For those who are confused about different flags appearing in this video, it's because I'm trying to improve the accuracy of each video I make over time. There are certain flags from my previous videos that I thought to be accurate at the time I made them. The flags of the Ming Dynasty and the Mongol Empire are a couple of examples. For more information, please read the description. In particular, I noticed some people are confused about why the blue Mongol flag from past videos isn't here, so I explained why it looks different here: th-cam.com/users/postUgkxvoy7tCctEFazeZum9FLEY97MZREqtdmt
I think it is time those five Asian regions unify together as new countries as examples 1. West Asia unified as United Middle Eastern Union 2. Central Asia unified as United Stanistan minus Pakistan 3. South Asia unified as Greater United India 4. East Asia unified as United East Asian Union 5. Southeast Asia unified United ASEAN.
@@asdfghjk-xh9jl Central Asia? Russia? (Not Siberia) Afghanistan? Northern India? Manchuria? They all had kingdoms that were powerful which mongols either invaded and took or fought against and failed
Many people forget that the concept of "national flag" appeared very late, in the 18-19 centuries. Even Austria-Hungary never had a single national flag. So for the most part, the flags shown in the video are the personal standards of the rulers, small military banners or a rare mention in the sources.
@@Godzilla_kingofthemonsters It actually isn't a real flag, but rather a type of Mongol/Turkic banner called a 'Tug'. Since the Mongol Empire never had an official flag, the Tug has been used instead to represent the empire.
This is the banner of the Russian Tsardom. The first Russian flag appeared in 1668. It is not yet known what it looked like. The most popular proposal is today's tricolor of Russia, only with a blue stripe in the center, and also on the right the tricolor is turned the other way.
Kingdom of Kinda Article Talk Language Watch Edit The Kingdom of Kinda (Arabic: كِنْدَة الملوك, romanized: Kindat al-Mulūk, lit. 'Royal Kinda') also called the Kindite kingdom, refers to the rule of the nomadic Arab tribes of the Ma'add confederation in north and central Arabia by the Banu Akil al-Murar, a family of the South Arabian tribe of Kinda, in c. 450 - c. 550 CE. The Kinda did not belong to the Ma'add and their rule over them was likely at the confederation's initiative and engineered by the Kinda's South Arabian patron, the Himyarite Kingdom. The tribes may have sought a prominent, non-involved leader to bring stability to the Ma'add during a period of constant feuding among its constituents. Kingdom of Kinda [كِنْدَة الملوك] Error: {{Lang}}: invalid parameter: |3= (help) c. 450 CE-c. 550 CE Map showing approximate extent of the Kingdom of Kinda, c. 500 CE Map showing approximate extent of the Kingdom of Kinda, c. 500 CE Capital Ghamr Dhi KindaBatn AqilQaryat al-FawHajaral-Mushaqqar Common languages Arabic Religion Christianity, Arabian polytheism Demonym(s) Kindites Government Monarchy History • Established c. 450 CE • Disestablished c. 550 CE Today part of Saudi Arabia The roughly century-long rule of the Kinda was the first known nomadic Arab monarchy and the first attempt by the tribes to regulate their affairs in a centralized manner. The Kindite kingdom presaged the centralization movement under Islam in the early 7th century. Likely influenced by the sedentary civilization of Himyar, the Kindite monarchs ruled their domains from urban settlements. The rule of the kingdom's founder Hujr Akil al-Murar was characterized by domestic peace. He was succeeded by his sons Amr al-Maqsur and Mu'awiya al-Jawn, who ruled over Najd and the Yamama, respectively. The tribes of the Rabi'a faction revolted and likely killed Amr. His son and successor al-Harith is the first Kindite king attested in contemporary Byzantine sources. His sons' assaults on the Byzantine frontier provinces in the Levant likely precipitated the Byzantines' establishment of an alliance with the Kinda to serve as tribal federates of the empire, alongside the Ghassanids, in 502. After al-Harith's death, his four sons, each ruling over a different grouping of tribes within the Ma'add confederation, became absorbed in their constituents' blood feuds, greatly weakening the kingdom in Najd. The Kindite kings in the Yamama similarly became entangled in conflicts between their subject tribes. Several Kindite kings in Najd and the Yamama were slain in the internecine fighting. The heavy losses and their fraying control over the tribes prompted the Kinda's abandonment of their kingdom and return to the Hadramawt. There, many of their tribesmen had remained and controlled parts of the region. Several Kindites attained power and influence in the Caliphate, the Islamic empire established after the Islamic prophet Muhammad's death in 632. However, these Kindites hailed from different branches of the tribe, the Banu Akil al-Murar having lost their leadership role. Contents History edit Establishment edit Family tree of the Banu Akil al-Murar, the Kindite ruling house of the Ma'add confederation in central Arabia and its constituent tribes between c. 450 and c. 550. The Kinda tribe originally had their abode in South Arabia, possibly in Hadramawt, where they served as nomad auxiliaries for the armies of the Sabaean and Himyarite kings.