and Ghengis lead from the front lines (and injured by every known weapon from the time). Both men had the brightest minds available to them.
I agree with all your viewers. Your delivery of historical content is extremely entertaining. What some might think of as boring comes to life. Please keep up with your great work.
thank you Steve 😊
Alexander was literally the greatest man ever. Comparing him to Goku is fair.
He put tha slong on the table for the world to see at just 16. What a f***'n G. Another banger by you. Thanks for the hard work, man!
thanks for watching bro 🫡
I loveeee listening to your stories. I’ve learnt so much from you and the humor is just top tier 🙌. It’s 2:44am.
Watched this while in Alexandria! So dope actually one of the first pages I’ve turned on notifications for. Keep up the amazing content.
thank you, thank you. also - so cool that you're in Alexandria and watching this haha
3:58 Macedonia was also Greek, so both his parents were Greek.
Macedonians spoke Greek, worshipped Greek gods, had Greek names, originated from Doric tribes, who were Greek.
Absolutely hilarious but very educational
Love you're work my man
Keep it up 👊
Awesome video man keep em coming
I’ve always been interested in war and conquerors and the mindsets of them. Love these videos, please make more in this genre/topic. Thanks for what you do.
many more on the channel, and many, many more coming 🫡
This channel is going to take off, I bet. Really good stuff, entertaining and informative. Thanks, man.
thanks for watching Sarah 🫡
Your videos are great bro, keep going!
My man delivers again..👏🏾👏🏾👍🏾! Great video
Such hard work on these videos!! Thanks for your beautiful and funny storytelling. Much love from Türkiye♡
11:07 dude i was not expecting that... seriously dude anticipated our reactions... tell me I'm not the only one.
haha I just knew people would gasp at the mention of cleopatras name
Your videos keep getting better and better, fine cuisine
Bro, i'm at 2:29 in this video. I love the artwork ( paitings ) background music. I liked and subscribed. All the best wishes from Romania.
"Alexander came before all the others"
"Alexander did it first"
Cyrus The Great (literally a conqueror admired by Alexander) : Allow me to introduce myself
Really enjoyed this one, awesome work dude!!!
Amazing as always 👏
Alexander is a topic I'm studying now. Your take on is story interesting. Philip
doesn't get enough credit. Alexander's head was big, though and that head was
a bottomless pit.
Bro I was hoping you were gonna mention that the Greek Fates seees spredicted his birth which is even more anime
Incredible video! I love your tone and humor
Gotta say the thumbnails and info from the video are fire
thank you anjay 🥹😊
You know your dogs just sitting there to make sure that you don't hurt yourself? He thinks you're a little bit crazy..... he can't get dinner all by himself😂
Bro, you're definitely on the come up! great content! i predict massive growth on this channel in your future. keep on keepin on my dude!
thank you Keith 🥹
Shout out to you dude i love your videos theyre something to aspire to. Always teach me new things. Cant wait for the Julius Caesar documentary i love hearing his story🤝🏿.
Thanks for this video Your ability to tell these stories is refreshing! Great work!
thank you for watching Angela, and thanks for the kind words
You'll be seeing me again.😇
Bro!!!! This is your best video yet
Your Super Dark voice at the beginning rocks dude, Props must me given 🙏🏾
thanks, thanks haha
Hey man i love your channel your style of storytelling your vibe everything would you mind making a video on chatrapati shivaji maharaj he was an indian king he is quite a big deal here it would mean alot thank you
Alexander: “I. Am a God. Speak hobo. What would you like?”
Diogenes: “I wish you’d move away? I’m sunbathing.”
Alexander: *utter shock*
Alexander
I admire Alexander's ambition & sheer will to conquer all.
I can never get over the mindset of a conquereor just thinking "yh I want this land to be mine."
New favorite channel
ayyyyye 🥹 love to hear that
@21:17, Alexander the Great sounds like a Neocon. He should have put up a banner that said “mission accomplished”.
Your voice is perfect for an Epic History Narrator
thanks David 😊
What a fantastic channel. Baby where have you been all my life??? So glad I've found you, you're such a compelling storyteller. ♥️
thank you, thank you 🥹
Can’t wait for next time on conqueror Z! 😂 Another awesome video!
Very well made video 😂 easy to understand you explain it so well
25:30 enjoying this video thus far. Will you do a video about the Persians conquering Egypt in 525 BC?
I'm planning to do a dedicated video on the Persian empire, yes
Those were like such impossible odds. I didn’t know the whole story of him so I thought that was the end. But woah plot twist. And then again plot twist! Being outnumbered in the battle in India. What a wild ride that was!!!!!
yo you killed this video! you got my sub
thank you, happy to have you on board
This man's voice...
Whoa...
Between the accent, the anime references, to the basis of the video, I was sold darnit😂😂👏🏾👏🏾🤝🏾
14:34 is the best part in todays video lol
Yessss!!! My fav tooo. Gotta love zizou🫶🏼
These stories are so beautifully told, thank you! 💞
thank you for watching
First time commenter somewhat new subscriber. . . First off I dig your voice. All the Anime references friggin' slay me. It was cool, I knew em' all. The anatomically correct way you describe it is a refreshing twist on history. Kudos 😜
The edits in this video had me rolling 😂😂😂😂😂
Philip and the Macedonias where also Greek but at that time in Greece every proven was independent and they were called " polis krati ". The mother of Alexander was from the proven of Epirus so she was Greek but she wasn't Macedonian. That was the problem with Alexander's legitimacy to the throne of Macedon not that the Macedonias weren't Greek.
