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Animations of historic events and battles.

Animated maps of the journeys of great discoverers
Battle of Tannenberg (1914) Animation
4:48
10 месяцев назад
The Battle of Coronel (1914)
7:19
2 года назад
Ancient explorers
5:04
2 года назад
Interior lines | military strategy
3:02
3 года назад
Naval warfare tactic | Crossing the T
4:43
4 года назад
Battle of Copenhagen | 1801 |
13:20
4 года назад
Columbus first voyage to America
7:42
4 года назад
Naval tactics in the Age of Sail
4:08
5 лет назад
Trafalgar
1:08
5 лет назад
Waterloo ( 1815 )  Animation
10:48
5 лет назад
Muskets , how accurate were they ?
2:59
6 лет назад
Комментарии
@Ryan-ii9bb
@Ryan-ii9bb 5 дней назад
very informational video
@Ryan-ii9bb
@Ryan-ii9bb 5 дней назад
great video
@andreimazheiko110
@andreimazheiko110 9 дней назад
there are a lot of inaccuracies
@acgmc6669
@acgmc6669 9 дней назад
Muy bueno... Si Chichagov hubiera sido más listo, Napoleón hubiera caído preso en esa batalla
@Sonof_DRN2004
@Sonof_DRN2004 12 дней назад
“Never mind the manoeuvres, just go straight at them!”
@redtailpunk
@redtailpunk 17 дней назад
total nitpick but im just thrown off by the french being red and the english being blue ... seems wrong haha
@matthewrosa7262
@matthewrosa7262 Месяц назад
NICELY DONE! -Unfortunately, You Don't Offer Moment-By-Moment "Time Stamps" Of Each Point Of The Battle According To The Log Books By Every Ships' Captain So As To Co-Ordinate The Actions!
@luxeternity
@luxeternity Месяц назад
Communication must be crazy
@willyaparcero
@willyaparcero Месяц назад
Vive La Grande Armée Vive Ses Maréchaux Vive L Empereur Éternel. Willy
@augustotrenta2650
@augustotrenta2650 Месяц назад
in this video, east is west and west is east
@pancakemacbuttery9142
@pancakemacbuttery9142 Месяц назад
Yea I had to turn my screen upside down
@bluntplank1879
@bluntplank1879 Месяц назад
🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮
@megabi7747
@megabi7747 Месяц назад
русские никогда не умели воевать умом, поэтому Наполеон просто поиздевался над ними.
@IAMCREATURETHATISDEMONEYE
@IAMCREATURETHATISDEMONEYE Месяц назад
3 years later this became a map for a game
@jdee8407
@jdee8407 Месяц назад
Britannia rules the waves. This was the Age of Pisces and the energy of Pisces, especially Neptune was with them to gain victory.
@petedallas3044
@petedallas3044 Месяц назад
look at the territory covered! Definately highlights the difference between French Generals of the day and todays russian generals recent attempt to steal a few KM's from Ukraine with the same losses in troops and the same invasion force!
@robimusprime8
@robimusprime8 Месяц назад
And that’s where the saying “crossing the t” comes from.
@pnwzcommunity
@pnwzcommunity Месяц назад
Вечная память защитникам родины..🇷🇺
@ralph7748
@ralph7748 2 месяца назад
Very systematic, they really needed a passage to Asia!
@JMT261_YT
@JMT261_YT 2 месяца назад
This made a huge battle
@michaelbaker7499
@michaelbaker7499 2 месяца назад
I can't help but feel this would be so much better if narrated
@danbradley6553
@danbradley6553 2 месяца назад
Love your German accent !
@AndrewLale-mr9jm
@AndrewLale-mr9jm 2 месяца назад
My ancestor, Richard Lale, was at the Battle of Trafalgar. He was on the Royal Sovereign. He died about a year after the battle when he fell overboard from the ship HMS Formidable.
@homebrandrules
@homebrandrules 2 месяца назад
THIS WAS GREAT BUT WOULDVE BEEN MUCH BETTER HAD YOU INCLUDED TIME STAMPS TO SHOW THE PROGRESS OF THE BATTLE AND PROVIDED THE VIEWER WITH A SENSE OF TIME PERSPECTIVE. REGARDLESS, VERY WELL DONE.
