Mysteries and Obscurities of World War 1 Iceberg

  Рет қаралды 402,654

tanman5123

tanman5123

Күн бұрын

On the 11th Hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month, The War to End all Wars came to an end. World War 1 is often overlooked by its more destructive sequel, but it is just as important to world history as world war 2. It was the first real modern war, and saw the introduction of modern weapons such as automatic gun fire, airplanes, and tanks. But with any war, or any event in history for that matter, it brings on a host of strange and obscure stories. From tales of battalions disappearing, to the most brutal of battles, to giant sea monsters that attacked a submarine. These mysteries and obscruities have been sorted into an iceberg chart, a way of organizing information where at the top, its topics that everyone knows, and as you go further down, the topics become more obscure.
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The Original Iceberg: icebergcharts.com/i/WW1_Myste...
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The SM-UB-35 Sea Monster Art Was Drawn By www.deviantart.com/loneanimat...
I own none of this footage.
Merry Go - Silent Film Light by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...
Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
Artist: incompetech.com/
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Intro 0:00
Tier 1 01:11
Tier 2 13:32
Tier 3 21:34
Tier 4 35:33
Tier 5 49:03
Tier 6 1:01:03
Tier 7 1:13:11
Tier 8 1:21:49
Conclusion 1:29:46

Пікірлер: 1 200
@latewizard301
@latewizard301 6 ай бұрын
Fun fact about the most famous "shell shock" image, the guy smiling isn't in fact under shell shock, he is smiling because a sniper bareley missed him, and he's laughing about it. There was a channel on KZfaq that talked about him, forget what channel it was exactly, but it's that bearded guy with the hot indian wife.
@AK-47Outlaw
@AK-47Outlaw 6 ай бұрын
@LateWizard301 Dude your Awesome 😎👍🏼
@axelhvetlander2212
@axelhvetlander2212 6 ай бұрын
​@@AK-47Outlaw?
@tanman5123
@tanman5123 6 ай бұрын
I had heard both perspectives of the story, and I could only find information on the picture being an actual PSTD victim. If you have a source for the real story, I would like to see it
@ajax3310
@ajax3310 6 ай бұрын
Hot indian wife lmao
@docholtzful
@docholtzful 6 ай бұрын
That still sounds like it could be ptsd or shell shocked. At least it doesn't prove that it's not
@landronsc
@landronsc 6 ай бұрын
The Christmas Truce will always be my favorite historical event. Makes me happy to see things so wholesome during awful times.
@bosanaz2010
@bosanaz2010 6 ай бұрын
Just that it didnt happend like that.Yes there was a cease fire,yes the spoke to each other,but didnt celebrated togther or played soccer.The picture often showen is from Britisch (or franz) troops playing soccer in a field camp behind the front.PPl often thing soliders stayed all the time in the trenches.But they didnt.They would rotate from front trenches to back and then after some weeks in a far more remoter Field camp. A important thing germany didnt do so much as the allied, so the german soldiers were oftne more tired.Same is in Ukraine russia rigth now.Ukrainiens are able to regain and calm down...russians are not.... Jus think about it.
@noth606
@noth606 6 ай бұрын
You were there? You said you saw it... At any rate, I'm near certain not much like the story happened, my guess is it happened, sort of, at one spot on the line - and propaganda took the ball and ran with it. Sources from the time have peculiar wording, but later it's turned into something that implies it was common. I'm certain it wasn't - because doing what is described would have generated lot of executions for collaborating with the enemy.
@Falkriim
@Falkriim 6 ай бұрын
Same
@Falkriim
@Falkriim 6 ай бұрын
@@noth606 Well actually it happened all along the front and some of the soldiers who participated were rotated off of the front because they refused to fight after that. There might not have been a football match, but they certainly met and exchanged goods. Why would propaganda run with something that promotes fraternisation?
@noth606
@noth606 6 ай бұрын
@@Falkriim You're welcome to believe what you want, I have had the chance more than once to compare what's "history", what was in "media" at the time, and evidence actually on the ground, to know that between 99% and 100% of nearly all modern "war history" is untrue. What is "official history" is never true, at least I've never once found it to be - it's somewhere between wildly embellished and completely made up. What's worse even, is that actual events disappear completely, I've been a first hand witness to what I'd consider important events when I was in the military. Not a peep ever came out of it. You'd think something would come out, even if on some conspiracy crank site or so - but nope. Zero. So I'll stick to what makes sense to me, and y'all can stick to what you like, and in the mean time what actually happened has been put 6' under and forgotten long before we were born. Refusing orders, abandoning post and fraternizing with the enemy is seldom rewarded with vacations, like you said happened, but then again, neither of us knows.
@billbobs5817
@billbobs5817 4 ай бұрын
37:38 We all know that who really killed the red baron was Snoopy
@andres20111996
@andres20111996 Ай бұрын
Snoopy, war hero
@GeneralMimzy
@GeneralMimzy 6 ай бұрын
It sucks that ww1 is always kinda overlooked so I’m super happy to see this
@skech_animations-wt9sg
@skech_animations-wt9sg 6 ай бұрын
Yah it sucks. But how I like to see ww1 is it was a way deadlier war then ww2 even though that's not true.
@CrisisMoon7
@CrisisMoon7 6 ай бұрын
it’s more talked about in Europe than in America
@MrORIGINAL81
@MrORIGINAL81 6 ай бұрын
It typically happens as the generations go on. Eventually WWII will fade and people will be talking about Vietnam more. The last WWI veteran died over a decade ago but there are still thousands of WWII veterans alive so we can still get a sense of WWII first hand. However, they are dying fast. Same thing most likely happened with the Revolutionary war, Civil war, and so on. We all get lost to time eventually.
