The „first mercenary company“ means the first „Free Company“ which is a medieval phenomenon. Obviously, it does NOT mean „first mercenaries in history“ (which is an upcoming video that we‘ve already written and for which we’ve interviewed a historian specializing in defining types of military services.) This video was requested by our Patreons. If want to become part of our project too check out our Patreon here: www.patreon.com/sandrhomanhistory
@amh94946 ай бұрын
Free, free, Catalan. 😂
@cpt1910216 ай бұрын
do you know why the borgias were being insulted as catalans? at least on the canal+ show. incredible show btw season 2-3 masterpiece
@srinjoyroychoudhury70346 ай бұрын
Make a vedio on the Spanish Jenetes please
@caniconcananas76876 ай бұрын
I guess now you need to make a video about the Navarrese company. Because, as they defeated the al mugawarim (their name was an Arab word), the Navarrese were greater warriors. 😜
@caniconcananas76876 ай бұрын
@@srinjoyroychoudhury7034 It is "jinetes". But they were just light cavalry. In Spain nobody uses that word for any historic unit, corp or group, as most of the people fighting on horse during the Middle Ages was light cavalry. Nowadays "jinete" is the Spanish word for "horse rider". Any kid or grandma on horse during a weekend trip is a "jinete" because the word itself has no military implication. The word is from Arab origin, from the name of one of the Berber tribes that invaded Spain in 711, the Zenata, known for their horse riding ability. It's just one of the many thousands words that the Spanish and Portuguese languages borrowed from the Arab language which the Spanish people spoke during more than half a millennia, whether they were Spanish Muslims or Spanish Christians living in a Muslim Spanish kingdom or Spanish Christians in a Spanish Christian kingdom but having to trade with Muslim neighbouring customers and providers. Just remember that the famous "El Çid", whose name was Rodrigo Díaz, was called "al Sidi", in Arab "the Lord". And Madrid is the only town in Europe which was founded by a Moslim ruler (the Caliph of Córdoba) and has become the capital of a modern state. Its original Arab name was Magerit or Mayrit. The two highest mountains in Central and Southern Spain have Arab names for two Muslim Spanish persons: Almanzor in the Gredos mountain range from "al Mansur", the victorious, the vizier or prime minister of one of the last caliphs of Cordoba.The other is Mulhacén, for Muley Hassan, one of the kings of the last Muslim kingdoms in Spain, Granada, the city under that mountain.
@kryzzan70396 ай бұрын
Already I can see from the comments that people didn't notice this is about the first Mercenary COMPANY, not the first Mercenaries.
@williamchamberlain22636 ай бұрын
Xenophon and the ten thousand
@geordiejones56186 ай бұрын
@@williamchamberlain2263that's not a mercenary company. That's several units paid under false pretenses to aid in a Persian rebellion. They stopped existing as units as soon as they were back in Greece. The Catalan Company maintained its banners for almost 90 years, long after their original fights were over and their original leader was killed.
@LuisAldamiz6 ай бұрын
Define "company".
@historyrepeat4026 ай бұрын
What about the Free Company?
@BeedrillYanyan6 ай бұрын
Oh God, you are right.
@pedrodaguiar58656 ай бұрын
I read somewhere that the Catalan Grand Company was so vicious that Catalan citizens were banned from entering Mount Athos until the year 2000.
@ElBandito6 ай бұрын
Something to do with them sacking the monastery at the location.
@pretoo6665 ай бұрын
Es por la venganza catalana, los bizantinos traicionaron a Roger de Flor después de ganar una batalla de Constantinopla y lo mataron junto 100 almogávares más, entonces los almogávares arrasaron con todo, matando a todos los ciudadanos y quemando todo, a eso se le llama la venganza catalana... Por eso en Grecia aún hay frases hechas que dicen: cuidado que vienen los catalanes!!
@saguntum-iberian-greekkons70144 ай бұрын
Exactly, and 6 years later, Spanish could go to iceland without the worrying that they could get killed because a law allowed it For more: Google this Spánverjavígin (Slaying of the Spaniards)
@CHex.6 ай бұрын
Many people in the comments fail to understand a "mercenary company" is a very specific term. It doesn't mean any kind of mercenary band or army.
@skampisti37016 ай бұрын
In Albania, an oger or a humanoid big ruthless monste is called "katallani." they were so ruthless that they inbeded themselfe in our myths and legends...
@julio5prado6 ай бұрын
The Almogavars are one of the most interesting military units in history. They were equipped as light infantry but they had the skills and the courage to confront and defeat all kinds of military units, including the most feared knights of the time. They fought large armies in open battle and conducted sieges, always successfully. The book from Muntaner is a fascinating account of their adventures.
@MarceloHenriqueSoaresdaSilva6 ай бұрын
this style of combat are pretty common in Iberia and even for cavalry.
