It's insane how you can clearly see the difference between Germany and Russia’s railroad density
@ChobeVelyasha10 ай бұрын
Slava Russia
@КосмонавтПетрович-м5к10 ай бұрын
Безумие? Это плотность населения чувак
@justusP910110 ай бұрын
@@ChobeVelyashabait used to be believable
@t.n.h.ptheneohumanpatterna833410 ай бұрын
its impressive how russia was able to quickly indsutrialize in ww2
@t_time505310 ай бұрын
@@t.n.h.ptheneohumanpatterna8334 Thats true, but to be fair, Russia already started to industrialize right before WW1. This was one reason the Germans wanted to go to war at that time. To do it before Russia fully industrializes and became to strong to defeat.
@faenethlorhalien10 ай бұрын
It always fascinated me that, for how static WW1 was in the western front for most of the conflict due to trench warfare, it was, on the other hand, quite mobile in the Eastern one.
@ЖелтыйКруг-ч9с10 ай бұрын
ну не прям, чтобы мобильной, если честно
@marcy324510 ай бұрын
Да и не сильно статичной она была на западном фронте
@simplifier_10 ай бұрын
@@ЖелтыйКруг-ч9сspeak English
@TheDJGrandPa10 ай бұрын
With a frontline sp big, you will be able to break through somewhere
@ethank505910 ай бұрын
@@TheDJGrandPa And Russia could also trade territory for time but if France ceded much ground to Germany it could mean losing Paris
@randomguy-tg7ok10 ай бұрын
2:17 "They were opposed by 730 Austro-Hungarian soldiers in Galicia" Ladies and Gentlemen, look no further than that as proof of Von Hotzendorf's logistical genius!
@minchy909410 ай бұрын
Sounds like something oversimplified would say
@Carl-Gauss10 ай бұрын
Only being able to supply 730 soldiers sounds like him😅
@rozkaz66110 ай бұрын
This sounds like a situation švejk would be a part of
@mind-blowing_tumbleweed10 ай бұрын
@@rozkaz661don't worry, Luigi Cadorna already offered his assistance in neutralising great threat, a plan which already resulted in 150k dead!
@Adonnus10010 ай бұрын
He only needed 730. Kaiser offered him 73,000. Based Chad Conrad said "No need, only need 730 to hold it."
@FirstLast_Nba10 ай бұрын
I can't believe this was never made clear and interesting to us for the last 110 years, better late than never I guess.
@WillN2Go110 ай бұрын
The heavy Russian casualties supports my great grandfather's decision to head for the first available boat to American as soon as the war was announced. And similar high casualties support my grandfather's desertion from the Austrian Hungarian Army at about the same time. Fortunately Italy was still neutral and ships were regularly leaving for America from Naples.
@bee-fs3vb10 ай бұрын
Ikr???
@Ukraineaissance201410 ай бұрын
Russia dont like to talk about it because they lost and western historians are fixated on the western front the few times they delve into the first war, so it's very frustrating trying to find any decent books on the subject. Theres a large overview book on the subject by Nick Lloyd coming out in late March though. I have it on pre order so cant say if it's any good but it's a part of his trilogy, the first of which is brilliant and avoids the usual endless Somme and Passchendaele cliches. Prit Buttar also does great books on ww1 eastern front but they might be far too in depth if you are just starting to learn about it.
@DaveSCameron10 ай бұрын
😂😂@@WillN2Go1
@WimsicleStranger10 ай бұрын
110 years of Russian aggression, it just spectacularly backfired in WWI 😂
@lorenzooliveira115710 ай бұрын
Gotta give props to the Garrison in Przemysl, boys got encircled, relieved, and encircled again!
@Perkelenaattori10 ай бұрын
Back when Indy was at the World War One channel, he certainly got plenty of practice on how to pronounce Przemysl.
@elomial72410 ай бұрын
Przemyśl not Przemysl
@Itspietertime10 ай бұрын
It was more than 100k that got trapped and stuck for months. When they finally surrendered, they had eaten their horses and pets.
@Hatypus10 ай бұрын
@@elomial724 Many keyboards don't have the accents.