@isabellaguo5783
@isabellaguo5783 2 месяца назад
Underrated
@travist7777
@travist7777 3 месяца назад
What almost everyone is forgetting is that Nelson only won, not because of his "queue-busting," but because he attacked right in the middle of Siesta time.
@Gloriaimperial1
@Gloriaimperial1 3 месяца назад
😀But in Trafalgar 1805, Spain only lost 11 ships (France 13). British fleets, sunk for Spain thanks to the 20-minute SIESTA, which recharges energy for the afternoon. 1372. La Rochelle, France. 48 English ships sunk. 0 Spanish ships sunk 1377-1411. 5 Spanish invasions of southern England 1554. Philip II of Spain arrives in England with a fleet, and becomes king of England and Ireland 1588. Spanish invasion of Germany 1589. 60-80 ships of Drake's Invincible Fleet, sunk. Elisabeth condemns Drake to take a nap as a lighthouse keeper. 1590. Spanish invasion of Paris 1625. 62 ships of the combined English and Dutch fleet, sunk in Cádiz 1629. Destruction of the combined English and French fleet in the Caribbean. Spain wins the war against England 1713. United Kingdom loses the War of Succession 1734. Spain invades Italy, defeating the Austrian Empire 1739-48. Spain wins the war of Jenkins' Severed Ear, against the United Kingdom. 400 British ships captured by assault on all seas. 100 Spanish ships captured 1741. 50 British ships destroyed in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia, by Admiral Blas de Lezo. That is why there are 335 million people speaking Spanish in the Caribbean and North America. 1763. Spain destroys the combined fleet of the United Kingdom and Portugal in Uruguay 1779-82. Spain blocks the United Kingdom with a fleet, commanded by Luis de Córdova. Capture of two British fleets of 24 and 55 ships. Collapse of the London stock market. Spain gives the Spanish dollar to the USA. 1777-83. Spain takes a nap and defeats the British in Florida, Louisiana, Central America, Bahamas, Uruguay and Menorca. USA Independence 1797. Spain defeats Nelson 3 times in Central America, Cádiz and Tenerife, where he loses his arm. Defeat of another British invasion fleet in Puerto Rico 1806-07, a year after Trafalgar. Spain defeats the British in Argentina and Uruguay, capturing the redcoats and British generals. Thanks to that victory there are another 150 million people speaking Spanish in southern Hispanic America. It was the last direct battle between the two countries. Spanish as a mother tongue: 485 million speakers. Spanish and Portuguese are the same in 89% of the words Native English: 380 million (40% born in parts of the USA that the British never controlled. USA saves the English legacy after WW2) 800 million Catholics thanks to Spain (200 million in Europe. 100 million in Asia and Oceania. 500 million in America. 120 million Anglicans. Spanish Empire in Europe: 200 years in the Spanish Netherlands, 160 years in parts of France and Germany. Spanish emperor in Germany. 60 years in Portugal. 70 years in Greece. 457 years in Italy. Spanish king in England. British Empire in Europe: Ireland, Cyprus and Malta. The SIESTA is good.
@travist7777
@travist7777 3 месяца назад
@Gloriaimperial1 AMEN! Viva, España! Apparently, though, the SIESTA wasn't invented yet, and when it was needed most, during the Battle of Guadalete, circa 711 A.D.. A refreshed King Roderic, et al, may have saved the Iberians some 800 years of Reconquista, which, in of itself, is an amazing feat of perseverance, had he taken that 20-minute nap!
@Gloriaimperial1
@Gloriaimperial1 2 месяца назад
@@travist7777 In reality the peninsula was not taken for 800 years. Half of the territory was liberated 400 years later. Then only a residue remained in Granada, in the last 200 years. Islam in Spain had a period of impressive splendor, when Córdoba became the most important city in Europe, with 450,000 inhabitants, public baths, 90% child literacy, marble palaces, the most advanced science and medicine, 170 intellectual women. (translators, musicians and poets) and the first human being to fly in history, Abbas Ibn Firnás, philosopher and scientist, inventor of the hang glider, 1000 years before the first airplane. At that time Christian Europe were small towns of 15,000-30,000 inhabitants, with wooden houses, mud in the streets, poverty and fanaticism (London, Paris, Amsterdam...). Aragon and Castile became European powers long before the end of the Reconquista in 1492. Aragon invaded Sicily 1282, Athens 1311, Corsica and Cerdanya 1326, Djerba base in Tunisia, Africa 1380, Naples 1442. Castile destroyed the fleet English in La Rochelle 1372, sinking 48 ships. 5 Castilian invasions of southern England between 1377-1411. Canary Islands, Africa, 1404, destruction of the German Hanseatic fleet in 1419. In addition, there was a great cultural exchange for 800 years between Christians, Islamic and Jews. They weren't always wars.