@julio5prado6 ай бұрын
@@MarceloHenriqueSoaresdaSilva Iberia had a major difference with the rest of Europe, it had been in frontier wars and raids for 6 centuries. Everyone had weapons and knew how to use them, and the frontier people were incredibly skilled in combat, in understanding the dynamics of wars and in the use of the terrain and all elements in their advantage. Two hundred years later when the Spanish had to fight the elite of the French in Italy, they lost the first battle, then learned the lesson and were not defeated again for 160 years. Then small units conquered enormous empires in America and so on. It was the result of 8 centuries of continuous training
@cliffordjensen87256 ай бұрын
@@julio5prado I agree, they were simply the best.
@JayzsMr6 ай бұрын
@@julio5prado100% it was a society centered around warfare because of these centuries of conflict against the Muslim and also tied into the conquest of the new world and Spanish tactics being dominant in Europe for a long time afterwards.
@julio5prado6 ай бұрын
@@JayzsMr Is very interesting how the tactics of surprise night attacks continued from this time into the 16-17 centuries with the Spanish Tercios. In the Tercios these attacks were called “encamisadas” as the Spanish wore a shirt on top of their equipment to distinguish themselves in the night from the soldiers they attacked. The origin of this tactic dates back to the Almogavars
@Pigraider2686 ай бұрын
That's unreal xd I started my Thesis about Grand Company last week and was looking for some good reliable sources on the topic. You a Godsent :D
@gj12345678999996 ай бұрын
No offense, but I hope people getting masters are not getting all info from KZbin. 😔
@FloatingLeaf11116 ай бұрын
(Citation Needed)😢
@albertmont34116 ай бұрын
@@gj1234567899999 I don't think he refers to the KZbin video but the sources that SandRhomanhistorian has cited to make the video possible.
@Pigraider2686 ай бұрын
@@gj1234567899999 Mate I see good bibliography. That's what I was talking about. You can't make a Thesis based on 15 minutos video xd
@Pigraider2686 ай бұрын
@@gj1234567899999 Mate you really think I would base my Thesis on 15 minutes film? ;) I was talking about good bibliography in the video :)
@LuisAldamiz6 ай бұрын
This is an excellent documentary, surely the best one you can find online on the Almogavars, however I miss a key epic "detail": the siege of Gallipoli, in which some 500 Catalans defeated the whole Byzantine Army (around 40,000, many of them cataphracts/knights) in the most amazing sally ever. You also went over Apros very casually, when it was also a battle in which the Almogavars were in clear numerical disadvantage (even if not as extreme as in Gallipoli). Now Patreons should request the Navarrese Company, a somewhat similar development some decades later, in which the Angevine wife of Prince Louis of Navarre, brother of Charles the Bad, claimed Durrës and much of Albania in the midst of Catholic-Orthodox conflicts in that country. They won but the princess died soon after and they moved on as rogue mercenaries to Greece, where they defeated the Catalan Company for good at Thebes. Pro-tip: unlike the rag-tag Almogavars, the Navarrese were pike and engineer heavy, and I've read that they even had a Gascon unit of horse archers, a very unusual type of arm in Western Europe that has me extremely intrigued. In any case, treat your mercenaries well, else...
@DavidJimenez-ux2lw6 ай бұрын
Fun fact: because the pillaging of greece the catalans were forbidden to enter mount athos until the 2000s
@ViktorCZ426 ай бұрын
Now that's what I call quarantine
@Ilikefinalfantasy7956 ай бұрын
LET ME INNNNNN~!
@gg2fan6 ай бұрын
One of history's greatest lessons that is still being learned today: Pay your damn mercenaries
@joshuajimbun58776 ай бұрын
Company still tried to underpay their employees and then wonder why their staff is unmotivated or quit😂😂😂 guess people never learn
@noah48226 ай бұрын
@@joshuajimbun5877 unions have been at war with the state from the beginning of labor. and will be untill we are free, comrade.
@jasonashley45796 ай бұрын
The kinda people that come looking for that money won't tolerate you not having it.
@hoplite61646 ай бұрын
another day, another byzantine emperor cant stop sabotaging himself and his empire
@cool06alt6 ай бұрын
Imo you should make exclusive video about Almogavar and their tactics. Without Almogavars, there would be no Catalan. Almogavars were born out of the idea that to fight enemies superior tactic, you have to become like them (same as steppe horse archers)
@arnaue69056 ай бұрын
... Catalans have way more culture and history than just a bunch of mad men throwing pointy sticks... We were there before the almogavers and had to undergoe french opresion, castillian opresion and even endured a crusade so please thibk before writing bullshit
@Cyricist0016 ай бұрын
What's with all the backstabbing tradition among Rome and Byzantium? They were their own damn worse enemy it seems.
@jacklaurentius61305 ай бұрын
Byzantines are always their own worst enemy. Yet sympathizers of the Byzantines always lay blame on crusaders.
@leonardomarquesbellini5 ай бұрын
Wealth and power invites infighting (specially in States where power is somewhat decentralized), and the Crusaders actions greatly enabled the Roman's worst qualities by undermining their political stability at the crucial moment they would've been able to make great gain against their most pressing enemies.