@elomial72410 ай бұрын
@@Hatypus That's not an accent. S and Ś are a completely different thing. You can even write this letter on the english keyboard (unless you are on PC). Though I am pretty sure the author of the comment wasn't aware of the difference
@rozkaz66110 ай бұрын
Western front: after 15 months of constant human wave atacks a smouldering remenant of a sawmill has been captured! (This is the most exciting thing that has happened for 2 years) Eastern front: half of the army has been lost as the enemy has conducted a counterofensive and encircled us and taken 2 medium sized countries worth of territory but we were able to counter encircle his counter ofensive. (This is only the 3rd most interesting development this month)
@NosyShk5 ай бұрын
Real
@eltrumo1210 ай бұрын
It is fascinating that ww1 was never explored in so many details like ww2 or even some smaller-scale wars. I know most people won't find that interesting but it would be great if you make another one on the western front.
@ihicccup944610 ай бұрын
Imo it’s due in part to the ability to better document ww2 due to increase in technology, and the fact that WW2 had a more clear “bad guy”. The reasons for WW2 are much easier for a more casual history fan to understand and there is a more clear good vs evil element
@alexanderzagula199410 ай бұрын
@@ihicccup9446 In American history classes you only really get taught about wars where we can be framed as the good guys, which is why we hardly learned about the Vietnam War despite the fact is was a major conflict that affected the culture of the nation
@ffreeze992410 ай бұрын
@@alexanderzagula1994that’s true, especially with Vietnam, but for ww2 I think it’s more down to it being the war against the Nazis. No matter what, that war will always be interesting to people. The rapid advancement of technology during that time period also helps it captivate people’s interest. World war 1 becomes a complicated slog in comparison. Even though that’s not really true, that’s the popular perception because it will likely always be viewed in comparison to its more famous sequel by the layman
@ahanshi473210 ай бұрын
@@alexanderzagula1994We did learn about Vietnam but not WW1, since the former affected American society much more
@Itspietertime10 ай бұрын
There are some really excellent resources available for the study of WW1 though. For example, for the Austro-Hungarian side, "Österreich-Ungarns letzter Sieg" is the official history of it and freely accessible via the Vienna State Library online. Very easy to scan through, and absolutely tome of information. Contains also a lot of sketches and maps of divisions by date.
@augustolobo228010 ай бұрын
It would be AWESOME if you made a series on WW1 like you did to WW2. Both east and western fronts
@ThePuma170710 ай бұрын
Eastern front is definitely gonna be more interesting that western front
@candyneige660910 ай бұрын
@@ThePuma1707Both for World War I and for World War II.
@lukaswilhelm929010 ай бұрын
I hope you could cover this up to Russian Civil War. Eastern front of WW1 rarely being talked about so I really curious about it.
@chasechristophermurraydola931410 ай бұрын
Same thing with me because now I’m not sure which front but it was either this one the eastern front, The Italian Front or the Balkan Front that my maternal great grandfather was serving on and I don’t know which front he was on as all I know is that he served in the austro Hungarian army and he served in it because he was from a nation that’s still around but is split up and that nation was Czechoslovakia and at that time the austro Hungarian empire ruled over Czechoslovakia.
@ethank505910 ай бұрын
It's amazing how little coverage the Eastern Front gets given how important it was in world history. I guess the USSR wasn't particularly interested in glorifying the Russian Empire's battles and the countries that fought on the west likely wanted to play up their own achievements which means not emphasizing the importance of the East. The English speaking internet is also dominated by countries that didn't fight on the Eastern Front so that may also have something to do with it.
@shonewarrior217810 ай бұрын
@@chasechristophermurraydola9314was he a Czech, a Slovak, a German, a Hungarian or a Rusyn?
@chasechristophermurraydola931410 ай бұрын
@@shonewarrior2178 he was Czech/ Austrian.
@candyneige660910 ай бұрын
Either way, the Eastern Front is where all the trench warfare that is often associated with World War I happened.
@inline548410 ай бұрын
Wow, new Eastory video. MY DAY IS PERFECT
@LW5135710 ай бұрын
The wait was sure worth it! Thank you eastory for amazing videos.
@PakBallandSami10 ай бұрын
Note:In Vienna, the event "almost failed to make any impression whatsoever," according to historian Zbynęk Zeman. The crowds on June 28 and 29 continued to enjoy wine and music as if nothing had happened." Nevertheless, historian Christopher Clark has called the assassination of the heir apparent a "9/11 effect, a terrorist event charged with historic meaning, transforming the political chemistry in Vienna" due to its enormous impact.
