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I also inputted those exact words and it did not produce a picture that looked like it belonged to a History Dose video. I will admit there was only one iteration.
This is probably the best history channel on TH-cam. It's also my favorite. The fact that both of these brothers do all their own artwork and research makes it so much more impressive. It really captures these bloody tales from the past.
I do stuff with history/archeology channels on Mesoamerica (Aztec, Maya, etc): There were 100% soldiers from Mesoamerican states participating in Spanish campaigns in the Philippines (and elsewhere in the Americas: Maya soldiers participated in Spanish conquests of the Inca in the Andes, and various groups in Spanish campaigns and founding colonies up in Texas and perhaps as far north as the Canadian border). Actual Mesoamerican stuff more my interest then the Spanish stuff but as a quick example, there are two documents in the same volume, one from pension request from a Spanish veteran in 1624, another a 1630 petition from the Cabildo of Tlaxcala (which was a notable Mesoamerican city-state and kingdom, the city actually being a republic ruled via a senate, and were probably the most important party in the fall of the Aztec's alongside Corte's expedition and the Aztec city of Texcoco) which discusses Tlaxcalteca soldiers recruited for a 1603 campaign in the Philippines, where apparently the Tlaxcalteca men were being mistreated by Spanish officers. There is WAY more documentation on Mesoamerican troops participating in various Spanish campaigns and colonial efforts in the 16th and 17th centuries (later too, if you wanna consider them "Mesoamerican" rather then just Mexican that far after), but I'd need to dig into sources to provide more, since again, my thing is more Mesoamerican politics, city planning, architecture, water mangement systems, warfare, etc then Spanish campaigns and colonialism.... but hey, if you guys ever do episodes on Mesoamerican conflicts (We have a lot more documentation then you'd think on say wars between different Maya, Zapotec, etc states, or campaigns run by the Aztec Empire) or the Spanish conquest, I'd be down to help, time permitting! , if you wanna messag me on twitte, I'm Majora__Z
you don't need to point out any evidence since he's already a known fact. 99.9% of the troops that fought the aztec were other native americans who alligned themselves with the spanish because they were sick of being taxed and sacrificed by them.
@@ryennfilms6429 Nah, that's actually a misconception, the real reason Cortes (made alliances with so many local states in Mesoamerica is actually because the Aztec (and other kingdoms, empires) were HANDS OFF, not because they were oppressive: Due to the rough geography and a lack of draft animals, large states in Mesoamerica were fairly hands off, without the direct management and administration of subjects, founding of colonies, and instituting of a unified national/cultural identity: Political power was cemented more through fragile tax/tributary and vassal relationships, flaunting your military might, economic success, and ties to other legendary civilizations and kings to get states to align with you and suck up with political marriages, etc. Obviously, Eurasian polities did these too, and there still WAS some examples of more hands on imperialism in Mesoamerica. But hands off and indirect imperialism and methods of establishing political power which much more the norm and were more fundamental in statecraft in the latter then the former. The Aztec Empire was no exception here, and it's primary goal in expansionism was to gain resource rich states as tax-subjects to extract goods and luxuries without expending direct effort, with those states keeping their rulers, laws, and customs and mostly being left alone, as long as they did pay those economic goods as taxes, didn't block roads, provided military aid on request, and other basic obligations.,etc. The Aztec were not coming in and raiding existing subjects (unless they incited others to stop paying taxes), nor were slaves or sacrifices a common tax/tribute demand: Sacrifices were generally from enemy soldiers captured during wars, and sacrifice itself was also a pan-mesoamerican practice every civilization in the region did, not just the Aztec. Accordingly, what was really going on, as much or more then Cortes manipulating local states, was local kings and officials manipulating Cortes to benefit their own political ambitions: In a political system where subjects mostly stayed independent, they had the motivations and the capacity to secede, backstab, and preform coups opportunistically to sway or cause the house of cards they held up that their capitals rested on to collapse, so they could advance politically. Especially by allying or pledging themselves to another group (since again, as a subject they had little to lose) to then work together to take out existing political rivals or capitals, to then be in a position of higher standing in the aftermath. (The Aztec Empire itself was founded this way in the late 1420s) . For example, the city of Cempoala (and it's king Xicomecoatl), the capital of one of 3 major kingdoms of the Totonac civilization, and a recent conquered subject of the Aztec, lied to Cortes about there being an Aztec fort oppressing them at Tzinpantzinco, which was really a rival Totonaca capital city. They then led the Conquistadors into the territory of Tlaxcala, one of the states in Central Mexico the Aztec hadn't manage to conquer yet, and which the Totonacs were hostile with. When the Tlaxcaltecas and the Conquistadors fought to a standstill and allied with one another (with different Tlaxcalteca officials like Xicotencatl I, Xicotencatl II, disagreeing on what to do, later on Xicotencatl II would end up being executed when a rival Tlaxcalteca politician got Cortes to execute him) en route to Tenochtitlan (as Tlaxcala was an active target of Aztec invasions and DID have resentment towards the Aztec), they stopped in Cholula, where the Tlaxcaltecas fed Cortes rumors of them planning to assassinate the visitors, and it just so happens that the Tlaxcaltecas end up propping up a pro-Tlaxcalteca political faction after they and the Conquistadors sack the city, after Cholula had recently switched from being aligned with Tlaxcala to the Aztec. Finally arriving at Tenochtitlan, Moctezuma II allows them into the city: Flaunting the grandeur of your city and it's opulence was a common method of courting a foreign state into becoming a vassal or an ally (to say nothing of the princesses they gave to high ranking conquistadors, an attempt at political marriages the Conquistadors mistook as offerings of concubines). When Pánfilo de Narváez arrived, who actually was sent by the governor of Cuba to arrest Cortes as he had been out on his expedition illegally, Narvaez actually worked with Aztec officials to get capture Cortes, since by this point they realized Cortes wasn't a licensed diplomat representing a foreign king. It is only after 1. Cortes panics, Moctezuma II and other Aztec rulers and officials get captured, locked up (Cortes of course claims this happened earlier and he was always in control) and then are killed; 2. the Aztec nobles and elite warriors are killed while unarmed during a religious festival; 3. smallpox broke out, and 4. the Conquistadors and Tlaxcalteca flee back to safety; that then other core-Aztec states inside the valley like Texcoco (the second most powerful Aztec city), Chalco, Xochimilco, Itzpalapan, etc ally with Cortes. Because by then, Tenochtitlan was weak, vulnerable due to it losing it's elite soldiers, its king (always a period in Mesoamerican history where subjects would stop paying taxes and see what they could get away with untill the new ruler re-asserted their military power), and struck by plague. Furthermore, these also made Tenochtitlan unable to project it's power and wield its political authority; and by extension, said core subject states inside the valley didn't benefit as much from the tax influx into the area (which was secured by the threat of retaliation if taxes weren't paid, something currently jeopardized) or their political marriages with Tenochtitlan at the moment, de-valuing their close relationship with it. (Ixtlilxochitl II of Texcoco also had a grudge against the Mexica of Tenochtitlan, as in a recent war of succession after the prior Texcoca king died, the Mexica favored a competing heir as the claimant to the throne, so when the Conquistadors and Tlaxcalteca returned to the valley to siege Tenochtitlan, Ixtlilxochitl II, who had split power with other heirs, sided with Cortes wheras other Texcoca royals sided with Tenochtitlan)
@@ryennfilms6429 I honestly would have allied with the Spaniards to defeat the Aztecs if I had been alive back then I also really like the hispanic construction of viceroyalties Actually as a Mexican I'm pro Spanish empire
a lot of Mexicans and Latin Americans moved to the Philippines via the Manila-Acapulco galleon trade particularly on major port cities in Batangas and Pampamga. There's a town called Mexico (Masicu) in Pampamga, formerly Nuevo Mexico. The Pinar del Rio province in Cuba was previously known as Nueva Filipinas. There's a significant Filipino genepool of inhabitants of Mexico's Guerrero province.
