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In The Shadow of Napoleon - The 2nd French Empire Before 1870 I GLORY & DEFEAT 

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After Napoleon I had conquered and then lost Europe, France went through multiple revolutions. In 1851, Napoleons nephew and French president Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte took control and in 1852 crowned himself Emperor Napoleon III. The new French Empire wanted to regain the glory of Napoleon's uncle and together with his wife Empress Eugenie he ruled a state known for lavish balls and spending.
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realtimehistor... - interviews with historians and background info for the show.
» LITERATURE
Arand, Tobias: 1870/71. Die Geschichte des Deutsch-Französischen Kriegs erzählt in Einzelschicksalen. Hamburg 2018
Arand, Tobias/ Bunnenberg, Christian (Hrsg.): Karl Klein. Fröschweiler Chronik. Kriegs- und Friedensbilder aus dem Krieg 1870. Kommentierte Edition. Hamburg 2021
Gouttman, Alain. La grande défaite de 1870-1871. Paris 2015
Herre, Franz: Eugénie. Kaiserin der Franzosen. Stuttgart, München 2000
Rieder, Heinz: Napoleon III. Abenteurer und Imperator. München 1998
» SOURCES
Bonaparte, Prince Napoléon-Louis : Des Idées Napoléoniennes. London 1839
Marx, Karl: Der achtzehnte Brumaire des Louis Napoleon. Hamburg 1869
Maupassant, Guy de: Bel-Ami. Paris 1901
N.N. (Hrsg): Fontane, Theodor. Aus den Tagen der Okkupation. Eine Osterreise durch Nordfrankreich und Elsaß-Lothingen 1871. Berlin (Ost) 1984
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»CREDITS
Presented by: Jesse Alexander
Written by: Cathérine Pfauth, Dr. Tobias Arand, Jesse Alexander
Director: Toni Steller & Florian Wittig
Director of Photography: Toni Steller
Sound: Above Zero
Editing: Toni Steller
Motion Design: Philipp Appelt
Mixing, Mastering & Sound Design: above-zero.com
Maps: Battlefield Design
Research by: Cathérine Pfauth, Prof. Dr. Tobias Arand
Fact checking: Cathérine Pfauth, Prof. Dr. Tobias Arand
Channel Design: Battlefield Design
Contains licensed material by getty images
All rights reserved - Real Time History GmbH 2021

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28 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 278   
@realtimehistory
@realtimehistory 3 года назад
Support Glory & Defeat: realtimehistory.net/gloryanddefeat Small schedule update: This was the third of four primer episodes. Tomorrow we will begin the war proper with an episode about the Ems Dispatch (Week 1 so to speak). Next week we will upload the final primer (German Wars of Unification) and on Thursday the 22nd, the war will really start. From the on we will upload every Thursday again.
@oliversherman2414
@oliversherman2414 3 года назад
Please do more 19th century content on this channel
@PatMzongo
@PatMzongo 3 года назад
Another interesting fact about the Second Empire is that it was not only in Napoleon’s shadow, it was also crushed by the 3rd Republic that came after it. Many prominent and influential republicans, such as Victor Hugo, hated the Second Empire and made sure to destroy it’s memory in later years. Napoleon III was in power from 1848 to 1870, but all that is taught in the french republican school system today is: Coup d’état, and defeat to the prussians. Nothing of the 22 years in which Napoleon III modernised, industrialised, and expanded France.
@PatMzongo
@PatMzongo 3 года назад
@Xavier Lecaros Not saying he was right or wrong to despise the regime, just that he did. And that he made a lot of efforts to tarnish the way the Second Empire is remembered
@nunbiz7328
@nunbiz7328 3 года назад
@@PatMzongo petty men hate great men
@paulmourot1096
@paulmourot1096 3 года назад
@Xavier Lecaros He tried to push people to resist but when he sees that nobody followed him, he exiled himself...
@jimgordon6629
@jimgordon6629 3 года назад
Ha, they thought he was a dictator! They had no idea what kind of dictator would come their way 70 years later!
@PedroKing19
@PedroKing19 2 года назад
I love it when vain, arrogant, racist people are only remembered for their failures. It's the greatest form of retribution
@Penguin-lc3eg
@Penguin-lc3eg 3 года назад
I think I'm going to keep repeating myself every episode but this was great. Looking forward to more of this and seeing the start of the week by week coverage
@realtimehistory
@realtimehistory 3 года назад
thanks. Ems Dispatch, the proper Week 1 tomorrow's
@severanfenrir4051
@severanfenrir4051 3 года назад
Haussmann’s improvements Paris also made the city healthier to live in. Until his designs were implemented disease like cholera and dysentery decimated Paris regularly. The ability to remove the raw sewage and make the city easier to travel and better resources contributed to Paris becoming the center of art, fashion, and so forth. It is also true though that these redesigns made it harder for mobs to barricade the streets and revolt, as seen during the Commune.
