As soon as I saw the map I thought "looks a bit like Middle-Earth" When you mentioned the horse goddess Eonain, I thought "like Eowyn?" Then you said the nomadic kingdoms would be like Rohan and I started to realise. And when you mentioned Gondor, I knew these coincidences were too much. Looking on Wikipedia, evidence was established of Doggerland in the 1800s. In 1897, when Tolkien was a child, H. G. Wells released "A Story of the Stone Age" that explored the concept of Doggerland. In 1931, six years before "The Hobbit" was released, a trawler hauled up more evidence of societies that had been living in Doggerland five thousand years ago. Middle-Earth is supposed to be a distant history of our real Earth, a mythology of Britain, set SIX THOUSAND years ago... Holy shit, Tolkien literally did base Middle-Earth off of Doggerland, that's so cool!
I think Polynesia with its islands will be the first to industrialise in this world then… for some reason. There is also of a chance of doggerland becoming a Raj like Māori colony
Speaking of LOTR, some believe that Doggerland was Tolkien's inspiration for the land of Beleriand in his mythology, i.e. the setting where many of the events of the Silmarillion take place. Both were originally hospitable and fertile lands inhabited by a variety of different peoples and both were eventually inundated by the sea.
Glad I wasn’t the only one who thought of Beleriand. The shape, the positioning of the rivers…somehow I doubt that was a coincidence. Does that make Britain Numenor?
I'm left intensely curious what this would have meant for the Mongol Empire's push into Europe, with an existing society of historically nomadic horsemen just a little bit farther west...
You know how the Hungarians are related to the Uralic peoples despite being separated by thousands of miles? It'd be interesting to see a potentially Mongolic people smack dab in the middle of Northern Europe thanks to favorable terrain.
Livadia would still be pretty far regardless, probably around 1000 miles from Hungary, which the Mongols only Briefly invaded but didn't quite conquer. The Best we could get is someone using Livadian Mercenaries against them.
Tolkien definitely considered how geography would affect his kingdoms both when writing the stories that would become the Silmarillion, but also how Numenor and later Arnor and Gondor evolved. He also considered how geography affected Sauron's tactics during both the War of the Last Alliance and the War of the Ring.
The only thing I do wish about Tolkien and his geography is that he mostly used natural barriers as borders, which sure a lot of the times is done in real life. However there is also a lot of wacky stuff that is done, from colonies, bad decolonozation, trade routes, or just historical events. Like for example a lot of eastern Europe's borders is based off the carpathia mountain range, except Romania. Romania was 4 seperate countries which united into one and the carpathia mountain range actually runs through the middle of the country. Stuff like that is interesting and fantasy maps don't usually go that far. Another example is Nambia which has a strange panhandle, the reason for that is the Germans wanted access to the river that lead towards India, so the reason for the panhandle is literally for access to trade routes. I wish more fantasy would try wacky stuff, because wacky stuff happens often when it comes to borders in real life. Tolkien was one of the best when it came to fantasy maps, and there is some very interesting things in his map of Middle earth. But I find it lacks a bit of the wacky shit and follows natural borders a bit too much (mountain ranges, rivers, etc.)
Cody accidentally discovering that Ice-Age Europe was just Middle Earth is golden. Just wait, we'll discover elf populations hidden deep somewhere and it'll all come together.
elf language was Based on Finnish and Finnish mythology have elves. (i don't mean like the Christmas ones, those are like gnomes but in English they are called elf too)
I'm Welsh and grew up in a Welsh village and I can confirm even in this universe, we are 100% the Shire and 100% Hobbits, my county is literally called Carmarthenshire, which is an Anglicised name for Sir Gaerfyrddin, which in English means "The Shire of Merlins Fortress".
No, it’s not. It’s based off the village of sarehole where he grew up in rural England, he even said “The Shire is based on rural England, and not any other country in the world”
@@Finnbobjimbob I wasn't actually being serious, I know he never visited my village, just pointing out how Tolkienesque my county in Wales is. I do know he based Sindarin on Cymraeg, so if anything elves would be more apt, but honestly if you met the people of my village, you'd definitely be thinking "Those are tall hobbits".
"It would be like the Balkansand everythingt that it entails" as a Bulgarian im betting that the horse riders will have a lot of fun especially if they don't border a 2000 year old empire.
@@godemperorofmankind3.091I think he means a battle that would take place in an era that would have similiar weapons and technology to our napoleonic era.
I know that this is really late but- 1)That could be said for a lot of Cody’s videos. 2) The issue is, he realistically can’t, not in a way that he likes talking about these subjects. As he said in the “Mu” video he doesn’t really like diving too much into the specifics for videos like these since, as he says it, he’s essentially making it all up. Changing geography, especially for stuff like this, essentially wipes the slate of history clean completely. There’s no telling how or why history would take form in this world since, effectively, the history of Europe would fundamentally change at its core. Not only is all of the Northern European Countries completely different or just nonexistent as a result of different geography and cultural mixing, but we have no way to know what exactly replaces them, as we can’t know what the cultures of those who would continue on in this timeline that died after Doggerland sunk in ours or how they would change and develop over time. Not to mention how these new cultures would interact with the rest of the world and the butterfly effect that would cause on say Rome, North Africa, or even China I know that’s a bit long, but all to say, he can’t really make a “series” or anything more than this video without eventually just making a historical fiction story of this alternate world, which isn’t really what AltHistoryHub is about since it more or less tells the general strokes and possibilities of how the world would be different if events went different. Not to say he won’t potentially make a book on the subject, since he did that with the concept of Atlantropa, but I’m just saying, that’s not really how Cody does things typically. Again, sorry for such along reply after you probably forgot about this initial comment.
I'd imagine the Bronze age would have been very different. Tin deposits found in Brittany and South West England would obviously not have as easy coastal access, and the much colder temperatures in Central Europe would have made mining in the uplands of France and North German Plain much harder and more treacherous. Then again, Doggerland might have had it's own unique deposits.
we already know of some deposits that Doggerland would have, The North Sea Oil deposits would now be far more easily accesable (no need to build giant floating rigs, just a normal rig would do)
Thing to consider: what if the "Grand River Valley," or whatever it'd be known as, becomes another "Cradle of Civilization," like the Nile, Indus, or Yellow rivers? The region may end up being like China 2.0, only with Tin & stuff instead of Silk & stuff.
There is suspicion that it actually was. There is a sudden spontaneous development of monolith building in all the areas surrounding Doggerland after it starts to become uninhabitable. The thought is that they were a settled developed culture that emigrated to surrounding areas bringing the technology with them.
Yeah because England without an easy way out of fighting France directly instead of pillaging India to pay mercenaries to do the warring they would be instantly conquered and you would actually get a somewhat French Empire similar to China in both population and a stronger "center of the world" mindset covering Europe by the time of Louis the XIV
Gallia Hibernia, the land of tin: Livadia Occidentis, Tina, Zinnland, Irheim These names are what could define historical Gondor/Arnor in West Livadia (historical Eriador/"Doggerland") could be
Now do a video on Sundaland! It connected Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines to mainland Asia. I imagine itd be all forests, and the Indian Ocean Silk Road would probably not exist because there wouldnt be a method of going from China to India by sea since the Straights of Malak are now filled with land. Maybe also talk about Sahul, which connected New Guinea and Tasmania to mainland Australia.
This such an interesting scenario. I'd love to see more but I guess it's kinda hard to expand on these alternate geography scenarios before it just becomes low fantasy
The way I see it, following alternate histories where changes become drastic (either immediately or over a long time), you have two choices; you can either keep everything fairly vague and just talk about what trends are different, or you can go specific but acknowledge that this is based on very little and is essentially speculative fiction.
