Thank you so much for featuring my indie game in your video! Your support and outstanding promotion mean a lot to me. I'm excited about this opportunity and appreciate your help in getting the word out!
@@Jean_Jacques148 Carthage: Punic War will receive updates and new mechanics continuously, and the possibility of adding a new sandbox campaign with different factions is not ruled out. And always with the same philosophy: no in-game advertising and no microtransactions.
I knew Gascony was an important wine making and trading area, but didn't know how critical it was to England. I always thought it was Edward's aggressive pursuit of his right to the French throne that triggered the long war.
Edward III, doesn't declare himself King of France until 1340, with a prociamation read out in the centre of Ghent market place which he only does in order to give his French allies in Flanders, Gascony and across France, legality of serving their rightful king instead of being traitors by turning against Philip.
First time ever i hear of how critical Gasgony was to England, it almost makes sense why you would wage war for a century; it began with the threat of entirely cripling England itself and not just with redrawing lines on a map that's the norm
I love watching these enlightening videos. They actually have helped in genealogy research. Providing context of the time and places to add to queries. Extremely helpful and definitely helped bear fruit. Thank you History Marche!!!!! Any military family or historians should use these resources. 'Kings and Generals" is also a good resource. Together you get a bigger picture even.
As a history teacher your videos are both my go to for engaging & informative content, and my happy place for entertainment/information. Thank you @HistoryMarche
Thanks for this! Love your work man! Walter manny was such a fierce commander, specially with his " MAAAANYYY" Battle cry! Suggestion: the Siege of vienna of 1683!
Whoever made that game. Bro, thank you. You are freaking amazing. I had no idea this was a game and I wanted these videos to let me play them so bad. It's like a birthday or something I literally wanted thia game. I juat had no idea it was a reality. For everyone else this creator is referencing it is actually fire. It's awesome, give dude a chance. If this video is ur kinda stuff and you like total war and 4x games and stuff. Then this is it dudes. I feel like if this guy got some good support he could make this a full on blown triple aaaaaaaaaa indie game. It's awesome, him or his team put work into this. It every single bit worth the 4 whole dollars it cost.
Indeed and helps they had archers providing covering fire as fire support to clear the beaches of opposing forces, before the main force landed and attacked the enemy, who had retreated inland.
Wow, I had never actually heard of this battle before! Usually the medieval videos cover battles I've already read about which is also cool but its really interesting to learn of a new battle. I am excited for the battle of Saint-Omer, poor Flemish just can't catch a break.
Hi HistoryMarche, thank you for focusing on Medieval French warfare lately. I recommend to anyone to integrate with Schwerpunkt's content, it's as much a gold mine as this
In my opinion it's better to do things in order, this was meant to be the first video in hundred years war series, it's confusing for someone who is not familiar with the subject, how all things started why they fighting etc... imagine you done Hannibal series starting with the battle of Cannae and this is my first video in the HYW series that i watched till the end... i must be honest with my favourite history yt channel... and off course i really like the video... 😗
Great video y'all! You guys should adapt the battle of patay too, it's known as the english agincourt, where the french swept aside the longbowmen with a cavalry charge. (Also pls consider remaking crecy!)
Hope as well as the videos on the outstanding well known battles of the war, that you will also cover Bergerac/Auberoche in 1345, Patay 1429 as well as Morlaix in 1342 in this series, all key battles of less well known campaigns in the war.
Thank you( history Marche ) channel for sharing this remarkable historical coverage of this subject and wonderful introduction ...another times long bow English men recorded victory ✌️ of England 🇬🇧 on French army ( French alliance flammishes)
I'm looking for more games about the 100 year war, I recently tried the Crown Wars: The Black Prince demo and it's really cool, it makes you see this conflict in a completely new way. I would love to see you try it :)
Maybe a "minor English victory" in terms of overall manpower change, but total victory in terms of battlefield domination and as you describe with the resulting impact to pro English and French cities in the vicinity.