[1] Himyar gained full control over Saba and the other South Arabian kingdoms in the late 3rd century CE. By at least the mid-4th century they were launching campaigns into central, eastern and northeastern Arabia against the tribes or confederations of Ma'add, Iyad, Murad and Abd al-Qays.[2] An inscription from the late 5th century mentions that the Himyarite king Abikarib As'ad traveled to the "land of Ma'add on the occasion of the establishment of certain of their tribes".[2] The medieval Arabic literary works of al-Isfahani and Ibn Habib similarly mention that Abikarib campaigned in central Arabia and established the Kindite chief Hujr over Ma'add.[2] In this respect, the Kinda's relationship with Himyar are comparable to the Arab client kingdoms of the Sasanian and Byzantine empires, namely the Lakhmids of lower Mesopotamia and the Ghassanids of the Syrian steppe, respectively. All three Arab kingdoms vied with each other for preeminence in northern Arabia.[3] Medieval Arabic literature indicates the subordination of the nomadic tribes of the Ma'add to Kindite rule was the initiative of the Ma'add, especially its Bakr ibn Wa'il division, to bring order to its constantly feuding constituent tribes. Accordingly, the Bakr sent envoys to the king of Himyar, inviting him to be their king. Instead, the king delegated the role to Hujr for unclear reasons.[4] The historian Mohammed A. Bamyeh proposes that the sedentary Himyarite king, not wanting the burden of directly ruling the warring nomadic tribes of the vast desert expanses, resolved to have his dependent, the nomadic Kindite Hujr, effectively rule on Himyar's behalf. Himyarite attempts to extend their commercial interests into the region may have been related to the introduction of Kindite rule, though Bamyeh holds there is scant evidence such economic designs ever took shape. Rather than an economic arrangement, the Kindite leadership of Ma'add was a political pact between the warring tribes on the one hand and the Himyar-sponsored Kinda on the other. Contributing factors to the Kinda's leadership were the tribe's hitherto neutrality in the inter-tribal feuds of Arabia and their significant numbers, which could bolster their kingship in the expansive region of northern and central Arabia.[5] Hujr became the founder of the Kinda's royal household, the Banu Akil al-Murar, so-called after Hujr's nickname Akil al-Murar (lit. 'the one who eats bitter herbs').[6][7] In an inscription in South Arabian script, he styled himself "king of Kinda".[2] While the house of Akil al-Murar stemmed from the Banu Mu'awiya, one of the three main divisions of the Kinda, most of the tribesmen who accompanied him belonged to the Sakun division.[8] Hujr died of old age in the Kindite settlement of Batn Aqil, after a lengthy, stable reign, according to the Arabic sources.[9] His eldest son, Amr al-Maqsur, succeeded his father as head of the Ma'add in the Najd (northern central Arabia), while his younger son Mu'awiya al-Jawn, founder of the Banu al-Jawn house, ruled over the confederation in the Yamama (southern central Arabia).[6] Amr was known as al-Maqsur ('the limited one') because he was not able to expand the limits of his father's domain.[10] The Arabic traditions note that his authority was rejected by the Rabi'a tribes, which included the Bakr and Taghlib among others and whose territory was in the northern parts of Arabia leading to Mesopotamia. Around this time, in the late 5th century, the Rabi'a chief Kulayb had been launching successful assaults against the South Arabians. Amr received military support from Himyar to enforce his rule, but to no avail. His authority was likely confined to the southern parts of the Najd, closer to Himyar. Amr was killed, most likely in a battle against the Rabi'a.[11] Reign of al-Harith edit Relations with the Byzantines and Sasanians edit The Kingdom of Kinda and main polities in Eurasia around 500 AD Although there are no particular achievements attributed to Hujr's sons, his grandson, al-Harith ibn Amr, became the best-known Kindite among the tribes of Arabia, as well as among the Byzantines and Sasanians, and their Ghassanid and Lakhmid clients.[6] As per an arrangement between the Byzantines and the Arab tribes dwelling along its Syrian Desert frontiers in 502 CE, the Kinda under al-Harith (called Arethas in the Byzantine sources) and their Ghassanid rivals had become federates of the empire.[12] The Byzantines were prompted into this arrangement after al-Harith's sons Hujr and Ma'di-Karib launched
12:14 heeey, awesome update! And thanq for mentioning Tatarstan in 1991-93 as independent state! As I remember, in older videos (except outdated Asia timeline and older), there was only CRI (Chechen Republic of Ichkeria), but not CRI & Tatarstan.