The reason doggerland was a grassland was because ice age was a drier era than modern times. If doggerland remained today it would not be a grassland. It would have a temperate rainforest, at least near the western coastal regions. Further inwards more eastern european conifer like features would set in and they would set in from far more western region than we see in our version of europe. Think the vegetations of poland and western russia found all the way at germany and probably even eastern france. This is because, the presence of wayy more land would obstruct the warm oceanic current much more easily in the alt. world than it does in our world.
@@frankenstein6677 Look at ireland. Is it a grassland ?Thats what the regions near the western coast of doggerland would be like. Of course biological control is a factor, but it becomes less and less relevant as the land area becomes larger. What you said would be very influential on an island, but doggerland is a part of a continent so i dont think it is that important here.
Sometimes ill go a whole 6 months, maybe even longer without watching these. But I always come back to them, you have a way with words and creativity, im really enjoying writing whilst watching/listening to your videos. You're doing good work sir!
Now here's a question. How would this affect the trade of Britanic tin during the bronze age? Tin was imported from Britain to the Bronze age civilizations through both the North Sea and overland. Now overland goes through plains and the North sea doesn't really exsist?
Assuming the Channel River is of similar importance as the Nile & other rivers, we may have seen a "Western China," so to speak. Complete with nomadic horse-raiders to the north!
Most civilization of the Bronze age imported Tin from the region we know as Afghanistan, it was the closest great deposit for the middle East but also for Asia. While the Tin of Cornwall is also one of the biggest Tin deposit in the world, it was in the end dangerous and costly, still some merchants back then did make the trip (from back and forth) but it was not the norm ... In fact I heard the only people that could afford that kind of venture long term was the Northern Cannanites/ Phoenicians ....
@@0th_Law I was suspecting a similar setting. Either a Gaulic or Latin-based Western "China" could be possible if you subscribe to the theory that close proximity to horse-based nomadic societies creates centralized empires (China, Iran, Byzantines, Russians).
Speaking of land being underwater, what if the Bering land bridge never formed, and the Americas weren't settled until the Europeans (and possibly Polynesians) sailed over?
@@mal_3157 I used to be skeptical about ancient ocean sailing but if Leif Erickson could reach America with 15th century (could be off) boats anything is possible. Just a matter of routing and avoiding storms/rough waters I'd imagine.
Fascinating stuff, but did you know that the history of Doggerland is still known and celebrated throughout Rural Britain, it's folklore practised by a vast and varied community of Doggers who can be seen keeping history alive by Dogging in car parks throughout the British Isles. If you're interested there are plenty of videos availible online or if you live in the British Isles then feel free to go out and look for them yourselves, they are very welcoming and love it when people come out and watch.
What is interesting was that even after the last ice age and the sea levels rose, britain was still connected to France via a land bridge, near the cliffs of Dover. However, since this landbridge was made of chalk, a large flood caused by a glacial dam burst, called a mega flood, utterly destroyed the landbridge. So a more realistic scenario would be if that bridge was never destroyed
Actually there were many factors about the caused of Doggerland sinking. Just saying that it went under caused by a large flood is an understatement. It's a lot more complex and I can't really give details that much. Just looked it up like Atlas Pro. In simplification, GLACIERS WEIGHT A TONS AND CAUSED A DENT OVER EUROPE CRUSTAL PLATE. DOGGERLAND IS LIKE A SEESAW.
Love the scenario, love the presentation. The VHS-style history lesson was very fun, and even the Nord ad read was probably the most fun one you've done. 9/10.
As a Zelda fan I LOVE that Link's horse Epona is named after the Celtic Goddess of Horses, ponies and donkeys. Also I must point out that the Scots originated in Ireland and came to Scotland after the fall of Roman Britain.
@@overkoppsbaiter0714 What he means is that the people who becamse the Scots originated in what's now Northern Ireland. At the time they were called the Scoti and they invaded the Pictish lands during the dark ages, conquering the natives and obliterating their culture.
When you started to make the Lord of the Rings comparisons, I thought that would be pretty cool. But when you said it would be like the Balkans… well let’s just say there is already one too many Balkans in our timeline
I’ve been waiting for what feels like forever for another upload. Between this channel and pointless hub, you gotta be one of my favorite youtubers. Thanks for the cool new concept man.
I genuinely hope you make more videos like this. Not everything has to be super extreme realism alt-history. Have some fun, make your own history, make your own countries and cultures. Have massive wars, victories, failures, and blunders.
After this video, I like to imagine Middle Earth taking place in this scenario with Rohan, Gondor, and Arnor fighting against the Romans and Gauls, which would be known in their languages as Mordor.
11:15 - 11:30 - Robert E Howard described this same river as the boundary between Pits and the more settled Hyborian civilizations in his Conan the Barbarian series. He called it *Thunder River.*
Canonically, Middle Earth is supposed to be a text like Beowulf from even further in the past. In my headcanon LotR and the hobbit are mythological stories from doggerland and that the medieval technology used in the world was lost once the sea rose like Atlantis or numenor
So what you're saying is Tolkien had access to alternate reality history books and that's where he got Rohan and other parts of Middle Earth from? Understood
Great video! Loved the collaboration with Atlas Pro I was thinking if you considered the great migration of people during the Bronze Age and how that in a way created the "sea people" ultimatly being part of the destruction of the Bronze Age empires, and with Doggerland offering a different continent/climate might have had a great impact on that
That is if nationalisn as we know it is ever invented. That only became a thing in Napoleonic era. This would change Europe so much that nothing like that is guaranteed.
@@aurelianus1308 i'm not implying that. Neither am i saying that conflicts between groups haven't existed before nationalism. I'm just saying that the scale and reason of potential animosity between hypothetical groups is impossible to ascertain with this big of a divergence.
A novel set in this world world be great. I'm imagining a sort of adventure story about whoever lives in Gaul (Romans, Gauls,Germanics, Britons, Slavs, maybe) or some other western place ending up in the New World. Or a story about a Cossack-like celtic warrior for the Romanized Lands to the south. This world is a sandbox! Since he said it would be like the Balkans, maybe the Germanized lands to the northeast of Livadia or the Picts and Britons would form a sort of Yugoslavia! If you want a WW2- era war story, you could have a giant war in the region! Imagine a kursk-like battle to the south of Dover! Edit: there could also be a story about a climate crisis as Livadi refugees flee the flooding steppes, much to the chagrin of themselves and of the Celts in Britain.
There is a book trilogy by Stephen Baxter on this alternate history: Stone Spring Bronze Autumn Iron Winter I enjoyed them; they are a fun read. Another excellent video, good mix of comedy and seriousness.
I was just going to recommend this. It's a good book that explores this, and the people managed to keep the land intact by building embankments and sort of keep the land from being inundated by the sea similar to how the Dutch is able to reclaim land from the sea. They actually revealed the name of this place in one of the chapters but I don't want to spoil that here.
Very fun to see you branching into alternate geography, which actually gives me an idea I'd love for you to weigh in on that I guess could be folded into another alternate geography scenario if you like? What would happen if North American Bison had been domesticated by the time Europeans arrived? Or perhaps more broadly, what if North America had more livestock that could be domesticated? Obviously the Llama would still exist, but what if other species were also brought across (here's the geography tie-in) the Bering Strait Land Bridge if it never closed? Imagine an America where the Great Plains are effectively the African Savanah: impenetrable by white Settlers for perhaps half a century of more thanks to the domestication of Bison and other livestock leading to the Native Americans having their own plagues and diseases that they've grown immune to over centuries while Europeans would be decimated by contact with them, like Malaria in Africa. We'd see an entirely different continent as well, you'd have two conjoined continents to begin with, but also the existence of a land bridge would alter Oceanic currents leading to changing climate and of course a totally different relationship between Europe and the Americas,, as there would be these Native societies holed up in what were essentially "fortresses" in the Rocky Mountains (like the Inca in the Andes) or Steppe-esque societies but with diseases that kept Settlers at bay as well.
