Amazing China in 1917 in color [AI enhanced and colorized]

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Rick88888888

Rick88888888

3 ай бұрын

This is splendedly enhanced and colorized footage from two fragments of Benjamin Brodsky’s ten-reel film documentary, showing Peking in the 1910s. It is highly interesting material as it shows what China really was like over a century ago in 1917.
It should be noted that the film was shot only about 16 years after the ending of the boxer uprising from 1899 to 1901 and 6 years after the Chinese Revolution of October 1911 during which a group of revolutionaries in southern China led a successful revolt against the Qing Dynasty. This lead to the establishment of the Republic of China which ended the imperial system.
Many scenes in the film show that at the time China hardly had changed for over a thousand years. Life follows its course almost full time on the streets.
We see every day life with many people executing their skills and trades, children playing, artists and acrobats performing their tricks, processions, a funeral, great glimpses of the Forbidden Palace and much more!
A viewer has identified the ship at 29:12 as the USS Helena (PG-9), commissioned in 1897 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Hel...) Very rare footage!
Text cards explain what is happening in each scene.
Now please watch this film without further commentary.
This footage has been meticulously and painstakingly restored and enhanced with the latest Artificial Intelligence video software.
PS: This video is here for historic purposes and not to discuss present day China-related politics So please think of this before making your comment!
Music: Sight of Wonders and Christian Andersen.
Source: Archive.org

Пікірлер: 3 800
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
*This video is here for HISTORIC purposes and NOT to discuss present day China-related (CCP) politics* ! *Also this comments section is now closed to comments about the dark skin color. It has nothing to do with the AI* . Just scroll down in the comments section to understand why this topic is now off-limits because It has already been discussed to the dry bone" You may find this additional information provided by @tianming4964 interesting: "Phenotypes in different parts of China vary by region and ethnic background. Beijing in the early 1900s still had a sizeable Manchu population (at one point only Manchus could live in the inner parts of the city), as well as other minority groups such as Hui, Uyghurs, Mongols, etc. Hui are Chinese Muslims who ethnically and culturally aren't much different from the majority population, but many have ancestry from Arab and Persian settlers who arrived in China between the 7th and 14th centuries, hence why people of Hui descent tend to have more Central Asian looking features. Uyghurs are a Turkic ethnic group from the far western part of China more ethnically and culturally similar to Uzbeks and Turks than to Han Chinese. But even among Han Chinese there are variations in facial features (skin colour, eye shape, nose shape, face shape, etc.) between north and south China. Most Chinese in the diaspora (Southeast Asia, Europe, Americas, Oceania) come from southern parts of China like Fujian and Guangdong and have features that more resemble people from Southeast Asia like Vietnam for example. Most Chinese people you'll encounter abroad will be from southern China, and so those are the features most foreigners associate with being Chinese. Northern Chinese are known to have different facial shapes from southern Chinese and its usually possible for a Chinese person to tell whether another Chinese person comes from northern or southern China just by looking at them. Also when it comes to skin tone, it might not just have to do with the colourization process. My grandpa has ancestry from northern China and has similar features to most of the people in the video, including eye shape, nose shape, face shape, etc. This also includes skin tone, to the point that when many people meet him they mistake him for being Indian. His skin isn't naturally dark, but because he was forced to work out in the fields when he was young it became tanned. His siblings similarly have relatively darker skin than what most people would expect for Chinese. The reason why most Chinese people today don't have skin that dark is because they aren't working out in the rice fields anymore and can keep their skin pale and light with an office job indoors. Chinese culture is like most other Asian countries where they value pale skin because its a symbol of being wealthy and upper class and not having to work out in the fields. And as most Chinese today no longer have to work in the fields, they no longer have such tanned skin compared to the past, though among older generations like my grandpa many still do. A lot of people who have met my family will say things like my mom and grandpa "don't look Chinese," even though their ancestry is 100% from China (and we've done DNA tests to confirm). Even other Chinese people will say this, but almost always its southern Chinese people. They never say that my grandma doesn't look Chinese, because my grandma is also from southern China like they are. But because most aren't used to seeing as many northern Chinese in the diaspora, northern Chinese don't look as Chinese to them. I can say that of the northern Chinese I know--friends, neighbours, acquaintances, etc., most share similar features to those in the video. I often watch a lot of Chinese dramas, where actors are more likely to be of northern Chinese descent, and on many instances people have commented to me how some of the actors don't look Chinese at all. In some cases its because they are not ethnically Han Chinese but are from one of the ethnic minorities in China, and in other cases its just they have different features than what people normally associate with Chinese. For some examples search up names like: Lu Taichong, Song Ya Gang, Wang Kang, Eldos Faruk." PS: This video is here for *historic purposes* and *not to discuss present day China-related politics* So please think of this before making your comment!
@andreas7136
@andreas7136 3 ай бұрын
Perhaps the used b/w film stock was not panchromatic. This may have contributed to dark skin colours.
@andanssas
@andanssas 3 ай бұрын
@@andreas7136 darker skins were also due to sunlight exposure. Nowadays many Chinese & Japanese still avoid it like the plague, since the stigma of a farm/field worker is still attached to it. Unlike Nordic skins that just get burned, most if not all races skins in Asia get tanned.
@JeeryAltkins
@JeeryAltkins 3 ай бұрын
22:10 The hands are black, which is obviously unreasonable! Your face will tan, but have you ever seen your hands tan? It’s about light!
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
@@JeeryAltkins The back of hands tan just as much as faces! It's the inside that stays lighter. I repeat: do not blame the A.I. Watch the original B&W footage on Archive.org It is amazing to note that viewers are not able to accept that the population of Peking had a different composition a century ago. There are more videos about old China around 1910 on KZfaq. They all show the same darker skin tones. Also look at present day pictures/footage of people from Mongolia.
