Between the saltwater crocs, sharks and snakes, plus the thousands of other dangerous wildlife, I can't imagine how terrifying Australia must've been for those early explorers.
They would have been like gentleman steve irwin/ bear grylls but civilised Like "I say here we are. Gathered amongst the lush forests of this tropical hinterland. Here looks a terribly vicious spider. I shall prod it with a stick"
You are being disrespectful. Somebody's family had their crops shitted on by Emu invaders. EDIT: Shat upon. Thanks Rexy, this comment would have haunted me for the rest of my life.
I gotta say, I was born and raised in America and was taught literally nothing about Australia. I didn't even know about aboriginal people until recently or your Ned Kelly guy. Man our education system sucks
You are ignorant like other norteamericanos. First of all you are not American. America is a continent on which you live You are norteamerican ...an immigrant country. Read a little bit about Spanish history. Ignorant.
It isn't significantly important to our history, it is just something people like to say when they find out your Aussie or are doing an Aussie history like this.
I have always wondered about the history of australia,İ am not an Australian but I really wanted to learn the history of a country I love for a long time,thank you for making this video.
Growing up in Australia learning about Aboriginal culture, Captain Cook and the Exploration of our country every year at school kind of makes you lose interest in Australian history, so it's good to see foreigners so interested in our beautiful country's history
@@rohansmith4603 well that's coz there's not really much to teach. They didn't have a writing system so we have very little understanding of what happened in Australia before 1788
Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives ... You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours ... You, the mothers who sent their sons from faraway countries, wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well. - Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, 1934.
I'm Australian, and have just been reading about the history of the First Fleet and 1400 people on 10 ships arrived in Sydney, but all by two ships left Sydney with thier crews or some.were taken to Northfork Island. The population of European settlers was 1030 with over 700 being convicts, convicts children or convicts wifes, then thier was children and wifes of the offices, marines. A second fleet didn't arrived until over 2 years after the First Fleet which had even less offices and marines and another 1000 convicts in which only 60 percent serviced the trip or the first 6 months after landing in Sydney, then a third fleet came another 12 months later which even more convicts. ??? Most of the setters in the first three transports was very much populated with convicts.
The newsflash of today 20th December 2022 is that all mammals, including humans originated in Australia and spread into the northern hemisphere when Australia was actually part of Gondwanna land and what is now the state of Victoria ( which produced the first mammal, a shrew) was close to land that is now a part of the nation of India. There is already scientifically acknowledged evidence that all parrots and all song birds migrated into the rest of the world from the ancient land mass that is now formed and known as Australia. Also the only two species of monotremes in the world, the platypus and the echidna are the only examples of living fossils embodying the turning point at which some reptiles began evolving into mammals. A turning point they have frozen starting in ancient time and continued to live it right through to the present time. Australia is the most ancient landmass on the planet that has never completely been covered by water. Australian scientist Tim Flannery and other international scientists and even the Smithsonian Institute are now about to rewrite the books on this subject. Thank goodness for the intelligence, grace and wisdom and sheer common sense and perseverance of the indigenous first nation's Australians. They learned the secrets of living within and alongside the natural environment rather than abusing, over exploiting and trying to conquer their natural environmental sustenance support system. I knew the endless miscarried and aborted earlier attempts to claim this land, by so many nations was meant to be. For as long as possible this vast land's hidden, delicate ecosystem paradise was protected in many places by rough, harsh, rocky, desert or deadly infested mangrove shores, while the inviting easy access natural harbour areas were missed. I also believe it was more than fate that kept the invaders away for so long. Now the evidence of our beginnings and the respect for the ancient wisdom of preserving natural environments is coinciding at this present time. I am white Anglo Saxon , Celtic, Gaelic descent 6th generation Australian by the way. It is interesting how the ways in which the aboriginal people were treated badly by the invaders of early Oz, were exactly the same ways in which the ancestors of these invaders were treated themselves by the invaders that dominated and assimilated them into the invader's culture when infiltrating Britain. Massacre, imprisonment, take away the children, place into servitude, forbid the language, the culture, the spirituality of their religion, the worship of nature, the natural medicines, treat as scapegoats, force re education, place into no pay or low pay servitude, force assimilation, but still treat as second class citizens with zero to inferior rights. There were some early, convicts, settlers, citizens of early Australia who recognised the same injustices being forced upon the indigenous were still being carried out against their own nationalities back in Britain and that is why some of them were just escaping by settling in this new country. They protested in horror and disgust but they were overwhelmed by the tidal wave of the international gold rush seekers and new settlers growing the city and town centres and seeking more and more land into the wildernesses where life was remote and eye witnesses were few. Even in those days it was up to the regional governments to decide on what would be more convenient to be reported and what would be more convenient to neglect
1:02 - 1:38 ---- The Animated History of 60,000 years of Aboriginal Australia The rest of the video ---- The Animated History of the last 250 years of White Settlement in Australia
There's not much to say about Aboriginal Australia as there isn't much that can be said with assurance that it's true. Let's just be honest, 60,000 years of Aboriginal Australia isn't as relevant today as the rest of the video. Sure it's important to know they were there but there wasn't much happening that we can talk about.
I'd like to see that film as a mandatory part of our education system. Watched it when I lived in an Indigenous community and lent it a local Elder who was a victim of the stolen generation. She said that though it got some of the point across, it didn't come close to the trauma they experienced.
Mike Nonga the fucked up part is that Europeans help other immigrants but don’t help the natives out with they’re poverty and they help refugees that fucked they’re own countries with war and they pay money for them but not the natives sad asf.
As much as this video was awesome, it was really Australia being colonised and the history after that. Although I like how you talked about Indigenous history I believe you could have gone into more detail about culture and and way of life for us Aboriginal people. I don’t want this comment to sound negative btw, I love this channel and the content you produce keep up the good work.
