Thanks! I'm still learning but the journey is fun.
@saeedmodanlou18746 күн бұрын
The one who lost his life in the battle Araxes ( Aras) river was Faraortes. Faraortes was the Father of Cyaxares. He was ruling media while king Diaoces was in Asyrian prison in the city of Hemat of Syria. Scythian occupied Media for 27 years after killing Faraortes. The main fight was between Medes and Asyrian empire. Scythian made alliance with Asyrian. Madya son of Parshatova was grand son of Asarhadan and nephew of Ashurbanipal. Cyaxares managed to defeat Scythian and made allied with them aganist Asyrian empire. Cyaxares also made alliace with Nabupolasar of Babylon and ten other eastern migrating tribes all the way to Central Asia. From 612 to 609 B.C. a nonstop war between Asyrian and Rivales resulted the fall of major Asyrian cities, Urmya, Erbella and Neyneva. The city of Ashur was conquered by Nabupolasar.
@historycommander5 күн бұрын
Thank you for the insight!
@saeedmodanlou18744 күн бұрын
The main mythical stories of the great book "Shahnameh of Ferdosi" Cyaxares (Kai Khosro) plays the imortal character of the stories and the one who established "Aiin e Pahlavani" (Code of Pahlavani) along with Pahlavan Zal and mythical bird " Symorgh- Symorv" . The stories are the work of a Central Asian (Early mixed Scythian and Hunic tribes) treibe called " Pahlava". They were the top Hellenist of the entire Silk road. Their language "Pahlavi" became the trade and cultural language of the entire Silk road from Xinxiang China through Cenral Asia, Persia all the way to Antakia and Damascus. Around 130 B.C. under the presure of west ward migrating Uechi ( Kushani) tribe, they migrated to Southern geography of Afghanistan and south east of Iran. After their migration the area called "Sistan or Sakestan". Kai Khosro also called "Kai Kavis - Kai Kavus" meaning King of Kings. He Also has a nickname " Hova khash tera" ( The one who throws arrow good)
@historycommanderКүн бұрын
Damn, soooo much history. Thanks for the lesson! I plan on revisting the Scythians next year, I'll reach out before then. Maybe you can help with my research!
@saeedmodanlou1874Күн бұрын
@@historycommander Sure
@historycommander14 күн бұрын
And another one...
@johndevitt641227 күн бұрын
You sure it was Bosnia and Herzegovina back then?
@historycommander27 күн бұрын
I'll double check and make an amendment if it's wrong. Thx for the feedback!
@RealityCheck6969Ай бұрын
I hate these ai images…
@historycommanderАй бұрын
Thank you for the feedback!
@GoldenWaffelsАй бұрын
My least favorite part is the weird ai guy talking
@historycommanderАй бұрын
Thank you for the feedback!!
@user-uw9vu7tg6qКүн бұрын
lol
@historycommanderКүн бұрын
Yes, he is a bit funny. Once I upgrade my PC, I'll be able use a metahuman instead.
@historycommanderАй бұрын
Favorite part😊? Least favorite part😢?
@BenL-k2y2 ай бұрын
Even during age of Qin ShiHuang... actually Zhao had the most potential to unify china because the have the invincible warrior Li Mu. The famous Wan Jian that defeated the mighty Chu, he lost to Li Mu decades earlier. So imagine if Li Mu go and bully neighbor weaker kingdoms a bit, to get more men and resources. Then he could go and wipe out Qin. Zhao king were too retarded to just play defense and eventually believe Li Mu that served their kingdom for decades would commit treason
@Big-boi922 ай бұрын
general leman was captured unconcious in fort Loncin which was hit in the ammunition storage by a big bertha shell destroying it completely. when the germans came over to take over the rubble they came under fire from a few of the survivors including a 1 armed belgian soldier, the fate of these men is unknown. after his capture, amputation of a few of his toes and regaining conciousness Leman expressively stated that it should be written down that he was only captured because he was unconcious at the time. I think he was also allowed to keep wearing his sabre during his captivity. after he came back to belgium he received a hero's welcome and got uplifted into nobility. he passed away in 1920
@historycommander2 ай бұрын
I really should have researched this better because that would have been awesome to put in this video. thank you for the feed-back and amazing insight!
@Big-boi922 ай бұрын
@@historycommander also at the start of the battle 8 german officers raced to leman's headquarters which was at that time in Liege trying to take him captive or kill him. Belgian Staff officers saw through this, this ensued into a firefight between the officers in which all 8 german officers where either killed or wounded and captured after this Leman moved his HQ to Fort Loncin
@historycommander2 ай бұрын
@@Big-boi92Damn, this dude was legit!