That question could actually be rephrased as "What would North America be like if it's horses and camels hadn't died out?" Because horses and camels originated in North America before migrating into the old world 2-3 million yrs. ago and then their native population in the America's died out due to a few factors.
ive always thought about such a scenario but with little more parallel world american horses for horses toxodon for cattle macrauchenia for camels hippidion for donkeys pecarry for pigs maybe even war mammoths or mastodons
Well the difference is, the Mongols were, well, the Mongols - a more or less culturally uniform group. If you stick like 5 different cultures into a landmass the size of France with almost no natural borders, they'd probably be too busy killing each other to do any kind of Mongol business.
@@pocarski Which would be fine until they generated their own great conqueror. Then you have an incredibly violent group of people sitting on vast mineral and agricultural wealth finally looking outwards.
@@pocarski yep the mongols were a bunch of nomadic tribes too busy killing each others & raiding china's north to create any empire, until genghis khan came along it is now on the other hand, its not ensured that a similar great conqueror would have eventually risen in lividia so the possible future is uncertain
The whole area of Doggerland being above sea-level asks great questions & Cody does a good job of showing the potentially massive changes. But what if only a rump of Doggerland existed? In places this land is only about 30m below the waves & if only it was a bit higher there would an island the size of Wales sitting between East Yorkshire and Denmark. Who would live there & what implications would that have on the development of England as a nation?
1:35 Atlas pro. 3:59 'The story of Livadia' 9:27 The story of Livadia ends. 12:16 Essentially, it's Rohan. 12:37 Where's Hobbit town? is wales Hobbit town? 13:51 The Sponsor.
Huh, how convenient that I was literally just learning about Doggerland the other day Edit: I was learning about it in a class about Britain's origins to 1688
I’m not gonna lie to you. The algorithm just showed me you’re videos today, and when I was looking to see if knowledgehub and any more videos I could watch, yours popped up. Confusion at first because you’re voices are different but only slightly so I got about three minutes into the video before I did some googling and found you’re wiki ! Didn’t know you where Tyler’s brother and you actually started both channels. Tldr I didn’t know you had a channel untill today and now I’m gonna subscribe because I really like you’re brothers channel and I now like yours too. Thanks for the content fam and thank you for you and you’re brothers hard work and dedication.
I wouldn’t get my hopes too high. Civilizations probably wouldn’t be able to withstand the climate. Doggerland would most likely be like Northern Canada
One of the things I find interesting is the fact that Livadia would likely be the most colonisable section of the European North. The existence of Livadia would likely make a much more distinct culture in the east just because of the colder climates. Any major empires would likely be off more Southern latitudes or any nation that ever has the power to unify the Livadian grasslands. Navies and possibly colonisation will likely happen a lot later in time as there is much less naval focus, as no islands mean there is no need for significant navies to be made and as mentioned, any wars will likely be fully land based on horses
An alternate geography scenario I've always wondered about is what if the Caucasus Mountains didn't exist. The Black Sea (and thus, Mediterranean) just continues into the Caspian. This scenario would dramatically affect history so much that it would literally change timelines before the Romans even existed. Lots of Bronze Age Stuff goes on in such a world.
@@Khloya69 I suppose for those folks our western Europe would be some kind of weird super post apocalypse set so far after the destruction of such prominent cultures and people.
I have a alternate history similar to this, what would the world be like if the Zambezi river wasn't redirected? There was a lake where the Magkadigadi pans are today, that was fed by the Zambezi and Okavango, which connected the endorheic basin of the Okavango delta to the Atlantic ocean via the Orange river, it would be interesting to imagine how Southern Africa would develop if that much water wasn't directed away.
"I just made Britain disappear from the face of the earth, and you're questioning my decision." I am pretty sure Cody is the mad god of the timelines he creates.
Watched my first Alt History Hub video ages ago in Undergrad. Now I’m listening to it while writing my Masters Thesis with my three year old staring at the screen soaking all this up. Thanks man!
One thing worth considering here - north sea oil. That's gonna be a lot more accessible and profitable than it was in our own timeline. The Saudi Arabia of europe?
Probably more like Venezuela - Saudi Arabia basically only has oil and historic resources (I.e. Mecca.) This country would have fertile lands and plentiful natural resources other than oil as well.
This scenario is absolutely awesome! There is a reason I’ve been Subscribe to you for almost the past 10 years. I’ve been subscribed to you since 2013. Your channel is absolutely awesome
Historically, Britain has never fielded a large army. It has never had to worry about a land invasion since the English Channel is one of the greatest natural defences. This is why historically Britain has invested most of its resources into the navy. During the 18th and 19th centuries no other nation took their navy as seriously as Britain, and what followed was complete Anglo maritime dominance. This maritime dominance is what fuelled Pax Brittanica - nearly 100 yrs of uninterrupted global British dominance. However, if Britain was connected to mainland Europe, it would have to divert resources from the navy into the armed forces. In this timeline, The Royal Navy would be a mere shadow of its former self and Britain would never achieve the same levels of maritime dominance. I suspect the British state would get steamrolled by stronger armies from Prussia or France.
Britian and it's culture probably wouldn't even exist here, especially since the Anglo-Saxons wouldn't exist here, and same with the Prussians as Eastern Europe is Much Colder, and Gaul would Probably be Conquered by the Livadians rather than the Franks, so no France Either. Alot of Countries probably wouldn't exist here.
Please do cover something about if Justinian was successful. There’s a lot of stuff that went wrong in Justinian reign like the plague and Persians so it’d be awesome to see someone cover it :D
Emperor Justinian was technically successful to reclaim Italy and Africa (Roman name for today Tunisia), but the problem is that the campaign in the peninsula basically bankrupted the Eastern Roman Empire, and those wars was so devastating that the region was unstable for centuries ... Later Emperors didn't believe it keeping Rome was worth it ...
I have an idea for an alternate geography scenario: what if the Sierra Nevada, as we know them, didn't exist? The modern Sierra Nevada is a giant batholith of igneous rock that formed underground and was pushed upward by the relatively recent (and ongoing) activity that formed the Basin and Range Province. If that batholith never formed, there would still be mountains where the Sierra Nevada are now, but they would be more like the mountains of the Northern California coast. So what would the ecological, cultural, and historical consequences of this be?
I love how you used “Markham” as the name you chose for the (i assume) Anglo Saxon counterparts of this alternate universe, since Mark (or “mearc”) literally translates to border whilst “ham” simply means home, meaning the whole name is “home on a border”, which perfectly fits this story! Plus, it does help that the clan that traditionally got its name from the English area traces their ancestry all the way back to the times before even William the Conqueror. Overall, great video and also, I would recommend trying out Sundaland next, since that also follows a similar premise to this :) PS: i only know so much about this topic because its my surname :p
Well the Baltic Sea would be the Baltic Lake if there’s still water around that area. Any nation bordering this would be even more cut off from the coasts. English Channel wouldn’t exist, although I’m assuming this Grand River is what replaces it, and the alternate area known as the Netherlands in our world wouldn’t need to keep building land.
It’s a weird question and frankly dumb. Whenever somebody brings it up in relation to WW2 saying “Britain wouldn’t have survived if it wasn’t an island”. Well yea but Britain wouldn’t be Britain if it wasn’t an island, Germany wouldn’t be Germany if Central Europe was an island.
britain would have been far more French and Germanic in culture so Germany would have seen them as a potential ally. not that that would ever happen. doggerland existing is such a butterfly effect that Germany likely never exists to start with
welp, the entirety of the history of the earth, all the way back to when life first started would be completly different. Its like interpreting what life would be like on a different planet.
As chaotic as living in such contested land would be, it's beauty and features are certainly worth fighting for. All those rivers connecting acres upon acres of fertile flat land ON TOP of that coastal access... It's as if you moved the Nile up out of the desert!