@GeneralMimzy
@GeneralMimzy 6 ай бұрын
Ima sleep well tonight@@MrORIGINAL81
@skech_animations-wt9sg
@skech_animations-wt9sg 6 ай бұрын
​@@extantfellow46 thanks for correcting me
@VirgoShelter
@VirgoShelter 6 ай бұрын
Hearing him call USS Cyclops a submarine multiple times hurt.
@steamroddsroundhouse2080
@steamroddsroundhouse2080 5 ай бұрын
what you mean, it did turn into a submarine to the end
@The___Big___L___3309
@The___Big___L___3309 5 ай бұрын
Bro same, I felt my soul crumble every time he said it
@thevladman2000
@thevladman2000 5 ай бұрын
I might be wrong, but there may be another ship named during that time. I guess this because im gonna use USS Montana, which was a destroyer, and another ship named USS Montana, which was a battleship that, if i remember correctly, was canceled and scrapped, though i could be wrong
@TheSkyGuy77
@TheSkyGuy77 5 ай бұрын
""submarine""
@HazmatUnit
@HazmatUnit 5 ай бұрын
Thank you! It drove me crazy as I was Bermuda Triangle when I was younger. He even went and posted a photo of the Titan.
@alcatraz161
@alcatraz161 6 ай бұрын
The russian sentry one is probably about russian soldier who was found in collapsed tunnels in Osowiec fortress in Poland. After the Great War newly formed polish state was rebuilding old imperial fortress, when they found him. He was blind, and refused to leave his post when polish soldiers ordered him to. The sentry said that the only people who could remove him from his post were his CO or the Tsar himself UPD: decided to get rid of my drunk ass typos and clarify why dude didn't die when he was trapped in the tunnels. Russian Imperial Army withdrew from Poland in 1915 being certain they will return soon enough. Russian general stuff viewed the retreat as necessary step to regroup the army so they wouldn't be sandwiched by German and Austrian army from north, south and west (speaking of their Polish territories). When they've withdrew they've stashed huge amounts of necessary stuff for soldiers - ammo, weapons, clothes and most importantly - canned food. The sentry was trapped in one of this stashes under Osowiec fortress. For nine years straight he was eating canned food and drank water that flowed from a crack in the ceiling.
@occam7382
@occam7382 6 ай бұрын
What happened to the guy?
@alcatraz161
@alcatraz161 6 ай бұрын
@@occam7382 Polish officer who've served in Russian Imperial Army told him there is no Russian Empire anymore, and sentry agreed to surrender. After that there are no certainty about his fate - in some sources he somewhat recovered and lived in Poland for many years to come and in others he later succumbed to health problems and died prior WW2 Upd: I googled it a bit and it seems that he was in tunnels since 1915 to 1924, and poles offered him to stay in Poland and wrote about him in newspapers in 1925, calling him the most loyal tsar's soldier, but he refused to stay and left to his hometown somewhere in western Siberia. I was unable to find his name tho, but nevertheless there are some proofs that dude was real
@195j
@195j 6 ай бұрын
Whats his name
@alexbroshome
@alexbroshome 5 ай бұрын
yeah the second part is probably true@@alcatraz161
@zloycommentator83
@zloycommentator83 5 ай бұрын
@@195j Sergey🤭
@mr.lavander7145
@mr.lavander7145 6 ай бұрын
The anti-Germanization of WWI wasn't just renaming food, it also put an end to many German-American cultural institutions. German churches, schools and communities rebranded, switched to English and distanced themselves from Germany. It was when Germans joined English as being mainstream white Americans with little German heritage in most cases.
@Werty715_25
@Werty715_25 5 ай бұрын
Also, the russians changed the name of an entire city, because it sounded "too german".
@johnsanko4136
@johnsanko4136 5 ай бұрын
English Royalty even changed their family name in 1917 to distance themselves away from their German heritage. Queen Victoria, a Hanover monarch, married the Austro-Hungarian prince Albert Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, bringing their name to the royal house of England. But when anti-Jerry sentiments rose, they changed the royal family name from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to a more traditional Anglo-Saxon sounding Windsor, which remains today.
@Aye-McHunt
@Aye-McHunt 5 ай бұрын
In Britain, because of anti German feelings, the German Shepherd dog breed was renamed to Alsatian. This carried on into the 60's and 70's. I first saw a German Shepherd in 1970 but, when I asked what breed it was, its owner called it an Alsatian. It wasn't until the mid 80's that I learned their true name.
@Rose-hh1zy
@Rose-hh1zy 5 ай бұрын
I was raised in a small town where before the world wars, people spoke fluent German because this community was filled with German and Swiss immigrants, me being 5th gen Swiss. My town was Berlin, obviously named after the capital of Germany, but we changed the pronunciation of the town, and no one spoke German ever again, the language in my family died with my great grandfather. It sucks cause I didn’t even know my own roots until last year. Me and my father are planning to visit Germany and Switzerland next year to visit our roots and maybe even some distant relatives.
@mr.lavander7145
@mr.lavander7145 5 ай бұрын
Berlin, WI? I spent part of my childhood in Ripon and I learned later about Berlin changing pronunciation to BER-lin instead of ber-LIN. That's very cool! @@Rose-hh1zy
@gabemissouri
@gabemissouri 6 ай бұрын
18:03 That is actually a picture of the Canadian soldier Private Robert Lindsay Rogers. The reason he is smiling in that photo is because he survived getting shot in the neck by a german sniper.
@benkeogh7864
@benkeogh7864 6 ай бұрын
Them WW1 Canadians really were a different breed
@theboshow9697
@theboshow9697 6 ай бұрын
It was also a major deal to be on camera back then, that's why in a lot of photos everyone is smiling
@edmardisla8492
@edmardisla8492 6 ай бұрын
And also Larry.
@miguel.s7729
@miguel.s7729 6 ай бұрын
Yeah he died later in the war
@gabemissouri
@gabemissouri 6 ай бұрын
@@miguel.s7729 I am aware
@doctorbobcat7123
@doctorbobcat7123 6 ай бұрын
These historical icebergs are awesome I loved the WWII one, would listen to it all the time while studying. Hope you'll release a Cold War / Vietnam one I'm sure there's a tonne you could cover.