I don’t know if you can see this or if it’s just me but there seemed to be a subtle ignorance towards the things that happened to the indigenous Australians throughout the video. Probably the case that he just doesn’t realise the cultural sensitivity around these issues
Yes! Please show how Spain taxed Mexican prosperity so much that the Mexicans rebelled. Then they invited Anglos into Texas to protect them from Comanches and when the Texans became prosperous the Mexicans repeated the errors of the Spanish by taxing the prosperity of the Texans. Eventually Mexico descended into a third-world shithole so much that their people broke laws by moving into the US to steal American wealth.
It’s good that you added Tasmania (in half of the pictures) but I feel like you could’ve elaborated more on the history like WWI and WWII as well as Port Arthur and it’s infamous history as it was the worst place for convicts to be sentenced, and it is still standing (tourism now though)
Thanks for exploring the land down under Regarding the part about “very young nation”… From 1 January 2021, the second line of the Australian National Anthem was changed from ‘For we are young and free’ to ‘For we are one and free’
Heyo! That video was amazing, as always! If you are out of ideas for a History video, can you please make ''The Animated History of Greece?'' I mean, It's a really old country with wonderful history. It would be really intresting and fun! It will really bring lots of joy if you do it! Thanks for reading.
Hi, guys! My name is Alexandre and I am learning English. I think one of the best ways to learn English is through funny cartoons as your videos. But, since my English is not "a Brastemp" (it is a Brazilian way to say "not very good") is difficult to follow you. So, if you had your stories in small text, foreigners could follow better. Congratulations!! Your site is very Good!!!
Use video games to help. I learned a working vocabulary of Spanish by playing Pokemon blue version in Spanish. After a couple text based games I upgraded to playing games with audio like Starcraft in Spanish. I also watch dubbed shows. Now I am conversing with all my Latino coworkers and can do pretty well (except with subjective tense).
@@christiangadfly24 as an Indian I would say read novels, books , watch Netflix or documentaries (with subtitles on if there is problem with accent ) .. Video games aren't productive ..
@@branman864 *Aboriginals is how you say it if you say aborigines it is disrespectful and very offensive and highly rude. Maybe you should learn more about the first people and stop being rude.
@@branman864 as usual a colonizer mentality, not having any respect for people. Just refer people by how they want to be preferred, that is called common respect.
The term used is considered outdated and highly offensive by many people across Australia. The expression is used, though, by Aboriginal and Torrest Strait Islander people amongst ourselves. However, many would find it offensive for a person who is not Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander to use this expression.
@@crazyelf3455 blame the English for that. You can also thank them for forcing our families here against their will. Acting like everyone come here by choice gtfo
im from the usa and not once have i learned about australia at school and im in highschool 😐 and for some reason now im obsessed w australia and Australians for some reason so here i am
that's exactly what i'm saying, that's over 40,000+ years of history that was glossed over, the european british history, is already so well known, because the australian british history, is basically the exact same thing as the british culture, and experience, just implemented in australia. The aboriginal history is so unique, and un-westernized. Canada, britain, australia, france, is all western european history, that's very similar. Let's learn about some unique history for a change, it would be refreshing.
@@PAAKWAMEPAA because there wasn’t much going on in those 40,000 years. they didn’t have a written language or recorded history or civilisation and were incredibly primitive to the point that they were thought of as Fauna
I remember watching Rabbit Proof Fence in college and that was really the first time I ever learned anything below the surface about aboriginals or Australia Very depressing yet somehow unsurprising (I say this as an American too familiar with our relationship with native peoples)
Saddest thing about rabbit proof fence is that way worst things happened to some Aboriginal children who were taken. Like abuse and raped and I think a few cases of murder
A similar policy also happened to the Native Americans and Maoris. No matter how well-intentioned those people may have been, these policies resulted in cultural death and sometimes even physical death with the children.
The Mythical Southern Continent was never lost, It’s been inhabited for 60,000 years and counting with continual living culture. The First Nations mate.
I’m from Western Australia and was there 2 weeks ago. But then Victoria got COVID from NSW, and now I’m back home and finished my 14-day isolation this morning at 12am. :)
@@cwerkzz I'm sorry you had to go home to iso. we have a wonderful little city here to explore. It's the best when the busker's are on the streets doing there thing. The whole vibe of the city picks up when they are allowed out. WA has better beaches.
@@jadethornton7975 yeah it was wonderful. I was seeing family and I was meant to go for a week but only was there for 4 days. At least I got to see the Melbourne star, eureka sky deck and explore St. kinda a bit. And yeah I love out beaches over here, we aren’t known as much as Sydney or Melbourne but I’d say we are nearly on par with activities to do, at least with natural exploration along the coast and in the Bush.
CreeperMC 1234 No. There far more deserving countries, like India and Pakistan (the subcontinent) or Ethiopia. There’s way too many histories of japan floating around on yt rn.
Yeah a lot the kids that where stolen weren't just half cast, full blood children were stolen too, I know this because my nan was stolen as a kid and she was raped by a priest in the mission.
Yes no one mentions that from 1932 - 1984, 250000 nonindigenous children were forcibly taken from their mothers. There was a series once about it, but it gets squashed and not talked about. Both that and the stolen generation should never have happened.
@@denznoah8740 I never feel that and I never stole anything none of my ancestors were stealers but I do wish they’d change history for the sake of change
@@Greatworldofficial yes you stole. That land is not yours. And you even stole natural resources while colonizing many Asian countries. Don't deny it. You stole the land from aboriginals and claim that you're explore
I live in Canada. We kinda tried to remove the native race too through catholic boarding schools and cultural suppression. Currently, Canada is experiencing a lot of expression about the catholic schools and blaming of British colonialism, despite Britain’s separate faith. How does Australia fare?
Roughly half of all Aboriginal Australians, who make up around 2-3% of Australia's population, have been converted to Christianity (including Catholicism), I believe.
@@mistergnat638 Australia are the luckiest nation on earth, they've never had to fight for what they have its pretty much been gifted to them on a silver platter by the British Empire. I always find it odd why people in Britain get the blame for empire and they are called colonists even though they aren't the descendants of colonialists the people in Australia, Canada, USA and New Zealand are. The British get all the blame for Empire even though the people who live in those countries benefitted the most from it apart from the natives obviously and they still benefit from the British Empire to this very day.