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
PS: Watch this about Manchuria: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/aLt2ptOSrLvFppc.html
@mn7486
@mn7486 3 ай бұрын
This kind of video is what makes KZfaq and the internet in general worth it.
@deborahmantha1080
@deborahmantha1080 3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! My great-grandparents were American missionaries in China from 1904-1919. They loved the Chinese people so much...this really gives me an idea of all the things they saw while there.
@sandponics
@sandponics 3 ай бұрын
They are probably the ones who caused the revolution in 1948.
@_Meng_Lan
@_Meng_Lan 3 ай бұрын
​@@sandponicsno they were no doubt martyred. Read John and Betty Stam. These were real missionaries not the ywam or false maga Christians
@1nePercentJuice
@1nePercentJuice 3 ай бұрын
Your great-grandparents were kind of wack for trying to force their religion upon others.
@deborahmantha1080
@deborahmantha1080 3 ай бұрын
Yes, they would have been "wack" if they were forcing their religion upon others, but they weren't. Religion is a matter of the heart. @@1nePercentJuice
@joseh3564
@joseh3564 Ай бұрын
1ndpercent: You're confused. It's the leftists (Communists) who demand to force control over everything from cradle to grave. Research it because you're deeply lost.
@mirtikaschultz3282
@mirtikaschultz3282 25 күн бұрын
This was such a gem of a video. Just felt transported to another time/place, seeing how others dressed, worked, lived. Thank you.
@LookDeepWithin
@LookDeepWithin 25 күн бұрын
Life is just a dream. Whatever you think belongs to you become someone else's in a century. So just chill, let go of whatever negativities, forgive, do as much good as possible and live happily.
@meyojimbo
@meyojimbo 3 ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing trip back in time, each scene is fantastic, like an old painting - but moving! Please do more fragments, if not the whole ten reels :-)
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
I wish I could find the full 10 reels. I searched a long time for them, but they are nowhere to be found. There is only one (poor quality) film by the same maker about Japan in 1918 on Archive.org
@rchristie5401
@rchristie5401 3 ай бұрын
This is a rare sight indeed!! Awesome coloration! Thanks
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
Thank you too!
@smallbusinesssuccesswithni7339
@smallbusinesssuccesswithni7339 2 ай бұрын
it's over 100 years since these images were recorded and the people in the images are all long dead. I wonder if those who looked on at the funny man winding a handle on a box realised that people in countries far away would be watching them over 100 years later. Providing these films are never lost, the people in them will live for an eternity.
@gainwan1374
@gainwan1374 3 ай бұрын
看了感動到流淚,這就是百年前最真實的中國,那時窮困貧乏,但街上的場景人來人往顯現中華人最勤奮最樸實的一面,而且出乎意料的是環境街景看起來老舊破敗,但是很整潔,可見那時文化教育可能不高,但人的素質挺高,社會的氛圍頗為祥和,要不是戰亂,中國應該早就成很有發展的國家,不必等百年後了😢
@daydaystudydaydayup
@daydaystudydaydayup 3 ай бұрын
好事多磨
@nullptr64
@nullptr64 3 ай бұрын
没办法,谁叫中华民国跑了呢
@user-pq9kn9tw1o
@user-pq9kn9tw1o 3 ай бұрын
@@nullptr64 还有吹中华民国的。多少影视作品展现民国时期的迂腐破败。三毛流浪记没看过?那可是全中国最好的地方上海。能吹民国的。都是不了解历史的
@greybluesea
@greybluesea 3 ай бұрын
1917年是北洋时期,当时我国的“维新”、“自强”的风气不输日本
@user-pq9kn9tw1o
@user-pq9kn9tw1o 3 ай бұрын
@@greybluesea 输不输日本。过的也不行。这不是这条评论鼓吹民国的理由
@orthodoxpilgrimofficial
@orthodoxpilgrimofficial 3 ай бұрын
a nice selection of music you have made
@LiquidTurbo
@LiquidTurbo 2 ай бұрын
This is the closest thing we have to a Time Machine.
@TheOneUnforgivenLuna
@TheOneUnforgivenLuna 2 ай бұрын
For those saying this is fake/AI generated, it's not. Technology currently is not capable of creating something like this, and any signs of Ai is because it's upscaled from a poorer quality
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 2 ай бұрын
Ah, finally someone who understands A.I. The heaps of nonsense viewers have proclaimed under this video about A.I. is staggering...
@virginiatyree6705
@virginiatyree6705 2 ай бұрын
​@@Rick88888888, There's a LOT of ignorance in a LOT of the comments. Thank you for posting and your efforts. Fascinating look back. v
@heidimiller5475
@heidimiller5475 Ай бұрын
I have seen some fake antique black and white film. Some of this looks just like the fake ones. It's really hard to tell the difference. Either way, it's really enjoyable to watch this.
@nc01sadh
@nc01sadh Ай бұрын
I think it's looking like fake because the camera quality at the time wasn't that great. Also, the color and lighting is skewed when you distort the picture from its original black and white.
@heidimiller5475
@heidimiller5475 Ай бұрын
@@nc01sadh Probably we would have to take a class from a professional photographer to tell the difference. Either way, it was pleasant to watch.
@eamo106
@eamo106 3 ай бұрын
Utterly amazed. Such Chinese History. The incredible leap made from 1917 til today is astounding. Thank you for the History and the work put into this post. I was lucky enough to visit China many times in the 2004 - 8 recent times, and was amazed.