@tanman5123
@tanman5123 6 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@ryankrappweis5290
@ryankrappweis5290 6 ай бұрын
​@tanman5123 I really enjoyed the lost media iceberg as well! You're one of my favorite channels, so keep up the good work!
@variaxi935
@variaxi935 6 ай бұрын
"expecially" "excaped" etc. lmao man doesn't believe in the letter "S" 😭
@admarmayzo
@admarmayzo 3 ай бұрын
It´s painful. Great videos otherwise but please it hurts to listen to
@RadicalRadixerus
@RadicalRadixerus 3 ай бұрын
His speech is overall pretty poor, he never says the whole word, always leaving out at least one random consanant
@jacobrosenthal8161
@jacobrosenthal8161 6 ай бұрын
As a german, hearing him butcher the red barons name is one of the most painful things imaginable
@buttholebandit3815
@buttholebandit3815 6 ай бұрын
Score board dude , we get to say it anyway we want
@blakekenley1000
@blakekenley1000 6 ай бұрын
Well, I'm 31 now. When I was in school, the only foreign language offered was Spanish. Mind you, the school system I came out of is absolute garbage. It's rare to meet a bilingual American in most of this country because it's not used, and if it is it's Spanish. Mainly Central American Spanish, so it's not even the same as what you would hear in Europe.
@ht14
@ht14 6 ай бұрын
​@@extantfellow46The problem with that is that German words and names are pronounced exactly how they're written yet people still fuck up because english is legit confusing to pronounce itself
@ht14
@ht14 6 ай бұрын
Also doesn't help that the J is a Y and the V is a F
@janpetrik3422
@janpetrik3422 6 ай бұрын
As a Czech, hearing him butcher names of Edvard Beneš and the Czechoslovakin Republic, that must be one of the most painful things imaginable
@kadenthoreson9915
@kadenthoreson9915 6 ай бұрын
The Christmas truce is really wholesome but also sad to me. They were all having fun and playing games together for a day but then went straight back to fighting each other a few days later probably killing some that just a few days ago, they were just talking and laughing with each other.
@Didymus20X6
@Didymus20X6 5 ай бұрын
A lot of the soldiers were rotated out or reassigned to other locations. Their superiors anticipated that a lot of them would refuse to fight men that they had befriended. Look up the song by Sabaton. And the Sabaton History episode about it as well.
@kadenthoreson9915
@kadenthoreson9915 5 ай бұрын
@@Didymus20X6 that makes it a little better. Sadly lives were still lost but at least they didn't kill people they just made friends with.
@shawnshoptaugh4907
@shawnshoptaugh4907 4 ай бұрын
Yeah, and it was all ruined by higher-up brass. Guys that weren't directly there and had no skin in the game
@pablobro5944
@pablobro5944 2 күн бұрын
​@@shawnshoptaugh4907you just described every war ever
@zenitsuagatsuma2834
@zenitsuagatsuma2834 6 ай бұрын
I went to school with a lot of Armenians. A lot of their families went through the genocide. During a history when they mention it, almost half of all Armenian students raised their hands for having a family member part of the genocide.
@wickedskittle9917
@wickedskittle9917 3 ай бұрын
My grandmother had a friend who only herself and her mother somehow survived. Whole family gone
@pumpkingpie2938
@pumpkingpie2938 6 ай бұрын
Rasputin died from DROWNING. Not the bullets, not the freezing temperature of the water. He was just unconscious when he was dumped in the river💀
@docholtzful
@docholtzful 6 ай бұрын
You no that's just a myth. Unless you think he actually hypnotis people with eyes
@pumpkingpie2938
@pumpkingpie2938 6 ай бұрын
@@docholtzful of course he does🗿he was built different
@ColtTheWolf
@ColtTheWolf 5 ай бұрын
Mistranslation. He didn't drown in the river, he drowned in pussy
@GrubbusHubbus
@GrubbusHubbus 9 күн бұрын
You believe he died? No, my friend. Rasputin lives.
@LTKK
@LTKK 5 ай бұрын
WW1 has such a creepy feeling. It’s hard to describe. I think the inner empath in me envisions how horrifying it must’ve been. All wars are scary, but imagine being in the first one to use tanks, automatics, chemical weapons. Not only was the war itself a mindf**k, but the weapons of war were probably a mental hurdle of its own. It just seems like such a dark and scary time compared to other wars.
@Ekdrink
@Ekdrink 5 ай бұрын
“Inner empath in me” fucking zoomers
@westonsgenericchannel
@westonsgenericchannel 5 ай бұрын
Also the fact that as of now, nobody who served in ww1 is still alive
@alexlemaire8513
@alexlemaire8513 5 ай бұрын
idk about other countries but in canada people were running to go enlist when Britain joined (our status as an independent state was only really in between the 2 wars) a bunch of young boys pretended to be of age to be eligible. they had no idea the horrors they were getting themselves into, the torture of chemical weapons for one. thankfully plastic surgery being revolutionized helped some but even then ptsd was so unknown then too.
@norddorian5791
@norddorian5791 4 ай бұрын
Empathetic
@ThReverend6661
@ThReverend6661 4 ай бұрын
you don’t have to be empathetic to understand the banality of evil.
@JJake993
@JJake993 6 ай бұрын
I can’t remember where I learned this, but I remember reading reports of British pilots spotting an unidentified plane in the sky on multiple occasions. A few of these pilots said the person flying the plane was a woman dressed as a Valkyrie.
@Didymus20X6
@Didymus20X6 5 ай бұрын
First, are you related to the guy who plays in Aether Realm? Second, I wonder if you might be thinking of the Night Witches, a Russian unit of female pilots who flew outdated biplanes to do silent bomber runs in the Second War.
