You guys should make a Castilian War video. It has Indians, Malaysians, Somalis, Swahilis, Egyptians, Turks, and Arabs against Filipino, Aztecs, Incans, Borneans, and the Spanish. This also happened in 1578.
That war was epic! It's a multi national army that were fighting under the sultan of Brunei , the Spaniards took over the capital city of Brunei because of the betrayal of a rebel prince named sari lana or something , the sultan forces recreated into the jungles and then they regrouped their forces and attacked finally recapturing the capital , the Spanish fleeing and the sultans forces chased them to sabah. The sultan army was made of malays indian arabs turks Somalis and turks Unbelievable
Imagine Capt. Jack Sparrow but with two katanas (not because that is historically accurate but because Capt. Jack Sparrow is crazy), one tanegashima teppo, and speaking Japanese in his half-drunk accent 😂😂😂😂
Castilian War had Indians, Malaysians, Somalis, Swahilis, Egyptians, Turks, and Arabs against Filipino, Aztecs, Incas, Borneans, and the Spanish. And this happened in 1578.
if they were americans or people from england and not from spanish, there would be already 100 films about it. And history channel would be full of documentaries
@@jejfjaroszynski3496that's the most fascinating, all were Spanish , it did not matter where you came from,if you were under the crown you were spanish. Viva España y sus Virreinatos.
Yes, this channel is slowly going over all the often ignored parts of history I've been excited to discover over the past years. Thank you. Love the stories of obscure Spanish expeditions in the 1500-1600s, hope you revisit more in the future.
The Legazpi Expedition of 1565-1571 to the Philippines is quite an interesting subject. They faced fierce resistance of the pre-hispanic Filipinos from present-day Manila, and also the first use of the "Divide et Impera (Divide and Conquer)" strategy, where Spaniards used the ethnic Visayans (Cebuanos, Ilonggos, etc.) for their conquest of Luzon.
I'm surprised that you cover the Battle of Cagayan that was rarely discussed in Philippine history classes even upto college level and frequently overshadowed by the Battle of Vigan. I'm glad that you made a video about it!
To be fair.... This event is not that important to be discussed in general education... I mean, it may show a glimpse on how pre-colonial and early-colonial Philippines interact with neighboring countries before. I believe it's just adding filler that's not needed for the general population. Let's be real, history is interesting but it's boring too from time to time...
@@visayanmissnanny2.076 it may looks like a filler in the Philippine history but it's very important to revisit it so that we can learn something from it for future scenarios. Just an example, the Japanese might be defeated by the Spaniards during the Battle of Cagayan but centuries later, Cagayan was one of the 3 major landing areas in Northern Luzon chosen by the Imperial Japanese Military to conduct major amphibious landings that took place right after the Attack on Pearl Harbor during Dec. 1941 And if the bully above north became more aggressive and invades Taiwan forcefully, they will follow the same steps onced used by the Japanese during their Pacific Conquest.
@@paulsteaven Fair point! And good you mentioned the campaigns of 1941 and our recent issues (Deleted & Edited: Actually scratch that, unless you wish to emphasize nationalism then that's a fair point. If not, the familiarity with the 1941 invasion is pretty much enough)
Just remember not to get lazy and use videos to often. Practice telling the story yourself. It will still engage the children you just can't suck at doing it.
This and Extra Credits are great for teaching kids and adults. Extra Credits is definitely perfect for kids because of the visuals and enthusiasm of the people who run the show.
@@nightlightabcd eeehh, some were, Though the correct term would be Ronin seeing as Samurai would have at least a job and a house even though many were as poor as peasants.. Most would definitely be the peasant class though.
@@megax242 Yes I agree. The victors write history. Although in the case of the Spanish Empire it was mostly internal conflicts that led to its decline.
@@eelchiong6709 Actually, Filipinos had resisted Hispanization simply by not dying en masse by the Diseases from the Spanish. 😅😅 Filipinos had adopted the Spanish Cultures, yes; however they dont Speak Spanish and very few Filipinos mixed with the Spaniards, due to the fact majority of the Population were only viewed as very cheap labor. Not to mention the ongoing uprisings and resistance from the populations in the Rural areas.
@@arami187 Unlike the Native Americans, the filipinos were just as resistant to Spanish deseases as the Spaniards themselves since they were not isolated like the Americans but in constant contact with foreign traders and were once part of both the Sri Vijayan and Madjapit empires. Right, Spanish colonists rarely married filipinos, and only with the noble families when they do. But, they certainly had a lot of illegitimate children with the filipinas living and working in their haciendas. Even priests and friars were known to be womanizers.
@@eelchiong6709 it's only limited lol. More likely 4-13% in our genes have western European blood (haplogroup r1b ydna) according to many genetic research lab and our culture merely like 70% Hispanicized 20% in our language were derived from Spanish mixed with Malay, Sanskrit, english and hokkien-chinese. Better do alot of research
The fleet that conquered Phillipines sailed from México, most of the Spanish army were Tlaxcallans and Mexica allies, during 3 centuries The Phillipines was part of New Spain. Greetings for Spanish and Phillipino brothers from México
My family has lived in and around that region even before the Spanish colonization of the country. They’ve told tales about the español and natives fighting off pirates from Japan, China and even the Dutch. Along with tsunami waves hitting the coastal towns that originated from Japan.
You can even see on the facial characteristics of modern Filipinos, the result of ages old crossover interaction among these cultures. From the East Asian pirate, to the Conquistador, to the native, the entire Filipino bloodline bares witness to their shared interaction. A rare gem of a find, K&G! Awesome work!
@@theghosthero6173 not in this video, but later the japanese empire launch an invasion trying to remove the spanish from Philipines. This video shows only the first encounter between an european power and chinese/japanese "soldiers", not the onlyone
@@HexaDecimus yes, sadly. It's sad because they tried to dispel the myth of the "60 Spaniard destroying 1000 samurai" spread online but at the same time included it in the thumbnail, what most people see.
Mindanao was a particularly interesting place to trade. Sources mention Butuan (pronounced bu-TWAN), in modern-day Agusan del Norte, as a spot for gold. There were also spice trades between the Dutch and the sultanates in southwestern Mindanao. That could also be another interesting area to explore. Mindanao and Mindoro were good sources of riches. However, misfortune also struck the Spaniards there, under Ruy López de Villalobos, under whom was one Andrés de Urdaneta, who was crucial to the Legazpi expedition, and discovered a trade route from the Philippines to Mexico, which started the Manila galleon trade, another interesting topic for a video.
Butuan was one of the leading trading centres of the Philippine Archipelago from the 9th to 12th Centuries. Chinese Song Dynasty sources indicated that 3 envoy missions from Butuan on 1000s-1010s visiting the Song Court to get permission for direct trading with the Chinese instead of passing it to a third party kingdom, which is Champa in this case. Another mention of Butuan is in Antonio Pigafetta's chronicles of the Magellan-Elcano Expedition is that when they arrived in the island of Limasawa in the Visayan Islands, they met its ruler, Rajah Kolambu/Colambu, who happened to be a brother of Rajah Awi of Butuan. This shows the relations of local chiefs in the archipelago were closely connected as far as Malaya and Indonesia. There was also a type of boat discovered in Butuan by Filipino archaeologists, which is called Balangay/Balanghay. This same boat was mentioned in Pigafetta's chronicles, and the boat was a primarily used by most pre-Hispanic entities in the Philippines.
@@paulsteavenWe managed to tackle other battles like this though, not this one but the ones involving Chinese pirates, invasion attempts by the Portuguese, by the Dutch and cherry on top, the British invasion of Manila in the Seven Years War. What bothers me that we didn't learn are what were those old seperate kingdom's in our country were before the Spanish came.
It definitely does. Imagine the island hopping exploration similar to odyssey or ac black flag. But in a region and time period no other game franchise has I've ever heard of has ever touched. And of course with the combat mechanics of Ghost of Tsushima, it would be amazing.