@petros3115 ай бұрын
Well the byzantines had their issues for sure, mostly the internal struggle for power, but on the other hand the crusaders were off set their reason for existing, the free of holy lands and instead in many cases they attack and conquered christian lands, like in byzantium, and Zara, the italian city states were more than wiling to destroy byzantium in order to get in their hands the full control of the merchant with the east. Also in most cases the low noblemen of the crusaders who were leading them, their main goal was to have a feud of their own on the weak lands of the east no matter if was held by christians or muslims! and most worse from the crusaders they were those merceneries especially the Catalan company, they were really the scums of the earth!
@thenoblepoptart4 ай бұрын
They lay the blame on Venice
@petros3114 ай бұрын
@@thenoblepoptart true the italian merchant states like venice, genoa, amalfi and others were undermining byzantium becouse they wanted to control all the trade with east mediterranean without having paying taxes to use the byzantine ports and harbors or to be taxed on their profit that making by selling goods on the byzantine markets. so they activelly undermined the byzantine empire in many ways untill they diverted the 4th crusade to constantinople when they find a plausible pretexet, a dethroned byzantine ex emperor!
@GAMER123GAMINGАй бұрын
They think they can blame it all on whitey.
@edgarmaestre66226 ай бұрын
Desperta ferro!! Greetings from tha catalan pyrenes, birth place of a lot of "almogàvers". Thanks for talk about this topic.
@seedo2016 ай бұрын
Very interesting piece of history. Interesting fact: Almogavars coming from the arabic word ( almaghaweer: المغاوير) which means the adventurers
@FutureMythology6 ай бұрын
I'm continually impressed by the breadth and depth of knowledge in these history videos.
@rebel_drop_troop77156 ай бұрын
I see so many people commenting that he’s dumb and there are mercenaries before him. He’s talking about the first literal business company that someone started as mercenaries as a business. Read the title use your brain.
5 ай бұрын
Any of these Company videos would make an epic tv-series. Thanks!
6 ай бұрын
For me, what really deserves more attention is not so much the Catalan Company of Robert de Flor, but the history of the Almogávar unit that made up the majority of his company and that was fundamental for the Kingdom of Aragon expanded into the Mediterranean (even conquering the city of Athens, as you mentioned). The Almogávares history are very interesting and the campaigns they carried out in the Iberian Peninsula, Sardinia, Sicily and Southern Italy were also impressive; They were able to defeat cavalry only using javelins, short swords and crossbows, and their war cry was "Desperta Ferro!" (Awaken iron) while they caused sparks by striking flints with their weapons and after the events narrated in this video, his passage through Greece is known to this day as "The Catalan Fury". It's funny and ironic at the same time, that another mercenary company from the Iberian Peninsula had to be used to defeat the Catalans after 70 years controlling Athenian territory. It should not surprise anyone that Iberian war tactics were so successful fighting against other Europeans or even the Turks themselves, since the War that was waged between the Moors and Christians on the peninsula meant that: flexibility, efficient use of infantry, the existence of light horsemen, guerrilla warfare, rapid maneuvers, war of attrition and surprise attacks, were the daily bread. For this reason, not only the Almogávares managed to triumph, the Spanish Tercios also later succeeded, since their war mentality made adaptation the most important thing; This can be seen in the campaigns of Gonzalo Fernández de Cordoba (the Great Captain) in the Italian Wars (fast maneuvers, guerrilla warfare and the use of many projectiles in battles) or the Grand Duke of Alba in his campaigns at the beginning of the 80 years war during the first Invasion of William of Orange (where the attrition due to indirect fighting and the "Encamisadas" that were the surprise night attacks), those two generals are the most obvious examples of how the fighting mentality coming from the Reconquista was carried into practice in other European settings.
@aguspuig66156 ай бұрын
yyup, after all the term guerrilla would first appear in spain when they expelled the napoleonic invaders. Its a little sad as a catalan and spaniard myself how everyone knows Napoleon as ''that guy who won all the wars except that one in Russia'' when we did defeat him aswell, and in true catalan/spanish fashion we did it with common people that were barely armed but were flexible with their strategy and just very brave and commited
6 ай бұрын
@@aguspuig6615 Exactly, it is totally regrettable (as a Hispanic American) that our history is omitted several times in world events; More than one of the reasons why Napoleon failed in Russia was because he left half of his great army fighting fruitlessly in Spain, losing veterans and material that would have given him a more overwhelming superiority than he initially had in his campaign ( I don't remember if it was Spain that also caused the delays in the preparation for the French Invasion of Russia). The beginning of the end of Napoleon was not Trafalgar, nor Russia, but having gotten into a war of attrition against the Iberian guerrillas (something unnecessary if we take into account that Spain was an ally before the French betrayal); They paid dearly for his audacity, even Napoleon, in his memoirs, lists as one of his greatest mistakes going to war against Spain and even knowing that, I am surprised that the world continues to ignore it.
@Ocell7285 ай бұрын
Crown of Aragon was the monarchy that expanded into the Mediterranean. Kingdom of Aragon never had access to the sea.
@albertpratclaramunt5 ай бұрын
si Napoleon hubiera tenido el doble de hombres solo habria conseguido el doble de muertes de su propio bando! Y es el rey Fernando VII quien da permiso a Napoleón de ingresar en la península!
