Napoleon's Soldiers Used This Intense Musket Drill

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2025

Комментарии •

  • @survivehistory
    @survivehistory  9 месяцев назад +598

    If you enjoyed this Short, check out the full length episode and please consider supporting the channel at: ko-fi.com/survivehistory

  • @fletcharoo
    @fletcharoo Год назад +24674

    I admire his bravery to speak French without the accent
    Edit: for clarification, I mean without a French accent, he definitely has a British one.

    • @pedrojuan8050
      @pedrojuan8050 Год назад +1227

      He was a British spy in the 1800s, he had to be fluent and have no accent, hahaha.

    • @Liminal_Simulacre
      @Liminal_Simulacre Год назад +597

      There is a difference between having an english accent and not putting any effort at pronuncing words somewhat correctly.

    • @jack18over
      @jack18over Год назад +300

      I’d love to know where you guys get what you’re smoking from because you can hear he is trying to add a wee bit of accent, the second he over-does the French accent, the frogs would be up their own arses about it.

    • @sup3rgaming660
      @sup3rgaming660 Год назад +164

      @@jack18overu dont speak french do you? His accent isn't a french one at all. Mix between english accent and french canadian accent

    • @jack18over
      @jack18over Год назад

      @@sup3rgaming660 I didn’t say it was, it was an slight imitation of one however, anyone who would say otherwise is simply just a twat.

  • @sanjoynath7935
    @sanjoynath7935 Год назад +14718

    Now remember, switching to your melee is always faster than reloading.

    • @triplex3459
      @triplex3459 Год назад +357

      Switching to bayonet even faster 😂

    • @Jack.Fontaine
      @Jack.Fontaine Год назад +99

      Musketeer rapiers are beautiful

    • @MattLogan-s2f
      @MattLogan-s2f Год назад +44

      ​@@triplex3459duh melee is faster then bayonet, you can throw it to the enemy at a distance 🥴

    • @amirhaikal6672
      @amirhaikal6672 Год назад +21

      ​@@triplex3459that is only after it was already affixed.

    • @Sniper_shooter36
      @Sniper_shooter36 Год назад +10

      Bayonet the wa-or melon

  • @Clkr3
    @Clkr3 Год назад +11261

    Remember, switching to your baguette is faster than reloading

    • @not.inglish
      @not.inglish Год назад +114

      so many likes not even one comment so im here to claim the spot

    • @yukiomarco5288
      @yukiomarco5288 Год назад +61

      i shall claim my spot in history

    • @adamicb
      @adamicb Год назад +26

      @@yukiomarco5288i shall also claim my spot in history

    • @youenbodenan7295
      @youenbodenan7295 11 месяцев назад +18

      That's what the Austrians said at Austerlitz

    • @Raitiamedits
      @Raitiamedits 11 месяцев назад +3

      Switching to slippers always faster anything

  • @mrrandom1265
    @mrrandom1265 Год назад +387

    Fun fact: in French, "passer l'arme à gauche" (put the weapon on the left side) also means to die (like "kick the bucket" in English).

    • @alain9337
      @alain9337 Месяц назад +23

      The reason was because the soldier hold the gun in the left hand and had to stand up while loading the gun. It was a vulnerabilty.

    • @sheogorathprinceofmadness2223
      @sheogorathprinceofmadness2223 9 дней назад

      "Now, get ready to die."

  • @Joeyhiro
    @Joeyhiro Год назад +840

    The wife: I think he’s cheating on me…
    The Husband:

    • @Braian9887
      @Braian9887 7 месяцев назад +7

      Common joke

    • @AlphaSections
      @AlphaSections 6 месяцев назад +10

      @@Braian9887 But it's true!

    • @koala_guest_rbx8344
      @koala_guest_rbx8344 6 месяцев назад +15

      he is loyal to the emperor for sure

    • @manjuan9632
      @manjuan9632 5 месяцев назад +3

      Nah this is way more fun!

    • @LCPD335
      @LCPD335 3 месяца назад +4

      Vive'l empereur

  • @imam.pramono
    @imam.pramono Год назад +8477

    Now imagine doing this while your enemies just a few metres in front you doing the same thing...its terrifying and nerve racking...

    • @venus-tame8428
      @venus-tame8428 Год назад +483

      Why not just FIX BAYONETS

    • @sniperfity2327
      @sniperfity2327 Год назад +337

      @@venus-tame8428 the enemy probably would just do the same thing

    • @venus-tame8428
      @venus-tame8428 Год назад +164

      @@sniperfity2327 it would be a shorter battle than waiting a minute to charge ONE BULLER

    • @asbestos1502
      @asbestos1502 Год назад +454

      @@venus-tame8428 a bayonet charge requires strong, fit men that have high morale and generally outnumber the enemy. Around 20 seconds per shot when each volley causes a devastating effect on the enemy is well worth it

    • @tomthai7674
      @tomthai7674 Год назад +326

      repeating the drills is the only way to act without thinking in the battlefield.
      when you can't think properly, the body takes command and do what he only knows: the drill.