Flat earthers: ...But, they just sailed in a big circle over a map. And, the rest of the pirates sailed toward the edge of flat earth, fell, and got eaten by leviathans! 😂😂😂
I really like how it's impossible to believe in gravity and flat earth. BUT it is compl;etely believable in all the water staying on top, and none of the dirt, falling off the bottom into space.
@Super.Chuck none of that really matters, the real conclusive proof that the Earth is not flat is the fact that cats have not knocked everything off of it by now. anyone who has ever owned a cat knows that they would have done so just to be jerks if the Earth was flat.
@@SuperChuckRaney I have seen flat earthers saying that the artic and antartic serve like big walls at the edges of earth, that's why the water doesn't fall, seriously. They are really that stupid
this is not an elementary or high school topic discussion this is a self research agenda since no accurate accounts & will not be taught at schools Spanish kids do the same they don't know even chinese japanese lol.
@@veewsol7078 you'd be surprised to know that Spain is one of the evil empires in history it is even in youtube. And Spain censors it's past like Japan and Russia and US.
@@gregorjerman973 Not really, for the past 300 years all history taught in Spain has been the version of history promoted by the enemies of Spain for a simple reason that I don't expect you to know and I don't are enough to explain. You are clearly an ignorant and it's not my duty to fix that.
I've also read that during their conflicts vs the Wako, the pirates are actually crazy enough to charge a tercio (Spanish pike formation) and grab or wrestle their pikes from their soldiers so the Spaniards had to actually put oil on the shaft near the pikehead for that.
Wouldn't been able since the second and fourth row of a Tercio usually had either Crossbows and Arquebusiers depending on the time...so getting close is the stupidest thing you could do...if they were early tercio you also would have rodeleros crouching and cutting their tendons from underneath the pikes.
Putting oil on the end of the pike's shafts was standard setting before a battle, and i think cleaning it was important to march with them, though i am not sure about the later.
The history of Juan Pablo de Carrión is incredibly impressive, to begin with, he had exactly 69 years at the time of the events. His one is a story of continuous failure. Born in Valladolid in 1513, he had emigrated to New Spain (Mexico) in search of fortune and had taken part in previous expeditions to the Philippines which ended in absolute disaster, the last one making him return to Spain with only two friends left. He settled down in Toledo as treasurer of the Archbishop, and married in 1559 to a woman called María De Salcedo y Sotomayor. (Continues in replies)
Strangely, when the Archbishop died he left his family and returned to America, risking his very comfortable life for an uncertain future. There he served as a boat engineer and disgracefully for him started a marital life with another woman: a local who went for the name of Leonor Suárez de Figueroa. He also attempted to join Legazpi's and Urdaneta's expedition to the Philippines, but his bad relationship with the latter threw away his attempt. This was the very successful expedition which established the desired "tornaviaje", a safe route for merchants to cross the Pacific in both directions. Meanwhile the Spanish Inquisition had opened a case out of Carrión's second marriage in 1566 with Leonor, which resulted very merciful for him because he managed to avoid being condemned to row in galleys as well as public humiliation, but had his assets seized and was forced to return with his first wife. As he was jailed again in 1574, he applied for a destination in the Philippines, perhaps to put another ocean between the Inquisition and him. But being finally in Legazpi's expedition, he discovered things weren't going as swiftly as previously, because the pirates had settled in Luzon and were very well equipped in the European stile thanks to Portuguese merchants. Apparently, when he was sent to confront the pirates it was a bit sketchy, because it was well known they were massively outnumbered, and he had no relevant military history or experience despite being a "Fleet General". But he departed with a half Spanish, half Tlaxcala (allied native Americans) crew. The only thing that I would say they missed is that Tai-Fusa's pirates were armed with hooks to catch the European spears, but being Carrion of old hand, he had previously ordered to smear the pikes in oil so this couldn't happen. In any case pretty good video, but I missed some epic animations for such an epic story.
If you are interested in more Spanish epic battles in the area you should definetively read about the "Siege of Baler (1898-1899)" 50 Spanish soldiers held a church against the filipinos for almost a year surrounded and outnumbered 20 to 1 in the middle of the US-Spanish War. They even continued fighting for 6 months after the war ended. The survivors were famous in Spain and known as "Los últimos de Filipinas (The last ones of the Phillipines)" I wish to warch a K&G video about that hahaha
Back in baler there's also an event called the Philippines spanish friendship day which was signed by commonwealth president and fellow townsmen Manuel Quezon and the church that you mentioned, the church of baler is one of the most popular tourist spot in my hometown, sadly can't return there now cuz of pandemic
Hello, fantastic content as always. Just a small constructive correction regarding the title: "Conquistador" is singular, it's plural in Spanish is "conquistadores" with the extra e. In case you want to include it in the title. Keep up the good work!
@@Kokozaftran the trick is get nanban trade ships about 2 or three with a supporting fleet full of traditional ship get the black ship to target them one nanban trade ship will board the black one while the others damage it reducing it's crew
I’m from Cagayan, Philippines myself and I never knew this part of our history. It was never thought. We only heard of a naval battle at the mouth of the Cagayan River and that was it. This could also be a reason why we physically and closely looked like Chinese or Japanese than out Malay brothers because we have ancestors from these groups. Cagayan is often historically dismissed as we assumed that most of the Philippine History happened in the capital Manila, and our history only began when the Spanish came. This is a helpful insight and I hope this channel will make more lesser known historical videos.
This is why I love your content gentlemen, a completely obscure and BADASS event I never thought would be covered in such detail by anyone EVER, except you guys. Good work👍
Sadly japanese mostly avoid historical settings ar always throw some supernatural bisho ninjas into it. I remember italian cartoon adaptation of Sandokan from my childhood with tigers sailing medieval cogs in XIX century on coast of Borneo. Only animation about asian piracy I got. :
@@bombot8672 I mean, Spain help Americans in their Independence war Edit: Then we can say that America “betrayed” Spain in the Cuban Independence war, but that was in the late 18s
@@bmona7550 you are right, the spanish have the audacity to take the credit of the kapampangans, same people ( and the majority ) they used to fight against the dutch-spanish war in manila and other rebellions back at the early colonialization.
The Philippines in the 16th century was just Deadliest Warrior irl. Hope you guys also check out the Battle of Manila in 1574 which was another Conquistadors vs Wako battle, probably the biggest one. The Chinese warlord Limahong led 4,000 Wako in an attempt to take Manila for himself, but was defeated by a garrison of 300 Spanish and 300 Filipino soldiers. After his defeat, he was chased around the country by the Spanish for a year before he gave up and left to pirate elsewhere.
Conquistador: sir, I don't think the pirate are from Japan only... Captain: we are the Spanish in 1582 and Conquistadors.... Half of the Wokou could be polar bears and I would still call them Japanese.
Yup. Just like the way they collectively called the various islamic and native tribes of Mindanao as "Moros" after their own Andalusian Moors during yhe reconquista of southern Iberia.
Remember these are the same Spanish that continued to call native Americans "Indians" even though they knew they weren't from India...they literally met people from India...they just didn't care
Please, someday I would be happy to hear you talk about the attacks on the Philippines perpetrated by European potences during the 3 century period of Imperial presence.
not a single land does not have a spanish tomb, truly amazing video. Spanish history from the medieval age until the modern age is truly an adventure resembling more fantasy than history
Kings and Generals: the priest's accounts seem widely exaggerated... Filipino historians trying to make sense of Spanish priests' diaries and ledgers: ...yes.
the fun tings is that Spaniards absolutely believe a group of 60 tercios who weren't present in this area defeated a 1000 Japanese samurai from the satsuma province! LOL
@@carlosgarzon8900 The fun thing is that you wont find a single historical font in spanish tht call them, either "tercios", or japanese samurai. In spanish histography, this is not even called "the battle of cagayan". It is called "the combats of cagayan"...You sound like the typical south american with a huge inferiorty complex. Sorry for you, keep trying.