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@magnusspas7732
@magnusspas7732 2 ай бұрын
Leap from 1917 ? Between 1917 and 1949 China was ruled by warlords who where protected by the KMT The leap forward came after Mao kicked the foreign occupiers out
@loganstroganoff1284
@loganstroganoff1284 3 ай бұрын
My great granddad sailed all over Asia in the early 1900s as a USN sailor. He had a tattoo on his forearm from Hong Kong. Would love to have seen the world back then before globalism made every place so similar.
@protectorh9167
@protectorh9167 3 ай бұрын
Yes all countries do like imitating the west unless their comments on it.
@knife-wieldingspidergod5059
@knife-wieldingspidergod5059 3 ай бұрын
A China sailor. On a gun boat, I assume?
@darquanjr
@darquanjr 3 ай бұрын
@@protectorh9167yeah its because they copy the west. Definatly not because of the wests colonialism and imperialism…
@realMoMoPuFF
@realMoMoPuFF 3 ай бұрын
​@@darquanjr Countries whom were not colonized by the West want to be like the West.
@realMoMoPuFF
@realMoMoPuFF 3 ай бұрын
What a legend!
@hover-eb1hx
@hover-eb1hx 2 ай бұрын
I have taken several courses in modern China at my university. This time period is very interesting, and this video brought it to life in a way that is hard to capture through textual sources. Thank you for this!
@valen460
@valen460 3 ай бұрын
Look better and clean than many slum place in India 2024
@airplanedude3103
@airplanedude3103 3 ай бұрын
I don't know why you specifically mentioned India when most of Asia, Africa and Latin/South America is littered with them. They are also present in the U.S., albeit in considerably lower numbers.
@Peter-pe6pp
@Peter-pe6pp 2 ай бұрын
You havent been to.China recently I guess? There are lots of dirty placed there too. I couldnt even go to the toilet in some places I.visited. i have been to.China and India. Its all about where you go.
@kedsforkids668
@kedsforkids668 3 ай бұрын
streets are so clean, remarkable architecture, thanks for posting!
@joshgee8714
@joshgee8714 3 ай бұрын
No disposable products back then
@WarLionsofGesar
@WarLionsofGesar 3 ай бұрын
As for th argument why Chinese look dark in old videos, I offer an explanation: Don't use imagination. Use reality. We Chinese households all have several old photos taken at the beginning of the last century, and our great grandparents are all so black. But in my grandfather's generation, my father's generation, it's not like this anymore. I have met my grandfather and my maternal grandfather. My grandfather was a teacher, fair looking, white skin, and my maternal grandfather was a farmer with a dark skin. This is our personal experience, much more reliable than any so-called expert's explanation. So since ancient times, Chinese people have admired white skin because it is a manifestation of identity, indicating that this person has separated from physical labor and become a wealthy class. The army guys are also labor in the sun. Here I will repeat why Chinese people looked black in the image materials a hundred years ago: 1. working under the scorching sun, 2. poor hygiene conditions (not taking a shower or washing face), 3. poor shooting hardware and technology. In addition, we Chinese prefer white skin, not because of the influence of the westerners. Since very very old books written in the centuries B.C, the appreciation of the beauty has been there. In the history of contemporary Chinese art, a famous oil painting called "Father" was created by Luo Zhongli in 1980 (I offered a KZfaq link in comments). This is all because he is not someone's father, but represents the typical image of a Chinese farmer, with dark and rough skin, and a bewildered and numb deep gaze. If you Westerners don't understand history, you will think he is a low caste Indian or African. But this is the Chinese farmers of the past few thousand years. It has only been in recent decades that Chinese farmers have become fair. No need to use a hoe to cultivate land under the scorching sun, we have switched to using machinery.
@krisaaron8180
@krisaaron8180 3 ай бұрын
Did use of coal stoves for have something to do with it? It's hard to tell but some people look like their faces are blackened, like coal miners.
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for your thoughtful comment
@WarLionsofGesar
@WarLionsofGesar 3 ай бұрын
@@krisaaron8180 Coal workers are another matter, they only have two white eyes and the rest are black. Haha. The black skin of farmers has nothing to do with coal. In ancient times, poor families used to burn firewood, which was a dry branch of a tree. Families who could afford coal were all landlords.
@junaplantbased9093
@junaplantbased9093 3 ай бұрын
Why is the world ashamed of its dark heritage lol sun burn and melanin are two different things these dark Chinese are clearly melaninated people.
@BalboaBaggins
@BalboaBaggins 3 ай бұрын
tlngr
@sinistercrusader4981
@sinistercrusader4981 15 күн бұрын
Its honestly fascinating how much China has changed in the past century, this feels completely different from modern China.
@user-hr1wo1gn8f
@user-hr1wo1gn8f 10 күн бұрын
exactly
@20001born
@20001born 2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the footage. The music was soothing, it was lovely to see the architecture and the people of back then. The music just made this 10x better , thank youuu
@rossgai8630
@rossgai8630 3 ай бұрын
As a Chinese who works in Beijing, this is quite precious. My nation has developed so much.
@gissyb1
@gissyb1 3 ай бұрын
I actually do not call it development. you have lost the essence of china.. this old days is lovely...now china is just like usa
@user-ty1on7dy7n
@user-ty1on7dy7n 3 ай бұрын
It certainly has, Beijing architecture is quite impressive.
@yoiashi
@yoiashi 3 ай бұрын
i dont like china but i have to admit that it is progressing in a faster rate than western countries, at least in terms of infrastructure.
@aglis_
@aglis_ 3 ай бұрын
@@gissyb1 "Essence of China" as you call it while living in New Zealand and likely don't know extensively a single Chinese person. You're a special one.
@gammaknife9933
@gammaknife9933 3 ай бұрын
This is the period of "warlords" in Chinese history before Nationalists Party (KMT) unified the country. Thank you for processing and sharing these precious films. What a difference a hundred year makes in China. From no automobiles on the streets in the film to the largest auto export country in the world today.