@@user-kt1xt8cc4nРегион в России на пересечении Волги и Камы. Столица Казань. Основная нация - татары - вот и название региона. Может слышал о русском сериале "Слово Пацана"? Там про Казань 80-90-тых.
The Russian expansion differed from the others in that each new land was taken on the rights of existing ones. The rights of the people were common to the whole Territory. This is very clearly expressed in the confrontation of the USSR with Hitler's expansion, the features of which were in the rise of only one nation.
The flag used for the Mongol Empire in this video isn't actually a flag, but rather a Mongol/Turkic banner called a Tug. Since the Mongol Empire never had an official flag, their banner has been used to represent the empire instead
@@tahiranoor1090kashmir is a highly disputed territory between china, india, and pakistan. pakistans and chinas claims do not overlap as the nations are allies. to find it, go to north india on a map, and find where pakistan is and china, and that region is kashmir. if a war broke out there, it would be an absolute bloodbath, dead soldiers left and right.
Most of it is desert though plus Ottoman empire , roman empire, Macedonian Empire, Persian empire , mauryan empire are almost same size. This map is a mercaptor
For those who are confused about different flags appearing in this video, it's because I'm trying to improve the accuracy of each video I make over time. There are certain flags from my previous videos that I thought to be accurate at the time I made them. The flags of the Ming Dynasty and the Mongol Empire are a couple of examples. For more information, please read the description.
In particular, I noticed some people are confused about why the blue Mongol flag from past videos isn't here, so I explained why it looks different here: th-cam.com/users/postUgkxvoy7tCctEFazeZum9FLEY97MZREqtdmt
First. And yeah. The people dont understand that you want to improve the accuracy of the video.
I Like it
The old Mongolian flag is better than the current one in my opinion:)
Bbk
I think it is time those five Asian regions unify together as new countries as examples
1. West Asia unified as United Middle Eastern Union
2. Central Asia unified as United Stanistan minus Pakistan
3. South Asia unified as Greater United India
4. East Asia unified as United East Asian Union
5. Southeast Asia unified United ASEAN.
2:25 the music is a banger
8:40 WHOA THAT IS BIG! Nice job Genghis!
Mongol empire💀
I know.
People seem to forget that most of those lands (aside from China, Iran, and the Middle East) was desolate land populated by small tribes.
@@asdfghjk-xh9jl Central Asia? Russia? (Not Siberia) Afghanistan? Northern India? Manchuria? They all had kingdoms that were powerful which mongols either invaded and took or fought against and failed
@@fildafernandes4366 What are you trying to do? Prove my point further? None of those regions were significant centers of human population or trade.
Good job on the video!
No.
Why no
What absolutely not what you say is hurtful things
7:09 Kievan Rus: joined the game
Great video.
Yessss
Same🙂👍👍👍👍
@@MuhammedEhab-xt5qlyessssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
Family coming worlds
Ok
Glad he finally uploaded the history of asia in flags, we have all been waiting, underrated channel!
Hes working hard on the maps be patient
in Viet Nam
Can’t even imagine how long this took. i am so amazed thanks for the great video Geography And Space!
