How Prussia Ended The French Empire: Franco-Prussian War | Animated History

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 14 июн 2024
  • Get Surfshark VPN at surfshark.deals/historian Enter promo code HISTORIAN for 83% off and 3 extra months for FREE!
    Sign up for Armchair History TV today! armchairhistory.tv/
    Promo code: ARMCHAIRHISTORY for 50% OFF
    Merchandise available at store.armchairhistory.tv/
    Check out the new Armchair History TV Mobile App too!
    apps.apple.com/us/app/armchai...
    play.google.com/store/apps/de...
    Discord: / discord
    Twitter: / armchairhist
    Sources:
    1: Wawro, G. (2010). The Franco-Prussian War: The German Conquest of France in 1870-1871. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Pr.
    2: Badsey, S. (2014). The Franco-Prussian War 1870-1871. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
    3: Kovacs, Arpad F. "French Military Institutions before the Franco-Prussian War." The American Historical Review 51, no. 2 (1946): 217-35.
    4: Howard, M. (1961). The Franco-Prussian War; the German invasion of France, 1870-1871. New York, NY: Macmillan.
    Music:
    Armchair Historian Theme by Zach Heyde
    Piano Trio No. 2 by Franz Schubert
    Weapons of Impact by Bonnie Grace
    No Time Left by Jon Bjork
    Preparing for the Attack by Bonnie Grace
    The NIght Attack by Experia
    For God and Queen from Victoria II
    Last Point of Safe Return by Fabien Tell
    Fair Winds and Following Seas by Golden Anchor
    No Going Back by Wendel Scherer
    No Rest for the Weary by Anthony Earls
    Victory in Sight by Sinfonietta Cinematica
    Victory Theme by Max Anson
    Choose Us by Benjamin Monday

Комментарии • 4,7 тыс.

  • @TheArmchairHistorian
    @TheArmchairHistorian  3 года назад +1237

    Get Surfshark VPN at surfshark.deals/historian Enter promo code HISTORIAN for 83% off and 3 extra months for FREE!
    Small correction to the narration at 26:26. When referring to the Paris Commune, we refer to them as communist revolutionaries. But as a few of you helpfully pointed out, this is an oversimplification. The commune was actually made up of a number of different radical groups who were collectively called the Communards, as well as some National Guardsmen who refused to stand down and joined the commune. The communards consisted of radical republicans, socialists, and anarchists. The main figures of the movement had no links to traditional Marxism.
    Another small correction is that Belgium's territory should not include Eupen-Malmedy as shown in our continental map of Europe.
    Sign up for Armchair History TV today! armchairhistory.tv/
    Promo code: ARMCHAIRHISTORY for 50% OFF
    Merchandise available at store.armchairhistory.tv/
    Check out the new Armchair History TV Mobile App too!
    apps.apple.com/us/app/armchair-history-tv/id1514643375
    play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=tv.uscreen.armchairhistorytv
    Discord: discord.gg/zY5jzKp
    Twitter: twitter.com/ArmchairHist

  • @acrispywaffleiron4014
    @acrispywaffleiron4014 3 года назад +6476

    Some European country: *Gains power
    The rest of Europe: Time for the durability test

    • @ajgraves8016
      @ajgraves8016 3 года назад +101

      Ya gotta show me bitches!!!!!! Lol

    • @murkywateradminssions5219
      @murkywateradminssions5219 3 года назад +520

      Welcome to another stress tess today our new product will be the kingdom of prussia.
      Let's see how well it'll face against the 2nd French emp- aaaaaand France is now... A republic? Yo prussia stronk

    • @DoctorYoda2
      @DoctorYoda2 3 года назад +20

      Hahahahahahahhhaa

    • @NewPaulActs17
      @NewPaulActs17 3 года назад +10

      i gave you your 499th like

    • @acrispywaffleiron4014
      @acrispywaffleiron4014 3 года назад +8

      @@NewPaulActs17 thanks!

  • @kamikazeviking3053
    @kamikazeviking3053 3 года назад +3844

    Napoleon III: please hit me
    His horse: dude WTF

    • @bocilepep3684
      @bocilepep3684 3 года назад +65

      Poor horse

    • @kamikazeviking3053
      @kamikazeviking3053 3 года назад +218

      @@bocilepep3684 he's the emperor's horse. He's the opposite of poor. And why does the horse's financial status have to do with this?

    • @toastbot9496
      @toastbot9496 3 года назад +43

      @@kamikazeviking3053 I think they meant "poor horse" as in "aw the horse had to go through that, sad" not so much about the horse's financial status.

    • @kamikazeviking3053
      @kamikazeviking3053 3 года назад +118

      @@toastbot9496 r/wooosh

    • @toastbot9496
      @toastbot9496 3 года назад +55

      @@kamikazeviking3053 how original

  • @whateverthisis389
    @whateverthisis389 2 года назад +4073

    It’s a bit poetic that the German Empire started and ended in Versailles.

    • @jaymeister4850
      @jaymeister4850 2 года назад +246

      What is old, becomes new and becomes new again.

    • @winnienguyen4420
      @winnienguyen4420 2 года назад +12

      It almost seems like it was planned that way by the allies to piss the Germans off even more.

    • @pulpficti
      @pulpficti 2 года назад +47

      @@winnienguyen4420 yeah, they didn't like their own medicine

    • @ShutUpBubi
      @ShutUpBubi 2 года назад +186

      Berlin still rules over France when it comes to the EU lol

    • @pulpficti
      @pulpficti 2 года назад +71

      @@ShutUpBubi inferiority complex much? It's also bs

  • @communismwithgiggles2515
    @communismwithgiggles2515 3 года назад +5374

    Napoleon III: "Just let me die already!"
    The Prussians: "Wouldn't it be funny if we left that one guy alone?"

    • @vicenteabalosdominguez5257
      @vicenteabalosdominguez5257 3 года назад +479

      Now I'm imagining Napoleon III surrounded by shell craters standing on the only patch of grass remaining.

    • @depressedtoothpaste6033
      @depressedtoothpaste6033 3 года назад +29

      .

    • @awc6007
      @awc6007 3 года назад +138

      Can’t help but feel sad for Napoleon lll

    • @maltheopia
      @maltheopia 3 года назад +34

      Signers of the Treaty of Versailles: Yeah. Real funny, grandpa.

    • @justblast3393
      @justblast3393 2 года назад +25

      @ottoman barbarousse Let me remind you your knowledge about history is trash

  • @murkywateradminssions5219
    @murkywateradminssions5219 3 года назад +3534

    "Is this an order"
    -some french soldier on sedan

    • @Sleepy_boi206
      @Sleepy_boi206 3 года назад +15

      Lol

    • @MechWarrior894
      @MechWarrior894 3 года назад +85

      The other guy - “Guess we’ll just die.”

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem 3 года назад +13

      @Ahmet Ali Cetin yes and right on the spot. Humour and narration perfectly balanced
      ...as all things should be

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 3 года назад +1

      Some French soldiers who speak remarkably good English.

    • @balkenkreuz2063
      @balkenkreuz2063 3 года назад +7

      "I guess I'll just die" replied the other anonymous soldier, LOL

  • @Fordo007
    @Fordo007 3 года назад +4454

    So Napoleon III was the real life 'Why are we still here? Just to suffer?' meme.

    • @k-studio8112
      @k-studio8112 3 года назад +42

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @TKUltra971
      @TKUltra971 3 года назад +238

      Franco-Prussian war = Fall of mother base
      WW1 = The phantom pain incident
      WW2 = Rise and Fall of Zanzibar Land.

    • @Butter_Warrior99
      @Butter_Warrior99 3 года назад +27

      @@TKUltra971, Best comment.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 3 года назад +7

      @@TKUltra971 👏

    • @awc6007
      @awc6007 3 года назад +3

      @@TKUltra971 XD

  • @cameronburke8002
    @cameronburke8002 3 года назад +5166

    Proclaiming the new German Empire inside the Palace of a King you just beat in a war is probably that Chadest thing that has ever been done.

    • @ommsterlitz1805
      @ommsterlitz1805 3 года назад +95

      no it wasn't as the monarchy in France was extinct since 100 years at the time

    • @Cl.M
      @Cl.M 3 года назад +271

      Well, the seat of power was the Elysée Palace already and Napoleon III wasn't a king. But yeah, could have been. Still the symbol was still stong and was seen as a humiliation.

    • @ommsterlitz1805
      @ommsterlitz1805 3 года назад +132

      @@Cl.M not a humiliation but a revenge for sure after the many consecutive defeat of the HRE and prussia in early 19th century even a victory against the weakest France it had been in centuries against german states was to help forgot the many wars they lost against France

    • @vic_r023
      @vic_r023 3 года назад +161

      And then we humiliated them after ww1 in the galerie des glasses and then they humiliated us in ww2 in the same wagon the German signed the ww1 armistice was signed. It’s an infinite loop. XD

    • @Bunionification
      @Bunionification 3 года назад +21

      @@ommsterlitz1805 the last French king was the same year Napoleon 3rd took over

  • @skymaster4743
    @skymaster4743 3 года назад +5423

    Fun Fact: During the Battle of Sedan, a young Japanese army officer witnessed the brilliant victory of Moltke as a military observer. He would go on to command the Japanese army gaining victory over the Russians at Liaoning and Mukden in the Russo-Japanese War. His name was Marshal Oyama Iwao.

