How Geography Made Germany Powerful

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KhAnubis

Жыл бұрын

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Written by: Char Daston (@behindthissky)
MUSIC:
“Epic Voyage” by Dream Cave*
“The Wild West” by Ross Bugden
“Circle” by Jones Meadow*
“Genie’s Bane” by Deskant*
“Crusaders” by Adriel Fair*
“Grenadine” by West & Zander*
(*via EpidemicSound)
📖 SOURCES:
germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/home.cfm
www.britannica.com/topic/Germanic-peoples
www.iamexpat.de/expat-info/german-expat-news/most-googled-why-does-germany-have-so-many-names
www.britannica.com/place/Holy-Roman-Empire/The-empire-after-Frederick-II
core.ac.uk/download/pdf/160477843.pdf
www.googlesightseeing.com/2007/09/a-canal-across-germany/
bigthink.com/strange-maps/the-true-heart-of-europe-nil-the-blue-banana/
www.brusselstimes.com/201432/its-geography-stupid-deciphering-the-russian-enigma
ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/2995521/9618249/1-26022019-AP-EN.pdf/f765d183-c3d2-4e2f-9256-cc6665909c80
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Пікірлер: 427
@KhAnubis
@KhAnubis Жыл бұрын
To support this channel and a team of media outsiders working to make the news more transparent, visit ground.news/khanubis and subscribe for unlimited access.
@user-gr9fq9gt9w
@user-gr9fq9gt9w Жыл бұрын
The link is leading to a 404 error page
@sfsplayz4626
@sfsplayz4626 Жыл бұрын
the link is invalid :(
@HerbertKraus242
@HerbertKraus242 Жыл бұрын
I would like to inform you about some things you got wrong in your video: On different dialects: In opposite to platt-deutsch in the north there is "oberdeutsch" in the south - not "hochdeutsch" On one of your maps concerning rivers and rivers an waterway networks: the rhine-main-danube canal goes from the nearly most northern peak of danube to the southern peak of the small main-triangle which is about 100 km more eastward. So I am pretty insecure about some interesting facts you provided in your video, whether they are true or just nonsens.
@ground_news
@ground_news Жыл бұрын
@@sfsplayz4626 Thank you, the link is now updated!
@ground_news
@ground_news Жыл бұрын
@@user-gr9fq9gt9w Thank you the link is now updated
@albevanhanoy
@albevanhanoy Жыл бұрын
As a French, I am glad to count Germany as a country of friends and allies, far from the era of endless wars that plagued the continent 🇫🇷🤝🇩🇪
@HerbertKraus242
@HerbertKraus242 Жыл бұрын
So do I as a German. Sadly my grandpa´s brother had to die in 1916 in Fleury - near Verdun.
@NorCa60
@NorCa60 Жыл бұрын
wait untill an austrian painter gets back
@drakegod84
@drakegod84 Жыл бұрын
Thank's this is exactly what we want you to think. Muahahaha! Give back Alsace Lorraine and maybe we won't take Paris away from you again... Wait a sec, I've seen Paris before, umm, you know what never mind, just give back Alsace Lorraine.
@drakegod84
@drakegod84 Жыл бұрын
Ya know I just don't see this happening until their are some territorial consecutions returned back to us. For fuck sake, the US still has 21 military bases on our land and refuse to leave. It's funny how the Russians stole land from us, but left and yet we're still under US occupation. The memory of WW2 how can anybody who's German forget about it especially if your country is currently still being held captive by occupation forces.
@jml732
@jml732 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, as a German I hate pessimism with our neighbours caused by the German question, wich has been solved with German reunification. We want to be friends with our European neighbours now 👍
@idk-wy3pk
@idk-wy3pk Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: In the Cold war the capital of West Germany wasn´t Berlin, but the much smaller city Bonn. Thats because West Germany didn´t want ther capital be surrounded by the enemy. When Germany reunified the capital was changed back to Berlin. Grüße aus Deutschland :)
@AaronOfMpls
@AaronOfMpls Жыл бұрын
Berlin was still legally the capital throughout, though, with Bonn _officially_ just the seat of government -- kinda like how Amsterdam is legally the capital of the Netherlands, but the government is actually in The Hague.
@thorstenfinke2751
@thorstenfinke2751 Жыл бұрын
@@AaronOfMpls and i still dont get, why they choose Bonn instead of Frankfurt, which would have been a) more cetrally located in West Germany b) a significant city c) neither north or south german dominated and d) historically linking the first german attempt at democracy with the modern federal republic (Paulskirche).
@AaronOfMpls
@AaronOfMpls Жыл бұрын
@@thorstenfinke2751 There were concerns that a move to Frankfurt would be too permanent. Many of the leaders at the time still wanted the government to move _back_ to Berlin once the occupations ended, since they didn't expect the east-west split to last as long as it did.
@garretthoie6542
@garretthoie6542 Жыл бұрын
Many federal agencies continue to be located in Bonn to this day I believe
@JaKingScomez
@JaKingScomez Жыл бұрын
@@AaronOfMpls how long did it last😡
@kwark4115
@kwark4115 Жыл бұрын
As a German I must say, that you pronounced all those German words really well 👍
@deinkonig2113
@deinkonig2113 Жыл бұрын
Not that i would dislike the video, what i dont but you barely spoke about geography. The only arguement you mentioned was germanys rivers and canals, we had to build the canals ourselves so that doesnt even really count. We are in the middle of europe and there are basically only two really good things about or geography the fertility of our land and some really good rives (the canals dont count). Germanys geography actually gave us a pretty hard time very often, like being in the center of europe between many historical big empires such as Russia, France or Sweden, we also have a considerably small coastline and our way to the open ocean can easily be blocked by for example england like they did more then once. Also our only natural border are the alps in the south and even tho we had or have a bit of iron and coal we never were rich in natural resources. So i think our geography isnt really what made us "Powerful" but rather the tasks and problems we faced and had to overcome with many different skills and abilities we had to learn and to master. The video wasnt bad but it earns a diffirent title tho, thats what i think at least. greetings from Germany.
@MichaEl-rh1kv
@MichaEl-rh1kv Жыл бұрын
I disagree. The position in the midst of Europe gave Germany a lot of power during the middle ages and at the start of the modern era (which starts around 1450). But that was gambled away due to internal conflicts and due to noble families competiting against each other for more personal power instead of working together. The Holy Roman Empire, ruled by German kings and emperors, had a lot of coast lines - at the Nordic Sea from Calais to Hamburg, at the Baltic Sea from Kiel to (about) Kolberg (plus the harbours controlled by the Hanse like Gdansk/Danzig, Riga, Reval and others), at the Mediterranean from Marseille to Pisa and (even after the independence of Venice) between Aquleia an Triest. At different times German merchants controlled much of the overseas trade in the Mediterranean and the North and Baltic Sea as well as the overland trade between southwestern and northeastern Europe. It was not geography which made it hard for Germany, it was bad politics and in the end the 30 Years' war which started out as a kind of civil war or rather a conflict between self-assured regional rulers and their sovereign, the Emperor (which was at that time a conservative and inflexible product of Habsburg inbreeding), but was then used by the UK, Sweden and France to bring down the central European power.