@@thesnoopmeistersnoops5167 Cadzand or the 1355 chevauchées don't involve kings but the channels still did it. If the Caroline phase don't involve kings, it's because Edward 3 was too old and Richard 2 too young on the Plantagenet side while on the Valois side, Charles 5 use the Fabian strategy and let skilful commanders lead armies in battle and Charles 6 was also too young. There's still big battles and events (without kings): Edward 3 chevauchée 1359-1360 Cocherel 1364 : 1500 Valois vs 5000 Plantagenet Montiel 1369 : 15000 Plantagenet vs less Valois Knolles chevauchée and Pontvallain 1370 : 5000 men on each sides La Rochelle 1372 : 20 Valois ships vs 50 Plantagenet ships John of Gaunt 1373 chevauchée Thomas Woodstock chevauchée 1380 Roosebeeke 1382 : 15000 Valois vs 25000 Plantagenet Despenser crusade 1383 Ecluse 1385 even on each side
@@robert-surcoufhello/bonjour. Both of those battles are not part of Caroline phase? I think you misunderstand me. History remembers big battles/kings/generals/emperors. Caroline phase is a war of maneuvering. Underated French king because he didn't lead a big battle but that's my point? No disrespect to France, but that's just how history works.
I love every video you made so far. I would love to show it to my little brother, but he doesnt know English, which is a big problem in Czechia. I already sent you an email mentioning this and I wonder... Would it be possible for me to translate some of your videos and create a shared youtube channel, where Czech speaking people could watch your great work?
Wow this battle sounds so cinematic! I always thought medieval amphibious assaults were the thing of myth and legend. Are there any other examples of ancient amphibious landings like this? As always, Ill see you in the next one 👍
I had no idea that the longest war in history between the English and French had begun so far from their current borders and in another country like Netherlands. It is striking how Netherlands and Belgium have been, for centuries, the favorite battlefield of all of Europe, since Roman times, throughout the Middle Ages and practically throughout the modern age. Will Netherlands and Belgium be the places where there are the most tombs of soldiers from every corner of Western Europe? I know that Italians, French, English, Germans, Spaniards, Americans, Canadians, Scandinavians, among others, died there (no wonder it is such a productive agricultural land, with such macabre fertilizer). XD
Also the island of Cadzand, and the port of Sluys don't exist anymore. Silt and geography have made both part of mainland. Sluys is an inland city.
ปีที่แล้ว +5
@@josephvisnovsky1462 Yes, that is the interesting thing about Dutch geography, I'm quite familiar with the 16th and 17th century maps of that European region (from studying the topic of the Spanish Tercios, as a Hispanic that I am) and it is incredible how different it is in this video; For example, Breda here appears as a coastal port, while several centuries later it was another city in the Dutch inland and I also see that Ostend does not appear on the map (although I don't know if it is by omission), among many other things like the way land was reclaimed from the sea in the North, around Groningen and etc.
It all started with that Frankish ruler who had 3 sons. One took France, one the later HRE. And the last one the smallest and least united , but very wealthy, middle-part that reaches from Belgium, the Netherlands and Alsace-Lorraine over Burgundy and Switzerland to northern Italy. - Understandably everybody tried to grab what they could from the latter; house Habsburg and France, for example, were ( until Marie Antoinette) at war for centuries for a reason.
@as you can see cadzand is an island here but during later years the complete region from cadzand towards the area of braband was reclaimed, a few major city got created in this erea that at one point rivaled venice in its econimic power it was the three citys of ghent axel and hulst. They where major exporteurs of flax wich was valuable at the time, although its a contestet piece of info. Also cadzand is now a great place for a vacation to the netherlands, since its close to multiple historic sites and has a nice beach close by
Hey, I was binge watching second punic war series. But it has not been finished. I think many are waiting for the next episode so eagerly. Please please do it soon...❤❤
It’s amazing to me how often armies during this era. Would neglect to bring any form of ranged weapons. Then proceed to just stand in formation and take volley after volley. How many men have died because of terrible military command? Countless….
Not the first or the last time Walter Manny arrived in the nick of time to pull somebody’s chestnuts out of the fire. Why he was not a founding member of the Order of the Garter is a mystery to me.
Edward III was a great king, he reformed English law, had great military success and made the nobility more confident in war, even creating a new chivalric order in the mould of Arthur to further this bond. Edward also did a great job in creating a professional army (by medieval standards) that performed well in pitched battle.