    • @hititmanify
      @hititmanify 3 года назад +167

      is this true?

    • @perrydb9299
      @perrydb9299 3 года назад +216

      epic fact, love it

    • @Marc_Masters
      @Marc_Masters 3 года назад +33

      How?

    • @franzivan4567
      @franzivan4567 3 года назад +157

      Hold up, wtf is a japanese doing in european soil? Did he come from a rich family?

    • @perrydb9299
      @perrydb9299 3 года назад +749

      @@franzivan4567 Expeditionary generals, sent by the government to be educated by western officers. When the mission is successful, the general will return home and educate other officers of what he has learnt.

  • @antitroller101
    @antitroller101 3 года назад +2118

    "We are in a chamber pot, about to be @$#% on"
    I would give a medal to that man's brilliant choice of words

    • @Impzorz
      @Impzorz 3 года назад +53

      Sounds like something Bronn from Game of Thrones would say.

    • @earthenjadis8199
      @earthenjadis8199 3 года назад +9

      For the record, I was the 1000th like.

    • @secretbaguette
      @secretbaguette 2 года назад +15

      *Merde*

    • @The_whales
      @The_whales Год назад +1

      I also like that quote

  • @theresgottabeagermanwordfo903
    @theresgottabeagermanwordfo903 3 года назад +6659

    Imagine having a better Map of France than The French

    • @def3ndr887
      @def3ndr887 3 года назад +487

      Basically whoever had the better artillery wins, and also logistical superiority

    • @theresgottabeagermanwordfo903
      @theresgottabeagermanwordfo903 3 года назад +443

      @@def3ndr887 Sounds napoleonic alright

    • @friedrichwilhelmviktoralbe349
      @friedrichwilhelmviktoralbe349 3 года назад +21

      ha

    • @janjansen3315
      @janjansen3315 3 года назад +104

      @@def3ndr887 Still same, only artillery has been changed to airpower. But logistics is the key to any victory in war, when its superb then you can win but when its screwed: you are as well

    • @busodelor1977
      @busodelor1977 3 года назад +7

      da können die Moffen wirklich extrem stolz sein, Nachbarländer angreifen und massenhaft abschlachten Heil, z. B. auch Deutschsüdwestafrika und Namibia, habe ich gerade gestern wieder gelesen, deutsche Effizienz, Eingeb orene in der Wüste entsorgen wa kostenlos, wenn man die Greueltaten dieses Trotha liest, bekommt man heute noch Tränen
      Norwegen, Belgien ud Niederlande waren in WK 2 auch höchst entzückt über die Nazibrutalitäten

  • @danioking5369
    @danioking5369 3 года назад +4173

    “This will be a long war, with many battles being won by the french”
    “What do you mean they’re sieging Paris”

    • @jimvolk9911
      @jimvolk9911 3 года назад +182

      french fighting with old tactics while prussians were fighting with new cannon and tactics french had no chance

    • @hirocheeto7795
      @hirocheeto7795 3 года назад +306

      @@jimvolk9911 Oddly familiar to another German-French war

    • @corrat4866
      @corrat4866 3 года назад +39

      @@hirocheeto7795 eh technically a German-Polish war.

    • @hirocheeto7795
      @hirocheeto7795 3 года назад +61

      @@corrat4866 Yeah, for like a little over a month.

    • @Bartaz19
      @Bartaz19 3 года назад +18

      @@corrat4866 With Poland there was also Soviets attacking on thier backs, 17 days after Germans.

  • @darthplagueis13
    @darthplagueis13 3 года назад +1221

    "So... We were originally supposed to harass the rear guard, but we then kind of ran into their entire army because they were so gosh-darn slow on the retreat, so we just took out their artillery...."

    • @culturedman2757
      @culturedman2757 3 года назад +192

      "Task failed successfully."

    • @sherabtod3728
      @sherabtod3728 3 года назад +42

      fun fact: bismarks own son was among the cavalry and was belived MIA for a time after the battle

    • @Zwijger
      @Zwijger 3 года назад +16

      @@sherabtod3728 You can't be "believed MIA", because it means "missing in action". You either are missing or not, there's no believing involved.

    • @sherabtod3728
      @sherabtod3728 3 года назад +49

      @@Zwijger well he was reported Mia and believed dead untill he was found alive later

    • @generalgrievous2202
      @generalgrievous2202 2 года назад +6

      @@sherabtod3728 i think you are confusing MIA and KIA

  • @clivestegosaurus4136
    @clivestegosaurus4136 3 года назад +4478

    Crazy that veterans of this war were still alive when Hitler marched through Paris in 1940.

    • @joevenespineli6389
      @joevenespineli6389 3 года назад +694

      De ja vu for them.

    • @civilengineer3349
      @civilengineer3349 3 года назад +839

      They would be about 90 years old which was difficult during those times

    • @TravelerZ24
      @TravelerZ24 3 года назад +159

      Von Machenstein maybe, but probably not

    • @chombus2602
      @chombus2602 3 года назад +94

      @@civilengineer3349 not really

    • @CocoHutzpah
      @CocoHutzpah 3 года назад +753

      @@civilengineer3349 It's not unheard of. The last veteran of the American civil war died in 1956.

  • @jhibbert6627
    @jhibbert6627 3 года назад +1803

    French army: We need Napoleon
    France: we have Napoleon at home
    Napoleon at home:

  • @tylergregersen9546
    @tylergregersen9546 3 года назад +1875

    Fun fact, Otto von Bismarck's son was a participant in the death charge. He was reported dead, but that was a mistake. Bismarck actually travelled close to the front to see him

    • @7shinta7
      @7shinta7 2 года назад +192

      I fail to see where this fact is fun, but it's very interesting nontheless.
      Just think of politicians with a vision for their country and taking responsibility for their actions to a drgree where they sent their own family into the battles they ignite. Hard to imagine nowadays.

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance 2 года назад +56

      @@7shinta7 Prince Harry served in Afghanistan.

    • @7shinta7
      @7shinta7 2 года назад +112

      @@Ballin4Vengeance
      I'm aware.
      But he's a high priority target. They'd never let him get in harms way for real.

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance 2 года назад +8

      @@7shinta7 Probably

    • @generalgrievous2202
      @generalgrievous2202 2 года назад +9

      @@7shinta7 iirc he was a logistics guy, delivering supplies and the like, could be wrong though

  • @user-tm3si7pw3u
    @user-tm3si7pw3u 2 года назад +499

    17:41 But it wasn't just the German patrols spotted the French movements, French newspaper also helped the germans: in addition, the national customs of the French were the most stupid, for example, they described all the movements of their troops in the most detailed way in the newspapers. Historical fact: the 3rd Prussian army missed the French troops of Marshal MacMahon and lost the enemy. But then the Germans got their hands on a fresh French newspaper, which described in detail how MacMahon was stationing troops in Reims. The Germans, delighted, turned to Reims, in fact they found MacMahon there and poured it into him sensitively.

    • @Aluzcz
      @Aluzcz 2 года назад +55

      Classical French arogance and lameness.

    • @zawarudo1161
      @zawarudo1161 Год назад +34

      That sounds extremely French.

    • @michaelwan9112
      @michaelwan9112 Год назад +3

      Really cool information

    • @smal750
      @smal750 Год назад

      @@Aluzcz would still rape

    • @nikel-
      @nikel- Год назад +27

      "in fact they found MacMahon there and poured it into him sensitively"
      This phrasing caught me off guard lmao

  • @aveioacosta371
    @aveioacosta371 3 года назад +1684

    French Artillery being outdone and outclassed:
    Napoleon I turning over in his grave so hard it shakes the earth.

    • @mill2712
      @mill2712 3 года назад +60

      I wonder if there was a major earthquake that year.

    • @Jim-fi4dc
      @Jim-fi4dc 3 года назад +76

      Believe it or not , the French artillery during the last years of the Napoleonic wars was outclassed by Austrian and Russian artillery. True story

    • @Jim-fi4dc
      @Jim-fi4dc 3 года назад +27

      @@elmascapo6588 After 1812 the French army started losing momentum and suffered numerous defeats both in the east and in Spain.