@nyk10473
@nyk10473 Год назад
This historians Marxism comes out from time to time. In another video he decries the Industrial Revolution - for LOWERING lifespans. This is glaringly false; he cites the average age of death at 40 without mentioning that it had previously been 30. But it is entertaining history, if you keep in mind the dishonest game playing.
@LightxHeaven
@LightxHeaven 3 года назад
“France was the preeminent military and cultural power in Europe”. That statement seems to have generally been true since the end of the Hundred Years War. But this war ended that long and glorious era of French history.
@lucasjleandro
@lucasjleandro 3 года назад
It's a point
@jessealexander2695
@jessealexander2695 3 года назад
I didn't say it hasn't - here we are starting the story in the mid-19th century.
@LightxHeaven
@LightxHeaven 3 года назад
@@jessealexander2695 Oh, don’t get me wrong I was just making a statement not critiquing you :)
@nuttygeezer708
@nuttygeezer708 3 года назад
1914-18 war??? The army was still considered the strongest in the world until defeat in 1940?
@jasonjason6525
@jasonjason6525 3 года назад
@@nuttygeezer708 The German Army was much stronger than the French. Can you imagine France alone with no allies going toe to toe with Germany in 1914? They’ll be decimated
@ihmejakki2731
@ihmejakki2731 3 года назад
Ha, I never knew the Marx quote was in the context of Napoleon the third
@realtimehistory
@realtimehistory 3 года назад
that's why we wanted to include it
@jonathanwilliams1065
@jonathanwilliams1065 3 года назад
Hard to stomach agreeing with anything that monster said
@AngryCenturion576
@AngryCenturion576 3 года назад
Ironic that Karl Marx's quote applies so well to himself. His philosophy is a tragedy, and all his imitators in every failed communist state have been farces.
@jonathanwilliams1065
@jonathanwilliams1065 3 года назад
@Some Weeb besides push for a world revolution and the end of private property and supporting religious persecution? He created an ideology that murdered 100 million people
@jonathanwilliams1065
@jonathanwilliams1065 3 года назад
@Some Weeb more than 100 million Doubt Certainly not 100 million in 100 years Also Christ did not command any of that Marx calls for murder and theft all over the world
@yorick6035
@yorick6035 3 года назад
Napoleon the Third has always been one of my favourite historical rulers. So I'm happy with this episode and this series in general!
@adilyricist1388
@adilyricist1388 3 года назад
He is... very mixed...
@miguelangelamezcuarosales7687
@miguelangelamezcuarosales7687 3 года назад
Wow, the first person in the internet that shares my view! You certainly are a cultured fellow.
@freewal
@freewal 3 года назад
He was a giant. He did not deserve this end. Sick and betrayed.
@patricofritz4094
@patricofritz4094 3 года назад
Yeah but I feel for Napoleon II and Napoleon III's son
@adilyricist1388
@adilyricist1388 3 года назад
@@freewal of course he deserve it. It happened.
@MikeB071
@MikeB071 3 года назад
Ironically in 1870, right before the outbreak of the War, Napoleon III inaugurated the Liberal Empire and appointed the opposition leader Emile Olivier as prime minister. He wanted to reform the regime and give it a wider base of support before he handed it off to his successor, the Prince Imperial, but unfortunately the war ruined everything for him. in many ways, he was actually a very enlightened ruler.
@indianajones4321
@indianajones4321 3 года назад
Great episode, can’t wait for this channel to get a million subscribers just like The Great War did
@julbro8451
@julbro8451 3 года назад
anything Hungary vs Romania should do the trick
@edwardwindsor2516
@edwardwindsor2516 3 года назад
Very interesting aesthetic from the Second French Empire, but alas the story of Le Petit Napoléon is and always will be over-shadowed by Nappy himself
@RidleyScottOwnsFailedDictators
@RidleyScottOwnsFailedDictators 3 года назад
I don't see the difference between the Napoleons. With the powerful army that he had to work with, the ineffective strategy of aggressive frontal assaults that withered away his army's strength, the MULTIPLE disastrous blunders he caused that destroyed that army, those disasters that completely outweigh any false "brilliance" attached to his name, and the fact that he ended in complete military defeat is why Napoleon is in the bottom tier of military commanders with the likes of Hitler, Mussolini, Napoleon III, and Solano Lopez, that Paraguayan leader that foolishly lost a war with his neighbors. So if you criticize Napoleon III for foolish military expeditions, superficial short-term "conquests", rushing to war, ending in defeat with a losing war record, leaving France occupied, leaving Paris captured (twice), being personally captured by the enemy, forced into exile, leaving his army in shambles, forcing France to radically change governments, and losing territory for France, do the same with Napoleon. And at least Napoleon III is not responsible for so many deaths of young Frenchmen the way Napoleon sacrificed about one million French conscripts in total defeat.