@deinkonig2113
@deinkonig2113 Жыл бұрын
@@MichaEl-rh1kv The coastlines you spoke about in the mediterranean were not inhabited by germans so control was only limited same counts for some other portions in the north. Also i think that because we are so in the middle the various tribes, cities, principalities and kingdoms had a lot of different problems because we were "surrounded" and also held control over a considerable amount of ethnically non german regions. So thats why (atleast i think so) we had a hard time unifying. With better policies that still probably would have been possible way faster then it did in our time but one of a few reasons for the "bad" policies was our position, atleast kinda. Also i dont know why being in the middle gave us power? We got limited support because we were on the frontline bewtween christendom and the so called "barbaric" believs of the germanic and slavic tribes next to us. Since Chrisianity spread quickly that advantage was lost tho. Now that im thinking more of it i have to atleast agree partially because many trade routes lead thruogh our lands so some of us profited largely from this trade that started getting bigger and more influential between the rich south(western) parts of europe and the north and east of the continent. So yeah it gave us an advantage in that sense. But on the other side when you have many "rich" leaders its hard to get them to obbey their power in order to unify the country so it has its pros and contras i guess.
@MichaEl-rh1kv
@MichaEl-rh1kv Жыл бұрын
@@deinkonig2113All tribes, cities, kingdoms are somewhat "surrounded" - admittedly that on islands only by water. The mediterranean coastlines were controlled mostly by the leading city states of Genua und Venice (the latter becoming independent from the HRE, but Genua and Milano often took sides in the conflicts between Emperor and regionals rulers against the Emperor) - in so far you are right. But the HRE had many ships in the Mediterranean, war ships as well as traders, and many of them controlled by people considering themselves being German speakers (German/Deutsch was at first a (group of) language(s)). Controlling trade and travel routes gives power and wealth, being in the middle gives access to ideas and technologies from all sides, and in the early and high middle ages the Empire was continuously expanding (mostly to the East, absorbing Germanic and non-German tribes). In medieval times ethnical differences played a far smaller role than as they have attributed to nowadays. There was no impetus to "unifying" to the German prinicipalities, cities and other states, because they considered themselves already unifiied in the HRE with its four Kingdoms (the German-Roman Kingdom, the Kingdom of Bohemia, the Kingdom of Burgundy and the Kingdom of Italy), which ruled over some of the wealthiest regions in Europe and dominated most of Europe (except the East) for the most time. But the (German and German-Italian) nobles bickered the whole time about personal power, personal wealth and inheriditary offices. In that sense corruption was the normal condition of politics. In the early modern era then came the reformation, which was not only about religion, but also about reforming the federation - the Protestant princes wanted more power to themselves and less to the Emperor, the wealthy citizens of the Imperial cities wanted more civil rights (but mostly only for the rich), and the Emperor, considering himself ruling by the grace of God and in alliance with the Pope, wanted predominant power by divine right. The leader of the Protestant Union, the Count Palatinate of the Rhine (House Wittelsbach), was supported by his father-in-law, the King of Scotland and England, as well as the King of Sweden, who wanted to win predominance over the Baltic Sea, and the Catholic King of France saw the opportunity to weaken the Emperor by supporting the Protestants and to influence the interior politics of the Empire (and all his successors followed that pattern, trying to secure bridgeheads and claims within the HRE). The HRE was even before on the decline, partly due to Habsburg House politics, but that civil war ended the German predominance in Europe. At the same time however the noble Houses from Germany sat still on the most European thrones (except France and the regions ruled by the Ottomans) and were very content with that. (A branch of Wittelsbach e.g. became Kings of Sweden after the Vasa dynasty went extinct.)
@Napoleonic_S
@Napoleonic_S Жыл бұрын
I agree, the video title is misleading and the content is lacking...
@deinkonig2113
@deinkonig2113 Жыл бұрын
@@MichaEl-rh1kv Okay well... : D ive gotta admitt you got a pretty good point there. But i still think that even tho Germanys location had some good things it also had some bad things. I would still say that our geography isnt what made us "powerful". We seem to have failed at growing from the challanges and the help our location provided to us. I would maybe say it was like playing with fire if you can control it its a powerful weapon but if you fail you may burn yourself. Having powerful Neighbours is also a two sided sword, haivng good relations with them means wealth but having bad ones often means the opposite. Also the pros mostly count for medieval times. Not all tho like having the possibilaty of learning from all Neighbours. We can go back and forth about how "good" or "bad" germanys starting point was but i think we can agree that other factors played a far bigger role at building this Nation. I mean when we look at the maybe best example france we can say that the advantage they had (only at Geography) was far greater, right?
@MichaEl-rh1kv
@MichaEl-rh1kv Жыл бұрын
8:50 Germany's "capital" was not divided. The capital of the GDR was East Berlin, while the capital of FRG was Bonn in the far west. The first chancellor of West Germany preferred Bonn before Frankfurt, which would have been the logical solution, Frankfurt also being the place of the first democratic parliament in Germany. Chancellor Adenauer, who had been a delegate of the Rhine Province in the Prussian parliament before the Nazi regime came to power, despised Prussia. And because the SPD was strong in Berlin, he advised the Western allies to prohibit a full integration of West Berlin into West Germany - West Berlin did elect delegates for the Bundestag, the parliament of the FRG, but those delegates had no voting rights within the parliament. Berlin became only capital of the FRG after the reunification in 1990.
@kinngrimm
@kinngrimm Жыл бұрын
8:47 He said "germany and its capital were devided by its NATO and Sovjet Spheres of influence" which is factually correct. *At the time* , after the war was lost, germany as well as Berlin were split. He did not claim, that Berlin would stay to be West Germany's capitol. Instead one could imply and think of it like if he would have said, "germany and its capital, *at the time* , were devided by its NATO and Sovjet Spheres of influence" The time referance comes from the occation of the split and therefor is implied. You know when it happened, you know what lead up to it, by referencing the occation, we know the contextual timeline. An explicit time referance i would suppose would make this point more clear. You are ofcause still right by mentioning that in the process Bonn became West Germany's capitol for all the mentioned reasons, but again what he said there was factually correct, even though that tidbit of Bonn was left out.
