"So today in the 21st century, this small town remains Spanish because a treaty 350 years ago considered it a city because it had been a capital city of a county of a principality, which came into existance 900 years ago." This is one of the reasons I love Europe.
Meanwhile in Africa: some baron decided his colony should be the shadow of his birthmark even though it would cross over 5 rivers and dozens of native tribes plus there's this one really long part so that he has access to a lake that has some fish he thinks are cool
@@abadedo Look for any official Chilean map. There's a white rectangle over the disputed section of the border (the white rectangle is part of an accord signed in the 90s while the demarcation is not completed). Edit: es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litigio_del_campo_de_hielo_Patag%C3%B3nico_Sur#/media/File:L%C3%ADmites_Campos_de_Hielo_Patag%C3%B3nico_Sur_seg%C3%BAn_el_Acuerdo_de_1998_(en_uso_en_la_cartograf%C3%ADa_oficial_chilena_actual).svg
I would argue that your example is the most boring one. Just a piece of useless land that no one can walk on, in the middle of a river, where the twice-yearly border change isn’t even made official by a ceremony anymore.
Isac Calderón Sierra that’s similar to Strom Thurmond Lake along the Georgia/South Carolina border. Growing up, it was Clarks Hill Lake, as it was then Georgia’s “turn” to name the lake; and, it has been Strom Thurmond Lake for probably 20 years now, as it is now South Carolina’s “turn”.
Fun fact. Lake San Martín in Argentina, changes its name to Lake O'Higgins whe it crosses the border with Chile It's the only example I've heard about a lake that changes its name depending on wich country is it ( And doesn't depend on the language)
La verdad para Chile habría sido perfectamente aceptable también llamarlo San Martín. Sería un buen nombre para un lago chileno-argentino. El otro lago no, no aceptaríamos un lago llamado "Buenos Aires" en Chile, lógicamente. Supongo que la diferencia es porque alguna vez ambos países reclamaron la totalidad de ambos lagos y les deben haber puesto su propio nombre: según el doble criterio de las más altas cumbres que dividen las aguas, esos lagos deben haber sido problemáticos, porque los dos están al este de los Andes pero desaguan en el Pacífico.
No tiene sentido, San Martín no solamente liberó chile sino que cruzó los mismísimos Andes. Ohiggins solamente luchó por chile en el territorio al oeste de la cordillera
The Daily Weather Foreskin exclaim ɪkˈskleɪm,ɛkˈskleɪm/Submit verb past tense: exclaimed; past participle: exclaimed cry out suddenly in surprise, strong emotion, or pain. "‘Well I never,’ she exclaimed" Yes, it is.
@Fil Buric you're using it correctly in the most literal definition of the word. however, "exclaimed" is most often used as a verb in the idea of "said", as in "He said / He exclaimed" - in fact, I've never seen it used as a first person verb - which is why those other commentators considered you to be using the word incorrectly.
Some areas of the Chilean Argentine border are not yet defined, since it has been impossible to predict whether the waters would flow into one or the other ocean. The division by peaks is no longer supported by either side (Aconcagua, for example, which is the second highest mountain in the world, is entirely in Argentine territory).The united kingdom was the third opinion in several moments of history, in cases in which the criterion of the division of waters was not sufficient, for that reason, mainly to the south, the limits are more arbitrary, with many straight lines of peak to peak and an island split in half (which allowed both countries to have coasts in both oceans) PS: do not let anyone tell you that Argentina "stole" Patagonia or vice versa. Neither country had real control over Patagonia at the moment of independence, both claimed the total of this region and was "unoccupied" (there were aboriginal nations) until not much more than 100 years ago, when both nations began their expansionism. It is almost a miracle that they have never been at war.
Yay! So happy to see this video. :) One thing I'm surprised you didn't mention about the Chile-Argentina border is the undefined area in the Southern Patagonia Ice Field. I know it was being worked on last I checked, but even if it's become historical, it's an interesting point on those borders.
Here are some my suggestion for the final part!: - Dahagram: Even tough Bangladesh and India resolved their super complex borders, there is STILL one exclave! And it's Dahagram! So close! But I havemy solution for that. Step one, you make a thick road borders, not too thick through Baura for Kuchlibari. Step two, connect the another Kuchlibari to Dahagram by a small thick road borders. Step three, extend Dahagram's border to Paschim Chhatnai so that they are connected. - Büsingen am Hochrhein: The exclave of Germany, located near the mainland of Germany in south, surrounded by Switzerland. And it is also near to the Lake Constance! - Jungholz: A part of Austria that is JUST ALMOST an exclave and that is JUST ALMOST surrounded by Germany! At the narrowest, it is only 4.6 meters or 15.18 feet, which is the narrowest border! - Dubrovnik: An exclave of Croatia separated by Bosnia and Herzegovina at the south of Croatia. It also has ALMOST another exclave at the east of the exclave! - Međurečje, Čajniče Municipality, and Zubanj: Međurečje is an exclave of Bosnia and Herzegovina and near it to the left is a thin road border which lead to a tiny part of Čajniče Municipality and Zubanj (Also the road is a part of Zubanj). This borders Serbia from Bosnia and Herzegovina. - Gibraltar: A part of United Kingdom that is located at the very south of Spain. *Honorable mentions:* - Artvashen, Kərki, Sofulu, and Yuxarı Əskipara: These are the exclaves of Armenia and Azerbaijan. Artveshen is an exclave of Armenia, surrouned by Azerbaijan, while Kərki, Sofulu, and Yuxarı Əskipara are the exclaves of Azerbaijan, surrounded by Armenia. - The treaties of Israel, Jordan, and Syria: Yeah, there is a lot of them in the southwestern part of Asia next to Africa! - The borders of Moldova: Yes, they are pretty bizarre and janky looking! Especially the southern ones!