@theterminator3779
@theterminator3779 3 ай бұрын
There was one automobile in the video , it was at 7.56 in the video
@rosejanet80
@rosejanet80 3 ай бұрын
Things really got changed rapidly in 100 years.
@carolinebennett5615
@carolinebennett5615 Ай бұрын
Wow. That was a rare treat. It was like time travel. Completely absorbing. Fantastic footage. I smiled back at some of those smiling at the camera over a century ago.
@TealJadeTurquoise1
@TealJadeTurquoise1 Ай бұрын
Most all cultures have variations in skin color. No one should be surprised by this. We are so programmed to be stuck on someone's complexion. Nice work and excellent share! Thank you.
@megeek727
@megeek727 3 ай бұрын
The colorization makes this video absolutely stunning and better than a movie set! It is definitely worth a second and third look. Your efforts are greatly appreciated. 🙏
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
Thank you very much
@Peter-pe6pp
@Peter-pe6pp 2 ай бұрын
It is inaccurate though in terms of colour
@megeek727
@megeek727 2 ай бұрын
@@Peter-pe6pp Agreed. I was in China a few years ago and the buildings and roof tiles were closer to a grey clay in color. The colorization does make it look better.
@motonegros
@motonegros 3 ай бұрын
Rickshaw man was a tough job.
@otisarmyalso
@otisarmyalso 3 ай бұрын
He still going many Asian places
@andredoracle6326
@andredoracle6326 3 ай бұрын
I wonder what type of cameras were used to film these scenes? It certainly was a major source of intrigue and fascination to those who were being filmed. Great video, by the way.
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
Probably a hand cranked camera on a heavy wooden tripod like this one: cinemaantiques.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/DSC08552-600x743.jpg
@jubian8645
@jubian8645 3 ай бұрын
太兴奋了,可以看到100多年前的北京城,感谢视频的提供者,作为一个北京人感到非常高兴。希望大家有机会也可以来北京看看,视频里大部分的建筑现在都还在。已经成为世界文化遗产的一部分。再次感谢大家。😊
@mrblock1318
@mrblock1318 3 ай бұрын
I love how in the 1890s- 1920s the all cities of Earth had an distinct yet near modern flavor. A mix of both the old and the new in great proportions.
@atky7032
@atky7032 3 ай бұрын
It already look more developed than modern India.
@fife8332
@fife8332 3 ай бұрын
The skies and buildings of indian cities would be much cleaner without the number of cars/motorcycles/rickshaws that it has. During lockdowns in Mumbai at the very beginning of the pandemic, there were almost no cars or vehicles driving around for like two weeks. In that time the haze lifted, the sky was bright blue and you could see the stars at night, really beautiful. I’ve never been anti-fossil fuels, but that really made me realize the cost of gas cars on daily wellbeing in crowded urban centers.
@yaucharles91
@yaucharles91 3 ай бұрын
@@fife8332 Its the cleanliness that make India look bad! India architecture is good in my opinion.
@DesertStormTimes
@DesertStormTimes 3 ай бұрын
😂😂
@Weeping-Angel
@Weeping-Angel 3 ай бұрын
This is Beijing though. And India didn’t use modern technology at all back then.
@ifoundpeaceindrowning8030
@ifoundpeaceindrowning8030 3 ай бұрын
?
@user-ov3pp5hk1x
@user-ov3pp5hk1x 18 күн бұрын
感谢外国友人整理上传,和平是最重要的了
@davidnewkirk2438
@davidnewkirk2438 2 ай бұрын
Wow what a treasure this is!! Absolutely riveting. The funeral procession was stunning. Wonderful music too! 🙏
@RogerCooley
@RogerCooley 3 ай бұрын
Wonderfu job, as usual. Thanks for taking us back in the history of mankind. If not for your amazing work we wouldn't have seen and enjoy them. Thanks again.
@mrs.g.9816
@mrs.g.9816 3 ай бұрын
Beautifully restored footage! I felt like I was walking through a magic portal to a long-gone world (that had previously lasted for a couple of thousand years.) All palace and park scenes were lovely. What was really poignant was seeing those curious onlookers from so long ago. They probably never saw a movie camera before.
@alejandraparker7272
@alejandraparker7272 3 ай бұрын
AFTER MY MEXICAN GRANMAMA PASSED AWAY I FOUND OUT THAT MY GRANDFATHER WAS CHINESE WHO MIGRATED WITH HIS PARENTS TO VENEZUELA TO ESCAPE HUNGER THEN THEY SETTLED IN MEXICO ACTUALLY LINARES N.L. MEXICO. THAT EXPLAINED WHY LOVE CHINOISERIE OVER MEXICAN POTTERY AND FURNITURE SINCE YOUNG. I WATCH CHINESE DRAMAS 24/7 TRYING TO CAPTURE IN MY MIND HOW MY GREAT GRANDPARENTS WOULD HAVE LIVED IN CHINA. CHINA VIDEOS ..THEY MAKE ME HAPPY.. I AM A FIRST BORN TEXAN OF MEXICAN AND CHINESE DESCENT. THANK YOU FOR THIS VIDEO. DO YOU BY ANY CHANCE HAVE VIDEOS WHERE THEY ARE BUILDING PAGODAS?.
@junxu7588
@junxu7588 2 ай бұрын
Love how open-minded you are. I guess when people have mixed heritage, they're naturally more open and less judgemental?
@DawnDavidson
@DawnDavidson 2 ай бұрын
Fascinating video. The colorization really makes it feel more immediate. Wonderful to see!
@uphett2379
@uphett2379 3 ай бұрын
When you see this kind of poverty in China. We who are living now, have to appreciate all the sacrifices our ancestors have made.