@travist7777
@travist7777 2 месяца назад
@Gloriaimperial1 And today, all Spain rules is an acre and a half of a painted grass field, called a soccer pitch! (Good luck, today!)
@Gloriaimperial1
@Gloriaimperial1 2 месяца назад
@@travist7777 Well, Spain has a higher human development index than France and Italy. We are the tenth power in scientific research in the world One of the first countries in life expectancy in the world, above all of Europe. One of the best public health systems Fourth country in the world in terms of cultural heritage recognized by the UN Spain is the second leading country in global infrastructure, behind China. Second country with the most high-speed trains in the world Second investor in Latin America, behind the USA. Tenth country to send a rocket into space, privately We manufacture our own aircraft carriers (which Australia buys), cutting-edge frigates and submarines that launch missiles at 1900 km, in addition to manufacturing the latest Eurofigther, with Germany and France, in equal parts. Second country with the most tourists in the world. The country that best preserves its natural beauty in Western Europe, with the greatest variety of animals Spanish restaurants are always in the top 10 of the best in the world. And some of the cities with the best life in the world are Spanish. We also have the best painting museum in the world: "El Prado". The Spanish culture industry is one of the strongest in the world, thanks to Latin America. We have the greatest world legacy The two best literature prizes in the world, after the Nobel Prize, are Spanish: Príncipe de Asturias and Premio Cervantes. Apart from football we also win in basketball, tennis, handball, golf, motorcycling, motorsports... We don't just live off football. Alcáraz just won Wimbledon an hour ago. Well, it was grass! :) Thanks for the good wishes. I hope it's a good match. All the best!
@garryferrington811
@garryferrington811 3 месяца назад
Thanks for the clarification.
@aleksandar-f9z
@aleksandar-f9z 3 месяца назад
sorry, I still dont get it: I would like to dive, ok, I fill my tank with water, weight will increase and all is fine- now I would like to go back to surface, you say I pump "compressed air" into the tank to chase the water out, right? unfortunately, it will not work like that- air, compressed or not will never drive the water out, unless container is airtight (not the same as watertight) and under condition that pressure in the tank is higher than pressure surrounding the submarine at 100m of depth- lets say, 1000 atm? plus, you will need more and more air in wolume to pump in? only solution is to pump the water out of the tank, now you need to air to flow in without pumping it in order for pump the work, isnt it? that cannot be compressed air, so you need another tank to unpack the compressed air to, but what to do with air that was in the tank already, shall we compress that one in the containers we have just emptied? its so confusing- nice diagram though...
@at3j3s3mb3r-ff1bv
@at3j3s3mb3r-ff1bv 3 месяца назад
cscscscscsccscsc
@generalsandnapoleon
@generalsandnapoleon 3 месяца назад
Nice work on a very important battle.
@generalsandnapoleon
@generalsandnapoleon 3 месяца назад
Really good work on the animation here!
@jamiejones7325
@jamiejones7325 3 месяца назад
Question: Did did everyone have officer schools where they studied historical tactics and strategies like this? The sane for the army? All movies I see imply British especially incompetent led by inexperience rich landlords etc. Which nations were better at balancing disciple following orders and adapting as things progressed. Very impressed presentation.😁
@Richardbillig-zn3zc
@Richardbillig-zn3zc 3 месяца назад
Bubbles in front of diamond wheel tire Cars make car toward more Swift.Electric magnetic fields HARA in Japanese Wheel Tires front. left Car up.benefit front wheel tires be a density of gas ,bubbles ,and air . below that salt water. Electric magnetic fields HARA in Japanese light can not go under salt water.