@joange18425 ай бұрын
very informative post. Thank you very much!
@vicentcampsvilallonga5 ай бұрын
Fantastic video, very clearing and interesting. People hard for hart times.
@kristofferraton70606 ай бұрын
Thank you for spending the time to research this and create a comprehensive video. Ive been very interested with this topic for a while now, but found most interesting sources in spanish!
@SandRhomanHistory6 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@PonçHugdEntença-k9o6 ай бұрын
Thank you for explaining the Catalan Company history!
@vertigq51266 ай бұрын
This was excellent, thanks for the high-quality videos!
@psychofozz6 ай бұрын
Thank you. I loved this video. The Almogavars also ended up fighting against the English in the company of Owain Lawgoch (Owen of the Red Hands) in his invasion of Guernsey as part of his campaign to reclaim the Principality of Wales from the English king Edward III (victor at Crecy and Potiers [well his son was]). Love to see your take on the Welsh resistance under Lawgoch and his successor Owain Glyn Dwr.
@kemita6 ай бұрын
Impressive. This video was a truly enjoyable snippet of history. Thank you.
@SandRhomanHistory6 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@Rohv6 ай бұрын
This deserves a miniseries.
@dennisbergkamp15536 ай бұрын
The quality of your videos is getting better and better. Absolutely top stuff keep it up
@SandRhomanHistory6 ай бұрын
Thanks a ton!
@didacromero38926 ай бұрын
Why is everyone complaining about him calling it Catalan? There must always be that person who puts politics into everything (Very good video by the way)
@joanmasdeu46005 ай бұрын
Spaniards are butthurt that us catalans remember our history
@LarsOfTheMohicans6 ай бұрын
If anyone's curious. That animated movie about the Almogovars where some kid travels back in time, which used to play on YTV in Canada around Christmas in the late 90's. Its original title was "Desperta Ferro" which was translated as "Swords of Freedom". You can find it on YT.
@joange18425 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/apOafWabepp3i8U it's truly heartwarming. I can't recall ever seeing this, or this style of animation in my childhood. The animation is pretty good, taking aside that it is not 24 fps, as that would be a titanic enterprise. It reminds me of the Asterix&Obelix animated films, it had a similar pace of animation. Thank you very much!
@kassander73536 ай бұрын
Okay. Now I want to know about that Navarrese Company.
@noahkidd33596 ай бұрын
Me too!!
@skin47006 ай бұрын
I love it how you shown the iner boarders of Hungary as a Croatian that made me VERY happy.
@erikturnar64666 ай бұрын
Not just that, but even the Banate of Slavonia. It is a very nice map.
@amtmannb.46276 ай бұрын
Very exciting adventure of such a company. Great work!
@righteousviking6 ай бұрын
"I was a businessman, doing business!" - Roger de Flor
@jeanmartox35706 ай бұрын
Hello to Catalogne Nord, chez nous, c'est trés connu, et cela est meme une fiérté!!! Merci à la chaine pour avoir fait cette revue!
@Benito-lr8mz6 ай бұрын
L'estat Francés ha esborrat el.Catala ? i ens queixem en Espanya😂
@jeanmartox35706 ай бұрын
@@Benito-lr8mz Surement pas, loin de là, la langue est meme encouragé, et promu, du moins par chez nous, et les échanges avec la Catalogne Sud est constant, hier j'étais encore avec des étudiants du collége de Figueras! bien à vous!
@Lapsontheboy6 ай бұрын
underatted channel that's for sure...
@Ronnie.rocket.3336 ай бұрын
Just discovered this channel, the feeling is like a miner founding gold, you know. I'm a history student and (i hope you guys hear this a lot) you explain history far better than my teachers hahahaha
@SandRhomanHistory6 ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
@Eteriaa3 ай бұрын
Hi! I've been looking to your videos on and off for a while now and, as a Catalan, I was surprised to find that you decided to make a video about the Gran Companyia Catalana! I wanted to thank you greatly for providing such a well-researched documentary full of details I didn't even know about myself. Also, I feel sorry about the comments of Spanish nationalists trying to delegimitize your work. I know from first-hand experience how hard it can be to discuss about history with compulsive revisionists.
@c.2531Ай бұрын
I only can join on, as a half Catalan from my mother's side, on which you have written. I've heard from the great name "Roger de Flor" and some facts of the Gran Companyia Catalana through the mediterranean sea from my mother, but didn't know the whole story such in detail like in the video.
@maxgalofre99096 ай бұрын
I love seeing that theres interest on history from catalunya,aragon and valencia. Also showing the good and the bad equaly.
@SB-qm5wg6 ай бұрын
The flint at night trick is pretty cool.
@zetectic79685 ай бұрын
Rule 1: always pay your mercenaries.
@uxigadur6 ай бұрын
I just started this campaign in field of glory 2 yesterday. Nice.