@davepavillar6606
@davepavillar6606 Жыл бұрын
I am a foreigner living in Germany and as far as I know, Bonn was not the supposed to be the capital. Frankfurt was at the top of the list, but because Frankfurt (and Cologne, another potential capital) was still on the process of rebuilding from WWII, Bonn was selected to be the capital; a contingency.
@burgerinnensteig2205
@burgerinnensteig2205 Жыл бұрын
Bis 1945 oder vielleicht sogar noch etwas länger war Berlin deutsche Hauptstadt. Als es dann zwei geteilte deutsche Staaten waren, wurde Bonn die Hauptstadt von Westdeutschland bzw. der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und Ostberlin die Hauptstadt der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik.
@gandalf_thegrey
@gandalf_thegrey Жыл бұрын
And IIRC actually Bonn was never the capital, it was the seat of the government (akin to Den Hague (Seat) and Amsterdam (de-jure capital). There was always the intention to move the capital back to Berlin and only in the 1980s people accepted that it might not happen (oh boy ;D). That's also why Bonn was chosen over Frankfurt. Frankfurt had a legit claim to be made the capital (a very central city where the first attempts of German Unification (the OG one) started (Paulskirche), but since the German government wasn't in search for a new capital it was denied. Just fact checked myself: Bonn was indeed the German capital. From 1973 to the fall of the Berlin wall. But up until that point Berlin was De-Jure our capital, sorry for the mistake.
@JosTheMan1
@JosTheMan1 Жыл бұрын
This was maybe 5% about the promised geography?
@contentdeleted6428
@contentdeleted6428 Жыл бұрын
"Wasn't a kingdom but more a weird sort of confederation between all these smaller kingdoms" Yes, very much every kingdom at that time, difference being the smaller kings did not call themselves kings. The HRE wasn't that united as most others but no king had total control over his kingdom, that's in the nature of feudalism.
@jml732
@jml732 Жыл бұрын
The structures of the HRE still exist to this day, the federal states are the successor of the responsibilities of imperial circles and the cities/districts are the successor of the responsibilities of independent duchies/counties/free cities.
@robinrehlinghaus1944
@robinrehlinghaus1944 Жыл бұрын
Yeah
@rodi8266
@rodi8266 Жыл бұрын
the HRE is distinguished from "regular" feudal realm by being far more decentralised to the point that subjects of the (elected) emperor didnt really submit themselves too much to anything the emperor tried to make them do, unless of course they wanted to/were coerced/had marriage or familial obligations And there was an actual kingdom inside the HRE for most of its existance, that being Bohemia
@robinrehlinghaus1944
@robinrehlinghaus1944 Жыл бұрын
@@rodi8266 You are more or less correct, but HRE-level fragmentation was due to feudal strcutures running there longer than they did in, say, France, not so much due to inherent weakness. Of course, the imperial subjects were less bound to the emperor directly you're very right there, but them straight up not doing anything of what he says is an exception that only became the rule over a hundreds of years long process.
@chheinrich8486
@chheinrich8486 Жыл бұрын
To the opening sentence you could have added " and soon while be in the top 5 countries based on military spending"
@Herdatec
@Herdatec Жыл бұрын
Plattdeutsch is not called that way because of the flat lands but rather in lower german Platt means "plain" (similar to English) as in 'simple' or 'normal '
@olafgogmo5426
@olafgogmo5426 Жыл бұрын
Nee! Wikipedia sagt: "Beide Bezeichnungen, Niederdeutsch und Hochdeutsch, wurden aus dem Niederländischen entlehnt. Als hoghen duutsche und neder duutsche tauchten sie in einem mittelniederländischen Text von 1457 erstmals auf. Zunächst hatten die Bezeichnungen eine rein geografische Bedeutung. Mit Niederdeutsch waren die Sprachen am Niederrhein und Westfalens gemeint, wohingegen Hochdeutsch (oft synonym mit dem anfangs häufiger verwendeten Oberländisch) für die Sprachformen des Hügel- und Berglandes am Rhein verwendet wurde. Der Gebrauch des Wortes Niederdeutsch blieb jedoch bis ins 17. Jahrhundert selten. Erst später entwickelte sich aus der Bezeichnung Niederdeutsch die in der Dialektologie übliche Dreiteilung des deutschen Sprachraumes in Nieder-, Mittel- und Oberdeutsch, die durch die Grammatiken von Justus Georg Schottelius, Johann Bödiker und Martin Opitz popularisiert wurde."
@DocoMonde
@DocoMonde Жыл бұрын
An insightful video as always. Very entertaining.
@pierremertscheit4206
@pierremertscheit4206 Жыл бұрын
As a german, plattdeutsch and hochdeutsch is not used as a part of germany, its used to name the accent ypu are talking I live in the part, where it says plattdeutsch, but actually we speak hochdeutsch in that area Above plattdeutsch are other accents spoken and unter hochdeutsch is bavarian, they also have a very different accent. We like to say, the bavarians have their own language
@emmetjames2482
@emmetjames2482 Жыл бұрын
No one seems to have spotted the problem at 4:31 where KhAnubis forgot to include Galicia (Krakow) in his map of the Austrian Empire, which would be irritating, but the fact they included Bukovina just makes it hilarious.
@randomguy-jd8su
@randomguy-jd8su Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that was just painful to watch.
@NoymoHD
@NoymoHD Жыл бұрын
That's because he tried to make it just painting with as many of the modern borders as posible, that's why they also don't hace carpathia rhutenia
@Antonio_Gamer21
@Antonio_Gamer21 Жыл бұрын
Do you mean 7:59 ?
@emmetjames2482
@emmetjames2482 Жыл бұрын
@@Antonio_Gamer21 No, it just happens twice.
@WolfieOfficiial
@WolfieOfficiial Жыл бұрын
It was actually much more land, in Ukraine, Poland and near Belgrade
@tobirates916
@tobirates916 Жыл бұрын
Ooh maps! Very educational and entertaining. And honestly, i almost skipped through the sponsor part but, unlike most, your “commercials” are really entertaining and Ground News actually sounds awesome. Aggregate to see the bias and be fully informed.
@ground_news
@ground_news Жыл бұрын
Glad to hear this!
