Norway: The Forgotten Battle of WW2

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Animarchy History

Animarchy History

Күн бұрын

Thanks to Nord VPN for sponsoring this video! Get 4 months extra on a 2 year plan here: nordvpn.com/an... It’s risk free with Nord’s 30 day money-back guarantee!
Special thanks to ‪@LazerPig‬ and ‪@HardThrasher‬ for lending me their aid in both their voice talent and in making this glorious thumbnail. I'd also like to give a shoutout to the channel "Epic Scores" who provided the music for this video.
The invasion of Norway is a topic seldom covered in history documentaries, in fact on KZbin there are only two documentaries covering it in detail. One of them is forty minutes long and leaves all the cool parts out while the other only features it for a mere twenty minutes.
However this is something I simply can't understand as the sheer number of GIGA-CHADS who did incredible things during this campaign defies belief and their achievements would be dismissed as unrealistic had they not been documented. Despite Quisling's best efforts.
So I present to you this nearly two hour long documentary on the story of Operation Weserübung and the brave men and women of the Allied forces who inflicted some of the most devastating defeats on the Axis Powers in the entire war. Victories which sadly all but the most die hard WW2 history nerds have forgotten. It will be more captivating than any Mr Beast video.
I hope you enjoy.
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@AnimarchyHistory
@AnimarchyHistory 4 ай бұрын
Thanks to Nord VPN for sponsoring this video! Get 4 months extra on a 2 year plan here: nordvpn.com/animarchy It’s risk free with Nord’s 30 day money-back guarantee! Special thanks to @LazerPig and @HardThrasher for lending me their aid in both their voice talent and in making this glorious thumbnail. I'd also like to give a shoutout to the channel "Epic Scores" who provided the music for this video. The invasion of Norway is a topic seldom covered in history documentaries, in fact on KZbin there are only two documentaries covering it in detail. One of them is forty minutes long and leaves all the cool parts out while the other only features it for a mere twenty minutes. However this is something I simply can't understand as the sheer number of GIGA-CHADS who did incredible things during this campaign defies belief and their achievements would be dismissed as unrealistic had they not been documented. Despite Quisling's best efforts. So I present to you this nearly two hour long documentary on the story of Operation Weserübung and the brave men and women of the Allied forces who inflicted some of the most devastating defeats on the Axis Powers in the entire war. Victories which sadly all but the most die hard WW2 history nerds have forgotten. It will be more captivating than any Mr Beast video. I hope you enjoy. Support the Channel on Patreon: www.patreon.com/Animarchy
@許進曾
@許進曾 4 ай бұрын
Also just some more irony to the Blucher sinking, those 40 year old guns were made by Krupp Steal. Which meant a german ship is cripple by a gun made by german company. Which is incredibly ironic.
@madkoala2130
@madkoala2130 4 ай бұрын
When we are going to see history of Russian aviation part 2?
@danielgreen6302
@danielgreen6302 4 ай бұрын
Hey, Your The Dude That Was speaking to LaserPig, I watched a few of your convened Casual military Conferences, Well, I Am glad and grateful you appeared on my feed. You've earned a Staunch subscriber, Really interesting blend of History and humour; A rare commingling. Yes I am still trying to digest your puns, i enjoy corny. anywho, take care looking forward for more outstanding stories
@swedihgame
@swedihgame 4 ай бұрын
@AnimarchyHistory Thank you for being one of the very few that have spoken about the nordic front of ww2. You should look up the guy Allan Mann, he is a swedish volunteer for the winter war than then at the invasion of Norway volunteered and fought with the Norwegians and after that went into the Norwegian residence, he was as a combat medic in the dieppe raid and the continued as a brittish taught Norwegian commando residence fighter and also fought in the police troops in lappland and survived the war to become THE best known case combat inatruktor of the swedish military without doing his forced war theme conscription because of battle damage sustained from the winter war. Oh and also he got a medal from the French foreign legion called "Croix de Guerre". But that story il let you look up, but in includes hand to hand combat, tunnels, alps, snow and 1000% luck. Allan also being so humble that he downplayed any honor given towards him.
@KrisT0f.