Your content has awaken a desire in my wife to learn history in detail. She is completely enthralled with your videos and I must thank you for giving her the push to have a passion for history 🤘🏻
@@killerkraut9179 Megawrong is a fraud and a jerk. I did a video humiliating him. "A conquistador refutes the 'Metatron''s video on Samurais VS Spaniards" See also "A Spanish conquistador puts accusers of genocide in their place (con subtítulos)."
This is not even in our history books, Japanese and Chinese are reffered to as traders while Spaniards are the conquerors. This channel never fails to amaze me with nice looking art, but stories narrated in an awesome manner.
For real history, and not mainstream superficial Disney versions of reality, see my series "Islam was invented by Jews" and "The British Empire Was NOT The Biggest." Idiots count deserts but say oceans dont' count, which is hypocrisy and stupidity.
History Dose gives a fresh new way of often unknown history through striking storytelling and beautiful art. Yet another intense and interesting story. Keep it up! 🙏
Great content! The 1582 Cagayan Battles are an event not known to many here within the Philippines, which is also perhaps one of few instances (including the attack in 1565 at Fukuda Bay, Japan) when Conquistadores and the Japanese Samurai fought each other, like two different worlds meeting with differences in weaponry, tactics, and ships. It's also good that the diversity of the Wokou Raiders were emphasised in the video, since some think it's mostly a Japanese force, but it was multi-ethnic, composed of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and some native Filipinos. The Chinese were known for piracy in this region, attacking the Spanish colonial center of Manila in 1574 that led to the death of veteran conquistador Martin de Goiti. Superb art too. It illustrated many of the narrations in the video, and I appreciate that it's true to the environment and setting of the historical account, which gave life to the story.
@@PaulJohn01 Yeah, it was never taught in schools at all, and perhaps, like some of us, learned it on our own. The first century of Spanish colonisation in the country was marked by a constant state of vulnerability (constant attacks by raiders and other colonial powers) which was not emphasised much in history classes.
@@DanielLee_2304 It's OK hard to keep on everything in the past, even I as a Brit didn't know we captured Manila from the Spanish and held it for 2 years. Only found that out recently. But yeah the lack of Historical sites/markers/monuments/battlefields in the PH is a bit disappointing. Was in Cebu about 3 years ago , been there several times and on that visit the Lapu-Lapu statute was in poor condition and he's literally the most famous Historical figure i can think of.
@@PaulJohn01 Yes, I have noticed that too. There's a lack of markers for some historical events, and some markers are also usually obscured by things or people within sidewalks, you wouldn't know if you check carefully. The historical organization should really maintain these markers, like the one in Cebu you mentioned.
@@DanielLee_2304 In the UK there are many local/regional/national organizations responsible for maintaining and promoting various aspects of the UK's history. Not sure what organizations exist in the PH though. Yep hard to find things when they covered by signs/dirt/graffitti in urban areas ☹☹
One of my favorite historical events with the Spanish venturing thru Southeast Asia. Interesting enough, this is one that in my eyes is not well known, but overall its incredible. In addition, i learned from my mothers side of the family that Juan Pablo de Carrion is one of my ancestors.
Everything in this channel is top notch. The narration, the research, the art style. I love when passion delivers such beauty. It's incredible to think that it's mainly run by two people if I'm not mistaken.
As someone who studies Portuguese history in college, I have never heard or referred to our explorers as "conquistadores", but both are very similar so it is easy to understand this. I have heard the term "Aventureiros" more often which describes the military wing of seafaring gentry that fought in the terço-like formation that was adapted from the original Spanish formation, although this terminology was adopted in a later stage of the discoveries, but it was pretty much already established by the time Portugal had arrived to China.
@@SilverforceX Thieves as in trading precious resources that the natives had little to no use of in exchange for materials and tools that were, to us, cheap and disposable but to them were vital for grazing and working the land, most of the slaves that were acquired came from native warlords who sold them to portuguese traders (we were just taking advantage of an institution that was present and had already existed for hundreds of years since antiquity). As for conquerors, excluding the Feitoria system, mostly towards Africa and Brazil, albeit Brazil was in a later stage, it was a military scale operation, yes we were conquerors much like how any other european kingdom would've delighted themselves in taking that land for themselves.
The art, the narration, the soundtrack and the excellent writing. This has become my favorite history channel. The art alone stands head and shoulders above most others
Wow, this is really high-quality, and even backed up with sources in the description. How have I never heard of this channel before? I’m definitely checking out more of their work.
the quality of the illustrations is absolutely insane! it feels like reading some sort of game of thrones type of graphic novel but cooler and it's actual history
I don't possess enough superlatives nor do I posses a great talent for written English but I do possess an appreciation of this channel and the incredible content it makes. Thank you History Dose for the continued excellence. PS More Scottish history would go down a treat ;)
Perhaps this is the busiest week i've had in the last 2 years - but nothing will stop me from watching History Dose ON TIME! Come hell or high water...
A recommendation for a future video, the Somali dervish rebellion( the mad mullah of Somalia) vs the British empire. Love your video and the way you tell the stories, amazing just amazing.
Kickass book. If you like Shogun check out Clavell's other books. Gai-jin is also very good. And if you want another massive book set in Japan, check out Musashi by Eiji Yoshikawa. Amazing novel!