@@carlosgarzon8900 Pasar, pasó, probablemente fue exagerado pero aún así se puede deducir que los hispánicos tenían la desventaja numérica pero la ventaja estratégica, aún así no voy a negar que Tercios vs Samurais piratas en una isla tropical suena a cuento hecho por un niño de 5 años
@@Usepe Un cuento de ciencia ficción pero que si esta bien escrito mas d uno nos compraríamos y leeríamos durante días jajaja. Imaginaos una historia ficticia en plan juego tronos en esa zona donde meten conquistadores, samuráis, tormentas y monstruos marinos, piratearía etc etc
@@Alex-mh1pj estoy de acuerdo, conquistadores vs. Samuráis piratas con una mezcla de monstruos marinos mitológicos asiaticos y occidentales suena muy prometedor y no dudaría 2 veces antes de comprarmelo
1:40 that's absolutely wrong. Magellan's mission was to get to the Molucas islands. It was after his death when Elcano decided to circumnavigate the world to return to Spain. This is a huge mistake.
I second that. It’s one of the few battles that remain in Filipino consciousness (at least in Manila) due to the commemoration of Our Lady of La Naval every year. (Background: It was promised to the Virgin that if the Spaniards won the battle against the numerically superior Dutch, they would honor her every year).
Don't forget the majority of the spanish force is made up of native filipinos. Europeans specificaly spanish tends to ignore the huge contribution of the native filipinos
I really love the variety and your uploads, they're amazing. I just wish you'd finish or carry on series that have been going on for months if not years.
Agree. Been a lot of series part 1s, without follow-up on series already started. Been waiting on finale to Hundred Years’ War for awhile now. That said love everything being done.
1:58 error. Everyone (except the uneducated) in Magellan’s time knew the world was round. What Magellan accomplished was that circumnavigating the globe was possible and record the coordinates of latitude and longitude relevant to the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) which divided Portuguese and Spanish overseas territories.
Actually Juan Sebastián el Cano was the first to circumnavigate the globe since Magallanes (The spanish nationaliced admiral) died in the midle of the tryp.
@@rodrigolaguna4476 Technically the first person to circumnavigate the globe was a slave that Magellan owned. He had been taken from the area near the Philippines to Portugal and had then served with Magellan on his journey.
@@latinEU It's a well documented fact and we know Magellan had his slave with him when he sailed. All we don't know is his name since it was never written down. You can look it up in a history book.
This is why the Philippines is distinct from its Asian neighbors... Geographically Asian, but culturally Hispanic... On one hand, we eat rice and value family. On the other hand, we value Christianity, eat flan and speak a little bit of Spanish...
@@jejfjaroszynski3496 Of course, the Tlaxcala were at first allies of the Kingdom of Castile and later part of the same kingdom and highly appreciated by the crown.
You should also see the Nossa Senhora da Graça Incident. A Portuguese Carrack,the famed "Black Ship" had a 4 day battle against thousands of Samurai and ended in a die hard last stand.
This video reminds when OffyD ( the narrator of this video) played a battle like this ( samurais vs conquistadors) at the end of his NLP series " Barbarian Masters".
I am here purely because Metatron made a rant video about this one and i want to see what the latest "European Army vs Japanese Army" drama is all about. Nice video btw.
Now this is epic history 101..! Who would've tought that someone will cover these kinds of interactions.. and the best part is that i dont have to search for it.. it popped up on my notification feeds..! Ty!
Please do the voyage of Ferdinand Magellan and the Battle of Mactan soon, K&G! Great work! EDIT: Sir Devin, the stress on Luzon is on the second syllable.
Thank you for Covering this wonderful Story. I am Filipino and I never know this. This never taught in our school. I hope you can make videos about the Philippines 😊❤🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭
Lmao, you can clearly watch the other videos on English History and see no bias in there. If you think that warning people that the accounts are second hand sources or that the writers may have been exaggerating things is “discredit”, that’s on you.
I think it's a good video. The whole 40 soldiers vs 1500 samurai is a myth that even wikipedia had it wrong. I'm also spanish and I love my history, but we don't have need for legends.
This topic was never discussed to us in in Highschool and in College here in the Philippines. THANK YOU FOR THIS Kings and Generals! This is why this channel is my favorite Channel, you discuss my favorite History topics such as Alexander the Great's campaign and Julius Caesar's, you also have some gems about my country's history that majority of the Filipinos don't know. Again, thank you and please keep up the amazing work
B/c legend has it, it was the most embarrassing defeat in Japan. By that, how well trained Samurai (who were mostly Ronins), were defeated by such a small group of Spaniards. It was almost like the Battle of Thermopolyae, only difference is, the small army wins and big army loses.
They don't teaches this in Filipino schools, they only teaches heroes like the Silang Siblings, the first contact with Lapu-Lapu and the Philippines Revolution starting from Rizal to Bonifacio. When I was in school, I didn't even know Manila was colonized by the British for short amount of time.
I never thought I'd hear anything ever made on this battle, much less from Kings and Generals! I remember first hearing about it in a discussion about whether pike squares were ever used against the Japanese in any way. At the time the only source I could find from this was an obscure website detailing the local history of Cagayan as a region, and then only as a footnote.
You guys suprise me everyday. Your team deserves the kind of applause like buttons cannot provide. Absolutely brilliant. KINGS AND GENERALS NEEDS TO BE PLAYED IN HISTORY CLASSES!
Regardless of the taunts in the comments from the band of bastards hating Spain, the feat of the Spanish soldiers is one of the most impressive that has ever existed.
I'm not much of a history person but I do enjoy watching/reading them. I must say, I wasn't expecting a Conquistador Vs Samurai topic, not even in games!
@@carlosgarzon8900 JAJAJAJAJA triste que vengan estos comentarios siempre de gente hispana, como les lavan la cabeza para odiar todo lo español... Carlos Garzón si te llamaras Tlaxia Tolkomu te diría bueno mira un indígena con motivos, pero tu? jajajajajajaj LAVADO DE CEREBRO!!
@@Alex-mh1pj el unico con lavado de cerebro eres tu, que te crees cuentos sin ningun valor historico que la unica base para dicho cuento de hadas son dos cartas totalmente contradictorias sin peso objetivo, alla cada quien con sus creencias... pero aqui no hay debate, yo soy ciencia tu eres Fe
@@carlosgarzon8900 Mira mira... no hables de lo que no tienes ni idea decir eso es como no darle crédito a ninguna parte de la historia porque un monje exageraba las cosas. Eres un tonto si te crees que esta batalla nunca ocurrió, otra cosa será el numero de contendientes y sus nacionalidades que por lo menos imagino que te llegará la cabeza para saber que para esos marinos eran la primera vez que veían ese tipo de hombres con esos rasgos para ellos serían todos iguales como los europeos para ellos. Ahora si tu te quieres engañar tu mismo.
woohh good job Kings and Generals !! i have red this in my Philippine History Book numerous times. This is the reason why I love your channel very detailed and nicely animated. Didn't expect you could cover this topic. By the way i'm a Filipino and I have watched numerous videos of Kings and Generals.
If possible, please make a documentary about the Dagohoy Rebellion in Bohol, Philippines. A revolt that lasted for 85 years and is considered to be the longest rebellion in Philippine History.
Kings and Generals, very, very impressive! The Spanish conquistador encountered the samurai on many occasions firstly in their fight against the Wako under Limahong in 1574 and 1575. The samurai also lent their martial services to the Spanish in many of their colonial affairs not only in the Philippines but also the general geographic area.
@@lucanic4328 Indeed, Nick. However there were Wako who were samurai that confronted the Spanish specifically in their fight against Limahong and samurai who “lent” their services to Spain in her interests in and around Las Felipinas. Pirates, of course, does not mean a samurai by means nor vice versa.
@@mythologic To be fair those were more likely to be just wako, mercenaries or marauders and again hard to tell if they were Japanese in the first place, especially given the usual ethnic composition of wako pirates, it would have been unlikely. Most Japanese Wako would have been active near Japan and they raided China and Korea. Samurai owned land, had court titles and wealth, and in the 1570s-90s were quite busy to deal with their own civil war. I know that some Japanese mercenaries were also used by the Dutch against the Spanish with great effect at Tidore. But again those were not Samurai as much as the Spanish involved in East Asia were not Tercios. They were Japanese but didn't own land nor court titles - hence they were mercenaries
Wow! Thank you K and G for sharing this little piece of history I never knew existed until watching the video. My mom was born and raised in Cagayan province where I also spent part of my childhood there, even swam in the Cagayan river myself countless times.