Koalas: *Vibing to the Digeridoo (idk if I spelled that right)* Kangaroos: Ooooh, can I join? Koalas: Sure. Emu: YOU WILL NOT HAVE FUN FOR LONG- *Frickin dies*
I think the Bloody Code should've been mentioned where you would get hanged for petty crimes like threatening someone to burn their haystack (arson), chopping down a tree, pickpocket, vandalize a pond, etc. This was used as a deterrence but it didn't work too well so the option for Penal Transportation to Australia was used instead as a more humane way to punish petty criminals.
Captain Cook landed in Australia on the 29 August 1770 and claimed the land on behalf of the british. The first boat of the First Fleet landed at Botany Bay on 18 January, 1788, but the Fleet then moved to Port Jackson (what became Sydney), where on 26 January 1788, the British flag was raised,” My ancestors arrived in 1788 on the fourth ship, I can only imagine the hardships they endured, every generation from then on endured hardships even my fathers time in the 1930s. Trying to farm in harsh conditions, sending sons off to war, going bush for work and my generation has enjoyed their hard work. Australia day has so much controversy yet we all share the hardships of generations gone and we all reap the benefits of those previous generations. Its sad we have to have such division on a day we should all share enjoy and be thankful for.
There is division because the date marks the beginning of the genocidal atrocities that occurred in Australia. Yes I understand the hardships your family would of had but by celebrating on the 26th it doesn't acknowledge the hardships of Aboriginal people and this is what rightly causes the division
@@Daniel-zh8lh I disagree with you there Daniel, Australia day is for all Australians. Every race that has ever come to australia has endured some hardships. Yes a lot of aboriginal people still have hardships just like a lot of other australians, calling out their hardships as special doesnt help in any way. Having been born/raised in the NT and a lot of my family is aboriginal through marriage I can tell you none of them even think the way you do. Aboriginal people want results not empty acknowledgements (lip service). They are more concered about violence in aboriginal communities.
Yeah... my mum is half malay, and her family was the only non white family in her schools and neighbourhood... she was born in 1963 and her dad (malay) moved in 1962... the only reason he was allowed in was because his wife (white)s father was the magistrate, but mums childhood was horrid, as you could imagine
It was apart of new south wales before gaining indapendance like Victoria and queensland however unlike Victoria and queensland it although offered and is within our constitution didn't join the commonwealth of Australia/Australian federation.
2:58 I don't get why you would belittle the Chinese like that. If you ask me, Chinese people are as much if not more determined as the Americans are/were.
i saw the fence and immediately thought of a film, but couldn't remember what it was called. I've gotta watch it again, i remember loving it when i watched it at school.
This term is considered outdated and highly offensive by many people across Australia. The expression is used, though, by Aboriginal and Torrest Strait Islander people amongst ourselves. However, many would find it offensive for a person who is not Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander to use this expression.
When I was in Primary school we had a day called Convict day where we all dressed up as convicts and made damper while watching Despicable Me, Flushed away and The Lorax
great video, suggestions for your next clip: 1. touch on "Doctrine of Discovery" the spreading of christianity faith from catholics to invade Indigenous peoples lands 2. Aboriginal people did not cede Sovereignty 4. Blackbirding (term used for stolen slaves 1900s from the pacific islands of vanuatu, solomons) 3. be good to have an Aboriginal person to teach the Didj playing at 6.33min as it belongs to them and its good for the money to go back to an Aboriginal person and not a person by the name of paul carlos as its culturally misappropriation.
Solid points, though I don't really think him playing the Didgeridoo is cultural appropriation, he's obviously spent a lot of time learning it if he can teach it, not really sure what the issue is. Traditionally, it wasn't allowed to be played by women, so would a women playing it be cultural appropriation? Also wouldn't be surprised if he was potentially from a part Aboriginal background, it's not super uncommon here.
You should do an animated history video about Belgium it has a rich and pretty interesting history consideringen ever since Roman occupation it has been the battlefield of Europe
How to speak Australian:
Yes : nah yeah mate
No : yeah nah mate
Definitely : yeah nah for sure mate
Absolutely not: nah
100
Lmmfao the accuracy
hahahahahahahaha so funny. you should do standup.
Nah yeah for sure mate**
racist
Okay we need a red dead redemption sequel or spinoff based in Australia
Lol I was literally just thinking that.
As an aussie, I would love to see this, except the dialogue and accents would probably ruin the mood. "Git off ma verandah ya flamin gallah"
Inimbos We literally have our own rip off outlaws! Outlaws and gunslingers may rule the deserts, but the bushrangers of Australia rule the bush
That would take Rockstar 10 years or more to pull that off
@@roberthaig2133 nah australians actually talked with a mostly british accent back then
Between the saltwater crocs, sharks and snakes, plus the thousands of other dangerous wildlife, I can't imagine how terrifying Australia must've been for those early explorers.
They would have been like gentleman steve irwin/ bear grylls but civilised
Like
"I say here we are. Gathered amongst the lush forests of this tropical hinterland. Here looks a terribly vicious spider. I shall prod it with a stick"
There is a video explaining how it would have been on extinct zoo
What? This is fake, you didn't cover the emu occupation of Perth
Or the great dingo uprising in the mid north. Sneeky sneeky dingos.
the great shame of the emu war..
Or the real reason for the white Australia policy.
You are being disrespectful.
Somebody's family had their crops shitted on by Emu invaders.
EDIT: Shat upon. Thanks Rexy, this comment would have haunted me for the rest of my life.
Dr. Vikyll wait, I knew about the Great Emu War, but what occupation?
Why is the video upside down?
Because aussies like me are awesome
Upside down? Don't you mean down under? 😂
Glad to see the flat earth society is alive and well mate
¿uɐǝɯ noʎ op ʇɐɥM
Ariana Grande owns Skillshare now
I gotta say, I was born and raised in America and was taught literally nothing about Australia. I didn't even know about aboriginal people until recently or your Ned Kelly guy. Man our education system sucks
You are ignorant like other norteamericanos.