@lindboknifeandtool
@lindboknifeandtool 2 ай бұрын
@@Didymus20X6why do you ask that? I just found one of their songs lol
@sansthedrummer
@sansthedrummer 3 ай бұрын
We Canadians embodied the term "it ain't a war crime the first time."
@stopmakingeyesatme1290
@stopmakingeyesatme1290 6 ай бұрын
Dave Munger has a good video on the Gavrilo Princip thing. It's basically a myth. While Princip was actually waiting on that corner, he hadn't called off the assassination (actually, the mistake was that Franz Ferdinand's driver had accidentally turned down the original route where Princip was, instead of the new one) and he wasn't getting a sandwich (which wasn't even a part of the local cuisine at the time). That story apparently comes from a novel, and people misinterpreted the fictional aspect of that story as historical fact.
@nenadmilovanovic5271
@nenadmilovanovic5271 5 ай бұрын
Finally someone with a lick of sense.
@leomathlein3658
@leomathlein3658 5 ай бұрын
The guy smiling with shell shock, wasnt actually experiencing ptsd from what i've read. He was talking to an officer in front of him when a sniper hit him in the neck. The bullet went straight through his neck without causing major damage and killed the officer in front of him. Hes sitting on the ground because he had to wait for 8 hours to be evacuated at night, and hes smiling because 1: he just barely made it out alive and 2: because thats what people did when on camera at that time. His eyes look weird because the cameras were bad in dim light back then.
@st.paddymad7085
@st.paddymad7085 6 ай бұрын
Finally, a WW1 iceberg, I imagine more uncanny things happening in comparison to WW2.
@TheSkyGuy77
@TheSkyGuy77 5 ай бұрын
28:26 Uh no. It ended on NOVEMBER 11th 1918, not March 😂
@plaidzebra5526
@plaidzebra5526 6 ай бұрын
56:04 When it comes to the crucified soldier, one of the biggest key witnesses was a man by the name William Metcalf. An American fighting in the Canadian army and winner of the Victoria Cross ( England's highest military medal) who came across the body of the crucified soldier with his men first hand, stating he was close enough to see the Maple Leaf badges on the man's uniform and watching another man checking out the body. I think it's interesting that a VC winner had witnessed it first hand is all.
@nenadmilovanovic5271
@nenadmilovanovic5271 5 ай бұрын
Considering what atrocities austro-hungarians and germans commited in Serbia at the start of the war, I wouldn't be surprised they crucified someone.
@FearOfTheDarkS312
@FearOfTheDarkS312 5 ай бұрын
It is much more likely the soldier was pinned by shrapnel from a bomb than purposefully crucified
@ColtTheWolf
@ColtTheWolf 5 ай бұрын
⁠@@FearOfTheDarkS312Did you get this from the Passchendaele film? lol
@dosidicusgigas1376
@dosidicusgigas1376 4 ай бұрын
@@ColtTheWolf It happend often, men got trapped in barbed wire, they got thrown around and pinned by shells too. I cant see a situation where German soldiers feel the need to waste time and crucify a Canadian, the odds of the soldier being recovered would be high since death from crucifixion takes a while, then theyd have to contend with accusations of war crimes.
@ColtTheWolf
@ColtTheWolf 4 ай бұрын
@@dosidicusgigas1376 Yep. Nobody has that sort of energy and there's no way commanding officers wouldn't stop that sort of behaviour. Especially given the religious nature of people those days, there's no way they'd be able to do that, it'd be seen as a mockery of Christianity and massively demoralising. Also consider the mud. How would they be able to hoist up while sliding around in such deep mud without being shot? They'd have to leave the trench and stand upright in plain sight of snipers to lift a crucified man up. Logistically and physically impossible. Your view makes sense, I agree with it entirely.
@jelyse14
@jelyse14 6 ай бұрын
Ive watched a few of his videos by now and its crazy the number of times he's said he didnt know what a word was and its a common english word that any native english speaker would know and my first thought is, how young is this guy and how can someone avoid coming across these words for so many years?
@GhoulCityOffline
@GhoulCityOffline 6 ай бұрын
Bro just asked if "amongst" was a word. What the fuck
@Elchinoalto
@Elchinoalto 6 ай бұрын
Dawg English from England is way different then American documents and he prolly hit most of his info from the us and British papers from the time
@g0rdonfreeman1
@g0rdonfreeman1 6 ай бұрын
@@Elchinoalto I'm an American and I understood pretty much every word he didn't know
@Ekdrink
@Ekdrink 5 ай бұрын
Chronically online
@Big_Dolfie
@Big_Dolfie 4 ай бұрын
I don't know anything about him, but i assume that English might not be his first language
@xato3796
@xato3796 20 күн бұрын
Fun fact about the Spanish Flu. It likely wasn’t as deadly as we are taught. In med school you learn about iatrogenic harm (which is when the treatment of an illness is actually causing the issue), and the Spanish flu is the case example. In the western forces, Asprin was used to treat fever. Spanish flu caused fever and because of the fighting, fever was believed to not only be the deadly aspect, but also was the thing that incapacitated a soldier. So they were issuing huge doses of Asprin in order to combat fever. Well… overdose of Asprin causes fever… so many soldiers were getting fevers from Asprin overdose and then given more Asprin. But when they died of fever, (since that’s what kills you with the flu) they were chalked up as Spanish flu deaths as well. It’s literally impossible to gauge how many deaths were from Asprin and how many from the Spanish flu, but the lethality rate was significantly less than thought. Not to mention battlefield and wartime conditions in general aren’t the best for treating regular flu outbreaks and this likely caused a more severe spread and therefore more Asprin use. Doses you can find in military medical records are sometimes 100x higher than the LD50 known today.
@therago1456
@therago1456 6 ай бұрын
A little tidbit about the scuttling of the High Seas Fleet at Scapa Flow is that the British admirality was somewhat happy that the ships were ruined as it settled most debates about what to do with the ships.