When he died in 1377, England was financially ruined, the franco-castillan fleet havoc english coast and Plantagenet have less land than they had in 1326 when he become king. He also starts a war with a false claim. Last but not least, he created the seed that gave the war of roses 100 years later by giving each one of his sons vast lands. For English law and the order of Garter, you're right.
@daemontargaryen6757 Philippe 6 claim could be debatable but Edward 3 wasn't. If only male by male male line could inherit the crown, then Philippe 6 was the rightfull king. If male coul inherit by female line, then all Charles 4, Philippe 5 and Louis 10 (all Philippe 4 sons) grandsons will be above Edward 3 in line of succession since Edward was only Philippe 4 grandson. In 1328, Only Philippe 5 has one grandson, Philippe of Burgundy (born in 1323) so the crown will be open between him and Philippe Valois while Edward 3 will be second in line at best behind Philippe of Burgundy. In 1337, there wil be three other grandson, Louis of Flanders (born in 1330 and Philippe 5 granson) and the brothers Charles and Philippe of Navarre (born in 1332 and 1336 and both Louis 10 grandsons). It's another thing but when the Lancastrians take the throne of england, they basically deny Edward 3 claim by ignoring Roger and Edmond Mortimer (Lionel of Anvers grandsons) claim.
It is difficult to imagine that a single piece of paper could such influence European history that it resulted in a small island becoming a world expansive empire . The Magna Carta , was that document , it gave the right to every common man to hunt in all forests but the kings forest . This meant that as long as you could hunt with a bow and later on a musket your family would not go hungry . It encouraged archery and musketry as a skill from a young age . This is why English longbowmen and the redcoats were so feared the world over and how the transition from archery to powder was smoother . When you instead compared this to France Italy and other nations of europe they had no such document and started training the required skills to adults , particularly with archery which requires an immense amount of upper body strength to draw a 80lbs pull longbow repeatedly for hours on end .
Why isnt this talked about more? Its basically a medieval D-day Edit: Its not the same in its effect but it was an important amphibous assualt that included a bombardment.
It's look cool, does the game exist on PC ? Because I look for this type of game, especially when it's about history ! By the way, I saw Crown Wars : The Black Prince on Steam, if anyone is interesting. It look like XCOM2. I played the demo and if I'm not mistaken it's inspired by the 100 years war.
While looking at Google Maps, I noticed that the town of Cadzand, currently located in the Netherlands, is actually on the continent. Does anyone have any idea what happened there? Was the region terraformed or someting?
If you look at Sluys (or Sluis) you'll see it's about a dozen miles inland next to Cadzand (or Kadzand). Sluys was still a port when besieged by the Spanish in 1587 but only because a canal had been dug to compensate for the estuary silting up. Kadzand had been abandoned by this point but the whole area was a morass of dykes, sluices, small islets, and ever-changing river channels. It's all been reclaimed since. As an aside you'll note in the video Bruges is listed as a port. Similar processes led to it being rendered virtually useless and Zeebrugge being constructed. The Dutch, Flemish, and Walloons, were/are fiendishly clever at claiming land from the sea as well as flooding it again whenever their territories are invaded.
The Perveza campaign 1538 in this month Pope called for a crusade and gathered a large crusader fleet (600 ships and 100,000 men) from many christian kingdom and duchies but Hayreddin Barbarossa with his fleet annilihated them killed most of them at least 60,000 crusaders died and sank most of their ships after a 5-hour battle the largest naval battle in history
Quite weird to kill the apparent 60k+ 'crusaders' when they only lost around 12 ships out of more than 200. And where do you get 600 ships from, that are way way too many.
You can't spell "Preveza" properly, and you want people to believe your grossly exaggerated numbers ? How could there be more dead soldiers at the outcome of a battle than living ones at its onset ?
Crazy times the sword and shield isn't the word for it for what it is today so many people died more than likely just for war good work on your history of the world is shaped it is thank you
Although it is nothing more than an small skirmish in respect of the much larger battles in the war to come, it did prove how vulnerable France would be to sea attacks, if England gained control of the channel as they would at Sluys in 1340. As well as even more importantly cement Flanders neutrality and eventually loyalty to the english cause which they would join openly by 1340.