@A.Man.From.Cyprus
@A.Man.From.Cyprus Жыл бұрын
🇨🇾 Wow, I didn't know all these information! That is a very enlightening video! Thank you! 🙏😊
@kinngrimm
@kinngrimm Жыл бұрын
I as a german am confused by the Plattdeutsch and Hochdeutsch definitions here. Hochdeutsch as far as i am aware is the defacto default/standard german language. It originats from the prussian german dialiect which became the common language and more widespread used due to the prussian rule over germany, therefor entering the education system and becoming Amtssprache(officially used language by buerocrats and state officials). Thereby the Prussian Dialekt became the mainly spoken language of germany now known as german language. Hochdeutsch has nothing whatsoever to do with a north/south territorial devide as shown in this vid. That is just wrong. I live in Bavaria and people here might just stone you to death if you tell them they speak Hochdeutsch ^^. Damn though i am born in the south and speak some dialect, due to my parents not coming from here, i would never dream of calling what i speak dialect rather Hochdeutsch with a slight coloring of Fränkisch and a touch Bayrisch and yet those who live here more than one generation would say i speak Hochdeutsch while they speak Fränkisch or Bayerisch. I am unaware of any widely used "Niederdeutsch" terminology, which might be just because i live in the south, even though i have some roots in the north and north east. On the other hand there are several different Plattdütsch, one as far as i know, is a rarely if at all anymore spoken dialect in the upper north bordering the dutch. It is next to inexistant anymore and only few who try to keep it alife still speak it and it very hard to understand for anyone who isn't born in that area. Then there is one widely used as a dialect, especially known to me by its use in Karneval from cologna to münster. Which maybe related to the formerly mentioned but regionally still seemingly very different. I am unsure about any idiomatic relations between Platt- and Flach (which both translates to flat/narrow), entymologicly "platt" means 'clear'/'easy to understand' and not "flach". It is also known as Ostfälisch which was spoken upto Belgium if i am not mistaken. Somebody with more knowledge about may please correct me or add to this, i am just not 100% sure, but i am still quite certain it to be different than discribed by the youtuber. Summa sumarum, Hochdeutsch = german language, used everywhere in germany Platt is roughly spoken in that area you outlined but even further to the west upto Belgium and is also known as Ostfälisch with regional differances creating subdialects. The southern part of germany, has several different dialects Ober-/Niederbayrisch, Oberpfälzisch, Schwäbisch and Fränkisch just to name a few which all are within the federal territory of Bavaria. Then there are still others like Badisch and on and on :) I don't claim to know them all or understand them ^^, but i do love to hear them all, especially in satire shows.
@deutschermichel5807
@deutschermichel5807 Жыл бұрын
I think he meant Niederdeutsch (north) vs. Oberdeutsch (south)
@raritania7581
@raritania7581 Жыл бұрын
He literally clarified that at 3:30. Calling the standard language Hochdeutsch is a misnomer that originated because it is closer related to the southern dialects than to the northern dialects. The northern dialects, "Low German" were closer to pre-Norman English than to standard German, but have been largely replaced.
@terrorkekslp9423
@terrorkekslp9423 Жыл бұрын
@@raritania7581 even then Plattdeutsch isn't and wasn't spoken in 99% of the area he Highlighted its just a very small almost non existent dialect only spoken in the north west, to say Hochdeutsch is spoken in Sothern Germany is just wrong because the dialects there are named oberseutsch like the dude over you already explained.
@frachtrick
@frachtrick Жыл бұрын
@@raritania7581 Hochdeutsch is Standard German. In its purest form it is spoken in the region of Hanover, which is in the north of Germany.
@raritania7581
@raritania7581 Жыл бұрын
@@frachtrick A- that's a misnomer B- that's a modern construct, the "purest form" happens to have occured in Hanover, but before the creation of Standard German, Hanover would have spoken Low German.
@J_Gamer_Mapping
@J_Gamer_Mapping Жыл бұрын
Once again this video is really well ilustrated! You got a few errors in the maps every now and then but nothing disastrous I'd argue. I was a little vonfused by the end of the video. It felt like there wasn't a real conclusion.
@whatsbehindthesky
@whatsbehindthesky Жыл бұрын
This was fun to make! Note that Willie and I avoided obvious jokes about the blue banana.
@HarvestStore
@HarvestStore Жыл бұрын
Great video.
@tarthos2662
@tarthos2662 Жыл бұрын
Being German I gotta say you nailed the pronounciations for Schleswig Holstein and Hamburg, gj!
@ShiggyMiggy6637
@ShiggyMiggy6637 Жыл бұрын
1:16 I wouldn't exactly call Poland "friendly" under the current government
@Vorname_Nachname_
@Vorname_Nachname_ Жыл бұрын
Then you should lower your standards regarding the word "friendly". In geostrategic terms, both countries heavily rely on one another and closely cooperate in countless affairs. The PiS party is a bunch of snooty populists, who enjoy playing the victim card to receive reparations. (Even though they know this will never happen.) In reality, the EU is less devided than ever before.
@ryuuducat
@ryuuducat Жыл бұрын
You made a mistake there at 7:30 , Napoleon never declared himself Holy Roman Emperor, he was crowned Emperor of the French, Francis II held the title of HRE until he himself disolved the HRE releasing all german states from their obligations to the Emperor, a title he then abdicated.
@Boretheory
@Boretheory Жыл бұрын
He crowned his son king of the Romans which was in that case referred to Italy not Germany as he probably misunderstood. So Napoleon was French emperor and Italian king while his son also had another versione of it “ King of the Romans” which was what Charlemagne got for Italy.
@MichaEl-rh1kv
@MichaEl-rh1kv Жыл бұрын
Napoleon was in 1804 declared hereditary Emperor of the French, putting himself in the succession of Emperor Charles the Great (Charlemagne), to whom also the Emperors of the HRE referred as original founder of the Empire. In reaction to this Francis II declared himself hereditary Emperor Franz I of Austria-Hungary (which was a violation of the law of the HRE). In 1805 Napoleon was also crowned King of Italy; in 1806 Napoleon demanded by ultimatum the dissolution of the HRE. Francis abdicated as Holy Roman Emperor and dissolved the Empire, and the princes of newly founded Federation of the Rhine (which included most of southern Germany except Austria) paid homage to Emperor Napoleon.
@robinrehlinghaus1944
@robinrehlinghaus1944 Жыл бұрын
"Emperor" is the same title still. In the true meaning of the word, it's identical.
@jaydenclowers2616
@jaydenclowers2616 Жыл бұрын
Discuss more of the differences of the regions in Germany
@yiannicart
@yiannicart Жыл бұрын
Fantastic as usual
@Argacyan
@Argacyan 2 күн бұрын
1:50 To make a point about rivers, this map omits or fails to mention a significant amount of rivers east of the Elbe such as the Oder which connects ressource-rich Silesia to the sea & was at the centre of Germany for a long time after France started creeping up on the Rhine.
@DawidSikora
@DawidSikora Жыл бұрын
Funfact, the polish word for Germany: "Niemcy" comes from the adjective "niemy" which means "wordless" or "mute". This is because polish people could communicate with basically all their neighbours as they were slavic countries, but not with germans as the language difference is much bigger
@KillaFromErzurum
@KillaFromErzurum Жыл бұрын
The reason of the economic power of germany is the mentality of the people. They are very patience people especially when they stay in traffic jams, they have respect to other people and going work on time. As a Turk living in Germany i know what i‘m talking about.