@KrisT0f. 4 ай бұрын
where is lazpig
@MinedMaker
@MinedMaker 4 ай бұрын
As a Norwegian, it warms my heart that this part of WW2 history is getting more attention. For anyone who's interested in more, I highly recommend the Norwegian film *The Kings Choice / AKA Kongens Nei.* It's a well made biographical film from 2016 focusing on King Haakon VII and the Norwegian royal family in the days before and immediately after the German invasion of Norway. The Blücher battle footage in the video was taken from the film.
@basslinejunkie2776
@basslinejunkie2776 4 ай бұрын
my favorite story from WW2 is the absolute giga chad Major Holtermann and the heroes at Hegra fortress.
@bongfuhrer
@bongfuhrer 4 ай бұрын
You should read 'Tusen glemte menn'.
@ForelliBoy
@ForelliBoy 4 ай бұрын
The one nitpick I have about that scene is that they didn't include the commander's famous line: "Either I'll get a medal or a court martial!"
@basslinejunkie2776
@basslinejunkie2776 4 ай бұрын
@@ForelliBoy 44:16 :)
@stuglife5514
@stuglife5514 4 ай бұрын
Glad to hear it! Pennsylvanian here, I’ve always had a interest in the Norwegian theater, I have an original M/40 helmet taken from a dead German solider from the battle of Norway. His bloodstain is still in the helmet liner
@Nick-rs5if
@Nick-rs5if 3 ай бұрын
Norway and Poland were just symbols of Mark Twain's sentence as quote here: "It's not the size of the dog in the fight, it's the size of the fight in the dog." Their involvement in WW2 is criminally underrated, underestimated and undereducated.
@Dexs911
@Dexs911 4 ай бұрын
The battle of Narvik. Where HMS Warspite decided it wanted to be a destroyer.
@danielbrooks732
@danielbrooks732 4 ай бұрын
HMS Warspite, too angry to die and has anime level of plot armor
@aaroncabatingan5238
@aaroncabatingan5238 4 ай бұрын
​@@danielbrooks732The fact that it didn't get hit by a torpedo during the entire run is impressive.
@Dexs911
@Dexs911 4 ай бұрын
​@@aaroncabatingan5238I think it was U39 fired 4 torps at her at near point blank and all of them prematurely detonated
@anthonyhayes1267
@anthonyhayes1267 4 ай бұрын
​@@Dexs911The very torpedoes were too scared to approach
@TheDgamesD
@TheDgamesD 4 ай бұрын
reminds me when Vittorio Veneto did the same at the Battle of Cape Spartivento
@falcorusticolus4360
@falcorusticolus4360 4 ай бұрын
"If there is anyone who still wonders why this war is being fought, let him look to Norway. If there is anyone who has any delusions that this war could have been averted, let him look to Norway; and if there is anyone who doubts the democratic will to win, again I say, let him look to Norway. " U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt - 16 September 1942
@PedroCosta-po5nu
@PedroCosta-po5nu 4 ай бұрын
Calling the Graff spee an battle cruiser is an insult to battle cruisers. @Drachinifel , twist his balls NOW
@tacotown4598
@tacotown4598 4 ай бұрын
People need to stop calling things that are not battlecruisers battlecruisers
@odd-ov4gf
@odd-ov4gf 4 ай бұрын
Here is a better question. What is a battlecruiser
@Eatmydbzballs
@Eatmydbzballs 4 ай бұрын
​@odd-ov4gf *"A little pile of scrap! But enough talk, RAMMING SPEED!"*
@ximiraxelo7375
@ximiraxelo7375 4 ай бұрын
​@@odd-ov4gfa ship with the guns of a battleship but with less armor and more speed, like Scharnhorst
@tacotown4598
@tacotown4598 4 ай бұрын
@@ximiraxelo7375 good definition, bad example. Scharnhorst is an odd ship, like a lot of ww2 German designs-it has good armor and speed, but anemic firepower for its displacement. For reference, scharnhorst is almost as large as HMS Rodney, but has guns which fire shells less than 1/3 the size.
@rwagingsloth9528
@rwagingsloth9528 4 ай бұрын
honestly surprised you didnt give a giga-chad counter to that Norwegian boat that crossed the atlantic. that's some SERIOUS courage and seamanship to pull that off.