Gibraltar is not part of the United Kingdom, it is an overseas territory, in other words, a dependency of the United Kingdom. The United Kingdom only consists of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The crown dependencies (Isle of Man, Guernsey, and Jersey) and the overseas territories (Gibraltar, Akrotiri and Dhekelia, Bermuda, Turks and Caicos Islands, Cayman Islands, Virgin Islands, Anguilla, Montserrat, Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha, Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, British Antarctic Territory, British Indian Ocean Territory, and Pitcairn, Henderson, Ducie and Oeno Islands) are not technically part of the United Kingdom. Apart from that, there are major problems with some overseas territories, especially with Gibraltar. The United Kingdom claims that Spain ceded Gibraltar by signing the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, however, that is not what the treaty stipulates. Article 10 is more than clear that only the settlement of Gibraltar (the castle) is ceded and it explicitly says that the territory is not ceded, meaning that Gibraltar is illegally occupied by the United Kingdom, it is not a legal overseas territory, it is legally part of Spain. The Falkland Islands and the South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands are also illegal situation, both usurped from Argentina, as the vast majority of the international community and of the academic community conclude. The British Indian Ocean Territory is part of Mauritius as determined by the International Court of Justice and Cyprus claims back Akrotiri and Dhekelia.
Thank you very much, +WonderWhy, for making this video! We have been waiting so long and, despite all the waiting, we love you! We still greatly enjoy your videos. Good look with your channel, mate! :D
+Kosta M. That's not entirely true. The main reason the Alaska panhandle exists has nothing to do with the US or Canada, but rather with the geographical extent of Russian America and the combined posts of the Hudson's Bay Company and Northwest Company. While generally, the territory of the latter two was to the south and east of Russian America, there were ports established by the Russians in what is now the Alaska panhandle that were in fact south of trading posts established further inland by the two British fur trading companies. Because cutting either territory off along a longitudonal or latitudonal line would have either deprived Alaska of valuable southern ports or the Northwest Territories of valuable furrying territory, the border between Canada and the US exclave of Alaska was drawn the way it is, largely to follow the earlier ill-defined but similar border between Russian America and the fur companies of Britain.
mPky1 fine call me self absorbed all you want I was just putting forward a suggestion about a border I always wondered about Sorry for asking a question
I remember driving from Spain to France in that exact same area. I noticed I left France, as I wanted, but then ended up in Spain again while still driving north which left me confused. So I went back and took a route around the town. Keep in mind, I had no map or GPS.
Living in Bangladesh my teachers never thought me how complex our border was and so I was surprised to see part 1. Also now I know the truth about how our area increased because when it happened people spread the rumor that the Bangladesh government bought those areas. What a shame! Thank you for letting me know all these things. (Sorry for bad English)
Holly Thomas Actually, no. An *exclave* is just a part of a country that is separated from its main body. An *enclave* is a country or part of a country that is completely surrounded by another country. An exclave can also be an enclave but it doesn't have to be. Thus Alaska is an exclave but it is not an enclave because it has coast which means it cannot be completely surrounded.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceuta I'm spanish and if you say Ceuta /θeuːta/ or /seuːta/there you will look like a dumbass (unless you're talking with intelligent people if that's your case they will understand that is not pronounced alike in all languages) In English is Ceuta /ˈsjuːtə/, /ˈseɪʊtə/ or how do you call it /siuta/ (where the phonemes are totally mistaken) do you understand? 🙂
Don't get me wrong, I'm subscribed and I like his content, I just found it funny the way he says it. I understand pronouncing the "c" as an "s", but not to swap the order of eu to ue
2:38 You missed one. There's actually a really small exclave between the two larger Spanish cities within Morocco. It contains the shortest international border in the world.
So far the schedule on this channel on videos uploaded according to the past couple years: Late April/May, Late July/August, Late October/November. With surprise videos around Late December/January. Basically about every four months a new video will be uploaded on this channel. Way better than the dead CGP Grey channel.
Him at 9:40 "lake konstanz" Me, a swiss, known it's name as "Bodensee" (translates to something like floor- or bottom-lake) "Oh. That's it's english name?" And I didn't know it's borders are undecided...
India and bangladesh Border dispute is Over 2 years ago :D I'm from bangladesh Partition completed people who want to live in bangladesh Headed over to bangladesh side and people who want to live in india Gone to their side :) it's now complex anymore :) peacefully Done by both Sides and it was one of the big Settlements After 1971 Independence war against pakistan
Gabriel Adorante nope, it was a part of the territory of the “rio de la plata”(now argentina), until they got their independence, but im not gonna fault u for that, if I say South America away from South America, everyone will just say brasil
Wondering if you might want to talk about Andorra, which is its own oddity. Also, while not an International border, I’d like to refer you to an oddity inside of the United States known as “The Wedge”, which was under the nominal control of three different states at one point, owing to the unusual Northern border of the state of Delaware. There are also exclaves of Delaware in the state of New Jersey, owing to that same odd circular border and the movement of fill land along the Delaware River. For reference : en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedge_(border) en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_Island,_New_Jersey
Sueta? See-u-tah is way more accurate. Also, you forgot to mention Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera and some may even consider the islands that compose the plazas de soberanía but that's quite farfetched.