@TheAndropoff
@TheAndropoff 5 ай бұрын
plus we got the scrap metal..
@simonnachreiner8380
@simonnachreiner8380 3 ай бұрын
Considering the sheer amount of goddamn politics it takes to decommission a semi-modern warship I believe it. The US navy still keeps a lot of battleships around for this exact reason. Although they do get some use as floating artillery divisions.
@verdahl253
@verdahl253 5 ай бұрын
Regarding the hound of Mons - in Iraq and Afghanistan, packs of stray dogs would eat the dead or severely wounded. If the locals/insurgents didn't collect the bodies, which was often enough as they were usually in sectors of fire or assumed to be booby-trapped, then the stray dogs regarded them as a large meal. Soldiers who found themselves separated during patrols for a significant time (yes, soldiers occasionally screw up that bad) would occasionally report being stalked by the feral packs.
@wickedskittle9917
@wickedskittle9917 3 ай бұрын
What a terrifying thought.....trained for war. Trained to be stalked by the human enemy.... Gets stalked in the desert by wild packs of dogs.....insane.
@PublicEmilyNo1
@PublicEmilyNo1 6 ай бұрын
Amazing video! If you were interesting in continuing this series further, I think a Cold War Mysteries and Obscurities iceberg would be very interesting!
@Gettasghost
@Gettasghost 6 ай бұрын
Korean War too! There's so little out there in the public mind
@docholtzful
@docholtzful 6 ай бұрын
​@@extantfellow46 that doesn't make since how can you have present day tech 70 years in the past
@bailydekker9377
@bailydekker9377 5 ай бұрын
What I think is really interesting is that there is documentation of civil war veterans fighting in World War 1. The quick changes in technology and war tactics must have been insane to see.
@rayanderson5797
@rayanderson5797 5 ай бұрын
Man imagine going through some of those battles, Antietam, Bull Run, Manassas, etc.... And then going on to fight in World War 1.
@thatlittlevoice6354
@thatlittlevoice6354 4 ай бұрын
50 year difference, js. 15 yo in '65 would be 65 in '14.
@Crazyknight2133
@Crazyknight2133 3 ай бұрын
@@thatlittlevoice6354it’s actually possible being that even at 13yo at the youngest, who made a career out of the military would be high ranking NCO/Officers if commissioned. That’s also assuming at the tail end of the Civil War
@bailydekker9377
@bailydekker9377 3 ай бұрын
@@thatlittlevoice6354 yes 50 year difference but there are some books on these guys that really did see both sides. I’ll snag some titles if you’re interested. I think they are on audio books too if you’re working or whatever.
@jeffreytam7684
@jeffreytam7684 5 ай бұрын
USS Cyclops wasn't actually a submarine-she was a collier. These are large vessels meant to supply and support other ships, including submarines.
@chugachuga9242
@chugachuga9242 3 ай бұрын
@@amerifatcheeseburgerhe found out what scuttling is, look in the grand scheme or things it’s not that important.
@synthwavecat96
@synthwavecat96 3 ай бұрын
@@chugachuga9242 Except it very much is because misinformation muddles and ruins history, and detracts from the sacrifices made during wartime.
@timothyhayes9724
@timothyhayes9724 6 ай бұрын
Hey love the iceberg but USS Cyclops was not a submarine. It was a type of ship called a Collier. It is often associated with the Bermuda triangle (which is a load of nonsense b/c ships sink everywhere all the time in higher rates than there anyway). It's believed it may have been a victim of a process called ore liquifaction which has sunk and continues to sink ore carriers to this day.
@benswolo3048
@benswolo3048 6 ай бұрын
As a German I really Loved how incredibly the pronounciation of our words gets changed. Lovely and a Great Video Never the less
@NewArchipelago
@NewArchipelago 6 ай бұрын
It's spelled "pronunciation".
@Didymus20X6
@Didymus20X6 5 ай бұрын
@@NewArchipelago We butcher his language, he butchers ours...
@ColtTheWolf
@ColtTheWolf 5 ай бұрын
@@Didymus20X6languages are more fun when we make mistakes imo. When the situation isn't serious, some pretty hilarious things can ensure. "If my grandmother had wheels, she would've been a bike"
@estebansteverincon7117
@estebansteverincon7117 3 ай бұрын
That's OK, he continuously mispronounces non-German words as well. It's pretty abysmal.
@UltraNostalgia
@UltraNostalgia 6 ай бұрын
I love undertime slopper
@Zaikia
@Zaikia 6 ай бұрын
I love undertime slopper
@jakeisrandom3343
@jakeisrandom3343 6 ай бұрын
I love undertime slopper
@lllllllxlllllll300
@lllllllxlllllll300 6 ай бұрын
I love undertime slopper
@Bababooey887
@Bababooey887 6 ай бұрын
I love undertime slopper
@gabriellarosa7159
@gabriellarosa7159 6 ай бұрын
I love undertime slopper
@sasha1mama
@sasha1mama 4 ай бұрын
Some pronunciation corrections: Rasputin: rosp oo teen. Cábrinović: kah bree no vich. Schlieffen: shleef en. Ypres: eep ruh. Mannfred Albrecht Freiherr von Richthofen: mann-fred al-brekt fry-hair von rikt-ho-fen. (Freiherr means 'freeman', not baron. He actually was a baron. Please do not spread inaccurate information.) Cavalry: kav al ree (not kal-varee). Agincourt: ajjin-kor. Passchendaele: pashen day la. Croix de Guerre: kwah de gair. Also, Cher Amí was a female pigeon, not male. Petaín: peh ton. Osowieć: oh so vyech. Kadaververwertungsanstalt: ka dah ver ver vair tung zon stahlt. No, insofar as we know, there was no corpse-soap factory. The real corpse factory was the uniforms and equipment recovered from the field, cleaned, repaired, refurbished, and re-issued to fresh recruits, sometimes with the dead men's nametags still on them. Beauchámp: bo-shomp. Gottlieb Höchmuller: goht-leeb hok-mooler. And no, his experiment could not have succeeded due to simple biological differences between human and canine. But there *was* a huge canid roving those fields, most likely a dogman. And yes, 'amongst' is a word. I know literacy has taken a nosedive in recent years, but don't let this generation's failings make you doubt what you know about grammar. If you're *part* of this generation, then I'm sorry - attend remedial English and Literature classes. Make an effort to become fluent in your native language (I can't believe I'm actually typing those words) and improve or master basic literacy.