@historycommander2 ай бұрын
After this series on ww1 I plan on telling more intimate stories. I'm staying generic while I'm learning Unreal Engine.
@user-uw9vu7tg6qКүн бұрын
@@historycommanderwoah you’re getting told
@KijjiSale2 ай бұрын
Over half million soldiers die in this battle
@historycommander2 ай бұрын
Westerners don't often think about the atrocities that occurred on that side of the world.
@rickclark78394 ай бұрын
This was so cleary written by AI. Lord.
@historycommander3 ай бұрын
Yes it was, I do this in my limited spare time. Thank you for the comment!
@neddrol4 ай бұрын
Medes ancestors of the Kurds ☀️
@historycommander4 ай бұрын
That would be a good video!
@Thecircustapes5 ай бұрын
What's even funnier is that Ying Zheng aka Qin Shihuangdi was a political hostage as a child in Zhao during the battle and so was his father who at that time was the crown prince's heir.
@historycommander5 ай бұрын
That's interesting, perhaps a future video. Thanks for the info!
@pedrosura5 ай бұрын
The only shot we have at going to Mars is nuclear propulsion and nuclear energy. Without it there is no Mars.and it doesnt matter what Elon says, after all he was going to launch Starship in 2022😂
@BodhiTheMovieMaker6 ай бұрын
😮
@BodhiTheMovieMaker6 ай бұрын
Very interesting 👍🏻
@BodhiTheMovieMaker6 ай бұрын
Great work!!!
@HowlinMadSmith6 ай бұрын
Furthermore, Western understanding of the solution became as we colloquially call "The Manchurian Candidate".
@historycommander6 ай бұрын
Good movie too!
@historycommander6 ай бұрын
Is the competitive spirit behind the naval build-ups of the past, like the HMS Dreadnought, similar to today's race in quantum computing and moon missions?
@historycommander6 ай бұрын
Hi
@historycommander6 ай бұрын
All images via gpt4 see if you can find the hallucinations.
@BodhiTheMovieMaker6 ай бұрын
That’s crazy. Works really well
@historycommander6 ай бұрын
Yeah and they're fun to make as well.
@BodhiTheMovieMaker6 ай бұрын
@@historycommander oooh make a tutorial maybe?
@historycommander6 ай бұрын
Perhaps...
@jBKht9316 ай бұрын
So Russia has used the idea that it invades other countries in order to "protect" almost anything. Christians, Russian immigrants, Russian language speakers. Is that what I'm seeing?
@historycommander6 ай бұрын
It's there move haha
@AlluboyyFIN6 ай бұрын
Learned something new
@historycommander6 ай бұрын
Well, that's the best compliment one could give! Thank you!
@PeterBayer77 ай бұрын
"Vienna, the majestic capitol known for its imperial grandeur and vibrant culture" shows an AI-drawn Budapest 🤣
@user-th4be3bc3o7 ай бұрын
The map movements need work but I liked the ballerina.
@Maescra7 ай бұрын
Whats your Favorite Part? Whats the Worst Part?
@historycommander7 ай бұрын
I hope you enjoyed it. I'm still learning soo much and appreciate your support.
@davidstorm49118 ай бұрын
Maybe NASA can borrow some of Our Taxpayer Money from Ukraine? 🤡💩
@stuka808 ай бұрын
The video gave wrong information regarding the deployment of the Theban Sacred Band. They were in fact deployed right at the vanguard of the massive Theban left flank, not on the right to fend off the peloponesian forces facing it...the video also missed to point out a couple of other crucial details of the battle, mainly how he solved the issue of protecting his much weakened center and right flank.
@historycommander8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the information, I'll do better in the future. This is all a learning process for me, so I greatly appreciate your feedback.
@jasons449 ай бұрын
Yes, SpaceX and NASA should build a nuclear/hydrogen engine, or light speed 😊
@barryboushehri17079 ай бұрын
Thank you. Please more on Iranian empires, and nomadic Iranians battles.
@historycommander9 ай бұрын
I will consider this!
@CommanderSix10 ай бұрын
So fission vs. fusion?
@royclayton790310 ай бұрын
The content is very interesting but the background music is just a distraction and too loud.
@historycommander10 ай бұрын
Thank you for the feedback. This is all a learning experience. Hopefully the projects I have planned for next year will be much improved!
@jasons4410 ай бұрын
Yes, we need movement on this issue, its time!
@historycommander10 ай бұрын
Let's go!
@Eisenkieffer10 ай бұрын
Ok a method for “mitigating” radiation exposure to earth ecosystems with heavy lift fission propulsion discussed here, anybody want to take a crack at that? Any idea what that looks like some fine day? Now build and launch these from LEO with orbit achieved by chemical or kinetic launch systems. That’s somewhat imaginable.