Brooo this is so fucking good. You ever considered doing a video on the march of the 10,000 (the anabasis). The movie ‘the warriors’ is based on the anabasis.
There is no Greek culture without ancient Egyptian culture, this is readily apparent through art history in particular
Fantastic video. I love the combination of visuals, the straight-to-the-point history takeaways, the music, and the injection of humor every once in a while. Definitely earned my subscribe, my friend
I watch a boatload of history videos and your style is very refreshing and cool!
thanks, thanks. love to hear that 🫡
I just found your channel & I am hooked!
Love it 🥹 hope you stick around 🫡
lovely video, entertaining & educating
you have a way with words and stories
really nice job
thank you professor
You are a great story teller bro.
The art in these videos are great. your alright also :)
and the dog? 🥹
Absolutely love your style and videos! Thank you!
thank you for watching
Fun fact: there is an anime loosely based on Alexander the great, called reign: the conqueror
yea I saw it mentioned in the comments. never heard about it before. def gonna have to check it out
Love these videos!!!
Awesome video. I appreciate that 🤙🏼
and I appreciate you watching 😊 thank you
No problem at all. Came across your channel not long ago, and it is my go to. You do good research, and your point of view and delivery are spot on. Keep it up 👊🏼💪🏻
I truly hope Dan Carlin sees this, because I believe he will deeply appreciate it as a fellow narrator!
Love the anime comparisons 😂
Nice channel!
I've been bingeing your channel all day and the artwork. Chefs kiss. How long does it take you? I can't believe you do this twice a week, thats wilddddd
I had to slow down to once a week, that's the limit currently. the artwork.... hmmm I would say roughly 10h per video for the art
Hey bro, I just discovered your channel. I've recently started learning more about Alexander the Great and I'm getting more and more fascinated. This is one of the best videos I've watched on the topic, with super good information combined with funny memes and anime comparisons, making the video a super interesting watch. - another subscribed, keep it up.🙏
One of those "what ifs" for me. Everytime I hear Alexander the great, I think "what if he continued living? What else could he have conquered?"
I love it! Would you consider doing an episode on Mithradates VI? You have a beautiful way to tell that superhuman story.
I Enjoyed your video keep up the good work!
thank you, thank you. I hope you enjoy the others too
I really love your Videos and your Style (aesthetics in vid and how you explain everything) :D
You make some good points on why Alexander achieved so much in his young life and how he was put on that path kind of from a very young age and had so much advantages and took it to the next level. Like you say: Philip was already a legend himself.
As someone who loves history as much as you do and having studied it, I noticed a few aspects that might benefit from further clarification or a second look. I though I'd share them, as they could enhance the historical accuracy of your already fantastic video:
- "Greek Empire" is a bit of a misnomer. We do not use that term in Scholarship as the Greek Empire never existed. Ancient Greece (from the Bronze Age until Philip put most of Greece under his Hegemony) consisted of a collection of independent city-states and never unified into a single empire. Each Polis had their own government & culture, which makes it so unique compared to empires like rome or Persia.
- Philip never ruled over all of Greece. Actually Sparta and therefore half of the Peloponnese never came under his rule as a hegemon and they remained independent even under Alexander
- Olympias was an Epirote Greek: this is quite complicated as although the Epirotes were greek speaking people and probably also ethnically greek, most greeks saw them as barbarians (like the Macedonias). They actually were closer to the Macedonians and their Illyrians Neighbors than the Greek Ctiy-States - nice detail from the movie Alexander is when they call Olympias a Barbarian (as a greek she would never be called like that). In Contrast to the Poleis Epirus was a kingdom. Even though they were traditionally macedonian allies, they were never part of the Macedonian kingdom. They remained their own distinct kingdom.
- Alexander did not flee to another part of Philip's territory. Olympias and Alexander went into exile to Epirus, which was not under Philip's rule but actually Olympias' brother (who was also named Alexander) was the king during that time. Alexander is even said to have went to exile to the Illyrians, who were traditional enemies of the Macedonians for a long time and never part of the Macedonian Kingdom.
I believe these points could add even more depth and accuracy to your video, offering viewers a comprehensive picture of Ancient Greece, Greek ethnicities & their neighbors :)
Of course, history is vast and often open to interpretation, and I appreciate the challenge in condensing such a rich period into a short video. Your work is inspiring and makes a significant contribution to history education on this platform.
Thank you for your dedication to creating educational content. I'm looking forward to your upcoming projects and the continued exploration of history and mythology on your channel :)
I loved the humor along with this video! 😆 I know about Alexander, and you told the story well, and made it fun to watch & listen to! 😁
thank you, and thanks for watching 😊
my favorite mythology channel.....dude really said, "inherited Chad genes were strong in young Alexander, so Phillip had high hopes that his son would one day become a legendary super saiyin"
Briefed. Yes should make a video about the real Dracula. I've heard twice that he was a redhead, like Ghengis Khan. Interesting does you think? I've heard they both did that same thing.
it's funny because just today I thought about doing a video on Dracula haha so yes - incoming