    • @skyhappy
      @skyhappy 3 года назад +5

      @The Death Star source

    • @uorothewizard3576
      @uorothewizard3576 3 года назад +28

      @The Death Star The Prussian artillery corps was nowhere near as competent on the command level as the French. Shoddy organisation, wherein the artillery chief at army level was usually a general, but had no army level artillery reserve, was a massive handicap. That left nothing for the army commander to use, in terms of artillery, on order to exploit an advantage, or commit at the decisive time or place.
      Even in the late stages of the Napoleonic wars Prussia suffered from a lack of effective artillery coordination and leadership. One only has to look at Ligny, whereupon the army artillery chief, Karl Friedrich von Holtzendorf, was seriously wounded, losing a hand, and was sent to the rear. His place was taken at army level by the senior corps artillery chief, a mere lieutenant-colonel, whose rank was too low to effectively coordinate with senior officers at a command level.
      The French artillery clearly dominated the field at Ligny, despite being heavily outnumbered in terms of batteries and men. The Guard artillery was massed against the Prussian center at 20:00, and blew a hole in the Prussian lines, paving the way for an attack by the Imperial Guard and Gerard's IV Corps which split the Prussian army in two and won the battle for the French.

  • @WereWolf-ry3yv
    @WereWolf-ry3yv 3 года назад +2386

    Napoleon III looking at the enemy army be like "at least they're not british"

    • @Brehat29
      @Brehat29 3 года назад +166

      Without the arrival of Blücher at Waterloo, Wellington was done.

    • @presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889
      @presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889 3 года назад +77

      @@Brehat29 Hypothetically, Wellington would've far likely be defeated than be victorious without Blucher.

    • @DarkLizard-
      @DarkLizard- 3 года назад +67

      The Prussians couldent have done it with out the British tho

    • @Wanderer628
      @Wanderer628 3 года назад +68

      @@Brehat29 It wasn't some miracle, Wellington only held at Waterloo because Blucer promised support. If Blucer hadn't promised to come then there wouldn't have been a battle of Waterloo as Wellington wouldn't have made a stand there.

    • @Brehat29
      @Brehat29 3 года назад +31

      @@Wanderer628 I never wrote it was a "miracle". I only mentionned Blucher because the British have this tendency to claim all the merits of a victory, as well as to blame others for their failures. I'll bet whatever you want that if Grouchy had arrived before Blucher, the British would have put all the blam on Blucher.

  • @SDRlegacy
    @SDRlegacy 3 года назад +609

    Fun fact: the italian general Giuseppe Garibaldi fought the war on the french side. He was the only general who haven't lose a battle and the only one who has capturated a prussian flag.

    • @piepiep2368
      @piepiep2368 2 года назад +38

      Old time when french can trust italien without need to verify if italien attack french when we have the back turned unlike 1940

    • @mexicoxv2236
      @mexicoxv2236 2 года назад +22

      imagine that at some point the Italians were a military power, fate played rough.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims 2 года назад +6

      @@piepiep2368 I mean the French did completely lie to the Italians, the Vitorio Mutillato if you recall
      Oops

    • @thiccupcake
      @thiccupcake 2 года назад

      @@looinrims Vittoria Mutilata

    • @thiccupcake
      @thiccupcake 2 года назад +6

      @@mexicoxv2236 I think it was Garibaldi's skill as a general more than anything. He was a war hero and even a grest contributor to the unification of italy

  • @sir17pounder8
    @sir17pounder8 3 года назад +343

    The true definition of "I'll be home for christmas"

    • @druisteen
      @druisteen 3 года назад +4

      The war was arsh for both side & opened to WW1 & 2 .
      Think about

    • @SVASH-hz5ji
      @SVASH-hz5ji 2 года назад +3

      And Germans got a glorious empire as their Christmas present!

    • @gamerdrache6076
      @gamerdrache6076 2 года назад

      @@SVASH-hz5ji and elass lothringen

  • @martinxy1291
    @martinxy1291 3 года назад +2383

    I just imagen a poor french general standing in a wide open area screaming "SMITE ME FOR THE LOVE OF GOD" only for everything else around him to explode missing him entirely

    • @robbieaulia6462
      @robbieaulia6462 3 года назад +251

      German officer: "Yeah keep him alive and let him suffer."

    • @redskull8354
      @redskull8354 3 года назад +210

      @@robbieaulia6462 Bavarian officer: "Your cruel"
      German Officer: "I know."

    • @TravelerZ24
      @TravelerZ24 3 года назад +19

      Bavaria is german. Screw you

    • @miko5742
      @miko5742 3 года назад +90

      @@TravelerZ24 By German I think he meant the North German Confederation

    • @TravelerZ24
      @TravelerZ24 3 года назад +4

      @@redskull8354 War is cruel

  • @jessewillason2064
    @jessewillason2064 3 года назад +926

    "It will cost what it will cost" Prussian cavalry commander that cleared the French artillery

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 3 года назад +96

      I assume the original quote would have been "Koste es was es wolle", which is used in the way of "no matter the cost" or "whatever it takes".

    • @alikos88
      @alikos88 3 года назад +61

      Prussian Cavalry Commander quoting Lord Farquaad:
      "some of you _MAY_ die...but its a sacrifice _I_ am willing to make"

    • @LoLMasterManiac
      @LoLMasterManiac 3 года назад +2

      @@alikos88 lol

    • @heinzguderian628
      @heinzguderian628 3 года назад +7

      god I love these Krupp guns...

    • @wtfduud
      @wtfduud 3 года назад +10

      @@alikos88 Presumably the cavalry commander would be part of the charge.

  • @eddie0lutetia
    @eddie0lutetia Год назад +105

    If I remember correctly, the Prussian army sent observers to the American Civil War, who learned quite a bit about the effective use of railways for moving troops, the use of telegraphs and a centralized command structure for processing information faster. Some of these lessons were implemented successfully during this war.

    • @HellStr82
      @HellStr82 Год назад +5

      You serios think that any european country could have learned anything from the US back then în matters of war? :))))))

    • @chanti9274
      @chanti9274 Год назад +8

      @@HellStr82 The french probably thought like you hence they lost.

    • @pretzelstick320
      @pretzelstick320 11 месяцев назад +10

      @@HellStr82every war has observers. The American civil war was a massive and long war, with casualties high even for European standards.

    • @larryalvares1369
      @larryalvares1369 7 месяцев назад +1

      Prussians in the civil war: Damn. They suck at this
      Fun fact: some of the commanders that fought for the Union in the civil war were Prussians

    • @parsatayebi
      @parsatayebi 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@HellStr82when it came to maneuver warfare the acw was one of the biggest wars of its era

  • @crazycrayon4247
    @crazycrayon4247 2 года назад +216

    Prussia was just really known for their incredible military reforms and tactical innovations with a hint of incredible discipline. Their probably were a lot of details that played through the Prussian success but this was the main reason for their amazing victories.

    • @winnienguyen4420
      @winnienguyen4420 2 года назад +5

      I've never understood why they fell so quickly against Napoleon at Jena-Auerstedt in 1806. Seems like such a historically excellent army would have been able to hold out longer.

    • @gen169
      @gen169 2 года назад +1

      @@winnienguyen4420 mainly officers are the problem after Frederick the great the Prussian army rests on its laurels and Prussian command was plaque with personal rivalry and other things and the Prussians faced the might of a reformed new french army

    • @zarakdurrani7584
      @zarakdurrani7584 2 года назад +6

      @@winnienguyen4420 the Prussian army of 1806 was the same army that Frederick had used in the Silesian wars half a decade before. Incredibly well disciplined and reliant on the expedient of marching in excellent order over all kinds of broken terrain. Sadly, by 1806 this iron discipline and neat, mechanical marches didn't help against Napoleon's Grande Armee with the revolutionary logistics and tactical flair.

    • @abdirahmanidris290
      @abdirahmanidris290 2 года назад +1

      @@winnienguyen4420 Prussia reformed after their humiliating defeat to Napoleon. However it was only in 1862 after Bismarcks Army bill got passed that the Prussian army became elite

    • @blackimp4987
      @blackimp4987 Год назад

      I thought the same until I watched a much longer documentary about it. The main reason was they outnumbered French and had longer distance guns. Prussians won some battles - as told in this video too - by losing HALF of their men! HALF! they attacked furiously with no order being decimated but winning thanks to their number. The long distance guns did the rest. I don't see the other details so much relevant than these. In this video was omitted that French at the beginning of the war used their traditional red trouses that allowed Prussians to see them better when French moved in the battlefields

  • @thegoldencaulk2742
    @thegoldencaulk2742 3 года назад +2913

    Prussian war planners: We know how many loaves of bread the French have in reserve
    Nazi war planners: he have no idea how many soldiers the Soviets have in reserve

    • @skymaster4743
      @skymaster4743 3 года назад +433

      "The Russian colossus has been underestimated by us. Whenever a dozen divisions are destroyed the Russians replace them with another dozen."
      - General Franz Halder during Operation Barbarossa, Summer 1941

    • @destubae3271
      @destubae3271 3 года назад +309

      @@nettleleaves8224 If you look up "Hitler's everyday talking voice," you'll even hear him shocked at the amount of tanks USSR made. They underestimated them for sure

    • @joeyreidelbach5509
      @joeyreidelbach5509 3 года назад +70

      @@nettleleaves8224 True but you gotta remember the 2 Russian winters borg down the Germans which slow the Germans down which Stalin knew that was going happening so Stalin was able to send around 5 million Soviet soliders to reinforced the cities of Stalingrad, Leningrad, Moscow, Kieve and Baku from Eastern Russia cause he was paranoid of a japanese invasion plus Soviet was getting alot of Aid from USA during the lend-lease deal such as 5,000 M4 sherman tanks, 7,000 jeeps, oil, steel and around 8 billion dollars which gave the Soviets ability to mass produce there tanks in large quanities and thousands of stuta-baker trucks which were fitted with field rockets plus the British was using there navy to keep the seaways clear of German U-boats so the American cargo ships would reach seaports in Northern Russia to drop the materials and also Stalin was begging Americans and England to open a western front to relieve pressure off of Soviet Union.