@VisibleLeon
@VisibleLeon 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the Info
@pablobro5944
@pablobro5944 2 күн бұрын
☝️🤓
@notvelocityy9129
@notvelocityy9129 6 ай бұрын
The most famous picture of a shellshocked soldier is even of a shellshocked soldier. He was smiling because he got shot and survived.
@docholtzful
@docholtzful 6 ай бұрын
There aren't mutually exclusive
@IncarnateSable
@IncarnateSable 5 ай бұрын
That They Might Be Giants reference was cheeky, just gotta remember that New York was once New Amsterdam
@Chance4
@Chance4 6 ай бұрын
For Rasputin, you forgot to mention that they had to wrap the man in a carpet before throwing him in
@CrisisMoon7
@CrisisMoon7 6 ай бұрын
9:37 Into the machine, Sly 1 14:15 This poster caused a lot of controversy with German-Americans who were a large minority in America 15:57 Pokémon black and white 17:00 Looking at footage of shell shock makes me wanna cry 22:44 Sly 1 Casino music 27:54 Sly 1 Ruby’s swamp 35:55 Sly 3 Holland theme, fitting 42:50 Pokémon black and white music 44:28 more Pokémon music 46:30 Pokémon music 49:19 Sly 3 Dog fighting music 54:30 aww she’s adorable :D 55:08 Sly 1 Ruby’s swamp 1:09:40 Sly 1 swamp music 1:18:47 Sly 3 Lemonade competition
@EmilyKimMartin
@EmilyKimMartin 6 ай бұрын
I never expected most of the music (specially the track at 27:50) to be from Sly 1 lmao
@pik3177
@pik3177 6 ай бұрын
some of the pokemon tracks were from pokemon diamond and pearl and heart gold and soul silver
@rayanderson5797
@rayanderson5797 5 ай бұрын
Lol, yeah I'm paused at 9:35 exactly, looking at the comments to see if anyone else caught it.
@JoeMamaisdabest
@JoeMamaisdabest 2 ай бұрын
ik they seemed familiar
@randomitalian909
@randomitalian909 6 ай бұрын
18:38 they might be giants reference, love it
@syvatality
@syvatality 6 ай бұрын
39:41 My great great grandfather served in World War I and he told my grandmother which told me that every night he had to put all the covers on top of his face in the barracks like in the sleeping quarters area, so the rats wouldn’t run all over his face, and he did it until he died
@ronaldoalfaro7692
@ronaldoalfaro7692 5 ай бұрын
About the cyanide, it is volatile and sometimes neutralized by sugars, that may be sufficient to explain why Rasputin didn't die because of the poisoned cakes.
@variaxi935
@variaxi935 6 ай бұрын
a few days ago I watch the WWII iceberg... a day or two later the WWI iceberg comes out. yeah, definitely subbing ASAP
@meyers6975
@meyers6975 6 ай бұрын
There was a story that a russian soldier got locked up inside a food basement of Osowiec Fortress(the same from the attack of the dead man) and stayed there for nearly 9 years when some polish people found him, because he lived in darkness for years, when leaving the basement, the sunlight blinded him, at least according to the polish newspaper of the time
@Biggiechesse888
@Biggiechesse888 4 ай бұрын
It's a popular legend in Poland and Russia but a urban legend
@Ben-0
@Ben-0 6 ай бұрын
Was excited when I saw your recent upload. I recently saw the iceberg on WW2 and it was really good.
@jelyse14
@jelyse14 6 ай бұрын
1:14:00 Drawing can be like a form of therapy. My most disturbing sketches have been from times when my mind was in a really dark place. Its almost like journaling, it gets it out of your mind and onto paper. Helps you process emotions.
@Werty715_25
@Werty715_25 5 ай бұрын
I remember that there's a photo of a polish girl, whose family was killed in ww2, tasked with drawing a house. It was unrecognizable.
@slrrt
@slrrt 6 ай бұрын
So happy to see you keep releasing content! Can’t wait for what’s next ! Keep it up man!
@tanman5123
@tanman5123 6 ай бұрын
For sure, thanks for watching!
@matthewcochran3325
@matthewcochran3325 5 ай бұрын
18:39 I was gonna subscribe as soon as the video finished but when you made a They Might be Giants reference, I had to stop what I was doing and subscribe. Keep up the good work, buddy.
@VisibleLeon
@VisibleLeon 5 ай бұрын
Idk there A LOT OF historical inaccuracies in this video like the Stab-In-The-Back Myth that he got COMPLETELY wrong.
@matthewcochran3325
@matthewcochran3325 5 ай бұрын
@@VisibleLeon he sounds like a young man that is trying to make his mark in this harsh circus we call life. He may make a mistake every now and then. He may get the facts a little squirrelly sometimes. If he is given the right criticism, he will probably do better next time.
@VisibleLeon
@VisibleLeon 5 ай бұрын
@@matthewcochran3325 Dawg he gets the most basic thing wrong like the false picture of the Associate of Mata Hari. In this picture was literally Crown Prince William the third.
@VisibleLeon
@VisibleLeon 5 ай бұрын
However i do think you were very polite about it.