@@luisduarte7917 oh But we do in fact we have a lot more than you since we were in more wars also you are just our backyard there is literally nothing to see in Portugal that you cant see in Spain we literally have the same architectury and we also share the same origins in history
@@ranbojd1070 backyard?cunt you are the garden of the portuguese mansion wich os always viver then the house itself 🤣🤣🤣🤣first Portugal was born then you follow like copycats🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 We made 3x most discouvery! P.S Aljubarrota Will always be your shame ⚔️🇵🇹💪🏻 6500 vs 35000 🤣
You always gave great video ideas. They’re very good and informative. Videos like these make me enjoy learning about history. Thank you History Dose! Keep up the good work! 😎
5:26 is one of the only times when watching something i have stopped the video and said holy sht in awe of the incredible art. Thank you history dose these are some absolutely incredible videos.
Can you cover the Fall of Malacca empire to Portuguese in 1511, I there's no one does the narration and art like your channel, truly amazing and enjoyful!
some of those who fought against Spanish forces in the Philippines might have been fallen samurai yes but mostly are foot soldiers or ashigaru who were both pikemen and musket riflemen who were lighter armor and their iconic hats. There's a statue of a famous Chinese pirate whose crew mispronouncing a native word for a clam my local area's name came to be that way. Limahong's ambitious to even try to take over Philippines with his pirate fleet (lol but why though? they didn't start as privateers as some did in the Americas before going into piracy, they really did do pirate stuff harassing their local areas though they were essentially pushed out, in the seas of South East Asia it was China who had the biggest and best fleet of their time or even their sailing tech, so fighting against at least remnant tech would've been a great experience).
At Fukuda, it was not only two European ships but also the navy of Omura Sumitada, which prevented the Matsura fleet to board and completely over run the Portuguese. The Matsura fleet was mainly composed by Sakai merchants turned into piracy, as stated by Frois himself. The Japanese side of the story is never told, despite memorandum and letters of the events being present. If it was not for the men of Omura and the Fukuda ships stopping the Matsura ships, the Portuguese would have been killed due to the negligence of João Pereira, who did not listened to the Jesuits warning and allowed the Matsura to storm his ship. The reference material which is (criminally) omitted by Hesselink for unknown reason is a paper written by Masaki Anno (安野異幸), "On the opening of the port city of Nagasaki -From a point of view of Ebune's people living on the small boat, going ashore" (長 崎 開 港 史 一家船 の陸上が りの視点か ら). The reference includes the primary source in which Omura Sumitada praised the Fukuda's samurai for blocking the landing of Matsura's navy. If you are studying Japanese history please make an effort to use at least Japanese sources once.
The Philippines sure has an interesting history and culture. It's geographical location and a melting pot of human interaction, migration, and colonization shaped it to have a very distinct culture. From Chinese pirates, Malayan sultanates,native American warriors, Spanish conquistadors, exiled Japanese feudal warlord, to defecting African Americans during the US colonization. Seems like people from the world's continent has stories to tell that shaped the archipelago's identity today. This results to a cultural peculiarity where some Filipinos are racially ambiguous with an English first name and Spanish surname and speaks Nahuatl and Chinese loan words.
Filipinos are not racially ambiguous. Most of them are pure 100% Southeast Asians. Only a very small minority of Philipinos are descendents of Spanish noblemen that settled in the island (Mestizos)
The video was awesome,but I want to note that the conquistadors do not rely exclusive on fire arms , because that was very hard to reload. The european swordsmans and spikemans have their own style of fighting ,and a catana made in that era will probably brake at repeated contact with the european cross sword 🗡️
Could you make a video on the Hussite Wars? It is a short and not so well known period and I feel like it would fit perfectly with this channel's style of videos.
Well, this is surprising. Samurais vs. Conquistadores. I will preprare my popcorn for this 😎🍿 Update: What an amazing video! Seriously, with you I learn new things on History. Thank you!
So contrary to popular opinions and beliefs this would actually be the most realistic or historically accurate scenario since both sides existed at the same time and had actual interactions with each other
Oh, it's beautiful. The art, as always, is amazing, and the narration, in that same vein, is just as good! Also, I'm *dying* to have the music pieces you used in this video. You have any links, by chance?
A conquistador’s head was severed by a Japanese samurai/ambassador during a scuffle in the city of Tenochtitlan according to the account of an Aztec priest, 1614
Hey History Dose, I just watched your episode on Henry Avery, and I was wondering if you could please make more videos about famous pirates and their history.
Funfact: by 1639 all portuguese and basically all Europeans were banned from entering Japan while it went into Isolation. Except for the Dutch, who were granted exclusive trading rights for over 200 years. Since we helped them crush a rebellion of Japanese catholics, we weren't interested in spreading religion wich they saw as a threat.
Portugal have OSaka and Nagasaki for centuries, that cities was founded by portuguese. Today many portuguese words ini dicionary japanase, food, and others things. Portugal also was important in civil war japanase to unification of japan
Missed the to mention the mesoamerican mercenaries that made up a large amount of the force of the Spanish in the Philippines , Tlaxcalan warriors allied to the Spanish against the dominant Aztec later asked to join the Spanish in the South Pacific
It's an interesting factor of history. People's often assume that the meso americans who allied with spaniards to defeat the large civilizations (notably the Tlaxcalan against the Aztecs) were then betrayed by the spaniards, but it wasn't true. In fact they became the powerbase of spanish power for decades, because they were reliable allies and willing subjects to the Spanish crown. One could call them collaborators but that would imply that the Tlaxcalan had any relations to the Aztecs other than hatred for what horrors Tenochtitlan did to them for years. The spaniards treated their enemies like trash, but they did reward those who sided with them during the conquests of south america, at least for a time.
CINEMATIC ASSS FUCKK!! listening in my car and it felt like i was at a theatre. I love you guys seriously. Everytime i watch i feel like im actually there, witnessing the historic moment
En 1592 Toyotomi Hideyoshi (el unificador de Japón) envió al gobernador Gómez Pérez Das Mariñas un emisario pidiendo tributo y pleitesía a lo que el gobernador Español respondió diciendo lo siguiente: «Ve y dile a Taicosama (Toyotomi Hideyoshi) que los Españoles están acostumbrados a recibir tributos y no a pagarlos. Que tú señor haga primero la prueba del valor Español y sí le venciese en guerra, trátele entonces como se le trata a los vencidos». Toyotomi no tomó represalia alguna.
Samurai vs Conquistador is like local police gang vs professional invasion force... Even in a melee battle, Samurai lack of equipments, tactic and training against one of the most infamous conquering armies in the history.
The people who appear in this battle are not samurai. They are mercenaries called foot soldiers. They are usually farmers. Not a regular army, but pirates like the Vikings.
@Sanary Seggnate Infamous? Stop believing the damn black legend. Anywhere they went, Spain let natives join them and gave them properties. You don't use logic, right?
@@javiersamuel8172 that doesn't make them any Less infamous. Hundreds of years later and people still know and talk about them,that Definitely means they're infamous. As for their efficiency, even after Joining forces with local populations (which only means they were more intelligent and effective) they were almost always outnumbered and still almost always succeeded.