@CPR5235 ай бұрын
The comment section goes havoc. First the focus on the Almogavers comes from Catalan romanticism during the second half of the 19th Century and the glorification of the so called four great chronicles. Second, the mercenary company is called Catalan Company for a reason. Their business was run in Catalan, their correspondence was in Catalan etc. The Crown of Aragon is not the Kingdom of Aragon. These people spoke Catalan and there is enough evidence for it. Don't project your modern ideas of nation and people onto the past. But be assured that if you can read modern Catalan and you have the paleographic skills for 14th century documents of the time you will have no problem reading the preserved documentation (except the may be more neutral greek sources haha).
@CPR5235 ай бұрын
PS: You can read, Early Catalan Contacts With Byzantium by Stephen P. Bensch to better understand the previous relationships between the Crown of Aragon and the Byzantine Empire and why the Company was called Catalan Company.
@MrNigara5 ай бұрын
@@CPR523 You are the typical pseudocatalan fake propaganda agent. Your opinion is just 0.
@anabogueles59325 ай бұрын
No hablaban catalán, hablaban en navarro-aragonés, bearnés, occitano, etc..., por aquel entonces el catalán era un dialecto más del occitano, además de que no solo se hablaba navarro-aragonés en el Reino de Aragón, también se hablaba en gran parte del Reino de Valencia, Tortosa y Lérida (hasta hace apenas 80 años el valenciano aún poseía una gran influencia aragonesa que en ciertas expresiones e ideas aún siguen compartiendo, tú mismo puedes comprobarlo en carteles o periódicos de época sin hacer demasiadas búsquedas) de los adalides de la gran compañía "catalana" más de la mitad eran aragoneses, dicha compañía (también llamada Gran Compañía Almogávar, referenciada por primera vez en 1305 como "Exercitus francorum") estaba compuesta principalmente por aragoneses, valencianos y catalanes, también por navarros, francos y castellanos en menor medida, no era algo exclusivamente catalán como algunos absurdamente defendeis, ni muchísimo menos, pues las tropas almogavares tienen su origen en el Reino de Aragón, teniendo su primera aparición documentada durante la toma de Zaragoza de 1118, desde entonces serían muy frecuentes en las huestes del Reino de Aragón y posteriormente de la Corona de Aragón (aparición de almogavares catalanes y valencianos), el reino y Corona de Aragón evidentemente no son lo mismo y creo que poca gente los confunde, pero recuerda que la Corona no es mas que una confederación de territorios propiedad del rey de Aragón, muchos remarcais la diferencia entre Reino y Corona, pero, acaso diferenciais vosotros entre Cataluña y Corona de Aragón?? 😂, que son los països catalans sino una Corona de Aragón sin Aragón con un idioma y nación impuestos (sin ni siquiera existir un precede histórico que lo justifique) de forma autoritaria y chovinista?? Acaso sois incapaces de diferenciar el relato pseudo-historico y nacionalista fantástico de la historia académica contrastada y aceptada por la historiografia oficial?? Tanto necesitáis adornar vuestro pasado para justificaros políticamente en el presente???
@Ocell7285 ай бұрын
@@anabogueles5932 La mayoría eran catalanes. El catalán era un idioma con literatura a esas alturas, perfectamente distinguido del occitano, con Ramon Llull habiendo escrito en ambos idiomas, o con la crónica de Jaime I que diferencia a los que hablan catalán de los que hablan aragonés. En Lleida y Tortosa también se hablaba catalán. No eran únicamente catalanes, pero eran identificados así, igual que la corona no era todo Aragón, pero se la llama así. Yo veo bastante pseudo-historia en todo lo que escribes. Dime qué estudio dice que más de la mitad eran aragoneses.
@CPR5235 ай бұрын
@@anabogueles5932 Well, they did their book keeping and relations in Catalan, so even if you have a mixed group of Mercenaries you stick to the most common language. They did not care about your modern political stance. Show me a document from the Catalan Company that is in Aragonese. Read the article by Bensch, for exemple and then you will have a better understanding I guess. I am not Catalan btw. but teach constitutional history and medieval law and I am constantly confronted with half knowledge bloated up with modern iberian nationalisms. The Catalan company was run in Catalan, all the evidence points in that direction. Rutger von Blume learned Catalan when he became the head of the Catalan company and it was not a big deal as he already new what today you would consider Venetian dialects. But honestly I think you're just here to troll so I rather spent my time transcribing in peace some pending documents. Have a peacefull live and I hope you will get over your nationalisms and become a free thinker.
@MrRostit6 ай бұрын
Thank you for shedding some light into medieval catalan history which often gets overshadowed by later periods of history after unification with Castile
@TRLHistory6 ай бұрын
Loved the almogavars in M2TW mods, such a badass early game unit😅
@guaporeturns94726 ай бұрын
Every group of warriors or soldiers ever featured on any channel /documentary was "one of the best/fiercest/toughest/most successful/most sought after” troops of all times.. literally every one😂. Just once I would love introduction to go something like " some of the least successful , most poorly trained troops of all time. Here is their story."🤣
@iseeyou50616 ай бұрын
Someone probably would but "lack of surviving sources." :v
@perrytran95046 ай бұрын
The Iceni would probably be on any list of troops with the worst showings. Despite a substantial numerical advantage they were crushed by the first Roman army that they didn't catch off guard. Even their queen was forgotten to history for centuries until Britain wanted to create a national mythos for itself.