First of all you are not American.
America is a continent on which you live
You are norteamerican ...an immigrant country.
Read a little bit about Spanish history. Ignorant.
@@juanmorales5133 tf?
@@StanbyMode que?
@@juanmorales5133 And what does this have to do with Australia’s history? *nothing* calling others ignorant though you seem like a narcissist.
America is the most ignorant country in the world no shocker
You forgot to mention the great emu war lol
It isn't significantly important to our history, it is just something people like to say when they find out your Aussie or are doing an Aussie history like this.
Lord Fluffy98 what are you, a genocide denier?
Maybe
Is that nice when we celebrate our holidays in Australia that is called
“we got f’’ked by the emu day”
PTSD
*Kills a redcoat with a boomerang* 10/10 you win at life.
ThatFighterGuy well I mean you could knock them out with certain ones
Kills a boomerang with a redcoat
Luis Velarde The red coats wear blue now, mate!
The Australians were the ones wearing the redcoats lol
I automatically thought of Sokka from Avatar the last Airbender
Nice, as an Australian, to see an episode dedicated to us and our people
Same
oi oi oi @@user-kx8vn6tm1d
I have always wondered about the history of australia,İ am not an Australian but I really wanted to learn the history of a country I love for a long time,thank you for making this video.
Growing up in Australia learning about Aboriginal culture, Captain Cook and the Exploration of our country every year at school kind of makes you lose interest in Australian history, so it's good to see foreigners so interested in our beautiful country's history
@@mitchellstocken1116 they don’t teach anything about aboriginal history in schools
@@rohansmith4603 well that's coz there's not really much to teach. They didn't have a writing system so we have very little understanding of what happened in Australia before 1788
@g.g yeh for only the past 200 years, I’m talking about the real Australian history
@g.g no I’m not. What relevance does that have?
Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives ... You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours ... You, the mothers who sent their sons from faraway countries, wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well.
- Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, 1934.
what
@@Kanal7Indonesia what
turkey is not a friendly nation.
@@Elliott2001 not at the moment, that’s correct. But it has been a friendly nation since 1918 until this ape of a president.
@@froggymusicman Rude.
I'm Australian, and have just been reading about the history of the First Fleet and 1400 people on 10 ships arrived in Sydney, but all by two ships left Sydney with thier crews or some.were taken to Northfork Island. The population of European settlers was 1030 with over 700 being convicts, convicts children or convicts wifes, then thier was children and wifes of the offices, marines. A second fleet didn't arrived until over 2 years after the First Fleet which had even less offices and marines and another 1000 convicts in which only 60 percent serviced the trip or the first 6 months after landing in Sydney, then a third fleet came another 12 months later which even more convicts. ??? Most of the setters in the first three transports was very much populated with convicts.
Means Australia is country of convicts generation mostly
most austrlians are descendants of a convict
Your creativity shines through your videos, it's been a source of inspiration for my own work.
So it's safe to say that the people that we consider "Australians" today, aren't really Australians.....the Aboriginal People need their story told.
They were gross!! Long live the Queen
Well, they are, because the nation of 'Australia' is a concept. The aboriginals had their own separate nations.
Technically we are Australian by being born here but not by blood. Australia isn’t the only place like this; The US is mostly European, not American.
@@idek28 he means indegenous people
The newsflash of today 20th December 2022 is that all mammals, including humans originated in Australia and spread into the northern hemisphere when Australia was actually part of Gondwanna land and what is now the state of Victoria ( which produced the first mammal, a shrew) was close to land that is now a part of the nation of India. There is already scientifically acknowledged evidence that all parrots and all song birds migrated into the rest of the world from the ancient land mass that is now formed and known as Australia. Also the only two species of monotremes in the world, the platypus and the echidna are the only examples of living fossils embodying the turning point at which some reptiles began evolving into mammals. A turning point they have frozen starting in ancient time and continued to live it right through to the present time. Australia is the most ancient landmass on the planet that has never completely been covered by water. Australian scientist Tim Flannery and other international scientists and even the Smithsonian Institute are now about to rewrite the books on this subject.
Thank goodness for the intelligence, grace and wisdom and sheer common sense and perseverance of the indigenous first nation's Australians. They learned the secrets of living within and alongside the natural environment rather than abusing, over exploiting and trying to conquer their natural environmental sustenance support system.
I knew the endless miscarried and aborted earlier attempts to claim this land, by so many nations was meant to be. For as long as possible this vast land's hidden, delicate ecosystem paradise was protected in many places by rough, harsh, rocky, desert or deadly infested mangrove shores, while the inviting easy access natural harbour areas were missed. I also believe it was more than fate that kept the invaders away for so long.
Now the evidence of our beginnings and the respect for the ancient wisdom of preserving natural environments is coinciding at this present time.
I am white Anglo Saxon , Celtic, Gaelic descent 6th generation Australian by the way. It is interesting how the ways in which the aboriginal people were treated badly by the invaders of early Oz, were exactly the same ways in which the ancestors of these invaders were treated themselves by the invaders that dominated and assimilated them into the invader's culture when infiltrating Britain. Massacre, imprisonment, take away the children, place into servitude, forbid the language, the culture, the spirituality of their religion, the worship of nature, the natural medicines, treat as scapegoats, force re education, place into no pay or low pay servitude, force assimilation, but still treat as second class citizens with zero to inferior rights.
There were some early, convicts, settlers, citizens of early Australia who recognised the same injustices being forced upon the indigenous were still being carried out against their own nationalities back in Britain and that is why some of them were just escaping by settling in this new country. They protested in horror and disgust but they were overwhelmed by the tidal wave of the international gold rush seekers and new settlers growing the city and town centres and seeking more and more land into the wildernesses where life was remote and eye witnesses were few.