Although i wouldn't underestimate the Samurai as much. After all they had been fighting and successfully defeated the Mongols multiple times. Another of the most infamous invading forces of all time
Times change... I'm Portuguese and once upon a time we were freaking overpowered, probably even more than Spain? (I'm not sure) even knowing we never had huge army's. But im proud of my country anyways, but it's sad that Portuguese people forget about what happened in the middle ages and don't give they're country enough credit, i truly believe my country is very underated, European history wouldn't be the same without Portugal.
Mexica also fought alongside the Spaniards. Vastly outnumbered, they defeated the pirates which included not only Japanese but warriors from across the region. It was a clash of 3 worlds.
It is very unlikely that he will, as the history and recognition of Portugal's importance both militarily and politically is not often known to Americans (apart from Brazilians). They tend to look more at the history of Spain because of the link it has with their history. Even knowing that portugal was as important or even more important for the european domain of the world, with the development of cartography, nautical instruments, the caravel, the nau, the galleon, the positioning of cannons on the sides of ships etc.
The most important part of the spanish tercios in Cagayan Battles was composes by Tlaxaltecas, so the mayority was not really european spanish but mexican natives even if the captain Juan Pablo de Carrion was from the peninsula.
Amazing Video!! Just found your channel and im amazed with all the content and artwork present, you have earned another sub my friends. As a side note on this excelent Video there was another engagement Between Portugal and Samurai of the Arima Clan, subordinate to the Tokugawa Shogunate. It was the "Nossa Senhora da Graça incident" and it involved 1 Portuguese Galleon, the "Nossa Senhora da Graça" facing off against 33 Japanese vessels with around 3000 Samurai. It was in 1610, a period in wich Portuguese-Japanese relations were very strained and emboldened by the Dutch and Spanish the Tokugawa prepared an attack in the Portuguese "Black Ship" to capture it and its goods. The battle lasted for 3 Days and only in the last did the Japanese sucessfully boarded the Galleon after starting a fire. The Portuguese Captain, André Pessoa, then decided to to set the ship´s magazine on fire and told his remaining crew to bail out.He set the magazine alight and went down with the ship, the Galleon exploding twice, killing crew, boarders and destroying the cargo in the process. Very few Portuguese Crew, along with slaves escaped, most being executed by the Japanese in the water but the Arima Clan suffered very heavy losses to no gain, as trade with the Dutch or spanish wouldnt be profitable for them.
Don’t know why I want this animated so bad, it would be like a Vietnam movie, mixed with a samurai flick, if it was done in a samurai champ lol style would be the coolest shit
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okok
Ew
dont support scammers pls
Were do you get the music for this and many other of your episodes love it .
thank you m'lord
Jose is arguably one of the best modern artists I've ever seen, both digital and physical.
What an incredible painter.
@@Optable I'm inclined to believe not, as Jose has been painting and posting in this style since at least 2020
I also inputted those exact words and it did not produce a picture that looked like it belonged to a History Dose video. I will admit there was only one iteration.
@@Optable That'd be quite disappointing if that were true.
@@Optable do you know this for a fact, or is this and assumption you are saying is true?
@@misterliligant5772 Not disappointing! hes using his resources and producing great results.
This is probably the best history channel on TH-cam. It's also my favorite. The fact that both of these brothers do all their own artwork and research makes it so much more impressive. It really captures these bloody tales from the past.
Support their Patreon then!
@@yodojo3493 I barely have enough money to support myself.
Along with epic history tv for sure
*So what you're telling me is that, by law of the Butterfly Effect, Portugal is responsible for Pearl Harbor*
Ohh noo
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Ah yes *HISTORY INTESIFIES*
Wich it would mean that Portugal caused the nuclear bomb attack in Hiroshima and nagashaki
@@Literallyryangosling777 Portugal at it again
I do stuff with history/archeology channels on Mesoamerica (Aztec, Maya, etc): There were 100% soldiers from Mesoamerican states participating in Spanish campaigns in the Philippines (and elsewhere in the Americas: Maya soldiers participated in Spanish conquests of the Inca in the Andes, and various groups in Spanish campaigns and founding colonies up in Texas and perhaps as far north as the Canadian border). Actual Mesoamerican stuff more my interest then the Spanish stuff but as a quick example, there are two documents in the same volume, one from pension request from a Spanish veteran in 1624, another a 1630 petition from the Cabildo of Tlaxcala (which was a notable Mesoamerican city-state and kingdom, the city actually being a republic ruled via a senate, and were probably the most important party in the fall of the Aztec's alongside Corte's expedition and the Aztec city of Texcoco) which discusses Tlaxcalteca soldiers recruited for a 1603 campaign in the Philippines, where apparently the Tlaxcalteca men were being mistreated by Spanish officers.
There is WAY more documentation on Mesoamerican troops participating in various Spanish campaigns and colonial efforts in the 16th and 17th centuries (later too, if you wanna consider them "Mesoamerican" rather then just Mexican that far after), but I'd need to dig into sources to provide more, since again, my thing is more Mesoamerican politics, city planning, architecture, water mangement systems, warfare, etc then Spanish campaigns and colonialism.... but hey, if you guys ever do episodes on Mesoamerican conflicts (We have a lot more documentation then you'd think on say wars between different Maya, Zapotec, etc states, or campaigns run by the Aztec Empire) or the Spanish conquest, I'd be down to help, time permitting! , if you wanna messag me on twitte, I'm Majora__Z
you don't need to point out any evidence since he's already a known fact. 99.9% of the troops that fought the aztec were other native americans who alligned themselves with the spanish because they were sick of being taxed and sacrificed by them.
@@ryennfilms6429 Nah, that's actually a misconception, the real reason Cortes (made alliances with so many local states in Mesoamerica is actually because the Aztec (and other kingdoms, empires) were HANDS OFF, not because they were oppressive: Due to the rough geography and a lack of draft animals, large states in Mesoamerica were fairly hands off, without the direct management and administration of subjects, founding of colonies, and instituting of a unified national/cultural identity: Political power was cemented more through fragile tax/tributary and vassal relationships, flaunting your military might, economic success, and ties to other legendary civilizations and kings to get states to align with you and suck up with political marriages, etc. Obviously, Eurasian polities did these too, and there still WAS some examples of more hands on imperialism in Mesoamerica.
But hands off and indirect imperialism and methods of establishing political power which much more the norm and were more fundamental in statecraft in the latter then the former. The Aztec Empire was no exception here, and it's primary goal in expansionism was to gain resource rich states as tax-subjects to extract goods and luxuries without expending direct effort, with those states keeping their rulers, laws, and customs and mostly being left alone, as long as they did pay those economic goods as taxes, didn't block roads, provided military aid on request, and other basic obligations.,etc. The Aztec were not coming in and raiding existing subjects (unless they incited others to stop paying taxes), nor were slaves or sacrifices a common tax/tribute demand: Sacrifices were generally from enemy soldiers captured during wars, and sacrifice itself was also a pan-mesoamerican practice every civilization in the region did, not just the Aztec.