@duckling361510 ай бұрын
There was no way the crowds in Vienna could have even known of the shooting on the 28th. It happened at lunch, there was time until the heir apparent would be announced dead in Sarajevo, then the first ones to be informed would be his family which would take some time, and then the information would be released on the newspapers earliest on the 29th in the morning papers. Of course, the crowds on the 28th of June would just enjoy their wine.
@maximilianbeyer564210 ай бұрын
Both can be true at the same time. While normal people might not have cared that much, for the political elite it was a very different story because it was universally seen as not only an outrage but also a chance to finally show Serbia their place
@MsZeeZed10 ай бұрын
Its often overlooked that the heir to Austro-Hungary, Franz-Ferdinand, was a proponent of peace and a diplomatic settlement with Serbia. His murder was not only a casus belli, but also removed the most likely check to war in 1914 and could have held his uncle, the 84 year-old Emperor Franz Joseph, back from attacking Russia’s ally Serbia.
@Ukraineaissance201410 ай бұрын
Same during the russian revolution actually within petrograd. During both february and October revolutions public transport was still running, restaurants and shops open and supposedly prostitutes still walking around working the bridges over the Neva
@Fuzznator10 ай бұрын
Yes think if it was today, the majority of people would not give a shit at least until they are drafted. The main difference is people at least in the west are much less patriotic today but this happens when the standard of living decline for decades
@fordernPL10 ай бұрын
Ouch, I believe Battle of Tannenberg was too simplified to satisfy me. I've been trying to learn as much as possible about this battle (since I was born in the city that was one of the first invaded by Samsonow's 2nd Army), and I think you've missed key elements of that battle. First of all, when Russians attacked from the south, general von Prittwitz decided to abandon East Prussia, and retreat onto the defensive line on the river Vistula. That's why Russians managed to break through so easily so deeply, almost reaching Allenstein from the south. Then von Prittwitz was replaced by famous duo of Hindenburg and Ludendorff, after lower general von Francois complained to von Moltke (chief of the entire German Army) about von Prittwitz plans to abandon whole region, giving up key positions almost for free. When Hindenburg and Ludendorff took power over 8th army, their approach changed massively. You were right, that it was mostly based on intercepted radio communication, but they wanted to defend East Prussia anyway. They managed to transport many troops (I think about 50K soldiers) from Konigsberg region, around Western part of East Prussia down to Iława-Działdowo (Deutsch Eylau - Soldau) region, and attack them from the West. Important battle of Uzdowo (Usdau) happend, led by german's general von Francois, which scared russian general Artamonow - who then completely abandoned his positions, leaving russian left flank completely undefenced - he jumped about 50 kilometers south, creating a huge gap for von Francois troops to encircle Russians from South. On the same time, german general Mackensen followed russian general Martos, who was retreating from Allenstein to cover russian right flank, because he thought he went too deep. That allowed Germans to encircle Russian 2nd Army from East. Two German Generals meet around Wielbark (Willenberg), completing encirclement. Martos was caught and defeated by Mackensen, becoming PoW himself. Legend says that Martos was held in a hotel in Nidzica (Neidenburg), in the same room he was staying just a few days later, when he took that Town with his army. Legend goes even further - he was treated well, because he prevented typical war chaos in the Town, stopped his soldiers from robbing citizens with harsh penalties - so he was held in good conditions. Okay, maybe I went with too much details, but I believe that changing leadership of 8th German Army was crucial. And on the other hand, another key element was missed. During the battle, Germans decided to send two corps present in France, to use them in East Prussia. Ludendorff after the battle said, that they got into East Prussia too late to be used in that battle, and those corps being not present in France meant Germans didn't have enough power to take over Paris - that Germans needed exactly those two corps to win battle of Marna.
@ReichLife10 ай бұрын
Nah, you didn't. From his historical works, this one was easily among his most poorly made.
@user-gh6jq9cc2w10 ай бұрын
These events were preceded by the Battle of Gumbien, which convinced the Germans to withdraw their troops beyond the Vistula, as planned according to the Schliefen plan. However, then, as you wrote, the Germans pulled troops from the right flank at the Battle of the Marne (6 army corps along with artillery and the VIII cavalry division) to defend the ancient Prussian capital. Also in this video it is shown that the Russians in East Prussia had 500k people, which is of course a very overestimate. The armies of Samsonvoa and Rennekampf did not advance fully mobilized and their number did not exceed 125 thousand. 5 divisions were surrounded.