Even in those days it was up to the regional governments to decide on what would be more convenient to be reported and what would be more convenient to neglect
1:02 - 1:38 ---- The Animated History of 60,000 years of Aboriginal Australia
The rest of the video ---- The Animated History of the last 250 years of White Settlement in Australia
There's not much to say about Aboriginal Australia as there isn't much that can be said with assurance that it's true. Let's just be honest, 60,000 years of Aboriginal Australia isn't as relevant today as the rest of the video. Sure it's important to know they were there but there wasn't much happening that we can talk about.
What are you complaining about? Should they tell mythical stories of the aboriginees? There is zero historical evidence for that time period.
@ True lol
we dont know their history, they didnt have any writing systems until the europeans arrived.
@
They did but you can't understand. They were satisfied with what they had. Not destroying Mother Nature for baseless luxuries.
Just the mention of rabbit proof fence almost made me cry. That's such a sad, although important film. I highly recommend it.
You know it was a real thing right?
I really want to watch it!
I'd like to see that film as a mandatory part of our education system. Watched it when I lived in an Indigenous community and lent it a local Elder who was a victim of the stolen generation. She said that though it got some of the point across, it didn't come close to the trauma they experienced.
@@Inoxia42 In NZ we basically watched Rabbit Proof Fence every year from age 8 or 9 in social studies up until later highschool.
@Kye Yes, that's why it's an important film. Sorry for the late reply.
Ned Kelly = Aussie Iron Man
Except he can get shot in the legs and arms
@@baldkevindurant I feel bad for laughing at that.
closer to robin hood but alright.
@CurlyG65 Tony Stark sold so many weapons his nickname was the Merchant of Death.
He stole a horse from my great great great grandparents
Not once you mentioned slavery! That's the history they don't teach in school here Australia..
Mike Nonga the fucked up part is that Europeans help other immigrants but don’t help the natives out with they’re poverty and they help refugees that fucked they’re own countries with war and they pay money for them but not the natives sad asf.
Best reply.. thanks for the reminder
@@alexchavez3244 which refugees are you talking about.
Nameless Man middle eastern. And most of all Europeans to destroy the lives of native Americans and indigenous people that is a fact.
I got taught about that? But i see where you are coming from
“The mythical southern continent had just been discovered” -cries in Antarctica-
PLEAAASE BABAHHAA
-s😊
s-
At last .. you make a content about your country 🤓
Apa kabar bung !!
Make your videos in English...pls 🙏🏻🙏🏻
U here, buddy
well well well whos caught up on not just extra credits now suibhne.
...
You should change the title to "The very basic history of Australia" I think you know what basic I'm talking about....
Basic please explain
As much as this video was awesome, it was really Australia being colonised and the history after that. Although I like how you talked about Indigenous history I believe you could have gone into more detail about culture and and way of life for us Aboriginal people. I don’t want this comment to sound negative btw, I love this channel and the content you produce keep up the good work.
I don't think that is the intention of the video but certainly a separate video on aboriginal culture would be good.
I don’t know if you can see this or if it’s just me but there seemed to be a subtle ignorance towards the things that happened to the indigenous Australians throughout the video. Probably the case that he just doesn’t realise the cultural sensitivity around these issues
history of australia, not history of whatever it was before that
@@matthewfinis6723there's No sensitivity that is only an invention of white Aborigines so that no one is allowed to have a conversation
Australia wasn’t australia prior to that. The west made it “Australia”. Also it wasn’t a country prior to federations
My great grandfather was a POW in Malaysia and apparently he was fed two bowls of rice a day
The fact that this 7 minute long video taught me more about my own country than my school education did is insane.
OMG IKR, me too and I literally live in Australia!!!
Coloniser
Your country is a typical jeff porn.
Really? Most of this I learned in school and I went to a pretty derro school
Australia 🌏🦘
Do animated history of Mexico
Connor in charge - please
Que buena idea!
Yes!
Yes! Please show how Spain taxed Mexican prosperity so much that the Mexicans rebelled. Then they invited Anglos into Texas to protect them from Comanches and when the Texans became prosperous the Mexicans repeated the errors of the Spanish by taxing the prosperity of the Texans. Eventually Mexico descended into a third-world shithole so much that their people broke laws by moving into the US to steal American wealth.
Aztecs, conquistadors, many wars independence. End.
It’s good that you added Tasmania (in half of the pictures) but I feel like you could’ve elaborated more on the history like WWI and WWII as well as Port Arthur and it’s infamous history as it was the worst place for convicts to be sentenced, and it is still standing (tourism now though)
Someone’s definitely inbred
Thanks for exploring the land down under Regarding the part about “very young nation”… From 1 January 2021, the second line of the Australian National Anthem was changed from ‘For we are young and free’ to ‘For we are one and free’
omg yess i remember they told us this in school lol
Heyo! That video was amazing, as always! If you are out of ideas for a History video, can you please make ''The Animated History of Greece?'' I mean, It's a really old country with wonderful history. It would be really intresting and fun! It will really bring lots of joy if you do it! Thanks for reading.
Hi, guys! My name is Alexandre and I am learning English. I think one of the best ways to learn English is through funny cartoons as your videos. But, since my English is not "a Brastemp" (it is a Brazilian way to say "not very good") is difficult to follow you. So, if you had your stories in small text, foreigners could follow better. Congratulations!! Your site is very Good!!!
Your english is amazing!
Seu ingles esta perfeito irmão 🥳
english is really good but if you want to sound less robotic look into contractions, good luck.
Use video games to help. I learned a working vocabulary of Spanish by playing Pokemon blue version in Spanish. After a couple text based games I upgraded to playing games with audio like Starcraft in Spanish. I also watch dubbed shows. Now I am conversing with all my Latino coworkers and can do pretty well (except with subjective tense).
@@christiangadfly24 as an Indian I would say read novels, books , watch Netflix or documentaries (with subtitles on if there is problem with accent ) ..
Video games aren't productive ..
Your channel is a go-to for me whenever I need inspiration. Thank you!
Australia only gave citizenship to the Aborigines in 1967. How much research did you actually give to this?