  • @laurentdevaux5617
    @laurentdevaux5617 Год назад +5061

    As a Frenchman, I'm amazed to see these English people wearing the uniforms and weapons of our imperial army, their "best ennemy", and in a very accurate way. I doubt that a Frenchman would agree to wear a British red uniform... But it seems Napoleon is still popular, even more popular than in France, in many countries that admire his military genius, in particular those who were our ennemies... Congratulations to these young lads !

    • @NotLeftarded1
      @NotLeftarded1 Год назад

      I'm a Frenchman in the Commonwealth and I still won't swear an oath to their crown. I remind them that they are red coat loyalist scum every chance I get. Worse still the Frenchman who participate in their political system and swear an oath to their crown. If you guess that I'm in Canada you are right and goddamn I hate Justin Trudeau.

    • @Aureus_
      @Aureus_ Год назад +113

      You are our greatest rivals

    • @laurentdevaux5617
      @laurentdevaux5617 Год назад +426

      @@Aureus_ We were, not we are. We are now allies, and it's a good thing. This little video is also for me an opportunity to greet and pay homage to all the British soldiers who fought by our side with such courage and gallantry during two world wars

    • @Aureus_
      @Aureus_ Год назад +167

      @@laurentdevaux5617 Indeed, I was merely referencing our immense century long history alongside each other. The French will always be our brothers-in-arms.

    • @laurentdevaux5617
      @laurentdevaux5617 Год назад +104

      @@Aureus_ Glad to read such words ! How could I disagree ? For sure, we fought each other many times, but when we think a little more about it, even if we often, by tradition, tease each other, we have so much in common. No matter some people may think, on both sides of the Channel...

  • @tonyz7216
    @tonyz7216 Год назад +2121

    Now you may understand why in French the gap in someones teeth is called 'dents du bonheur' literally 'teeth of happiness'. Gap in your teeth meant you may have the chance to escape from conscription as you would not be able to load your rifle.... This is what the legend says about this expression still in use to this day.

    • @mcmax571
      @mcmax571 Год назад +126

      There was always the artillery.

    • @thenewcatgirl2727
      @thenewcatgirl2727 Год назад +104

      @@mcmax571 you still need to be able to load and fire small arms....

    • @blackdynamite5560
      @blackdynamite5560 Год назад +52

      The French must have been trying to conscript lawyers if that worked.

    • @kutyaember
      @kutyaember Год назад +52

      He uses his canine teeth, not the front ones. Due to a mild abnormality I could not even try using my front teeth, yet I can rip packets open like that, too.

    • @goldeagle8051
      @goldeagle8051 Год назад +8

      Is that were it comes from? I've been wondering about that phrase!

  • @НикитаРозвод
    @НикитаРозвод Год назад +46

    I'm glad he is still with us 200+ years later

  • @xcaliber7779
    @xcaliber7779 Год назад +522

    If Napoleon's soldiers would see how we load and fire rifles now they will have a heart attack 😂

    • @roballister5269
      @roballister5269 Год назад +6

      lmao

    • @TarkovRaider7749
      @TarkovRaider7749 6 месяцев назад +45

      They're gonna fainted just by seeing the funny tube that volleys some big bombs that can rapid fires faster than how they load their cannons tbh

    • @VictorGomez-fy3no
      @VictorGomez-fy3no 5 месяцев назад +2

      Se hacia en bateria

    • @LCPD335
      @LCPD335 3 месяца назад +5

      They Will be amazed

    • @andrewg.carvill4596
      @andrewg.carvill4596 2 месяца назад +3

      Their hearts would go ratatatatatat......

  • @teleee12
    @teleee12 Год назад +3456

    Imagine saying baguette in the middle of a battle without laughing

    • @Dapur-0073
      @Dapur-0073 Год назад +107

      Unless they know the secret of the baguette!

    • @czolgistta
      @czolgistta Год назад +111

      You know... I can imagine myself not laughing saying/hearing that during a bloody battle.

    • @clemsondriver9214
      @clemsondriver9214 Год назад +186

      I like how in the middle of this technical explanation he explains "baguette means stick" because he kneeeew what we were all thinking lol.

    • @WadesTru1
      @WadesTru1 Год назад +39

      ​@@czolgisttau must be fun at war

    • @theguybehindyou4762
      @theguybehindyou4762 Год назад +102

      "Baguette!"
      (Crams literal baguette into rifle)
      "I found the english spy!"