@SithTrooper-MN
@SithTrooper-MN 2 года назад
Long live to our Emperor, our Empress and our Empire ! 🇫🇷❤️
@r5u26d3
@r5u26d3 3 года назад
Great series and presentation
@daudret2065
@daudret2065 Год назад
I learn and enjoy so much watching your videos, I thank you so much for your work.
@shaider1982
@shaider1982 3 года назад
5:18. I think he was the writer of the short story: “The Necklace”.
@welcometonebalia
@welcometonebalia 3 года назад
Thanks. I would argue there's an aspect of the 2nd Empire diplomacy that wasn't mentioned but would be important later: although it focused mainly on economics at first, the regime began a process of... I don't know, reconciliation might not be the word... but France and its old rival England tended to become a little closer, if not allied yet (well, they were in the Crimean War...), although of course they would be competing in imperialist endeavours for a long time and this would remain so at least until the end of the century (actually, they would be on the verge of war on several occasions, I know). Nevertheless, if this was not yet the "Entente cordiale", which would have to wait for some time, those first moves, maybe not flamboyant, would prove to be important in the 20th century. As your series has been presented in some way as a prologue to the Great War, I thought it might be worth mentionning. I might be wrong, though.
@realtimehistory
@realtimehistory 3 года назад
it will get a bit of time in the first two weekly episodes when France is looking for allies
@warpigeonofdoom
@warpigeonofdoom 3 года назад
Britain was in an naval arms race with France prior to 1871. A gambler in 1880s may have placed a bet on a Anglo-French war breaking out over colonial possessions. Although we know in hindsight, after 1897 the German navy brought Britain and France closer together.
@LKaramazov
@LKaramazov Год назад
I’m truly enjoying these videos! This one was one of the best!
@kayzeaza
@kayzeaza 3 года назад
Love this channel
@chrisigoeb
@chrisigoeb 3 года назад
I like Napoleon III, he tried his best and his new design of paris was marvelous. Not a Napoleon I but no utter failure either
@grantbarnes3678
@grantbarnes3678 9 месяцев назад
Great, thanks! (Side note-sound is a bit harsh)
@podemosurss8316
@podemosurss8316 3 года назад
If you try to make a video on Spain at this point in history, you would need at least 1 hour to explain.
@podemosurss8316
@podemosurss8316 3 года назад
@A Velsen That's 2 decades later, and thanks to politicians involving with military affairs. But in 1870 the Spanish situation was very complicated. We just had a revolution against Queen Isabella II and were sorting out things. There was factionalism reaching the level of civil war.
@totalwar1793
@totalwar1793 3 года назад
@@podemosurss8316 Yeah, the Carlist Wars were... interesting
@NellaCuriosity
@NellaCuriosity 3 года назад
I am loving these primers!
@flak509
@flak509 3 года назад
This is going to be quite a ride, so exciting 👍
@nicbahtin4774
@nicbahtin4774 2 года назад
6:35 what a cool picture
@LKaramazov
@LKaramazov Год назад
Thanks!
@pauldavies5611
@pauldavies5611 7 месяцев назад
I really liked this video very much and learned quite a bit from it. But if you will permit me a small comment, I wouldn’t say that Napoleon III installed Maximilian as Emperor of Mexico in 1867. Negotiations between the two men for this began as early as 1862, if not earlier, and the Austrian archduke began his stint as Emperor of Mexico in May of 1864. After Prussia defeated Austria in 1866 Napoleon was forced to withdraw his troops from Mexico (the last troops were evacuated by February of 1867) and as a consequence the Mexican Empire was doomed.
@iain349
@iain349 3 года назад
Boom. More real time, from the great war team? The Franco-Prussian war too? And the commune?? I subscribe!
@n.n.5293
@n.n.5293 3 года назад
One important caveat to his support for Sardinia-Piedmont is that he didn‘t intend for Italy to unify. He originally intended for the peninsula to be split between three seperate states: Sardinia-Piedmont in the north, the papal states in the center the two sicilies two the south. By backing Sardinia-Piedmont, he hoped to break Austrian Hegemony over northern Italy. All of the newly strengthened states should become french satellites. With that in mind the unification of Italy, which grew more and more hostile towards France, because french troops occupied Rome, can be considered a rather spectacular failure of fremch foreign policy.