00:24 - 600 BC
00:51 - 500 BC
01:17 - 400 BC
01:44 - 300 BC
02:11 - 200 BC
02:37 - 100 BC
02:51 - 50 BC
03:03 - 1 BC
03:04 - 1
Hhehhhhh
5:04
What is that empire with "K" in he north of south asia with blue colour
@@tahiranoor1090khorezm
@@tahiranoor1090it is kashmir bro
8:23 Genghis Khan has entered the chat
8:03
90% of Asia and Europe: 💀
Genghis khan didnt won the vietnam people😅
@@lexuannam1822also india😊😊
8:02
You've done one of the greatest flag mapping videos of all time, huge respect to you man.
the flags are somewhat inaccurate though
@@Rov4ni3miiyeah but the used flags in the 1600s for Russia were fire
@@Rov4ni3miiNo
Mongol flag is correct
I still prefer the old one tho
@@idkwhattodo8652 not only mongol flag, more liek every flag except iran
@@Rov4ni3miithey aren’t inaccurate
Great job
🎉
Al fin de tanto tiempo ya sale el vídeo completo me encanta tanto tu canal. Use the Traductor
1:36 1:39 1:39 1:39 1:39 1:40 1:40
This dude cannot be copied this guy has a legend you haven’t been here for four months. It’s been tough without you.😢 This guy is a legend
Agreed. He has creation level infinte he cannot be copied hes the ultimate youtuber
AND I JUST WANT HISTORY OF CENTRAL AMERICA!!!!!!1!1!1!1!!1!11!1!1!1!1!!11!1!1!!11!!1!1!1!1!1
9:34秒あたりの天下統一?が再現度高くてすこ
Achaea
感觉还是蒙古帝国和苏联的共产组织更加吓人。横扫亚洲做回自己😂
나영어몰라
11:06 my favorite audio
Hey Me is Brazil
Really great as usual!
0:01 my man pulled out a whole history museum
LMFAO
Bro similar pfp…
@YTBattles-nu8yg learn history or else
This is AMAZING!
❤ good
🇵🇭❤🇺🇲
🇰🇷❤🇯🇵
5:04 which people is that identified with the deer antlers above the Caspian sea?
Bro you haven't uploaded in years but this is a masterpiece
Hey can u do one for Asia's economic history as well? This looks really cool
very nice and detailed
He.
at around 11:39 you can see along the Yellow Coast, those lil patches of land, those where German Colonies from 1899 to 1919
Hats off to you, man. You earned my respect.
Rassia?
Hello, Russian Monarchy speaking.
Many people forget that the concept of "national flag" appeared very late, in the 18-19 centuries. Even Austria-Hungary never had a single national flag. So for the most part, the flags shown in the video are the personal standards of the rulers, small military banners or a rare mention in the sources.
Even the concept of a nation didn't really begin until like the 17th century.
stop being boring and just show the damn flags
@@Rov4ni3miiif history was faked to look more pleasing we would never know real history
@@Rov4ni3mii can you please stop saying bad words
@@DanteSimoncinistop being silly
This video it’s very beautiful
Awesome 👍🏼. We waiting
In my opinion, this is the best flag and map channel ever !!!!!!! Try your best!😁
I can’t understand how you made Japan in 1500-1600!!!
It’s small but so accurate!!!!!
Thank you for your nice work!!
1000 BC-2023
I will be 1008bc
I will be 12000 bc
3:20 British emipre begin
3:21 British emipre change is flag
3:30 British emipre change if flag again💀
A
0:13 1000 cat
8:38 Mongolia..
I didn’t know that was the flag of the Mongolian Empire lol
@@1102AMtheNineteenthsBandMakerGo to community
@@UnitedKingdom80 Ok
@@UnitedKingdom80Bro ain’t chill
Khamag mongol is the part of mongolia…
Amazing video bro.😄😄
Lots of love from india. 🧡🧡
Love India
7:31 I noticed that somehow the Roman Empire stayed until over 1,100 it just had a different flag
Eastern Roman Empire
Yeah
But the empire of Iran never disappeared ☠️☠️
罗马代表者西方世界的正统啊。有哪个统治者会嫌弃自己王座的合法性呢?这个旗帜就代表者合法性
@@Mohammad-qo7zw Mongol Empire, Seljuk and Macedonian Empire😁
You deserve 100M for this hard work.