There's actually a 3rd Spanish exclave bordering Morocco, it's called Penon de Velez de la Gomera. It's easily missed because it's so small and because it used to be island. Since it's no longer an island, it is an exclave.
one of my favourite border disputes is the weird part of Minnesota USA/Manitoba Canada where theres a small little exclave (though not really because it's all in the border, even though they share no land borders with mainland USA) but since theres no schools on the peninsula kids have to get the bus though Canada and back into the US all to go to school IN THEIR OWN COUNTRY
The unclaimed land either belongs to one country or the other, so it cannot be claimed by a third; these are Schrodinger's Lands, stuck in a limbo between one state or another, but it must be ONE of those. Just because you do not know whether the cat in the box is alive or dead, doesn't mean you can claim it is a dog!
Border disputes in africa: I WILL FIGHT FOR THIS PLOT OF LAND TILL I DIE!! NO IT'S MINE, DIE! IT'S NON OF YOURS, ITS OURS, FREEDOM! Border disputes in europe: What do i care, does anyone want cake? Agree Chocolate please!
You do forget that the borders in Europe, particularly Western Europe, were shaped by centuries upon centuries of conflict as well. It's not that we never had border disputes, just that we've since passed that stage...
+Mosquit0 "Indeed! The Europeans are so bad.. They invented slavery and caused chaos all over the world!" Fuck off. Every single country, every region, every culture, every continent was somehow involved in horrible shit like that.
Europe has been involved in bloody conflict ever since the Roman empire, if not before. It's only fair to assume that after the deadliest conflict in human history, they would be chill about their borders... I mean that first scenario you postulate actually happened not a long time ago... member the Yugoslav Wars of the 90s? I member.
"As you may know already know by now, International Borders can be complicated. If you need proof of this", watch -parts 1 and 2- *the entire life of Yugoslavia*
There is actually a third Spanish exclave in morocco, it's called Peñon de Velez de La Gomera and used to be an island until an earthquake created a land bridge with Moroccan land
Its Ceuta, not Sweater, pls write everything you pronounce because sometimes we want to google it and don't understand, like Liberland and the other country that I couldn't understand what you said
Even though it's no longer there and not an international border my home state of Ohio and our rival Michigan(two states in the Midwest of the United States)wanted land surrounding the Maumee Bay. This was due to a cartography error because Ohio believed Lake Michigan ended and lined up with Lake Erie, but Lake Michigan extended farther south. Ohio made their own claim and founded Lucas County. Michigan went off the Northwest Territory rule and as much as it pains me as an Ohioan to say this, but Michigan was right. So a strip was made called the Toledo Strip named after the city of Toledo. In 1835, both states fought and both militias met at the Maumee Bay, a few shots were fired, one guy shot in the leg, and many arrested U.S. president Andrew Jackson removed the Michigan governor and Michigan was forced to give up Toledo and the strip to Ohio. In exchange Michigan got the upper peninsula instead which the state of Wisconsin also wanted and the upper peninsula wanted to be their own state until the late 1950s.
Hi @WonderWhy, there are two complex international border I would like to know more about: Campioone d'Italia in Switzerland/Italy, and the enclave of Nahwa in Oman/UAE
So, where do you live?
Person living in an enclave: good question
O m to
Oh well I live in Llivia
@@zapperberry6977 me know if you need
@Roofed BG i live in the microwave
@Roofed BG i live inside the timer of the microwave
see you next year folks
lel
Quality over quantity mate
A bit of quantity wouldn't hurt...
Nikolaj11
Gaaaw that chicken is so cute.
*heavily pats chicken*
*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH GOD WHHHHHHHYY?!*
Tootle-loo
Austria: Schrodinger's cat
Switzerland: Everything is equal
Germany: I don't give a fuck.
Latvia: Can me has potato
Estonia: Can I into nordic
Lithuania and Belarus: Potato
Russia: soviet?
Liechtenstein:- can I have it all?
I am from Sudan, yet I learnt more about my country from your videos than our own school curriculum!
Kaiser Wilhelm, there should be no apostrophe in “Americans”.
LOL
Kaiser I be thinking it better you no insult English proficiency of Americans when you no master it yourself.
Probably done that way on purpose.
Are you in the desert part of sudan or the grassy part of sudan (not south sudan)
"So today in the 21st century, this small town remains Spanish because a treaty 350 years ago considered it a city because it had been a capital city of a county of a principality, which came into existance 900 years ago."
This is one of the reasons I love Europe.
Meanwhile in Africa: some baron decided his colony should be the shadow of his birthmark even though it would cross over 5 rivers and dozens of native tribes plus there's this one really long part so that he has access to a lake that has some fish he thinks are cool
Can't wait for part 4 in 2019!
yo yo *3019
yo yo will there be a part 4 in human history?
*12019
The borders of the world will have been redrawn completely by that time haha
_Markus_ that is only a second order enclave
I've been waiting for this since 2014...
yo yo 😂😂
Jamming InDaStreets I am serious...
yo yo ur on every damn geography channel!