@thunderbird1921
@thunderbird1921 3 года назад
Partially why Italy successfully unified though was because Britain intervened. As Garibaldi and his volunteers were trying to take the southern peninsula and Sicily, they gained the direct assistance of the Royal Navy, which transported them to the coast and from what I've read even bombarded Neopolitan coastal defenses. The British decided to make Italy a larger state because they sought to make a power to balance both Austria AND France. Napoleon III was alarmed by it to say the least.
@n.n.5293
@n.n.5293 3 года назад
@@thunderbird1921 Definitely true. My point still standd however. I felt it was wrong to credit Napoleon III. With helping to unify Italy when 1, he at no point intended for Italy to unify and 2 as you amended, the british were also a large factor in this.
@gregburch1598
@gregburch1598 Год назад
The war hasn't started yet, but it's clear our host is very much a product of the modern academy. The analytical concepts would be right at home in a meeting of the Comintern of the 1920s, with a dash of postmodernist spice.
@mohammedsaysrashid3587
@mohammedsaysrashid3587 3 года назад
Excellent Historical Video Thanks for Sharing ( Surfaces Brilliant Phenomena of Glory appeared But standing on Ruin & decline Foundations ....Bringing Loud disasters at last
@ichmalealsobinich
@ichmalealsobinich 3 года назад
Thank you for the first detailed history documentation about the franco-prussian war. But the era of Napoleon 3 and Bismarck is worth to be handled in more than one video. And concerning la belle époque, do not forget to mention such musicians as Jaques Offenbach from my hometown Cologne, who impregnated the french music.
@iDeathMaximuMII
@iDeathMaximuMII 3 года назад
Napoleon III is a mixed bag for me On one hand, the Paris we see today is because of him. Before he became Emperor, the streets of the capital were disgusting & dirty He also got French colonies in Asia, gave women some rights, and a few more a can’t remember off the top of my head On the other hand, his authoritarian side showed a lot, massive censoring, spying on civilians, secret police, etc. He managed to rule longer than his Uncle (1799 - 1814/1815) yes I’m counting his time as First Consul, since he was all but in name, an Emperor already While his nephew ruled France from 1848 - 1870
@jadegreen438
@jadegreen438 3 года назад
I'm gonna be starting wargaming the Franco Prussian war with Perry miniatures new line of plastic kits so this documentary series is very helpful to get a clearer idea of what the era was like.
@patricofritz4094
@patricofritz4094 3 года назад
That would be cool I already saw ones on The Napoleonic wars
@yourroyalchungusness
@yourroyalchungusness Год назад
Didn't know that established titles had existed since the second french empire
@bauschaum2158
@bauschaum2158 Год назад
Those were some magnificent balls!
@tomhegeman1166
@tomhegeman1166 3 года назад
'no great power war since 1815'. What about the Crimean War? Furthermore, great content!
@lucasjleandro
@lucasjleandro 3 года назад
Vive L'Empereur
@adrianainespena5654
@adrianainespena5654 2 года назад
You forgot to add that Eugenie was a feminist who pushed for educational opportunities for women. She supported secondary education for women and having women go to the Sorbonne. She also pushed to have George Sand elected to the Academie Francaise
@bob494949
@bob494949 4 месяца назад
So she is who we can blame for all the feminist garbage we deal with today.
@adrianainespena5654
@adrianainespena5654 4 месяца назад
@@bob494949 Yes, sad, isni't it that you no longer have the right to beat up your wife if she backtalks?
@LKaramazov
@LKaramazov Год назад
“ wanted to be an emperor like his uncle” lol!
@lettuceman9439
@lettuceman9439 Год назад
I mean he was and for longer than his uncle
@Bracus.Reghusk
@Bracus.Reghusk 8 месяцев назад
It's a shame to don't talk about the Niel Law whith whome Napoleon III wanted to modernize his army conscious of his inferiority against Prussia after the latter's victory over Austria. But the parliament and the government, while going to war, refused this reform which would have modeled the French army on the Prussian model.
@cybersurf5
@cybersurf5 3 года назад
Its fascinating how mutable beauty standards are.
@johnbeechy
@johnbeechy 10 месяцев назад
gross wages are the key to economic growth, due to the definition not allowing Profits to be included in the GDP. capital gains, dividends, profits, none of which go into the GDP, which is the only gauge for the economy.
@F40PH-2CAT
@F40PH-2CAT 9 месяцев назад
This is spectacularly wrong.
@LKaramazov
@LKaramazov Год назад
His ideas were largely populist, but he was also familiar with social ideas” isn’t that somewhat redundant?
