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hey,curiosity is great These are 5 Moments In History WHEN POLAND CHANGED THE WORLD Vigo’s Dad th-cam.com/video/o5NIuOOXzbM/w-d-xo.htmlsi=1ANY1eIkykUUDwVu
Jadwiga was KING. Thet meant whoever she would marry would not have greatee power than she had. Queen means just wife of the King. And she was the ruler.
But that's just because in Polish we don't differentiate between queen and queen consort. In English (and in Polish colloquial speech as well), the word "queen" can mean a woman who rules the same way as a king does. They didn't say anywhere that she was a "queen consort", so calling her a queen is completely justified, even though she was officially crowned as a "król", not "królowa". It's the easiest way to do it without getting deeper into unique Polish etymology.
@@SomeRandomGuy499 It's not justified, it's just ignoring cultural differnces, no need to make excuses for it. It hardly matters to anything anyway, just another removing of history.
@@toirto1836 How are they removing history? They literally didn't omit anything, they didn't say that she was a king's wife, didn't say anything untrue, and they used a proper term that not only can be used in this context, but currently is used in the same way in Polish language - unlike in the XIV century, nowadays "królowa" doesn't just mean "king's wife", it also means "female monarch". Nobody ever says "król Jadwiga", it's always "królowa Jadwiga". The fact that she was crowned for a king is a fact, but it's also an absolutely irrelevant tidbit of trivia.
@@SomeRandomGuy499 acrually queen and żona (wife in Poland) has the same roots. And queen literally means wife of the King. In Polish you had kowal (as his function), but kowals wife people described as kowalowa, swat - swatowa, bednarz - bednarzona, and król.... królowa. So królowa is kings wife, but nit a person who actually has a function.
Let me shed a bit of light on the idea that 'Russia was having a hard time, so Poland decided to invade it,' XD because it sounds funny but it's a bit more complicated than that. The so-called Kievan Rus-a medieval country that encompassed the territories of present-day Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus-got divided in the 13th century. The lands of today's Russia were conquered by the Mongols, while the territories of Belarus and Ukraine fell under the dominion of Lithuania (and thanks to a later union, also Poland). The Duchy of Muscovy-somewhat of the predecessor of Russia-freed itself from the Mongol yoke at the end of the 15th century and kind of started doing what Russia is known till today-claiming itself as a successor to the ancient Rus empire and trying to forcefully subjugate the former Rus territories, even though they had been separate entities for centuries and the people there were already even speaking different languages. Literally, one of the first moves of Muscovy after regaining sovereignty from the Mongols was to attack another former Rus republic-Novgorod-which at that time was a vassal state of Lithuania. Novgorod did not want to align with Muscovy in the slightest and called Poland-Lithuania for help, but was conquered by Muscovy nevertheless. The next century was practically marked every few years by battles over border territories that Muscovy wanted to annex at all costs. So in the 16th century, during the so-called 'Time of Troubles' in Russia (when the tsar died without an heir and the state plunged into anarchy), various countries tried to place their representative on the Russian throne (not only the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth but also, for example, Sweden, which had also been attacked by Muscovy). Russia was, by the way, trying to do exactly the same thing a few years earlier when the Polish throne was vacant. Due to disagreements in the Russian Duma, various factions emerged among the Russian nobility, and the faction that chose the Polish prince for a future tsar was the majority. So here you have it-the Polish-Lithuanian army indeed did some not-so-cool things on Russian territory, but calling it an invasion is a huge exaggeration. The Polish-Lithuanian army did not fight anything like the 'Russian army,' but the soldiers of the so-called Tsar Vasil Shuisky-another pretender to the Russian throne. The Polish army won and entered Moscow-again, not 'invading' or 'capturing' it in any way, because the Russian boyars *literally* opened the gates for them and welcomed them with a banquet (as the Polish army was seen as allies and the army of the future tsar). The situation worsened later, because the Polish prince obviously had opponents, not to mention that the Polish king started making strange demands that annoyed the Russians and ultimately led to bloody riots and fighting with the Polish army. Russia to this day has a holiday commemorating the 'liberation of Moscow from Polish occupation'...but they kind of forget that they invited them themselves.