@suntzu8499
@suntzu8499 Жыл бұрын
"AN EMPTY BROWSER HISTORY TELLS A LOT MORE THAN A FULL ONE" -SUN TZU
@kurwanko
@kurwanko Жыл бұрын
wdym?
@brandonjade2146
@brandonjade2146 Жыл бұрын
@@kurwanko if your browser history is empty it implies you cleared it, meaning you possibly have something to hide *porn*
@kurwanko
@kurwanko Жыл бұрын
@@brandonjade2146 no, no, i understand, i mean what does it mean in this context?
@molybd3num823
@molybd3num823 Жыл бұрын
@@kurwanko nothing, this is probably a bot
@suntzu8499
@suntzu8499 Жыл бұрын
Not a bot *makes angry bot noises*
@TowZatya
@TowZatya Жыл бұрын
Truth is, that during Cold War economic division between so-called West and East part of Germany did not increase but DECREASE. East Germany economy has developed 1,5x faster than West. Economic division of Germany is much older and it starts before 1000 years ago, and during XVI century it become cemented because of Elbe Line that divide Europe.
@brohamerer1604
@brohamerer1604 Жыл бұрын
I haven't played it in awhile so I'm not sure if they changed it, but is that Gwent music I hear in the background?
@oskararndt8818
@oskararndt8818 Жыл бұрын
Napoleon didnt proclaim him as hre emperor but as emperor of france, didnt he?
@Damzum
@Damzum Жыл бұрын
He did booth
@oskararndt8818
@oskararndt8818 Жыл бұрын
@@Damzum no he did not. Emperor Francis II abolished empire and title, so that Napoleon couldn't crown himself as emperor of the hre
@Damzum
@Damzum Жыл бұрын
@@oskararndt8818 He crowned hoimself as the empire of the German tho
@charlesTCMS
@charlesTCMS Жыл бұрын
@@Damzum he crowned himself Emperor of the French and made himself Protector of the Confederation of the Rhine. He never claimed to be Emperor of the Germans, nor would it have been particularly beneficial for him to have done so; he already got what he needed (primarily military support for his campaigns) as Protector of the Confederation, so to declare himself directly in charge would have only complicated the matter for him by further ruffling the feathers of the German states.
@Damzum
@Damzum Жыл бұрын
@@charlesTCMS oh Sorry i thought He was declared the emperor which I misunderstand.Thanks for the reply tho
@shimanopetermann9068
@shimanopetermann9068 Жыл бұрын
Someone once said "Germany's fate is it's location in the middle of Europe. Either it's threatened by all its neighbors or it threatens them."
@karlhintonwilson5111
@karlhintonwilson5111 Жыл бұрын
That's why we had WWI.
@shimanopetermann9068
@shimanopetermann9068 Жыл бұрын
@@karlhintonwilson5111 And WW2....and the 30 years war, and the Napoleonic Wars, and the Azstrian Succession war, and the Spanish Succession war, and the Franco-German war....say what you want about us but our history is anything but boring 🤣🤣🤣
@Tuma25
@Tuma25 Жыл бұрын
The Rhein-Main Donau channel is connected at Bamberg to the Main, not at Kitzingen as shown in your video, ca. 50, km far east
@AchyutChaudhary
@AchyutChaudhary Жыл бұрын
0:06 🇹🇷Turkïye quietly laughing in the bottom-right corner 😅
@RedRocketthefirst
@RedRocketthefirst Жыл бұрын
*Turkey
@liveforever9888
@liveforever9888 Жыл бұрын
Turkey isnt European so his point stands.
@revinhatol
@revinhatol Жыл бұрын
1:09 *FUN FACT:* Germany even has a maritime border with Sweden.
@rokatzenc4435
@rokatzenc4435 Жыл бұрын
With england too
@Corporis
@Corporis Жыл бұрын
Idk what it is, but the audio sounds particular professional on this one
@theoo4929
@theoo4929 Жыл бұрын
The music from the Risk Online Gamr
@matthewbrotman2907
@matthewbrotman2907 Жыл бұрын
My father served in the Fulda Gap when he was in the 3rd Armored Division. He said their instructions if the Soviets attacked was “hold on as long as you can” 😆
@masfiqratul7559
@masfiqratul7559 Жыл бұрын
So Basically Hold until you are Dead that's Gross 😅 I actually Passed by Fulda on my way to Frankfurt but really never knew this ...Maybe I should visit this place rather than Passing
@balkanmadnessmadeinaustria5837
@balkanmadnessmadeinaustria5837 7 ай бұрын
Befehl ist Befehl 🥾🥾 🥾🥾 🥾🥾 🥾🥾
@Gern99
@Gern99 Жыл бұрын
2:47 NO WAY. I LIVE THERE. OMG 🤯😯😲 THIS IS CRAZY. THE CHANCES!!!
@LivE.503
@LivE.503 Жыл бұрын
Great. Greetings from Germany
@DonaldDucksRevenge
@DonaldDucksRevenge Жыл бұрын
We do talk about rail service in the US. We call it Brightline.
@ground_news
@ground_news Жыл бұрын
Another great breakdown of a complex topic! Thank you for partnering in making our mission more accessible. For those who want to be better informed and spot media bias, check out the link in the description.
@taka7369
@taka7369 Жыл бұрын
Talking of West Berlin as part of the Federal Republik: Berlin wasn't part though. Associated, but separate.
@LeZylox
@LeZylox Жыл бұрын
8:57 is there a bigger map of this?
@Touhou-forever
@Touhou-forever Жыл бұрын
As a Irish person who has a lot of German friends and I'm honoured to have them as my friends Germany is a perfect example dispute the dark past that still shadows over the country to certain extent Germany and it's people hasn't let it affect it's future of course Germany still has problems like many countries even my favourite country Japan still has a lot to learn from Germany but like I said before Germany Is a very good example of overcoming the mistakes of the past 🇮🇪❤️🇩🇪
@curiousitycave
@curiousitycave Жыл бұрын
Bro really called the Weser eastern 🥹💀
@WasatchWind
@WasatchWind Жыл бұрын
2:58 - I'd be very interested in this video.
@paulus1828
@paulus1828 Жыл бұрын
Hochdeutsch is spoken throughout Germany. In the south for example in Bavaria there is a Bavarian dialect and I am from Austria where the dialects are also completely different than in Germany. Greetings from Austria🇦🇹
@greatknarloc9835
@greatknarloc9835 Жыл бұрын
Der Bayrische und Östreicher Dialekt sind aber auch Hochdeutsche Dialekte ;) ... die bezichnung Hochdeutsch richtet sich nach der höhe der Region über dem Meeresspiegel.