TheGamingParadise I've been told so
Stop being on every geography channel!
Who else had been waiting for this for so long? :)
The Blue Mapper me
The Blue Mapper Meeeee
The Blue Mapper I have.
Hi y'all! I am fine and you?
The Blue Mapper
MEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
Regarding Chile and Argentina, there's still an area were the border demarcation hasn't been decided: the Southern Patagonian Ice Field.
Andrés Falcone - it’s all Chilean. Thanks for participating. ❤️🇨🇱❤️
@@pac1fic055 Es argentina wevon
@@pac1fic055 where? I can't see that on Google maps🤔
@@pac1fic055 tourists visit mount Fitzroy and Cerro Torre as expeditions coming from el chaltén, argentina. these two mountains are in the ice field
@@abadedo Look for any official Chilean map. There's a white rectangle over the disputed section of the border (the white rectangle is part of an accord signed in the 90s while the demarcation is not completed).
Edit: es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litigio_del_campo_de_hielo_Patag%C3%B3nico_Sur#/media/File:L%C3%ADmites_Campos_de_Hielo_Patag%C3%B3nico_Sur_seg%C3%BAn_el_Acuerdo_de_1998_(en_uso_en_la_cartograf%C3%ADa_oficial_chilena_actual).svg
Every time he said "Sueta" trying to say Ceuta I died I little bit more
Isnt it pronounced say-ooh-tah
@@orans_ oot-tah
@@asheep7797 oh
Thanks
Me too
@@asheep7797no
I WonderWhy it took him so long
(sorry)
Snarky Edmonton Cyclist I _wonder why_ you use 'an' rather than 'a' when at this point in time FAQ should be considered as a word.
But you don't pronounce FAQ as "fack", which is how it would sound, you pronounce it "F, A, Q," so it's an "an".
Dave Null The pronounciation of FAQ begins with an 'a' / 'e'.
Thus pronouncing 'a ef-ay-que' would be unusual and not the english one speaks.
atzurblau OMG 😲 I see what you did there! 😉
Why, are you sorry? That's a good one.
finally! my yearly video!
Notumengi I don't want to like it because there is 666 likes on it
:P
Notumengi Congrats on hitting 700 likes.
thanks man
3:43 "It was actually destroyed in 1740 but later reestablished in the 9th century."
You know... folk story
Lmao I went back to hear that again
Captions say “740 AD” tho
Anime pfp
I think he meant the 19th century.
You missed all of the interesting Spanish exclaves and focused on the basic ones only! Spain has even one island which belongs to it half a year only.
Pheasant Island, if anyone wondered.
But that's not an exclave
Exclave or not, it's still pretty much useless
And Spain have more exclaves in Morocco
I would argue that your example is the most boring one. Just a piece of useless land that no one can walk on, in the middle of a river, where the twice-yearly border change isn’t even made official by a ceremony anymore.
It's weird when you realize that Alaska is in its entirety, an exclave.
enclave
@@boiledpepsi11 it's not an enclave, an enclave is a piece of land completely surrounded by a country but Alaska has a coast line
@@TylerR0913 which is actually longer than its Canadian border
Josh Paterno well i mean that what happens when you take a piece of land bigger than texas and give it a coastline on three of its sides
an exclave in a exclave, because Canada is an exclave.
What about Phesant Island in Spain/France, which changes which country it belongs to every 6 months
Isac Calderon Sierra RLL did a video on that
Yeah, Isaac is right.
@mPky1inhich cancels eachother out since it still rotates
Isac Calderón Sierra that’s similar to Strom Thurmond Lake along the Georgia/South Carolina border. Growing up, it was Clarks Hill Lake, as it was then Georgia’s “turn” to name the lake; and, it has been Strom Thurmond Lake for probably 20 years now, as it is now South Carolina’s “turn”.
When your video timetable is so sparse that your 3rd video needs to address the changes made to a country border that happened 2 years ago
I Putu Satyena Pande He made a lot of videos between the 2nd and 3rd videos of the series.
Last time I was this early WonderWhy uploaded a video
Snarky Edmonton Cyclist took me a minute to get that joke, good one
Jared Green I had schooo, noooo
Snarky Edmonton Cyclist lol
Jared Green walter
When ever I see a border dispute, I say”Split it in half!”
I’m using tilt controls! Its not that simple! Splitting in half tends countries to lose billions of dollars
Wisdom of Solomon.
You: Abyei
Me, an intellectual: Schrodinger’s Sudan
I wish he uploaded more often. I absolutely love this channel
Fun fact.
Lake San Martín in Argentina, changes its name to Lake O'Higgins whe it crosses the border with Chile
It's the only example I've heard about a lake that changes its name depending on wich country is it ( And doesn't depend on the language)
El Lago Buenos Aires pasa a ser Lago General Carrera acá donde yo vivo
U3ithpejpr
@BMAN488877 it's called Phesant Island, and it does not change it's name, only the country who owns it.
La verdad para Chile habría sido perfectamente aceptable también llamarlo San Martín. Sería un buen nombre para un lago chileno-argentino. El otro lago no, no aceptaríamos un lago llamado "Buenos Aires" en Chile, lógicamente. Supongo que la diferencia es porque alguna vez ambos países reclamaron la totalidad de ambos lagos y les deben haber puesto su propio nombre: según el doble criterio de las más altas cumbres que dividen las aguas, esos lagos deben haber sido problemáticos, porque los dos están al este de los Andes pero desaguan en el Pacífico.