Imagine being a peasant. Drafted into the militia. Your beloved wife kissing you a goodbye and you promise her that you'll return safely. Your baby-girl awaiting her father. You march out with the thoughts of your small farmhouse and cooking food. You dont have much, but you're happy. Then, you lose the fight. Surrender with the hopes of somehow returning home. You're done with fighting, you just want to live. Just want to go back home. You're no soldier. No knight. No man-at-arms. You're just a regular dude who doesn't care about who's flag is flying above your head as long as your family is safe. You maybe beg for your life. Cry, for you want to go home. A "heroic knight" just walks to you as you try to crawl away, crying and begging. Your thoughts, dwelling on your promise you made to your wife. You can't leave her. You can't die now. Not before you see your baby girl walk for the first time. That Heroic Knight jabs his sword to your chest because your poor wife couldn't scramble enough valuables to pay for your ransom. She has no idea you are dead. Still searching the house for anything valuable. Anything at all. She will gather all of your belongings, from pots to clothes, and race to the beach with the hopes that she can pay for her one and only lover. You are long gone.. War is hell.
Cadzand and Sluis are in the Netherlands since the 80 Years War with Spain, conquered by Zeeland. That part is called Zeeuws-Vlaanderen/Zeelandic Flanders, says is all).
Advisor: My liege, this raid could have major repercussions for a century. Should I send our army? Phillip: Non, this is far too important. Send in the Flems!
🚩 Play Carthage: Bellum Punicum: bit.ly/CarthageBellumPunicum
Your work is among the Best! Love your 100 years war content! You rock🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤
Hope you do Halidon Hill next
I don't want to play as the bad guys lol
Has the game been getting decent updates somI can makemmy dad buy it for me
What if I don't want to😩
Thank you so much for featuring my indie game in your video! Your support and outstanding promotion mean a lot to me. I'm excited about this opportunity and appreciate your help in getting the word out!
Nice game, do you think you will add more factions?
Game looks awesome
@@Jean_Jacques148 Carthage: Punic War will receive updates and new mechanics continuously, and the possibility of adding a new sandbox campaign with different factions is not ruled out. And always with the same philosophy: no in-game advertising and no microtransactions.
I've been waiting for a game like this for years, will be playing soon without a doubt
DUDE, ADD ROMANS FOR JUPITER'S SAKE
@@mindebyte
I knew Gascony was an important wine making and trading area, but didn't know how critical it was to England. I always thought it was Edward's aggressive pursuit of his right to the French throne that triggered the long war.
Edward III, doesn't declare himself King of France until 1340, with a prociamation read out in the centre of Ghent market place which he only does in order to give his French allies in Flanders, Gascony and across France, legality of serving their rightful king instead of being traitors by turning against Philip.
There’s always money behind the politics. Some things don’t change.
First time ever i hear of how critical Gasgony was to England, it almost makes sense why you would wage war for a century; it began with the threat of entirely cripling England itself and not just with redrawing lines on a map that's the norm
I'd heard that Gascony was valuable (mostly in reference to Eleanor of Aquitaine), but never how much it contributed relative to the overall treasury.
Most of royal tresure came from wine trade with Gascony.
Edouard 3 has never been the rightful heir to Charles 4 but use his claim as a pretext
The killer of the natives, I have no remorse. I have no skin in ur wars.
@@ThexSleepingDragon
Nobody cares.
@@ThexSleepingDragonI would hope not, figuring we are talking about the 14th century. Unless you are a time traveler, then what’s up bro
I love watching these enlightening videos. They actually have helped in genealogy research. Providing context of the time and places to add to queries. Extremely helpful and definitely helped bear fruit. Thank you History Marche!!!!! Any military family or historians should use these resources. 'Kings and Generals" is also a good resource. Together you get a bigger picture even.
As a history teacher your videos are both my go to for engaging & informative content, and my happy place for entertainment/information. Thank you @HistoryMarche
Thanks for this! Love your work man! Walter manny was such a fierce commander, specially with his " MAAAANYYY" Battle cry!
Suggestion: the Siege of vienna of 1683!