    • @joeyreidelbach5509
      @joeyreidelbach5509 3 года назад +23

      @@skymaster4743 True, but the soviet soilders were inexperince and undertrained cause 80 percent of the Generals were let go by Stalin and the other 20 were in gulags but was replace with yes generals didn't know what the crap they were doing but always agree with Stalin which gave Germans the ability to push the Soviets back to the gates of Moscow.

    • @Intreductor
      @Intreductor 3 года назад +55

      @@skymaster4743 funny Halder mentioned it as he was the one responsible for screwing up both Barbarossa and Fall Blau. Hitler primarily wanted Ukraine for the food and Caucasus for the oil. Halder went all in and threw it all at Moscow.

  • @2Links
    @2Links 3 года назад +1522

    Love the detail with the hot air balloon when illustrating the defenders of Paris.

    • @charliefoxtrott1048
      @charliefoxtrott1048 3 года назад +12

      Love those eastereggs - they do it everytime :)

    • @gtbest5417
      @gtbest5417 3 года назад +6

      Context?

    • @Henri.d.Olivoir
      @Henri.d.Olivoir 3 года назад +23

      @@gtbest5417 Napoleon III tried to escape the siege of Paris with a hot air balloon

    • @HolgerLovesMusic
      @HolgerLovesMusic 3 года назад +133

      @@Henri.d.Olivoir Not Napoleon III, but the new minister of the republic.

    • @Henri.d.Olivoir
      @Henri.d.Olivoir 3 года назад +49

      @@HolgerLovesMusic seriously? My whole life has been a lie lol

  • @daguard411
    @daguard411 3 года назад +110

    I am very happy that you brought up Moltke, a general so brilliant that he developed a command structure that is used by virtually the entire world for their military's. Also, it would also be worth mentioning that the early frontal assaults, where most of the German casualties were suffered, was contrary to Moltke's orders. He had developed a doctrine of flanking and envelopment, ordering that with the new types of weapons, frontal assaults were stupid. When he heard of they that ordered frontal assaults, many were dismissed immediately. Few hear or read of Moltke for the very reason he stated when others said he would go down in history as the best, and his reply was "Nobody will hear of me as I have never conducted a retreat."

  • @makeromaniagreatagain9697
    @makeromaniagreatagain9697 3 года назад +81

    10:04
    Napoleon III: okay guys, so we need to fight the Germans in Alsace-Lorraine?
    Soldiers: did you say L'Algerie?

    • @piepiep2368
      @piepiep2368 2 года назад +2

      I don't understand?

    • @makeromaniagreatagain9697
      @makeromaniagreatagain9697 2 года назад +5

      @@piepiep2368 the war was in Alsace-lorraine and some idiots met up in Ageria

    • @Corpus.Adamus
      @Corpus.Adamus 2 года назад +7

      It means Algeria, the French had bad orders that confused some officers during the mobilization and some went to Algeria😂

  • @lalallama171
    @lalallama171 3 года назад +2249

    France: we have an awesome empire. We can conquer anyone.
    Germany: deutsche Qualität

    • @fenzelian
      @fenzelian 3 года назад +320

      France: We have a railroad to the front!
      Germany: We have two railroads to the front!
      France: Ha, what a waste!
      Germany: How do you get your trains back to fill them with soldiers with only one set of rails? Do you just stop sending troops while the trains go back?
      France: ...

    • @polygonalfortress
      @polygonalfortress 3 года назад +142

      Who knew having one extra railroad track could drastically improve a military's logistics.

    • @notthebeaver1532
      @notthebeaver1532 3 года назад +13

      @Anthony Amable Feliciano I think that was sarcasm...

    • @TravelerZ24
      @TravelerZ24 3 года назад +54

      "War isn't won by tactics, it's won by logistics"

    • @fkjl4717
      @fkjl4717 3 года назад +1

      Empire without army.

  • @gostavoadolfos2023
    @gostavoadolfos2023 3 года назад +1508

    The moment king Ludvic II and his brother realized that the Kingdom of Bavaria will never be independent.

    • @jerikrazik4707
      @jerikrazik4707 3 года назад +77

      I dont know they may come back the spirit of the Alimeni mt kingdoms is fierce and as the west Germans doom themselves to oblivion it won't be the East to just protest, the Chinese phrase works for Germany too, " long divided must unite, long united must divide "

    • @leonrothier6638
      @leonrothier6638 3 года назад +42

      @@jerikrazik4707 Of course it’s a Chinese proverb.

    • @gostavoadolfos2023
      @gostavoadolfos2023 3 года назад +73

      @@jerikrazik4707 the German nation lost most of the eastern territories to the slavic people after WWII.. now they are undergoing a drastic demographic changes caused by psychotic storm Merkel's masochistic open doors and the collapse of birth rate.. my point is Bavaria could ve followed Switzerland's model but now they are drawing with the rest of Germany.

    • @kevinbauer2187
      @kevinbauer2187 3 года назад +7

      @@gostavoadolfos2023 Berotoroto!

    • @l0lLorenzol0l
      @l0lLorenzol0l 3 года назад +65

      @Dave Baton lmao I guess he just imagined Merkel massive immigration wave then. I guess the hordes of "syrian refugees" are just my imagination. Get real.

  • @mafiousbj
    @mafiousbj 3 года назад +76

    19:31 If I could give you two likes for the use of the "Is this a ...?" And "Guess I'll die" memes I would

  • @ziomudru
    @ziomudru 3 года назад +38

    Wheni was young i was fascinated by epic battles between great empires. Now i m old, i m a parent, and i m heartbroken by the awareness of what men can do to each other.
    Outstanding work man!

    • @Apex_Alpha53
      @Apex_Alpha53 2 года назад +2

      I m a young boy being fascinated with such wars... well ur comment gave me something to ponder upon 😞

  • @alexius23
    @alexius23 3 года назад +1125

    When Napoleon III’s only son died, as an observer, died during the Zulu Wars...this was the final coup d’grace to the French Empire

    • @Julianna.Domina
      @Julianna.Domina 3 года назад +11

      D'Gras*?

    • @clementl.9566
      @clementl.9566 3 года назад +121

      @@Julianna.Domina Coup de grâce* in French

    • @alexius23
      @alexius23 3 года назад +15

      @@Julianna.Domina the final blow

    • @alexius23
      @alexius23 3 года назад

      @Egg Egg egg egg ?

    • @tipitjo
      @tipitjo 3 года назад +65

      He was more than an observer ! He was enlisted as an officer, with a special authorisation from Victoria. He went to a military academy in the UK

  • @Anglomachian
    @Anglomachian 3 года назад +525

    “It’ll cost, what it will cost”.
    - The Cavalry Commander before the death charge.

    • @muneebnajam3744
      @muneebnajam3744 3 года назад +14

      How many of you clicked
      After knowing extra credits own video

    • @peterroberts4415
      @peterroberts4415 3 года назад +34

      "Some of you may die, but it's a sacrifice I'm willing to make"

    • @presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889
      @presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889 3 года назад +4

      Name : von Bredow
      Event name : Von Bredow's Death Ride.
      The Battle of this event : Battle of Mars-la-Tour/Rezonville.

    • @mrunaltondre6051
      @mrunaltondre6051 2 года назад +2

      800 charged
      420 returned alive

    • @johny16G
      @johny16G Год назад

      ​@@peterroberts4415 *some of us

  • @mikestafford6900
    @mikestafford6900 3 года назад +90

    Your animations are getting really, really good! I had no idea the Franco-Prussian war was so brutal and humiliating. Explains a lot.