11:23 The Qing Dynasty surely devolved quite hard there
If the last video was from 4 months ago, I can't imagine how long it took to make it. Thank you very much you are the best making these videos 🌐❤
*It's the entire hecking history of Asia, what did you expect?*
@@baconhairbacana1964Bro really said hecking 💀
@@corfile3869you can’t be saying anything, you used a ‘bro ____ 💀’ format
@@KronosAnimates Better than “OmG WhY DiD yOu HeCkIng Do ThAt” or what he said
@@corfile3869 ok fair point
though some of the mapping is wrong and qin dynasty is missing, but huge respect for ur effort
0:21 Ethiopia just appeared out of no where
How brilliant this work is!!!
8:30 why is that the mongol flag
Copyright maybe
The blue flag with the symbol is fake
@@Jake100animationsit looks better tho
@@Lwrjawfla yeah
This Mongol banner is accurate and it's a banner, not a flag. There is no evidence that countries that are very old used actual flags.
4:29 "pin you have a win token would you like to use it now?" ahh music
0:00 The flag used for the Mongol Empire can be seen on the bottom left
It’s weird
@@Godzilla_kingofthemonsters It actually isn't a real flag, but rather a type of Mongol/Turkic banner called a 'Tug'. Since the Mongol Empire never had an official flag, the Tug has been used instead to represent the empire.
2:06 Oster 🇲🇳
8:26 Oster 🇲🇳
There was such a thing, but I think it will be better now! Keep up the good work!
Exatamente
Это расширенная версия, отрезок времени больше, чем в предыдущем видео)
@@Jaga_Imbawhy are you speaking Russian language try English
@@Kostya2005Хочу и говорю на русском, есть притензии?
@@Jaga_Imba да именно. Пусть радуются, что русские тоже смотрят этот канал
8:56 what flag is the biggest country there?
The War Tug of the Mongol Empire, Yuan Dynasty in that time
@@user-ls8or7ps3o
It's Russia 🇷🇺
@@LEANDROROBERTORAMOSCABEZASno
@@LEANDROROBERTORAMOSCABEZASits Mongolia
@@btuyalkham
Ok
Amazing GAS it would be cool if you made a Europe version
How did you did this,and is the most incredible thing that i ever seen in my life
06:59 In year 882 where is kieven rus?
In the video
The red flag with a yellow trident symbol
@@Maltae-g1zyeah it just have the other flag
GOOD video as always, thanks for posting
Harusnya tidak @retributionist.
No. No no no no!!!!!!!!
The way he makes videos always make me happy :)
@@коза-р7тare u kidding me 💀💀💀
@@MiniMint411 Sorry, the child wrote some nonsense.
Eres uno de los canales mas geniales de geogarafia historia y mapas
translates to: "You are one of the coolest channels of geography history and maps"
@estrilloball_oficialsorry
@@OmniSync it says it's one of the most genius, not the coolest
@@ItalophoneManNo, coolest, not genius
nice job btw
it's here...good work mate, you put a lot of effort into this
領土問題とかヒヤヒヤする問題も気にしない度胸すごい
After 7 months it’s finally here
Thank you for making the whole bc year
Well done, amazing attention to detail you have on your videos. Keep it up!!
7:09 Kievan Rus: joined the game
Kievan Rus wasnt a country, it was a period of time, when the capital of Rus was Kiev
10:19 Love the Old Russian flag
Это Хоругвии
This is the banner of the Russian Tsardom. The first Russian flag appeared in 1668. It is not yet known what it looked like. The most popular proposal is today's tricolor of Russia, only with a blue stripe in the center, and also on the right the tricolor is turned the other way.
#duvitan_chelky SPEAK ENGLISH OR ELSE
Veri nice😊😊😊
Finally, history of Asia Flag 🎉
戦国時代に日本がいきなり散り散りになるの面白すぎる
それなw日本人いてホッとしたww
5:07 “KINDA” 🤣🤣🤣
5:10 "where are you from?"
"Kinda"
Kingdom of Kinda
Article Talk
Language
Watch
Edit
The Kingdom of Kinda (Arabic: كِنْدَة الملوك, romanized: Kindat al-Mulūk, lit. 'Royal Kinda') also called the Kindite kingdom, refers to the rule of the nomadic Arab tribes of the Ma'add confederation in north and central Arabia by the Banu Akil al-Murar, a family of the South Arabian tribe of Kinda, in c. 450 - c. 550 CE. The Kinda did not belong to the Ma'add and their rule over them was likely at the confederation's initiative and engineered by the Kinda's South Arabian patron, the Himyarite Kingdom. The tribes may have sought a prominent, non-involved leader to bring stability to the Ma'add during a period of constant feuding among its constituents.