Whoever made that game. Bro, thank you. You are freaking amazing. I had no idea this was a game and I wanted these videos to let me play them so bad. It's like a birthday or something I literally wanted thia game. I juat had no idea it was a reality. For everyone else this creator is referencing it is actually fire. It's awesome, give dude a chance. If this video is ur kinda stuff and you like total war and 4x games and stuff. Then this is it dudes. I feel like if this guy got some good support he could make this a full on blown triple aaaaaaaaaa indie game. It's awesome, him or his team put work into this. It every single bit worth the 4 whole dollars it cost.
thank you so much, that means the world to me.
That is extremely well executed ambitious landing for a medieval army
Yes that was impressive
Indeed and helps they had archers providing covering fire as fire support to clear the beaches of opposing forces, before the main force landed and attacked the enemy, who had retreated inland.
Extremely good. Historymarche is the best History channel on TH-cam.
Wow, I had never actually heard of this battle before! Usually the medieval videos cover battles I've already read about which is also cool but its really interesting to learn of a new battle. I am excited for the battle of Saint-Omer, poor Flemish just can't catch a break.
Hi HistoryMarche, thank you for focusing on Medieval French warfare lately. I recommend to anyone to integrate with Schwerpunkt's content, it's as much a gold mine as this
Already been subbed for a while now :D
I find medieval English warfare fascinating
The Hannibal series was awesome and it's absolutely legendary that someone made a game out of it
I love how you guys have been uploading more frequently. I always look forward to your videos
In my opinion it's better to do things in order, this was meant to be the first video in hundred years war series, it's confusing for someone who is not familiar with the subject, how all things started why they fighting etc... imagine you done Hannibal series starting with the battle of Cannae and this is my first video in the HYW series that i watched till the end... i must be honest with my favourite history yt channel... and off course i really like the video... 😗
Thanks for a great episode! ⚔🔥🏹
Amazing work as always!
Great video y'all! You guys should adapt the battle of patay too, it's known as the english agincourt, where the french swept aside the longbowmen with a cavalry charge. (Also pls consider remaking crecy!)
Hope as well as the videos on the outstanding well known battles of the war, that you will also cover Bergerac/Auberoche in 1345, Patay 1429 as well as Morlaix in 1342 in this series, all key battles of less well known campaigns in the war.
I like that your maps reflect the coastline of the time, not the modern coastline. Unimportant for the narrative but a good attention to detail.
Thank you( history Marche ) channel for sharing this remarkable historical coverage of this subject and wonderful introduction ...another times long bow English men recorded victory ✌️ of England 🇬🇧 on French army ( French alliance flammishes)
Excellent video!
I'm looking for more games about the 100 year war, I recently tried the Crown Wars: The Black Prince demo and it's really cool, it makes you see this conflict in a completely new way. I would love to see you try it :)
Maybe a "minor English victory" in terms of overall manpower change, but total victory in terms of battlefield domination and as you describe with the resulting impact to pro English and French cities in the vicinity.
Fascinating, never heard of how this war really started
Will you make the Battle of Patay and the Caroline phase? There are no quality videos from any reputable channel that covers them.
This channel made videos on Patay, Castillon and Orléans. Great performance for an anglo-saxon channel.
@@didierpaya9069 Not on Patay. I do agree.
Caroline is skipped over because there were no big battles involving kings. That's just the way of it (history).
@@thesnoopmeistersnoops5167 Cadzand or the 1355 chevauchées don't involve kings but the channels still did it.
If the Caroline phase don't involve kings, it's because Edward 3 was too old and Richard 2 too young on the Plantagenet side while on the Valois side, Charles 5 use the Fabian strategy and let skilful commanders lead armies in battle and Charles 6 was also too young.
There's still big battles and events (without kings):
Edward 3 chevauchée 1359-1360
Cocherel 1364 : 1500 Valois vs 5000 Plantagenet
Montiel 1369 : 15000 Plantagenet vs less Valois
Knolles chevauchée and Pontvallain 1370 : 5000 men on each sides
La Rochelle 1372 : 20 Valois ships vs 50 Plantagenet ships
John of Gaunt 1373 chevauchée
Thomas Woodstock chevauchée 1380
Roosebeeke 1382 : 15000 Valois vs 25000 Plantagenet
Despenser crusade 1383
Ecluse 1385 even on each side
@@robert-surcoufhello/bonjour. Both of those battles are not part of Caroline phase?