  • @earthenjadis8199
    @earthenjadis8199 3 года назад +36

    18:45 - There is a famous painting called "The Last Cartridges" (Les Dernières Cartouches) about Bazeilles.
    The room the painting depicts has been preserved like it was on that day and is now a museum.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 3 года назад +831

    "You know I had to do it to em" - Otto von Bismarck

    • @VanshVadhavan
      @VanshVadhavan 3 года назад +12

      Why are you everywhere

    • @DK-tv6rk
      @DK-tv6rk 3 года назад +70

      Don’t put random quotes on me
      - Otto von Bismarck

    • @Nietabs
      @Nietabs 3 года назад +2

      Ok

    • @Diego-fd3we
      @Diego-fd3we 3 года назад +3

      Why are u in every comment daddy

    • @Riolupai
      @Riolupai 3 года назад

      "You know I had to do it to em" - Joseph Stalin

  • @dinolandia8978
    @dinolandia8978 3 года назад +1543

    Napoleon I rolling in his grave: " I do not know this man, Napoleon III, who claims to share my name."

    • @galatheumbreon6862
      @galatheumbreon6862 3 года назад +51

      lmao come n he wasn't that bad

    • @alaricneviaski780
      @alaricneviaski780 3 года назад +222

      Napoleon III is known for being a great manager for France, bringing the country into modernity. His oncle would be proud of his nefew for sure

    • @darrenbutler9819
      @darrenbutler9819 3 года назад +24

      @@alaricneviaski780 uncle*, nephew*

    • @axelpatrickb.pingol3228
      @axelpatrickb.pingol3228 3 года назад +32

      @@darrenbutler9819 Doesn't matter. The thought is there. They'll learn to spell it correctly sometime at their own pace...

    • @darrenbutler9819
      @darrenbutler9819 3 года назад +61

      @@axelpatrickb.pingol3228 or you could help them learn by pointing out the mistake and then put the correct spelling in.

  • @BigBrotherTheWatcher1984
    @BigBrotherTheWatcher1984 3 года назад +684

    I made one mistake in my life I should have burned Berlin.
    - Napoleon Bonaparte, 1815

    • @Enyavar1
      @Enyavar1 3 года назад +92

      @Soumyadeep Chatterjee Maybe only one, instead to the dozens he had because he was lenient.
      If you are fighting an enemy who will kill you upon surrender, will you consider surrendering? No, you won't. Napoleon had this many victories because he quickly overwhelmed other forces, made them say "uncle" and then let them join his own forces (under strong supervision, he was no fool).
      Had Nappy been a bloodthirsty tyrant, he likely wouldn't ever have risen to power.

    • @Enyavar1
      @Enyavar1 3 года назад +40

      @Soumyadeep Chatterjee He, umm... did? He rewrote the map of Europe. France annexed BeNeLux+Rome+Catalania+Croatia, his brothers were made kings of Westfalia, Spain and Italy; his ambassadors ruled all the smaller territories in his name, even Poland; his general was made Swedish king... the whole shebang. And whenever the results were not fast enough, he annexed territories for his crown (like Benelux which started as his puppet state and then was made French proper in due time). Had Napoleon not begun the war with Russia and had he clung to power just a decade more or two, his foundations of a continental European Empire might even have lasted.
      Read up on what Napoleon did! He DID right what you suggested, usually just stopping before massacring people.

    • @jacopoabbruscato9271
      @jacopoabbruscato9271 3 года назад +15

      He burned Moscow, didn't do much for him

    • @olympia5758
      @olympia5758 3 года назад +101

      @@jacopoabbruscato9271 No, Moscow was burning before Napoleon and his army even got there. The Russians were using a scorched earth strategy.

    • @23GreyFox
      @23GreyFox 3 года назад +2

      @Soumyadeep Chatterjee Because he tried, the time of his rule isn't the best memory. In Germany it's still called "die Franzosenzeit". And in 1870 France declared war again. Never trust the French.

  • @tikkurilaboi6893
    @tikkurilaboi6893 2 месяца назад +3

    I am saddened to hear that RUclips hasnt fared the best on your channel. But I wish for great success to you and your videos, theyre genuinely some of the best.

  • @jeremiahkivi4256
    @jeremiahkivi4256 3 года назад +474

    Prussia had that extra soft attack with that artillery tech upgrade. Research bonuses pay off.

    • @redskull8354
      @redskull8354 3 года назад +38

      Eyyyyy fellow Hoi4 fan :'D

    • @JuanMatteoReal
      @JuanMatteoReal 3 года назад +32

      And they have stronk National Spirits and generals with good traits and skills.

    • @FreaKCSGOHacker
      @FreaKCSGOHacker 3 года назад +21

      @@redskull8354 I am pretty sure that at least a third of this audience plays hoi4

    • @YataTheFifteenth
      @YataTheFifteenth 3 года назад +22

      -should've rushed researched Gas Attack-

    • @lazyeggs3133
      @lazyeggs3133 3 года назад +10

      as much as i love victoria 2 i dont understand the game half of the time and i dont think the ai does either so i just stick with hoi4

  • @colbykitto4597
    @colbykitto4597 3 года назад +1476

    16:18 respect to Napoleon III, never leaving his men, despite his agony. He fought on.

    • @fahoodie1852
      @fahoodie1852 3 года назад +366

      Napoleon III was a brave soul who did all he could, and is only remembered for his disastrous defeat and wrongly as a coward, which in fact he was the opposite

    • @supermario5849
      @supermario5849 3 года назад +60

      It’s a shame that Napoleon lll was captured in a shameful way. He was better off staying in Paris where he was safe.

    • @fahoodie1852
      @fahoodie1852 3 года назад +123

      @@supermario5849 he considered returning to Paris, but with his wife’s advice backed down as they’d see him as a coward. I believe him showing in the battlefield was to motivate his soldiers as he knew the war was going to be lost

    • @michaelnash1067
      @michaelnash1067 3 года назад +6

      Yes, Yes, misery loves company. 🤔
      So they were miserable together, so nice...🙄🙄

    • @richardmangelmann4975
      @richardmangelmann4975 3 года назад +3

      @@fahoodie1852 I meeeean have you ever looked into what happened in Egypt? He surely left his men there

  • @johnhendrickson1806
    @johnhendrickson1806 3 года назад +27

    You’ve gone above and beyond with your graphic design dude. So much improvement in such little time. Props

  • @tymofo2540
    @tymofo2540 3 года назад +19

    The vic2 music sold me, absolutely nostalgic

  • @tigershark2328
    @tigershark2328 3 года назад +809

    Other RUclips videos: 16:9 or close to 16:9 aspect ratio
    The Armchair Historian: I don't even know what aspect ratio this is but omg it commands such a powerful presence that I must pay attention to it...

    • @TheArmchairHistorian
      @TheArmchairHistorian  3 года назад +358

      Widescreen all the way!

    • @restless6107
      @restless6107 3 года назад +43

      @@TheArmchairHistorian Wide screen go brr

    • @Julianna.Domina
      @Julianna.Domina 3 года назад +4

      @@TheArmchairHistorian 18:9, is it? I have an 18:9 phone and it seems to fill the screen. Or maybe 21:9?

    • @Julianna.Domina
      @Julianna.Domina 3 года назад +4

      It's 21:9, isn't it

    • @itarry4
      @itarry4 3 года назад +3

      The animation and art is amazing as well. It makes understanding the content so easy to understand and entertaining to watch. It's honestly incredible.

  • @crw45able
    @crw45able 3 года назад +1117

    Man, your channel is 80% history, 20% ASMR, and 100% brilliance.

  • @t5ruxlee210
    @t5ruxlee210 2 года назад +10

    Prussian spymaster and police chief (1818-1882) Wilhelm Johann Carl Eduard Stieber (3 May 1818 - 29 January 1882) was one factor behind much of Bismark's Franco Prussian War battlefield successes. He was responsible for much of the prewar legwork which built up massive reams of data correcting French Army mistakes in mapping etc. He and his spies even discovered that many official roadway distance markers had substantial errors re distances.

  • @RRaquello
    @RRaquello 3 года назад +18

    One interesting thing about this war was that it was a French-German war where the US tacitly backed the Germans. We were neutral, of course, and couldn't give any material aid, but because of bitterness over the French adventure in Mexico during our Civil War, our government was extremely hostile to Napoleon III, so we sent Phil Sheridan to spend the war as an observer with the Prussian army-a neutral, but friendly, observer. Sheridan had been sent to the Texas-Mexico border after the Civil War ended, with a large army, to give Napoleon a hint to "git out", and also supplied the Mexicans fighting the French with weapons and other supplies. He was present, as an honored guest, at the surrender of Napoleon to the Prussians.