@0animalproductworld558
@0animalproductworld558 2 ай бұрын
Looked quite similar to when I was young. I was born in 1990 in a small chinese village in vietnam. They had houses that were made of woods and dry leaves. Children running around playing. We made chinese cakes wrapped in leaves and boiled in water for the ~whole day and the cakes last for days without refrigeration. My sister and I would play with the fire using sticks with plastics wrapped around the sticks then placed in the fire and I got burnt from the melting plastic falling on my leg. I was around only 5 and I still remember.
@EmilyTienne
@EmilyTienne 3 ай бұрын
Some of the coolest historic footage on YT. Thank you!
@stefanschleps8758
@stefanschleps8758 3 ай бұрын
Agreed. The funeral was killer!
@onearth5279
@onearth5279 2 ай бұрын
I am Chinese, but not from Beijing or Shanghai... the capital of China. With the unprecedented development of modern societal change in China, I cannot see the old city anymore, what a pity, yet it is amazing to see this from KZfaq, and in color...come from a very small village in China, I only can catch up the memories, which is old and rural Chinese city...
@jaydouglas5847
@jaydouglas5847 2 ай бұрын
What part of China is your home village in. When and where did you learn to write English so well ?
@alfred535
@alfred535 3 ай бұрын
It's unblievable even for Z generation Chinese. This ground has been changed dramaticly.
@manoman0
@manoman0 2 ай бұрын
My mum grew up in similar conditions, quite poor, outside all the time, happy and well. I can so relate to these folks. Don't we all see how similar we all are?
@mollydooker9636
@mollydooker9636 Ай бұрын
Fascinating stuff! I see lots of comments on the skin colour, to me it looks like a side effect of the colourisation process. Thanks for posting, this is gold.
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 Ай бұрын
It has nothing to do with the A.I. colorizer. The B&W footage is just as dark.
@chicawhappa
@chicawhappa Ай бұрын
@@Rick88888888 So what happened to all these round-faced dark-skinned chinese? Now, if you see anyone in China, they got pale skin and thinner faces. Was there some demographic change that nobody heard about? Not putting you on the spot, just wondering if you know anything about it...
@ccdsds3221
@ccdsds3221 28 күн бұрын
@@chicawhappa yes, in less than 100 years more than 1billion people changed their skin color...
@wesandy22
@wesandy22 3 ай бұрын
China has come a long way through their hard work and suffering and perseverance. A true testament to it's enduring ambitions and determination to succeed.
@Anonymous-ip4qx
@Anonymous-ip4qx 3 ай бұрын
What are you talking about. China has been ruined thanks to the people in charge that destroyed true Chinese culture and traditions.
@Dannysince1985
@Dannysince1985 2 ай бұрын
They have come a long way, to mass counterfeit goods, shoddy building work, mass cheap inferior manufacturing, appalling human rights, terrible prison like living conditions for a lot of its citizens, nanny state control. For the mega rich yeah it's great, but just like everywhere else the common people suffer.
@smith9808
@smith9808 3 ай бұрын
Reflecting on past footage can be unsettling, as it forces us to confront our own mortality. Billions of individuals who preceded us experienced life's worries, fears, joys, love, and laughter, only for their stories to be erased in an instant. Countless intriguing narratives and fascinating individuals remain unknown to us. The way future generations will perceive us, with our lives documented through vlogs and interviews, contrasts sharply with the loss of 5000+ years of digital undocumented history It’s why rare early footage like this will always be viewed more than our modern versions, because there’s so much mystery in it as there’s so little of it.
@zixianjia376
@zixianjia376 2 ай бұрын
The traditional, beautiful, peaceful China. I love it.
@slashsaussier
@slashsaussier 3 ай бұрын
I have been in china 8 times last past 13 years, amazing country, awesome people❤
@berklia
@berklia 3 ай бұрын
are they still black like in the film?
@georgewilder7423
@georgewilder7423 2 ай бұрын
@@berklia ..if you've got enough money, go see for yourself?
@fardadsayyarpour3581
@fardadsayyarpour3581 3 ай бұрын
Another great historical video. Thank your taking the time to put this together. Regards
@heidimiller5475
@heidimiller5475 Ай бұрын
Thank you for showing this film to us. I really enjoyed watching it.
@user-qwertyuiopasdfghj
@user-qwertyuiopasdfghj 5 күн бұрын
This video is so precious for many Chinese who are obsessed with republican era like me. Its a short, chaotic but fascinating period, similar to warring states and three kingdoms, but with extra western influence. I read novels and watch movies about that period all the time since young. Now watching this video is like literal time travel. Thanks!
@anahata2009
@anahata2009 29 күн бұрын
What a fascinating view into a different time and place. Thank you for posting this.
@AMDMAD1974
@AMDMAD1974 3 ай бұрын
I Really Love Historic Videos like tihs. And i Love the Start Musik...whats the Name from this Song? Sorry my bad English and big thx for this Video. You got Abbo and Like fpr Sure :D - Greetings
@user-uh6xc1wg1e
@user-uh6xc1wg1e 3 ай бұрын
😢😢 ❤ I'm very happy that I seen this old videos ❤ I don't know why I'm feel emotionally attached by this video. ❤ Its very peaceful and simple living ❤ I love it so much😢😭😭 My heart is very happy to see this old videos. I'm in my 30's now and this video it was hundred years old. Thanks so much and I subscribed to your channel
@LeviDoek15
@LeviDoek15 3 ай бұрын
Its incredible how fast the world has changed since WW1. This has been the standard of living for over centuries and look at what we have now.
@kdegraa
@kdegraa 3 ай бұрын
The Chinese in China were poor and backwards till around 1979.