@Daddy_Skeletor
@Daddy_Skeletor Жыл бұрын
Good video but that bit about Fulda felt kinda random and incomplete
@freyarummelt6088
@freyarummelt6088 Жыл бұрын
The language Hochdeutsch is the official language of germany and original was thought of an area connecting language. It was thought as a language for higher education thus as politics or trading. Each area for a long time had is own language or dialect. Plattdeutsch is a language related to dutch and old english. And it self has dialects trough the north. The Platt is to my knowledg not related to the topografie. Most dialects are named after the area their from. Languages are mostly not named after areas or topografie. In the contrary the southern areas are known to have more diverse and spoken dialects.
@SomeBavarianGuy.mp4
@SomeBavarianGuy.mp4 10 ай бұрын
i love my country, and i live in bavara, where all the beer and lederhosen stereotypes come from
@redwards5000
@redwards5000 Жыл бұрын
Don’t think you got away with using Risk background music
@jetdooley7609
@jetdooley7609 Жыл бұрын
at 6.41 the word Saksaa is Finish for Germany. I'm Finnish American.
@memazov6601
@memazov6601 Жыл бұрын
Damn even after getting the two worst beat downs they still going at it and now controls the Eu with France
@RedRocketthefirst
@RedRocketthefirst Жыл бұрын
Fr*nce 🤢🤮
@stevejohnson3357
@stevejohnson3357 Жыл бұрын
The Goths originally came from southern Sweden (where some of my ancestors came from} and migrated to the east to Poland and Ukraine. King Carolus Gustavus is thus king of the Swedes and the Goths.
@MellonVegan
@MellonVegan 25 күн бұрын
3:30 Keep in mind that this is the historical distribution of the dialects, which should also include Middle German dialects as a sort of bridge of mutual intelligibility. The reality today is that the High German language has become dominant virtually everywhere and Low German can rarely be heard outside the proper North of the country.
@eurodoc6343
@eurodoc6343 Жыл бұрын
This is just semantics (and I'm no expert, so I might not have this completely correct), but I'm pretty sure only one of the states of the Holy Roman Empire was officially a kingdom for most of its existence, and that was Bohemia. Brandenburg-Prussia sort of fudged the issue in the 1700s, but the other kingdoms (Bavaria, Saxony, Wuerttemberg and Hannover) weren't officially elevated to that status until the empire was officially abolished. And Austria was never a kingdom, it was an Archduchy, although the Hapsburg monarchs had other realms were they reigned as kings (Bohemia being one).
@sorenm.lairdsorries7547
@sorenm.lairdsorries7547 29 күн бұрын
❤❤
@aviarun9427
@aviarun9427 Жыл бұрын
Some facts seem to have been bent here. When talking about Germany's main economic centres, he conveniently left out Munich and Hamburg, two of the wealthiest and largest economic powerhouses of Germany, neither of which is in the blue banana region.
@samthesuspect
@samthesuspect Жыл бұрын
I mean this is sorta right, its so diverse and separated from large chunks of other parts of German land because of the geography. That's why it took so long for Germany to become a nation, hell it wasn't even founded until the 1870s. I'm in my 30s and my Great Great Grandfather was older than Germany as a nation.
@MichaEl-rh1kv
@MichaEl-rh1kv Жыл бұрын
7:15 That's not fully correct. The map seems to try to show the situation around 1380 AD at the end of the reign of emperor Karl IV / Karel IV (born as Vaclav of Luxemburg, Roman-German King 1346-1378k, King of Bohemia 1347 - 1378, King of Italy 1355 -1378, King of Burgundy 1365 - 1378 - and therefore at this point King of all Kingdoms within the Empire -, Roman-Geman Emperor 1355 - 1378). The map is a bit misleading as it shows not the legal constituencies but the "real power relations" - violet the realms reigned by officials of the Catholic church directly responsible to the Emperor, the other colors showing family-related factions as well as reigns ruled by Imperial Cities directly responsible to the Emperor. It shows also the realm of the Teutonic Order (the later Prussia) being within the borders of the Empire, which it never was - it was nearly always a part of Poland (the Teutonic order conquered Prussia on behalf and by order of the Polish crown, but multiple times tried to become independent afterwards). It also shows the papal states to be within the Empire which would be fiercely denied by the Church of that days (and also doubted by legal scholars of the time). If you would go about one to two centuries back however you would still see the original structure of the German-Roman Kingdom: about 11 duchies and a few margraviates (at the southern and eastern borders). The duchy of Swabia was dissolved as the ruling house of Staufen went extinct, and many other duchies were divided during the following centuries between heirs; so this administrative level lost importance and smaller units gained power. But there was still a central power holding it all together and clear administrative structures until the unrests after the reformations led to the 30 Years's war as France, Sweden and the United Kingdom tried successfully to weaken the Empire.
@afilanus7084
@afilanus7084 Жыл бұрын
You made a big mistake. "Plattdeutsch" is practically extinct and only a very small number of people in the north can actually still speak it. You then said that "Hochdeutsch" shouldn't be confused with Standard German. But it's the same thing, linguistically. The dialects from the south spread north and then became the standard form of the language, while lower German dialects (some even consider them to be entirely different languages) slowly went extinct.
@rao803
@rao803 Жыл бұрын
That's sad
@maxberner1886
@maxberner1886 Жыл бұрын
Napoleon never declared himself Emporor of the HRE. Francis the II. dissolved the Empire after losing to Napoleon in 1806. afterwards there was the confederation of the rhine which was a french puppet state and after napoleon lost the was the deutscher bund which was established during the congress of vienna where the austrians where once again the dominant power until they lost to prussia in 1866. Also after charlemagne there was never a french emporer which ruled the hre (which was established after the division of the frankish empire, so charlemagne also was never emporor of the hre) the only emporors where german or czech(ings of bohemia)
@huuu4689
@huuu4689 Жыл бұрын
That's great and all but i feel this video is explaining more history than geography i finished the video and i still don't understand exactly what's great about germany location ( i can see what's bad about it without the video though)
@bones6448
@bones6448 Жыл бұрын
Napoleon never declared himself the Holy Roman Emperor
@Adi-vi8is
@Adi-vi8is Жыл бұрын
great video, but ,,hochdeutsch" is actually standard german. ,,platt" is one out of many dialects. very good pronunciation btw!
@CroissN
@CroissN Жыл бұрын
Wow
@911fletcher
@911fletcher Жыл бұрын
The language in Southern Germany ist not "Hochdeutsch" it's "Oberdeutsch".