  • @CountSwann
    @CountSwann Год назад +261

    I went to school with this guy! Be knows his stuff! Great to see you again mate!

  • @Rainbing
    @Rainbing Год назад +241

    BRO MY SCHOOL USED THIS IN ONE OF OUR CLASSES TODAY

  • @oliverfreitas8593
    @oliverfreitas8593 11 месяцев назад +152

    *WE MAKING OUT SAN SEBASTIAN WHIT THIS ONE!!!!!*

  • @Azkaazief
    @Azkaazief 10 месяцев назад +77

    Guts and blackpowder begginer guide belike:

  • @AlephTroll
    @AlephTroll Год назад +188

    I doubt Britain in 1814 knew that they’d have the largest number of napoleon diehard fans and re-enacters

    • @Rafjol
      @Rafjol Год назад +46

      Actually, Napoleon was extremely popular among the English population. He petitioned to be exiled in England, but the British government back then feared he would rally the English population around him.

    • @amh9494
      @amh9494 Год назад +23

      ​@@Rafjol it was only after defeat that be l he became more universally admired previously it was mainly radicals that idolised him.

    • @cariboubearmalachy1174
      @cariboubearmalachy1174 Год назад

      Just like how the South made up for the fact they had fewer soldiers in the Civil War by producing way, way more re-enactors in subsequent generations.

    • @ramseydoon8277
      @ramseydoon8277 5 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@Rafjol"napoleon was extremely popular among the British population"
      Do you have a source to cite for that, by any chance?

    • @UsuallyTrolling
      @UsuallyTrolling 3 месяца назад +6

      @@ramseydoon8277 They were only at war because Napoleon tipped the balance of power in Europe, a threat to monarchism and British naval power not because they didn't like him.

  • @vanguardactual1
    @vanguardactual1 Год назад +255

    What's amazing is I've been reenacting the American Civil War since 1991 when I turned 16. I understood every loading term even in French. America basically copied the Napoleonic tactics and procedures because at the beginning of our Civil War we were still using linear tactics and fighting. In our drill it's called " Load in 9 times" or moves I suppose.

    • @rustomkanishka
      @rustomkanishka Год назад +12

      Not an American here, so my knowledge is sparse.
      I heard somewhere that the US civil war was much deadlier than previous conflicts because rifles used on both sides were way more accurate as compared to the US war of independence.
      How did the Napoleonic rifles fare against the civil war era rifles?

    • @Frost73268
      @Frost73268 Год назад +41

      ​​@@rustomkanishkaInfantry weapons had significantly been improved on from the end of the Napoleonic Wars to the beginning of the American Civil War. A majority of the Union Army were equipped with Rifles instead of muskets, which in turn were significantly more accurate, increased range and faster to reload and even more deadly as they fired the Minie Ball invented some time before. Most Generals fighting in the American Civil War were taught Napoleonic Era strategy at West Point. You can see many examples of this throughout the war when you have units engaging in a line battle many times there'll be regiments suffering 50-60% casualties. You have technology surpassing strategy, and at the end of the Civil War you see more trenches and siege warfare.

    • @TheSMR1969
      @TheSMR1969 Год назад +5

      ​@@rustomkanishkacivil war was proto modern warfare with the Boer war being first

    • @jackhaugh
      @jackhaugh Год назад +9

      @@Frost73268I agree entirely with what you’re saying, but the vast majority of people that died in the US Civil War died from dysentery; not combat wounds, much like every other war in history before hand.
      What did come out of the US Civil War; due to the use of the Minnie ball was a quantum leap in medical interventions such as the use of a field ambulance, ether (believe it or not, but most surgical patients received ether, unless they ran out…), proper sanitation, and a VAST increase in the number of amputations preformed.
      The expanding Minnie ball caused such catastrophic wounds, that it often led to patients having limbs amputated because there was no surgical intervention previously to treat such wounds. This led to expanding bullets being outlawed in warfare eventually by the Geneva Convention.

    • @NewGuy-w9m
      @NewGuy-w9m Год назад +1

      Hey, if it works, it works!

  • @FeeZ_FZ
    @FeeZ_FZ 10 месяцев назад +18

    Now imagine having to fight off a horde of zombie with this one...