@fordernPL10 ай бұрын
@@ReichLife I wouldn't go this far, this is still a good video fulfilling it purpose. It might just be me going crazy about Battle of Tannenberg, and maybe an 1h video showing how every village was taken over would satisfy me 😅
@billyosullivan319210 ай бұрын
@@fordernPL2 corps would not have changed the tied at the marne. Moltke died in 1916 so after the war everyone blamed him. The plan in 1996 called for 48.5 corp or 81 divisions, Germany could only deploy 37.5 corp in 1914 on the west and had already abandoned flanking west of Paris by the time the 2 corps were diverted
@alpha348810 ай бұрын
That, plus the german high command made huge mistakes during their advance on Paris, with infighting between several Generals and Moltke mostly powerless, sitting far away in Luxemburg. Moltke also distributed more men to the southern part of the western front, which weakened the right wing further.
@livethefuture249210 ай бұрын
The Parallels are striking when comparing this video's intro about Russia's plans to invade Germany and take Berlin to win the war, to your Eastern Front videos in 1944-45 about the actual Soviet Advance into Germany and how similar it is to what you described here.
@euphoric11839 ай бұрын
You are seriously underrated. You should have millions of subscribers. Keep doing what you are doing man. Its incredible. You are one of the most detailed, ambitious and well researched youtube channels out there. Im a big fan of you.
@Eastory9 ай бұрын
I will, 1915 already looking good.
@euphoric11839 ай бұрын
@@Eastory Im very excited for that video. I will be eagerly waiting for it :)
@smokeybear15979 ай бұрын
@@Eastory i love the content and the history pls keep up the good work. will you upload the rest of the ww2 animated maps when your finished with WW1.
@Eastory9 ай бұрын
@@smokeybear1597 I have already done most of ww2. Would topic would you like to be covered?
@smokeybear15979 ай бұрын
@@Eastory ah I have no problem with ww1 I like it I thought you were going to upload the rest of the animated maps from the ww2 channel with the documentary bits cut out since you did the animation.
@newpaperyes10 ай бұрын
I'm really glad you're covering this! Seeing a full history of the Eastern Front in WWI would be tremendous!
@extrahistory895610 ай бұрын
Man, I'm pretty excited to see more map content this year. Whether it is from this new series about WW1 battlefields or continuing with the Pacific and Mediterranean campaigns of WW2, it sure sounds like a lot quality content is coming down the pipeline very soon.
@jesseherman127210 ай бұрын
We need more of your videos dude. I love them! One series on the Vietnam war would be good too
@Tepidtyler10 ай бұрын
Finally! i was waiting for this! I just know judging by your estonia video and WW2 video that this video will be awesome!
@yulian_p10 ай бұрын
You said in the teaser post you were yet to figure out how to pronounce Przemyśl. As a Pole, I must say, you nailed it very well :)
@Eastory10 ай бұрын
Thanks! I guess, practicing helped
@aserehuehue10 ай бұрын
Always loving your videos bud!
@bomx-w2q10 ай бұрын
you damn time traveler
@abcd-18210 ай бұрын
Woah ! I never thought I would be able to see such a detailed video on these wars. I am lucky that I found this channel. Thanks for explaining the war in detail...
@gordon154510 ай бұрын
"It'll be over by Christmas," they all said. That aged well.
@freetolook372710 ай бұрын
They didn't lie, they just didn't say which Christmas! 🎄😂
@The_whales10 ай бұрын
@@freetolook3727fact checker: true
@minchy909410 ай бұрын
@@freetolook3727he’s not wrong
@pax683310 ай бұрын
It very nearly almost was. If the Germans had been more successful in the west, the war would've been a loss for the Entente and a quick negotiate peace likely. If the Russians were more successful, Ottomans never intervene, Italians join sooner, war is totally unwinnable for the Central Powers and a quick negotiate peace likely. Both sides massively miscalculated and fumbled the bag, leading to the stalemate. Germans got crushed at Marne, Russians at Tannenburg. If only 1 of those two great victories did not occur, a peace in 1915 seems highly plausible.
@Markfr0mCanada10 ай бұрын
Right up there with "A grateful Iraqi populace will facilitate a smooth exit for the US military" and "3 day special military operation in Ukraine". Politicians who start wars usually overestimate themselves.