Accordingly, what was really going on, as much or more then Cortes manipulating local states, was local kings and officials manipulating Cortes to benefit their own political ambitions: In a political system where subjects mostly stayed independent, they had the motivations and the capacity to secede, backstab, and preform coups opportunistically to sway or cause the house of cards they held up that their capitals rested on to collapse, so they could advance politically. Especially by allying or pledging themselves to another group (since again, as a subject they had little to lose) to then work together to take out existing political rivals or capitals, to then be in a position of higher standing in the aftermath. (The Aztec Empire itself was founded this way in the late 1420s) . For example, the city of Cempoala (and it's king Xicomecoatl), the capital of one of 3 major kingdoms of the Totonac civilization, and a recent conquered subject of the Aztec, lied to Cortes about there being an Aztec fort oppressing them at Tzinpantzinco, which was really a rival Totonaca capital city.
They then led the Conquistadors into the territory of Tlaxcala, one of the states in Central Mexico the Aztec hadn't manage to conquer yet, and which the Totonacs were hostile with. When the Tlaxcaltecas and the Conquistadors fought to a standstill and allied with one another (with different Tlaxcalteca officials like Xicotencatl I, Xicotencatl II, disagreeing on what to do, later on Xicotencatl II would end up being executed when a rival Tlaxcalteca politician got Cortes to execute him) en route to Tenochtitlan (as Tlaxcala was an active target of Aztec invasions and DID have resentment towards the Aztec), they stopped in Cholula, where the Tlaxcaltecas fed Cortes rumors of them planning to assassinate the visitors, and it just so happens that the Tlaxcaltecas end up propping up a pro-Tlaxcalteca political faction after they and the Conquistadors sack the city, after Cholula had recently switched from being aligned with Tlaxcala to the Aztec. Finally arriving at Tenochtitlan, Moctezuma II allows them into the city: Flaunting the grandeur of your city and it's opulence was a common method of courting a foreign state into becoming a vassal or an ally (to say nothing of the princesses they gave to high ranking conquistadors, an attempt at political marriages the Conquistadors mistook as offerings of concubines). When Pánfilo de Narváez arrived, who actually was sent by the governor of Cuba to arrest Cortes as he had been out on his expedition illegally, Narvaez actually worked with Aztec officials to get capture Cortes, since by this point they realized Cortes wasn't a licensed diplomat representing a foreign king.
It is only after 1. Cortes panics, Moctezuma II and other Aztec rulers and officials get captured, locked up (Cortes of course claims this happened earlier and he was always in control) and then are killed; 2. the Aztec nobles and elite warriors are killed while unarmed during a religious festival; 3. smallpox broke out, and 4. the Conquistadors and Tlaxcalteca flee back to safety; that then other core-Aztec states inside the valley like Texcoco (the second most powerful Aztec city), Chalco, Xochimilco, Itzpalapan, etc ally with Cortes. Because by then, Tenochtitlan was weak, vulnerable due to it losing it's elite soldiers, its king (always a period in Mesoamerican history where subjects would stop paying taxes and see what they could get away with untill the new ruler re-asserted their military power), and struck by plague. Furthermore, these also made Tenochtitlan unable to project it's power and wield its political authority; and by extension, said core subject states inside the valley didn't benefit as much from the tax influx into the area (which was secured by the threat of retaliation if taxes weren't paid, something currently jeopardized) or their political marriages with Tenochtitlan at the moment, de-valuing their close relationship with it. (Ixtlilxochitl II of Texcoco also had a grudge against the Mexica of Tenochtitlan, as in a recent war of succession after the prior Texcoca king died, the Mexica favored a competing heir as the claimant to the throne, so when the Conquistadors and Tlaxcalteca returned to the valley to siege Tenochtitlan, Ixtlilxochitl II, who had split power with other heirs, sided with Cortes wheras other Texcoca royals sided with Tenochtitlan)
@@ryennfilms6429
I honestly would have allied with the Spaniards to defeat the Aztecs if I had been alive back then
I also really like the hispanic construction of viceroyalties
Actually as a Mexican I'm pro Spanish empire
Thank you so much for sharing this interesting insight! Greetings from México!
a lot of Mexicans and Latin Americans moved to the Philippines via the Manila-Acapulco galleon trade particularly on major port cities in Batangas and Pampamga.
There's a town called Mexico (Masicu) in Pampamga, formerly Nuevo Mexico. The Pinar del Rio province in Cuba was previously known as Nueva Filipinas. There's a significant Filipino genepool of inhabitants of Mexico's Guerrero province.
Your content has awaken a desire in my wife to learn history in detail. She is completely enthralled with your videos and I must thank you for giving her the push to have a passion for history 🤘🏻
their way of telling history is kind of biased lol
I think this is controvers the Metatron have made a Video abou the same topic !
@@legate-lanius wdym?
@@legate-lanius No such thing as a person without bias.
@@killerkraut9179 Megawrong is a fraud and a jerk.
I did a video humiliating him.
"A conquistador refutes the 'Metatron''s video on Samurais VS Spaniards"
See also "A Spanish conquistador puts accusers of genocide in their place (con subtítulos)."
This is not even in our history books, Japanese and Chinese are reffered to as traders while Spaniards are the conquerors. This channel never fails to amaze me with nice looking art, but stories narrated in an awesome manner.
it is in our history it's just you don't know anything
@@rampage4695 can you show me that book then?
@@rampage4695 stop the cap
@Bryan Villafuerte Thank you!
For real history, and not mainstream superficial Disney versions of reality, see my series "Islam was invented by Jews" and "The British Empire Was NOT The Biggest."
Idiots count deserts but say oceans dont' count, which is hypocrisy and stupidity.
The art in these videos never fail to impress
History Dose gives a fresh new way of often unknown history through striking storytelling and beautiful art. Yet another intense and interesting story. Keep it up! 🙏
Great content! The 1582 Cagayan Battles are an event not known to many here within the Philippines, which is also perhaps one of few instances (including the attack in 1565 at Fukuda Bay, Japan) when Conquistadores and the Japanese Samurai fought each other, like two different worlds meeting with differences in weaponry, tactics, and ships.
It's also good that the diversity of the Wokou Raiders were emphasised in the video, since some think it's mostly a Japanese force, but it was multi-ethnic, composed of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and some native Filipinos. The Chinese were known for piracy in this region, attacking the Spanish colonial center of Manila in 1574 that led to the death of veteran conquistador Martin de Goiti.