No tiene sentido, San Martín no solamente liberó chile sino que cruzó los mismísimos Andes.
Ohiggins solamente luchó por chile en el territorio al oeste de la cordillera
it's about time buddy
Toby adams that's what she said
Toby adams cuz he has a Scottish accent, maybe this is the reason
Toby adams Wonderwhy it took him so long :)
Fliyo MB uh
Dixon Adair copied
2 random countries : exist peacefully
Britain : hey want some land disputes?
One*
4:05 the king died without any air
You can just say he choked
Crispy Chippy Put on captions,he says heirs.
Kainimations r/whooooooosh
He meant heir.
He himself wasn't perhaps, but his bloodline surely was.
*heir
Just jumped up and exclaimed when I saw this like a little schoolgirl :D
Fil Buric that's not what exclaimed means lol
The Daily Weather Foreskin exclaim
ɪkˈskleɪm,ɛkˈskleɪm/Submit
verb
past tense: exclaimed; past participle: exclaimed
cry out suddenly in surprise, strong emotion, or pain.
"‘Well I never,’ she exclaimed"
Yes, it is.
Fil Buric yeah no, you're still using it incorrectly
Nordir erm, no I'm not, learn some English before telling others they are wrong. I cried out in surprise, which means I exclaimed.
@Fil Buric you're using it correctly in the most literal definition of the word. however, "exclaimed" is most often used as a verb in the idea of "said", as in "He said / He exclaimed" - in fact, I've never seen it used as a first person verb - which is why those other commentators considered you to be using the word incorrectly.
[ BREAKING NEWS ] WonderWhy has just uploaded!
It's Ceuta not Sueta.
Time stamp?
Some areas of the Chilean Argentine border are not yet defined, since it has been impossible to predict whether the waters would flow into one or the other ocean. The division by peaks is no longer supported by either side (Aconcagua, for example, which is the second highest mountain in the world, is entirely in Argentine territory).The united kingdom was the third opinion in several moments of history, in cases in which the criterion of the division of waters was not sufficient, for that reason, mainly to the south, the limits are more arbitrary, with many straight lines of peak to peak and an island split in half (which allowed both countries to have coasts in both oceans)
PS: do not let anyone tell you that Argentina "stole" Patagonia or vice versa. Neither country had real control over Patagonia at the moment of independence, both claimed the total of this region and was "unoccupied" (there were aboriginal nations) until not much more than 100 years ago, when both nations began their expansionism. It is almost a miracle that they have never been at war.
@Ema Strnad un tratado mientras chile estaba en la guerra del pacífico 👍
"Second Highest Mountain in the world"
Klev Aconcagua is massive, but is far from the 2nd tallest mountain the world. It’s actually close to being the 200th tallest.
@@GuadalupePicasso Really? I was taught as a kid that it was the second tallest.
86Fallowcp yeah, it isn’t. At all. There are well over 100 mountains that are taller than it.
Reasons I watch this channel: 50% interested in topic, 50% Listening to the Scottish accent
sueta?
paperchasin23 don't be rude
That’s the proper pronunciation.
*Cueta*
Seuta and Melilla
Philippines Productions im from spain and believe me it is not, its Ceuta
Yay! So happy to see this video. :)
One thing I'm surprised you didn't mention about the Chile-Argentina border is the undefined area in the Southern Patagonia Ice Field. I know it was being worked on last I checked, but even if it's become historical, it's an interesting point on those borders.
I love how all gringos pronounce Chile as if it said Cheli
I hate it, man. It sounds really dumb
@@antoniachung5940 i love it to
I live in chile and its realy anoing sorry for my bad inglish
@@nicolasjsjwkqkhuito173 i live in Chile to
Ironic that Chileans can't do proper Spanish lol
Here are some my suggestion for the final part!:
- Dahagram: Even tough Bangladesh and India resolved their super complex borders, there is STILL one exclave! And it's Dahagram! So close! But I havemy solution for that. Step one, you make a thick road borders, not too thick through Baura for Kuchlibari. Step two, connect the another Kuchlibari to Dahagram by a small thick road borders. Step three, extend Dahagram's border to Paschim Chhatnai so that they are connected.
- Büsingen am Hochrhein: The exclave of Germany, located near the mainland of Germany in south, surrounded by Switzerland. And it is also near to the Lake Constance!
- Jungholz: A part of Austria that is JUST ALMOST an exclave and that is JUST ALMOST surrounded by Germany! At the narrowest, it is only 4.6 meters or 15.18 feet, which is the narrowest border!
- Dubrovnik: An exclave of Croatia separated by Bosnia and Herzegovina at the south of Croatia. It also has ALMOST another exclave at the east of the exclave!
- Međurečje, Čajniče Municipality, and Zubanj: Međurečje is an exclave of Bosnia and Herzegovina and near it to the left is a thin road border which lead to a tiny part of Čajniče Municipality and Zubanj (Also the road is a part of Zubanj). This borders Serbia from Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- Gibraltar: A part of United Kingdom that is located at the very south of Spain.