@bigsarge20856 ай бұрын
Fascinating history!
@gerardarriola59546 ай бұрын
Hi, I am a catalan myself and I didn't know this part of my history. It's really cool to see it represented in such a cool video! Thank you, earned a new follower
@deep_boy63762 ай бұрын
Medieval mercenary companies were the original gig workers-except instead of food deliveries, they delivered swords and shields... to whoever paid the most!
@saguntum-iberian-greekkons70146 ай бұрын
I wish you showed the battles against the turks, or until they reached Cilicia. I always wondered how they overcame larger, more mobile and better equipped enemies. They knew how to adapt the terrain. Only another Iberian Company can beat an Iberian Company haha
@piggypoo6 ай бұрын
Man this stuff is just so interesting. Only a world where military and economic power isn't super centralized like what we have today could allow something like this to happen: a nationless homeless band of mercenaries moving about the land but who also happened to be unstoppable on the battlefield. I can't imagine a modern day equivalent of that happening, unless like, the USA broke up into different countries or something, even then it's hard to imagine. Also those cowardly mounted arches at the last battle are hilarious.
@cool06alt6 ай бұрын
You can google what the RSA (Rapid Support Force) in Sudan are doing.
@JayzsMr6 ай бұрын
We almost had such a case today in Russia with the Wagner company, almost. Prigoshin was also a mercenary captain character out this and later time periods
@ingold14706 ай бұрын
It can still happen in regions the US cares little for, Paul Kagame's rise to power went something like this.
@7thDesertRat6 ай бұрын
another fantastic vid, look forward to the next one,
@egillskallagrimson58796 ай бұрын
"Almogàvers a la lluita! desperta ferro!" - Almogavars to battle! Awake Iron!
@marcgascon9265 ай бұрын
Great video, very interesting. I would very much apreciate more videos like this one.
@raia.a56795 ай бұрын
thank you for keeping alive the memory of the Great Catalan Company. Spanish/castillian envious people can keep coping, seething and dilating in the comments.
@anabogueles59325 ай бұрын
Los almogavares eran en su mayoría y en origen pastores aragoneses del Pirineo, había catalanes por supuesto, del mismo modo que había valencianos, sicilianos, navarros y hasta castellanos al servicio del rey de Aragón, los almogavares no eran tropas catalanas ni un símbolo catalán por el simple hecho de que en los siglos XII-XIII Cataluña no existía, recuerda que por muy mercenarios que fuesen los almogavares seguían siendo vasallos del rey aragonés y así lo demostraban, por lo que actuaban defendiendo los intereses reales además de los económicos propios, Desperta Ferro es un grito de guerra muy conocido, aunque también en los albores de la batalla gritaban ¡Aragón! para recordar que seguían los intereses del rey y la Corona.
@acusticamenteconvusional99365 ай бұрын
Pero si lo peor es que la mayoría ni serán castellanos
@roigiperillos5 ай бұрын
Great video. Don't forget the Kingdom of València
@sirjabal6 ай бұрын
Roger von Blume!! European history indeed. German in Italy to Spain to Greece etc etc. When travels were slow and dangerous. What a man.
@STV2406 ай бұрын
a true knight hero for a great novel
@STV2406 ай бұрын
Tirant lo Blanc's novel is based on Roger von Blume's adventures, considered the most important writing in Catalan
@fedecano73626 ай бұрын
Thanks SRH this was an excellent production!
@dalmabu5 ай бұрын
Thanks from Catalonia for this amazing video on a topic often ignored!
@MrNigara5 ай бұрын
uy si siempre "ignored" incluso aunque fueran catalanes (que no lo fueron) se habla de bandidos: de eso te sientes orgulloso??? jajajaja
@Eteriaa3 ай бұрын
@@MrNigara I tant! Sobretot quan van massacrar a milers de castellans a Múrcia. ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cr%C3%B2nica_de_Ramon_Muntaner
@egillskallagrimson58796 ай бұрын
Not only you did a great video on the most famous and mad lads among the Catalans you also did the best video defending the legitimacy of the Aragonees crown over Sicily and Naples.
@amos4986 ай бұрын
You were just a foreign invader
@gamingforfun86626 ай бұрын
Guys all this happened hundreds of years ago no need for animosity
@aB-of1nz6 ай бұрын
Aragonese crown it's not correct, Crown of Aragon Et Cathalonia
@daninaval95696 ай бұрын
@@aB-of1nz es la corona de aragón a secas cataluña era un territorio mas
@MrAlepedroza6 ай бұрын
Catalans is not correct to describe them. They themselves called their name "Aragonese" or just "Franks" to the eastern Romans. "Catalan" is a modern nationalistic projection loaded with politics.
@medievalist84416 ай бұрын
I wish it was longer
@wiktorberski92726 ай бұрын
Really intersting piece of history. . IT looks Luke switching the sides was a common practice
@Elpeletas6 ай бұрын
DESPERTA FERRO!
@ruzasuka6 ай бұрын
Was this made by a studio?? It looks so good. Great job.