@matthewcochran3325
@matthewcochran3325 5 ай бұрын
​@@VisibleLeonyikes. Yeah, he needs to hit the books a little harder before he makes another video
@MoldyAppleEater
@MoldyAppleEater 6 ай бұрын
Ive watched all 3 of your iceberg videos, would love a pt.2 for ww1. I dont see enough of them
@circleancopan7748
@circleancopan7748 6 ай бұрын
One of the most obscure I knew in World War I, was Tomas Claudio, the first Filipino KIA in the Western Front.
@mikkelgravgaard1093
@mikkelgravgaard1093 6 ай бұрын
Came across this channel because of the ww2 video, and I must say, I love your vids. Keep up the good work!
@nemmexebaalludin1268
@nemmexebaalludin1268 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for mentioning the Armenian [and Assyrian's] genocide.
@AresTakeoff
@AresTakeoff 5 ай бұрын
Great video my man!!
@maxias5
@maxias5 6 ай бұрын
please dont stop uploading bro, you're hella good at this :-)
@user-yb2jd8rn2j
@user-yb2jd8rn2j 6 ай бұрын
another amazing video, you never fail to make amazing content tanman!
@tanman5123
@tanman5123 6 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@nekroy3385
@nekroy3385 6 ай бұрын
Just watched the WW2 Iceberg Video. Great Stuff! I would say the video is perfectly composed. I would've guessed you had at least a million subscribers judging by the video quality.
@tanman5123
@tanman5123 6 ай бұрын
Hopefully one day, thanks for watching!
@nekroy3385
@nekroy3385 6 ай бұрын
@@tanman5123 If you keep up the good work you'll get there in no time. 👉👉❤️
@anthonycollantes17
@anthonycollantes17 6 ай бұрын
Great upload timing, playing this during my smoke sesh🔥
@HZStudios2023
@HZStudios2023 6 ай бұрын
the long awaited sequel, but timelinewise prequel to Mysteries and Obscurities of World War 2 Iceberg
@Falkriim
@Falkriim 6 ай бұрын
Yep
@inhabss
@inhabss 6 ай бұрын
bruh i keep accidentally finishing your videos 😂 i dont know why but youre just so like genuine its so enjoyable and calming to watch
@schmlif8839
@schmlif8839 5 ай бұрын
Props for explaining the concept of icebergs without going "everyone knows what an iceberg is but in case you dont"
@SonOfTheDawn515
@SonOfTheDawn515 6 ай бұрын
21:11 you only face war crimes tribunals when you're on the losing side.
@miguel.s7729
@miguel.s7729 6 ай бұрын
@tanman5123 17:57 is actually private Robert Lindsay Rogers , from the canadian 25th battalion , in that picture, rogers was reportedly talking to a Sargent when a sniper shot at Robert hiting him in the neck but going straight through and killing the Sargent, robert survived the shot, and in that photo its just him and a few comrades helping them with his wound , hes just happy that hes alive, he survived the wound and got back into the front, but he was killed later in the war when charging hostile positions.
@soggybiscotti8425
@soggybiscotti8425 6 ай бұрын
Rasputin was a hectic mad lad. Theres so many interesting stories about him.
@captainjames8799
@captainjames8799 6 ай бұрын
You definitely need to make more videos you are one of my favorite channels now
@tanman5123
@tanman5123 6 ай бұрын
For sure, thanks for watching!
@Ziggiratt
@Ziggiratt 6 ай бұрын
Liked and subscribed, simply because of your reference at 18:36 Nice video too!
@ianeons9278
@ianeons9278 Ай бұрын
Someone who should have really been on the list is Jiroemon Kimura. He was a Japanese man who was the last living World War I veteran. He was born in 1897 and served towards the end of the war in 1918 in the Imperial Japanese Army, leaving in 1921. He died in 2013 at the age of 116. Not only was he the very last verifiable living WWI veteran but he was also the last verifiable living man born in the 19th century and the oldest verifiable man in history when he died. This means that the last living veteran from a war that happened nearly 106 years ago died not even 11 years ago. Mind blowing to think about.
@_bellona_792
@_bellona_792 5 ай бұрын
33:26 footage of the largest payload to be detonated in WW1. The Messines Ridge. It can be seen on Google Maps still to this day, known as the Spanbroekmulen crater, and was made from an underground tunnel full of explosives, dug by British forces
@KibuFox
@KibuFox 6 ай бұрын
Error: 26:40. USS Cyclops was NOT a submarine.
@board1666
@board1666 6 ай бұрын
great video as always
@cheekychap8998
@cheekychap8998 4 ай бұрын
he cant pronounce squirrels lol
@thenkk4914
@thenkk4914 5 ай бұрын
I remember seeing the story of rasputin and how after they retrieved his body they initially deemed him dead from the gunshots and found water in his lungs as if he was still breathing when he was dumped into the water, making them question if he drowned rather than bled out
@115Cyprain
@115Cyprain 6 ай бұрын
Always wonderful to see a fellow West Virginian doing well! You make great videos! Keep up the great work!
@RJTradess
@RJTradess 5 ай бұрын
that explains why he didn’t know if “amongst” was a real word or not that’s that West Virginia education boy!!
@Ekdrink
@Ekdrink 5 ай бұрын
@@RJTradesswhat I was thinking lmfao
@gavincampbell7488
@gavincampbell7488 4 ай бұрын
Subbed. Great video brother
@ChochunskaNebena
@ChochunskaNebena 6 ай бұрын
Nice video man👍
@warweasel2832
@warweasel2832 4 ай бұрын
I would've loved to see the Repeated Isonzo offensives, Albert Mayer/Jules-André Peugeot (the Skirmish at Joncherey), Brewster Body Shield, and the Compagnies della morte/Farina Armor in this list.