  • @andresemilior.gonzalez
    @andresemilior.gonzalez 3 года назад +689

    That quote of Napoleon on his death bed made me sad :(

    • @fahoodie1852
      @fahoodie1852 3 года назад +188

      His story is sad, all his 22 years of hard work and success overshadowed by a war he didn’t want to fight

    • @creepygamerful
      @creepygamerful 3 года назад +109

      @@fahoodie1852 Well, he actually declared war because of a letter, so I think he really did wanted to fight

    • @fahoodie1852
      @fahoodie1852 3 года назад +178

      @@creepygamerful the population pressured him as there were massive demonstrations. He was very skeptical and said “the war will be long and difficult”. After his capture in sedan he told the Prussian king he was reluctant and didn’t wish to fight. He had many reasons not to want the war, most notably France’s unpreparedness and his failing health

    • @tibsky1396
      @tibsky1396 3 года назад +15

      @@fahoodie1852 That's not impossible. Republicans pressured him to sabotage the project and bring down Napoleon III

    • @Thomgxx100
      @Thomgxx100 3 года назад +56

      @@tibsky1396 France declared war on Prussia because France couldn't enjure more diplomatic defeats from Prussia. Mind that France by 1869 had transposed into a (weakened) constitutional empire like that of the British monarchy. Napoleon 3 had to comply with the French goverment's decisions. Everybody in France were in favour of the war declaration, including the republicans and socialists, because they too saw the authoritarian Prussian state as a threat to French reforms, as a threat to liberty in general and to France itself. @ Andres R Napoleon the 3rd said those words with pride (We weren't exactly afraid at Sedan, were we? - Those were his exact words) What he meant was, that he himself and his Army of Chalons had fought very bravely at Sedan, which they truly had, with the 3rd Zouaves breaking through the Saxon lines, with the Marine Infantry twice retaking and repulsing the Bavarians at Bazeilles, with parts of 45. Reg. breaking through the lines of the Prussians Guards in the north. The rest only surrendering to avoid being plastered with German grenades coming from all directions.

  • @somefilipino
    @somefilipino 3 года назад +509

    The Kaiser do be lookin good with his drip

    • @quietanteater9719
      @quietanteater9719 3 года назад +70

      he left too much drip on Paris

    • @dm6678
      @dm6678 3 года назад +34

      Soaking wet with imperial drip

    • @Retaliatixn
      @Retaliatixn 3 года назад +30

      Deutsche Qualität Drip.

    • @somefilipino
      @somefilipino 3 года назад +5

      @@quietanteater9719 :flushed:

    • @Spider_aaaahhh
      @Spider_aaaahhh 3 года назад +23

      Prussians in Paris

  • @jebbroham1776
    @jebbroham1776 3 года назад +7

    Dad passed away in 2019, but when I was going through the things he left behind, I found a French Curassier bayonet from the Franco-Prussian war. January 16th 1870 is stamped clearly on the flat side of the tang in French just forward of the mounting lug for whatever rifle they used it on back then. Possibly a needle gun? Idk. It's pretty cool though.

  • @NovaExeRegent
    @NovaExeRegent 3 года назад +10

    Appreciate the fact your team are taking two weeks to make videos, it really gives a chance to increase the overall quality compared to a singular week.

  • @kamikazeviking3053
    @kamikazeviking3053 3 года назад +386

    Getting coronated in a captured enemy palace in the middle of the war requires the balls of tungsten and is also the biggest flex of all time.

    • @sunrisings292
      @sunrisings292 3 года назад +9

      Haha! Agree.... I could not put it any better.

    • @filipkopec525
      @filipkopec525 3 года назад +23

      At the end of the war, with the enemy traped in their capital city...

    • @kamikazeviking3053
      @kamikazeviking3053 3 года назад +5

      @@filipkopec525partisans

    • @emc8476
      @emc8476 3 года назад +13

      @@filipkopec525 partisans could still be close and if the French somehow did a comeback that could have been the most shameful retreat in history.

    • @AllGoodThings607
      @AllGoodThings607 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, still not entirely sure why the Germans did that. Maybe because the war was still going on and all the principles were camped out in Versailles to help continue the conduct of the war? I'm not sure.

  • @Captain_Dough
    @Captain_Dough 3 года назад +320

    Editing is getting really so much better

    • @Captain_Dough
      @Captain_Dough 3 года назад +1

      @Egg Egg egg egg indeed

    • @kingstarscream320
      @kingstarscream320 3 года назад +1

      Doesn’t make up for Armchair Historian’s stoic emotionless delivery.

    • @Captain_Dough
      @Captain_Dough 3 года назад +1

      @@kingstarscream320 exactly

  • @grigorijklymenko3198
    @grigorijklymenko3198 2 года назад +26

    To me, this episode looks substantually better then the other ones you uploaded, and definetely a lot of dedication went into making it.
    I appreciate it a lot, having proper animations help immensly to understand the subject. Thank you.

  • @davethewave2197
    @davethewave2197 2 года назад +10

    A few months ago, I randomly watched this video because I was interested in the topic.
    Today I had my A-Level exams with the random topic of Bismarck and his plan to Unify Germany through war. We had covered this topic in school, but the only thing I could ever remember about the Franco-Prussian war was this video.
    Thanks to you I passed my exam!

  • @yazui.i.9368
    @yazui.i.9368 3 года назад +460

    Bismarck: " I am going to do what is called a pro gamer move"

    • @selinane2Seli-zw3pz
      @selinane2Seli-zw3pz 3 года назад

      A real pro gamer move wouldn't have taken Alsace-Moselle
      Just check German border of today compared to 1914.

    • @danmenard6917
      @danmenard6917 3 года назад +14

      Bismarck had a plan. He ALWAYS had a plan.

    • @lolcop7416
      @lolcop7416 3 года назад +7

      @@selinane2Seli-zw3pzBismarck was put out of Service in 1908 from Kaiser Wilhelm the second

    • @selinane2Seli-zw3pz
      @selinane2Seli-zw3pz 3 года назад +1

      @@lolcop7416 And ? Alsace Moselle was taken from the French in 1871. And the treaty of Frankfurt was harsh nonetheless French paid it all, contrary to Germans whining about Versailles.
      What is your point ? In 1914 alsace Moselle was still German. Bismarck did terrible mistakes

    • @c4m0uflag34
      @c4m0uflag34 3 года назад +16

      @@selinane2Seli-zw3pz sounds a lot like a salty french to me

  • @drawnout3349
    @drawnout3349 3 года назад +237

    I do really love that all the german actions are said to be made by Bismarck, even though Kaiser Wilhelm was the person who (technically) made them. Really shows how much influence he wielded.

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall 3 года назад +11

      Bismarck is an amazing individual.

    • @misterjder1.831
      @misterjder1.831 3 года назад +34

      Actually Otto von Bismarck Bismarck was chief of the government of the north German confederation.
      So basically he was in charge. He was also in charge of Prussia at that time if iam not wrong.
      So basically he was the one who did daily business. The king reigned. But Bismarck had to ask him before every action.
      But Wilhelm I. Was very dependent upon Bismarck.
      A good example is the German Austrian war 1866. After the victory Wilhelm I. Wanted to annex Austria or parts of it but Bismarck didn't like this decision because other nations could be terrified and that would endanger Prussia / Germany. And it wouldn't have been good for the austro German relations.
      So Wilhelm I agreed on leaving Austria be.

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall 3 года назад +24

      @@misterjder1.831 Bismarck also disdained colonies and wanted to stay allied with the UK. Wilhelm II going against this led to WWI

    • @misterjder1.831
      @misterjder1.831 3 года назад +13

      @@shorewall more or less.
      Bismarck said after the war 1871 "the empire is saturated" meaning Germany won't expand any further.
      Wilhelm the second nonetheless wanted "a place at the sun" demanding, like other empires colonies in Africa.
      Due to many reasons it got to the point, that the Germans got various colonies around the world which at the end Bismarck greeted.
      But after the years Bismarck got very old and senil in old years and above all stubborn.
      (many say that the retirement of Bismarck from wilhelm II. Was a mistake and lead to ww1.)
      But that's incorrect. But that wasn't the case. Out of Wilhelms perspective the retirement absolutely justified because Bismarck was as I said very old.
      And You'll never know how history would've went if even just a little detail changed.
      Yes sure the aggressive emperor was a factor. But only one of many. Imagine if Franz Joseph the Austrian emperor would've died of a heart attack. That would have changed pretty everything.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 3 года назад +1

      @@misterjder1.831 I've never heard of anyone saying Bismark had gone senile when he was dismissed, is there a source for this?

  • @lightbluewaves5526
    @lightbluewaves5526 2 года назад +6

    20:40 that horse be like "dafuq bro i don't wanna die!"

  • @erikjohnsen5154
    @erikjohnsen5154 3 года назад +6

    Excellent video. Very informative about a war i always was interested in, but never seemed to be able obtain much information about. Learned a ton! Loved the style of the animations and the narration also. Well paced and just professional in every way.

  • @blinkakadu
    @blinkakadu 3 года назад +355

    I love his animation style

    • @itarry4
      @itarry4 3 года назад +18

      It's unbelievable isn't it? TV shows that do history should take notes. It makes it clear to understand and really entertaining. I honestly can't think of a better way to make videos to get such information across.

