I don't think the person who made it is from Korea, China and Japan, but it's amazing that he accurately express their history. Even description's more information are objective. Maybe rather he's a third party, so he was able to express it accurately. The way to distinguish dictatorships with facial expressions is also refreshing.
@@totalguardian1436 Oh, as expected, I thought it was a neat and objective view, and he was really a third person. Nevertheless, he understood them as if he were from those countries and expressed them witty, so I guessed that he were the same Asian, and that's right lol I really enjoyed watching it.
No they didn't, they never did since the fall of the Tang dynasty, and also Japan and China had a rivalry since the Mongol invasion of China (and the subsequent takeover by the Yuan, Ming, Qing dynasty, ROC and now PRC). And the Korean peninsula was, roughly speaking, the battleground between China and Japan even before the Imjin war (and of course, the first and second sino Japanese war), it was either under the influence or direct occupation of China, Japan and even the Mongolian empire to for a while, hence, the Chinese and Japanese influence on Korean language, culture, food etc. I'm not saying that Korea isn't it's own entity or doesn't have it's separate identity or anything, but the result of Chinese and Japanese influence in Korea is very much visible. TLDR. China, Japan and Korea didn't exactly live in peace, China and Japan were rivals, and Korea was being bum clapped from two sides either through diplomacy or straight up occupation. 🤓 👈 This is me
Very little thing: ダーリン And ダ | リ ン Because the “ー” is kind of “dash” :) so when you write it from the top to down, it’s won’t remain “from left to right”, it would keep representing “from the last word to the next word”. Every balls are adorable 😍
all countryballs in order empire of great yuan 0:14 goryeo 0:16 minamoto 0:18 ming 0:20 joseon 0:23 toyotomi 0:24 manchu 0:27 joseon 0:29 tokugawa 0:31 qing 0:34 joseon 0:36 japan 0:38 people's republic of china 1:06 republic of china (Kuomintang) 1:08 south korea 1:10 north korea 1:13 japan 1:15 republic of china (Beiyang) 1:20 manchukuo 1:20 korean empire 1:21 manchukuo 1:25 republic of china (Kuomintang) 1:26 japanese korea 1:28 japanese empire 1:30 Republic of Chin (KMT) 1:31 people's republic of china 1:33 south korea 1:34 japan 1:36 japanese empire 1:36 people's republic of china 1:37 north korea 1:37 republic of china (Kuomintang) 1:38 south korea 1:38 republic of china (DPP) 1:39 people's republic of china 1:39 south korea 1:41 north korea 1:41 minamoto 1:43 toyotomi 1:43 tokugawa 1:46 japanese empire 1:49 japan 1:52
Maybe politically, the relationship between the three of them is not very good. However, culturally and economically it must be quite good, right? Moreover, for us Southeast Asian people, the three of them are like brothers who have been helping us economically, culturally, socially, etc.
I found a problem with the video. The Japanese attack on Korea was the only time that Korea went on an expedition when the Yuan Dynasty attacked Japan in 1274 When Korea invaded Japan, it took away Japan's Tsushima Island and took control of it for about 300 years, but it did little damage to Japan I hope the translation was successful