When i saw this video i assumed you were going to plop the British Isles as we know them in Northern France. I was assuming if The British Empire was ever able to form and make it to the modem day it definitely wouldn't have had as much influence as it would and probably have as much colonial influence as the mainland Empires, maybe it and France would have less because of constant wars between the two nations
I think you made a significant mistake Cody; you concluded that Doggerland (or whatever name it would end up having) would be grassland but I think it would be cold forest. It was grassland in its day because large herbivores ate plants keeping trees from growing, but those herbivores would have been eaten in the few thousand years after the ice age allowing forests to grow. This is what happened in Britain itself, it happened in large parts of Russia and with the loss of a lot of wildlife it is happening in parts of Africa. The only thing that would stop it would be lower rainfall, I could believe that there would be less rainfall on Doggerland as rain from the Atlantic would fall more on Britain and Ireland but those barriers exist today and it still rains on the North Sea. Given that you included large rivers on your map showed you don't think that there would be dramatically less rainfall here. Given that it would be colder forest I don't think its people would be just like the Germanic peoples we have but I would be interested in what other people think about that.
Even better. The fact that it is not a forest means mammoths. So we get Rohan with mammoths. Also makes it likely that siberia is no longer a forest, but instead is mammoth steppe. Imagine the mongol invasions if they had mammoth cavalry. Imagine Hannibal crossing the alps, with mammoths.
I can't even begin to imagine what would've been of the territory we currently know as United States in this scenario. Would the New World still establish lands there or would that also change completely?
The discovery and colonization of the Americas was mainly caused by trade and Mediterranean politics, which led into a land-grab that would probably be at least partially unchanged.
@@0th_Law we might see a harder effort by the vikings in america, seeing as they can't really go east to become the rus as the black sea doesn't exist. the rus instead would be in doggerland, leaveing more vikings to go even further west in search of lands and ending up in america. potentially
the Americas would of course still be found but likely by Spanish or French people. and there'd be no "british" colonies, just French and Spanish. basically the Americas is one big Super Mexico.
@@godemperorofmankind3.091 I feel like people fail to realize the massive increase of population a region that's covered in massive rivers, fertile planes and is accessible by land would bring forth........
The lesson here is Tolkien knew what he was talking about.
Tolkien was the first “I told you so” writer
I thought it looked like Middle Earth.
What if Japan won the imjin war
Well he did wanted to write mythes and legends for an older England/Europe
Meaning by extension Awdry likely knew what he was talking about.
Cody I’ve been subscribed to you for 7 years. When I was a kid you got me interested in history and now I’m a history major in college, so thank you!
Congratulations man!
Jeez… it’s really been that long?
Fantastic! Well done 👍
@@mongooseiv8336 It blows my mind too
So your just going to college for fun not to make any money in the future huh? 😂
As soon as I saw the map I thought "looks a bit like Middle-Earth"
When you mentioned the horse goddess Eonain, I thought "like Eowyn?"
Then you said the nomadic kingdoms would be like Rohan and I started to realise.
And when you mentioned Gondor, I knew these coincidences were too much.
Looking on Wikipedia, evidence was established of Doggerland in the 1800s. In 1897, when Tolkien was a child, H. G. Wells released "A Story of the Stone Age" that explored the concept of Doggerland. In 1931, six years before "The Hobbit" was released, a trawler hauled up more evidence of societies that had been living in Doggerland five thousand years ago.
Middle-Earth is supposed to be a distant history of our real Earth, a mythology of Britain, set SIX THOUSAND years ago...
Holy shit, Tolkien literally did base Middle-Earth off of Doggerland, that's so cool!
Than there is Beleriand and yes, there is no way this is all coincidence.
I think Polynesia with its islands will be the first to industrialise in this world then… for some reason. There is also of a chance of doggerland becoming a Raj like Māori colony
@@1mol831 ?
@@1mol831 wat
@@1mol831 it's impossible for archipelagos/tropics to industrialise. You really don't understand how anything works, do you?
"If there's anything an empire loves, it's nomadic horsemen right on their border."
As a former Wal-Mart employee, I felt that.
??
@@mariekirstinebang5808 RV's
@@WindFireAllThatKindOfThing ??
@@bale9320 I think RV means recreational videos here.
Speaking of LOTR, some believe that Doggerland was Tolkien's inspiration for the land of Beleriand in his mythology, i.e. the setting where many of the events of the Silmarillion take place. Both were originally hospitable and fertile lands inhabited by a variety of different peoples and both were eventually inundated by the sea.
Yeah and Doggerland depicted here looks really similar to Beleriand also
So, Angband is under the North Sea?
Because that actually makes too much sense…
Also Cimmeria from Robert E Howard's work (Conan etc) Not sure when people knew about Doggerland since he killed himself in like the mid 30s
Yeah, much like several places like Isengard is in Denmark
Glad I wasn’t the only one who thought of Beleriand. The shape, the positioning of the rivers…somehow I doubt that was a coincidence.
Does that make Britain Numenor?
I'm left intensely curious what this would have meant for the Mongol Empire's push into Europe, with an existing society of historically nomadic horsemen just a little bit farther west...
Man imagine if somehow Mongolian and Lividian horsemen met in Central Europe. Those battles I would love to learn about.
You know how the Hungarians are related to the Uralic peoples despite being separated by thousands of miles?
It'd be interesting to see a potentially Mongolic people smack dab in the middle of Northern Europe thanks to favorable terrain.
Livadia would still be pretty far regardless, probably around 1000 miles from Hungary, which the Mongols only Briefly invaded but didn't quite conquer. The Best we could get is someone using Livadian Mercenaries against them.
Genghis Khan: "It's free real estate."
Maybe the Levatis would invade Mongolia instead
Tolkien definitely considered how geography would affect his kingdoms both when writing the stories that would become the Silmarillion, but also how Numenor and later Arnor and Gondor evolved. He also considered how geography affected Sauron's tactics during both the War of the Last Alliance and the War of the Ring.
The only thing I do wish about Tolkien and his geography is that he mostly used natural barriers as borders, which sure a lot of the times is done in real life. However there is also a lot of wacky stuff that is done, from colonies, bad decolonozation, trade routes, or just historical events. Like for example a lot of eastern Europe's borders is based off the carpathia mountain range, except Romania. Romania was 4 seperate countries which united into one and the carpathia mountain range actually runs through the middle of the country. Stuff like that is interesting and fantasy maps don't usually go that far.
Another example is Nambia which has a strange panhandle, the reason for that is the Germans wanted access to the river that lead towards India, so the reason for the panhandle is literally for access to trade routes.
I wish more fantasy would try wacky stuff, because wacky stuff happens often when it comes to borders in real life. Tolkien was one of the best when it came to fantasy maps, and there is some very interesting things in his map of Middle earth. But I find it lacks a bit of the wacky shit and follows natural borders a bit too much (mountain ranges, rivers, etc.)
Cody accidentally discovering that Ice-Age Europe was just Middle Earth is golden.
Just wait, we'll discover elf populations hidden deep somewhere and it'll all come together.
if this doggerland never sink beneath the sea we will have a video called "what if UK was an island?"
elf language was Based on Finnish and Finnish mythology have elves.
(i don't mean like the Christmas ones, those are like gnomes but in English they are called elf too)
Dutch fishermen continue to bring mammoth bones to the surface, and even rivers have names that refer to a large common river.
@@kmeanxneth elves are more like ukrainian people. with all due respect finns are a bit too ugly to be a reference for the elves
I'm Welsh and grew up in a Welsh village and I can confirm even in this universe, we are 100% the Shire and 100% Hobbits, my county is literally called Carmarthenshire, which is an Anglicised name for Sir Gaerfyrddin, which in English means "The Shire of Merlins Fortress".
That is the most fantasy name I have ever seen.
No, it’s not. It’s based off the village of sarehole where he grew up in rural England, he even said “The Shire is based on rural England, and not any other country in the world”
@@Finnbobjimbob I wasn't actually being serious, I know he never visited my village, just pointing out how Tolkienesque my county in Wales is. I do know he based Sindarin on Cymraeg, so if anything elves would be more apt, but honestly if you met the people of my village, you'd definitely be thinking "Those are tall hobbits".