    • @VadimShy
      @VadimShy 2 месяца назад +1

      well i think that there may be lumbago bonus because of power

    • @entertoby6698
      @entertoby6698 2 месяца назад

      In that case, it would be more effective to use the rifle like a club

  • @Rh1tro
    @Rh1tro 8 дней назад +4

    he is ready for zombie apocalypse

  • @BULLMOOSE_1901
    @BULLMOOSE_1901 Год назад +26

    Important to remember that this is by the numbers training. In combat soldiers would have been given commands to prime and load “obviously in french” and then fire. This breaking down of the loading process was a way to train soldiers and was very effective at training. On the field of battle soldiers are discharging their weapons between 3 to 4 times a minute. Great video but important distinction.

    • @Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry
      @Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry Год назад

      I think you've watched too many episodes of "Sharpe". What you are describing might be true in a melee, but before that point in a battle soldiers were expected to remain tightly disciplined, and the heavier the enemy fire, the greater the need to maintain that discipline. The practice of "forming square" is one example of when uniformity of movement would be essential, as each rank of the square needed to fire in unison to achieve maximum effect. Maintaining the integrity of the square was necessary to provide protection from cavalry, and immediately obeying officer or NCO orders to maneuver the square or redirect its fire could make the difference between victory or defeat. It only became a melee if one or the other line broke, and the intact line was ordered to rush the weakened enemy. As a rule, you only loaded and fired your weapon when ordered to do so, and only fired at your own discretion if given the order to fire at will, or if all officers or NCO's were dead or severely wounded.

    • @TrinityCore60
      @TrinityCore60 Год назад +1

      3 or 4? That’s an impressive rate of fire for a Napoleonic muzzle-loader. These guys must’ve been badasses.

    • @Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry
      @Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry Год назад +1

      @@TrinityCore60 That idea is taken directly from the UK tv series, "Sharpe", set during the Napoleonic era. Tons of clips on YT. Great entertainment, but not necessarily good history.

    • @Dolritto
      @Dolritto 2 месяца назад

      Do they took the ramrod out and put it back every single time? Feels like a waste of time

    • @Nikolapoleon
      @Nikolapoleon 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry Not even close to true.
      It comes from Prussian, British, Austrian and American training manuals, in addition to reports from commanding officers of the period. It was perhaps optimistic, in the sense that men trained to fire 3 or 4 shots a minute on a training ground rather than on a battlefield (obviously) but it was still the consensus that this is what men should be able to do, even to the point that it informed, at least in part, the breakdown of the military structure.
      Prussian officers report, for instance, that men grouped into a line by regiment are instructed to fire by companies, that is, one company after another. In this manner something like a continuous fire can be retained. 8 companies in a regiment firing 4 shots a minute means that one company is firing along the line every 2 seconds.

  • @manu_spawn
    @manu_spawn Год назад +1329

    Bro, you deserve to be in the Napoleon movie.
    Edit: Ah, such a dissapointment of a movie :( but the commentary was in good faith.

    • @pog428
      @pog428 Год назад +51

      The worst movie I've seen in a long time

    • @lemon__j
      @lemon__j Год назад +19

      @@pog428I was excited about it but now I've decided not to go and see it. I just get a sense it's not that good.

    • @dazednotconfused1503
      @dazednotconfused1503 Год назад +25

      @@lemon__jI’m a big history buff and I was a bit disappointed in the actual story of Napoleon but it has great battle scenes

    • @Arnor2207
      @Arnor2207 Год назад

      nah, this movie sucks balls. Watch the other films about napoleon (the french and russian ones) they're much better

    • @Redactedredacted5837
      @Redactedredacted5837 Год назад +15

      @@dazednotconfused1503 I agree. They were great fun but they were far from historically accurate.

  • @Alexkabron
    @Alexkabron 4 месяца назад +11

    G&b when they see bomber:

  • @JohnDoe-di2rt
    @JohnDoe-di2rt Год назад +18

    "How much recoil do you want for these blank loads?"
    "No"

    • @cattledog901
      @cattledog901 Год назад +4

      🇫🇷TIREZ LA BAGUETTE 🥖💥🔫🔥🇫🇷

  • @Dexim77
    @Dexim77 Месяц назад +5

    Guts and blackpowder lore:

  • @johnbamba3052
    @johnbamba3052 Месяц назад +2

    Imagine there's a zombie apocalypse and this is the only weapon you have. 😂

  • @phisit8813
    @phisit8813 Год назад +21

    Give this soldier la baguette!! 🥖

  • @mystery1266
    @mystery1266 Год назад +1698

    So that's why my French soldiers in Total War Napoleon keep talking about bread
    Edit: this is the most likes of gotten on a comment thx

    • @WarPigstheHun
      @WarPigstheHun Год назад +55

      Oí oí baguette

    • @Takero-Sc
      @Takero-Sc Год назад +4

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Arnor2207
      @Arnor2207 Год назад +22

      honhon

    • @nathanpont3831
      @nathanpont3831 Год назад

      Omelette Du Fromage@@WarPigstheHun

    • @VeryCreative-wu5kr
      @VeryCreative-wu5kr Год назад +45

      Bru same I heard baguette like hundreds of times in the desert of Egypt and thinking how they still have them

  • @최민태-d5c
    @최민태-d5c Год назад +3

    So they DID fight with baguettes

  • @RKNGL
    @RKNGL 11 месяцев назад +3

    You’re seriously telling me French troops would say Au jos and Baguette in combat. Napoleonic era memes must’ve been strong to last this long.

