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Historical Method Man
Historical Method Man
Historical Method Man
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Anyone interested in original historical research will adore this channel.
All videos are captioned for those hard of hearing.

Your source for analytical history on RU-vid. I make episodes on historical subjects that are meant to be insightful and provocative. I make mini-documentaries, often in a video-essay style.

Viewers can find historical research from someone with a background in the historical method. As a historian, Historical Method Man studies Transnational, Global, and World History. He has studied extensively the history of Animatronics, the Cold War, Decolonization, History of Ideas, Orientalism, Modern Japan, the Vietnam Wars, the Industrial Revolution, Museum Studies, Nationalism and Empire, Scientific Racism, Social Darwinism, Labor History, Economic History, Ottoman History, African History, Medieval History, Urban History, and New York City History.
How the Arabic Language Works
5:00
Месяц назад
Fulbright Student Research Abroad in Morocco
4:15
9 месяцев назад
Untold Moroccan Earthquake Poem from 1960
6:15
9 месяцев назад
Animatronics, Theme Parks, & Race
1:13:35
Год назад
Frankenstein in Baghdad
10:05
Год назад
Комментарии
@LEMJAD-w4k
@LEMJAD-w4k 21 день назад
قناة اللغة والادب تتمنى لكم النجاح والاستمراريرية وهذا احلا لايك واشتراك تشجيعا لكم
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 21 день назад
‏شكرا جزيلا ‏يا صديقي! ‏نحن فرحان جداً لأن أنت وزرتنا
@Vancha112
@Vancha112 25 дней назад
Agreed with the lack of resources. Thanks for trying to make a change!
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 25 дней назад
Yeah, I found that. Very frustrating when I was first learning Arabic, especially when the “standard” of Al-kitaab did not align with other resources, not even factoring in the dialects. My dream job is to become a history professor, but I think if I can teach Arabic, then I will be more employable, so I’m practicing that now
@MarkyNomad
@MarkyNomad 26 дней назад
Best resource to learn Arabic in your opinion? I speak lower-intermediate Swahili and fluent Spanish and noticed how much Arabic existed in these languages and think they can compliment each other
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 25 дней назад
Hey @MarkyNomad, Nice of you to drop by. Arabic and Swahili are closely related, especially because of the Omani empire and historical Indian Ocean trade. The first resource that I'd recommend is the textbook/workbook called Alif Baa: Introduction to Arabic Letters and Sounds. www.amazon.com/Alif-Baa-Introduction-Arabic-Letters/dp/1589016327 The alphabet is the first place to start, as the grammar is in the letters. Be well, Reese
@Rhythm412
@Rhythm412 Месяц назад
Hi friend! You're Arabic is good as a foreigner. Can you suggest some tips to learn to read Arabic script fast?
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
Hey, I personally believe that reading is the hardest skill in Arabic, especially to read quickly I have much trouble with. My advice is to start the workbook Alif Baa (third edition) and do all the exercises within it
@Rhythm412
@Rhythm412 Месяц назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan ohh ok. Thanks for replying
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
My advice for reading is different whether you’re at the word level, sentence level, or paragraph level. For the word level, Alif Baa is the best place to look. On the sentence and paragraph levels, I recommend finding collections online of short stories for children.
@Rhythm412
@Rhythm412 28 дней назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan how and why did you learn Arabic isn't it so hard so many exceptions, complicated script and such a big vocabulary! How did you memorize it all???
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 27 дней назад
Little by little. I've been in the game for about three years.
@rhollister9029
@rhollister9029 Месяц назад
It would be cool if you also talked about the Haraket vowel markings
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 25 дней назад
Perhaps in a 101 series we could chef something up to talk about the haraket
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
ريس راك واعر
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
لا أفهم oops
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan you are wow
@Am-merengue
@Am-merengue День назад
It’s a North African Arabic dialect
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
هاي هاي هاي هاي هاي
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
Hay hay hay hay hay
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan 😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
Allez ssi Yassine
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 25 дней назад
We love Yassine!
@axelsylvian
@axelsylvian Месяц назад
vibes
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 25 дней назад
The vibes are immaculate
@clovispadilha3237
@clovispadilha3237 2 месяца назад
5:38 what series/movie/whatever is that?
@benlouloumuhammadamine2237
@benlouloumuhammadamine2237 2 месяца назад
The film has a deep impact in anti-colonialism
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 25 дней назад
Absolutely!
@CULLIVISION
@CULLIVISION 3 месяца назад
Yooo what a fresh cut
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 25 дней назад
Bless!