*Honorable mentions:*
- Artvashen, Kərki, Sofulu, and Yuxarı Əskipara: These are the exclaves of Armenia and Azerbaijan. Artveshen is an exclave of Armenia, surrouned by Azerbaijan, while Kərki, Sofulu, and Yuxarı Əskipara are the exclaves of Azerbaijan, surrounded by Armenia.
- The treaties of Israel, Jordan, and Syria: Yeah, there is a lot of them in the southwestern part of Asia next to Africa!
- The borders of Moldova: Yes, they are pretty bizarre and janky looking! Especially the southern ones!
Gibraltar is not part of the United Kingdom, it is an overseas territory, in other words, a dependency of the United Kingdom. The United Kingdom only consists of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The crown dependencies (Isle of Man, Guernsey, and Jersey) and the overseas territories (Gibraltar, Akrotiri and Dhekelia, Bermuda, Turks and Caicos Islands, Cayman Islands, Virgin Islands, Anguilla, Montserrat, Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha, Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, British Antarctic Territory, British Indian Ocean Territory, and Pitcairn, Henderson, Ducie and Oeno Islands) are not technically part of the United Kingdom.
Apart from that, there are major problems with some overseas territories, especially with Gibraltar. The United Kingdom claims that Spain ceded Gibraltar by signing the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, however, that is not what the treaty stipulates. Article 10 is more than clear that only the settlement of Gibraltar (the castle) is ceded and it explicitly says that the territory is not ceded, meaning that Gibraltar is illegally occupied by the United Kingdom, it is not a legal overseas territory, it is legally part of Spain. The Falkland Islands and the South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands are also illegal situation, both usurped from Argentina, as the vast majority of the international community and of the academic community conclude. The British Indian Ocean Territory is part of Mauritius as determined by the International Court of Justice and Cyprus claims back Akrotiri and Dhekelia.
Thank you very much, +WonderWhy, for making this video! We have been waiting so long and, despite all the waiting, we love you! We still greatly enjoy your videos. Good look with your channel, mate! :D
Love this videos, love this guy's scottish voice, love that tiny piano in the background, love that Chile is mentioned here
yes me agree with everything (i am chilean if you havent noticed)
@@slyar Wena!
Can you explain the Alaska panhandle next time?
UK just didn't care when it was establishing border between Russia and Canada.
And in the end USA was the biggest winner.
+Kosta M. That's not entirely true. The main reason the Alaska panhandle exists has nothing to do with the US or Canada, but rather with the geographical extent of Russian America and the combined posts of the Hudson's Bay Company and Northwest Company. While generally, the territory of the latter two was to the south and east of Russian America, there were ports established by the Russians in what is now the Alaska panhandle that were in fact south of trading posts established further inland by the two British fur trading companies. Because cutting either territory off along a longitudonal or latitudonal line would have either deprived Alaska of valuable southern ports or the Northwest Territories of valuable furrying territory, the border between Canada and the US exclave of Alaska was drawn the way it is, largely to follow the earlier ill-defined but similar border between Russian America and the fur companies of Britain.
mPky1 I was just suggesting something
You don't have to be rude
mPky1 I'm actually Canadian and wanted to know why it wasn't part of British Columbia
mPky1 fine call me self absorbed all you want
I was just putting forward a suggestion about a border I always wondered about
Sorry for asking a question
I remember driving from Spain to France in that exact same area. I noticed I left France, as I wanted, but then ended up in Spain again while still driving north which left me confused. So I went back and took a route around the town. Keep in mind, I had no map or GPS.
Living in Bangladesh my teachers never thought me how complex our border was and so I was surprised to see part 1. Also now I know the truth about how our area increased because when it happened people spread the rumor that the Bangladesh government bought those areas. What a shame! Thank you for letting me know all these things.
(Sorry for bad English)
So Alaska is the world's largest enclave separated from USA by Canada
theboyuan0jcfan good point
Actually, it would be an exclave. It doesn't qualify as an enclave because of its coast line.
William Astle exactly an exclave is a country that is completely surrounded by another one
Holly Thomas Actually, no. An *exclave* is just a part of a country that is separated from its main body. An *enclave* is a country or part of a country that is completely surrounded by another country. An exclave can also be an enclave but it doesn't have to be. Thus Alaska is an exclave but it is not an enclave because it has coast which means it cannot be completely surrounded.
theboyuan0jcfan t
Sueta is triggering me... IT'S Ceuta
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceuta
I'm spanish and if you say Ceuta /θeuːta/ or /seuːta/there you will look like a dumbass (unless you're talking with intelligent people if that's your case they will understand that is not pronounced alike in all languages) In English is Ceuta /ˈsjuːtə/, /ˈseɪʊtə/ or how do you call it /siuta/ (where the phonemes are totally mistaken) do you understand? 🙂
Mentira, es Ceuta
Viva Melilla
@@nicolasjulian8213 In either case it's NOT /siutə/ as WonderWhy is saying it
twothousand and FEFFTEEN
Why do you say Ceuta as "Sueta"? xD
Because he can't read lol
David Elizondo He mispronounced a word in a 12 minute video where he does nothing but talk? He must be illiterate.
AwaShinima He mispronounced a simple word multiple times in one video
Don't get me wrong, I'm subscribed and I like his content, I just found it funny the way he says it. I understand pronouncing the "c" as an "s", but not to swap the order of eu to ue
Ceuta (assimilated pronunciation /ˈsjuːtə/ SEW-tə, also /ˈseɪʊtə/ SAY-uu-tə
You nailed the pronunciation of "Melilla", how come you failed so bad in "Ceuta" ?