  • @sovannareachLee
    @sovannareachLee 7 месяцев назад +16

    Normal guts and blackpowder reloading be like

  • @Wowaniac
    @Wowaniac Год назад +7

    "this is the only time you look down"
    proceeds to look down a second time

  • @rickcharon1197
    @rickcharon1197 Год назад +192

    As a Frenchman, I am honored to see a British man wearing the uniform of the French empire and to say the orders in French. Long live you, dear neighbors

    • @EmperorDionx
      @EmperorDionx Год назад +3

      Dear neighbors? Good lord no wonder napoleon lost.

    • @rickcharon1197
      @rickcharon1197 Год назад +21

      @@EmperorDionx Times change and some people too. Aren't you ?

    • @alexanderwarren1785
      @alexanderwarren1785 Год назад +8

      Merci mon amis, Vive la France!

    • @aaronmarks9366
      @aaronmarks9366 Год назад +3

      I mean, a huge percentage of English words come from French, and between the 11th and 15th centuries the dynasties of the two countries were all tangled together. The relationship is a deep one, even when it's been hostile.

    • @Blermie1794
      @Blermie1794 Год назад

      Napoléon: we're neighors??? Nay! To arms, friends!

  • @appendixpower5538
    @appendixpower5538 Год назад +106

    What we could have had in the Napoleon movie instead of what we got....

    • @terminal8
      @terminal8 Год назад +3

      Would have been like veggie tales but with bread

    • @soemin9894
      @soemin9894 Год назад +3

      There's nothing we can do.
      *music start playing

    • @abdul-kabiralegbe5660
      @abdul-kabiralegbe5660 Год назад +3

      Oh come on, that battle by the icy lake was a glorious scene.

    • @appendixpower5538
      @appendixpower5538 Год назад +10

      @@abdul-kabiralegbe5660 it reduced austerlitz, Napoleons masterpiece, to "everyond gets into one huge melee, haha i hid cannon to break the ice". Never once did this movie show off Napoleons tactical genius.

    • @abdul-kabiralegbe5660
      @abdul-kabiralegbe5660 Год назад +1

      @@appendixpower5538 So you're not happy about the historical inaccuracies. I get that.

  • @jrdoge1503
    @jrdoge1503 2 месяца назад +3

    "Shoot The Barrel!"
    "Help us They're coming"

  • @BOXTEN_IS_BOXY_BOO
    @BOXTEN_IS_BOXY_BOO 4 месяца назад +22

    "Shoot the one with the barrel" ahh outfit😭😭💀💀💀💀

  • @theflyingdutchman724
    @theflyingdutchman724 Год назад +70

    Bro spawned too late💀

  • @pasty6179
    @pasty6179 10 месяцев назад +5

    As a french, im really proud that this man putted efforts on learning our shotcalls and maked a true napoleonian uniform

  • @ghostass422
    @ghostass422 Год назад +56

    Imagine being on the battlefield fighting Napoleon army knowing just enough of french to know baguette is a type of bread and you get gunned down by french troops, that for all you know are talking about sandwiches they are gonna eat after they kill you

  • @wozn7195
    @wozn7195 Год назад +68

    Imagine getting shot somewhere during that reload and your last word literally being Baguette 😬

    • @theguybehindyou4762
      @theguybehindyou4762 Год назад +11

      That carries the same energy as Marines fixing bayonets and being told, "If you french fry when you're supposed to pizza, you will not have a good time!" just before a shell blows them all up.

    • @hititmanify
      @hititmanify 8 месяцев назад +1

      Prepare the hamburger! Ketchup!!!

  • @samabedin786
    @samabedin786 Год назад +4

    Absolutely Brilliant! Best Army of its Era and one of the Greatest Armies ever! Always outmanned and outgunned- they still won almost all their battles! Vive La France 🇫🇷✌️❤️

    • @johncorrall1739
      @johncorrall1739 Месяц назад +1

      Frenchmen of this period were the absolute toughest of men.

  • @FangTheManokit
    @FangTheManokit 7 месяцев назад +100

    Instructions unclear, mauled by runners.