Incorrect, middle earth is in New Zealand. And the shire is in Matamata
@@Draconightfury that’s where movies filmed it, books were inspired of Europe and England
As a Brit I can’t imagine a more horrifying scenario than having a border with the French.
don't worry - in this world, there aren't any french
there wouldnt be any "French" as we think of them. thered be entirely alternate peoples living in most of Western Europe
No English, French or Dutch. One can only dream.
@@RedbadofFrisia what a wonderful world
@@kameronjones7139 fr
"It would be like the Balkansand everythingt that it entails" as a Bulgarian im betting that the horse riders will have a lot of fun especially if they don't border a 2000 year old empire.
"It would be like the Balkansand everything that it entails" - question is: who would be those "Balkans" version of the Ottomans?
@@vladprus4019 ummmm ¿france? i know them was not that powerfull in a beginning, but they could try to conquer their neighbors eventually.
@@vladprus4019 maybe the Nordic countries
I can definitely imagine a huge Napoleonic battle on the outskirts of London
why would napoleon be born to begin with
@@godemperorofmankind3.091I think he means a battle that would take place in an era that would have similiar weapons and technology to our napoleonic era.
We would essentially get Rohan. With horses and flatlands and Celtic and Germanic influence. I love this.
Lol
“Where was the Earl of Wessex when Northumbria fell?!”
@@warlordofbritannia "The beacons are lit! Rome calls for aid."
@@stevemcgroob4446 And Livadia shall answer!
I can’t help but feel this should have been a whole series since it’s such a fascinating subject, not just a 15 minute video.
I know that this is really late but-
1)That could be said for a lot of Cody’s videos.
2) The issue is, he realistically can’t, not in a way that he likes talking about these subjects. As he said in the “Mu” video he doesn’t really like diving too much into the specifics for videos like these since, as he says it, he’s essentially making it all up. Changing geography, especially for stuff like this, essentially wipes the slate of history clean completely. There’s no telling how or why history would take form in this world since, effectively, the history of Europe would fundamentally change at its core. Not only is all of the Northern European Countries completely different or just nonexistent as a result of different geography and cultural mixing, but we have no way to know what exactly replaces them, as we can’t know what the cultures of those who would continue on in this timeline that died after Doggerland sunk in ours or how they would change and develop over time. Not to mention how these new cultures would interact with the rest of the world and the butterfly effect that would cause on say Rome, North Africa, or even China
I know that’s a bit long, but all to say, he can’t really make a “series” or anything more than this video without eventually just making a historical fiction story of this alternate world, which isn’t really what AltHistoryHub is about since it more or less tells the general strokes and possibilities of how the world would be different if events went different.
Not to say he won’t potentially make a book on the subject, since he did that with the concept of Atlantropa, but I’m just saying, that’s not really how Cody does things typically.
Again, sorry for such along reply after you probably forgot about this initial comment.
It's fine
I'd imagine the Bronze age would have been very different. Tin deposits found in Brittany and South West England would obviously not have as easy coastal access, and the much colder temperatures in Central Europe would have made mining in the uplands of France and North German Plain much harder and more treacherous. Then again, Doggerland might have had it's own unique deposits.
we already know of some deposits that Doggerland would have, The North Sea Oil deposits would now be far more easily accesable (no need to build giant floating rigs, just a normal rig would do)
Thing to consider: what if the "Grand River Valley," or whatever it'd be known as, becomes another "Cradle of Civilization," like the Nile, Indus, or Yellow rivers? The region may end up being like China 2.0, only with Tin & stuff instead of Silk & stuff.
Too cold that far north probably
There is suspicion that it actually was. There is a sudden spontaneous development of monolith building in all the areas surrounding Doggerland after it starts to become uninhabitable. The thought is that they were a settled developed culture that emigrated to surrounding areas bringing the technology with them.
Yeah because England without an easy way out of fighting France directly instead of pillaging India to pay mercenaries to do the warring they would be instantly conquered and you would actually get a somewhat French Empire similar to China in both population and a stronger "center of the world" mindset covering Europe by the time of Louis the XIV
Gallia Hibernia, the land of tin: Livadia Occidentis, Tina, Zinnland, Irheim
These names are what could define historical Gondor/Arnor in West Livadia (historical Eriador/"Doggerland") could be
@@ommsterlitz1805 That’s… assuming a _lot_ of history that very easily could not have happened.
Making real Rohan is worth sacrificing the UK for
I would sacrifice the UK for 5 bucks
This
@@Joshisepic2222 I would sacrifice the UK for nothing.
Nothing of value was lost
I'd ask what the UK did, but uh... it's far less time consuming to ask what they didn't.
Now do a video on Sundaland! It connected Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines to mainland Asia. I imagine itd be all forests, and the Indian Ocean Silk Road would probably not exist because there wouldnt be a method of going from China to India by sea since the Straights of Malak are now filled with land.
Maybe also talk about Sahul, which connected New Guinea and Tasmania to mainland Australia.
You could go from India to China through the gap between Borneo and Sulawesi but it's a longer route
This such an interesting scenario. I'd love to see more but I guess it's kinda hard to expand on these alternate geography scenarios before it just becomes low fantasy
He wrote a book about Atlantropa, he could write a book about Livadia.
Speaking of Low Fantasy, I honestly wouldn't mind if he made up Low Fantasy What ifs and Scenarios, or Just Fantasy Scenarios in general.
What if Zealandia was above water? Great collaboration video.
The way I see it, following alternate histories where changes become drastic (either immediately or over a long time), you have two choices; you can either keep everything fairly vague and just talk about what trends are different, or you can go specific but acknowledge that this is based on very little and is essentially speculative fiction.
The reason doggerland was a grassland was because ice age was a drier era than modern times. If doggerland remained today it would not be a grassland. It would have a temperate rainforest, at least near the western coastal regions. Further inwards more eastern european conifer like features would set in and they would set in from far more western region than we see in our version of europe. Think the vegetations of poland and western russia found all the way at germany and probably even eastern france. This is because, the presence of wayy more land would obstruct the warm oceanic current much more easily in the alt. world than it does in our world.
It's a combination of factors. We can't ignore the potential biological control of vegetation. Which is basically the grazing pressure by herbivores.
@@frankenstein6677
Look at ireland. Is it a grassland ?Thats what the regions near the western coast of doggerland would be like. Of course biological control is a factor, but it becomes less and less relevant as the land area becomes larger. What you said would be very influential on an island, but doggerland is a part of a continent so i dont think it is that important here.
Sometimes ill go a whole 6 months, maybe even longer without watching these. But I always come back to them, you have a way with words and creativity, im really enjoying writing whilst watching/listening to your videos. You're doing good work sir!
Now here's a question. How would this affect the trade of Britanic tin during the bronze age? Tin was imported from Britain to the Bronze age civilizations through both the North Sea and overland. Now overland goes through plains and the North sea doesn't really exsist?
It wouldn't change a lot.
@@birisi916 actually it might be more of it.
More land above ground more tin deposits
Probably would make it slightly cheaper.
Assuming the Channel River is of similar importance as the Nile & other rivers, we may have seen a "Western China," so to speak. Complete with nomadic horse-raiders to the north!
Most civilization of the Bronze age imported Tin from the region we know as Afghanistan, it was the closest great deposit for the middle East but also for Asia. While the Tin of Cornwall is also one of the biggest Tin deposit in the world, it was in the end dangerous and costly, still some merchants back then did make the trip (from back and forth) but it was not the norm ... In fact I heard the only people that could afford that kind of venture long term was the Northern Cannanites/ Phoenicians ....
@@0th_Law I was suspecting a similar setting. Either a Gaulic or Latin-based Western "China" could be possible if you subscribe to the theory that close proximity to horse-based nomadic societies creates centralized empires (China, Iran, Byzantines, Russians).