Superb art too. It illustrated many of the narrations in the video, and I appreciate that it's true to the environment and setting of the historical account, which gave life to the story.
Yep i've never met anyone in the PH who knows about this.
@@PaulJohn01
Yeah, it was never taught in schools at all, and perhaps, like some of us, learned it on our own. The first century of Spanish colonisation in the country was marked by a constant state of vulnerability (constant attacks by raiders and other colonial powers) which was not emphasised much in history classes.
@@DanielLee_2304 It's OK hard to keep on everything in the past, even I as a Brit didn't know we captured Manila from the Spanish and held it for 2 years.
Only found that out recently.
But yeah the lack of Historical sites/markers/monuments/battlefields in the PH is a bit disappointing.
Was in Cebu about 3 years ago , been there several times and on that visit the Lapu-Lapu statute was in poor condition and he's literally the most famous Historical figure i can think of.
@@PaulJohn01
Yes, I have noticed that too. There's a lack of markers for some historical events, and some markers are also usually obscured by things or people within sidewalks, you wouldn't know if you check carefully. The historical organization should really maintain these markers, like the one in Cebu you mentioned.
@@DanielLee_2304 In the UK there are many local/regional/national organizations responsible for maintaining and promoting various aspects of the UK's history.
Not sure what organizations exist in the PH though.
Yep hard to find things when they covered by signs/dirt/graffitti in urban areas ☹☹
love the effort you put into pronouncing spanish names properly, just a small details but i really like it
I do speak Spanish, so I hope they sound OK!
One of my favorite historical events with the Spanish venturing thru Southeast Asia. Interesting enough, this is one that in my eyes is not well known, but overall its incredible.
In addition, i learned from my mothers side of the family that Juan Pablo de Carrion is one of my ancestors.
That’s awesome
Everything in this channel is top notch. The narration, the research, the art style. I love when passion delivers such beauty. It's incredible to think that it's mainly run by two people if I'm not mistaken.
Ancient Aliens. The answer is always ancient aliens.
I literally started following you on Instagram. Can’t wait for next one. Love what you do man 👍🏽
As someone who studies Portuguese history in college, I have never heard or referred to our explorers as "conquistadores", but both are very similar so it is easy to understand this. I have heard the term "Aventureiros" more often which describes the military wing of seafaring gentry that fought in the terço-like formation that was adapted from the original Spanish formation, although this terminology was adopted in a later stage of the discoveries, but it was pretty much already established by the time Portugal had arrived to China.
Well ofc they called themselves adventurers and explorers, but were in fact thieves & conquerors. :D
@@SilverforceX Thieves as in trading precious resources that the natives had little to no use of in exchange for materials and tools that were, to us, cheap and disposable but to them were vital for grazing and working the land, most of the slaves that were acquired came from native warlords who sold them to portuguese traders (we were just taking advantage of an institution that was present and had already existed for hundreds of years since antiquity). As for conquerors, excluding the Feitoria system, mostly towards Africa and Brazil, albeit Brazil was in a later stage, it was a military scale operation, yes we were conquerors much like how any other european kingdom would've delighted themselves in taking that land for themselves.
@@SilverforceX And the pirates called themselves the liberators of your purses!
I got videos on how overrated Portugal is.
@@scintillam_dei Overrated? I thought it was the other way around most of the time.
The art, the narration, the soundtrack and the excellent writing. This has become my favorite history channel. The art alone stands head and shoulders above most others
Wow, this is really high-quality, and even backed up with sources in the description. How have I never heard of this channel before? I’m definitely checking out more of their work.
I genuinely get excited when I see a notification for this channel and my goodness the art and audio immersion never fails🙌🙌🙌Thank you
the quality of the illustrations is absolutely insane! it feels like reading some sort of game of thrones type of graphic novel but cooler and it's actual history
I don't possess enough superlatives nor do I posses a great talent for written English but I do possess an appreciation of this channel and the incredible content it makes. Thank you History Dose for the continued excellence. PS More Scottish history would go down a treat ;)
this is comment feels like a dude saying "I'm not good at the piano" and then proceeding to make a piece so good it made Beethoven shed a tear
@@johnjoe993 nice, you used Chat GPT to come up with a TH-cam comment…
Perhaps this is the busiest week i've had in the last 2 years - but nothing will stop me from watching History Dose ON TIME! Come hell or high water...
These recounts with the amazing art, transport you to 17th century Japan. Absolutely astounding 💎
Absolutely fascinating. This shows the level of colonial competition between European powers at this time too.
The art and audio quality is just superb, you deserve more recognition
A recommendation for a future video, the Somali dervish rebellion( the mad mullah of Somalia) vs the British empire. Love your video and the way you tell the stories, amazing just amazing.
I have never been so immersed from a video. I only wish it was longer.
1565 battle Fukuda - Portuguese defeated the Japanese
Thats not true
I'm reading The Shogun right now, and it's very interesting to see the crossovers of history. Such a vastly storied period!
Kickass book. If you like Shogun check out Clavell's other books. Gai-jin is also very good. And if you want another massive book set in Japan, check out Musashi by Eiji Yoshikawa. Amazing novel!
Please please more Portuguese history! This channel does a great job!! Appreciate you all!
*spanish
@@ranbojd1070 Spain dont have Legendary Battles like us 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Last place of the templars ⚔️🇵🇹✝️💪🏻
@@luisduarte7917 oh But we do in fact we have a lot more than you since we were in more wars also you are just our backyard there is literally nothing to see in Portugal that you cant see in Spain we literally have the same architectury and we also share the same origins in history
@@ranbojd1070 backyard?cunt you are the garden of the portuguese mansion wich os always viver then the house itself 🤣🤣🤣🤣first Portugal was born then you follow like copycats🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
We made 3x most discouvery!
P.S Aljubarrota Will always be your shame ⚔️🇵🇹💪🏻
6500 vs 35000 🤣
@@ranbojd1070 that’s an interesting perspective. *portuguese. Always someone like yourself with poor response and class.
I just wrote a paper on this 2 months ago so cool to see it visualized. Specifically globalizations influence on East Asian islands from the 1500s
Cannot wait for the matchup of two of the coolest historical warriors
@Shy Cracker being functional doesn’t make you “uncool”
@Shy Cracker the twisted logic you have is very interesting.......
@Shy Cracker Armor's always bases on functionality. Both would be cool, man.
@Shy Cracker nah, they're cool, I love their helmets
@Shy Cracker i wonder what exactly you would call "cool"
You always gave great video ideas. They’re very good and informative. Videos like these make me enjoy learning about history. Thank you History Dose! Keep up the good work! 😎
Dude seriously keep this up it’s literally so good there’s nothing like it
Great channel! The immersive story telling and history makes it seem fantastical! Keep it up💪💪
5:26 is one of the only times when watching something i have stopped the video and said holy sht in awe of the incredible art. Thank you history dose these are some absolutely incredible videos.