@SandRhomanHistory6 ай бұрын
everything made by just the two of us!
@ruzasuka6 ай бұрын
@@SandRhomanHistory Damn, did you two made all of the drawings and maps?
@Philipp.of.Swabia6 ай бұрын
After Manfreds Death, his Nephew, the 16 year old Konradin, Duke of Swabia, gathered a Swabian and Bavarian Host, and marched onto Italy, the Bavarians left his army though, for reasons I’m not 100% sure anymore, will have to look it up again. But Konradin was welcomed by many of the Italians, as the Rule of Charles of Anjou was a hard one. Konradin was beaten in the field by Charles, who then had him Beheaded at the town square in Palermo, without a Trial, even back then, this was seen as a Crime. After that, the Aragonese came into the picture.
@jasonashley45796 ай бұрын
My grandparents were from Castlevetrano Sicily, I hope to see it some day, but right now I'm just down the road from Jesse James and thats a long ways away.
@Pilvenuga6 ай бұрын
Moral of the story: respect the men who come down from the mountains.
@thepopcornmonger34345 ай бұрын
Wow, you can smells like the end of November in Madrid in the comments. Bet they all miss the blue door bar.
@normtrooper43926 ай бұрын
Average mount and blade campaign experience.
@EcomCarl6 ай бұрын
What an intriguing glimpse into history! 🏰 The story of the Almogavars and their rise to power showcases the importance of adaptability and strategic thinking, qualities that resonate even in today's fast-paced world of business and leadership.
@benm59136 ай бұрын
Commenting for the algorithm. Danke schon fellas.
@miguelmontenegro35206 ай бұрын
European noblemen's only weakness: Unable not to charge
@Kalumubotia6 ай бұрын
Sounds like a French problem.
@summerwell82626 ай бұрын
CORRECTION: what they shouted before attacking wasn’t “awake iron, lets kill, lets kill!” It was “Aur, aur... Desperta ferro” meaning: “listen, listen, awake iron!”, they also shouted: “Aragon, Aragon!” Their royal house And “San Jorge!” Meaning Saint George, their royal house saint protector.
@DeRegelaar6 ай бұрын
Great video. Thx. Fantastic.
@Pohjanseppa6 ай бұрын
On the regards of their knives, which can also have the names of 'Cortel', 'Cultro', etc. It's been hard to find information or any archeological finds about them, but they seem to be wide single-edged knives, that were shortsword-sized, but could be still called 'knives'. I'd say they were similar to Falchions or something akin to another obscure weapon around 8-13th century in Lithuania, from the tribe of Semigallian a particular type of very wide combat knives. Which was a type of unique seax around the Baltics (Also arguably similar type in Finland/Finnish tribes, along with 'narrow' Baltic-styled seaxes), which they used against crusaders from Swedish crusades, Germany's Templars and the Rus' Orthodox Crusaders. The guerilla-type of warfare is similar, though in the Baltics/with Vikings, they used also axes/Dane-styled axes and bow (and arrow), whilst the Almogavarans used slings. Those tribes also didn't really use armor. I'd bet they used a Falchion-esque, Semigallian-type of war knife, that was useful also for utility, like a machete (They also carried them sideways through a 'latch' system). However, as I've mentioned, there doesn't seem to be any information about Spanish/Iberian finds, from between the Roman period to the later Medieval Period with rapiers (Besides usual arming swords), so it's hard to say.
@framegrace16 ай бұрын
In today's Catalan, Coltell is just another name for a Knife, but refering to it as a "tool" (For cooking,etc..), not as a weapon. And AFAIK that was also the meaning back them... If I had to theorize, I gues people said they use "Coltells" meaning they used normal everyday knives instead of military ones. In the drawings they seem to use wide butcher knifes, which with their tendency on appearing fierce brutal, I think i makes sense.
@adriaarmengou16 ай бұрын
Thanks for the document, sir.
@welcometonebalia6 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@54032Zepol6 ай бұрын
Awesome video bro! Keep up the great content! Can't wait for more! Swag 😎
@gerardnogues48146 ай бұрын
Sant Jordi! Desperta ferro!
@carnifex20056 ай бұрын
The Almogavars weapons and tactics sound a lot like the Aiel from Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series. I wonder if they were an inspiration.
@valentinbezdan5706 ай бұрын
I don't think the idea of an irregular skirmishing force that does hit and run tactics is unique enough to warrant thinking this is what inspired the Aiel.
@carnifex20056 ай бұрын
@@valentinbezdan570 I was talking more about the specific gear. Jordan described the Aiel as carrying several short spears, occasionally with a small round shield and their only edged weapon was a "heavy bladed knife" that looked closer to a short sword than a normal knife.
@GarfieldRex6 ай бұрын
Hmmm dishonored and having your mercenary band persecuted by your former employer... In which manga and anime have I seen this 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
@PhilipLaSnail6 ай бұрын
I am getting heavy bannerlord viebs from this.