Kingdom of Kinda
[كِنْدَة الملوك] Error: {{Lang}}: invalid parameter: |3= (help)
c. 450 CE-c. 550 CE
Map showing approximate extent of the Kingdom of Kinda, c. 500 CE
Map showing approximate extent of the Kingdom of Kinda, c. 500 CE
Capital
Ghamr Dhi KindaBatn AqilQaryat al-FawHajaral-Mushaqqar
Common languages
Arabic
Religion
Christianity,
Arabian polytheism
Demonym(s)
Kindites
Government
Monarchy
History
• Established
c. 450 CE
• Disestablished
c. 550 CE
Today part of
Saudi Arabia
The roughly century-long rule of the Kinda was the first known nomadic Arab monarchy and the first attempt by the tribes to regulate their affairs in a centralized manner. The Kindite kingdom presaged the centralization movement under Islam in the early 7th century. Likely influenced by the sedentary civilization of Himyar, the Kindite monarchs ruled their domains from urban settlements. The rule of the kingdom's founder Hujr Akil al-Murar was characterized by domestic peace. He was succeeded by his sons Amr al-Maqsur and Mu'awiya al-Jawn, who ruled over Najd and the Yamama, respectively. The tribes of the Rabi'a faction revolted and likely killed Amr. His son and successor al-Harith is the first Kindite king attested in contemporary Byzantine sources. His sons' assaults on the Byzantine frontier provinces in the Levant likely precipitated the Byzantines' establishment of an alliance with the Kinda to serve as tribal federates of the empire, alongside the Ghassanids, in 502.
After al-Harith's death, his four sons, each ruling over a different grouping of tribes within the Ma'add confederation, became absorbed in their constituents' blood feuds, greatly weakening the kingdom in Najd. The Kindite kings in the Yamama similarly became entangled in conflicts between their subject tribes. Several Kindite kings in Najd and the Yamama were slain in the internecine fighting. The heavy losses and their fraying control over the tribes prompted the Kinda's abandonment of their kingdom and return to the Hadramawt. There, many of their tribesmen had remained and controlled parts of the region. Several Kindites attained power and influence in the Caliphate, the Islamic empire established after the Islamic prophet Muhammad's death in 632. However, these Kindites hailed from different branches of the tribe, the Banu Akil al-Murar having lost their leadership role.
Contents
History
edit
Establishment
edit
Family tree of the Banu Akil al-Murar, the Kindite ruling house of the Ma'add confederation in central Arabia and its constituent tribes between c. 450 and c. 550.
The Kinda tribe originally had their abode in South Arabia, possibly in Hadramawt, where they served as nomad auxiliaries for the armies of the Sabaean and Himyarite kings.[1] Himyar gained full control over Saba and the other South Arabian kingdoms in the late 3rd century CE. By at least the mid-4th century they were launching campaigns into central, eastern and northeastern Arabia against the tribes or confederations of Ma'add, Iyad, Murad and Abd al-Qays.[2] An inscription from the late 5th century mentions that the Himyarite king Abikarib As'ad traveled to the "land of Ma'add on the occasion of the establishment of certain of their tribes".[2] The medieval Arabic literary works of al-Isfahani and Ibn Habib similarly mention that Abikarib campaigned in central Arabia and established the Kindite chief Hujr over Ma'add.[2] In this respect, the Kinda's relationship with Himyar are comparable to the Arab client kingdoms of the Sasanian and Byzantine empires, namely the Lakhmids of lower Mesopotamia and the Ghassanids of the Syrian steppe, respectively. All three Arab kingdoms vied with each other for preeminence in northern Arabia.[3]
Medieval Arabic literature indicates the subordination of the nomadic tribes of the Ma'add to Kindite rule was the initiative of the Ma'add, especially its Bakr ibn Wa'il division, to bring order to its constantly feuding constituent tribes. Accordingly, the Bakr sent envoys to the king of Himyar, inviting him to be their king. Instead, the king delegated the role to Hujr for unclear reasons.[4] The historian Mohammed A. Bamyeh proposes that the sedentary Himyarite king, not wanting the burden of directly ruling the warring nomadic tribes of the vast desert expanses, resolved to have his dependent, the nomadic Kindite Hujr, effectively rule on Himyar's behalf. Himyarite attempts to extend their commercial interests into the region may have been related to the introduction of Kindite rule, though Bamyeh holds there is scant evidence such economic designs ever took shape. Rather than an economic arrangement, the Kindite leadership of Ma'add was a political pact between the warring tribes on the one hand and the Himyar-sponsored Kinda on the other. Contributing factors to the Kinda's leadership were the tribe's hitherto neutrality in the inter-tribal feuds of Arabia and their significant numbers, which could bolster their kingship in the expansive region of northern and central Arabia.[5]