Arthur E.W nah, he pronounced it "Melía", not "Melilla". And yes, "Sueta"... Even "Seuta" is just fine but...
The 2 Ls in Meli*ll*a have a Y sound, therefore his pronunciation is right. "Meliya"
Im a simple girl,I see my country
I click
Me too, i am Chilean
i'm finnish
*sips tea*
*clears throat*
i am bRItIsH
CHILEAN DONT HAVE RIGHTS🤢🤢🤢🤢
Paraguay doesn't exists
C-E-U-T-A! Hearing "sueta" makes me puke 😂
SĀ-Ū-TAH
Say-oo-tah not soo-et-ah
This was driving me nuts. Like some dyslexic mispronouncing.
😷
@@glub1381 No, people from Ceuta are called Ceutans xd
woah.....I feel old.....it's been so long!!!!!!!
I've been waiting for this video since 1947.
Buckle up for The Most Complex International Borders in the World Part 4 in 2019 everyone !!!!
Lmao i just found this coment at 2019
lol
@@TheMadVulpen same
Laproaig nahh its in 2021
already 2020
2:38 You missed one. There's actually a really small exclave between the two larger Spanish cities within Morocco. It contains the shortest international border in the world.
3:38 Ceuta has a local anthem of its own and its name is symply "Himno de Ceuta." The music is quite powerful!
very interesting. especially the part about Chile and Argentina
That's the third longest border between two countries in the world, so they had a lot of issues.
OMG I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS FOREVER!!!!!!
*Ceuta (pronounced Seuta), not Sueta
How do you pronounce seuta
@@LeeSwaggington how can someone explain a pronunciation by writing xD
@@LeeSwaggington to just swap the u and e
Se-oo-tah
lol'd at the passat wagon on the kaliningrad oblast segment pic since it was popular to transfer and sell cheap fuel with additional fuel tanks :D
The castle shown at 5:06 is not the Castle of Melilla. It is the Castle of Manzanares El Real, a village north of Madrid.
So, the border of Chile (my country) and Argentina seems simple but is one of the most complex of the world
Edward Longshanks Of England, Duke of Aquatine I think the borders are complex but fine
Our borders are stupid. Either is the top of the Andes or the flow of waters, but it can't be both.
So far the schedule on this channel on videos uploaded according to the past couple years: Late April/May, Late July/August, Late October/November. With surprise videos around Late December/January. Basically about every four months a new video will be uploaded on this channel. Way better than the dead CGP Grey channel.
he aint dead
Samuel Skillern ikr his chan is alive now
Uploaded a new video about a dragon representing Death.
Grey usually uploads every 6-7 weeks. That would be less than 4 months. Can you count?
ARKOVZ he uploads once per month.
It's not Sueta (?), it's Ceuta.
Ik. He pronounced it wrong.
ok honestly that gives no clue how to pronounce it, you're just saying the name
Him at 9:40 "lake konstanz"
Me, a swiss, known it's name as "Bodensee" (translates to something like floor- or bottom-lake) "Oh. That's it's english name?"
And I didn't know it's borders are undecided...
I was born in and adopted from Kaliningrad and live in the US and never knew why it was there because none of my teachers knew. Thank you.
5:12 Sounded like he said the "cannibal" landed 2900 meters from the castle lol
There is an area between Ethipoia, Kenya and S. Sudan called the Ilemi triangle.
9:40 dang i love borders that don't exist
Dliess Mgg hell yeah 😃
Disputes over who controls water is a whole other category to get into. It would make a great video.
This video is as high quality as it was a long time coming! Great stuff
Borders are great. I especially enjoy crossing them on land... the officialdom, the uniforms, the anxiety.
I forgot this channel existed, lol.
TyOrca 5 same xD
India and bangladesh Border dispute is Over 2 years ago :D I'm from bangladesh Partition completed people who want to live in bangladesh Headed over to bangladesh side and people who want to live in india Gone to their side :) it's now complex anymore :) peacefully Done by both Sides and it was one of the big Settlements After 1971 Independence war against pakistan
Dipto Paul It's a good example that diplomacy can actually work
10:06 switzerland actually also got a small "navy" there. When you do your military service you can choose to be a "Watergunner"
It could be nice to join it and bomb Voralberg just for fun
I binge watched all 3 s parts. Good video!
Si estas aca, es por la miniatura que aparece argentina y chile verdad?
Déjame tu like para que los argentinos y chilenos se destaquen
No way???? That's so awesome! :O
Confirmo 😎
Confirmadisimo
@@a.v.r3237 nadie me lo dijo🤣
@@bagofnickels caca con sangre
What about Britain's exclave of Gibraltar?
Yay Argentina! There are also exclaves with Uruguay like Isla Martín García
Fedejr712 That island is the only border by land between both countries! I went there a month ago, beautiful place
Uruguay is an Argentinian province
@@danielromero001 wasn't brazilian?
Paraguay doesn't exists
Gabriel Adorante nope, it was a part of the territory of the “rio de la plata”(now argentina), until they got their independence, but im not gonna fault u for that, if I say South America away from South America, everyone will just say brasil
Wondering if you might want to talk about Andorra, which is its own oddity. Also, while not an International border, I’d like to refer you to an oddity inside of the United States known as “The Wedge”, which was under the nominal control of three different states at one point, owing to the unusual Northern border of the state of Delaware. There are also exclaves of Delaware in the state of New Jersey, owing to that same odd circular border and the movement of fill land along the Delaware River.