Finally, as a person who love a histories, i should say thank you I have been waiting for this channel to make this event. Absolutely love it Salaam from nusantara
Head to keeps.com/kings to get 50% off your first order of hair loss treatment!
the battle of fukuda bay and the nossa senhora de graça incident were similar stories as well
More Philippine Content ❤️
can you do the british invasion of Manila the forgotten invasion
Hello sir! I am so so glad that you mentioned my country in this channel. I truly hope that you will make more content like this. 👍
Great
You guys should make a Castilian War video. It has Indians, Malaysians, Somalis, Swahilis, Egyptians, Turks, and Arabs against Filipino, Aztecs, Incans, Borneans, and the Spanish. This also happened in 1578.
As there was no India or Malaysia then,partially disagreed & you should do more research before posting.
That war was epic! It's a multi national army that were fighting under the sultan of Brunei , the Spaniards took over the capital city of Brunei because of the betrayal of a rebel prince named sari lana or something , the sultan forces recreated into the jungles and then they regrouped their forces and attacked finally recapturing the capital , the Spanish fleeing and the sultans forces chased them to sabah.
The sultan army was made of malays indian arabs turks Somalis and turks
Unbelievable
@@anti-Russia-sigma Cut him some slack. Not everyone is a genius.
@@anti-Russia-sigma It's just a suggestion. If I actually listed the ethnic groups no one would know who they are and it would seem boring.
@@muhammadirfanjalaluddin1018 Castilian War. It's already on my original comment.
They say Samurai Pirates like that concept doesn't sound like the raddest thing a 13 year old boy could come out with.
the japense pirates were named wokou倭寇, sometimes their leaders are Chinese residential in Japan, for example Wang zhi,
If you're using terms like raddest, i take it you're no longer 13...lol...
Imagine Capt. Jack Sparrow but with two katanas (not because that is historically accurate but because Capt. Jack Sparrow is crazy), one tanegashima teppo, and speaking Japanese in his half-drunk accent 😂😂😂😂
@Marcelo Henrique Soares da Silva Against what "other Christians", troll ?
@Marcelo Henrique Soares da Silva They were Catholics. They did not attack other Catholics, you absolute troll
"This is the most ambitious crossover in history."
-History 10% of the time.
What about the time a Japanese Samurai fighting a Spanish Conquistador recorded by a Grandson of a Aztec Noblemen in Mexico
@@gamebawesome Did that really happen? Lol
@@reydavid12fh Yes lol
@@MiguelAlejandroVF OK do you know we're I can read about it? Cuz I typed in google Samurai vs Conquistador and all I got was anime stuff hahaha
Castilian War had Indians, Malaysians, Somalis, Swahilis, Egyptians, Turks, and Arabs against Filipino, Aztecs, Incas, Borneans, and the Spanish. And this happened in 1578.
'Avengers Endgame is the most ambitious crossover in history.'
Spanish Conquistadors and Samurais: Hold my cash......
Also Tlaxcala Indians, native Americans allied to Spain, who made out half of the crew.
if they were americans or people from england and not from spanish, there would be already 100 films about it. And history channel would be full of documentaries
@@zamirroa so push for more films (subtitled, please)
@@jejfjaroszynski3496that's the most fascinating, all were Spanish , it did not matter where you came from,if you were under the crown you were spanish. Viva España y sus Virreinatos.
@@zamirroa Plus Ultra!
Yes, this channel is slowly going over all the often ignored parts of history I've been excited to discover over the past years. Thank you. Love the stories of obscure Spanish expeditions in the 1500-1600s, hope you revisit more in the future.
Kinda feels like the lead up to a Nathan Drake story
WE need to know more about the golden age of spanish hegemony in europe, its history is almost like a fantasy.
The Legazpi Expedition of 1565-1571 to the Philippines is quite an interesting subject. They faced fierce resistance of the pre-hispanic Filipinos from present-day Manila, and also the first use of the "Divide et Impera (Divide and Conquer)" strategy, where Spaniards used the ethnic Visayans (Cebuanos, Ilonggos, etc.) for their conquest of Luzon.
This didnt happened. Its been debunked.its a hoax
@@leonard9624 what is the hoax?
I'm surprised that you cover the Battle of Cagayan that was rarely discussed in Philippine history classes even upto college level and frequently overshadowed by the Battle of Vigan.
I'm glad that you made a video about it!
and even I dont know the battle of vigan
To be fair.... This event is not that important to be discussed in general education...
I mean, it may show a glimpse on how pre-colonial and early-colonial Philippines interact with neighboring countries before.
I believe it's just adding filler that's not needed for the general population. Let's be real, history is interesting but it's boring too from time to time...
agreed, we read about Limahong in high school but this is the first time i learned about this battle...
@@visayanmissnanny2.076 it may looks like a filler in the Philippine history but it's very important to revisit it so that we can learn something from it for future scenarios.
Just an example, the Japanese might be defeated by the Spaniards during the Battle of Cagayan but centuries later, Cagayan was one of the 3 major landing areas in Northern Luzon chosen by the Imperial Japanese Military to conduct major amphibious landings that took place right after the Attack on Pearl Harbor during Dec. 1941
And if the bully above north became more aggressive and invades Taiwan forcefully, they will follow the same steps onced used by the Japanese during their Pacific Conquest.
@@paulsteaven Fair point! And good you mentioned the campaigns of 1941 and our recent issues
(Deleted & Edited: Actually scratch that, unless you wish to emphasize nationalism then that's a fair point. If not, the familiarity with the 1941 invasion is pretty much enough)
On behalf of all history teachers on the prowl for killer resources to help engage the kids and get them interested in history, thank you!
Just remember not to get lazy and use videos to often. Practice telling the story yourself. It will still engage the children you just can't suck at doing it.
This and Extra Credits are great for teaching kids and adults. Extra Credits is definitely perfect for kids because of the visuals and enthusiasm of the people who run the show.
Just avoid their videos on US history.
Though the title is misleading, because I'm pretty sure that Chinese-Japanese Waco Pirates are not Samurai!
@@nightlightabcd eeehh, some were, Though the correct term would be Ronin seeing as Samurai would have at least a job and a house even though many were as poor as peasants.. Most would definitely be the peasant class though.
I believe that spanish history is wildly underrated
It is. It is also hidden and demoted by Anglo influences.
@@htx92 It just baffles me how much they did and how little it is talked about
@@megax242 Yes I agree. The victors write history. Although in the case of the Spanish Empire it was mostly internal conflicts that led to its decline.
@@robertocb7911 Well said. Proud of our ancestors. From Roman times to the Reconquista to the present global family.
spain is probably the most important actor in european history from 1500-1700
Ah yes Philippines, the land of historical crossovers... This is going to be fun.
True something not mention the majority of spanish force was Mexican natives who were used by spaniards to conquer the Philippines.
@@xephir5767
Yet despite their blood running through our veins, those latinos refuse to accept us as hispanics.
@@eelchiong6709 Actually, Filipinos had resisted Hispanization simply by not dying en masse by the Diseases from the Spanish. 😅😅
Filipinos had adopted the Spanish Cultures, yes; however they dont Speak Spanish and very few Filipinos mixed with the Spaniards, due to the fact majority of the Population were only viewed as very cheap labor. Not to mention the ongoing uprisings and resistance from the populations in the Rural areas.
@@arami187
Unlike the Native Americans, the filipinos were just as resistant to Spanish deseases as the Spaniards themselves since they were not isolated like the Americans but in constant contact with foreign traders and were once part of both the Sri Vijayan and Madjapit empires.
Right, Spanish colonists rarely married filipinos, and only with the noble families when they do. But, they certainly had a lot of illegitimate children with the filipinas living and working in their haciendas. Even priests and friars were known to be womanizers.