Can you cover the Fall of Malacca empire to Portuguese in 1511, I there's no one does the narration and art like your channel, truly amazing and enjoyful!
Thats a minor incident in history. Nothing worth making a video for
Absolutely awesome video as always! The quality only keeps getting better here 🔥❤️
I love the narration and art, it makes the video come together so well
Didn't expect this lol
some of those who fought against Spanish forces in the Philippines might have been fallen samurai yes but mostly are foot soldiers or ashigaru who were both pikemen and musket riflemen who were lighter armor and their iconic hats. There's a statue of a famous Chinese pirate whose crew mispronouncing a native word for a clam my local area's name came to be that way. Limahong's ambitious to even try to take over Philippines with his pirate fleet (lol but why though? they didn't start as privateers as some did in the Americas before going into piracy, they really did do pirate stuff harassing their local areas though they were essentially pushed out, in the seas of South East Asia it was China who had the biggest and best fleet of their time or even their sailing tech, so fighting against at least remnant tech would've been a great experience).
Superbe quality as always, great narration, and I think particularly the paintings were outstanding. Amazing work.
History dose is hands down one of the greatest channels on youtube, 100% in the top 5
At Fukuda, it was not only two European ships but also the navy of Omura Sumitada, which prevented the Matsura fleet to board and completely over run the Portuguese. The Matsura fleet was mainly composed by Sakai merchants turned into piracy, as stated by Frois himself.
The Japanese side of the story is never told, despite memorandum and letters of the events being present. If it was not for the men of Omura and the Fukuda ships stopping the Matsura ships, the Portuguese would have been killed due to the negligence of João Pereira, who did not listened to the Jesuits warning and allowed the Matsura to storm his ship.
The reference material which is (criminally) omitted by Hesselink for unknown reason is a paper written by Masaki Anno (安野異幸), "On the opening of the port city of Nagasaki
-From a point of view of Ebune's people living on the small boat, going ashore" (長 崎 開 港 史
一家船 の陸上が りの視点か ら). The reference includes the primary source in which Omura Sumitada praised the Fukuda's samurai for blocking the landing of Matsura's navy.
If you are studying Japanese history please make an effort to use at least Japanese sources once.
Another badass video about a lesser known conflict in the world. I really like these warrior versus warrior videos.
The Philippines sure has an interesting history and culture. It's geographical location and a melting pot of human interaction, migration, and colonization shaped it to have a very distinct culture.
From Chinese pirates, Malayan sultanates,native American warriors, Spanish conquistadors, exiled Japanese feudal warlord, to defecting African Americans during the US colonization. Seems like people from the world's continent has stories to tell that shaped the archipelago's identity today.
This results to a cultural peculiarity where some Filipinos are racially ambiguous with an English first name and Spanish surname and speaks Nahuatl and Chinese loan words.
Indeed
Filipinos are not racially ambiguous. Most of them are pure 100% Southeast Asians. Only a very small minority of Philipinos are descendents of Spanish noblemen that settled in the island (Mestizos)
The video was awesome,but I want to note that the conquistadors do not rely exclusive on fire arms , because that was very hard to reload.
The european swordsmans and spikemans have their own style of fighting ,and a catana made in that era will probably brake at repeated contact with the european cross sword 🗡️
With the Toledo steel of Spain
What is funny is that right under your video there is one by History Dose called "The Samurai vs Conquistador Battles"
Could you make a video on the Hussite Wars? It is a short and not so well known period and I feel like it would fit perfectly with this channel's style of videos.
Well, this is surprising. Samurais vs. Conquistadores. I will preprare my popcorn for this 😎🍿
Update: What an amazing video! Seriously, with you I learn new things on History. Thank you!
That last line where the Spanish governor called the Chinese and Japanese people valiant gave me chills...
how you narrate this bring a tear in my eye, its probably how oral history is passed down back then.
I got my Title a few weeks ago. Now I am Lord Bug vs Windshield! Got my DOSE10 discount too!
So contrary to popular opinions and beliefs this would actually be the most realistic or historically accurate scenario since both sides existed at the same time and had actual interactions with each other
I absolutely love your channel. The narration and artwork. Well done.
ANOTHER SAMURAI VIDEO!!!!!! IVE BEEN WAITING AGES
Oh, it's beautiful. The art, as always, is amazing, and the narration, in that same vein, is just as good!
Also, I'm *dying* to have the music pieces you used in this video. You have any links, by chance?
Who needs caffeine when I can start my day with a jolt from this video? Very nice. I've never thought of Samurai as being pirates before!
Such a rich period of history, would love to see more media be if games or tv shows made about the Philippines at this particular time
Holy crap. This is a WILD video. I love your channel. Always learn something new.
These videos are amazing in every sense, please keep it up 👍
those illustrations are STUNNING goddamn I'm glad that this is free content and I'm subscribed to this channel
A conquistador’s head was severed by a Japanese samurai/ambassador during a scuffle in the city of Tenochtitlan according to the account of an Aztec priest, 1614
@Bryan Villafuerte incredible history central and South America has, I spent a lot of my youth studying history especially the 1500s
A great meal
Hey History Dose, I just watched your episode on Henry Avery, and I was wondering if you could please make more videos about famous pirates and their history.
Funfact: by 1639 all portuguese and basically all Europeans were banned from entering Japan while it went into Isolation. Except for the Dutch, who were granted exclusive trading rights for over 200 years. Since we helped them crush a rebellion of Japanese catholics, we weren't interested in spreading religion wich they saw as a threat.
Also many Dutch setters came and lived in central Japan. It's not well know but descendants of them have quite large population.
Portugal have OSaka and Nagasaki for centuries, that cities was founded by portuguese. Today many portuguese words ini dicionary japanase, food, and others things. Portugal also was important in civil war japanase to unification of japan
@OLD WINE until they got yeeted. Portugal even send a ship to demand explanation but all crew members were beheaded. That's was the end.
@@drpepper3838 스페인 국왕이 도쿠가와 막부에 사신을 보냈지만 전원 처형 스페인 국왕은 유럽과 남미 동남아 에서는
자기 맘대로 했지만 동북아시아 에서는 그렇게 할만한 능력이 안되었지 당시 일본이 유럽에 있었다면 유럽은 일본의 식민지 였을거임
Missed the to mention the mesoamerican mercenaries that made up a large amount of the force of the Spanish in the Philippines , Tlaxcalan warriors allied to the Spanish against the dominant Aztec later asked to join the Spanish in the South Pacific
It's an interesting factor of history. People's often assume that the meso americans who allied with spaniards to defeat the large civilizations (notably the Tlaxcalan against the Aztecs) were then betrayed by the spaniards, but it wasn't true.