@aribrique264410 ай бұрын
Ça faisait longtemps ! Merci Eastory pour ces excellentes vidéos.
@RedLogicYT10 ай бұрын
Hey eastory. Thanks for the video. You're one of my top 10 favorite creators, and ive watched THOUSANDS.
@X.M_Mapper10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video, I always wanted to learn more about WW1 for so long
@leeham623010 ай бұрын
The best WW2 channel gets a ww1 upload? Amazing. Thanks so much.
@derpitt878810 ай бұрын
Sehr beeindruckendes Video. Habe den Kriegsverlauf an dieser Front im 1. Weltkrieg noch nie so dargestellt gesehen. Bin gespannt auf eine Fortsetzung.
@tobyblasto348210 ай бұрын
You’re videos are amazing! Much love.
@Michaelonyoutub10 ай бұрын
It is crazy how much territory changes hands in only a few months of war, and this was before mechanized mobile warfare with trucks and tanks advancing at rapid paces.
@RgyStvia10 ай бұрын
1915 : The Russian great retreat, Masurian campaign 1916 : Brussilov offensive 1917 : Russian negotiation with the Central powers 1918 : first month of Russian civil war Ww1 on eastern front is very underrated, people say it's boring
@EvanTheHistorian10 ай бұрын
cause it was
@radosawdabrowski556810 ай бұрын
1920 ruski dostają wpierdol od wojsk Polsko-Wielkopolskich
@wol06fi8910 ай бұрын
Really great video and thank you for covering WW1 in more detail. Much love from Germany. I hope you can talk about the importance of Przemysl in the next video. The Austro-Hungarians lost hundreds of thousands of men in a vain attempt at relieving the garrison and completely broke their army on the Russian defenses in the Winter of 1914/15. From 1915 onwards the Austro-Hungarians would never again be able to really launch an offensive of their own. In these early battles for Przemysl the AH empire lost much of its (somewhat) decent officers and good soldiers. It's seldom talked about how these battles broke the army of one of the major powers of Europe. Anyway I also hope you can make videos about both the serbian and greek fronts of WW1 in the future. It's quite fascinating to see how Serbia held on as long as they did and the international army fighting in Greece (without Greeces' permission) is a really unique situation.
@MariaKomenova-xp7cl10 ай бұрын
But we cannot forget that russian advance has stopped and russian casualties were as high as austrians but easier to replace
@Echoak9510 ай бұрын
It did not brake them. AH got the greatest victory at gorlice tarnow in 1915 against Russia in the war. With the Brussilow Offensive 1917 Russia and AH were just bleeding each other dry, with Russia collapsing first.
@wol06fi8910 ай бұрын
@@Echoak95 The Gorlize Tarnow offensive was led by August von Mackensen, with a lot of German troops leading the way. After the winter of 1914/15 the AH army was almost always directed by German officers as most experienced Austro-Hungarian ones had died (and there weren't that many good onesto begin with). Also the Brusilov offensive happened in 1916 with Germany having to pull several divisions away from Verdun where they had just managed to break the French line but because they now had no reserves had to pull back. Russia collapsed because of political turmoil in the country and a lack of bread not because of the AH army.
@Echoak9510 ай бұрын
@@wol06fi89 it was led by Mackensen but the planning was done by the Austrian field marshall Hötzendorf and most involved troops were austrian. No austrian troops were commanded by german officers in 1915, only after the death of the Emperor Franz Joseph at the end of 1916 Germany took the military High command, but the officers were still from the Austrian empire. Mackensen helped in Serbia and Italy with german divisions, but they were only up to 50k strong. I misrote 1916 for Brussilow, but the failure of a breakthrough still lead to the collapse of Russia, as most russian soldiers deserted or got captured after it, which lead to the turmoil.
@MariaKomenova-xp7cl10 ай бұрын
@@wol06fi89 yeah everybody knows that russian participation in the war only distraction of german army on Western front. Russia collapsed because they were defeated multiple times on the battlefield having lost the best soldiers and lacking(because of defeats) courage, ammunition, experieneced military staff. We cannot forget that German army united eith Austro Hungarian reached as far as Rostov On Don and Tiflis(Tbilisi) and after have concluded humiliating for russia Brest Litovsk treaty
@dominikmysliwy8511Ай бұрын
Thank you for remembering this front. Between October 7th and 10th, there was a battle near my hometown of Grójec as part of the Warsaw-Ivangorod operation. There are several cemeteries around. Let’s remember this war so that it never happens again.