@NoSTs123
@NoSTs123 Жыл бұрын
and Hochdeutsch is standard german
@harismetselaar2847
@harismetselaar2847 Жыл бұрын
Oh ja
@hariscountrys6911
@hariscountrys6911 Жыл бұрын
Why am I surprised someone with the German Empire flag immediately comment the moment they see the word "Germany" lmao.
@harismetselaar2847
@harismetselaar2847 Жыл бұрын
@@hariscountrys6911 lmao
@N3gn4v
@N3gn4v Ай бұрын
Powerfull, Democrazy and Wealth. Are the three most important criterias for a country.
@johngorman6641
@johngorman6641 Жыл бұрын
What form of ~_’alde…… ???? 3:45
@ostharz4267
@ostharz4267 Жыл бұрын
3:29 this is not really correct, "Hochdeutsch " is spoken in the area around Hannover and is considered the kinda dialect free standard german. In the south different dialects are spoken. Otherwise great video!
@QueenOfBrokenStone
@QueenOfBrokenStone Жыл бұрын
It is technically correct. Our current standard German is based on high German dialects, like Saxonian and Bavarian (a big reason being Luther's translation of the bible). Because it was so different from lower German dialects, people from regions where those were spoken had to basically learn nearly a new language, which is why dialects like Plattdeutsch are nearly extinct now. On the other hand high German dialects were similar enough, that they are still very much alive nowadays. This all has lead to this strange dichotomy, where the lower German regions speak better "high German" than the places it originated from. Personally I'd prefer if ppl called it "Standarddeutsch" instead of "Hochdeutsch", to avoid confusions like this...
@Dr.Leymen
@Dr.Leymen Жыл бұрын
You are wrong. Many people call standard German "Hochdeutsch" but that is not correct. The standard dialect in Germany is called, as already mentioned, "Standard German" or "Standard-Deutsch" "Hochdeutsch" are all the upper German dialects, spoken in Southern Germany, Liechtenstein, Switzerland and Austria.
@raritania7581
@raritania7581 Жыл бұрын
@@Dr.Leymen I wish more people would realize that
@benderostap2167
@benderostap2167 Жыл бұрын
I'm just freaking out because you said that in the north of Germany is spoken flat. But they only speak that in Hessen. It feels like every village in Germany already has their own dialect. So you don't understand the people from the neighboring village anymore, because the language is so different. And everyone must be able to speak 'High German' because it is the official language and is taught in all schools. And because otherwise you can't communicate with the people from the neighboring village.
@mattmanh4242
@mattmanh4242 Жыл бұрын
Germany kinda looks okay like a skull 💀
@hqlife5128
@hqlife5128 Жыл бұрын
I just realised I think Germany, since it was fractured for so many centuries into smaller duchies and kingdoms has a history of being part of a bigger loose confederation - liek the HRE or currently, the EU. The EU is in some ways very similar to the HRE except bigger. I don't know what the future holds but I kind of like how we're all sort of on board with this pan-European union. I think that's a much better situation for all involved than the hostilities of a century ago
@theChaosKe
@theChaosKe 8 ай бұрын
Correct. Even today germany is a federation of 16 Bundesländer which translates to union countries. Even though most of the world just sees germany as one country, within germany there is an emphasize on the states being semi autonomous small countries, like england and scotland in the UK.
@peachypietro9980
@peachypietro9980 Жыл бұрын
the socio-economic divide between east and west germany is more complicated than simply saying east germany is poor, west germany rich: the rich of east germany fled to west germany along with many of the professional classes after WW2, leading to a stronger working class presence that got shafted after the collapse of the warsaw pact and subsequent privatization of industry in the east (i.e. the working class got f**ked and lost pay, were fired, etc.)
@boris8854
@boris8854 Жыл бұрын
Germany Before. Germany: I'm going to unite Europe Nowadays Germany. United States: Who is a guter junge?
@iandegiovani4703
@iandegiovani4703 Жыл бұрын
US Rail tends to EXPLODE lately
@YujiroHanmaaaa
@YujiroHanmaaaa Жыл бұрын
I don't who said it but there is a saying " If you dominated Central Europe, you dominate whole Europen continent ". As a central european country Germany has the best geographical place in terms of economic. The only problem is Germany lack resources.
@martinstock
@martinstock Жыл бұрын
Germany had/has not the amplest resources. But had a bit of nearly everything: gold, silver, copper, lead, salt, iron, coal, oil, uranium, lithium, ... It has a strong mining tradition and the resources were enough to fuel technological progress.
@justusjanzen6010
@justusjanzen6010 Жыл бұрын
risk music hahah I love it
@spxdesu
@spxdesu Жыл бұрын
Hold on. Northern Germany and southern Germany don't simply speak "Plattdeutsch" and "Hochdeutsch". 🤔 Plattdeutsch is a Dialekt only spoken in areas at the north sea coast and Netherlands while "Hochdeutsch" is literally standardized German spoken by everyone. It used to be used to summarized southern dialects in the past tho but if you dig deeper you will find out it was a bad idea. Like every state has its own dialects that have little to do with each other.
@FantasKanal
@FantasKanal Жыл бұрын
Plattdetsch isnt even a dialect, its a language on its own, like Frisian, or Dutch.
@KennyNGA
@KennyNGA Жыл бұрын
Lmao dachte das gibt es fast überall hab an der holländischen Grenze in NRW gewohnt und jetzt bald Ostfriesland und es gab an beiden Orten Plattdeutsch bzw saterfriesisch
@FantasKanal
@FantasKanal Жыл бұрын
@@KennyNGA Ostfriesland ist Kerngebiet was Platt angeht.
@KennyNGA
@KennyNGA Жыл бұрын
@@FantasKanal Lügenpresse wir hatten es zuerst
@jml732
@jml732 Жыл бұрын
@@KennyNGA Der Unterscheid zwischen Nieder-/Hochdeutsch ist, dass die Niederdeutschen Sprachen (Niederländisch+Platt) keine Konsonantenverschiebung wie beim Hochdeutschen gemacht haben, was daran liegt, dass Hochdeutsch durch einem Akzent der keltisch-romanischer Bevölkerung mit-entstanden ist. So ähnlich ist aus Angel-Sächsisch Englisch geworden, durch einen britonischen und später normannischen Akzent.
@FantasKanal
@FantasKanal Жыл бұрын
3:20 Plattdeutsch is not a dialect, its a language on its own. Also, people in the north have less of a dialect than the people in the south and speak in a language closer to high german. The standard dialect of hochdeutsch is based on the dialect of Hannover, if you look at a map... thats not very south... Common dialects are: Bavarian, Saxonian and Swabian... but theres dozens and i dont wanna get into it. So the Info you gave here is just plain wrong. Btw. what you learn in Duolingo is "High german" its the standard dialect afterall. 8:50 the capital of western germany was Bonn, not Berlin
@99batran
@99batran Жыл бұрын
didnt the HRE get abolished to avoid Napoleon becoming the Holy Roman Emperor?