@reciprocaldumping4782
@reciprocaldumping4782 3 месяца назад
Why did they surrender? They had plenty of firepower left.
@rasmuslampposselt3564
@rasmuslampposselt3564 3 месяца назад
Attacking a neutral country without a declaration of war? Expected from Britain I guess ;)
@RuvimAbaras
@RuvimAbaras 3 месяца назад
Great video, well explained, thank you!
@noanyabizniz4333
@noanyabizniz4333 3 месяца назад
Please find a real narrator or use an AI.
@GeorgeSantiagoBFH
@GeorgeSantiagoBFH 4 месяца назад
German guy makes me sleep ..
@dankwartdenkhardt5714
@dankwartdenkhardt5714 4 месяца назад
It was clearly the main and mortal fault of Admiral Brueys. Normally his anchored in line ships would had been a strong fortress wall against Nelson. It´s hardly to understand that such an experienced naval officer placed his ships so far away from the shore. Furthermore the half of french crew was on land, when the battle started, looking for water and food, not able to reach their ships in time anymore. So they had to be the spectators of the downfall.
@LowryYT
@LowryYT 4 месяца назад
dont be sad, the french were defeated!
@erikamordek2231
@erikamordek2231 4 месяца назад
I am reading War and Peace and this map has put it all in perspective. thanks
@richardbutt4431
@richardbutt4431 4 месяца назад
The quality of this production is excellent. I found the comparative mapping of the two expeditions extremely informative. For example, I had no idea that neither expedition had depots beyond the mountain range described in the video. Also, I had no idea that Scout had created a depot so far away from the mountains both groups had to cross. The Norwegians laid THREE depots. By the way, Amundsen learned his snow craft in the Canadian Artic while living among the Inuit people. That was the difference (dogs, food, sleds used were all influenced by his time in the Artic). I enjoyed this video very much. Well done!!!
@nohandle62
@nohandle62 4 месяца назад
Amundsen did his research. His biggest advantage was the dogs, which were faster and provided his men with protein and protection from scurvy. Scott lost this race the minute Amundsen entered it.
@Nobara_Kugisaki13
@Nobara_Kugisaki13 4 месяца назад
I watched this in class and everyone wondered why u sounded like that 💀
@antoniocarrascosa6060
@antoniocarrascosa6060 5 месяцев назад
Magnífica descripción de esa batalla naval, enhorabuena por el trabajo desde España
@antoniocarrascosa6060
@antoniocarrascosa6060 5 месяцев назад
Los gráficos y mapas muy buenos, enhorabuena
@antoniocarrascosa6060
@antoniocarrascosa6060 5 месяцев назад
Fue una victoria táctica rusa, pero victoria estratégica de Napoleón, básicamente debida a la torpeza de Chichagov -que era un oficial de marina. La captura de Napoleón y sus principales jefes estaba al alcance de la mano y hubiera supuesto el fin de la guerra, como dice la propia narración.
@marconrvz9071
@marconrvz9071 5 месяцев назад
Do the german Blitzkrieg for the next video
@futuretyrant
@futuretyrant 5 месяцев назад
nice
@richarddavis1599
@richarddavis1599 5 месяцев назад
Thanks, enjoyed the small details in this that otherwise don't get a mention.
@NCMA29
@NCMA29 5 месяцев назад
While a mildly interesting concept, it doesn't take much to realise that 19th century wooden warships would stand no chance against a WWI battleship. But DANTON was hardly a shining example of that class of warship by the way - although she was laid down about the same time as DREADNOUGHT, she was missing many of the revolutionary developments the RN battleship featured and thus not even a true dreadnought battleship. Frankly, a WWI battleship would have huge advantages in range, explosive shells, manoeuvrability, speed and armour. She probably could have simply rammed each British 1st rate and saved all her shells. This video could have been much shorter and achieved the same result. Incidentally, there are no troops aboard ships. "Troops" by definition are soldiers. Not seamen. Also, you say "...[DANTON] could traverse thousands of nautical miles, a stark contrast to the limited range of Napoleonic era warships." You've got that backwards, mate. Coal-fired warships were heavily dependent on coaling stations around the world to restock their coal bunkers. 18th century warships were only limited by their provisions. So quite the opposite.