@musixnost10 ай бұрын
Always happy when Eastory uploads, most of my knowledge comes from this channel ❤
@Simon_the_penguin10 ай бұрын
New oversimplified, Bulgarian ball, AND Eastport video all in one week? Wake me up I’m in a dream🥹
@NM-wd7kx10 ай бұрын
Don't forget Montemayor uploaded too
@SkyGlitchGalaxy7 ай бұрын
What the Germans achieved in WW1 was incredible. Basically, the allies had the resources of the entire world against them. And it was a near run thing.
@MarkIsTiredAlways2 ай бұрын
German efficiency
@czikibriki10 ай бұрын
I can't even imagine amount of research you had to do to make this properly. I'm subscribing your channel for years and i'm still amazed with details. Also, people tend to forget or simply not pay attention that it wasn't just some 3-nation front, as it would be during WW2, for most of the time there were occupied nations dragged by empires into fighting each other to save lifes of Germans/Austrians/Russians, sometimes even with people of same nationality pointing guns at their compatriots without even knowing that fact. That's the main reason i consider this war a bloody mess, not the amount of explosives used, or new god-forsaken weaponry, or a stalemate on the western front.
@simonstock444810 ай бұрын
I thought I knew enough about the opening encounters and battles in the east in 1914 but the elasticity of the front lines is way more complex than I ever imagined, only comprehensible due to these moving maps. So much easier to understand than the few static maps in the literature on this topic- which leaves so much out. You might have mentioned that one or was it one-half of an Austrian army was entrained to and then back again from the Belgrade offensive and actually played no material part in either!
@sqweebel110 ай бұрын
It's so much harder to find detailed info like this about WW1 compared to WW2, I'm really glad to see this from this channel.
@candyneige660910 ай бұрын
It's in the Eastern Front that we get all the Trench Warfare that is often associated with World War I.
@biryanilover71474 ай бұрын
@@candyneige6609 There was some trenches on the Eastern Front, however because the front was so big, trench warfare was not so big. It happened mainly on the western front. Please don't say something so ignorant.
@candyneige66094 ай бұрын
@@biryanilover7147 It's the other way around. The Eastern Front was so big that trench warfare was omnipresent and the trenches themselves were both very big and very long. By contrast, the Western Front was pretty fast-paced, meaning that there was little to no trench warfare, and it was also where the Central Powers, specifically Germany, was most successful, as it managed to capture Paris and make France surrender in just under 6 weeks, thus creating Vichy France in the process, a puppet state of Germany led by Philippe Pétain who had infamously collaborated with the German occupiers, however, Charles de Gaulle refused to surrender, and so he and countless others went to the UK in exile and founded Free France with Charles de Gaulle as its leader, and with an ultimate goal of liberating France from the Vichy regime and the German occupiers, which it eventually did, when the Entente, more specifically Free France, the UK and the US, landed in Normandy, liberated Paris and destroyed Philippe Pétain's Vichy regime, and once all of France got liberated from Germany, the Entente had one final goal in mind, invade Germany, and invade Germany they did, this caused Germany to go in a panic, essentially forcing them to sign an armistice on November 11th 1918 to end the war and to prevent further damages on the German homeland.
@biryanilover71474 ай бұрын
@@candyneige6609 You made an entire world salad, however none of your words are true. Stop spreading misinformation.
@candyneige66094 ай бұрын
@@biryanilover7147 Sorry, but that's real history.
@livethefuture249210 ай бұрын
It's fascinating how the first few minutes of the video could be the same as talking about ww2 and the Soviet advance into Germany. I guess I goes to show that these plans have existed for a long time, and overall strategies aren't all that different, its just the implementation of those strategies that dictate the result.
@Elucidator-10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your original content Eastory: I always enjoy your videos.
@guilhermefeldens883110 ай бұрын
man, keep doing your videos, they are the best
@yoslash10 ай бұрын
Massive job, can’t wait for the next part! Also hope to see campaign on Caucasus front covered
@Ccccccccccsssssssssss9 ай бұрын
great video, I really appreciate that your map shows topography
@alexzero373610 ай бұрын
Most shocking thing about WW1 is numbers, staggering numbers... Whole Napoleons Grande army could be lost in 1914 in 2-3 battles. And after all these losses armies continued to fight...