  • @dga8371
    @dga8371 Год назад +42

    Not only "joue" which means cheek, but rather "en joue" (put your rifle next to your cheek).

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland 11 месяцев назад +1

      Ah, now I know what the French were shouting during the first skirmish in 'Barry Lyndon (1975).'

    • @JohnnyJSmith584
      @JohnnyJSmith584 11 месяцев назад +2

      ⁠Apprêtez armes!!!
      En joue!!!
      FEU!!!

    • @mixdiver12
      @mixdiver12 6 месяцев назад

      @@JohnnyJSmith584yep or as brits would say. Make ready! Aim! fire!

    • @JohnnyJSmith584
      @JohnnyJSmith584 6 месяцев назад

      @@mixdiver12 I believe the Brits would say “Present!” instead of “Aim”, “Aim/ Take aim” is American.

  • @Mr_MonkeyMan69
    @Mr_MonkeyMan69 8 месяцев назад +45

    "Guts and Blackpowder" Moment

    • @xand-er5625
      @xand-er5625 6 месяцев назад +4

      Hes gutting his blackpowder

    • @peko7553
      @peko7553 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@xand-er5625 and he's pulling his guts out

  • @Red_poet971
    @Red_poet971 13 дней назад +2

    Bro immediately surrenders afterwards

  • @samukaze5810
    @samukaze5810 Месяц назад +2

    Guts & Blackpowder is so popular they are re-enacting it in real life!

  • @audiblecult7528
    @audiblecult7528 Год назад +13

    That French is brutal

    • @dyflin3246
      @dyflin3246 Месяц назад

      What do you expect? He's not a native speaker, people speak English horribly and with accents all the time, we don't give them shit for it.

  • @BlazeGamerX1
    @BlazeGamerX1 2 месяца назад +3

    nah bros playing guts and black powder

  • @VPE_BADLANDERS
    @VPE_BADLANDERS Месяц назад +3

    Guts and blackpowder player come out😂

  • @Jhelopohi_PH
    @Jhelopohi_PH 2 месяца назад +2

    50% history
    50% guts & blackpowder gameplay

  • @calango_bombado
    @calango_bombado Месяц назад +3

    Guts and blackgunpowder live action

  • @MariaMartinez-researcher
    @MariaMartinez-researcher Год назад +8

    I highly recommend the book Swords Around a Throne: Napoleon's Grande Armée, by Col. John R. Elting. There are detailed descriptions of what Napoleonic soldiers did and how they lived. Curious detail: sometimes, amidst the tension of a battle, soldiers forgot to take the baguette out from the gun - and when they shot, they shot the bullet *and the baguette!* This was awful, as they were left without the essential tool to shoot; the best they could do was to hit the ground with the loaded gun and hope the powder compacted that way.
    Once, in a city (in Germany, I think) that was at peace, soldiers made an exhibition which included firing some blanks. One soldier forgot to take the baguette out, shot it - and killed an important official of the city with it.
    Those things were dangerous.

    • @HistoryOnTheLoose
      @HistoryOnTheLoose Год назад +2

      Seating a charge without the ramrod IS possible, but only within the first shot or two. Black powder leaves incredible fouling and residue that quickly builds up in the barrel. This makes the bore narrower. Slamming a load is highly inadvisable, as any gaps in the breech area could be calamitous upon discharge.
      The video claims around two tamps with the ramrod are enough to seat a load. In 40 years of shooting and 20+ of those as an instructor, that was a fraction of the required tamps to seat a live round. He refers to blanks, which require no tamping and can be poured in and fired loose.
      Many battle reenactments require that ramrods not be used to avoid leaving them as projectiles.

    • @filipemellomattos4057
      @filipemellomattos4057 Месяц назад

      Perigoso é um soldado distraído

  • @靳舰
    @靳舰 7 месяцев назад +37

    average g&b musket reload time

  • @not_me_isnot_cool
    @not_me_isnot_cool 8 дней назад +3

    blood things this is guts and blackpowder

  • @Zubb_Yightlear.
    @Zubb_Yightlear. Год назад +1

    The fact the French actually said Le baguette before shooting someone is the funniest thing I’ve learned in years.