Speaking of land being underwater, what if the Bering land bridge never formed, and the Americas weren't settled until the Europeans (and possibly Polynesians) sailed over?
There's a book for this if I remember, It's called "a different flesh"
I doubt the Polynesians could sail that far north
@@mal_3157 The Americas include south America such as Peru and Chile, where it shares latitudes with Polynesia.
@@Grason20 I suppose they could make the trip considering they reached Hawaii
@@mal_3157 I used to be skeptical about ancient ocean sailing but if Leif Erickson could reach America with 15th century (could be off) boats anything is possible. Just a matter of routing and avoiding storms/rough waters I'd imagine.
Fascinating stuff, but did you know that the history of Doggerland is still known and celebrated throughout Rural Britain, it's folklore practised by a vast and varied community of Doggers who can be seen keeping history alive by Dogging in car parks throughout the British Isles. If you're interested there are plenty of videos availible online or if you live in the British Isles then feel free to go out and look for them yourselves, they are very welcoming and love it when people come out and watch.
What is interesting was that even after the last ice age and the sea levels rose, britain was still connected to France via a land bridge, near the cliffs of Dover. However, since this landbridge was made of chalk, a large flood caused by a glacial dam burst, called a mega flood, utterly destroyed the landbridge. So a more realistic scenario would be if that bridge was never destroyed
Actually there were many factors about the caused of Doggerland sinking.
Just saying that it went under caused by a large flood is an understatement.
It's a lot more complex and I can't really give details that much.
Just looked it up like Atlas Pro.
In simplification, GLACIERS WEIGHT A TONS AND CAUSED A DENT OVER EUROPE CRUSTAL PLATE. DOGGERLAND IS LIKE A SEESAW.
England would have blown up the bridge to avoid baguette invasion
@@rogueascendant6611 I think he was talking about the Storrega Megatsunamis
Love the scenario, love the presentation. The VHS-style history lesson was very fun, and even the Nord ad read was probably the most fun one you've done. 9/10.
Normie
@@Perririri In what way?
As a Zelda fan I LOVE that Link's horse Epona is named after the Celtic Goddess of Horses, ponies and donkeys.
Also I must point out that the Scots originated in Ireland and came to Scotland after the fall of Roman Britain.
there was no ireland or scotland back then
@@overkoppsbaiter0714 What he means is that the people who becamse the Scots originated in what's now Northern Ireland. At the time they were called the Scoti and they invaded the Pictish lands during the dark ages, conquering the natives and obliterating their culture.
@@joshwenn989 Scoti weren't a specific group of people, it was just the Latin name for all the Gaelic people of the British isles.
When you started to make the Lord of the Rings comparisons, I thought that would be pretty cool.
But when you said it would be like the Balkans… well let’s just say there is already one too many Balkans in our timeline
We love you too.....
There are three too many Balkans
I’ve been waiting for what feels like forever for another upload.
Between this channel and pointless hub, you gotta be one of my favorite youtubers. Thanks for the cool new concept man.
I love this -- the changes to world history would be so profound as to create an unrecognizable world. Great video.
I genuinely hope you make more videos like this.
Not everything has to be super extreme realism alt-history.
Have some fun, make your own history, make your own countries and cultures.
Have massive wars, victories, failures, and blunders.
However I will say that if you do fun alternate history don't try to act like it's comparable to the serious ones.
After this video, I like to imagine Middle Earth taking place in this scenario with Rohan, Gondor, and Arnor fighting against the Romans and Gauls, which would be known in their languages as Mordor.
Slavs - Rhûn
Rome - Mordor
Gauls - Haradrim?
What would be angmar? The vikings?
And let Iceland be numenor and north America be Aman
@@balashibuyeeter2704 The Norse yeah. Fuck, does that mean Arminius is the Witch King?
Who would that make Sauron?
11:15 - 11:30 - Robert E Howard described this same river as the boundary between Pits and the more settled Hyborian civilizations in his Conan the Barbarian series. He called it *Thunder River.*
Loved the segment from the perspective of a historian in that world. Would love to see more things like it.
Canonically, Middle Earth is supposed to be a text like Beowulf from even further in the past. In my headcanon LotR and the hobbit are mythological stories from doggerland and that the medieval technology used in the world was lost once the sea rose like Atlantis or numenor
I can't believe you managed to get History Man! Nice catch brother
*No nation could survive with the name "Doggerland."*
It'd fall rapidly from its own embarrassment.
It would be dogged
Turkey
I had to look up what "Dogging" means in English.
Now I DO feel it's a tragedy Doggerland is gone 🤪
@@h-Films really it's called Türkiye, so it's not that bad.
@PhantomOfficial07 it's been 2 years
So what you're saying is Tolkien had access to alternate reality history books and that's where he got Rohan and other parts of Middle Earth from? Understood
Maybe he went there through C.S. Lewis's warddrobe...
Great video! Loved the collaboration with Atlas Pro
I was thinking if you considered the great migration of people during the Bronze Age and how that in a way created the "sea people" ultimatly being part of the destruction of the Bronze Age empires, and with Doggerland offering a different continent/climate might have had a great impact on that
Just imagine Balkans-level racism and infighting across all of Europe. Good times.
Balkans plus the Caucasus level.
That is if nationalisn as we know it is ever invented. That only became a thing in Napoleonic era. This would change Europe so much that nothing like that is guaranteed.
Balkan conflicts are national now, once tribal. You are very foolish if you think nationalism invented intergroup conflicts as you imply.
@@aurelianus1308 i'm not implying that. Neither am i saying that conflicts between groups haven't existed before nationalism. I'm just saying that the scale and reason of potential animosity between hypothetical groups is impossible to ascertain with this big of a divergence.
A novel set in this world world be great. I'm imagining a sort of adventure story about whoever lives in Gaul (Romans, Gauls,Germanics, Britons, Slavs, maybe) or some other western place ending up in the New World. Or a story about a Cossack-like celtic warrior for the Romanized Lands to the south. This world is a sandbox! Since he said it would be like the Balkans, maybe the Germanized lands to the northeast of Livadia or the Picts and Britons would form a sort of Yugoslavia! If you want a WW2- era war story, you could have a giant war in the region! Imagine a kursk-like battle to the south of Dover! Edit: there could also be a story about a climate crisis as Livadi refugees flee the flooding steppes, much to the chagrin of themselves and of the Celts in Britain.
Well, well. Looks like I ain’t the only story teller in this comment section.
@QuantumMeme nah I don't like Hobbits
I want to see more alternate geography. What if continents like Mu or Hyperborea were real?
Congratulation he made a video on Mu
@@exciton9861 next we need Hyperborea and Lemuria
Hyperborea is real, it's called, "Russia"
There is a book trilogy by Stephen Baxter on this alternate history:
Stone Spring
Bronze Autumn
Iron Winter
I enjoyed them; they are a fun read.
Another excellent video, good mix of comedy and seriousness.
Thanks for the recommendation!
I was just going to recommend this. It's a good book that explores this, and the people managed to keep the land intact by building embankments and sort of keep the land from being inundated by the sea similar to how the Dutch is able to reclaim land from the sea. They actually revealed the name of this place in one of the chapters but I don't want to spoil that here.
wait but what about summer
@@tranquoccuong890-its-orge
The middle book is called "Bronze Summer"
Op mistyped
I was looking for someone hear who knew those books!
Very fun to see you branching into alternate geography, which actually gives me an idea I'd love for you to weigh in on that I guess could be folded into another alternate geography scenario if you like?
What would happen if North American Bison had been domesticated by the time Europeans arrived? Or perhaps more broadly, what if North America had more livestock that could be domesticated? Obviously the Llama would still exist, but what if other species were also brought across (here's the geography tie-in) the Bering Strait Land Bridge if it never closed?