@Gurkenpudding10 ай бұрын
What you missed in East Prussia: The main horse breeding region of whole germany was situated here - so the main logistic force was endangered by the russians. Also you should've mentioned that Germany pulled out some Corps from the Western Front to Allenstein - a very ironic happening because these troops opened the gap between the 1st and 2nd German Army and made it possible for the French to pierce in this gap and bring the Schlieffen Plan to a hold. Ironic to that? These Corps came too late for the battle at "Tannenberg" (Allenstein/Graudenz/Gumbinen).
@rol1xgames33310 ай бұрын
Great video, I'm looking forward to the next part and 1915.
@Maperator10 ай бұрын
WWI was before armored vehicles and aircraft could support infantry. Not to mention radios hadn't been properly established making communication with artillery difficult. This made infantry extremely deadly as little could be done to counter the accuracy and lethality of rifles. Which was why so little ground captured would cost the lives of hundreds of thousands.
@perappelgren94810 ай бұрын
Fantastic! Have been looking for such a video for 10+ yrs. Many thanks!
@Superlegend5610 ай бұрын
Had no idea there was this much of a back and forth in 1914
@Itspietertime10 ай бұрын
Since late I'm especially interested in the Battle of Galicia. It was absolutely chaotic and full of twists. Highly recommend the book "A Mad Catastrophe" by Geoffrey Wawro.
@paulflechsig825310 ай бұрын
Great work, as always. Your content is so very much educational, as it is accessible and visually good looking at the same time. Love your work!
@spoddie10 ай бұрын
This is a wonderful overview, far more informative than most material.
@ziggytheassassin583510 ай бұрын
It's funny how the balance of power basically considers a ratio of 2 germans to 3 russians as favouring the germans. It shows how backwards russia was and how efficient the german army was.
@davekeating586710 ай бұрын
It didn't help that the Russians were led by a weak Tsar who believed God would provide victory regardless of the weapons, logistics or strategy used. He was the supreme commander but he had neither the talent or charisma to lead an army into war. He led the Russian's to defeat against Japan which led to the 1905 Russian revolution then again against the central powers which led to the 1917 revolution.
@WILLIAN_142410 ай бұрын
@@davekeating5867 Nicholas II wasn't in command against Japan, and only took control in ww1 after late 1915. Sure, you can blame him for joining the war with a poor and underdeveloped country (even if it was defending an ally), but that's out of the point.
@alcazar926610 ай бұрын
@@WILLIAN_1424serbia was technically not an ally of russia before ww1
@play_boy754310 ай бұрын
Taking into account that Germany was by far the most efficient and organized army on the planet, this is not proof that the Russians were backward, but actually far above the world average
@davekeating586710 ай бұрын
@@WILLIAN_1424 The Tsar was the supreme political authority in all matters in Russia and was considered to be Gods emmisary on earth and closer to God than the pope. It doesn't matter to the Russians who his subordinates were ... the Tsar led the Russian army and all other aspects of Russian political life either in person or by proxy through his marshalls. The buck stopped with the Tsar.
@AnimatedWarMapper9 ай бұрын
Great content Eastory! Your insight and style has motivated me to create content. One day hopefully I can get on your level! Cheers!!
@RomatifaRoma10 ай бұрын
keep it up bro love the effort u put in every video
@ss-oq9pc3 ай бұрын
Love your videos. I always look forward to them.
@nasser259910 ай бұрын
Finally. Your back
@tumaysonmez219610 ай бұрын
First of all, well done. Where can I access the map you used in the video? The map in question is very detailed and extensive, and I really need it for my lessons.
@Doxxieeee10 ай бұрын
Great video Eastory! This video is very interesting of in depth army movment and battles depecting them on a map, its always a great feeling to see them done in a very nicely with polishing! As always great video
@McRocket10 ай бұрын
I knew virtually nothing about this area in 1914. Fascinating. Thank you for this. ☮
@zixi486910 ай бұрын
Oh I've been waiting for you long time❤❤❤
@anakienpezzotta626410 ай бұрын
So excited for the next videos about ww1.Great History Channel
@legallyblind39310 ай бұрын
Thank you for subtitles ❤️
@ducknugget470510 ай бұрын
Yooo u started making ww1 content now! Awesome, please make videos on the entire war like what u did for ww2
@bigsarge208510 ай бұрын
Always learn something, thank you!