@BuffMyRadius10 ай бұрын
Project NERVA tested multiple nuclear thermal rockets in the open atmosphere. One of the problems they had was the casing of the fuel rods cracking, allowing the uranium to be introduced into the exhaust stream. In one test entire sections of broken fuel rods got thrown out of the engine. I suspect "mitigation" means something like "lets not chuck nuclear fuel out the back of our rocket again."
@Eisenkieffer10 ай бұрын
Throwing out fuel rods. Just get the Nerva into LOE, position over target population, and hoo boy! Radioactive rods from god. Even better than Niven’s folly!
@Propnut4810 ай бұрын
Who F’ing cares about a nuclear rocket if the whole F’ing world is about to be destroyed by our criminal world leaders.
@rowdydog11 ай бұрын
I'm all for space technology, but, why don't we solve a problem or two here on earth? Example, how about a clean, renewable replacement for oil? Surely, NASA, DARPA, MIT, and others could come up with something. Give us that, and then we go to mars!!
@historycommander11 ай бұрын
I think they go hand and glove.
@searching4adventure8510 ай бұрын
Money laundering.
@CalvinK30011 ай бұрын
2:06 and 2:14 you mentioned Qin ruler was King Xiaocheng and Zhao ruler was again King Xiaocheng. Qin ruler was King Zhaoxiang.
@historycommander11 ай бұрын
I think I have the audio figured out! Let me know what you think?
@Grga-jn4dw11 ай бұрын
Its too low
@historycommander11 ай бұрын
@@Grga-jn4dw I'll fix it in the next one, I agree. I didn't notice it until I rewatched it this morning, I thought the same thing.
@TheBskids11 ай бұрын
Yeah, the background music is too loud and is drowning out the voice-over.
@historycommander11 ай бұрын
@TheBskids yeah, idk why I thought it was fine on my first listen through. I hear it plainly now though. Thank you for the feedback, I'll do better on the next one.
@bbartky11 ай бұрын
Good video! I really liked your summary of the DRACO program and its context within the history of nuclear propulsion. As to my own feelings I think chemical propulsion is fine for robotic missions beyond the Moon but for crewed missions I think we should wait for nuclear propulsion before we start sending people beyond the Moon’s orbit. As you mentioned, there are so many advantages from shortening the trip. In fact, I read a study that said we will need to keep the lifetime exposure to deep space to under four years due to cancer risks. So, a single mission to Mars using chemical rockets would hit that limit.
@historycommander11 ай бұрын
I wonder what tech we develop to overcome that 4 year mark? Thank you for the insightful comment!
@Ludicanti11 ай бұрын
This is apprwciated. Any friends of Alexander is a friend of mine. ⚜️❤️🐯
@historycommander11 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!
@garyrobbins28311 ай бұрын
NASA should also develop a centrifugal crew module and test it in orbit.
@historycommander10 ай бұрын
That would be cool.
@user-iw8pg8kq2q11 ай бұрын
IMO, ATG was the greatest military commander in all hunan history.
@historycommander11 ай бұрын
That's a big claim!!
@user-iw8pg8kq2q11 ай бұрын
@@historycommanderIt is true. ATG's tactics R still studied by all militaries today. Can U name another?
@historycommander11 ай бұрын
@@user-iw8pg8kq2q Possibly Darius I or Caesar. They also had great wins and mighty empires.
@user-iw8pg8kq2q11 ай бұрын
@@historycommanderWith all due respect 2U. First of all, Darius inherited a vast empire, he did not create it. ATG defeated Darius. ATG's army was much smaller than Darius' army. So that knocks Darius out of contention 4 consideration 4 being one of the greatest commanders of all time. Just plain logic. As 4 Caesar, yes he is one of the greatest, but he was not #1. Rome began in the 8th Century B.C. So like Darius, the Roman Republic during Caesars time was also vast. So Caesar already had quite a bit 2 work with. But the clencher 4 me abt ATG being the greatest, is that Caesar studied ATG's tactics. So Caesar knew who the grand master was, and he learned FM him. B4 U reply with Genghis Khan, most people don't that it was Subati, the Khan's greatest general, who was responsible 4 GK's greatest victories. Their were many great commanders all through history. But U hv not presented any evidence except ur personal opinion, 2 prove ur point. I am always willing 2 listen 2A sound disagreement that is based on logic and evidence. But not on personal opinion. Bcz basing a disagreement on a personal opinion is like debating a woman. A woman uses feelings and emotions instead of logic, facts, data, and evidence, like a man. So LMK what U think. And until we speak again my friend, here is my signoff. God bless U and ur family, and all who watch this channel.❤😊