Hujr became the founder of the Kinda's royal household, the Banu Akil al-Murar, so-called after Hujr's nickname Akil al-Murar (lit. 'the one who eats bitter herbs').[6][7] In an inscription in South Arabian script, he styled himself "king of Kinda".[2] While the house of Akil al-Murar stemmed from the Banu Mu'awiya, one of the three main divisions of the Kinda, most of the tribesmen who accompanied him belonged to the Sakun division.[8]
Hujr died of old age in the Kindite settlement of Batn Aqil, after a lengthy, stable reign, according to the Arabic sources.[9] His eldest son, Amr al-Maqsur, succeeded his father as head of the Ma'add in the Najd (northern central Arabia), while his younger son Mu'awiya al-Jawn, founder of the Banu al-Jawn house, ruled over the confederation in the Yamama (southern central Arabia).[6]
Amr was known as al-Maqsur ('the limited one') because he was not able to expand the limits of his father's domain.[10] The Arabic traditions note that his authority was rejected by the Rabi'a tribes, which included the Bakr and Taghlib among others and whose territory was in the northern parts of Arabia leading to Mesopotamia. Around this time, in the late 5th century, the Rabi'a chief Kulayb had been launching successful assaults against the South Arabians. Amr received military support from Himyar to enforce his rule, but to no avail. His authority was likely confined to the southern parts of the Najd, closer to Himyar. Amr was killed, most likely in a battle against the Rabi'a.[11]
Reign of al-Harith
edit
Relations with the Byzantines and Sasanians
edit
The Kingdom of Kinda and main polities in Eurasia around 500 AD
Although there are no particular achievements attributed to Hujr's sons, his grandson, al-Harith ibn Amr, became the best-known Kindite among the tribes of Arabia, as well as among the Byzantines and Sasanians, and their Ghassanid and Lakhmid clients.[6]
As per an arrangement between the Byzantines and the Arab tribes dwelling along its Syrian Desert frontiers in 502 CE, the Kinda under al-Harith (called Arethas in the Byzantine sources) and their Ghassanid rivals had become federates of the empire.[12] The Byzantines were prompted into this arrangement after al-Harith's sons Hujr and Ma'di-Karib launched
It is a Saudi history “Kenda” pronounced 😊
12:14 heeey, awesome update! And thanq for mentioning Tatarstan in 1991-93 as independent state! As I remember, in older videos (except outdated Asia timeline and older), there was only CRI (Chechen Republic of Ichkeria), but not CRI & Tatarstan.
@@user-kt1xt8cc4nгосударство посередине России с зелёным флагом
@@user-kt1xt8cc4nРегион в России на пересечении Волги и Камы. Столица Казань. Основная нация - татары - вот и название региона. Может слышал о русском сериале "Слово Пацана"? Там про Казань 80-90-тых.
How about the world pls? Alsoo why are some flags kinda not idkk?
6:02 Year 666 imagine the Devils Year be like:💀
Everything was great! except Parthian Empire's Flag 167BC ~ 212 AD!! Where did you get that Golden head Pig?
FINALLY THE BEST FOR MY FAVORITE CONTINENT
6:49 Tibet empire gone💀
The Russian expansion differed from the others in that each new land was taken on the rights of existing ones. The rights of the people were common to the whole Territory. This is very clearly expressed in the confrontation of the USSR with Hitler's expansion, the features of which were in the rise of only one nation.
gracias a este canal por hacer el remake de la historia de asia
Why You do not speak English🦜🐣
@@alexandersalvatierra7083 i from of a spanish speaking country
XD lol lol>:(🦜🤫🧏@@Mr.BizancioYT245
7:45 why weren't there turkic countries before Seljuk like Göktürk? did they exsist longer ago?