@@eelchiong6709 it's only limited lol. More likely 4-13% in our genes have western European blood (haplogroup r1b ydna) according to many genetic research lab and our culture merely like 70% Hispanicized
20% in our language were derived from Spanish mixed with Malay, Sanskrit, english and hokkien-chinese. Better do alot of research
After the battle of Cagayan be like.
Spanish governor: Someone make a note of their bravery.
Sound so familiar 🤔
@@jcomandante6629 POTC 4, spanish admiral at the final battle
Pirates of the Caribbean 4 @@jcomandante6629
"Su Merced tomad nota de gentes aquellas muy bellicosas"
@@familiasotonunez5223 belicosas*
The fleet that conquered Phillipines sailed from México, most of the Spanish army were Tlaxcallans and Mexica allies, during 3 centuries The Phillipines was part of New Spain. Greetings for Spanish and Phillipino brothers from México
My family has lived in and around that region even before the Spanish colonization of the country. They’ve told tales about the español and natives fighting off pirates from Japan, China and even the Dutch. Along with tsunami waves hitting the coastal towns that originated from Japan.
Even though Ilocanos, Pangasinan, and Ibanag people traded with the pirates before Spanish arrived.
Tercio: "Usted ya está muerto!"
Samurai: "Nani?!"
FRANCISCO Traeme la pica.... La pica pesada.
Quote of the day
Omaewa mou shinderu
Rofl
¡¡¡PLVS VLTRA!!!
Good to see the Philippines on the channel
It's about time.
You can even see on the facial characteristics of modern Filipinos, the result of ages old crossover interaction among these cultures. From the East Asian pirate, to the Conquistador, to the native, the entire Filipino bloodline bares witness to their shared interaction. A rare gem of a find, K&G! Awesome work!
Orgy island lmao.
Makes sense. I live in NYC and I am often mistaken as Chinese, Japanese, Tibetan, Nepali, Korean, Vietnamese, Thai, Indonesian.
@@BergenDev No longer 7000+ as China keeps continuing occupying our lands illegally.
@@BergenDev all?
@@sirmiles1820 I'm sorry that they are under the mercy of the powerful, and power always corrupts.
Conquistadors vs. Samurai Pirates!? Throw in some robot dinosaurs and this will be everything I have ever wanted since I was 7 years old!
Unfortunately has the video tells they were no samurai there
@@theghosthero6173 not in this video, but later the japanese empire launch an invasion trying to remove the spanish from Philipines. This video shows only the first encounter between an european power and chinese/japanese "soldiers", not the onlyone
@@theghosthero6173 so the title was clickbait?
@@HexaDecimus yes, sadly. It's sad because they tried to dispel the myth of the "60 Spaniard destroying 1000 samurai" spread online but at the same time included it in the thumbnail, what most people see.
@@rodrigoibanezcastrillo2783 wait really the japanese empire launched an invasion trying to remove the spanish from the philipines
Mindanao was a particularly interesting place to trade. Sources mention Butuan (pronounced bu-TWAN), in modern-day Agusan del Norte, as a spot for gold. There were also spice trades between the Dutch and the sultanates in southwestern Mindanao. That could also be another interesting area to explore.
Mindanao and Mindoro were good sources of riches. However, misfortune also struck the Spaniards there, under Ruy López de Villalobos, under whom was one Andrés de Urdaneta, who was crucial to the Legazpi expedition, and discovered a trade route from the Philippines to Mexico, which started the Manila galleon trade, another interesting topic for a video.
Perhaps, Kings and Generals could also tackle the long battle of attrition between Spain and the Sultanates....
Sultan Kudarat's story is interesting
It's only in Tagalog so i have problems with understanding.
Butuan was one of the leading trading centres of the Philippine Archipelago from the 9th to 12th Centuries. Chinese Song Dynasty sources indicated that 3 envoy missions from Butuan on 1000s-1010s visiting the Song Court to get permission for direct trading with the Chinese instead of passing it to a third party kingdom, which is Champa in this case.
Another mention of Butuan is in Antonio Pigafetta's chronicles of the Magellan-Elcano Expedition is that when they arrived in the island of Limasawa in the Visayan Islands, they met its ruler, Rajah Kolambu/Colambu, who happened to be a brother of Rajah Awi of Butuan. This shows the relations of local chiefs in the archipelago were closely connected as far as Malaya and Indonesia.
There was also a type of boat discovered in Butuan by Filipino archaeologists, which is called Balangay/Balanghay. This same boat was mentioned in Pigafetta's chronicles, and the boat was a primarily used by most pre-Hispanic entities in the Philippines.
We are truly Ophir as stated in the Bible!
Nah just kidding! I'm not your crazy uncle! XD
@@visayanmissnanny2.076
You almost scared me, bruh. Lol
Never knew we had a battle like this in the northern part of Luzon
Hello to everyone watching from the Philippines.
I knew about it but i forgot about it
It's not surprising that few Filipinos knew about this battle since it is rarely tackled in Philippine history classes.
@@paulsteavenWe managed to tackle other battles like this though, not this one but the ones involving Chinese pirates, invasion attempts by the Portuguese, by the Dutch and cherry on top, the British invasion of Manila in the Seven Years War.
What bothers me that we didn't learn are what were those old seperate kingdom's in our country were before the Spanish came.
@@paulsteaven yeah, and I'm from Cagayan. They don't have this shit in our textbooks from school.
Thanks for the video featuring the Philippines!
Hope you guys can cover Philippine battles from 1896-1910. Thanks!
I hope so
Thank you, Kings and Generals, for featuring this lesser-known part of our history.
We hope, Assassin brother... 😁
@@jimpaoloabalde5427 I see, you're a man of culture as well.🤜🤛
@@ezioaltair2929 Nothing is true. Everything is permitted.
The Battle of Cagayan sounds like the perfect setting for an open world PS5 exclusive from Sucker Punch.
It definitely does. Imagine the island hopping exploration similar to odyssey or ac black flag. But in a region and time period no other game franchise has I've ever heard of has ever touched. And of course with the combat mechanics of Ghost of Tsushima, it would be amazing.
Cagayan is a wack Tropical hellscape, perfect for Stealth
Ok boi
"Proving beyond any doubt that the Earth is round"
Flat Earthers: unsubscribe
Flat earthers: ...But, they just sailed in a big circle over a map. And, the rest of the pirates sailed toward the edge of flat earth, fell, and got eaten by leviathans! 😂😂😂
I really like how it's impossible to believe in gravity and flat earth. BUT it is compl;etely believable in all the water staying on top, and none of the dirt, falling off the bottom into space.
@Super.Chuck none of that really matters, the real conclusive proof that the Earth is not flat is the fact that cats have not knocked everything off of it by now. anyone who has ever owned a cat knows that they would have done so just to be jerks if the Earth was flat.
@@SuperChuckRaney I have seen flat earthers saying that the artic and antartic serve like big walls at the edges of earth, that's why the water doesn't fall, seriously. They are really that stupid
What's funny is that sentence irritated me but for the opposite reason. It was proven almost 2000 years before the voyage.
I’m Filipino and I didn’t even know about this. This wasn’t taught in our history class. Great job Kings and Generals.
this is not an elementary or high school topic discussion this is a self research agenda since no accurate accounts & will not be taught at schools Spanish kids do the same they don't know even chinese japanese lol.
Learning should be a life long pursuit. What they teach in school is only the tip of the iceberg, sometimes are even wrong. That's why we need to read
@@gregorjerman973 We don't get much history classes in Spain at school, only basic stuff (neolithic, bronze age, greece, rome) and no battles at all.
@@veewsol7078 you'd be surprised to know that Spain is one of the evil empires in history it is even in youtube. And Spain censors it's past like Japan and Russia and US.
@@gregorjerman973 Not really, for the past 300 years all history taught in Spain has been the version of history promoted by the enemies of Spain for a simple reason that I don't expect you to know and I don't are enough to explain.
You are clearly an ignorant and it's not my duty to fix that.
A native from Cagayan here, we appreciate that our history is slowly being recognized internationally
I've also read that during their conflicts vs the Wako, the pirates are actually crazy enough to charge a tercio (Spanish pike formation) and grab or wrestle their pikes from their soldiers so the Spaniards had to actually put oil on the shaft near the pikehead for that.