    • @Litovskyy
      @Litovskyy 3 года назад +4

      Yeah the animation is lit

    • @eggisfun4217
      @eggisfun4217 3 года назад

      same

    • @eggisfun4217
      @eggisfun4217 3 года назад

      i mean its a pretty strong reason i use this channel than others

  • @mule8064
    @mule8064 3 года назад +285

    French Military: *Is Retreating*
    German Military: *Teleports behind them*

    • @rainningstorm
      @rainningstorm 3 года назад +28

      But if they're retreating, shouldn't they be already behind them?

    • @mule8064
      @mule8064 3 года назад +16

      @@rainningstorm wow, you got me there.
      It does make the joke more comedic tho

    • @gyrozeppeli751
      @gyrozeppeli751 3 года назад +19

      germany: *nothing personal kid.*

    • @noone3272
      @noone3272 3 года назад +3

      @@gyrozeppeli751 ......but I gotta go all out on you

    • @kidd32888
      @kidd32888 3 года назад

      @@rainningstorm wow this makes perfect sense

  • @amogus67688
    @amogus67688 3 года назад +3

    The music from 19:11 to 19:34 is really good.

  • @robertbell8378
    @robertbell8378 2 года назад +11

    Dear Arm Chair Historian,
    I greatly commend you for this video, I high school I could find little on the full details in my high school and local libraries.
    This half hour video gives the viewer a strong basic understanding of this conflict.
    And the notes in your bibliography reinforces text to gain, yet a deeper understanding.
    I would suggest that you also make animated videos on how the German 🇩🇪 forces exploited the Loshiem Gap in 1914, 1940 and 1944.
    This would surely give you a larger following among students of military history, my friend's son is army jrotc in high school and follows your videos and even donated to your cause.
    When my unemployment finally clears, so will I, you do great work, it's engaging, very enjoyable and highly educational.
    Yes, I am a big fan of your work, as a Pennsylvanian, I enjoyed your bird's eye view of the battle of Gettysburg.
    In addition to your video on the public wars, I sincerely thank you for all your hard good work and I pray that I can get more involved soon!
    Sincerely
    Robert Bell

  • @arodv
    @arodv 3 года назад +292

    Really love this Era. Wish that there's a total war game abt this

    • @Armann_
      @Armann_ 3 года назад +18

      Probably enough war games already depicting Germans getting slaughtered. Enough with that stuff.

    • @matt47110815
      @matt47110815 3 года назад +8

      There is. Europa Universalis

    • @angeloluna529
      @angeloluna529 3 года назад +29

      They will never make a 1800s total war, they'll produce either fantasy warhammer or another ancient era game.

    • @leonrothier6638
      @leonrothier6638 3 года назад +23

      There’s Total War Shogun 2: Fall of the Samurai which takes place around this era

    • @angeloluna529
      @angeloluna529 3 года назад +13

      @@leonrothier6638 I already played it, I want total war empire 2

  • @2Links
    @2Links 3 года назад +229

    Remember watching your old video on the war, focusing on the Battle of Sedan. Glad to see you're revisiting the subject.

    • @TravelerZ24
      @TravelerZ24 3 года назад

      Pretty sure Bismarck's son was in the death charge

    • @luigidisanpietro3720
      @luigidisanpietro3720 3 года назад +2

      Such a great jump from the Old Artstyle to the New....

  • @Kalron9
    @Kalron9 Год назад +3

    I love that these videos are meant to be standalone pieces of information that can support themselves but if you watch some other videos of the same era, you start to see a much larger picture unfolding because some of the same events and people are intertwined and you can see how they affected the events of the video you're currently watching.

  • @a_Minion_of_Soros
    @a_Minion_of_Soros 3 года назад +2

    Amazing production quality. The artwork is just great!

  • @seancuevasmusician
    @seancuevasmusician 3 года назад +112

    What’s amazing is the evolution of this videos animation since the last Franco Prussian war video 3 years ago.

  • @MrMask-mw5fd
    @MrMask-mw5fd 3 года назад +121

    Loved the target poster on Napoleon’s horse

  • @alexandrorodriguez5289
    @alexandrorodriguez5289 3 года назад +2

    It is so cool to see how much this channel has evolved!! Congrats!

  • @jvsp3r39
    @jvsp3r39 3 года назад +12

    20:33 I think this is a nice moment in history to show that back then the enemies still had respect for each other and honor was still a thing people cared about

    • @Wuschel1990
      @Wuschel1990 3 года назад +3

      I believe helmuth von Moltke and his generals didn't even want to shell paris because they thought that it was inhuman.

    • @rebelfriend9006
      @rebelfriend9006 2 года назад +2

      @@Wuschel1990 I thought Bismarck didn’t want Paris to be shelled because Krupp cannons were to expensive

  • @pathosofmine
    @pathosofmine 3 года назад +114

    18:50 i like the detail where the rifleman had to reload a single round, considering needle rifles were single shot rifles

  • @brianboru2762
    @brianboru2762 3 года назад +349

    And then six years after his death, his only son died in a skirmish against the Zulus when he had been scouting with the British, everyone on both sides of the fighting was horrified when they realized what happened. The Zulu king swore he would never have been harmed if they had known who he was.
    Thankfully the original Napoleon had a lot of brothers so the family is still kicking.

    • @TehScareM8
      @TehScareM8 3 года назад +56

      His son is buried in my hometown in England, weird story

    • @Nixie_noobionlassie
      @Nixie_noobionlassie 10 месяцев назад +3

      this was napoleon III son right?

    • @leemarshall348
      @leemarshall348 9 месяцев назад

      @@Nixie_noobionlassieyes

    • @larryalvares1369
      @larryalvares1369 7 месяцев назад

      @@TehScareM8dang. Do people visit his grave?

    • @TehScareM8
      @TehScareM8 7 месяцев назад

      @@larryalvares1369 It's in a catholic monastery, I'm sure people do, will have to go and check it out at some point!

  • @MetDaan2912
    @MetDaan2912 3 года назад +3

    This video is so well made: beautiful animations and great information!

  • @Hugehugebighuge
    @Hugehugebighuge 2 года назад +2

    Loving the widescreen. It fits my phone ( one plus 8) so cinematically. You are a beast.

  • @dancingcow8640
    @dancingcow8640 3 года назад +255

    Poor napoleon the 3rd, couldn’t even have the dignity of dying among his men.

    • @emugaming8548
      @emugaming8548 3 года назад +58

      I honestly kind of feel bad for the guy. Living just enough to get roasted by all of Europe and not being remembered for winning the Crimean war. Ouch.

    • @presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889
      @presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889 3 года назад +18

      @@emugaming8548 I, too. As a young man he was persecuted by the Bourbons and Louis Philippe. Then, he became President and everybody was belittling him. Later, he became emperor and had a good life up to 1867. Then, the Mexican crisis, everybody started hating him. Fought a war provoked by the Germans and was humiliatingly captured. And after the war, the French Republic antagonizes him to get rid of their responsibilities of their defeat. That is the view of many modern historians.
      Napoleon wasn't 'the Great', but he wasn't 'the monkey' described in the past.

    • @ancientnumbat4631
      @ancientnumbat4631 3 года назад +2

      @@presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889 How did the Germans provoke the Franco-Prussian War?

    • @fahoodie1852
      @fahoodie1852 3 года назад +12

      @@ancientnumbat4631 it was with the ems telegram. There was a diplomatic standoff between the two countries, and the telegram was manipulated to make it look like the sides insulted one another. The French population went into uproar and declared war

    • @matcha1693
      @matcha1693 3 года назад +1

      @@fahoodie1852 It was a silly thing to declare war against Prussia outright without the French government consulting with its British and Italian military allies in order to make sure that all three countries would coordinate their military plans against Prussia.
      The smart thing to do would be for the French government to respond by issuing an extremely insulting ultimatum against Prussia , thereby forcing Prussia to declare war against France, and ensuring that Britain and Italy would honor their military alliance with France and join together with France in fighting the war against Prussia.
      Furthermore, issuing an extremely insulting ultimatum against Prussia instead of issuing an outright declaration of war against Prussia would have given the French government more time to get ready for war and to organize and mobilize the huge unwieldy French army.
      In the final analysis, France would have been guaranteed to win the war against Prussia because France and its British and Italian allies had 3 times the military power of Prussia and its German allies.
      Not to mention that Austria and Denmark would have been very keen to join a military coalition against Prussia, and to attack Prussia from the rear in order to obtain their revenge against the Prussian army.

  • @MoriorInvictus1453
    @MoriorInvictus1453 3 года назад +402

    Dear Griffin, will you please make a video about life in the German Empire? It's something I and surely many others have been looking forward to for a long time. Thanks in advance :)

    • @NordisktLejon
      @NordisktLejon 3 года назад +9

      Agreed.

    • @hamzamohamed9862
      @hamzamohamed9862 3 года назад +8

      y’all have the same avatar! :O

    • @eatathepizza4449
      @eatathepizza4449 3 года назад +2

      Ridiculously militaristic

    • @Jim-fi4dc
      @Jim-fi4dc 3 года назад +29

      @@eatathepizza4449 no lol. The German empire was propably the most prosperous country in that era.Arts and science thrived not only the military.