He skimmed through it to make a quick video, don't be too harsh.
@@ananasupreme he also claimed that Tasmanian Aborigines were the aggressors in the genocide that effectively wiped them out.........
Xander Hyslop how tf would you know?
@@branman864 *Aboriginals is how you say it if you say aborigines it is disrespectful and very offensive and highly rude. Maybe you should learn more about the first people and stop being rude.
@@branman864 as usual a colonizer mentality, not having any respect for people. Just refer people by how they want to be preferred, that is called common respect.
1:05 also known as what?!?!?! oh man, good thing you edited it out, now no one will ever know.
The term used is considered outdated and highly offensive by many people across Australia. The expression is used, though, by Aboriginal and Torrest Strait Islander people amongst ourselves. However, many would find it offensive for a person who is not Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander to use this expression.
The ANZAC legacy remembers both Australian and Australian life. Wether you are Australian or Australian or Australian... We will remember them.
And New Zealand
Australians like me celebrate Anzac Day and eat Anzac biscuits sent to soldiers during the 1st world war
@LuqmanGamer that is Anzac Day
Hey Dude! the KIWI'S had a lot to do with the ANZAC also, FFS people like you only look at the Icing and not the whole cake.
As long as you are not Aboriginal, you will be remembered.
When are you going to make a animated history video about Norway? You already made history video’s about Danmark,Sweden and Finland.
Happy Australia Day 🇦🇺🇦🇺
Invasion day*
Crazy Elf ew no way 🤮
Why’s that ew? Do you like our history? Destroying, killing, stealing and depriving the indigenous people is what Australia was built on.
@@crazyelf3455 blame the English for that. You can also thank them for forcing our families here against their will. Acting like everyone come here by choice gtfo
Aussielad 21 rude! It’s offensive to say Australia Day!
I understood the Rabbit Proof Fence reference, as it’s apart of the Year 7 curriculum for HASS.
I’m an Aussie, so that’s why I came here
im from the usa and not once have i learned about australia at school and im in highschool 😐 and for some reason now im obsessed w australia and Australians for some reason so here i am
Armchair Historians, EmperorTigerstar, Suibhne, and Potential History upload the video just today
What a coincidence
Simple History also upload their video since yesterday
Ok
becauss its on australia day mate
I have watch all these videos like 20 times. I love them
Make the Animated History of Portugal
Good thing that im not the only portuguese here
@@unkownpt1806 you live in Portugal?
If he will make about Portugal, he should have mentioned it were the Portuguese to actually find Australia, not the Dutch!
@@duartecorreia8602 what?
@@StarLord_2307 yep the dutch arrived there with badly copied maps from the portuguese
I legit skipped to make sure he didn't skip the stolen generation
Wow that's awesome I love that I must say, 🤗
Dude... BIG THANKS for recommending "Rabbit-Proof Fence" ... it was a great film, no doubt!
Are you going to do Sweden part 2 soon?
I noticed he skips a lot...
Ismael A. Yea sadly
he already did...
th-cam.com/video/-qbZNM_SSAs/w-d-xo.html
@@DaHavemann That's part 4 or 5 though.
Sett på tidigare videor att det tagit honom nästan ett år att släppa nästa del.. så vi får nog vänta ett tag.
Interesting, but you seem to have missed the most notorious segment of Australia's history: the Great Emu War of 1932.
thx so much it helped me with my history project :D
Remember to add the many massacres of First Nations People 😭
I love how schools spend 6 years teaching this one topic when you could have learnt it from watching a single youtube video
Do animated history of Wales, yes we have complicated words but we have a rich history. Btw i love the new intro its really cool!
Australia and America will become the next Kazakhstan, where whites once dominated but has been replaced by Asians.
New subscriber. Brilliant video 💪🏻🏴
Thanks Fellow Aussie TH-camr Feature History for working with me on this collab. Show him some love here: th-cam.com/video/wmsCEyDFs8M/w-d-xo.html
Yall aussies call launceston lan-ces-ton
its lawn-ston
Turkish history plz
Please do Romania
Even if your videos take ages to be mad I love your vids!! Also try working with oversimplified
Suibhne
Hey mate, great video!
Please do England next. :)
Thank you for once again telling Australia’s history from a non-Indigenous perspective.
that's exactly what i'm saying, that's over 40,000+ years of history that was glossed over, the european british history, is already so well known, because the australian british history, is basically the exact same thing as the british culture, and experience, just implemented in australia. The aboriginal history is so unique, and un-westernized. Canada, britain, australia, france, is all western european history, that's very similar. Let's learn about some unique history for a change, it would be refreshing.
PlanetJohn They dug some stuff, burned some stuff, painted rocks, moved around a bit. That’s about all. Would make an interesting video
@@PAAKWAMEPAA 40,000 years of nothing
@@jacobmcnamara7234 🧂
@@PAAKWAMEPAA because there wasn’t much going on in those 40,000 years. they didn’t have a written language or recorded history or civilisation and were incredibly primitive to the point that they were thought of as Fauna
This video teached me a lot and I really needed it ! 😊😊😊
They talk about slavery or the genericides that happened to my people
You forgot the biggest moment in Australian history, the Great Emu War! =P
That wasn't even a significant moment in our nations history lmao
Thank you for including the fact that Chinese workers were part of the Eureka stockade!
Nice, that is a very good historical video about the first australians.
Strange how the effort to dilute the aboriginal bloodline was also an effort that would necessarily dilute European blood-lines.
Yes, the act of mixing blood is Immoral must never happen.
Wow, that 2nd comment
@@zamaz48dumb
Nope it was the other way round because the aborigines where breeding themselves out
It was mainly to increase population but that's not important in the todays agenda so everyone skips that
I remember watching Rabbit Proof Fence in college and that was really the first time I ever learned anything below the surface about aboriginals or Australia
Very depressing yet somehow unsurprising (I say this as an American too familiar with our relationship with native peoples)
Saddest thing about rabbit proof fence is that way worst things happened to some Aboriginal children who were taken. Like abuse and raped and I think a few cases of murder
Still goes on. All western counytries are the same
A similar policy also happened to the Native Americans and Maoris. No matter how well-intentioned those people may have been, these policies resulted in cultural death and sometimes even physical death with the children.