@rachid_ColdPoison
@rachid_ColdPoison 3 месяца назад
Best luck my friend Reese ! Rachid Bayt Alice
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 25 дней назад
Thanks Rachid, a pleasure to know you!
@brightroarttttbbbb
@brightroarttttbbbb 3 месяца назад
The future will be shaped by the existence of Africa because the population is dynamic and its cultural structure and religious feelings are strong.
@williamparkinson9853
@williamparkinson9853 3 месяца назад
hey method man finishing history homework you really helped probably would have failed with out this
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 3 месяца назад
Glad to be of service!
@luxiest
@luxiest 3 месяца назад
thank you for this video <33
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 3 месяца назад
Thank you for watching!
@user-ey6oi4xw8r
@user-ey6oi4xw8r 3 месяца назад
Industrialisation is not the Industrial Revolution. Industrialization has been in existence for 2000 years or more, and has gradually been increasing over time with the development of science and knowledge. The Industrial Revolution was a leap in Industrialisation which occurred after James Watt's Invention of the first PRACTICAL Steam Engine. I was surprised myself when I looked at the numbers. 500 Steam Engines in 1800 to 10,000,000 in 1900. Divide 10,000,000 Steam Engines by 20,000 Waterwheels and you get a multiplication of 500 times in total Power output for the country!! And you don't need a river of flowing water for each one either. The only totally new Invention at that time was James Watt's Steam Engine. It had never existed before. ( Newcomen's Atmospheric Pump is not a Steam Engine, despite all those people claiming it is. No doubt, to claim the Invention. It is a big Invention after all ! ).
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 3 месяца назад
Great information, thanks for sharing!
@runebaas2568
@runebaas2568 3 месяца назад
I’m sorry but do you think fata morgana is a bad thing or racist? Because I can’t really tell what your opinion is.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 3 месяца назад
My opinion is this: Fata Morgana is a well-made attraction of high quality and great thematic execution. More relevantly for this video, Fata Morgana is worth looking at critically to understand the historical phenomenon of Orientalism, and how it continues to appear throughout more modern times. Thus, by looking at Fata Morgana, we can understand histories of dehumanizing pictures of the so-called “Orient” through the eyes of the West.
@runebaas2568
@runebaas2568 3 месяца назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan I do see a point there, but in my opinion people should be able to tell that it’s supposed to be a fantasy setting. Because I think this point could be made about the attractions in western europe style the setting is also unrealistic, not all europeans live in middle ages houses but you can tell it’s supposed to be fantasy setting. So I don’t really find it problematic. I do understand and respect ur opinions, ( these arguments might also come from the love this park since I was a child 😂)
@user-ey6oi4xw8r
@user-ey6oi4xw8r 4 месяца назад
In England, from 1800 to 1900. 20,000 Waterwheels declined in number. Windmills declined in number. The Englishman Thomas Newcomen's 1500 Atmospheric Pumps disappeared. The Scotsman James Watt's 500 Steam Powered Engines increased to 10,000,000!!! Through that, total available Power increased by between 1400 and 1500 times!! A percentage increase of between 40,000% and 50,000%!! This WAS the Industrial Revolution! It was a Power Revolution. And it was all due to only one Invention. James Watt's Invention of the world's first PRACTICAL Steam Powered Engine. It was nothing to do with Spinning and Weaving technology.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 3 месяца назад
Spinning and Weaving technology led the first industry to industrialize (textiles). While I do not deny your evidence, it would be useful to look at the timeline. The inventions you mention come earlier than the 1800s. This video was not about the British Industrial Revolution, but my other Industrial Revolution videos are.
@kwikijakson2332
@kwikijakson2332 4 месяца назад
hiiiiiya
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 4 месяца назад
Yoooooooo!
@prodbydrizzy
@prodbydrizzy 4 месяца назад
❤❤
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 4 месяца назад
Thank you!!! Rabat Skate Legend!
@RobertJones-zg3tu
@RobertJones-zg3tu 4 месяца назад
Long live AfricanBloodBrotherhood...r.a.Franz Fanon( Omar) one of his famous quotes was religion is the opium of the people.*!?!*. It's said he reverted to Islam before he was martyred.*!?!*. Happy Black History Month... Al Quran pray oh Lord Nourisher sustainer of the worlds increase me in knowledge!?!
@redarkhon482
@redarkhon482 Месяц назад
" religion is the opium of the people " is a quote by Karl Marx
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 5 месяцев назад
Hey friends, if you're a regular viewer, thanks for watching. If you're new here, check out my original history research. Best wishes, Reese
@dellsoprano8110
@dellsoprano8110 5 месяцев назад
this is the most realistic of conflict and oppressor colonisation civilians this reminds me of Palestine.