@Marcelo Henrique Soares da Silva They disembarked a lot
Wouldn't been able since the second and fourth row of a Tercio usually had either Crossbows and Arquebusiers depending on the time...so getting close is the stupidest thing you could do...if they were early tercio you also would have rodeleros crouching and cutting their tendons from underneath the pikes.
Putting oil on the end of the pike's shafts was standard setting before a battle, and i think cleaning it was important to march with them, though i am not sure about the later.
this didn't happened... go a read some manga weebo
there were not Tercios at Flipines, nor at America. Only in Europe
The history of Juan Pablo de Carrión is incredibly impressive, to begin with, he had exactly 69 years at the time of the events. His one is a story of continuous failure. Born in Valladolid in 1513, he had emigrated to New Spain (Mexico) in search of fortune and had taken part in previous expeditions to the Philippines which ended in absolute disaster, the last one making him return to Spain with only two friends left. He settled down in Toledo as treasurer of the Archbishop, and married in 1559 to a woman called María De Salcedo y Sotomayor.
(Continues in replies)
Strangely, when the Archbishop died he left his family and returned to America, risking his very comfortable life for an uncertain future. There he served as a boat engineer and disgracefully for him started a marital life with another woman: a local who went for the name of Leonor Suárez de Figueroa. He also attempted to join Legazpi's and Urdaneta's expedition to the Philippines, but his bad relationship with the latter threw away his attempt. This was the very successful expedition which established the desired "tornaviaje", a safe route for merchants to cross the Pacific in both directions.
Meanwhile the Spanish Inquisition had opened a case out of Carrión's second marriage in 1566 with Leonor, which resulted very merciful for him because he managed to avoid being condemned to row in galleys as well as public humiliation, but had his assets seized and was forced to return with his first wife. As he was jailed again in 1574, he applied for a destination in the Philippines, perhaps to put another ocean between the Inquisition and him. But being finally in Legazpi's expedition, he discovered things weren't going as swiftly as previously, because the pirates had settled in Luzon and were very well equipped in the European stile thanks to Portuguese merchants.
Apparently, when he was sent to confront the pirates it was a bit sketchy, because it was well known they were massively outnumbered, and he had no relevant military history or experience despite being a "Fleet General". But he departed with a half Spanish, half Tlaxcala (allied native Americans) crew. The only thing that I would say they missed is that Tai-Fusa's pirates were armed with hooks to catch the European spears, but being Carrion of old hand, he had previously ordered to smear the pikes in oil so this couldn't happen.
In any case pretty good video, but I missed some epic animations for such an epic story.
@@Jayako12 I do not understand how the US is going to go 1 century before it still existed
I’ll be intrigued if K&G does the British invasion of Manila.
...or the Dutch attempt in 1646...
YES !!!!
Thanks to that short ocupation, they founded the Maps of Australia and NZ coast so they could "discover" it.
*not British its ENGLISH
End of the 7 years war. 🤟
Longtime Filipino subscriber here, thank you so much K and G for covering this battle!
Amen indeed.
If you are interested in more Spanish epic battles in the area you should definetively read about the "Siege of Baler (1898-1899)" 50 Spanish soldiers held a church against the filipinos for almost a year surrounded and outnumbered 20 to 1 in the middle of the US-Spanish War. They even continued fighting for 6 months after the war ended. The survivors were famous in Spain and known as "Los últimos de Filipinas (The last ones of the Phillipines)"
I wish to warch a K&G video about that hahaha
Theres a movie about that on Netflix
That's my hometown lol
Thats nothing, look up the Dagohoy Rebellion
@@gavriloprincip9634 It was shown as well in an episode of El Ministerio Del Tiempo if I'm correct. I watched it when it was still with Netflix.
Back in baler there's also an event called the Philippines spanish friendship day which was signed by commonwealth president and fellow townsmen Manuel Quezon and the church that you mentioned, the church of baler is one of the most popular tourist spot in my hometown, sadly can't return there now cuz of pandemic
Hello, fantastic content as always. Just a small constructive correction regarding the title: "Conquistador" is singular, it's plural in Spanish is "conquistadores" with the extra e. In case you want to include it in the title.
Keep up the good work!
Correcto.
Consquistador is its own word in English language, that's why the plural of the word is Consquistadors.
POV:
You are capturing the black ship in Shogun II.
Oh god, don't remind me.
Darn hell that one. Absolutely massacered my woodplank fleets
Always go for it as the Otomo
@@Kokozaftran the trick is get nanban trade ships about 2 or three with a supporting fleet full of traditional ship get the black ship to target them one nanban trade ship will board the black one while the others damage it reducing it's crew
Would love K&G to do more naval battles of the Early Modern Period. This was an excellent part of history!
A million thanks to covering these lesser know topics! This channel is a gold mine of history!
I’m from Cagayan, Philippines myself and I never knew this part of our history. It was never thought. We only heard of a naval battle at the mouth of the Cagayan River and that was it. This could also be a reason why we physically and closely looked like Chinese or Japanese than out Malay brothers because we have ancestors from these groups. Cagayan is often historically dismissed as we assumed that most of the Philippine History happened in the capital Manila, and our history only began when the Spanish came. This is a helpful insight and I hope this channel will make more lesser known historical videos.
This is pretty much an Age of Empires II 2v2 skirmish battle featuring Spanish and Malay vs Japanese and Chinese
Ok
now im playing aoe all day lol
Samurai have An attack bonus VS unique units so they should have won!
@@barthoekstra6760 Only if they can close the distance vs the Conquistadors!
Spanish themed music always fills me with such great vigor and pride!
iViva España!
The old blood in your heart warms ... congratulations. Greetings from Spain.
Viva las yslas Filipinas1
This is why I love your content gentlemen, a completely obscure and BADASS event I never thought would be covered in such detail by anyone EVER, except you guys.
Good work👍
And this isn't an anime why?
Edit: Yeah, you could make 13 episodes based of this.
Sadly japanese mostly avoid historical settings ar always throw some supernatural bisho ninjas into it. I remember italian cartoon adaptation of Sandokan from my childhood with tigers sailing medieval cogs in XIX century on coast of Borneo. Only animation about asian piracy I got. :
Hmmm, Isn't Bleach about japanese Shinigamis vs spanish Hollows?🤔🤔🤔
@@washingtonjunior1994 xDD actually laughed to that
Cause they lost.
Because Japanese were defeated
The title should be: "Samurai Pirates didn't expect the Spanish Inquisition"
User name checks out
La Inquisición española fue mucho más suave que la Inquisición alemana. La leyenda negra contra España ha sido muy efectiva.
Politics aside, the Spanish Conquistadors were really badasses.
then the americans came and kick their asses😄
@@bombot8672 the us didnt even exist when the conquistadors were around, in fact half of the us was part of Spain at the time
@@bombot8672 I mean, Spain help Americans in their Independence war
Edit: Then we can say that America “betrayed” Spain in the Cuban Independence war, but that was in the late 18s
Most of the forces were actually composed of Kapampangans (a Filipino tribe) and Native American slave mercenaries. Only a few were European Spanish
@@bmona7550 you are right, the spanish have the audacity to take the credit of the kapampangans, same people ( and the majority ) they used to fight against the dutch-spanish war in manila and other rebellions back at the early colonialization.
The Philippines in the 16th century was just Deadliest Warrior irl. Hope you guys also check out the Battle of Manila in 1574 which was another Conquistadors vs Wako battle, probably the biggest one. The Chinese warlord Limahong led 4,000 Wako in an attempt to take Manila for himself, but was defeated by a garrison of 300 Spanish and 300 Filipino soldiers. After his defeat, he was chased around the country by the Spanish for a year before he gave up and left to pirate elsewhere.
The artwork, with the ink-painting style, is amazing.
Conquistador: sir, I don't think the pirate are from Japan only...