@bongfuhrer
@bongfuhrer 4 ай бұрын
Norwegian know how to build boats and ships. ;)
@gothamlives4278
@gothamlives4278 4 ай бұрын
​@bongfuhrer was gunna say.. Vikings landed all over NE N America and company..
@rwagingsloth9528
@rwagingsloth9528 4 ай бұрын
@@gothamlives4278 i give props for the balls to risk being sunk in the north sea or atlantic ocean by the german navy, on top of just willing to cross the Atlantic ocean. however the specific boat shown in the picture the Kaare II actually provided assistance to the Norwegian war effort evacuating civilians from various places, including one trip in which the 69ft boat managed to carry 60-70 refugees from Tromso to Petsamo. it also provided some naval assistance but i don't know specifics. They also hadn't originally aimed for Canada. hoping to go to the Faroe islands, being denied, trying England also denied, before making the gambit on Canada where they were welcomed.
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre 2 ай бұрын
@@bongfuhrer Not just build... but sail as well. The video doesn't mention NORTRASHIP either but it's a subject arising from near the end of the timeline of this video and this video is amazing either way, and VERY well researched. At the outbreak of WWII, Norway had the largest merchant marine in the world. Yes, in the _world._ And not for the first time either (in other stupid conflicts as junior partner, Norway lost vast swathes of it several times, and WWII was no exception, we were just not in a union at this time)
@TheNerdForAllSeasons
@TheNerdForAllSeasons 4 ай бұрын
"And if rumors are to be believed, a ceremonial cutlass kept aboard for special occasions." Well they certainly found an occasion to break it out of the glass case.
@TheNerdForAllSeasons
@TheNerdForAllSeasons 4 ай бұрын
33:09 PERHAPS TODAY IS A GOOD DAY TO DIE
@jakublulek3261
@jakublulek3261 3 ай бұрын
It's Royal Navy. Piracy is always around the corner.
@Redfoxjack
@Redfoxjack 2 ай бұрын
@@jakublulek3261I like to think every Royal Navy vessel has a pre signed Letter of marque on bored baring the seal and signature of who ever is the current monarch of Britain for the express purpose of allowing the Royal Navy to go full pirate at a moments notice
@kyrrekausrud5960
@kyrrekausrud5960 4 ай бұрын
Great video! The only thing is that, ironically, it forgets the most important contribution to the war: The Norwegian merchant fleet. The biggest in the world and, with the legal government having escaped to exile, now in allied service. The merchant sailors were crucial for keeping the UK supplied and the lend lease convoys to the USSR going. They took heavy losses running the gauntlet of U-boats, Luftwaffe and arctic storms, yet were overlooked after the war.
@joshstanton267
@joshstanton267 4 ай бұрын
Absolute fearless backbones! Massive respect to the Norwegian merchant navy ✌️
@anderspaulsen4637
@anderspaulsen4637 3 ай бұрын
They aren't a part of the Battle of Norway, so it makes sense. The norwegian merchant fleet was insane though
@katosigmarsrensen2343
@katosigmarsrensen2343 3 ай бұрын
I agree, being a norwegian merchant sailor during those times must have been brutal, im not sure on the current number but at some point during the war the casualty rates were staggering for them, i think it was during the so called ''happy time'' for the german kriegsmarine when they were focusing on using u-boats to disrupt supplies for the allies.
@ladythalia227
@ladythalia227 2 ай бұрын
This has actually been brought up recently in Norway. We still have a large merchant fleet but many of these ships are captained by foreign captains from hosiery countries like China and Russia. The army has recently asked themselves if these captains will follow Norwegian orders in the event of a war with these countries.
@Sungamton
@Sungamton 2 ай бұрын
@@ladythalia227 Oh I'm sure a captain who has his wife and children in Russia or China will gladly throw them under the bus to honor his contract with Norway, as we all know the cheap ink used to sign a contract is thicker than blood...
@strandern5387
@strandern5387 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for this Animarchy, we Norwegians appreciate it!❤
@baconsinatra8837
@baconsinatra8837 4 ай бұрын
"Captain, we've got a German battke cruiser in front of us!" "Then it's an even fight. "
@KRDecade2009
@KRDecade2009 3 ай бұрын
“Sir were literally in jetskiis” “Did I stutter?”