@@robertkowal8442 Błąd: To moskiewscy bojarzy popierający kandydaturę Władysława syna Polskiego Króla Zygmunta III Wazy na Cara postawili warunki. " Zwycięstwo kłuszyńskie otworzyło oddziałom dowodzonym przez Żółkiewskiego drogę w kierunku Moskwy. Skutki klęski Dymitra Szujskiego okazały się poważne: 27 lipca jego brat Wasyl został obalony, a bojarzy przystąpili do rozmów z hetmanem, proponując wybór królewicza Władysława na tron carski. Bardziej niż jego obawiali się bowiem wojsk Samozwańca i towarzyszących mu oddziałów polskich pod wodzą Jana Piotra Sapiehy. Ostatecznie 27 sierpnia podpisano traktat z bojarami, na których czele stał Fiodor Mścisławski. W zamian za elekcję Władysława - Żółkiewski zgodził się na spełnienie życzeń strony moskiewskiej, czyli przejście królewicza na prawosławie oraz zachowanie integralności Państwa Moskiewskiego. Ugoda zakładała jednocześnie, że oblężenie Smoleńska przez Zygmunta III zostanie przerwane, a siły polsko-litewskie wycofają się z granic moskiewskich. Co więcej, Rzeczpospolita zobowiązała się do udzielenia Moskwie pomocy w rozbiciu oddziałów Samozwańca, wciąż blokującego ich stolicę. Tymczasem we wrześniu Żółkiewski za zgodą bojarów wprowadził swą załogę w mury Kremla. Wydano mu braci Szujskich: Wasyla, Dymitra i Iwana, którzy zostali przewiezieni do obozu polskiego pod Smoleńskiem. Polski król nie był jednak zadowolony z uzyskanego porozumienia. Rozwój sytuacji go zaskoczył. Jego zdaniem hetman przekroczył swe kompetencje. "
High five bro✋. If someone understands us and lives according to our rules (after all, he is a guest). It does not matter what skin color or religion he has. He will always be welcome in Poland🇵🇱.Greetings, all the best. Above all, health.👍👋😃
The other reason was that Polish Senate was against financing the personal guard of the Polish Prince IF named Tsar in Moscow which was needed to protect him. (10 000 cavalry soldiers)
in the film refers to Kosciuszko. Kosciuszko, after the uprising, fought in the “American Revolution” was an engineer in the US Army. In recognition of his engineering skills, he was entrusted with the construction of the strong fortress of West Point on the Hudson River. Such a decision was supported by the Commander-in-Chief of the American army, George Washington. In recognition of his merits, Thaddeus Kosciuszko was promoted to brigadier general of the American army by a resolution of Congress on October 13, 1783. He also received a special thanks, a grant of land (about 250 hectares) and a substantial sum of money, to be paid at a later date in annual installments. When Congress paid him his outstanding emoluments in 1798, despite his difficult financial situation, he immediately used the money to buy freedom and educate the black population. unfortunately, the grateful black residents of philadelphi vandalized his monument in philadelphi,. “because he's a white boy”. a quote from one of the black uneducated citizens of the usa. “for your freedom and ours”
rozmawiałem raz z amerykaninem i tak stwoerdził że Polacy to w sumie imigranci i nie prawdziwi Amerykanie, przpomniałem mu o wkładzie Koszciuszki i Puławkiego i go oświeciło że to true american spirit i że ich celebrują na paradach ale dopiero wtedy połączył kropki :)))
If You want to know good story go react to "Bloody foreigners. Untold Battle of Britain." Its long but its worth it, and You will see why siome poles dont trust in aliances as much as some of more western countries.
7:35 Yo if you get a chance do more research on this guy (Tadeusz Kosciuszko). Dude's a fucking legend in both Poland and the US. Like dude lived in 1700s and his last wish addressed to Thomas Jefferson was to free as many slaves as possible for money owed by US gov. But like in general, he was just one of the boys
I'm very happy that you're interested in my country and what's even better, you actually wanna learn what you can. That's awesome. Our history is like no other, just in my opinion.