@user-uk6uy7sq6e
@user-uk6uy7sq6e 5 месяцев назад
❤❤❤❤❤
@deonbeattie3343
@deonbeattie3343 5 месяцев назад
I am an immigrant laborer who traveled from South Africa to Canada, basically for a better future. Sure, materially (including infrastructure and services), North America is convenient and in a state of abundance. But, I have come to experience more cultural, communal, and social poverty here in the West than in Africa. The social relations, working conditions, working attitude, and productivity driven life in Canada have really reduced the average Canadian to a very shallow and superficial being. This is despite the so-called politeness of Canadians. Many things listed in this video are very relevant and present in modern-day Canada. It has evolved, but it has most definitely eroded the quality of life.
@principalonduty
@principalonduty 5 месяцев назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_cxQIV5D3sY.htmlsi=yf6zkLNZ-wxU48-7
@habibabdoul628
@habibabdoul628 7 месяцев назад
great work, hat off to the @HistoricalMethodMan
@knight24474
@knight24474 7 месяцев назад
00:03:59 education and science 00:05:12 german science and industry
@user-if2hl4im3t
@user-if2hl4im3t 7 месяцев назад
Amen others together children s would African unite amen together amen
@joshuamitchell5018
@joshuamitchell5018 7 месяцев назад
I know that you went into this with your end conclusions already well decided in what you think to have been good or bad in that last section of the presentation and that's well and fine, of course it would of be a height of arrogance on my part to expect to turn you aound from what's clearly been a strong sentiment of yours about planning being a way to go but all the same I think you shouldn't be so didactic about on how industry emerged and staking them as nakedly better. How these things played out are only defined in part by how a govt of an area wants for it to go. America was (and still is) a more disparately peopled landmass which before & during industrialization had been slanted for raw export in exchange for the furnished goods of Europe. If you are not in yankeeland/new england where all the industrialization actually took root and propogated from then so much of the urban spawl and unsexy tertiary factors of industry in France/Germany/england wouldn't have been present. Large pools of otherwise unemployable urban youth, proximity of furnished products to an insatiable consumer market, readily available mechanical specialists everywhere and robust secondary transports outside of rail. A comparison more alike to the Americans situation and in comparable times would've been the Argentinians and tsarist/soviet industrializations where so much of the same command and control idealism when in practice were an absolute strangulation on the very industrializations they were trying to manifest. Both should have been made spawling industrial if their trajectories were even half as prosperous as in America and they were in their best of times as the sparks of a industrialization began kicking off carrying expectations/fears of being continental conquering powers in the making that just never fully manifested. I would highly recommend a skim over of 'Basic economics" by one Thomas Sowell. It is so very key to always keep experimenting and improving, see what works best, combine it with what works best from other contexts and continually fine-tune the system. Good economy is as much about an adapting to your to context as anything and the models you described with france and germany would have been abysmal failures if applied in the usa like trying to serve an undercooked egg.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Hello, thank you for your comment! In short, I'll put my cards on the table for the goals of this paper. I took an undergraduate course with Dr. Jeff Horn, modern European historian and expert on the French and Industrial Revolutions, on the Industrial Revolution. This script comes from a the final, the prompt was: What were the benefits and drawbacks of the models of industrialization developed in France, Belgium, the German lands and the United States? Which of these transitions to industrial society would you have preferred to live through? [Note: this is a two-part question, but 3/4 of your answer should be on the first part.] (5 pages) I feel comfortable sharing this question because this course runs once every five or so years (my undergraduate was a small institution with an even smaller history department). This was an argumentative paper, and I chose to lean into the idea that (A) Free market capitalism was specific to the British Industrial Revolution and (B) Industrialization had a large influence of the state in these three contexts. Many sources come from Dr. Jeff Horn's secondary readings, as well as a pretty standard reading list. Horn's books include: - The Industrial Revolution: History, Documents, and Key Questions (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2016) - Economic Development in Early-Modern France, 1650-1800: The Privilege of Liberty (Cambridge University Press, 2015, paperback edition 2017) - Reconceptualizing the Industrial Revolution (MIT Press, 2010; reprinted 2012); - The Industrial Revolution (Greenwood Press, 2007); edited (with Leonard N. Rosenband and Merritt Roe Smith) - The Path Not Taken: French Industrialization in the Age of Revolution, 1750-1830 (MIT Press, 2006, paperback edition, 2008) The essays that influenced my argumentation the most were: - Cole and Filson, eds., British Working Class Movements: Select Documents 1789-1815, 3-14, 74-77, 85-110. - Hobsbawm, Labouring Men, 5-22 and Binfield, ed., Writings of the Luddites, 69-109 - “Testimony Gathered by Ashley’s Mines Commission,” - The Sadler Committee Report on Child Labor.” - Horn, “Leads and Lags: Competing with a Dominant Economic Power,” 85-94. - Emile Zola, Germinal. - Hounshell, “The American System of Manufactures in the Antebellum Period.” This shows where I got much of my evidence for the argumentation from.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
I will respond to the content of your comment once I have a little more time this week. I am finishing History PhD applications and am also teaching, so I'm a very busy boy. This channel is merely a side-project.