@Montrala
@Montrala 4 ай бұрын
This campaign is well remembered in Poland. Both for loses Polish Navy and Army took and as a first chance to get on Germans since 1939. „For freedom our and yours!”
@PetterVessel
@PetterVessel 4 ай бұрын
My uncle fought on the Narvik front (Norwegian Army). He told me the Polish forces fought with fire in their eyes!
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre 2 ай бұрын
From accounts I've heard, the Poles were the bravest and most tenacious at the recapture, and a very honourable part of the first strategic victory for the Allies in the entirety of the world war. I can't recall my sources, but I remember spending days just reading about this one subtheatre. Another thing I remember vividly, is the Allied common soldier being utterly heartbroken when they realized they were to abandon the Norwegians again. The Norwegians were not even informed beforehand. Left to their own fates, indeed... The British "stiff-upper-lip" officer tradition of blind arrogance was very much present still, until after they got decimated in Norway for refusing to listen to Norwegians and in France for underestimating the Germans there, too. I think all that arrogance disappeared by 1940 or so.... "They may be slow learners... but they learn"
@Montrala
@Montrala 2 ай бұрын
@@SebHaarfagre British command had same attitude towards Polish pilots, until they finally allowed Squadron 303 to join Battle of Britain and then German bombers just started to fell out of the sky in big batches.
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre Ай бұрын
@@Montrala I wonder if there's a relation to that and winning WWI. Their Empire also stretched across the world still by WWII. Rude awakening! But a lot of new heroes were made.
@aeriumsoft
@aeriumsoft Ай бұрын
probably a coincidence but Poles are the largest immigration group in norway😳
@MadMargaretGaming
@MadMargaretGaming 4 ай бұрын
"You're locked in here with me" is such a Warspite thing to say
@promptedleek4829
@promptedleek4829 4 ай бұрын
yeah, warspite has 0 chill
@ALLMINDmercenarysupportsystem
@ALLMINDmercenarysupportsystem 4 ай бұрын
​@@promptedleek4829 Given the name, I'd be surprised if it DID have any chill.
@arjovenzia
@arjovenzia 4 ай бұрын
I have a great mental image if it was from a psychological drama movie. Eyes with a crazy glint, but calculating, crooked smile, head slightly clocked. You just know this guy is gonna enjoy this scene way to much.
@jaymorrison2419
@jaymorrison2419 3 ай бұрын
@@arjovenzia Azure Lane Warspite isn't QUITE crazy enough...
@jakublulek3261
@jakublulek3261 3 ай бұрын
@@jaymorrison2419 She is an insult to real life Warspite. They made Kriegsmarine ships super edgy and badass but did THIS to Warspite. Even US Navy ships got better treatment!
@panzer_ace_107stankdivisio8
@panzer_ace_107stankdivisio8 4 ай бұрын
Can’t wait to hear about the battle of Drøbak Sound and Oscarsborg Fortress. Who was responsible for the complete drop of the hat the Germans did in preparation by forgetting about her entirely. Remember: “Old, but not unarmed”
@floridachess9328
@floridachess9328 4 ай бұрын
Sodem where are the torpedoes!
@neidu
@neidu 4 ай бұрын
Visst fanden skal det skytes med skarpt!
@sigmamale6154
@sigmamale6154 4 ай бұрын
Yeah but did Norway win?
@panzer_ace_107stankdivisio8
@panzer_ace_107stankdivisio8 4 ай бұрын
@@sigmamale6154 Yeah but did Germany win?
@sigmamale6154
@sigmamale6154 4 ай бұрын
@@panzer_ace_107stankdivisio8 they almost did and put up a great fight while fighting four empires on three fronts
@jordinagel1184
@jordinagel1184 4 ай бұрын
“Defecation had hit oscillation in a most spectacular fashion” is probably the best way of saying “shit really hit the fan” I’ve ever heard
@rashkavar
@rashkavar 4 ай бұрын
In fairness, to the guy planning the invasions based on a tour book - that was not uncommon for WWII. The tour books of the era included spectacular road maps, particularly those by Michelin, (which, as an aside, is what led to the Michelin star system that is so coveted in the gourmet food industry today - it was originally a rating system employed in their tour guides and while its top tier was high end gourmet foods, they offered lower tiers of approval for places where the food was good but nothing special - the kind of place you go to while traveling, as opposed to the kind of place you travel specifically to visit.) And these weren't just used for planning - part of every paratrooper's kit during the D-Day invasion of Normandy was a set of maps taken from the Michelin guide to travel in the region. I wouldn't be surprised if part of the reason why tour books were rather less reliable for a good stretch of time after WWII is the fact that everyone realized that publishing extremely good, up to date and complete maps of the road network for sale internationally was a great boon for invading armies and thus might not actually be the best idea in the world. Of course, with modern satellite imagery so widely available, it's effectively impossible to quietly suppress that kind of information (and many possible invading powers just have their own satellites taking pictures even if you're censoring all of your own data). That said, any plan drawn up in a single day is definitely going to be just a *tad* rushed...