I think you misunderstand me. History remembers big battles/kings/generals/emperors. Caroline phase is a war of maneuvering. Underated French king because he didn't lead a big battle but that's my point? No disrespect to France, but that's just how history works.
Interesting. Thanks for the clear sep by step explanation of the development of the battle.
Much love, y'all. The content kicks ass 👏 👏 👏
Great video! I'm looking forward to seeing the next one.
okay that game is a brilliant idea hopefully he/she will get more support and a bigger team behind him in the near future
Great work. Looking forward for the next episode
I love every video you made so far. I would love to show it to my little brother, but he doesnt know English, which is a big problem in Czechia. I already sent you an email mentioning this and I wonder... Would it be possible for me to translate some of your videos and create a shared youtube channel, where Czech speaking people could watch your great work?
Wow this battle sounds so cinematic! I always thought medieval amphibious assaults were the thing of myth and legend. Are there any other examples of ancient amphibious landings like this?
As always, Ill see you in the next one 👍
You realize this is fiction right, lol ... the real battle was totally different to what they're showing.
@megabazus1775 where can I find real source?
I had no idea that the longest war in history between the English and French had begun so far from their current borders and in another country like Netherlands. It is striking how Netherlands and Belgium have been, for centuries, the favorite battlefield of all of Europe, since Roman times, throughout the Middle Ages and practically throughout the modern age. Will Netherlands and Belgium be the places where there are the most tombs of soldiers from every corner of Western Europe? I know that Italians, French, English, Germans, Spaniards, Americans, Canadians, Scandinavians, among others, died there (no wonder it is such a productive agricultural land, with such macabre fertilizer). XD
Also the island of Cadzand, and the port of Sluys don't exist anymore.
Silt and geography have made both part of mainland. Sluys is an inland city.
@@josephvisnovsky1462 Yes, that is the interesting thing about Dutch geography, I'm quite familiar with the 16th and 17th century maps of that European region (from studying the topic of the Spanish Tercios, as a Hispanic that I am) and it is incredible how different it is in this video; For example, Breda here appears as a coastal port, while several centuries later it was another city in the Dutch inland and I also see that Ostend does not appear on the map (although I don't know if it is by omission), among many other things like the way land was reclaimed from the sea in the North, around Groningen and etc.
They are flatlands, perfect for huge battles in hand to hand combat.
It all started with that Frankish ruler who had 3 sons. One took France, one the later HRE. And the last one the smallest and least united , but very wealthy, middle-part that reaches from Belgium, the Netherlands and Alsace-Lorraine over Burgundy and Switzerland to northern Italy. - Understandably everybody tried to grab what they could from the latter; house Habsburg and France, for example, were ( until Marie Antoinette) at war for centuries for a reason.
@as you can see cadzand is an island here but during later years the complete region from cadzand towards the area of braband was reclaimed, a few major city got created in this erea that at one point rivaled venice in its econimic power it was the three citys of ghent axel and hulst. They where major exporteurs of flax wich was valuable at the time, although its a contestet piece of info. Also cadzand is now a great place for a vacation to the netherlands, since its close to multiple historic sites and has a nice beach close by
Thank you, as always. Well done.
CarthageBellumPunicum is the BEST NEWS in a long period ! I wish best to your friend!
Compare to the other videos, this one is quite short. But quite great nonetheless!
Hey, I was binge watching second punic war series. But it has not been finished. I think many are waiting for the next episode so eagerly. Please please do it soon...❤❤
Never knew about this interesting battle. Thank you for the great video! Moar plz.
This would make a great movie
I think Ridley Scott should be informed
Keep the history coming brother! ❤
It’s amazing to me how often armies during this era. Would neglect to bring any form of ranged weapons. Then proceed to just stand in formation and take volley after volley. How many men have died because of terrible military command? Countless….
Nice video. Can you make a video on the age of Portugal like their clashes with Spain and Kongo and intervention in Ethiopia and India.
Yo nice vid. When’s u droppin the next Hannibal vid?
Not the first or the last time Walter Manny arrived in the nick of time to pull somebody’s chestnuts out of the fire.
Why he was not a founding member of the Order of the Garter is a mystery to me.
Fantastic video as usual.