    • @eatathepizza4449
      @eatathepizza4449 3 года назад +10

      @@Jim-fi4dc Yeah , 47 noble prizes is cool for a short lived empire

  • @ardugaleen2231
    @ardugaleen2231 3 года назад +3

    19:39 the prise de bazeilles is a really bad ass story. Only handful of men held the Bavarian army while the rest were retreating. Those men did a last stand in a building and thought litteraly to ''la dernière cartouche'', to the last round, only surrendering after having killed as many bavarians as possible and having held as long as possible. It's sad that this war was a continuation of heroic stands made by the French military but all of those were in vain

  • @leonidasj406
    @leonidasj406 3 года назад +4

    That was a very good narration and description of the Franco-Prussian War. That conflict’s outcome marked the pinnacle of Prussia’s power and influence in Europe since its inception centuries earlier.

  • @Topst_er
    @Topst_er 3 года назад +170

    its always a good day when he uploads!

    • @cameronii5979
      @cameronii5979 3 года назад

      Very true

    • @Sigur114
      @Sigur114 3 года назад

      Yes.

    • @RK18771
      @RK18771 3 года назад

      Please dont assume gender!

    • @Topst_er
      @Topst_er 3 года назад +4

      @@RK18771 please get out of here? Its clearly a boy. he dont have his pronouns anywhere so go away. thank u!

    • @RK18771
      @RK18771 3 года назад

      @@Topst_er its a joke.

  • @wachtwoorden2
    @wachtwoorden2 3 года назад +146

    19:35 the meme guy "is this an order" had me dying hahaha

    • @julianspeckmaier4548
      @julianspeckmaier4548 3 года назад +20

      dont forget the "guess i'll die" guy!

    • @gyreil100
      @gyreil100 3 года назад +1

      @@julianspeckmaier4548 wait i just realized that

  • @TheAlaskaninja
    @TheAlaskaninja 3 года назад +7

    The Victoria 2 soundtrack is so good for this video!

  • @Crowbar6006
    @Crowbar6006 3 года назад +8

    I actually read a book about the entire Von Moltke bloodline from Teutonic Knights to Nazi Germany. Fascinating family. Book was called Blood and Iron.

  • @vonKraehe
    @vonKraehe 3 года назад +213

    27:19 I never thought that I would feel sorry for Napoleon III... Das rührt schon fast zu Tränen

    • @faithlesspancake4800
      @faithlesspancake4800 3 года назад +10

      Fast....

    • @fuhlvee5555
      @fuhlvee5555 3 года назад +11

      ​@@faithlesspancake4800 not a native german speaker, but in this case "schon fast" should mean almost

    • @dee3246
      @dee3246 3 года назад +4

      @@fuhlvee5555 yes!

    • @ArkadiBolschek
      @ArkadiBolschek 3 года назад +3

      Don't. The guy was a tyrant and a traitor to his country, and his ambitions too big for his boots. He got what he deserved, nothing more.

    • @faithlesspancake4800
      @faithlesspancake4800 3 года назад +1

      @@fuhlvee5555 i know

  • @DD-qw4fz
    @DD-qw4fz 3 года назад +392

    Napoleon the Third
    "third time is the charm"
    Germany
    Plays "drop it"

    • @AndrewGeierMelons
      @AndrewGeierMelons 3 года назад

      Third time is the charm... 3rd Republic, that is

    • @german_doggy7314
      @german_doggy7314 3 года назад +6

      Thirds time the charm?
      Ask the french or germans about that

    • @eddiejc1
      @eddiejc1 3 года назад +3

      It's really only the second time. Napoleon II was more along the lines of England's Edward V and France's Louis XVII----kings or emperors who were only so in name only.
      While obviously the 1870 war was a disaster, Louis Napoleon remained in power longer than his uncle, and he had a bigger impact on the architecture of Paris.

    • @mone3145
      @mone3145 3 года назад

      @Rafiquil Alam In 1806, France took Berlin in 19 days

  • @pictheboi
    @pictheboi Год назад +1

    You gotta love the small details in videos like these, like the balloon carrying Leon Gambetta away from Paris.

  • @themfwestcoast
    @themfwestcoast 3 года назад +1

    So well produced! Well done!

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 3 года назад +57

    the textbook definition of a quick decisive victory.

  • @Gray-Wolf
    @Gray-Wolf 3 года назад +70

    The map format in these videos could be a strategy game lol
    Edit: I like the use of Vic2 music

    • @eugenej.6331
      @eugenej.6331 3 года назад +4

      I smiled so fast when I heard the music!

    • @Gray-Wolf
      @Gray-Wolf 3 года назад

      @@eugenej.6331 ikr lol

    • @soldiersPL
      @soldiersPL 3 года назад +3

      Great thing to hear, puts you in proper imperialist mood

    • @Gray-Wolf
      @Gray-Wolf 3 года назад

      @@soldiersPL suddenly the British Empire turns into the "Bri ish Empai-uh"

  • @Kobrag90
    @Kobrag90 3 года назад

    Quality of this is amazing.

  • @skidrow8080
    @skidrow8080 3 года назад +4

    at 25:30 that is the french east army under general Bourbaki's commandment who were surrounded on the swiss border by german forces. The swiss let 87'000 french soldiers cross the border and took care of them. The picture here is the "Bourbaki Panorama", a huge painting of the event made by a swiss painter. We see swiss soldiers (in dark grey) disarming the french.

  • @kingofthesandbox7467
    @kingofthesandbox7467 3 года назад +47

    Now that balloon escaping Paris was a wonderful detail. During the seige French politician Léon Gambetta escaped the seige in such a balloon.

    • @omarbradley6807
      @omarbradley6807 3 года назад

      Let me guess. He never become popular after that!

    • @kingofthesandbox7467
      @kingofthesandbox7467 3 года назад +13

      @@omarbradley6807 Believe it or not but no he actually was very prominent in French politics until his death in 1882 from intestine and stomach cancer.

    • @omarbradley6807
      @omarbradley6807 3 года назад +1

      @@kingofthesandbox7467 Well yeah, prime minister, he was a flip-floper it seems, not so good taste by the third republic it seems.

  • @Big-boi92
    @Big-boi92 3 года назад +213

    Ahh yes the french greatest enemy
    Also THE FRENCH

    • @j.franklin21
      @j.franklin21 3 года назад +8

      The French are half Italian, Half German lol.
      More wars won than any nation.
      But they lost WW1 quickly, WW2 within a month, and of course this war, and Vietnam.

    • @fleauryanh528
      @fleauryanh528 3 года назад +32

      @@j.franklin21 Wtf are you talking about ? Are you okay ? France had won ww1. And french are not italians there are LATIN, that's realy different and they are more something like 40%latin 40%celtic(gaulish) and 20%german

    • @j.franklin21
      @j.franklin21 3 года назад +11

      @@fleauryanh528
      I'm fine lol.
      The French were whipped in WW1, the Allies had to save them. Same in WW2.
      I'm comparing France as a military power to Italy in WW2. Italy sucked, they were the weakest Axis power. France was the weakest Allied power.

    • @tomprelitz8067
      @tomprelitz8067 3 года назад +9

      @@fleauryanh528
      If the French are 40% Celtic then I'm a feathered bipedal.

    • @TheFrenchscot
      @TheFrenchscot 3 года назад +23

      @@j.franklin21 whipped in WW1? France basically did much of the fight on the western front and by far. Look at Verdun, the Marne or how the French saved the Commonwealth troops at the Somme. You have to be american to say that. Your education is known for well... basically suck.

  • @carlos.daniel.santmaria5477
    @carlos.daniel.santmaria5477 2 года назад

    The quality of this content never disapoints!!!

  • @MrARock001
    @MrARock001 Год назад +4

    It's fascinating to think about the fate of an empire collapsing due to "not having an army in the field." The personnel for the army exist all over the state, and the weapons are ubiquitous, and surely the requisite experienced commanders could even be found; but what collapsed was the recognition of the authority to command such an army: there was no one to whom each reserve or barracks or veterancy all agreed was worthy of command.

  • @SydTheAnt
    @SydTheAnt 3 года назад +123

    When he said, "Isn't it true that we weren't cowards at Sedan" i got freaking goosebumps

  • @SousouCell
    @SousouCell 3 года назад +22

    Most impressive part of this video :
    23:17 leon gambetta fleeing Paris in an air balloon..... goddamm precise..... love it

    • @massimomax3215
      @massimomax3215 3 года назад +1

      think about if the wind turned blowing towards german troops.. lmao

    • @SousouCell
      @SousouCell 3 года назад

      @@massimomax3215 hahahaha 🤣🤣🤣, thats a good one, never thought of it ......

  • @charlottebreckenridge659
    @charlottebreckenridge659 2 года назад

    thanks so much for this one. exactly the video I have wanted for ages.