Teutonic order decided to stay yup, they falsified ownership papers of the land that was only lend them to full ownership, then started brutal conquest of Christian Pomerania as well btw. before they were invited, the Hungarians chased them out from their land (wise move) fun fact Jadwiga was crowned a King of Poland, she had all legal rights and ownership of royal lands as rightfull ruler (we had no such rule as in west that a King had to be male - especially worth mentioning as we have gender-based language) Polish-Muscovites war yup, they were constantly clashing with us at our Eastern borders so the skirmishes escalated to full scale war you may have of may not heard about Russian's making a game with this as a theme 🌚 it hurts their bottom to this day
In the previous video we did not blamed you about lack of knowledge about the history of Poland. It was more about the quality of the vid you've reacted. There was much of small inaccuracies. I can do a little research and recommend you some good quality videos about Poland that I would recommend to watch.
You’re spot on in the context of immigration. There’s sadly a lot of fear of foreign influence and people coming here from the outside-it’s a flashback to our history. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was the most multi-ethnic and multi-religious country in Europe, and it didn’t exactly end well. Besides the obvious internal quarrels among different cultures, there was also the issue like with German immigrants who were invited to Polish territories by Polish rulers, land later became the leverage to claim those lands as 'German' based on the population. The biggest issue regarding migration to Poland, however, is the border with Belarus, which is far from being a classic case of immigration. It’s literally a hybrid war conducted by the Belarusian regime, where people are brought there purposefully, hard to identify, and used to blackmail and sabotage the defense of NATO’s eastern flank. Our right-wing politicians have, of course, also been waging a fear-mongering campaign against immigrants, following the example of Trump and other similar politicians (while quietly selling more Polish visas than any other country, but whatever).
'A Polish person who's a hundred years old"... well, yeah. Pretty much any Polish person you ask could tell you countless familial war stories, from various wars. Like in my family: my grandparents were fighting against communism in the 1980s, my relatives fought in the anti-German partisans during World War II, or hid Jews, or fought in the Polish army abroad. My great-grandfather was in the cavalry and fought in the Polish-Soviet War in 1920, and he was actually born when Poland still didn't exist on the map and his hometown was part of the Russian partition. And my family is far from being very historically relevant.
Wśród wymienionych naukowców zabrakło mi Stanisława Ułama, który był jednym z naukowców amerykańskiego Projektu Manhattan. Stanisław Ułam był też jednym z twórców amerykańskiej bomby termojądrowej.
Part of why Poland invaded Russia also was because the Elected King of the Commonwelth was from the Swedish Throne family and his brother was trying to gain major power in Russia because of the lack of Tzar.
5:50 ye :D we did xD and we were the only one who conquered the Moscow and withstanded there for 2 years. Russians are still ashamed of it and celebrates the kicking off the Poles from Moscow as something like independence day (they do not admit that it is independence day) xDDD see the Shuysky Tribute and Unity Day in Wikipedia
But why u not talkin WHO started? Conflict started many years earlier when Russians decide to cooperating with Tatars. Polish guy's watching next guy watching next guy which is spreading fake history of Poland 🤣🤣🤣
This video was recorded a few years ago as a response to many lies about the Polish role during WW2. A film in the style of uncensored history :) th-cam.com/video/7lu3xMj0HfQ/w-d-xo.html
Poland likes to take the dibs on that one. But it actually was a union of Poland, Lithuania and Ruthenian lords(modern day western Ukraine) that had enough power to strike Moscow.
They should show this video to 4th graders before they even start history classes. Instead they teach history piece by piece without showing the whole picture. Maybe a little longer one, because this was really compact.
It's not "Being screwed in the head". It's called "Noticing clear patterns of behaviour in easily observable reality". When you lend someone money once... And he doesn't give it back. Then he asks again, and you lend him money again... And he still doesn't give it back. And then he comes to you, begging you for even more money, so you lend him some more... And he doesn't give _that_ back, either. Would you lend him money again? Because by your logic, if you didn't want to, then you must be "screwed up in the head". Just continue giving him money, bro - after all, it's not like there's a reason to believe he won't return your money in the future, right? From _my_ perspective, it's the people who wilfully ignore the reality slapping them in the face, that are "screwed up in the head".