@lenschwedt9646
@lenschwedt9646 Жыл бұрын
Im German and why tf did i only JUST NOW hear that a part of the Pipeline appears to be completly Missing?
@hagmax1531
@hagmax1531 Жыл бұрын
I was hoping for an actual geography analysis, but this video is more like a combination between (simple) facts and the history of the country. That's not wrong in itself, however some clear conclusions are missing. You presented a lot without actually coming back to the main question. At the end of the video I still barely know why geography made Germany powerful, except for the railways and the rivers, a topic that was just barely scratched...
@skraus8786
@skraus8786 Жыл бұрын
at 3:30 when you speak about plattdeutsch and hochdeutsch you are wrong. Yes, plattdeutsch is a generic term for the lots and lots of different northern german dialects wich today are nearly extinct in most areas but "Hochdeutsch" is the term for modern, common german as it is taught in schools. Nobody would consider a Bayer, Schwabe or Franke speaking their dialect as hochdeutsch. It's also widely agreed upon, that the naturally clearest hochdeutsch is spoken in the Hannover area, in northern germany
@rasmusn.e.m1064
@rasmusn.e.m1064 Жыл бұрын
For anyone else confused: at 3:42 he said "To which form Aldi your country might have." Had to repeat that a few times xD
@tomhoni9642
@tomhoni9642 Жыл бұрын
oh boy in southern germany you speak anything but Hochdeutsch xD as a foreign dude who learned Hochdeutsch you will have your difficulties to understand the "native" german slangs basically in no region except around Hannover (im not even sure about that) the "native" language is Hochdeutsch, but some kind of regional "slang". You have frankish, hessian, saxon, frisian, bavarian, swabian, westphalian, palatinate german language, to name a few "larger" regional language categories.
@clemensgunther9644
@clemensgunther9644 Жыл бұрын
Hi, Germany is the 3rd largest European Nation now. Turkey is now rank 2.
@wheeliebeast7679
@wheeliebeast7679 Жыл бұрын
Russia gets credit for number 1 since if one eliminates the population on the Asian side, it still has more population than any country fully in Europe. Unlike Turkey, whose population largely lies in the Asian part, even with the high population density of its European territory..
@RedRocketthefirst
@RedRocketthefirst Жыл бұрын
No
@RedRocketthefirst
@RedRocketthefirst Жыл бұрын
Data?
@liveforever9888
@liveforever9888 Жыл бұрын
Turkey isnt European lol
@AlbertTheGamer-gk7sn
@AlbertTheGamer-gk7sn Жыл бұрын
Ukraine is actually the largest, followed by France, then Germany. Russia has land in Asia, so it is illegible to be a European not Asian country. However, after the Quadruple Anschluss, France became the largest European nation, followed by Ukraine. If Germany still had Pomerania and Eastern Brandenburg, it would be the second largest European nation.
@jml732
@jml732 Жыл бұрын
It is correct to say that the Holy Roman Empire is not a predecessor to Germany. The title "Holy Roman Empire of German Nations" is historically and politically wrong, the title "[...] of German Nations" only came much later in the context as we understand it today. At first there was only the term "Holy Roman Empire" or "Holy Empire / of Germanic (or) Theutonic Nations" (which excluded English, Scots and Scandinavians). German or 'Deutsch' is not a synonym for germanic or theutonic. A pan-Germanic state rightly never came about, since the Old Swiss Confederation, the Dutch and finally the Habsburgs, Luxembourgers, Belgians, Liechtensteiners and Prussians founded their own states. The only reason why the Holy Roman Empire, the German Empire and Nazi Germany existed was because of pessimism towards the outside world, while the aforementioned states (Germany, Switzerland, Netherlands, ...) arose because of pessimism towards inner-germanic rivals.
@Hession0Drasha
@Hession0Drasha Жыл бұрын
All of the major cities of france, germany, poland, hungary, some of romania are connected by internal waterways :) ukraine can be connected in the future.
@cush6827
@cush6827 Жыл бұрын
Napoleon declared himself emperor of France, not of the Holy Roman Empire. In reaction, Francis II declared himself emperor of Austria and subsequently abdicated as Holy Roman Emperor and thus ended the empire.
@texdillinger6173
@texdillinger6173 Жыл бұрын
It's actually "Saksa" in finnish, not Saksaa.
@christopherellis2663
@christopherellis2663 Жыл бұрын
The Danube is the backbone of Central Europe 🇪🇺 it flows from the Black Forest to the Black Sea, and its tributary, the Sava, runs through the Balkans South Eastern Europe is where the Volga flows into the Caspian
@masfiqratul7559
@masfiqratul7559 Жыл бұрын
So Danube run from Black to Black Sorry Forest to Sea
@luckyrefer7442
@luckyrefer7442 Жыл бұрын
German lost Stettin or Szczecin after WW2, which is the most important port city for eastern Germany. If they can buy the city back, their geography will be much more powerful.
@luckyrefer7442
@luckyrefer7442 Жыл бұрын
I know it is very unlikely to happen though I thought the border will be natural which is good in the future. German bought back some land from Netherlands but Poland does not want to sell any land.
@nealer52
@nealer52 Жыл бұрын
That seems like a fun fact but as a German I have to tell you that "Hochdeutsch" doesn't stem from the mountainous regions but rather from the regions that way back when were Prussia and lower saxony :(
@raritania7581
@raritania7581 Жыл бұрын
Prussia and Lower Saxony's dialects are closer to Old English than to Hochdeutsch
@nealer52
@nealer52 Жыл бұрын
@@raritania7581 that might have been the case at one point. After all they are both germanic languages even though English received a French vocabulary. But Hochdeutsch was heavily influenced by Martin Luther and the invention of the letterpress. And he lived in the territories that would later become Prussia.
@user-fu1yt7vb8h
@user-fu1yt7vb8h Жыл бұрын
1:40
@samwill7259
@samwill7259 Жыл бұрын
Those East German numbers have to be going up over time right? Like, not in comparison because the West is also going up but even if they don't equalize the raw living standard in the east is probably getting better, right?
@MichaEl-rh1kv
@MichaEl-rh1kv Жыл бұрын
It is getting better, but in most regions in the East wages are still lower than in the West (while much of the infrastructure is newer), and many younger people left. There are however also some "booming" regions e.g. around Berlin and Leipzig.
@karlhintonwilson5111
@karlhintonwilson5111 Жыл бұрын
Go great Germany!!!
@Hooptymann
@Hooptymann Жыл бұрын
Lmao you mentioned "Rathenow" I'm acutally from there cant belive my beloved shithole got mentioned
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