@Ozzies
@Ozzies 3 ай бұрын
Great video mate, thanks for sharing! What a beautiful place, such a beautiful city. 🙌🏻
@user-tu5un8jc9v
@user-tu5un8jc9v Ай бұрын
Film from this era made people look darker than they actually were, so to be accurate their faces should have been lighter skinned. It actually has nothing to do with darker skinned people in China but just with the way shadows on films from the 1900s to the 1920s were extremely black and dark, so it made people's faces sometimes look very dark. I have an example of this in my family on my father's side, their ancestors were white redheads but on the old pictures from the 1920s their skin look really dark and they appear to have brown/black hair. I hope you'll appreciate the explanation. 🙏 Thanks for this video.
@YouTube_Enjoyerlol
@YouTube_Enjoyerlol Ай бұрын
We wuz kangz!
@nightcrawler2937
@nightcrawler2937 Ай бұрын
It’s not because of skin lighteners and being out of the sun as to why the Chinese have lighter skin tone nowadays That’s like saying the negritos and siddis aren’t the modern day Filipino and asian Indian. We have been genetically modified and cloned in the past hence the incubator babies and orphanages all around the globe some few hundred years ago. We have been gradually divided as a people so that our past appears erased. We no longer know where we came from or who we are as a people anymore
@sunjourney3723
@sunjourney3723 Ай бұрын
Not! The lighter skin ones you see now are hybrids. .
@torhildsvendsen9424
@torhildsvendsen9424 Ай бұрын
Nå i 2024 har vi lært at kineserne stammer fra Afrika. Det er vel en naturlig tanke at etter istiden vandret Afrikanere nordover, Asiaterne vandret vel også nordover helt til Finnmark i Norge og til Grønland. Vi er EN STOR FAMILIE ❤ Vi er alle litt i slekt. Men snart kommer robottmennesket, DET er ikke i slekt med mennesket nei...
@onemightyandstrong8293
@onemightyandstrong8293 Ай бұрын
Yes
@JiubeiKibagami
@JiubeiKibagami 3 ай бұрын
29:09 is the USS Helena, a Wilmington Class Gunboat, with just very few pictures of it left. Beautiful.
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
Thank you very much. At first I thought you were mistaken, looking at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Helena_(CL-50) built 20 years later around 1939, but you are right that it is its predecessor: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Helena_(PG-9) commissioned in 1897. Well spotted!
@frumpdanold4992
@frumpdanold4992 3 ай бұрын
Chaos, poor, civil wars, nothing good happend during that period of our country. Thanks for uploading this, I will watch it again with my sons, they are kind of taking the good life they're having now for granted.
@christanaujok4319
@christanaujok4319 Ай бұрын
Hallo Rick, vielen Dank für diesen interessanten Film. Ich habe noch nie original Filmaufnahmen aus dieser Zeit von China gesehen. Viele Grüße aus Rheinhessen 🍷😀
@pauillacwine263
@pauillacwine263 3 ай бұрын
Hi @Rick88888888, just discovered your channel and its highly valued content. Much appreciated for sharing this. Groeten uit Zeeland.
@jeanprice2514
@jeanprice2514 3 ай бұрын
Great footage! My respect for the camera man
@juliefaulkner5497
@juliefaulkner5497 2 ай бұрын
Those poor men running along pulling carts with people in, imagine doing that all day.
@luisvi92
@luisvi92 3 ай бұрын
Beautiful combination of music and video
@johnmorgan5771
@johnmorgan5771 16 күн бұрын
This video is exceptionally beautiful. It reminds me of our common humanity and the wonderful power of the Internet to convey that. John M
@SaadMughal-ko5fw
@SaadMughal-ko5fw 2 ай бұрын
Great music selection
@dougmungoven4315
@dougmungoven4315 3 ай бұрын
a fabulous insight into Chinese culture back then
@hendyanthony722
@hendyanthony722 3 ай бұрын
Very interesting it's very very difficult to kept this kind of video, I hope it could keep maintained for generation. Thanks for sharing .. it's a marvellous work 🎉🎉🎉
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@lindodeyi1538
@lindodeyi1538 2 ай бұрын
Amazing what a people can do if they put their mind to it. Sad how some countries are still stuck in this era
@davidkennedy8929
@davidkennedy8929 3 ай бұрын
Quin dynasty is pronounced ching! Love the videos you produce, especially this one as I traveled for business during the 1990s when they were ripping up all the old Chinese houses and building roads etc. keep up the good work.