1:28 In Polish🇵🇱 "C" is always "C". Not "K", you pronounce "ts".It sounds like a cymbal hit in a drum kit.😁 "Ć" is "c" together with "i".(as in the word "Italy")
Now THIS is a super quick history ;D and it sounds hilarious, it is purposely read in English, but with very poor (or even none) polish "accent" (probably how Pole, who can't speak English would read it). But it is so memic. th-cam.com/video/TmSprfXbaMw/w-d-xo.html
Hey, another great video! :) If you are into history, I HIGHLY recommend Warsaw Uprising video by Extra history: th-cam.com/video/9BjIYKq4CVk/w-d-xo.html - the biggest uprising in the Europe during WWII (and one of the most tragic events). It is not easy to watch but the Warsaw Uprising must be rememberd
Poland was then a gridy predator just like Russia or England. Neither better nor worse. If Polish nobles weren't as disorganised as they were Poland could have become one of those superpowers like Russia or France in later years. But history doesn't consider conditional clauses.
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hey,curiosity is great
These are 5 Moments In History WHEN POLAND CHANGED THE WORLD
Vigo’s Dad
th-cam.com/video/o5NIuOOXzbM/w-d-xo.htmlsi=1ANY1eIkykUUDwVu
Jadwiga was KING. Thet meant whoever she would marry would not have greatee power than she had. Queen means just wife of the King. And she was the ruler.
They just always refuse to get it right in these kinds of videos
But that's just because in Polish we don't differentiate between queen and queen consort. In English (and in Polish colloquial speech as well), the word "queen" can mean a woman who rules the same way as a king does. They didn't say anywhere that she was a "queen consort", so calling her a queen is completely justified, even though she was officially crowned as a "król", not "królowa". It's the easiest way to do it without getting deeper into unique Polish etymology.
@@SomeRandomGuy499 It's not justified, it's just ignoring cultural differnces, no need to make excuses for it. It hardly matters to anything anyway, just another removing of history.
@@toirto1836 How are they removing history? They literally didn't omit anything, they didn't say that she was a king's wife, didn't say anything untrue, and they used a proper term that not only can be used in this context, but currently is used in the same way in Polish language - unlike in the XIV century, nowadays "królowa" doesn't just mean "king's wife", it also means "female monarch". Nobody ever says "król Jadwiga", it's always "królowa Jadwiga". The fact that she was crowned for a king is a fact, but it's also an absolutely irrelevant tidbit of trivia.
@@SomeRandomGuy499 acrually queen and żona (wife in Poland) has the same roots. And queen literally means wife of the King. In Polish you had kowal (as his function), but kowals wife people described as kowalowa, swat - swatowa, bednarz - bednarzona, and król.... królowa. So królowa is kings wife, but nit a person who actually has a function.
Russians: No one ever conquered Russia!
Also Russians: Lets celebrate every year the independence from Poland hahah xD
lol
Poland conquer Russia for 2 years
Jak nie podbito to czemu świętujecie wyzwolenie od polakow?
To dlaczego wasz car Szumski wraz z braćmi składali hołd polskiemu królowi Zygmuntowi III Wazie?
@@piotro.4765 do czego ty pijesz i przede wszystkim do kogo to? xD
Let me shed a bit of light on the idea that 'Russia was having a hard time, so Poland decided to invade it,' XD because it sounds funny but it's a bit more complicated than that.
The so-called Kievan Rus-a medieval country that encompassed the territories of present-day Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus-got divided in the 13th century. The lands of today's Russia were conquered by the Mongols, while the territories of Belarus and Ukraine fell under the dominion of Lithuania (and thanks to a later union, also Poland).
The Duchy of Muscovy-somewhat of the predecessor of Russia-freed itself from the Mongol yoke at the end of the 15th century and kind of started doing what Russia is known till today-claiming itself as a successor to the ancient Rus empire and trying to forcefully subjugate the former Rus territories, even though they had been separate entities for centuries and the people there were already even speaking different languages. Literally, one of the first moves of Muscovy after regaining sovereignty from the Mongols was to attack another former Rus republic-Novgorod-which at that time was a vassal state of Lithuania. Novgorod did not want to align with Muscovy in the slightest and called Poland-Lithuania for help, but was conquered by Muscovy nevertheless.
