Hi there! This is the all episodes version of my previous series. From now on I will do all parts videos for each of my series. That is for all except the Portuguese Empire and the Italian Wars. I plan to completely redo those ONCE running this channel becomes worthwhile $$$. Say the Portuguese at 20K subs and the Itw at 50K :D The last episode of the Spanish Empire will air in a week and my new series on John Hunyadi - comprising 3 episodes on: the Battle of Varna, 2nd Kosovo and the Siege of Belgrade will start 2 weeks from now.
Can't wait for the episodes about Hunyadi! I absolutely love the channel and its content. If you would accept this, I can offer my help with the episode about the crusade of Varna in 1444 (although your content is so well researched that I don't know if I can offer much). As a historian I'm studying the later crusades in the Balkans and as a Bulgarian (from Varna :D ) I can help with a lot of literature, especially source books on the topic and the achievements of Bulgarian scholars, since the Balkan crusades are well researched here. Keep up the good work!
Catholic, meaning universal, had captivated minds and souls as figure heads of corruption in the middle ages, reformers with faith in God and the bible challenged the authority and rule of the Vatican through the call of the Reformation and the subsequent separation from the Roman dogma which insists adversely to Scriptures, claimed the reformers until today.
This is becoming one of my favorite channels for history. I always overlooked the 15th,16th, and 17th centuries when I studied history but you have made me a lot more interested in this period (I think because growing up in school in the US we only learned about North America, and nothing about what was going on in the old world for the most part somewhat turned me off from looking deeper into this period)
As an American I can confirm this. I think the Reformation was covered in one day, and the class period was only an hour, throughout my entire time in school.
Me too... when I really got into learning about history around age 15 I became more familiar with medieval times, because I liked the mongols, and familiar with seven years war / American independence / napoleonic wars, but I was left ignorant of much of the time in between - except for the Spanish conquests in America and the ottoman conquests... only in the last few years have I started to fill in some of the blanks in my knowledge between ~1300 and ~1750 including the reformation
Your channel is *criminally* undersubbed bro. I just got done watching your Spanish Empire video and it was excellent! I went to this when I was doing the mowing! Great work, thank you very much!
@@pikeshotBattles Okay, though I think you should do a compilation even if you plan to redo the series. If you redo them you shouldn't take down the old ones just have the old and new ones.
A nice synthesis, thanks. However, as someone educated by the Jesuits, I'm positive that the version on how Eneko Loiola (Íñigo de Loyola, not yet renamed as Ignatius) got his inspiration is wrong: been told the story many times from different people, many of them Jesuit priests, and it's always that, when recovering from his wounds, he read many books of lives of saints and was inspired by them. No divine visions whatsoever, much less for eight whole days. Otherwise all sounds legit to me.
This is good but really broad strokes, I guess it needs to be for broad interest. The fact that most Cardinals and bishops were nobles was precisely because princes' had regional control of their churches. While Luther's reforms were and are a good thing for the church, the majority of the effort to curtail the power of the church wasn't the sale of indulgences but rather Princes seizing her tithes and church property. We saw it happen in all the protestant principalities immediately seizing church property and denying to send the church it's due. Money that was used to house the poor feed the hungry shelter the homeless and paint the Sistene Chapel and some less savory things to say nothing of keeping the Ottoman at bay. While the church eventually adopts many of Luther's reforms let's not pretend the reformation wasn't about rich men seizing more wealth for themselves.
With every major conflict there are multiple motivations on multiple levels. There is no such thing as a major conflict that was motivated by a single thing. Of course some "historians" in the Anglo-American sphere like to profess this (most notably in regards to the Civil War being solely motivated by the question of slavery!). Maybe I should explain this in more detail...
It never even occurred to me that there were priests who didn’t know Latin, and thus, had no idea what hey were performing along with an ignorant congregation. I thought that was the whole point, to act as the middleman for god’s word... smh so corrupt.
small piece of advice: I would not label the parts of your series with numbers, even if they are part of a larger series. You will get more views if you only put "series name - big event" in the title. That way, curious browsers will click on it even if they haven't seen the earlier parts.
John Hus wasn't ''lured'' at Constance. He went there, John XXIII and lift his excommunication and told him not to preach in public while in Constance. John Hus didn't do so and was arrested. But even then, he was assigned in a monastery for several weeks before his trial. And when trialed, he has been offered many times to recant his errors. He refused. Sadly
I am the only ones that sees Luther as a promoter of autoritarian regimes, making more centralized states and destroying the gap between church and state?
Indeed. And Basel - wrongly situated in the position of Berne on the map used here, it should be on the northern border - notoriously is the one Swiss protestant city that's pretty much Lutheran instead of Zwinglian or Calvinist.
There's no coincidence that Protestant Deformation appeared when the Holy Roman Empire was solidifying its power to wipe out Ottomans and reconquer Jerusalem. protestantism has a very strong relation with Iconoclasts in Constantinople.
I would disagree somewhat. The confusion and political schism result in bloodshed and chaos for 150 years. Beside the Catholic Church was probably the first institution in Europe that transcend political and national boundaries similar to the European Union.
I would disagree somewhat. The confusion and political schism result in bloodshed and chaos for 150 years. Beside the Catholic Church was probably the first institution in Europe that transcend political and national boundaries similar to the European Union.
There's no coincidence that Protestant Deformation appeared when the Holy Roman Empire was solidifying its power to wipe out Ottomans and reconquer Jerusalem. protestantism has a very strong relation with Iconoclasts in Constantinople.
The only one coping here is you dude, you can claim that the victory of the protestants at the end of the struggle was divine will if you want But is no coincidence that Luther was saved by the lord of Saxony because he wanted to challenge the growing centralization of the HRE, is no coincidence that it happened right after the conquest of the last Byzantine and orthodox conquests in the balkans All of it highly influenced the thoughts of the people and their leaders