@Jon-mh9lk
@Jon-mh9lk 2 ай бұрын
So much history... This was 6 years after the Xinhai revolution (1911-1912) that had swepped away the Qing dynasty and had lead to the foundation of the Republic of China. At this time China had plunged into the Warlord Era (1916-1928) after the dictator Yuan Shikai had passed away. In the following years Beijing was ruled by the Beiyang government and Yuan Shikai was succeded by Li Yuanhong and Feng Guozhang. In September 1917 Sun Yat-sen, the primary leader of the Chinese revolution, set up a rival Nationalist government in Guangzhou. During the Northern Expedition (1926-1928) the Nationalist government would attack the Beiyang government and would unify China for a short time. But already during the expedition the United Front between the Nationalists and the Communist Party (founded in 1921, 102 years ago, at that time lead by Chen Duxiu and later Xiang Zhongfa) was ended by the anti-communist Shanghai massacre, which lead to the Chinese civil war (1927-1949). At the same time the Northern Expedition also was a proxy war between the Soviet Union (that supported the Nationalist/Communist United Front) and the Japanese Empire (which supported the Beiyang government). The Japanese would invade Manchuria in 1931. China was in age of chaos and transformation that culminated in the foundation of the People's Republic of China in 1949. But these would be historical events in the far future. At this time the people might have still felt a strong disappointment with the "failed" revolution, but would still have been eager to "learn from the west" (i.e. Western Europe). It was the time of the "New Culture Movement" that rejected Chinese tradition (including the Classical Chinese language) and looked up to alternative western models of culture, society and statehood I really like some of the European style buildings shown in this video (for example at 1:42). I wonder what kind of architecture that is. Art nuoveau? I also wonder how the average Chinese thought about the westernization of Chinese society. What did this kind of "new" architecture mean for them? "Modernization" had already started in the Qing dynasty, but only the Chinese revolution lead to a very evident discontinuity in Chinese culture. Chinese society had been in decline since the the Christian Taiping rebellion (1850-1864) and the Muslim Dungan Revolt (1862-1877). The Opium Wars (1839-1842 and 1856-1860) were minor events in comparision. The Chinese answer to these inner and outer threats was Self-Strengthening Movement (1861-1895), the unsuccesful Hundred Days' Reform (1898) and the Late Qing reforms (1901-1911) which were lead by Confucian reformers. The event that was most humiliating for the Dynasty and the Chinese people was the Eight-Nation Alliance (1900) that lead to the destruction of a great part of Beijing. Therefore, even though there might be some remnants of the earlier imperial era still visible, this video mostly shows the following: - The advances of around 50 years of modernization based on western technology. - Signs of rapid westernization and loss or active rejection of traditional culture. - A city that still bears the signs of war and revolution. - Wretched and poor people whose ancestors only 100 years earlier would have been richer than most Europeans at that time. China would enter World War I in 1917 in support of the Entente Powers even though they were not able to send any soldiers to Europe. On the other hand, Chinese laborers comprised the largest non-European workforce during World War I. After the war the Chinese people would be bitterly disappointed by the western powers as they would allow Japan to keep the German colonies on Chinese territories. After the Treaty of Versailles (1918) this disappointment would lead to the May Fourth Movement (1919) that also was influenced by the October Revolution (1917). The leaders of this movement were people like Chen Duxiu and Li Dazhao, who had been part of the New Culture Movement and would go on to become the founders of the Chinese Communist Party. These were fundamentally modern thinkers that would reject Chinese tradition, and they would become more influential than Confucian reformers like Kang Youwei, anarchist like Liu Shipei, Wu Zhihui, Li Shizeng and Zhang Renjie, liberals like Hu Shih and neo-Buddhists and new Confucians like Liang Shuming and Xiong Shili, most of whom tried to defend Chinese culture against westernization. On the other hand, they were all influenced by thinkers like Hobbes, Rousseau, Adam Smith, Spencer, Huxley, Haeckel, Katō Hiroyuki, Nietzsche, Kroptkin, Bakunin, Bergson, Euken, Marx, Engels and Lenin. The westernization of thought was quite inevitable. Even though a lot of the scenes shown here are meant to show "traditional" China, this kind of selection goes against the spirit of the time: These were mere remnants, and they would become exceptions even long before the Communists took power.
@jean-pierrelanhingkwong7852
@jean-pierrelanhingkwong7852 2 ай бұрын
Greetings! We must thank you for your profound detailed written lecture you just gave us. Very informative & useful narrative of our past Chinese history. After so many tragic suffering & humiliation, at long last, we can be presently very proud of our China at the dawn of this 21st century.
@jjescorpiso21
@jjescorpiso21 2 ай бұрын
Very insightful! You have taught me many things about China that would be hard to find now. Thank you for taking the time to share your expertise. Cheers 🎉
@willfade7994
@willfade7994 3 ай бұрын
This is extraordinary! Thank you for sharing this. 🌹
@ormsolomon773
@ormsolomon773 3 ай бұрын
Fantastic footage thank you so much
@macho8330
@macho8330 3 ай бұрын
Just imagine the people in this video are long gone, that's mind blowing
@LeMouvementNZ
@LeMouvementNZ 3 ай бұрын
was just thinking that
@russe19642
@russe19642 3 ай бұрын
Even the youngest,life
@paulohagan3309
@paulohagan3309 3 ай бұрын
We are dust blowing in the wind ...
@maple2000new
@maple2000new Ай бұрын
Thank you for this excellent documentary. It brings back memories as some of the scenes could still be seen (street cobblers or the standing chair at 23:38) in rural China even in the 1980s. The footages starting at 29:08 shows boats carrying British and Japanese flags sailing freely in Wuhan (Hankou) and things changed in April 1949. This is a documentary that should be seen by all Chinese descendants whether they are in China or overseas to see what a journey China has gone through and cherish what the nation stands today.
@Bill-ww9df
@Bill-ww9df Ай бұрын
excellent point!
@PamKopp-ot7fd
@PamKopp-ot7fd 2 ай бұрын
Love little glimpses of people and the past thank u i enjoyed this very much
@Donknowww
@Donknowww 3 ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing if you compare it with nowadays. China evolved at Lightspeed! Impressive!
@Chameleon-wq4ul
@Chameleon-wq4ul 2 ай бұрын
It would be nice if someone made a comparison video of how everything looks today. Probably there is nothing left of these old buildings.
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 2 ай бұрын
I am no expert, but the summer and winter palaces are still there as well as the Jezuit observatory. Indeed a lot seems to have gone. Like so many people I've never been to China.
@diemcarl5546
@diemcarl5546 2 ай бұрын
Matt's drumming is flawless and fits perfectly 🙌🙌🙌
@AR-tf4mx
@AR-tf4mx 2 ай бұрын
thank you for sharing!!