@djfiore7103
@djfiore7103 3 года назад
Marx said 2:16 that "The fist time as a great tragedy, the next as a lousy farce" I can't imagine Marx face in heaven when he realized what his ideology, the ideology that he created. Is that quote... Repeating itself over and over again.
@liviunazarie3912
@liviunazarie3912 3 года назад
I've noticed many instances of quotes coming from the "independent observers" Marx&Engels in this series. Aren't there any other relevant independent observers?
@nikolatasev4948
@nikolatasev4948 2 года назад
For me Napoleon III was a better ruler than the first Napoleon. Fewer wars, more focus on internal issues, on infrastructure, health, education, social issues. Napoleion III built hospitals, schools, increased fresh water supply and constructed the Paris sewers - all expensive projects. He even allowed workers to strike, against the wishes of the capitalist. His entire rule he did a balancing act between doing what needed to be done, and doing what people wanted. The workers wanted Communism, the Catholics wanted French soldiers supporting the Pope in Rome, Liberals wanted Italy unified, Republicans wanted Napoleon gone, and pacifists wanted the army reduced. Unlike the first Napoleon, he tried to govern by consensus, not dictatorship, and made some concessions to his political opponents. For example, he wanted to enlarge the army to counter the Prussians, but agreed to postpone this until it was too late and his army got crushed.
@adrianainespena5654
@adrianainespena5654 2 года назад
Add to his ledger the access of women to higher education. And a system of microloans for workers (which included women) - years before Mohammed Yunus was born.
@wazzupsters
@wazzupsters 2 года назад
5:57
@presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889
@presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889 3 года назад
I am not a joke.
@merlinwizard1000
@merlinwizard1000 2 года назад
227th, 4 September 2022
@anthonysclafani3963
@anthonysclafani3963 2 года назад
*Here's another video on Napoleon I made: **ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-86gr1_pyVVQ.html*
@landerviguera9575
@landerviguera9575 2 года назад
No Eugenie.....EUGENIA....María Eugenia Ignacia Agustina de Palafox-Portocarrero de Guzmán y Kirkpatrick e
@r5u26d3
@r5u26d3 3 года назад
France and Prussia tried to manipulate each other. France got outwitted lost the battle. Couldn’t wait for the return match. Won it then blamed Germany for everything. German people could wait for a return match . Lost it, then France and Germany decide to share the running of Europe. All now peaceful , so far. UK not really part of all this. But France and Germany feel they have to bring the UK to heel.
@Vierzehn014
@Vierzehn014 3 года назад
For the algorithm
@julbro8451
@julbro8451 3 года назад
I second that.
@curt8652
@curt8652 3 года назад
"Karl Marx wasn't impressed " Who cares?
@luxy2854
@luxy2854 3 года назад
magnificent balls :9
@ClassicFormulaOne1
@ClassicFormulaOne1 Год назад
I say princess Eugenie wasn't a beauty at all, she is rather ugly if you see pictures of her so I don't understand quite a lot of sources say she was pretty. She was not.
@jessealexander2695
@jessealexander2695 Год назад
Beauty standards chage over time.
@illinoisdarkskystarparty2812
@illinoisdarkskystarparty2812 3 года назад
I winced when I heard your opening remark "France was the preeminent military and cultural power in Europe." Cultural, perhaps, but military? You can't be serious--and the rest of your presentation proves it. And please, spare us the PC comments about the French empire.
@ME-eu9sf
@ME-eu9sf 3 года назад
France has the record of military victories, it's a fact. But I guess you're american, right ?
@comicbutserious263
@comicbutserious263 3 года назад
But it was up, to 1870 France had never lost a war 1v1 against another great power. Only through coalitions. As for cultural i d argue we only lost cultural preeminence to the english and eventually the US around ww1
@kieranh2005
@kieranh2005 3 года назад
From what I've read, France had a larger serving army than Prussia (professionals and conscripts undergoing their training/term of service) and a larger pool of reserves. Most of their military equipment was on par with and in some cases superior to that with which the Prussians were armed and equipped. So on paper, they were superior. However. They got outsmarted. Prussia was prepared, with its armies positioned, stockpiles of supplies laid, ready to wage war when France opened the war against them, and had begun the call up well before the war, and had a better system for getting the reserves mobilized, better railways and better use of telegraph systems. France didnt have its armies positioned, didnt have the supplies ready to move on the moment, hadn't called up its reserves, and didnt have or didnt make use of railways and telegraph systems. They were thus able to outnumber the French at all of the points that it mattered, keep their troops supplied, reinforce when needed, outmaneuver and out-communicate on the operational and strategic levels and consequently spanked them all over France.