Imagine an America where the Great Plains are effectively the African Savanah: impenetrable by white Settlers for perhaps half a century of more thanks to the domestication of Bison and other livestock leading to the Native Americans having their own plagues and diseases that they've grown immune to over centuries while Europeans would be decimated by contact with them, like Malaria in Africa.
We'd see an entirely different continent as well, you'd have two conjoined continents to begin with, but also the existence of a land bridge would alter Oceanic currents leading to changing climate and of course a totally different relationship between Europe and the Americas,, as there would be these Native societies holed up in what were essentially "fortresses" in the Rocky Mountains (like the Inca in the Andes) or Steppe-esque societies but with diseases that kept Settlers at bay as well.
That question could actually be rephrased as "What would North America be like if it's horses and camels hadn't died out?" Because horses and camels originated in North America before migrating into the old world 2-3 million yrs. ago and then their native population in the America's died out due to a few factors.
Yes I want this now
ive always thought about such a scenario but with little more parallel world
american horses for horses
toxodon for cattle
macrauchenia for camels
hippidion for donkeys
pecarry for pigs
maybe even war mammoths or mastodons
@@djamelben9221 maybe Pygmy mammoths are domesticated in California and spread through the Americas
Native Americans with bison cavalry is an alt history I didn't know I needed.
I love that one of the most consistent things in my life is cody asking the real questions. Good shit brotha
"What if there was a second Mongol Empire just north of France" is a scary thought. We finally banished the Brits, but at what cost?
Well the difference is, the Mongols were, well, the Mongols - a more or less culturally uniform group. If you stick like 5 different cultures into a landmass the size of France with almost no natural borders, they'd probably be too busy killing each other to do any kind of Mongol business.
@@pocarski forget that; Genghis Khan was the Empire. No Genghis no party.
@@pocarski Which would be fine until they generated their own great conqueror.
Then you have an incredibly violent group of people sitting on vast mineral and agricultural wealth finally looking outwards.
@@pocarski yep
the mongols were a bunch of nomadic tribes too busy killing each others & raiding china's north to create any empire, until genghis khan came along it is
now on the other hand, its not ensured that a similar great conqueror would have eventually risen in lividia so the possible future is uncertain
Oh we're still here, on horses this time
The whole area of Doggerland being above sea-level asks great questions & Cody does a good job of showing the potentially massive changes. But what if only a rump of Doggerland existed? In places this land is only about 30m below the waves & if only it was a bit higher there would an island the size of Wales sitting between East Yorkshire and Denmark. Who would live there & what implications would that have on the development of England as a nation?
1:35 Atlas pro.
3:59 'The story of Livadia'
9:27 The story of Livadia ends.
12:16 Essentially, it's Rohan.
12:37 Where's Hobbit town? is wales Hobbit town?
13:51 The Sponsor.
Huh, how convenient that I was literally just learning about Doggerland the other day
Edit: I was learning about it in a class about Britain's origins to 1688
Could you figuratively have learnt about it?
Interesting that you made this video after your conversation with Atlas Pro on Earth's lost islands. Islands are way more important than we think!
Nothing stays the same, for long here.
I’m not gonna lie to you. The algorithm just showed me you’re videos today, and when I was looking to see if knowledgehub and any more videos I could watch, yours popped up. Confusion at first because you’re voices are different but only slightly so I got about three minutes into the video before I did some googling and found you’re wiki ! Didn’t know you where Tyler’s brother and you actually started both channels.
Tldr I didn’t know you had a channel untill today and now I’m gonna subscribe because I really like you’re brothers channel and I now like yours too. Thanks for the content fam and thank you for you and you’re brothers hard work and dedication.
Id seriously love further lore on this alternate universe, its so damn interesting
Read the Lord of the Rings...
@@jakeaurod why?
@@godemperorofmankind3.091 There's alot of similarities.
@@docpossum2460 not much. maybe one vaguely similar kingdom. thats it
I wouldn’t get my hopes too high. Civilizations probably wouldn’t be able to withstand the climate. Doggerland would most likely be like Northern Canada
I've been watching you for 7 years, and I must say, by far, that this is the best scenario you've put out. Cheers to you!
One of the things I find interesting is the fact that Livadia would likely be the most colonisable section of the European North. The existence of Livadia would likely make a much more distinct culture in the east just because of the colder climates. Any major empires would likely be off more Southern latitudes or any nation that ever has the power to unify the Livadian grasslands. Navies and possibly colonisation will likely happen a lot later in time as there is much less naval focus, as no islands mean there is no need for significant navies to be made and as mentioned, any wars will likely be fully land based on horses
An alternate geography scenario I've always wondered about is what if the Caucasus Mountains didn't exist.
The Black Sea (and thus, Mediterranean) just continues into the Caspian.
This scenario would dramatically affect history so much that it would literally change timelines before the Romans even existed. Lots of Bronze Age Stuff goes on in such a world.
I loved the VHS multiverse segment. You should do more of those in the future.
I just love love how norway still would've had essentially the same dominating sea border and would still likely be a sea and fishing people
Great Britain not being an island would be a very weird sight
yhjfvm,
In a timeline where it was never an island, seeing it as an island would be weird. All about what we are used to.
@@Khloya69 I suppose for those folks our western Europe would be some kind of weird super post apocalypse set so far after the destruction of such prominent cultures and people.
Please do a video on if the Sino-Sovoet split never happened or was patched up in the 70s. It would be awesome.
Love how this practically describes Skyrim minus the magic and snow
"where's hobbit town? is wales hobbit town?" is my new favorite quote on this channel lol
''Im going on an Adventure!''
It's actually called hobbiton but okay
I have a alternate history similar to this, what would the world be like if the Zambezi river wasn't redirected? There was a lake where the Magkadigadi pans are today, that was fed by the Zambezi and Okavango, which connected the endorheic basin of the Okavango delta to the Atlantic ocean via the Orange river, it would be interesting to imagine how Southern Africa would develop if that much water wasn't directed away.
"I just made Britain disappear from the face of the earth, and you're questioning my decision."
I am pretty sure Cody is the mad god of the timelines he creates.
I’ve been watching you since I was 11 years old you really made me interested in history so much, thank you 😊
3:55 for a second I though he would say Hyperborea and I nearly pissed myself laughing
Watched my first Alt History Hub video ages ago in Undergrad. Now I’m listening to it while writing my Masters Thesis with my three year old staring at the screen soaking all this up. Thanks man!
Cool to see you reached 2 million subs. When can we expect to see an alternate countries 5?
One thing worth considering here - north sea oil. That's gonna be a lot more accessible and profitable than it was in our own timeline. The Saudi Arabia of europe?
But maybe a lot less fish...
Probably more like Venezuela - Saudi Arabia basically only has oil and historic resources (I.e. Mecca.) This country would have fertile lands and plentiful natural resources other than oil as well.
This scenario is absolutely awesome! There is a reason I’ve been Subscribe to you for almost the past 10 years. I’ve been subscribed to you since 2013. Your channel is absolutely awesome
Historically, Britain has never fielded a large army. It has never had to worry about a land invasion since the English Channel is one of the greatest natural defences. This is why historically Britain has invested most of its resources into the navy. During the 18th and 19th centuries no other nation took their navy as seriously as Britain, and what followed was complete Anglo maritime dominance. This maritime dominance is what fuelled Pax Brittanica - nearly 100 yrs of uninterrupted global British dominance.
However, if Britain was connected to mainland Europe, it would have to divert resources from the navy into the armed forces. In this timeline, The Royal Navy would be a mere shadow of its former self and Britain would never achieve the same levels of maritime dominance. I suspect the British state would get steamrolled by stronger armies from Prussia or France.
Non of these nations would exist.
Angul the supposed ancestor of the Angle tribes wouldn't of even been born.