The next century was practically marked every few years by battles over border territories that Muscovy wanted to annex at all costs.
So in the 16th century, during the so-called 'Time of Troubles' in Russia (when the tsar died without an heir and the state plunged into anarchy), various countries tried to place their representative on the Russian throne (not only the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth but also, for example, Sweden, which had also been attacked by Muscovy). Russia was, by the way, trying to do exactly the same thing a few years earlier when the Polish throne was vacant.
Due to disagreements in the Russian Duma, various factions emerged among the Russian nobility, and the faction that chose the Polish prince for a future tsar was the majority.
So here you have it-the Polish-Lithuanian army indeed did some not-so-cool things on Russian territory, but calling it an invasion is a huge exaggeration.
The Polish-Lithuanian army did not fight anything like the 'Russian army,' but the soldiers of the so-called Tsar Vasil Shuisky-another pretender to the Russian throne. The Polish army won and entered Moscow-again, not 'invading' or 'capturing' it in any way, because the Russian boyars *literally* opened the gates for them and welcomed them with a banquet (as the Polish army was seen as allies and the army of the future tsar).
The situation worsened later, because the Polish prince obviously had opponents, not to mention that the Polish king started making strange demands that annoyed the Russians and ultimately led to bloody riots and fighting with the Polish army.
Russia to this day has a holiday commemorating the 'liberation of Moscow from Polish occupation'...but they kind of forget that they invited them themselves.
Zapominales dodać że warunkiem żeby Polak był carem Rosji było nie zmieniając religi prawosławia na katolicycm 😊
@@robertkowal8442 that's what I meant by "the king started making strange demands" 😅
*"zapomniałam", I'm a woman
@@robertkowal8442
Błąd:
To moskiewscy bojarzy popierający kandydaturę Władysława syna Polskiego Króla Zygmunta III Wazy na Cara postawili warunki.
"
Zwycięstwo kłuszyńskie otworzyło oddziałom dowodzonym przez Żółkiewskiego drogę w kierunku Moskwy. Skutki klęski Dymitra Szujskiego okazały się poważne: 27 lipca jego brat Wasyl został obalony, a bojarzy przystąpili do rozmów z hetmanem, proponując wybór królewicza Władysława na tron carski.
Bardziej niż jego obawiali się bowiem wojsk Samozwańca i towarzyszących mu oddziałów polskich pod wodzą Jana Piotra Sapiehy. Ostatecznie 27 sierpnia podpisano traktat z bojarami, na których czele stał Fiodor Mścisławski. W zamian za elekcję Władysława - Żółkiewski zgodził się na spełnienie życzeń strony moskiewskiej, czyli przejście królewicza na prawosławie oraz zachowanie integralności Państwa Moskiewskiego.
Ugoda zakładała jednocześnie, że oblężenie Smoleńska przez Zygmunta III zostanie przerwane, a siły polsko-litewskie wycofają się z granic moskiewskich. Co więcej, Rzeczpospolita zobowiązała się do udzielenia Moskwie pomocy w rozbiciu oddziałów Samozwańca, wciąż blokującego ich stolicę. Tymczasem we wrześniu Żółkiewski za zgodą bojarów wprowadził swą załogę w mury Kremla. Wydano mu braci Szujskich: Wasyla, Dymitra i Iwana, którzy zostali przewiezieni do obozu polskiego pod Smoleńskiem.
Polski król nie był jednak zadowolony z uzyskanego porozumienia. Rozwój sytuacji go zaskoczył. Jego zdaniem hetman przekroczył swe kompetencje. "
High five bro✋. If someone understands us and lives according to our rules (after all, he is a guest). It does not matter what skin color or religion he has. He will always be welcome in Poland🇵🇱.Greetings, all the best. Above all, health.👍👋😃
in 1610 Poland conquered moscow and son of Polish king was suposed to be a Tsar of Russia byut king didn't wanted his son to change religion
Prawda
Zgadza się !👍
The other reason was that Polish Senate was against financing the personal guard of the Polish Prince IF named Tsar in Moscow which was needed to protect him. (10 000 cavalry soldiers)
in the film refers to Kosciuszko.