For reference :
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedge_(border)
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_Island,_New_Jersey
this video was made 4 years after part 1 yet the style of the video hasnt changed.
Sueta? See-u-tah is way more accurate. Also, you forgot to mention Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera and some may even consider the islands that compose the plazas de soberanía but that's quite farfetched.
Or Sew-tah, maybe...
No shamo si lo dicen como dices van a decir siuta
Andorra in that one about Spain and France: BOI!
3:29 "Sweater" *Ceuta
Lake Victoria has complex borders, is so the borders dispute at the Indian Ocean between Somalia and Kenya.
An interesting case study
Nice to hear some of these have been resolved
yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaas you uploaded!!!!!!!!!!!
*Yes
nice steal
yass
MarianvsTM sdfrdddcəhgh
See you in 2019!
10:19 No entendí nada, no hablo ingles, solo entre en este vídeo porque estaba mi país Chile🇨🇱
Mas aweonao que tu mismo 🤦🏻♂️
Jajaja estamos igual amigo, solo que mi caso es Argentina
Yo si le entiendo, soy de Guatemala y solo estoy aqui por curiosidad
There's actually a 3rd Spanish exclave bordering Morocco, it's called Penon de Velez de la Gomera. It's easily missed because it's so small and because it used to be island. Since it's no longer an island, it is an exclave.
one of my favourite border disputes is the weird part of Minnesota USA/Manitoba Canada where theres a small little exclave (though not really because it's all in the border, even though they share no land borders with mainland USA) but since theres no schools on the peninsula kids have to get the bus though Canada and back into the US all to go to school IN THEIR OWN COUNTRY
The unclaimed land either belongs to one country or the other, so it cannot be claimed by a third; these are Schrodinger's Lands, stuck in a limbo between one state or another, but it must be ONE of those. Just because you do not know whether the cat in the box is alive or dead, doesn't mean you can claim it is a dog!
Yonkage nonononononono. Neither country claims it, meaning no one claims it, meaning someone can take it
CEUTA is not pronounced that way. It is The-oo-ta, for the English phonetics.
So deuta
ˈθeuta, not ˈðeuta
Border disputes in africa:
I WILL FIGHT FOR THIS PLOT OF LAND TILL I DIE!!
NO IT'S MINE, DIE!
IT'S NON OF YOURS, ITS OURS, FREEDOM!
Border disputes in europe:
What do i care, does anyone want cake?
Agree
Chocolate please!
You do forget that the borders in Europe, particularly Western Europe, were shaped by centuries upon centuries of conflict as well. It's not that we never had border disputes, just that we've since passed that stage...
After destroying the continent to rubble because of war, I think anyone would be that chill.
TheAlexer nah Europe is more like : let's genocide an entire population of people
+Mosquit0 "Indeed! The Europeans are so bad.. They invented slavery and caused chaos all over the world!"
Fuck off. Every single country, every region, every culture, every continent was somehow involved in horrible shit like that.
Europe has been involved in bloody conflict ever since the Roman empire, if not before. It's only fair to assume that after the deadliest conflict in human history, they would be chill about their borders...
I mean that first scenario you postulate actually happened not a long time ago... member the Yugoslav Wars of the 90s? I member.
Thx for this...Could you see something about Geneve? There is a rail station in Geneve that it actually France territory
For part 4, check the border dispute over Olivença (Portugal and Spain).
"As you may know already know by now, International Borders can be complicated. If you need proof of this", watch -parts 1 and 2- *the entire life of Yugoslavia*
sueta? more like seuta man
you forgot penon de velez de la gomera in the spain - morocco part
There is actually a third Spanish exclave in morocco, it's called Peñon de Velez de La Gomera and used to be an island until an earthquake created a land bridge with Moroccan land
Yay it's here, well see you in 2 years for part 4.
YAY!
Its Ceuta, not Sweater, pls write everything you pronounce because sometimes we want to google it and don't understand, like Liberland and the other country that I couldn't understand what you said
Artem hajahaja sweater que gracioso boi
Even though it's no longer there and not an international border my home state of Ohio and our rival Michigan(two states in the Midwest of the United States)wanted land surrounding the Maumee Bay. This was due to a cartography error because Ohio believed Lake Michigan ended and lined up with Lake Erie, but Lake Michigan extended farther south. Ohio made their own claim and founded Lucas County. Michigan went off the Northwest Territory rule and as much as it pains me as an Ohioan to say this, but Michigan was right. So a strip was made called the Toledo Strip named after the city of Toledo. In 1835, both states fought and both militias met at the Maumee Bay, a few shots were fired, one guy shot in the leg, and many arrested U.S. president Andrew Jackson removed the Michigan governor and Michigan was forced to give up Toledo and the strip to Ohio. In exchange Michigan got the upper peninsula instead which the state of Wisconsin also wanted and the upper peninsula wanted to be their own state until the late 1950s.
Hi @WonderWhy, there are two complex international border I would like to know more about: Campioone d'Italia in Switzerland/Italy, and the enclave of Nahwa in Oman/UAE
Another great vid pal! Glad you're back!