Captain: we are the Spanish in 1582 and Conquistadors.... Half of the Wokou could be polar bears and I would still call them Japanese.
in fact, some wokou's leaders are Chinese residential in Japan, for example Wang Zhi,
Yup. Just like the way they collectively called the various islamic and native tribes of Mindanao as "Moros" after their own Andalusian Moors during yhe reconquista of southern Iberia.
@@BaktasMIntrasWala
Yeah, Iberian powers pretty much called everyone who wasn't a Christian a "Moor".
😂😂😂.
Remember these are the same Spanish that continued to call native Americans "Indians" even though they knew they weren't from India...they literally met people from India...they just didn't care
¡Gracias!
Please, someday I would be happy to hear you talk about the attacks on the Philippines perpetrated by European potences during the 3 century period of Imperial presence.
First Philippine History cover. Thank you Kings and Generals.
not a single land does not have a spanish tomb, truly amazing video. Spanish history from the medieval age until the modern age is truly an adventure resembling more fantasy than history
Kings and Generals: the priest's accounts seem widely exaggerated...
Filipino historians trying to make sense of Spanish priests' diaries and ledgers: ...yes.
the fun tings is that Spaniards absolutely believe a group of 60 tercios who weren't present in this area defeated a 1000 Japanese samurai from the satsuma province! LOL
@@carlosgarzon8900 The fun thing is that you wont find a single historical font in spanish tht call them, either "tercios", or japanese samurai. In spanish histography, this is not even called "the battle of cagayan". It is called "the combats of cagayan"...You sound like the typical south american with a huge inferiorty complex. Sorry for you, keep trying.
Sea la gloriosa bandera "aspa de Borgoña" ensalsada con estás legendarias historias ⚔️
viste el video? esto no tiene nada de glorioso, si es pura ficcion
@@carlosgarzon8900 Pasar, pasó, probablemente fue exagerado pero aún así se puede deducir que los hispánicos tenían la desventaja numérica pero la ventaja estratégica, aún así no voy a negar que Tercios vs Samurais piratas en una isla tropical suena a cuento hecho por un niño de 5 años
@@Usepe Un cuento de ciencia ficción pero que si esta bien escrito mas d uno nos compraríamos y leeríamos durante días jajaja.
Imaginaos una historia ficticia en plan juego tronos en esa zona donde meten conquistadores, samuráis, tormentas y monstruos marinos, piratearía etc etc
@@Alex-mh1pj estoy de acuerdo, conquistadores vs. Samuráis piratas con una mezcla de monstruos marinos mitológicos asiaticos y occidentales suena muy prometedor y no dudaría 2 veces antes de comprarmelo
1:40 that's absolutely wrong. Magellan's mission was to get to the Molucas islands. It was after his death when Elcano decided to circumnavigate the world to return to Spain. This is a huge mistake.
Hoping you could cover the Battle of La Naval de Manila.
The Dutch against the Spanish in a series of naval battles.
I second that. It’s one of the few battles that remain in Filipino consciousness (at least in Manila) due to the commemoration of Our Lady of La Naval every year. (Background: It was promised to the Virgin that if the Spaniards won the battle against the numerically superior Dutch, they would honor her every year).
Yeah this is the thing you need to do. There was an incursion into the harbor to try and take Cavite and Manilla in 1600 and I think again in 1630.
The Most Holy Theotokos had saved Manila from the Calvinists.
What about the second Battle of Manila against Li Ma Hon?
Indeed. The numerical and superior Dutch were absolutely fucked over by just some old merchant ships converted into a warship
*Is Filipino
*Sees Spanish Conquistadors, Chinese and Japanese pirate, and Cagayan in the title
Me: "What the hell happened back then?!?"
Wtf did a time traveler do to get a timeline like this
Thank you for this, I'll share this in my Philippine History classes. ;)
Don't forget the majority of the spanish force is made up of native filipinos. Europeans specificaly spanish tends to ignore the huge contribution of the native filipinos
I really love the variety and your uploads, they're amazing. I just wish you'd finish or carry on series that have been going on for months if not years.
Agree. Been a lot of series part 1s, without follow-up on series already started. Been waiting on finale to Hundred Years’ War for awhile now. That said love everything being done.
@@Anon-og2lw
I agree too mate, I'm not criticising them as I love their work and appreciate it very much. I'd just like some closure on some things.
1:58 error. Everyone (except the uneducated) in Magellan’s time knew the world was round. What Magellan accomplished was that circumnavigating the globe was possible and record the coordinates of latitude and longitude relevant to the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) which divided Portuguese and Spanish overseas territories.
Actually Juan Sebastián el Cano was the first to circumnavigate the globe since Magallanes (The spanish nationaliced admiral) died in the midle of the tryp.
@@rodrigolaguna4476 it’s Magalhaes. He was Portuguese.
@@rodrigolaguna4476 Technically the first person to circumnavigate the globe was a slave that Magellan owned. He had been taken from the area near the Philippines to Portugal and had then served with Magellan on his journey.
@Mbern45 Making up as you go along.
@@latinEU It's a well documented fact and we know Magellan had his slave with him when he sailed. All we don't know is his name since it was never written down. You can look it up in a history book.
This is why the Philippines is distinct from its Asian neighbors... Geographically Asian, but culturally Hispanic... On one hand, we eat rice and value family. On the other hand, we value Christianity, eat flan and speak a little bit of Spanish...
The Philippines is basically a carribbean nation swept into asia.
Leche flan 👍
Filipinos feel like Hispanics when interacting with them. In my experience they’re the one Asian group hispanic feel very comfortable around
Wdym? Latin society highly values the family institution.
Culturally "Hispanic"... we don't even speak Spanish.
The Ronin: the way of the samurai is impenetrable.
The Conquistadors: ¿Where the Asian womans?
in manila
"Let me put a bit of this spanish steel though your way and let test that estatement"
From a meme lmao
@@themancantfindaname7589 >implying sex tourism is good
Loser.
Yes Spain Chad
I'm from Cagayan and I heard about this battle but not as detailed as this. Thanks!
Conquistadors fighting samurai pirates! You have my attention Kings
And also native Americans, the Tlaxcala Indians made out half of the Spanish crew.
there weren't, there are not Samurai pirates...
@@jejfjaroszynski3496 Of course, the Tlaxcala were at first allies of the Kingdom of Castile and later part of the same kingdom and highly appreciated by the crown.
@@carlosgarzon8900 If there were ... that's a fact. What cannot be known is the quantity.
Great content !
Greetings from Philippines 😍
I like hearing about the Philippines. My wife is from the island next to Cebu.
You should also see the Nossa Senhora da Graça Incident.
A Portuguese Carrack,the famed "Black Ship" had a 4 day battle against thousands of Samurai and ended in a die hard last stand.
I'm from the Philippines but now I found out, thank you very much for the knowledge.
this is very informative
This video reminds when OffyD ( the narrator of this video) played a battle like this ( samurais vs conquistadors) at the end of his NLP series " Barbarian Masters".
Hi, I’m from the Philippines and I can’t believe that this channel noticed this forgotten battle.
I am here purely because Metatron made a rant video about this one and i want to see what the latest "European Army vs Japanese Army" drama is all about. Nice video btw.
Now this is epic history 101..! Who would've tought that someone will cover these kinds of interactions.. and the best part is that i dont have to search for it.. it popped up on my notification feeds..! Ty!
Please do the voyage of Ferdinand Magellan and the Battle of Mactan soon, K&G! Great work!
EDIT: Sir Devin, the stress on Luzon is on the second syllable.
*Magalhães not Magallanes or Magellan
@@luistroops3341 Ferdinand Magellan in English, Fernando Magallanes in Spanish. But yes, it should be Fernao Magalhaes (sp?) because he is Portuguese.
Fun fact:
Rajah Humabon tried to use Magellan to kill Lapu-Lapu. When Magellan was offed by the latter, Rajah Humabon made peace with him.
The Battle of Mactan isn't even that big. I prefer the Moro rebellion in Mindanao during the Spanish occupation or the Battle of Yultong.
@@saywhatnow2173 Blame the nationalists who tend to blow the Battle of Mactan way out of proportion.