Britian and it's culture probably wouldn't even exist here, especially since the Anglo-Saxons wouldn't exist here, and same with the Prussians as Eastern Europe is Much Colder, and Gaul would Probably be Conquered by the Livadians rather than the Franks, so no France Either. Alot of Countries probably wouldn't exist here.
Or - might have kept its French colony after Henry V
Britain wouldn’t even exist at all. I not even sure of Prussia or even France either.
if Britain was connected to mainland Europe, it wouldnt be called Britain, it would just be a part of France essentially.
I thought the northern passage video was supposed to happen next? Either way I’m happy for a a video
This one was super fun!
Yes Rohan would be awesome imagine the culture and the stories that these people could have told
Imagine elements of Germanic, Gaelic and Saxon cultures coalescing together
Video starts at 0:00
thank you so much man i couldnt find it
Lol
Can we bring back the “So that happened” podcast. Cuz hearing them talk about how “things” are right now would be awesome
Science: *exists*
Cody: Unacceptable
This greatly expands the north European plains. I could see some HUGE countries forming there.
Thanks for using the name Markham. It works well. It’s also a pretty cool surname for a pretty damn cool family. That’s it
Imagine a world where you could visit the British Savannah
Please do cover something about if Justinian was successful. There’s a lot of stuff that went wrong in Justinian reign like the plague and Persians so it’d be awesome to see someone cover it :D
Emperor Justinian was technically successful to reclaim Italy and Africa (Roman name for today Tunisia), but the problem is that the campaign in the peninsula basically bankrupted the Eastern Roman Empire, and those wars was so devastating that the region was unstable for centuries ... Later Emperors didn't believe it keeping Rome was worth it ...
That said you are right, if they have been lucky it would have been interesting ...
Or what if the proposed volcanic eruption of 536 didn't happen?
I have an idea for an alternate geography scenario: what if the Sierra Nevada, as we know them, didn't exist?
The modern Sierra Nevada is a giant batholith of igneous rock that formed underground and was pushed upward by the relatively recent (and ongoing) activity that formed the Basin and Range Province. If that batholith never formed, there would still be mountains where the Sierra Nevada are now, but they would be more like the mountains of the Northern California coast. So what would the ecological, cultural, and historical consequences of this be?
1:07 the good ending
How so?
@@oconnorwilliam01 i hate england
Cry
We could've had real life Rohan?
WE COULD'VE HAD REAL LIFE ROHAN???
YYEEEEESSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Now Now, We Still have the Sioux and the Lakota. Unless your not an American in which case Ha Ha!!!
Hail our Pomo-Kamita
I love how you used “Markham” as the name you chose for the (i assume) Anglo Saxon counterparts of this alternate universe, since Mark (or “mearc”) literally translates to border whilst “ham” simply means home, meaning the whole name is “home on a border”, which perfectly fits this story! Plus, it does help that the clan that traditionally got its name from the English area traces their ancestry all the way back to the times before even William the Conqueror. Overall, great video and also, I would recommend trying out Sundaland next, since that also follows a similar premise to this :)
PS: i only know so much about this topic because its my surname :p
Well the Baltic Sea would be the Baltic Lake if there’s still water around that area. Any nation bordering this would be even more cut off from the coasts.
English Channel wouldn’t exist, although I’m assuming this Grand River is what replaces it, and the alternate area known as the Netherlands in our world wouldn’t need to keep building land.
The English Channel would be an artificial construction connecting some major city's smaller river to a bigger river.
It’s a weird question and frankly dumb. Whenever somebody brings it up in relation to WW2 saying “Britain wouldn’t have survived if it wasn’t an island”. Well yea but Britain wouldn’t be Britain if it wasn’t an island, Germany wouldn’t be Germany if Central Europe was an island.
britain would have been far more French and Germanic in culture so Germany would have seen them as a potential ally. not that that would ever happen. doggerland existing is such a butterfly effect that Germany likely never exists to start with
@@godemperorofmankind3.091 Wouldn't be a France.
yet another long-time follower here; thanks for more great content, mate - keep up the good work :)
What if all of the Earth's oceans were (and had always been) fresh water instead of salt water.
Well, I guess the short answer would be: Rain. Lots of it. Every single day.
An earth without a lot of salt. For the seas not to be salty there's got to be no salt for them to accumulate.
We wouldn't have water problems then
welp, the entirety of the history of the earth, all the way back to when life first started would be completly different.
Its like interpreting what life would be like on a different planet.
@@NuggetOG Way more Coastal cities, that’s for sure.
As chaotic as living in such contested land would be, it's beauty and features are certainly worth fighting for.
All those rivers connecting acres upon acres of fertile flat land ON TOP of that coastal access... It's as if you moved the Nile up out of the desert!
And you'd be going around burning villages and capturing women
Or if your the victim a dead man or captured woman.
I came here because Atlas Pro. And I subscribed to your channel. Thanks!
"I just made britain disappear from the face of the earth, how dare you question me"
Im not questioning you, I'm applauding you
*Looking forward to the alternate history Zapatslavia* (West Slavs, like Yugoslavia)
Aren't the Poles the West Slavs?
@@Ggdivhjkjl poles czechs and slovaks
@@Ggdivhjkjl poles czechs and slovaks
@@Ggdivhjkjl poles czechs and slovaks
@@brickchannel347 poles czechs and slovaks
Inkarnate plug at 2:50 I recognize where you made the maps here. Nice!! Inkarnate is awesome I support it.
When i saw this video i assumed you were going to plop the British Isles as we know them in Northern France. I was assuming if The British Empire was ever able to form and make it to the modem day it definitely wouldn't have had as much influence as it would and probably have as much colonial influence as the mainland Empires, maybe it and France would have less because of constant wars between the two nations
1:02 I dont question your decision!
10:10 Okay, now I'm hyped about potential tropical Russians video!
the funny thing is, russia did attempt to colonize hawaii
I think you made a significant mistake Cody; you concluded that Doggerland (or whatever name it would end up having) would be grassland but I think it would be cold forest. It was grassland in its day because large herbivores ate plants keeping trees from growing, but those herbivores would have been eaten in the few thousand years after the ice age allowing forests to grow. This is what happened in Britain itself, it happened in large parts of Russia and with the loss of a lot of wildlife it is happening in parts of Africa.
The only thing that would stop it would be lower rainfall, I could believe that there would be less rainfall on Doggerland as rain from the Atlantic would fall more on Britain and Ireland but those barriers exist today and it still rains on the North Sea. Given that you included large rivers on your map showed you don't think that there would be dramatically less rainfall here.
Given that it would be colder forest I don't think its people would be just like the Germanic peoples we have but I would be interested in what other people think about that.
Even better. The fact that it is not a forest means mammoths. So we get Rohan with mammoths. Also makes it likely that siberia is no longer a forest, but instead is mammoth steppe. Imagine the mongol invasions if they had mammoth cavalry. Imagine Hannibal crossing the alps, with mammoths.
I can't even begin to imagine what would've been of the territory we currently know as United States in this scenario. Would the New World still establish lands there or would that also change completely?
The discovery and colonization of the Americas was mainly caused by trade and Mediterranean politics, which led into a land-grab that would probably be at least partially unchanged.
@@0th_Law we might see a harder effort by the vikings in america, seeing as they can't really go east to become the rus as the black sea doesn't exist. the rus instead would be in doggerland, leaveing more vikings to go even further west in search of lands and ending up in america. potentially
@@matthiuskoenig3378 Would they have been as focused on seafaring without the Baltic, though? (I assume that’s what you meant)
the Americas would of course still be found but likely by Spanish or French people. and there'd be no "british" colonies, just French and Spanish. basically the Americas is one big Super Mexico.
@@godemperorofmankind3.091 I feel like people fail to realize the massive increase of population a region that's covered in massive rivers, fertile planes and is accessible by land would bring forth........
11:49 sail facing wrong way
Dear Americans, It's pronounced the river Thames 'T-em-ss' - not 'Fame-ss' - aside from that, amazing video as usual.