@@normalizedinsanity4873 All countries are the same, race isnt the problem, its people
Watch Samson and Delilah. It shows that Indigenous people still face a lot of problems in the 21st century.
0:37 actually Antarctica more closely fits Terra Australis Incognito, they just gave up on finding it so gave the name to Australia
How do you discover something that was already there
You do realise what discovered means right?
@@44shots6worlds yeah it means white people found something that black people already knew existed.
@@Jirangaaalol, did the aborigines circumnavigate the Australian land mass , map it and name the continent? Oh wait.
Hey. Talking about the dutch...... could you make a video about the Netherlands? That would be pretty cool. Sorry for asking without donating. Cya!
Typical Dutch to ask for anything for free
@@HalfLife333 thanks man. Real nice
Can never trust a Dutch. “I gave you all I had” -Arthur Morgan
As an indonesian, i can't trust the dutch.
@@thedjmjs i cri evritim
The Mythical Southern Continent was never lost, It’s been inhabited for 60,000 years and counting with continual living culture. The First Nations mate.
6:09: Awwwe flinders street station. Im on the steps right now watching this video. Life's great when things like that happen
I’m from Western Australia and was there 2 weeks ago. But then Victoria got COVID from NSW, and now I’m back home and finished my 14-day isolation this morning at 12am. :)
@@cwerkzz I'm sorry you had to go home to iso. we have a wonderful little city here to explore. It's the best when the busker's are on the streets doing there thing. The whole vibe of the city picks up when they are allowed out. WA has better beaches.
@@jadethornton7975 yeah it was wonderful. I was seeing family and I was meant to go for a week but only was there for 4 days. At least I got to see the Melbourne star, eureka sky deck and explore St. kinda a bit. And yeah I love out beaches over here, we aren’t known as much as Sydney or Melbourne but I’d say we are nearly on par with activities to do, at least with natural exploration along the coast and in the Bush.
Do animated history of japan
いい考えだと思います!
Samurai bois
Bill Wurtz already did that in 2016 but OK
CreeperMC 1234
No. There far more deserving countries, like India and Pakistan (the subcontinent) or Ethiopia. There’s way too many histories of japan floating around on yt rn.
I concur.
You shouldn’t say it was discovered in the 1700…. There has been people here for Millenia, thus already discovered
Yeah a lot the kids that where stolen weren't just half cast, full blood children were stolen too, I know this because my nan was stolen as a kid and she was raped by a priest in the mission.
Yes no one mentions that from 1932 - 1984, 250000 nonindigenous children were forcibly taken from their mothers. There was a series once about it, but it gets squashed and not talked about. Both that and the stolen generation should never have happened.
As an Australian myself who was born and raised in New South Wales Sydney History has always been a cruel subject.
So don't ever feel superior living in a land that you stole. And don't change the history
@@denznoah8740 I never feel that and I never stole anything none of my ancestors were stealers but I do wish they’d change history for the sake of change
@@Greatworldofficial yes you stole. That land is not yours. And you even stole natural resources while colonizing many Asian countries. Don't deny it. You stole the land from aboriginals and claim that you're explore
@@Greatworldofficial Gi British prisoner
@@prajwalkannadiga8737 yaavur bro
Dope video fam👍🏾
You should rewatch it with all your homies yo
Wow, I can’t believe we didn’t win at Gallipoli considering (according to your animation), there was a guided missile frigate available off shore
I know right. lol
Not period correct at all. Needs moar smoke stacks. ;)
It took me 7 minutes to realize the narrator had an Australian accent which meant he was Australian and knew a lot about the history
Wow that's awesome me too I will love to be there some day my dear 😊😊🎶
It was obvious in the first 10 seconds. Are you dumb?
How long do you want the didgeridoo playing for ?
Suibhne : yes
Ned Kelly now explains that one boss fight in Ty the Tasmanian Tiger
I live in Canada. We kinda tried to remove the native race too through catholic boarding schools and cultural suppression. Currently, Canada is experiencing a lot of expression about the catholic schools and blaming of British colonialism, despite Britain’s separate faith.
How does Australia fare?
Roughly half of all Aboriginal Australians, who make up around 2-3% of Australia's population, have been converted to Christianity (including Catholicism), I believe.
We also blame the British
@@mistergnat638 Australia are the luckiest nation on earth, they've never had to fight for what they have its pretty much been gifted to them on a silver platter by the British Empire.
I always find it odd why people in Britain get the blame for empire and they are called colonists even though they aren't the descendants of colonialists the people in Australia, Canada, USA and New Zealand are.
The British get all the blame for Empire even though the people who live in those countries benefitted the most from it apart from the natives obviously and they still benefit from the British Empire to this very day.
But you poms are good at music and still suck at sport 😅
For what they stole, protected by Britain
Koalas: *Vibing to the Digeridoo (idk if I spelled that right)*
Kangaroos: Ooooh, can I join?
Koalas: Sure.
Emu: YOU WILL NOT HAVE FUN FOR LONG- *Frickin dies*
Lol 😂🤣♥️👌🏻
Surprised the Ashes wasn’t mentioned - Australia beating England as a colony of as the catalyst to federation
I think the Bloody Code should've been mentioned where you would get hanged for petty crimes like threatening someone to burn their haystack (arson), chopping down a tree, pickpocket, vandalize a pond, etc. This was used as a deterrence but it didn't work too well so the option for Penal Transportation to Australia was used instead as a more humane way to punish petty criminals.