  • @Hardrada88
    @Hardrada88 Год назад +2

    Well done! This lad knows his stuff. Good show and nicely performed

  • @shykj8892
    @shykj8892 Год назад +14

    Napoleon would've loved to see this

  • @alexandrebardin8444
    @alexandrebardin8444 Год назад +5

    Just one nitpick, baguette means wand, bâton means stick

  • @DerekJeeter-sp8du
    @DerekJeeter-sp8du Год назад +6

    All while being shot at and seeing people in the front line getting shot to death…

  • @HunterDev-tehepikguest
    @HunterDev-tehepikguest 11 месяцев назад +1

    It sounds like he said “LOAD THE BAGUETTE”

  • @ImperialCitizenn
    @ImperialCitizenn Месяц назад +1

    Remember switching to your baguette is faster than reloading

  • @chongching6462
    @chongching6462 6 месяцев назад +5

    TUTORIAL BEFORE TRIP TO SAN SEBESTIAN🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @duckz236
    @duckz236 Год назад +10

    "What makes a good soldier, Sharpe?"
    "The ability to fire three rounds a minute in any weather, Sir"

    • @Flangel66
      @Flangel66 Год назад

      There it is! I was looking for this comment.

  • @matdens
    @matdens Год назад +14

    Living in Waterloo, il like watching this kind of stuff.

    • @abdul-kabiralegbe5660
      @abdul-kabiralegbe5660 Год назад +3

      I bet "you've met your Waterloo" is a common joke there. 😂😂

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull Год назад +1

      ABBA's 1973 Eurovision Song Contest winner "Waterloo" must make you sigh then! 😁

  • @Ashursardan
    @Ashursardan 3 месяца назад

    This is the coolest and most interesting channel since the inception of the internet.

  • @davidducouret791
    @davidducouret791 Год назад +1

    Nice to see quality content

  • @yellowhazeproductions
    @yellowhazeproductions 8 месяцев назад +4

    egypt: get out of our country
    france:

  • @sticy5399
    @sticy5399 Год назад +16

    Great video!

  • @KornPop96
    @KornPop96 Год назад +28

    You should show us how to march 70 miles in 2 days and then fight.

    • @olivierpujol8772
      @olivierpujol8772 Год назад +13

      From what I know they made it in 36 hours or something close to that. Absolute madness.

    • @KornPop96
      @KornPop96 Год назад +9

      @@olivierpujol8772 those guys were made of sterner stuff as Shakespeare would say.

    • @olivierpujol8772
      @olivierpujol8772 Год назад +11

      @@KornPop96 I think it just shows how much humans are capable of adapting to their circonstances. It's nice to read such feat in history and find inspiration in them.

  • @GorgeousGeorge056
    @GorgeousGeorge056 Год назад

    Glad to see your still active Marshall, post covid.

  • @Njordin2010
    @Njordin2010 Год назад +1

    As a german i clicked and immeadiately wanted to write a silly baguette croissant joke. Then you really said baguette first. I feel betrayed :(

  • @comettamer
    @comettamer Год назад +6

    This may explain where the Union Army derived some of their musket drill tactics from. The motions and terminology are quite similar.

  • @Henrique-xg8pk
    @Henrique-xg8pk 2 месяца назад +4

    Guts and blackponder reference

  • @flavypy9477
    @flavypy9477 Год назад +73

    Evrything is perfect 👍.
    Pro tip : (baguette dont mean stick, it's a word we use for something thin.) You were really close by saying "stick". As a french I Can Say you have an excelent french.
    I love your uniform and your musket, it's so cool to have.

    • @GabrielChamblin
      @GabrielChamblin Год назад +1

      Baton🫱🏼‍🫲🏻

    • @Orignal_Français
      @Orignal_Français Год назад +5

      well, "drum sticks" are baguettes in french too ahah

    • @flavypy9477
      @flavypy9477 Год назад +4

      @@Orignal_Français yes that's not false

    • @christiank1251
      @christiank1251 Год назад +1

      I love it when the conductor of an orchestra is introduced by saying "à la baguette: ... "
      (intrusive images about to spoil the experience)

    • @laurentdevaux5617
      @laurentdevaux5617 Год назад +1

      Here "baguette" means rod

  • @aragorn767
    @aragorn767 Год назад +1

    There's quite a lot of references to bread for a military drill. Must be nearly lunch.

  • @Legos4Musketeers
    @Legos4Musketeers Месяц назад +1

    "Ramettez la baguette"
    That one person who doesn't understand french: "Ram the baguette?" *Eats the baguette from his bag*

  • @marlonbryanmunoznunez3179
    @marlonbryanmunoznunez3179 Год назад +113

    Fantastic!
    I would love to see this same film but with a more open angle, to see your whole uniform including the rest of your pants and feet. As a painter I can tell you, that you look very pictorial in some frames, excellent reference for an oil painting!

  • @GizmoDuck_1860
    @GizmoDuck_1860 Год назад +22

    Thank you for not permeating this "Spitting ball" myth that Bernard Bloody Cornwall started. Always good to see the French side, though I still don't get the whole French Column tactic.

    • @Rusty_Gold85
      @Rusty_Gold85 Год назад +3

      Maximum amount of men , as fast as possible while grouped together with a lot less training or the chance to rout ?