3:28 Roman Empire: no one defeats me
4:38 Roman Empire: they defeated me😢
Sassanians and Parthians😂😂😂😂
罗马从来没有消失,不过是换了继承人罢了😂
Germanic Tribes: 😂
3:28 Roman is so strong
3:04 Here Comes 1 AD
Lol imagine saying, “oh yeah I was born in the year 2”
Wow it's crazy how u make a mostly realistic historical mapping
5:53 The Rashidun Caliphate ☠️😮💨
Tus videos son realmente increibles y estan muy bien hechos, felicitaciones desde Argentina
Pensé que era el único argentino que miraba este canal
11:54 why are you looking at europe
Lol
2:32 jesus 😮
2:32 jesus😮
woah thank you so mush
*much
8:35 Korea just chilling some how
5:19 what is this country
*kinda*
kinda is not country
In Arabic, it means Cnda not Canada
2:16 what white Mongolian flag is that
Xiongnu
Hunnu. The Hu
7:42 BRO HAVE 5 DOTS
. .
.
. .
3:05 alot of countries have the same base flag in mid east
3:53 唐突の三国志スタート
日本唯一の説明が加賀一揆は草
2:06 What is the name of this state that has a flag similar to the Mongol empire flag but in black and white that is above China?
xiongu
@@Rangadus thanks
Xiongnu Confederation
@@wilcowen 👍
11:22 perfect beats at korea and russia
And Qing empire
Fr
And japan (conquer territory)
Russia: color inversion
10:28 so big and hard to draw the flag.
6:52 Japan?
Yup it's Japan
@@playboi_vinez yeah ik but why is the flag similar to now?
@@次RightSquareBracketKey次idk
This is a slightly inaccurate video
@@バナナルド Maybe the opposite
Next you should do a flag map of Europe 3200 bc -2023
Yeah
he's already done an eu one
no countries existed in europe in 3200 bc
11:40 guys japan needs some lands
ストップしてみてみて、、 11:54
That's cool
What is Mongol Empire's flag? It looks weird.
I mean I would call it weird too cuz it looks like a cyclops smiling
Here is a real flag of the Mongolian Empire
The flag used for the Mongol Empire in this video isn't actually a flag, but rather a Mongol/Turkic banner called a Tug. Since the Mongol Empire never had an official flag, their banner has been used to represent the empire instead
What was shiregi 8:46
shrek
a mongol prince that rebelled and started his own faction against yuan (correct me if i’m wrong i forgot it all)
HOY CRAP TY IVE BEEN QUESTIONING MY LIFE OVER THIS BECAUSE GOOGLE DIDNT GIVE ME AN ANSWER!!!
Also, you give me a better answer than google did
@@Rangadus ok
いつも楽しく見ています😊
5:04
448
What kingdom is K? In the north of South Asia with blue colour???
Kashimir
@@user-ls8or7ps3o kashmir? Never heard of it
@@tahiranoor1090kashmir is a highly disputed territory between china, india, and pakistan.
pakistans and chinas claims do not overlap as the nations are allies.
to find it, go to north india on a map, and find where pakistan is and china, and that region is kashmir.
if a war broke out there, it would be an absolute bloodbath, dead soldiers left and right.
looking at how big persia gets in ancient times when u consider the technology level of that era is amazing
Now Iran is like North Korea and this is very bad. Please be our voice
@@pars_yasin i understand
@pars_yasin but there's no south iran
@@Supernasa19999. that's not the point
Most of it is desert though plus
Ottoman empire , roman empire, Macedonian Empire, Persian empire , mauryan empire are almost same size. This map is a mercaptor
9:38 - Russian flags from 1480 to 1668 in a nutshell: ☦️
Btw those are past leaders, that isnt actually jesus. But it looks like him a lot
bruh you forgot north korea and south korea is taking a korean war
it was under a year long blud
@@DoctorMalwareOfficial but korean war started on 1950 - 1953
@@DoctorMalwareOfficialagreed
I agree with Earth-k2i
well it showed a portion of it, happy enough? :/
12:52 what is going on in Siberia?