Kosciuszko, after the uprising, fought in the “American Revolution” was an engineer in the US Army.
In recognition of his engineering skills, he was entrusted with the construction of the strong fortress of West Point on the Hudson River. Such a decision was supported by the Commander-in-Chief of the American army, George Washington.
In recognition of his merits, Thaddeus Kosciuszko was promoted to brigadier general of the American army by a resolution of Congress on October 13, 1783. He also received a special thanks, a grant of land (about 250 hectares) and a substantial sum of money, to be paid at a later date in annual installments. When Congress paid him his outstanding emoluments in 1798, despite his difficult financial situation, he immediately used the money to buy freedom and educate the black population.
unfortunately, the grateful black residents of philadelphi vandalized his monument in philadelphi,. “because he's a white boy”. a quote from one of the black uneducated citizens of the usa.
“for your freedom and ours”
rozmawiałem raz z amerykaninem i tak stwoerdził że Polacy to w sumie imigranci i nie prawdziwi Amerykanie, przpomniałem mu o wkładzie Koszciuszki i Puławkiego i go oświeciło że to true american spirit i że ich celebrują na paradach ale dopiero wtedy połączył kropki :)))
@@michakocik4957 oni wszyscy sa amigrantami. Tylko indianie to tubylcy.
If You want to know good story go react to "Bloody foreigners. Untold Battle of Britain." Its long but its worth it, and You will see why siome poles dont trust in aliances as much as some of more western countries.
7:35 Yo if you get a chance do more research on this guy (Tadeusz Kosciuszko). Dude's a fucking legend in both Poland and the US.
Like dude lived in 1700s and his last wish addressed to Thomas Jefferson was to free as many slaves as possible for money owed by US gov. But like in general, he was just one of the boys
I'm very happy that you're interested in my country and what's even better, you actually wanna learn what you can. That's awesome. Our history is like no other, just in my opinion.
Teutonic order decided to stay
yup, they falsified ownership papers of the land that was only lend them to full ownership, then started brutal conquest of Christian Pomerania as well
btw. before they were invited, the Hungarians chased them out from their land (wise move)
fun fact Jadwiga was crowned a King of Poland, she had all legal rights and ownership of royal lands as rightfull ruler (we had no such rule as in west that a King had to be male - especially worth mentioning as we have gender-based language)
Polish-Muscovites war
yup, they were constantly clashing with us at our Eastern borders so the skirmishes escalated to full scale war
you may have of may not heard about Russian's making a game with this as a theme 🌚 it hurts their bottom to this day
You don’t have to be 100 years old to know this. Because if you are Polish you know you’re history. Are father and grandfather tell us history 🇵🇱
In the previous video we did not blamed you about lack of knowledge about the history of Poland. It was more about the quality of the vid you've reacted. There was much of small inaccuracies. I can do a little research and recommend you some good quality videos about Poland that I would recommend to watch.
You’re spot on in the context of immigration. There’s sadly a lot of fear of foreign influence and people coming here from the outside-it’s a flashback to our history. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was the most multi-ethnic and multi-religious country in Europe, and it didn’t exactly end well. Besides the obvious internal quarrels among different cultures, there was also the issue like with German immigrants who were invited to Polish territories by Polish rulers, land later became the leverage to claim those lands as 'German' based on the population.
The biggest issue regarding migration to Poland, however, is the border with Belarus, which is far from being a classic case of immigration. It’s literally a hybrid war conducted by the Belarusian regime, where people are brought there purposefully, hard to identify, and used to blackmail and sabotage the defense of NATO’s eastern flank.
Our right-wing politicians have, of course, also been waging a fear-mongering campaign against immigrants, following the example of Trump and other similar politicians (while quietly selling more Polish visas than any other country, but whatever).