@pdruiz2005
@pdruiz2005 7 месяцев назад
At 9:56. Again, the history proves you wrong. The U.S. was able to get the capital to industrialize not because it was an "isolated economy." Far from it. The U.S. was very plugged into the world economy, as a huge exporter of raw materials, especially agricultural products like wheat, tobacco and cotton. Americans got their capital to industrialize through the massive revenues they gathered from agricultural exports. In fact, it was "King Cotton" that drove the first Industrial Revolution in New England, as the manufacturers of the region imported cheap Southern cotton that they then turned into very cheap textiles that could compete with expensive foreign textiles from Europe. (Made expensive due to those tariffs.) Even more importantly, rich Southern cotton and tobacco planters were the first big investors in New England textile factories. These New England manufacturers, in turn, accumulated the capital to then invest in railways, the other huge engine of industrialization. The extremely fast expansion of the railways in the U.S. from 1835 to 1860 is what allowed the U.S. to then leapfrog the nations of Europe with industrial technology. That's because covering 1.5 million square miles of North America with the largest railway network in the world by 1860--making anything in Europe look puny and under-resourced--required a tremendous amount of technical and logistical knowledge. The Civil War and exploding immigrant population just added fuel to this fire, allowing the U.S. to become the largest industrial nation by 1880 or so, outstripping even the likes of the U.K. As for state contracts, that was never a big thing in the U.S. until the Civil War. Before the Civil War, the U.S. federal government had a tiny budget. Yes, it did spend on Samuel Colt guns and the like. But this was a small drop in the giant bucket of the U.S. economy pre-1860. The U.S. government could not spend that much on state contracts even if it wanted to. What drove U.S. industrialization was bringing agricultural products to the markets of Western Europe (hence all that railroad building between 1830 and 1860), and the investment capital gathered from the massive export revenues earned from those agricultural products.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Hello, I will respond to this specific comment when I have some more time to provide a proper response. What you are saying makes sense to me.
@pdruiz2005
@pdruiz2005 7 месяцев назад
At 1:27. If you look at the historical record, it was Belgium that was the second nation to go through the Industrial Revolution. Mostly because there were no laws that prohibited the formation of large industrial corporations in Belgium. By 1815, Belgium was bursting with factories. France was maybe 3rd or 4th, following Prussia. Why? The French prohibited railways of any sort until 1842. That was because the French had just finished constructing a marvelous and complex canal system connecting the nation, and vested interests didn't want brutal competition from railways. So railways, and all the industrial development that come with them, were outlawed. Prohibiting railways in effect retarded the Industrial Revolution in France until the law was lifted in 1842. That's when France shot up in terms of industrialization. It had nothing to do with the command economy--which only existed in France during the height of the French Revolution from 1790 to around 1795. That's when industrialization in France was at its lowest point, mostly due to the terrible political instability that discouraged investment from entrepreneurs and foreign investors. Education also had little to do with industrialization--Britain industrialized successfully while it had a very outdated formal educational system centered on exclusively educating the aristocracy and Anglican clergy. France only managed to get really going with industrialization after 1815, when political stability finally settled over the land and the investment environment became favorable. And it really got going only after 1842, when railways were finally legalized, along with the giant corporations that encourage railway manufacture and construction.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
In all of these nations, I'm using the textile industry as the marker of initial industrialization. This was the first industry to industrialize across the board. The second industrial revolution s marked by the use of railroads, not the first.