Thank you for doing this
I'm Australian 🇦🇺 and I am a bit Aboriginal but mainly Torres Strait islander 🖤💙💚
@Gay Vegan why
@Gay Vegan oh, I'm sorry
@@frannymeh Its not your fault, it's their problem smh
@FridayGood Don't blame someone for your own memories
Captain Cook landed in Australia on the 29 August 1770 and claimed the land on behalf of the british. The first boat of the First Fleet landed at Botany Bay on 18 January, 1788, but the Fleet then moved to Port Jackson (what became Sydney), where on 26 January 1788, the British flag was raised,”
My ancestors arrived in 1788 on the fourth ship, I can only imagine the hardships they endured, every generation from then on endured hardships even my fathers time in the 1930s. Trying to farm in harsh conditions, sending sons off to war, going bush for work and my generation has enjoyed their hard work.
Australia day has so much controversy yet we all share the hardships of generations gone and we all reap the benefits of those previous generations. Its sad we have to have such division on a day we should all share enjoy and be thankful for.
Dang Captain Cook landed in Aus. and the island of Maui in Hawaii. Thanks for teaching me something!!!
There is division because the date marks the beginning of the genocidal atrocities that occurred in Australia. Yes I understand the hardships your family would of had but by celebrating on the 26th it doesn't acknowledge the hardships of Aboriginal people and this is what rightly causes the division
@@Daniel-zh8lh I disagree with you there Daniel, Australia day is for all Australians. Every race that has ever come to australia has endured some hardships.
Yes a lot of aboriginal people still have hardships just like a lot of other australians, calling out their hardships as special doesnt help in any way.
Having been born/raised in the NT and a lot of my family is aboriginal through marriage I can tell you none of them even think the way you do.
Aboriginal people want results not empty acknowledgements (lip service). They are more concered about violence in aboriginal communities.
The reference to rabbit proof fence in the thumbnail took me out. Most depressing movie they could’ve made us watch in class.
Starting early is the best way of getting ahead to build wealth, investing remains the priority.
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@okam praise Now is the best time to purchase and invest in bitcoin, stop procrastinating.
Here I am thinking that this lockdown will affect bitcoin not knowing that people are busy investing and make huge
Fear is one of the factors that hinder most persons to invest into crypto, most persons say ignorance.
stock is good but crypto is better.
5:13 The White Australia Policy "up until about the Second World War"??
It is generally accepted that the policy ceased in 1973. love
They started easing the policy by the end of the war due to the populate or perish mentality. But the policy would be fully dismantled by the 70s yes.
Yeah... my mum is half malay, and her family was the only non white family in her schools and neighbourhood... she was born in 1963 and her dad (malay) moved in 1962... the only reason he was allowed in was because his wife (white)s father was the magistrate, but mums childhood was horrid, as you could imagine
During the gold rush era, there was a rebellion which is known as the famous Eureka Rebellion
Can you do New Zealand next?
that would literally be a 1 minute video.
It was apart of new south wales before gaining indapendance like Victoria and queensland however unlike Victoria and queensland it although offered and is within our constitution didn't join the commonwealth of Australia/Australian federation.
Also Maori wars
2:58 I don't get why you would belittle the Chinese like that. If you ask me, Chinese people are as much if not more determined as the Americans are/were.
Bro it's just a joke get over it
I am Chinese…….
By force my bro. By force.
6:19 is Flinders street. The heart of Melbourne's Train Line/ City
The animation and background music are so cute.
Hello Jenny I'm glad you enjoyed it as well. How're you doing hope you're fine and enjoying your day.]
I'm Harry from FL and you?
Make the Animated History of insert country where i'm from!!!!!! PLSS it has such an interesting history!!!!!!
also oh yeah yeah
You mean Cuckistan? lol
Voulty STOP
@@sehajbirsingh6167 comedy
i saw the fence and immediately thought of a film, but couldn't remember what it was called. I've gotta watch it again, i remember loving it when i watched it at school.
That's cool I must say.
isabel I really appreciate that you like my comment🤗
rabbit proof fence.
ned kelly for the win
Why is the word "Aboriginals" edited out from the voiceover?
This term is considered outdated and highly offensive by many people across Australia. The expression is used, though, by Aboriginal and Torrest Strait Islander people amongst ourselves. However, many would find it offensive for a person who is not Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander to use this expression.
@@DanielFieldProductionsthe fuk are you on about mate? I've never once heard an Aboriginal say that word is offensive 🤣
@@skalo2485 It's the 1/18th types in the city that think they speak for everyone
@@DanielFieldProductions Ok Aborigine!
@@DanielFieldProductionscalling aboriginal people aboriginal is not considered offensive by anyone 😂
When I was in Primary school we had a day called Convict day where we all dressed up as convicts and made damper while watching Despicable Me, Flushed away and The Lorax
A WW2 Australian hero called Starcevich, he's a hero of the Malaysia Sabah State!
Animated history of Croatia maybe?
Wow this is cool mate
great video, suggestions for your next clip:
1. touch on "Doctrine of Discovery" the spreading of christianity faith from catholics to invade Indigenous peoples lands
2. Aboriginal people did not cede Sovereignty
4. Blackbirding (term used for stolen slaves 1900s from the pacific islands of vanuatu, solomons)
3. be good to have an Aboriginal person to teach the Didj playing at 6.33min as it belongs to them and its good for the money to go back to an Aboriginal person and not a person by the name of paul carlos as its culturally misappropriation.
Masterful points. Thank you for sharing.
Solid points, though I don't really think him playing the Didgeridoo is cultural appropriation, he's obviously spent a lot of time learning it if he can teach it, not really sure what the issue is. Traditionally, it wasn't allowed to be played by women, so would a women playing it be cultural appropriation?
Also wouldn't be surprised if he was potentially from a part Aboriginal background, it's not super uncommon here.
You should do an animated history video about Belgium it has a rich and pretty interesting history consideringen ever since Roman occupation it has been the battlefield of Europe
Rabbit proof fence is also a book. Saw it in the library once. I didn’t get to read all of it, but the bits I did were pretty depressing.
I think it would have been important to mention John Macarthur, the rum rebellion and Lachland Macquarie.
This guy makes my history class interesting
Nice reference to the rabbit proof fence in the thumbnail!
ANIMATED HISTORY OF ROMANIA
Watch history of Romania by Juice Glass