    • @GizmoDuck_1860
      @GizmoDuck_1860 Год назад

      @@Rusty_Gold85 Fair, but what do you do once you actually get to the enemy's firing line?

    • @Uhtredskaer
      @Uhtredskaer Год назад +7

      ​@@GizmoDuck_1860the idea is that you don't. Formations very very rarely made bayonet contact. Imagine you're in a line 2-3 ranks deep and suddenly there's thousands of men coming straight towards you, bayonets fixed. You look behind you and there's open fields. You're not likely to stick around!

    • @GizmoDuck_1860
      @GizmoDuck_1860 Год назад +4

      @@Uhtredskaer I mean, the British stuck around and just blasted the columns to pieces, but I get your point. 👍

    • @nolancummings9590
      @nolancummings9590 Год назад

      @@GizmoDuck_1860well, if the enemy is British. You lose

  • @IspeakSnow
    @IspeakSnow Год назад +7

    I love that uniform❤️

  • @agammuhajir2902
    @agammuhajir2902 Месяц назад +1

    Today I learned "Baguette" means stick.

    • @arnoldhell8466
      @arnoldhell8466 Месяц назад

      Une baguette is a thin stick .Stick is baton

  • @Pratt_
    @Pratt_ 4 месяца назад

    As a French, congratualtion on your pronunciation, very clear and understandable, which with not easy giving how different our pronunciation and accent is, well done !
    And great demonstration of course.

    • @Utoobeedoo
      @Utoobeedoo Месяц назад

      Since you're French, I just want to ask, would they really give the order to fire with "Feu!", or would they have said "Tirez!"? Merci

  • @Novabunny_
    @Novabunny_ Год назад +9

    Remember lads, always keep a good musket at home for defense.
    Just as the founding fathers intended 🇺🇸🦅

  • @Lrac011
    @Lrac011 Год назад +5

    I would have gotten so many kills if i were serving in the grande armee💀

  • @kevintaylor5715
    @kevintaylor5715 Год назад +3

    Now remember, switching to your baguette is faster than reloading.

  • @itsmrbigsmoke862
    @itsmrbigsmoke862 Год назад +1

    All fun and games until your boy brings the wrong type of baguette

  • @gregstewart5081
    @gregstewart5081 Год назад +1

    I always thought it was interesting they stood facing each other instead of hiding while the other guys shoot

  • @itchytastyurr
    @itchytastyurr Год назад +5

    BREAD, FIRE!

  • @TheArklyte
    @TheArklyte Год назад +3

    Now imagine for a second that Napoleonic Wars happened a decade later. Suddenly one of the sides could have had Hall rifles or some other type of rifled breechloaders. Maybe even Pauly/Prelat primer cap and cartridge experiments would have led somewhere. Idk if Europe was lucky or unlucky that firearms revolution of 19th century started after Napoleonic Wars.

  • @cnkaiser1
    @cnkaiser1 5 месяцев назад +6

    Very effective against zombies can confirm 👍

  • @EchosTackyTiki
    @EchosTackyTiki Месяц назад +1

    There are French professors out there bringing about the fact that the Englishman didn't even attempt the accent.

  • @Quincy_Morris
    @Quincy_Morris Месяц назад

    The musket was essentially a magic wand that could cast an instant death spell every 15-20 seconds.
    Thousands of people armed with these and you see why they were so devastating and changed war forever.

  • @xand-er5625
    @xand-er5625 6 месяцев назад +5

    At that point bro wouldve been grabbed by either a shambler or a runner😭

  • @leifewald5117
    @leifewald5117 Год назад +4

    Demonstrating how to load and fire a French musket?
    Now thats soldiering…

  • @HenryEditz814
    @HenryEditz814 17 дней назад +2

    Guts and blackpowder training video:

  • @protonjones54
    @protonjones54 2 месяца назад +1

    "Intense musket drill"

  • @franktielemans6624
    @franktielemans6624 Месяц назад

    And while the bombs and bullets were flying around your ears, you had to perform all those complicated actions.

  • @dewoitined5207
    @dewoitined5207 Год назад +5

    Félicitations pour votre français 😉🇫🇷

  • @leme_1
    @leme_1 Год назад +22

    Blud & iron new Update

  • @YapsiePresents
    @YapsiePresents Год назад +1

    Can't imagine how many frenchmen were shouting baguette in the napoleonic wars

  • @CharlesMuller-b7z
    @CharlesMuller-b7z 3 месяца назад +1

    And then your enemy is further than 50 yards away and you miss.

    • @HonoredOne167
      @HonoredOne167 3 месяца назад

      yeah thats why they have an army for that genius