@667crash8 ай бұрын
Very nicely done.
@bolinfan151910 ай бұрын
Finally... I now understand the Eastern Front in 1914. Thank you, Eastory!
@stanchpandora365810 ай бұрын
My great-grandfather was an Armenian rebel during WW1. Hope you show that part of the Eastern Front too.
@rhysnichols860810 ай бұрын
Some of the biggest and most interesting battles happened on the eastern front in 1914. Some of the very last ‘Napoleonic’ style battles with line formations and mass cavalry charges.
@Dan-ul1hd10 ай бұрын
Where is the song Nerves by Mcleod??? That song alone made the success of the ww2 videos.
@coraldestroyer420210 ай бұрын
i am german but apparently my great great grandfather was with the 28th division on the russian side at premyzl and was captured in january of 1915 in the carpathians
@truthseeking66112 ай бұрын
Which one was dumber,Willy or Nicky?
@MeanderingMikesManCave9 ай бұрын
Excellent video ... thank you!
@ron325210 ай бұрын
Amazing work! Thank you!
@100push-upsguy610 ай бұрын
Amazing job man! Cant wait for the next video!
@UlanyUlan1027 ай бұрын
It is amazing! Thank you for this video! We need more video's about east front of WW1 like this! Greetings from polish Galicia! (;
@jimzafiriou78085 ай бұрын
Nice vid, looking forward to watching the rest.
@FacloFormerFavorite10 ай бұрын
This was my favorite part in the guns of august along with the chapter on war plans.
@imswedish453710 ай бұрын
Best history video i have ever seen i love the maps
@alfrancisbuada259110 ай бұрын
The Eastern Front doesn't always get much in World War 1. Thank you for showing this to us.
@kosipisakii10 ай бұрын
What’s sad is that polish people were forced into armies on both sides and had to kill each other
@michrei402710 ай бұрын
yeah killing each other for foreign ambitions sucks, the germans had the same experience during the napoleonic wars.
@meyers697510 ай бұрын
the eastern front of WW1 was just as bloody if not more than the western front, tho it is hardly remembered here on youtube
@LastHussar181210 ай бұрын
Fascinating. Please do more 🙏
@pigeoninanutshell10 ай бұрын
This is amazing! You should do something similar with the Lithuanian war of Independence.😀
@andreavoigtlander108710 ай бұрын
no thats unnecesary
@evangetz10 ай бұрын
Babe wake up, new Eastory video series!
@CrackheadYoda10 ай бұрын
Babe wake up, new Eastory series just dropped.
@TheSpoilerOfDreams10 ай бұрын
Seeing this after the WW2 Eastern Front videos really put those in perspective as to the sheer number of people involved in each operation. It really dwarfs any other modern conflict by a wide margin.
@Almagesto2510 ай бұрын
Another great work of yours!
@xanderlalla351010 ай бұрын
This is a really great video for my document about world war 1! I would really like to see 1915, 1916 and 1917 :D
@bokunogentoo442010 ай бұрын
babe wake up, new Eastory video just dropped
@avavaviv110 ай бұрын
Amazing. I never thought the eastern front got so intense so fast. One would think hundreds of thousands of losses isnt possible in this not yet so mechanized warfare..
@Telenil10 ай бұрын
Excellent content, as always. Looking forward to 1915!
@alabin347110 ай бұрын
Finally!!! The real eastory is back 💯💯
@hiderz9 ай бұрын
The eastern front of WW1 doesnt get nearly as much coverage as it should
@cyberiansailor974110 ай бұрын
Yay another excellent history video!
@adamkerman47510 ай бұрын
Wonderful video!
@tylerrichards64569 ай бұрын
Amazing, inspired content as always. Have you ever given any thought to analyzing the Sicilian and/or Italian campaigns? Keep up the incredible work, bud.
@Ostsol10 ай бұрын
Sounds like Russia was more competent on a strategic level than I was previously led to believe. It's just that their actual armies were outmatched.
@billyosullivan319210 ай бұрын
They beat Austria in September outnumbered
@kosa966210 ай бұрын
Russia was defeated cause of weaker infrastructure( railways)
@deopsey10 ай бұрын
Eastory uploaded again 🗣️ 🗣️ 💯
@YugoMapper10 ай бұрын
Will you ever make a video about the Balkan front because it was pretty interesting. Also thank you fr you're time making this. This is top tier quality and information love you man ❤.