In fact they became the powerbase of spanish power for decades, because they were reliable allies and willing subjects to the Spanish crown. One could call them collaborators but that would imply that the Tlaxcalan had any relations to the Aztecs other than hatred for what horrors Tenochtitlan did to them for years.
The spaniards treated their enemies like trash, but they did reward those who sided with them during the conquests of south america, at least for a time.
CINEMATIC ASSS FUCKK!! listening in my car and it felt like i was at a theatre. I love you guys seriously. Everytime i watch i feel like im actually there, witnessing the historic moment
Wow great narration and I learned something new today!!!! You earned yourself a subscriber and I’ll be watching other videos you have posted.
En 1592 Toyotomi Hideyoshi (el unificador de Japón) envió al gobernador Gómez Pérez Das Mariñas un emisario pidiendo tributo y pleitesía a lo que el gobernador Español respondió diciendo lo siguiente: «Ve y dile a Taicosama (Toyotomi Hideyoshi) que los Españoles están acostumbrados a recibir tributos y no a pagarlos. Que tú señor haga primero la prueba del valor Español y sí le venciese en guerra, trátele entonces como se le trata a los vencidos». Toyotomi no tomó represalia alguna.
Ok...... I'm sharing this channel to all my friends on social media, I just love the quality.
Samurai vs Conquistador is like local police gang vs professional invasion force... Even in a melee battle, Samurai lack of equipments, tactic and training against one of the most infamous conquering armies in the history.
The people who appear in this battle are not samurai.
They are mercenaries called foot soldiers.
They are usually farmers.
Not a regular army, but pirates like the Vikings.
@Sanary Seggnate
Infamous? Stop believing the damn black legend. Anywhere they went, Spain let natives join them and gave them properties. You don't use logic, right?
@@javiersamuel8172 that doesn't make them any Less infamous. Hundreds of years later and people still know and talk about them,that Definitely means they're infamous.
As for their efficiency, even after Joining forces with local populations (which only means they were more intelligent and effective) they were almost always outnumbered and still almost always succeeded.
Although i wouldn't underestimate the Samurai as much. After all they had been fighting and successfully defeated the Mongols multiple times. Another of the most infamous invading forces of all time
"I watched tom cruise's last samurai hence i know everything about japanese samurai".
- Sanary Seggnete
Portuguese explorers kicked ass, mega chads, always outnumbered in the other side of the world, they had to be bold and brave all the time!
This should become a movie!
Samurai in the steaming foggy jungles, quite the badass aesthetic.
best video yet imagine this movie!!!
It's hard to believe Spain was such a heavy hitter hundreds of years ago.. Now it's just a speck on the global stage...
Times change... I'm Portuguese and once upon a time we were freaking overpowered, probably even more than Spain? (I'm not sure) even knowing we never had huge army's.
But im proud of my country anyways, but it's sad that Portuguese people forget about what happened in the middle ages and don't give they're country enough credit, i truly believe my country is very underated, European history wouldn't be the same without Portugal.
Great Video as always!
I really appreciate how high the production value is in their videos. It makes for a quite engaging view.
The ad didn't age well....
also it would be nice if you could tell about the Spanish and the island of Formosa (aka Taiwan), its such a good story
Could you talk about the defense of Cartagena de Indias (it is one of the biggest defeats of the English empire)
Too many people are sleeping on this channel. God DAMN you can tell a story!
Im spanish, well known of spanish history, but never ever realised the spanish-japanese crossover did, in fact, exist.
Now you know 🎉
Mexica also fought alongside the Spaniards. Vastly outnumbered, they defeated the pirates which included not only Japanese but warriors from across the region. It was a clash of 3 worlds.
Dont you mean tlaxcaltecas?
@@tomassmith1519 Both, and ever some other groups
I felt this one was rushed. The art is amazing as always, but I wish the video was longer.
Do the siege and conquer of Malacca by Afonso de Albuquerque. All of his history is fascinating btw
YES
It is very unlikely that he will, as the history and recognition of Portugal's importance both militarily and politically is not often known to Americans (apart from Brazilians). They tend to look more at the history of Spain because of the link it has with their history. Even knowing that portugal was as important or even more important for the european domain of the world, with the development of cartography, nautical instruments, the caravel, the nau, the galleon, the positioning of cannons on the sides of ships etc.
@@JXJX-gg6qk yes but these are history nerds, they should know what's up
@@JXJX-gg6qk No, most of those means you said were Spanish
@@javiersamuel8172 what?
My gawd, I love the immersive art work! Epic!!!
This episode is better than most of the crap streaming on Netflix or Hulu right now.
Just stumbled onto this channel two days ago and I love every video. Keep it up homie!
Beautiful work as always
Every new video... is the best one yet.
By the end of next year your channel will have 3 mil. subs. Mark my words.
Why haven’t we gotten a movie about this
These paintings are amazing.
I'm so glad I found this channel.
The most important part of the spanish tercios in Cagayan Battles was composes by Tlaxaltecas, so the mayority was not really european spanish but mexican natives even if the captain Juan Pablo de Carrion was from the peninsula.
Nativos o no eran soldados españoles entrenados a la española, no iban en taparrabos, iban como soldados de la corona
Amazing Video!!
Just found your channel and im amazed with all the content and artwork present, you have earned another sub my friends.
As a side note on this excelent Video there was another engagement Between Portugal and Samurai of the Arima Clan, subordinate to the Tokugawa Shogunate.
It was the "Nossa Senhora da Graça incident" and it involved 1 Portuguese Galleon, the "Nossa Senhora da Graça" facing off against 33 Japanese vessels with around 3000 Samurai.
It was in 1610, a period in wich Portuguese-Japanese relations were very strained and emboldened by the Dutch and Spanish the Tokugawa prepared an attack in the Portuguese "Black Ship" to capture it and its goods.
The battle lasted for 3 Days and only in the last did the Japanese sucessfully boarded the Galleon after starting a fire.
The Portuguese Captain, André Pessoa, then decided to to set the ship´s magazine on fire and told his remaining crew to bail out.He set the magazine alight and went down with the ship, the Galleon exploding twice, killing crew, boarders and destroying the cargo in the process.
Very few Portuguese Crew, along with slaves escaped, most being executed by the Japanese in the water but the Arima Clan suffered very heavy losses to no gain, as trade with the Dutch or spanish wouldnt be profitable for them.
Don’t know why I want this animated so bad, it would be like a Vietnam movie, mixed with a samurai flick, if it was done in a samurai champ lol style would be the coolest shit
This deserves millions of views!
Wow! Great video and great art! Thanks for sharing
Never pump that content, I loves this 5 star content meal and am perfectly okay with waiting for it
Amazing video as always💪🏻