@requispw
@requispw 3 ай бұрын
It's a strange thing about humans on Earth. Billions humans passed through here and went somewhere. We don't know why they came and why they went
@junxu7588
@junxu7588 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting such amazing footages and the painstaking work! It really transported me to a different place, a different time. What a trip. I am so moved just watching the manual labor alone, pondering what the collective must've been like, their bodies so much more connected with the lives they led; the sheer energy of the city, the activity, is endlessly fascinating to think about. To think that those streets have been walked on with the same kind of liveliness for like a 1000 years, without much fundamental change in the lifestyle for generations back then. That's actually really moving to think about. Bouncing back and forth between that thought and the thought that within a century human technology has advanced so quickly that it has become so self-destructive. If advancement is leading to less life on earth, is it really advancement? Gosh, what a very heavy feeling in my chest right now.
@richardhart8121
@richardhart8121 2 ай бұрын
The manual labor was blowing my mind, everyone involved, except maybe those fortunate enough to be carted around by the less fortunate runners. The eight or ten guys packing down a road base with a 400 ib. weight suspended on ropes slung across their shoulders; a particular moment for me. I slowed the playback speed down to .25, just to catch all the characters whizzing by; all the old souls. Without all the distractions of modern day, I imagine they spent a lot more time thinking about each other and their relationships
@stevesun6953
@stevesun6953 2 ай бұрын
Cool video many thanks for sharing.
@franciscoguillermojauregui6725
@franciscoguillermojauregui6725 23 күн бұрын
Excellent video. Thanks for sharing this Master piece. I wonder if they spoke Mandarin or Cantonise?
@oswang-xc6gk
@oswang-xc6gk 23 күн бұрын
这里是北京,大家基本上都讲普通话,一般广东广西香港地区的人在讲粤语
@swisschalet1658
@swisschalet1658 3 ай бұрын
Incredible
@vw8961
@vw8961 Ай бұрын
very good video for documantory. This kind of video is kind of precious.
@engkiatpoh9696
@engkiatpoh9696 Ай бұрын
This is the very ancient China that my grand parents ran away, and came to settle down in Singapore.
@peteryu7366
@peteryu7366 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video, this ia amazing!
@noren3117
@noren3117 2 ай бұрын
Une très grande nostalgie de ce qui fut le monde autrefois...et en même temps vraiment magnifique de voir,ou bien de revoir ces belles images !!.. - Merci infiniment pour le partage 🙏👍
@bisonkambaine5628
@bisonkambaine5628 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for uploading this. Humanity has come along way.
@cathleenwitt2790
@cathleenwitt2790 Ай бұрын
Thank you for the wonderful film! I lived in China for 3 years in the mid 1990's. I spent one year in Beijing. I found China to be a fascinating place!
@Mithras444
@Mithras444 3 ай бұрын
Could you imagine how hard it would be to pull a rick shaw all day long? Its looks exhausting pulling that around!!!
@pekingdragon
@pekingdragon 3 ай бұрын
kzfaq.info/get/bejne/hZ2Fkrhy3snIcas.html..... There is that interesting movie "Richshaw Boy" a famous novel written by Lao She. It tells the stoy of a hard working richshaw men during the 1920s in Beijing who at least cannot escape poverty.
@sandponics
@sandponics 3 ай бұрын
Apparently someone is now making Rick Shaw's in Australia. I can't imagine why, it gets bloody hot here in the summer.
@adeelliaqat5899
@adeelliaqat5899 3 ай бұрын
Many people today criticise and down grade China saying so much negative about them but I don't see much examples in history that a nation with in 3 or 4 decades changed it's status from struggling to manage 3 meals a day to a super power. Always pay respect where it is due, no matter who is on the opposite side.
@FootballJunky-r6h
@FootballJunky-r6h 3 ай бұрын
Well said 👏
@heavenlysonshine
@heavenlysonshine 3 ай бұрын
At what price? Total loss of all personal rigthts and freedom? A 'superpower' of government, maybe.
@qingmingyang1093
@qingmingyang1093 3 ай бұрын
@@heavenlysonshine 没有你说的那么不堪,“所有个人权利和自由”?你说的权利是骂政府、选举?维护人权的最终的方式是法治,把应该做的和不应该做的进行规范,从而形成法律。而这正是中国政府正在做的
@低能儿
@低能儿 Ай бұрын
@@qingmingyang1093支言支语,支性难改
@alexao326
@alexao326 27 күн бұрын
really enjoy seen in video what was just mere pictures!!!! amazing job
@grandaddyjesus
@grandaddyjesus 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing, very interesting pictures and society being depicted here.
@CC-si1fi
@CC-si1fi 2 ай бұрын
This is fantastic ! What a great way to archive film that will likely crumble soon, if it hasn't already. Digitized it could potentially last forever (relatively). There is toil but also lots of humour. The pet birds, the freakishly tall gentleman, the contortionist. I wouldn't want to be "sailing" up the Yangtze, though. Exceptional.
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 2 ай бұрын
Many thanks!
@ekesandras1481
@ekesandras1481 3 ай бұрын
Back than China had 400 million inhabitants and even than it was crowded. India had 250 million (all of India, including Pakistan and Bangladesh) Mexico had 15 million Brazil had 18 million Germany had 64 million Austria-Hungary had 50 million Great Britain had 42 million (including Ireland) France had 39 million (including Algeria) Egypt had 13 million South Africa had 6 million Japan had 53 million .... a lot has changed since than
@joenunya421
@joenunya421 Ай бұрын
Love this!!! Thanks for posting
@老僧
@老僧 3 ай бұрын
Amazing video! Thank you for the efforts!
@Rick88888888
@Rick88888888 3 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@enzos711
@enzos711 2 ай бұрын
Got to be the most amazing video I've ever watched ..
@litog888
@litog888 Ай бұрын
Thank you for the interesting video. Now seeing China from my father's 10-year old eyes.
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