@TheFearsomePredator
@TheFearsomePredator 4 месяца назад
Bro's probably American lmao
@EagleLeader1
@EagleLeader1 2 года назад
Lol Empress Eugenie's beauty? Hahahaha, if I'm blind for not seeing her beauty I'll keep my blindness thanks.
@gabrielaristoi7451
@gabrielaristoi7451 3 года назад
Napoleon III was probably the best french ruler since Henry IV. Whats funny - he knew that Prussia was powerhouse - wanted army as strong in quantity as prussian but his parlament didnt let him do it. His biggest mistake - being overconfiden in his (as commander in chief) and overall french military might. Prussia said check and rest is history.
@Heisenberg882
@Heisenberg882 2 года назад
Probably the best monarch since Henri IV if you don’t count Cardinal Richelieu
@gallici-anima-christiana
@gallici-anima-christiana Год назад
Who even takes Marx seriously?
@LKaramazov
@LKaramazov Год назад
Today, not many, but you can’t deny his place in world history. He was responsible for one of the most “successful” empires in history and he played a huge intellectual role in the rise of todays China. Stalin and Marx took him VERY seriously.
@stephenclark5812
@stephenclark5812 3 года назад
You could be describing the liberal government of the USA. That is shocking!
@ColonelHess
@ColonelHess 2 года назад
Every time a buzz word drops I lose respect, just a little, well maby more then a little.
@michaelsinger4638
@michaelsinger4638 3 года назад
I think that if Napoleon III had stuck with domestic affairs, he might be far better remembered today because he did accomplish quite a bit there.
@gabespiro8902
@gabespiro8902 4 дня назад
Kinda like LBJ, I think he said something like “foreign affairs are the death of domestic affairs”
@yorick6035
@yorick6035 3 года назад
10:16 for those of you who love reading about last stands during wars: look up the Battle of Cameron, during the French Intervention in Mexico. 60 or so French Foreign Legion fighting almost to the last man, against 3000 or so Mexican soldiers. The battle is still remembered by Foreign Legion, and the wooden hand of the French commander an important artifact to the Legion.
@podemosurss8316
@podemosurss8316 3 года назад
Reminds me of the Spanish "last stand" at St. John's Hill in 1898: 125 Spanish soldiers with 4 guns against three US divisions (2 infantry + 1 cavalry). The US suffered 3000 deaths and around 5000 wounded.
@Anaris10
@Anaris10 2 года назад
Was Captain D'Anjou I believe.
@mikeyoung3519
@mikeyoung3519 2 года назад
@@podemosurss8316 seeing as the US only lost 385 troops for the entire Spanish American war, I doubt that
@podemosurss8316
@podemosurss8316 2 года назад
@@mikeyoung3519 "The US only lost 385 troops for the entire Spanish American war" Press X to doubt.
@domibht7817
@domibht7817 3 года назад
Hello I am French and I watch your series on the Franco-Prussian war I am happy to see that everywhere these days there is a real rehabilitation of the work of 'Napoleon III he was a great leader but he was a victim of deceit and black legend on the part of the Republicans. I am passionate about the 19th century and the reign of Napoleon III is fascinating happy to see that you did not simplify all this conflict and issues by mocking and "favoring" Prussia. These two countries are fascinating and Napoleon III and Bismarck too. I hope that one day your videos will have French subtitles, the quality is perfect. People often forget everything that Napoleon III did for France I hope to see yet another video on Napoleon III and all that he was able to bring to France, the members of his family Eugenie and the Prince Imperial we have a dramatic and at the same time fascinating story. Très Bonne vidéo ;)
@Big-guy1981
@Big-guy1981 3 года назад
A great leader? Là tu exaggères, Mon ami!
@domibht7817
@domibht7817 3 года назад
@@Big-guy1981 son règne a été bénéfique pour la France entière. Son problème la maladie et l'expédition du Mexique. La crimée la guerre d'Italie des victoires. Les provinces de France étaient favorables à Napoléon III seul Paris et les républicains on toujours été un obstacle.
@basilen.7852
@basilen.7852 3 года назад
@@domibht7817 marrant tu fais moins de fautes d'orthographe en anglais qu'en français
@domibht7817
@domibht7817 3 года назад
@@basilen.7852 Oui mdrr j'ai écris un peu pensant que ceux qui parlerai français seraient plus intéressés par ce que je dis plutôt de relever les fautes jpp
@totalwar1793
@totalwar1793 3 года назад
I thought he was an okay leader until the later years when he basically alienated French Foreign Policy
@renel8964
@renel8964 3 года назад
I was pretty certain that I was a responsible and pretty grown up adult, And then I had to hear "magnificent balls" 🤣
@davidmccormick7419
@davidmccormick7419 3 года назад
dido lol
@catriona_drummond
@catriona_drummond 3 года назад
I always found the perfect example of France's absurd politics of the time in the outcry "Revenge for Sadowa". Crying revenge for a battle that Austria lost to Prussia while you stayed completely neutral is the epitomy of hypochrisy.