@pdruiz2005
@pdruiz2005 7 месяцев назад
Comparing France, Germany and the U.S., eh? With regards to the Industrial Revolution, France lost in comparison to those two nations. Germany ended up in the middle. And the U.S. crushed the other two to smithereens. This all has to do with population, so the number of available industrial workers. France only managed to squeeze out 8 million extra people, going from 30 million in 1800 (the most populous nation in Europe, and therefore the most economically powerful) to 38 million in 1914. French governments were constantly worried about this because, well, they knew France would get crushed eventually if babies weren't being made. Germany went from 25 million in 1800 to 67 million in 1914, a mighty impressive run-up of 42 million extra people. But the U.S. was the victor, going from a measly 5 million in 1800 (or 1/6 the size of France) to 98 million, or just short of 100 million, by 1914. That is a whooping 93 million extra people. That's why the U.S. smashed everything in its path and France was left in the dust with regards to the Industrial Revolution.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Hello, I'll be responding to your comments, which I thank you for making, one by one and in turn. If we're talking population as the metric of success, then your argument is certainly true. However, the complexity-craving historian in me questions whether population and GDP is the truest marker of success. In terms of political economy, yes, it makes perfect sense. However, the number of people does not tell the much harder to quantify story of quality of life.
@svenvanwier7196
@svenvanwier7196 7 месяцев назад
Great video, starting to wonder what the ending meant? because it almost seems as if you try to market Prussia as a communist utopia
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Thanks for asking for clarification. Prussia was by no means a communist state. It was also by no means a utopia. However, it was not 'free-market' capitalism that led to its transformation like in Britain. One of the myths I attempt to dispel in this video is that free-market capitalism, as Adam Smith outlined, was the strategy of these three industrializing states. Instead, they all had large interventions of the state in planning the economy. As for why I would most prefer to live in industrializing Prussia, as opposed to the others (if I had to live in any industrializing state, which does not sound particularly fun), it's because of how the state commanded the economy to focus on education without state violence. Compared to the others, this was the most regulated instance of industrialization, and it was successful, transforming the nation rather quickly. I hope that clarifies the aim of the ending and my argument within it.
@svenvanwier7196
@svenvanwier7196 7 месяцев назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan I am all for "for the people by the people" just poking a bit of fun. You make great stuff, ill hit that sub button 😉
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Hehehe, thanks for the sub! I really love doing this channel as a side project to my regular history gig (:
@mythrilYT
@mythrilYT 7 месяцев назад
Bro was that endo-02 from fnaf💀
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
I don’t think so, I’ve never played
@WhyWorldSucks
@WhyWorldSucks 7 месяцев назад
8:29 probably missed to add the graph. Otherwise a very informative video.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Yes, this was a mistake in editing. In short, the tariff rate just before 1820 was <10%, by the 1870s, the tariff rate was around ~70%.
@andersonandrighi4539
@andersonandrighi4539 7 месяцев назад
Prussia and later on the German Empire did not need to sponsor terror as much as France because they had the New World (Americas) as a pressure valve to send people that did not fit their national goal. Today there are more German American than any other group. German diaspora did not limited itself to the US of A and there are significant German population in Brazil, Argentina and Canada. Your video is great by the way ;)
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Thank you very much for your observation. This reasoning seems to make sense to me. The state violence in France was a continuity from the state violence of the Reign of Terror that continued through the Napoleonic era. In the German context, the "forty-eighters/48ers" (supporters of the failed 1848 revolutions) generally fled to the Americas. While one could easily argue that exile informed by political persecution is state terror, this is of a lower level than that experienced in France during this industrial era.
@alioshax7797
@alioshax7797 7 месяцев назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan The idea that the political violence of XIXth century France derives directly from 1793 is very debatable. Both the society and ideals of 1848 were very different from the ones of "the" Revolution, although it was mobilized as a symbol by both revolutionaries and conservatives (and still is today, to some extent).
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
I agree, the link is more indirect and also historiographical, I’d amend.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
If you liked this video, please check out the supercut on the Industrial Revolution in Britain: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE--HgDEb5Fkuw.html If you want to see who I am and what I do for work as an historian, check out this video: "Fulbright Student Research Abroad in Morocco" ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_gZRxPJKkzs.html If you have any questions, please ask below, and I will do my best to research and cite a proper reply.
@ReesePuffsGoated
@ReesePuffsGoated 7 месяцев назад
Great Information! I remember learning about this in school!
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Thanks, I hope I made a compelling argument in this one. The Industrial Revolution is a favorite topic of mine. Would you like any interesting reading recommendations on it?
@cptake
@cptake 7 месяцев назад
Well done my friend
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Thank you! Cheers!
@gamernerd22
@gamernerd22 7 месяцев назад
great information as usual loved it
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Glad you enjoyed it
@Eaglyy
@Eaglyy 7 месяцев назад
Thank you for the tips Reese, I took the notes. - CHAROUQ.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 7 месяцев назад
Glad it was helpful!