@thehuntsmansniper
@thehuntsmansniper 5 ай бұрын
Bro said Richtofen wrong and I had a stroke
@JB-kt9dx
@JB-kt9dx 6 ай бұрын
Awesome video bro keep these up
@altper
@altper 6 ай бұрын
I love your videos, it's really surprising you only have 10k subs
@daddydavey9067
@daddydavey9067 6 ай бұрын
This episode came on accidentally, but I've enjoyed every moment of it ❤️
@MyneOwneNarrator
@MyneOwneNarrator 5 ай бұрын
In a way, WW1 *was* the war to end all wars as far as I can see, WW1 was the last war where rutheless, underhanded tactics were commonplace. And while they are still around, they aren't as common. Also, most wars after WW1 have a very low casualty rate compared to WW1. There aren't 50 thousand soldiers dying every day anymore. So I guess WW1 ended the ruthless, barbaric ways that wars used to be fought in this is just my own thoughts on it, I could be very very wrong
@MorrissDeroos
@MorrissDeroos 5 ай бұрын
WW1 to me is more of a medieval war feels more brutal
@tecraman8100
@tecraman8100 5 ай бұрын
WW2 was more brutal and had a higher casualty rate than WW1
@theelmogame
@theelmogame 4 ай бұрын
The Loch Ness monster just wanted to go on holiday in the sea. He wanted to go on a sea holiday
@danielhermstad3323
@danielhermstad3323 6 ай бұрын
Man this dude is soo underrated. How come people dont get this on their algorythm
@Storm_Wings11
@Storm_Wings11 6 ай бұрын
this guy gained 2k subs in 5 days of this video being posted edit: great vid well done!
@jellymop
@jellymop 6 ай бұрын
You’re amazing at this. So fascinating. You should do the Vietnam War next or the Rhodesian war. What would be crazy.
@electrotab
@electrotab 5 ай бұрын
Excellent video. I have now subscribed.
@kadevohn
@kadevohn 6 ай бұрын
its a hell of a good job you've done with this one brother. the boys are damn proud of you.
@MrORIGINAL81
@MrORIGINAL81 6 ай бұрын
Although its true WWI doesn't get as much recognition as WWII today, that wasn't always true, especially in the 50s and 60s. Wars are remembered less and less as the generations go on. Eventually WWII will fade and people will be talking about Vietnam more. The last WWI veteran died over a decade ago but there are still thousands of WWII veterans alive so we can still get a sense of WWII first hand. However, they are dying fast. Same thing most likely happened with the Revolutionary war, Civil war, and so on. We all get lost to time eventually.
@climaxfilms7886
@climaxfilms7886 5 ай бұрын
I doubt Vietnam will ever get talked about more than WWII
@a-p-p-l-e-s234
@a-p-p-l-e-s234 4 ай бұрын
​@@climaxfilms7886yea lol it's already started to fade into irrelevancy
@Runha240
@Runha240 3 ай бұрын
5:43 serbian nationalist, the organisation was cleverly named "mlada bosna" or "bosnian youth" but it was controlled by serbian government. Pro tip: If the guy can't even pronounce the name of the country properly, you maybe shouldn't shouldn't trust him with everything he says
@victormurori4367
@victormurori4367 3 ай бұрын
This channel should blow up, the content is top notch
@mjoulnir8950
@mjoulnir8950 6 ай бұрын
Good video but the Pokémon music alone in the background was the cherry on top👍🏾 Earned a sub
@bossyboi962
@bossyboi962 6 ай бұрын
If you ever did another iceberg video I’m pretty sure we’d all love to see on on the Vietnam War
@landofan6912
@landofan6912 6 ай бұрын
HES BACK, AND ITS A BANGER HES BACK WITH
@ssg9offical
@ssg9offical 6 ай бұрын
WW1
@klaizloveswoofs
@klaizloveswoofs 6 ай бұрын
Dude I love history icebergs this is so good
@notkemmi
@notkemmi 6 ай бұрын
Love ur vids!!
@lucid1600
@lucid1600 6 ай бұрын
You did not settle - You won! You didn't conquer - You liberated! You didn't take revenge - You mourned! You are not gone - You are resurrected! You are their nightmare - You are our hero! 🇷🇸
@AK-47Outlaw
@AK-47Outlaw 6 ай бұрын
42:22 temporary
@stuff4826
@stuff4826 6 ай бұрын
list of fked up things ppl believe while theyre kiling other ppl
@thatoneleaf9895
@thatoneleaf9895 6 ай бұрын
Idk why but as I heard that Sergeant Stubby and his human returned home and was considered a celebrity, i started tearing up when i remembered seeing a post somewhere of how loved Stubby was even untul his death and that he had a statue that people would pet, didnt know I was gonna be so emotional today 😭
@latewizard301
@latewizard301 6 ай бұрын
I've waited for this, probably since before iceberg videos were a thing.
@Joel-kg4nw
@Joel-kg4nw 5 ай бұрын
What is the song used in tier 5? Also could you put the name of the music you use, maybe temporarily when you start the tier would be great, awesome video 👍
@catdude5567
@catdude5567 6 ай бұрын
The Capt of the Cyclops thought it was a submarine also and dove it under water.
@Oscarilainen
@Oscarilainen 6 ай бұрын
Do Mysteries and Oscurities of World War 3 Iceberg next
@tanman5123
@tanman5123 6 ай бұрын
Great idea!
@BadWebDiver
@BadWebDiver 6 ай бұрын
WWIII?????????
@Oscarilainen
@Oscarilainen 6 ай бұрын
@@BadWebDiver Yep, there is a lot of interesting facts about WWIII.
@BadWebDiver
@BadWebDiver 6 ай бұрын
@@Oscarilainen Which hasn't happened yet...
@Oscarilainen
@Oscarilainen 6 ай бұрын
@@BadWebDiver Yes it has, silly.
@alanmendoza9509
@alanmendoza9509 5 ай бұрын
Great video, kept me focused while grinding Diablo 4, 10/10 will watch the rest of this channel's content
@randomsteamengine6052
@randomsteamengine6052 5 ай бұрын
I love history so this is automatically my fav KZfaq channel
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