@magni5648
@magni5648 2 года назад
Fun little tidbit: Another "advantage" of the modernisation of Paris was that those wide, open boulevards also made it much harder for rioting crowds to put up the barricades, and hence easier for the army to march in and put down revolts.
@adrianainespena5654
@adrianainespena5654 2 года назад
Well, building barricades is not the best way to handle political problems.
@Noe.2198
@Noe.2198 Год назад
😂
@magni5648
@magni5648 Год назад
@@Noe.2198 Not actually a joke. That was a legit point raised at the time.
@adrianainespena5654
@adrianainespena5654 Год назад
What really prevented the barricades was the expansion of agriculture which ended the endemic famines that France suffered, since revolts began when there was little food available.
@drpapa26
@drpapa26 3 года назад
Jesse's French pronunciation is pure joy
@jessealexander2695
@jessealexander2695 3 года назад
Facts. :)
@mammuchan8923
@mammuchan8923 3 года назад
I second that, it’s extremely pleasing✌️
@pegzounet
@pegzounet 3 года назад
There is a hint of quebec accent at the end, that always sounds wonderfully musical and cool to us frenchmen.
@jessealexander2695
@jessealexander2695 3 года назад
@@pegzounet J'essaie de cacher mon accent un peu pour les citations mais c'est impossible à 100%...
@pegzounet
@pegzounet 3 года назад
@@jessealexander2695 il faut pas, c'est magnifique !
@अजिङ्क्यगोखले
The French army under Napoleon Bonaparte was quite a force to be reckoned for its time, but it seems that France took too long to move on from that.
@Boxghost102
@Boxghost102 2 года назад
Can you do a full hour video just on the French Empire's culture and industry? Please.
@ForelliBoy
@ForelliBoy 3 года назад
"The guillotines ended the French Empire!" Bismarck: i'm gonna do what's called a pro gamer move
@ChannelBerpindah
@ChannelBerpindah 8 месяцев назад
I thought in mid 19th century britain were considered the most powerful military ?
@lawsharland7278
@lawsharland7278 2 года назад
The second French empire is such a strangely forgotten state despite the massive legacy it left behind
@morewi
@morewi 3 года назад
Excellent video.
@AtaMarKat
@AtaMarKat 2 года назад
RIP Emperador Maximiliano. 😔
@Clapsk
@Clapsk 3 года назад
Re: colonialism, it's more complicated than racist theories for N3. A) China was the big prize, a massive market for industrial goods, so Vietnam was a solid target as it was thought you could access it through the Red River, and it made a nearby base anyway B) N3 foreign policy was about framing himself as protector of Catholics, opposite to Russia which was protector of the orthodox. Hence intervention in Lebanon, but it also provided the pretext for the expedition against Vietnam (with Spain btw) as the Nguyen dynasty was persecuting Catholic communities, mostly out of fear they might be instrumentalised by foreign powers.
@kristiyaniliev4002
@kristiyaniliev4002 3 года назад
I just found the channel. Great surprise! Congratulations 😎😎
@adamgordon-boyle1560
@adamgordon-boyle1560 3 года назад
I can't be the only one who thinks the best part of this is hearing Jesse say things in French.
@toric6005
@toric6005 3 года назад
I misheard one of the first sentences. I thought he said, let’s talk about Friends lol.
@toric6005
@toric6005 3 года назад
@@Phil-ni3ol sir you made my night
@danschroeder3441
@danschroeder3441 3 года назад
Great work, love the content!
@bluebear6570
@bluebear6570 3 года назад
France and Prussia couldn´t have been more different! France - luxurious, glamourous and decadent, and Prussia - austere, low key. The French population was predominantly of Roman Catholic denomination, the Prussian populace of Protestant belief.
@ivanstojanac7752
@ivanstojanac7752 3 года назад
Can't wait to learn more about the war
@TullyBascombe
@TullyBascombe 3 года назад
When I visited Paris a few years ago I was struck by the degree to which buildings in entire blocks in central Paris exhibited the same architectural style. Was this Haussmann's doings?
@kevinreiss-coint2353
@kevinreiss-coint2353 3 года назад
Yes, it was probably buildings dating from Haussmann.
@perperson199
@perperson199 3 года назад
Yes
@giulianoradice4715
@giulianoradice4715 2 года назад
Buildings very kitsch!
@gabespiro8902
@gabespiro8902 4 дня назад
Say what you will of his ideas, you have to admit Marx was pretty funny
@macpurdy
@macpurdy 3 года назад
For the algorithm and the history.