Thank you for Covering this wonderful Story. I am Filipino and I never know this. This never taught in our school. I hope you can make videos about the Philippines 😊❤🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭
Don't exist land without a spanish tomb brother. #HispanicPride
Spain also hired christian samurais who were banushed from japan as mercenaries. They defended manila when china tried to conquer philippines.
Agreed. Im a Spaniard and was always curious about it
@@trentalpha7749 yeah, They help defend our country from Chinese Navy led by General Lemahong (according to our books he was a pirate)
how about ninoy being a hero.
I make a sugestión for you: the story of the Chinese pirate Limahon and the battle of Manila (1574).
We know it takes a lot of time and dedication towards these videos. Brilliant video. Love from Sri Lanka 🇱🇰🤝🏴.
As a Filipino I really appreciate it that you made a video like this and I hope that you do more.
Thank you kings & general for featuring this vedeo love from philippines🇵🇭
oh yeah, finally a documentary related to history of my country the Philippines 👍😀
Finally, a video on my country! We need more of this.
I love how he tries to discredit everything against the Spanish, if they were English he would surely praise them and not try to deny any legend
Lmao, you can clearly watch the other videos on English History and see no bias in there.
If you think that warning people that the accounts are second hand sources or that the writers may have been exaggerating things is “discredit”, that’s on you.
I think it's a good video. The whole 40 soldiers vs 1500 samurai is a myth that even wikipedia had it wrong. I'm also spanish and I love my history, but we don't have need for legends.
This topic was never discussed to us in in Highschool and in College here in the Philippines.
THANK YOU FOR THIS Kings and Generals!
This is why this channel is my favorite Channel, you discuss my favorite History topics such as Alexander the Great's campaign and Julius Caesar's, you also have some gems about my country's history that majority of the Filipinos don't know. Again, thank you and please keep up the amazing work
I read this from Wikipedia before, and wondered why is this history not being told
Mostly because Philippine history class focuses way more about Rizal and the KKK.
It is often overshadowed by the Battle of Vigan which was against the Spanish Conquistadors plus their native allies vs. the Kingdom of Vigan.
@@donpula6349 Right on.
B/c legend has it, it was the most embarrassing defeat in Japan. By that, how well trained Samurai (who were mostly Ronins), were defeated by such a small group of Spaniards. It was almost like the Battle of Thermopolyae, only difference is, the small army wins and big army loses.
Mostly because the Yanks don't want us to look at Pre colonial Philippines because it was so dope we would wanna learn Spanish rather than English.
They don't teaches this in Filipino schools, they only teaches heroes like the Silang Siblings, the first contact with Lapu-Lapu and the Philippines Revolution starting from Rizal to Bonifacio. When I was in school, I didn't even know Manila was colonized by the British for short amount of time.
I never thought I'd hear anything ever made on this battle, much less from Kings and Generals!
I remember first hearing about it in a discussion about whether pike squares were ever used against the Japanese in any way. At the time the only source I could find from this was an obscure website detailing the local history of Cagayan as a region, and then only as a footnote.
You guys suprise me everyday. Your team deserves the kind of applause like buttons cannot provide. Absolutely brilliant. KINGS AND GENERALS NEEDS TO BE PLAYED IN HISTORY CLASSES!
Regardless of the taunts in the comments from the band of bastards hating Spain, the feat of the Spanish soldiers is one of the most impressive that has ever existed.
I'm not much of a history person but I do enjoy watching/reading them. I must say, I wasn't expecting a Conquistador Vs Samurai topic, not even in games!
"Sobre un mundo cobarde y avaro,
sin justicia, belleza ni Dios,
imponemos nosotros la garra
del Imperio solar español..."
orgulloso por una ascaramuza contra unos sucios y hambientos piratas filipinos que todo indica nunca ocurrio, sigue soñando con tu imperio muerto
@@carlosgarzon8900 Es un escrito perfecto para ardidos como tú :)
@@carlosgarzon8900 JAJAJAJAJA triste que vengan estos comentarios siempre de gente hispana, como les lavan la cabeza para odiar todo lo español... Carlos Garzón si te llamaras Tlaxia Tolkomu te diría bueno mira un indígena con motivos, pero tu? jajajajajajaj LAVADO DE CEREBRO!!
@@Alex-mh1pj el unico con lavado de cerebro eres tu, que te crees cuentos sin ningun valor historico que la unica base para dicho cuento de hadas son dos cartas totalmente contradictorias sin peso objetivo, alla cada quien con sus creencias... pero aqui no hay debate, yo soy ciencia tu eres Fe
@@carlosgarzon8900 Mira mira... no hables de lo que no tienes ni idea decir eso es como no darle crédito a ninguna parte de la historia porque un monje exageraba las cosas. Eres un tonto si te crees que esta batalla nunca ocurrió, otra cosa será el numero de contendientes y sus nacionalidades que por lo menos imagino que te llegará la cabeza para saber que para esos marinos eran la primera vez que veían ese tipo de hombres con esos rasgos para ellos serían todos iguales como los europeos para ellos. Ahora si tu te quieres engañar tu mismo.
woohh good job Kings and Generals !! i have red this in my Philippine History Book numerous times. This is the reason why I love your channel very detailed and nicely animated. Didn't expect you could cover this topic. By the way i'm a Filipino and I have watched numerous videos of Kings and Generals.
Damn never expected this.
No one expects the Spanish Inquisition
Love your compilations
@@Jayako12 Thanks man!
I was wondering how badly you'd pronounce Cagayan lol. At any rate, I'm glad to see some Philippines related history on the channel. Good stuff.
But he misspelled Aparri.
If possible, please make a documentary about the Dagohoy Rebellion in Bohol, Philippines. A revolt that lasted for 85 years and is considered to be the longest rebellion in Philippine History.
That is more boring.
@@singkilfilipinas5574 Why?
THANK YOU FOR THIS
Kings and Generals, very, very impressive! The Spanish conquistador encountered the samurai on many occasions firstly in their fight against the Wako under Limahong in 1574 and 1575. The samurai also lent their martial services to the Spanish in many of their colonial affairs not only in the Philippines but also the general geographic area.
Japanese and samurai are not sinonymous, neither pirates nor samurai
@@lucanic4328 Indeed, Nick. However there were Wako who were samurai that confronted the Spanish specifically in their fight against Limahong and samurai who “lent” their services to Spain in her interests in and around Las Felipinas. Pirates, of course, does not mean a samurai by means nor vice versa.
@@mythologic To be fair those were more likely to be just wako, mercenaries or marauders and again hard to tell if they were Japanese in the first place, especially given the usual ethnic composition of wako pirates, it would have been unlikely. Most Japanese Wako would have been active near Japan and they raided China and Korea.
Samurai owned land, had court titles and wealth, and in the 1570s-90s were quite busy to deal with their own civil war. I know that some Japanese mercenaries were also used by the Dutch against the Spanish with great effect at Tidore.
But again those were not Samurai as much as the Spanish involved in East Asia were not Tercios.
They were Japanese but didn't own land nor court titles - hence they were mercenaries
Mentioned in novel Strong Roads A Spanish Shipwreck Survivor in Ancient Hawaii ... Looking forward to video
You have to admire the Spanish 16th century bureaucracy, that resulted in the letters being filed and retained.
That Castilian Ceceo pronunciation of the letter Z in Lopez de Legazpi, nice attention to detail
It is not "ceceo", it is the correct way to pronounce the "Z" in. Castilian, if you pronounce the Z as an S you are the one who "sesea".
"con el alma unida bajo el mismo credo... nunca temeré si va en columna el Tercio"
Wow! Thank you K and G for sharing this little piece of history I never knew existed until watching the video. My mom was born and raised in Cagayan province where I also spent part of my childhood there, even swam in the Cagayan river myself countless times.
There is an Spanish comic about this. I heard it had some success.
Name pls
Espadas del Fin del Mundo
Finally, as a person who love a histories, i should say thank you
I have been waiting for this channel to make this event. Absolutely love it
Salaam from nusantara
Y'all should cover Battle of Shimonoseki Straits in 1863 between Japan and the USA!!!
Awesome presentation!