Thanks!
Thank you so much for supporting my work. Very kind of you.
Wow, your pronunciation of "Sluys" was (with exception of the last one) spot on.
Thank you for this great video
Edward III was a great king, he reformed English law, had great military success and made the nobility more confident in war, even creating a new chivalric order in the mould of Arthur to further this bond.
Edward also did a great job in creating a professional army (by medieval standards) that performed well in pitched battle.
When he died in 1377, England was financially ruined, the franco-castillan fleet havoc english coast and Plantagenet have less land than they had in 1326 when he become king.
He also starts a war with a false claim.
Last but not least, he created the seed that gave the war of roses 100 years later by giving each one of his sons vast lands.
For English law and the order of Garter, you're right.
@daemontargaryen6757 Philippe 6 claim could be debatable but Edward 3 wasn't.
If only male by male male line could inherit the crown, then Philippe 6 was the rightfull king.
If male coul inherit by female line, then all Charles 4, Philippe 5 and Louis 10 (all Philippe 4 sons) grandsons will be above Edward 3 in line of succession since Edward was only Philippe 4 grandson.
In 1328, Only Philippe 5 has one grandson, Philippe of Burgundy (born in 1323) so the crown will be open between him and Philippe Valois while Edward 3 will be second in line at best behind Philippe of Burgundy.
In 1337, there wil be three other grandson, Louis of Flanders (born in 1330 and Philippe 5 granson) and the brothers Charles and Philippe of Navarre (born in 1332 and 1336 and both Louis 10 grandsons).
It's another thing but when the Lancastrians take the throne of england, they basically deny Edward 3 claim by ignoring Roger and Edmond Mortimer (Lionel of Anvers grandsons) claim.
It is difficult to imagine that a single piece of paper could such influence European history that it resulted in a small island becoming a world expansive empire . The Magna Carta , was that document , it gave the right to every common man to hunt in all forests but the kings forest . This meant that as long as you could hunt with a bow and later on a musket your family would not go hungry . It encouraged archery and musketry as a skill from a young age . This is why English longbowmen and the redcoats were so feared the world over and how the transition from archery to powder was smoother .
When you instead compared this to France Italy and other nations of europe they had no such document and started training the required skills to adults , particularly with archery which requires an immense amount of upper body strength to draw a 80lbs pull longbow repeatedly for hours on end .
Lovely as always
You need a 100 year war playlist.
Is this the start of a hundred years war series? if so awesome. This war is so uncovered by youtube.
Ça va faire toutes les batailles ou on s'est fait souillés ouuuu ? Le compte il est tenu par Wellington c'est pas possible
C'est une chaîne pro anglaise
Internet est un colonie anglaise haha.
And that's how the historical "friendship" between England and the Flanders was built...
Great show
I wish this game was on the Apple store I would totally buy it
Thank you
Nice vid as always, but the schedule is quite weired (should be the first vid to be released😎)
Than you.
Thus started one of history's biggest rivalaries.
I love this channel content
Thanks
"Victory? No, no.
Begun the 100 years war has."
Good stuff 👍
This is a nice story to what will be a fine series
Why isnt this talked about more? Its basically a medieval D-day
Edit: Its not the same in its effect but it was an important amphibous assualt that included a bombardment.
bruh@@IronWarrior86
It's look cool, does the game exist on PC ? Because I look for this type of game, especially when it's about history !
By the way, I saw Crown Wars : The Black Prince on Steam, if anyone is interesting. It look like XCOM2.
I played the demo and if I'm not mistaken it's inspired by the 100 years war.
Well,
this seems like a good day to kick off The Hundred Years War.
Have you though of using Gameplay from Total War games for demonstrations in your documentaries? @HistoryMarche
Wonderful video, though the pronunciation of Forecastle and Longbowmen seems off. Otherwise though thoroughly enjoyable.
What does the red line through the house names above the portrait mean, such as under Guy De Rickenbourg at 6:52?
After giving up their wine, the English turned to beer and bingo.
Please could you make a bombardment of algiers 1816 video. After watching the Fontenoy project I trust you'll do a sterling Job.