Jadwiga was King, not Queen
'A Polish person who's a hundred years old"... well, yeah. Pretty much any Polish person you ask could tell you countless familial war stories, from various wars. Like in my family: my grandparents were fighting against communism in the 1980s, my relatives fought in the anti-German partisans during World War II, or hid Jews, or fought in the Polish army abroad. My great-grandfather was in the cavalry and fought in the Polish-Soviet War in 1920, and he was actually born when Poland still didn't exist on the map and his hometown was part of the Russian partition. And my family is far from being very historically relevant.
Wśród wymienionych naukowców zabrakło mi Stanisława Ułama, który był jednym z naukowców amerykańskiego Projektu Manhattan. Stanisław Ułam był też jednym z twórców amerykańskiej bomby termojądrowej.
Part of why Poland invaded Russia also was because the Elected King of the Commonwelth was from the Swedish Throne family and his brother was trying to gain major power in Russia because of the lack of Tzar.
I like your polish reactions :D check out polish soldier bear Corporal Wojtek!
5:50 ye :D we did xD and we were the only one who conquered the Moscow and withstanded there for 2 years. Russians are still ashamed of it and celebrates the kicking off the Poles from Moscow as something like independence day (they do not admit that it is independence day) xDDD see the Shuysky Tribute and Unity Day in Wikipedia
But why u not talkin WHO started? Conflict started many years earlier when Russians decide to cooperating with Tatars. Polish guy's watching next guy watching next guy which is spreading fake history of Poland 🤣🤣🤣
This video was recorded a few years ago as a response to many lies about the Polish role during WW2. A film in the style of uncensored history :) th-cam.com/video/7lu3xMj0HfQ/w-d-xo.html
5.52 lol that was fumy yes Poland invaded Russia twice and occupied Russia's capital city for 2 years .
Hello😊 Watch the film: In defence of Poland: A Nation of heroes by Stefan Tompson
Poland likes to take the dibs on that one. But it actually was a union of Poland, Lithuania and Ruthenian lords(modern day western Ukraine) that had enough power to strike Moscow.
They should show this video to 4th graders before they even start history classes. Instead they teach history piece by piece without showing the whole picture. Maybe a little longer one, because this was really compact.
It's not "Being screwed in the head". It's called "Noticing clear patterns of behaviour in easily observable reality".
When you lend someone money once... And he doesn't give it back.
Then he asks again, and you lend him money again... And he still doesn't give it back.
And then he comes to you, begging you for even more money, so you lend him some more... And he doesn't give _that_ back, either.
Would you lend him money again?
Because by your logic, if you didn't want to, then you must be "screwed up in the head". Just continue giving him money, bro - after all, it's not like there's a reason to believe he won't return your money in the future, right?
From _my_ perspective, it's the people who wilfully ignore the reality slapping them in the face, that are "screwed up in the head".
1:28 In Polish🇵🇱 "C" is always "C". Not "K", you pronounce "ts".It sounds like a cymbal hit in a drum kit.😁 "Ć" is "c" together with "i".(as in the word "Italy")
What's up with the cuts? TH-cam cries about moustache mans?
Now THIS is a super quick history ;D and it sounds hilarious, it is purposely read in English, but with very poor (or even none) polish "accent" (probably how Pole, who can't speak English would read it). But it is so memic. th-cam.com/video/TmSprfXbaMw/w-d-xo.html
Hey, another great video! :) If you are into history, I HIGHLY recommend Warsaw Uprising video by Extra history: th-cam.com/video/9BjIYKq4CVk/w-d-xo.html - the biggest uprising in the Europe during WWII (and one of the most tragic events). It is not easy to watch but the Warsaw Uprising must be rememberd
Where war Poland VS Lithuania war 1919-1920?
Ask a Pole who Lech Walesa was...
Detailed? I'd say this was oversimplified if anything.
High quality of life? Why so many Poles go to work to the west then? And even emigrate.
Путин: A potem poszli się ruchać😢😂❤
я segs yay!!
Poland was then a gridy predator just like Russia or England. Neither better nor worse. If Polish nobles weren't as disorganised as they were Poland could have become one of those superpowers like Russia or France in later years. But history doesn't consider conditional clauses.
Nope
Poland detected. Instant view
7:00 nope, has nothing to do with history just look at all the blacks and muslims on streets of paris and such we simply don't want that to happen
F. Tusk