@marccan32676 ай бұрын
Such formations, although disciplined, were extremely unreliable. In 1313, the Venetians engaged 3,000 of these mercenaries in the siege of Zara, but they changed sides when the Croatian Viceroy Mladen II. bribed them. The mercenaries had already received their salary from the Venetians, and then they still took a bribe from Duke Mladen.
@jurgnobs13086 ай бұрын
that's exactly what made swiss mercenaries so well regarded later on. because they generally didn't switch sides and paid heavily (with some battles resulting in almost complete erradication) for it. that's not because the swiss were better or anything, but the swiss people taking part in the mercenary corps often had very limited rights
@poil83516 ай бұрын
Actually the Swiss were pretty prone to switching sides later on especially if the person who employed also hired landskanchets as the two groups kind of hated each other.
@duckyface03336 ай бұрын
Another banger video
@ДимоЦолов6 ай бұрын
You missed to add their participation in the battle of Velbazd in 1330.
@MaxPower-mn2ig6 ай бұрын
great video, tnx
@lopezlirio40046 ай бұрын
La venjança catalana. DESPERTA FERRO!!!
@RobitGalaxy5 ай бұрын
My family comes from one of those mercenaries. Here, on Catalonia, we are so proud of those warriors, they are like our national superhero. Thanks for posting this!
@petros3115 ай бұрын
so i think you would find this story interesting! after the sack of agio oros (Holy Mountain monasteries in Athos) and the many crimes they did in general to the people and farmers, looting the innocent peoples, raping and sold them to slavery to make money they sold to Genoese slave traders!, The monasteries banned the enter of men of catalonia for 700 years! a Catalan man enter the monasteries around 2000 maybe, when the Abbot of the monastery wile talking to visitors as its custom he ask from were are you? and he replied from Catalonia! the abbot suprised and sayed Catalonia? from the place that mercenery company pillaged the monasteries and they had no sacred thing on this earth? he leave and refused to talk him again as a sign of protest! the man was deeply socked and after returning back home he make some diging in history he made the incident known and catalonia feld they need to make some form of reparation for the past and they founded some work to be done on the monastery as a redemption for the things past!
@RobitGalaxy5 ай бұрын
@@petros311 Didnt know that stort. Thanks for sharing!
@daveweiss56476 ай бұрын
If only the Byzantines had paid them and kept them in service... maybe they could have pushed back in Anatolia and held off the Turks for longer.
@eriktillman81146 ай бұрын
They probably didn't have the money to pay- after 1204 the Empire was totally impoverished. Also the Catalan mercenaries would likely have been unwilling to hand over territories and castles they captured to Imperial officials and there would have inevitably been religious tensions with the Orthodox population.
@daveweiss56476 ай бұрын
@@eriktillman8114true...
@ivanivanovic55866 ай бұрын
Capable characters then. They got a lot of similarities with hajduk and uskok guys(think highwayman+skirmisher/raider in same package) of ottoman border wars. Say, that could be a good topic for a video. Ubisoft used these guys' name in the assassin's creed revelation game. Only problem, they gave it to the wrong enemy type, explanation - byzantine enemy type with heavy armor and 2h axe was called almogavar(instead of being called the varangians that they named their polearm counterpart after).
@danvikkilmire60756 ай бұрын
It's never wise to antagonize professional killers..
@Conquerthemall6 ай бұрын
It’s funny how a mercenary company in the high Middle Ages used the same tactics to fight armored riders that the rest of Europe 200-300 years later
@Pilvenuga6 ай бұрын
neccesity breeds innovation
@andreas26106 ай бұрын
the only faction to defeat these iberians are more iberians😂
@catoelder46966 ай бұрын
AWESOME
@SandRhomanHistory6 ай бұрын
Thank you! Cheers!
@adriaarmengou13 ай бұрын
As you can see in the comments, there are many Spanish deniers denying Catalan history.
@takeiteasy88472 ай бұрын
I dont think anyone would deny Catalan history they would rather say it was spanish
@Astraben12 күн бұрын
@@takeiteasy8847 Same thing. There are just as many Catalans denying their own history.
@feartheamish91836 ай бұрын
Hey you can hire these guys in CK3
@andrewhuch16 ай бұрын
I think this video is a great introduction to the Catalan great company, but it is a bit too cursory to cover such an interesting topic. Wish more had been said regarding the fascinating background of Roger de Flor. Also, I think you negated to mention important political factors in the assassination of Roger by not mentioning Michael IX Palaiologos and his jealousy of Roger as well as the the disgruntled nature of the Alan mercenaries and their leader, Gircon. For anyone interested in getting a true overview of the Catalan Grand Company, I would recommend reading Muntaner's great chronicle.
@kovi5676 ай бұрын
How is the almogavar knife name spelled?
@aB-of1nz6 ай бұрын
Coltell, similar to knives used by butchers ; those knives instigated fear to enemies
@deltabravo19696 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing the history of Iberian warriors. The gladius was used by Iberian tribes before the Roman legions made it their weapon of choice.
@godking5 ай бұрын
If i remember correctly romans adopted the iberian version of the gladius over the version they were using before.
@PlasterPariss6 ай бұрын
Show us all of the different known free companies and their different regalia