We need another video on what happened next
Such heavy casualties. Was a nightmere for those men
While looking at Google Maps, I noticed that the town of Cadzand, currently located in the Netherlands, is actually on the continent. Does anyone have any idea what happened there? Was the region terraformed or someting?
If you look at Sluys (or Sluis) you'll see it's about a dozen miles inland next to Cadzand (or Kadzand). Sluys was still a port when besieged by the Spanish in 1587 but only because a canal had been dug to compensate for the estuary silting up. Kadzand had been abandoned by this point but the whole area was a morass of dykes, sluices, small islets, and ever-changing river channels. It's all been reclaimed since. As an aside you'll note in the video Bruges is listed as a port. Similar processes led to it being rendered virtually useless and Zeebrugge being constructed. The Dutch, Flemish, and Walloons, were/are fiendishly clever at claiming land from the sea as well as flooding it again whenever their territories are invaded.
@@arisnotheles Very good. 🤣🤣🤣
Alternative title for the video; How The Price Of Grape Juice Ignited A Century Of Conflict
The Perveza campaign 1538 in this month Pope called for a crusade and gathered a large crusader fleet (600 ships and 100,000 men) from many christian kingdom and duchies but Hayreddin Barbarossa with his fleet annilihated them killed most of them at least 60,000 crusaders died and sank most of their ships after a 5-hour battle the largest naval battle in history
Quite weird to kill the apparent 60k+ 'crusaders' when they only lost around 12 ships out of more than 200.
And where do you get 600 ships from, that are way way too many.
You can't spell "Preveza" properly, and you want people to believe your grossly exaggerated numbers ?
How could there be more dead soldiers at the outcome of a battle than living ones at its onset ?
@@MDP1702 its called propaganda and he is full of it let him cope
Crazy times the sword and shield isn't the word for it for what it is today so many people died more than likely just for war good work on your history of the world is shaped it is thank you
The wool-trade with Flanders was far more important than the Gascon wine-trade.
Are you able to put the game on app store?
2 videos in 4 days. What did I do to deserve such a gift.
Although it is nothing more than an small skirmish in respect of the much larger battles in the war to come, it did prove how vulnerable France would be to sea attacks, if England gained control of the channel as they would at Sluys in 1340. As well as even more importantly cement Flanders neutrality and eventually loyalty to the english cause which they would join openly by 1340.
Good pronunciation of Sluys!
Imagine being a peasant. Drafted into the militia. Your beloved wife kissing you a goodbye and you promise her that you'll return safely.
Your baby-girl awaiting her father. You march out with the thoughts of your small farmhouse and cooking food. You dont have much, but you're happy.
Then, you lose the fight. Surrender with the hopes of somehow returning home. You're done with fighting, you just want to live. Just want to go back home. You're no soldier. No knight. No man-at-arms. You're just a regular dude who doesn't care about who's flag is flying above your head as long as your family is safe.
You maybe beg for your life. Cry, for you want to go home.
A "heroic knight" just walks to you as you try to crawl away, crying and begging. Your thoughts, dwelling on your promise you made to your wife. You can't leave her. You can't die now. Not before you see your baby girl walk for the first time.
That Heroic Knight jabs his sword to your chest because your poor wife couldn't scramble enough valuables to pay for your ransom. She has no idea you are dead. Still searching the house for anything valuable. Anything at all.
She will gather all of your belongings, from pots to clothes, and race to the beach with the hopes that she can pay for her one and only lover.
You are long gone..
War is hell.
War is hell, especially for normal folk.
Cadzand and Sluis are in the Netherlands since the 80 Years War with Spain, conquered by Zeeland. That part is called Zeeuws-Vlaanderen/Zeelandic Flanders, says is all).
Hope one day could you make video Dusan the mighty
The game seems interesting to be honest
I may try it
Hi
Will that game ever be on iPhones?
love histories.
Sir walter manny (mauny) legend of a man! 👍
Advisor: My liege, this raid could have major repercussions for a century. Should I send our army?
Phillip: Non, this is far too important. Send in the Flems!
I’m about to use these tactics in age of empires
Next the battle of Saint Omer !!!!
Shame the game is not for pc...
Look at the absolute unit of that HRE. So pretty
This sounds like the music baz battles uses
Can you add (Kurdish Sorani) language to caption please.
Thank you. ❤