@karoltakisobie6638
@karoltakisobie6638 3 года назад
All social problems you mention here were not exclusive to French in mid 19 century. They were present in entire western world all the way till Great War. US and Russia had the same problems too but they were cushioned by expansion west and east respectively. They came back when Great War started.
@stevelawrence5123
@stevelawrence5123 3 года назад
The way you described the Second Republic with the decadence and corruption could be a description of the USA today, except I doubt is any French general would have low enough to agree to warn the Germans in advance if and when his army was ordered to attack.
@grandcrowdadforde6127
@grandcrowdadforde6127 11 месяцев назад
what i REALLY! wanna know........how did he get those mustashes to stick out like that? Were they dangerous??
@rabihrac
@rabihrac 3 года назад
Great episode. Thumbs up!
@cglilp425
@cglilp425 Год назад
I blame French leadership for the fall of Napoleon III
@DucadiBorgogna_
@DucadiBorgogna_ 3 года назад
Watch out, Napoleon III was incredibly intelligent, an intellectual and courageous. The secondo empire lasted for 20 years and it’s influence in Europe was felt everywhere
@DucadiBorgogna_
@DucadiBorgogna_ 3 года назад
And the improvement of the worker class are undeniable
@DucadiBorgogna_
@DucadiBorgogna_ 3 года назад
He changed France forever. He made to some extend the France that we know today
@T_Mo271
@T_Mo271 3 года назад
It would be interesting to know more about why France was meddling in Mexico.
@Alduin_el_Compadre
@Alduin_el_Compadre 2 года назад
There are better people than me to give a thurough explanation but in short. Mexico owed Money to Spain, Britain and France. The european powers demanded the debts payed but Mexico said "Na fam in broke (again)" so the 3 European powers joined in an ocupation force in the state of Veracruz until mexico managed to pay their debts. Napoleon III decided this was an excelent opportunity to get some colonial land, so he kept bringing more forces; the spanish and Brits realizing What was happening left mexico. At this point is when the battles begin to happen, including the Famous Battle of Puebla/5 de mayo. France managed to capture the mexican capital and forced the mexican republicans into exile to either the USA or the mexican mountain Ranges. At this point the Mexican republicans began guerrilla warfare against the French forces and Mexican imperial sympathizers. The American civil war ended and The USA began giving weapons to the mexican republican forces, after more battles the French forces left (Because the turmoil with Purssia was beggining, the USA began putting sanctions on French goods and Napoleon III had enough of the Bad look gettint beaten by a bunch of poor hispanics tends to bring). Eventually Maximilian I was captured and executed . Fin
@mortenpoulsen1496
@mortenpoulsen1496 3 года назад
Go france ;)
@b1laxson
@b1laxson 3 года назад
Context for some of the years mentioned is the US Civil War was 1861-1865. The various technologies and methods of fighting were being co-developed in both Europe and the Americas. One of these being the "Napoleon" cannon that saw much use in the US Civil War.
@thebog11
@thebog11 3 года назад
The 12 pounder Napoleons were smoothbore, old tech by the time of the Franco-Prussian war. The Parrott rifled cannons used by the Union were more modern, but could not compare to the Prussian breachloading artillery.
@mayukhmitra5819
@mayukhmitra5819 3 года назад
Napoleon III Actually gained permanent conquest for France which it still has to this day. Savoie and Nice in exchange of help in 2nd Italian war.
@wasfureinbua
@wasfureinbua 6 месяцев назад
interesting video
@zico739
@zico739 Год назад
03:57 Beauty?
@napoleon_bonaparte_the_great
@napoleon_bonaparte_the_great 3 года назад
Long story short; Napoleon III made a fairy tale Empire out of France, but one that mostly worked. . .until he got sick, his advisors and entourage couldn't compete with the more politically proficient-Republicans {who I personally regard as Traitors as there are some serious claims by Bismarck that he even bought them out} and in the end lost his crown in the field of battle. . .same as his uncle did. Altogether, perhaps someone who would make France better if his regime stayed. And personally a kinda idol for his way of populistic {kinda} progressive way of ruling.
@MedjayofFaiyum
@MedjayofFaiyum 3 года назад
Do you have any sources for Bismarck claiming he brought out the French republicans?
@valmarsiglia
@valmarsiglia 3 года назад
3:50 - "Her beauty increased her social status." Wut
@jonathanwilliams1065
@jonathanwilliams1065 3 года назад
Some things never change
@ElBandito
@ElBandito 2 года назад
Ah yes, French temporary economic boom caused by speculation and insider trading. Bit like Japan in the 70's and 80's.
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