@deanstuart8012
@deanstuart8012 4 ай бұрын
When the Americans invaded Grenada in 1983 the only map they had of the island was in a school text book, and only one ship in the invasion fleet had a photocopier to copy it.
@Trump2024asw
@Trump2024asw 4 ай бұрын
Goggle earth says hellos. That an the company that mapped LA an Miami for GTA5 an 6 could be payed to do so for any location in America at least. Imagine practicing in a VR model of the event location.
@rashkavar
@rashkavar 4 ай бұрын
@@Trump2024asw yeah the modern access to intelligence on the internet precludes a lot of old standards of security through obscurity - as the war in Ukraine has proven time and time again.
@MsZsc
@MsZsc 4 ай бұрын
israel, south korea, china, all have ways of censoring their satellite maps
@foobarf8766
@foobarf8766 4 ай бұрын
You might be too fair on Nazis, they were fed poor quality tourist maps by Garbo as part of intelligence operations, and believed no better ones existed.
@kyleshape8645
@kyleshape8645 4 ай бұрын
This is just further proof of the rule of thumb: A commander's insanity is inversely proportional to the size of his vessel. If almost all destroyer captains are this mad, then TP boat captains must be absolutely unhinged.
@Braindamagedpotato
@Braindamagedpotato 4 ай бұрын
Having a screw or 10 loose must have been a requirement back then
@kyle857
@kyle857 4 ай бұрын
They picked DD commanders because they were aggressive, were quick to act, and liked to fight.
@kyleshape8645
@kyleshape8645 4 ай бұрын
@kyle857 Thomas Cochrane would have made an amazing destroyer captain. Bro was in command of a tiny Brig, and was up against a Xebec Frigate that was more than twice his size and number of guns, and four times his crew and broadside weight, and said "Nah, I'd win." And he won.
@seneca983
@seneca983 4 ай бұрын
I think Drachinifel mentioned something like this in some video (possibly in the one about ship waifus with Animarchy). He said that aggressive naval officers tended to be made destroyer captains whereas more careful officers tended to be sent to work on some larger ship like e.g. a cruiser.
@kyledragonheart3875
@kyledragonheart3875 4 ай бұрын
​@@seneca983 Why is that? I mean, don't get me wrong, having a squadron of damn near insane little destroyers sounds a bit funny, but why did they make the aggressive captains command the smaller ships? Or is it the obvious answer that command won't want aggressive commanders in charge of cruisers or battleships due to those ship types limited numbers?
@lordmilchreis1885
@lordmilchreis1885 4 ай бұрын
"Hitler hadnt missed the bus, he was driving it" i cant breath anymore
@gothamlives4278
@gothamlives4278 4 ай бұрын
The short bus lol
@walnzell9328
@walnzell9328 4 ай бұрын
When you ride alone, you ride with Hitler.
@Jmvars
@Jmvars 4 ай бұрын
breathe* breath is a noun
@cowboyjohnn
@cowboyjohnn 4 ай бұрын
Im bad at english is beathe a verb?​@@Jmvars
@haruhisuzumiya6650
@haruhisuzumiya6650 4 ай бұрын
​@@cowboyjohnnyes, you breathe in and breathe out
@Eyn4RTTV
@Eyn4RTTV 4 ай бұрын
As a Norwegian I thank you for shining a light on this. I am proud to have served in the Kings Royal Guard and I am still in reserve. The Norwegian fighting spirit is not to be underestimated.
@memorymeme51
@memorymeme51 4 ай бұрын
Takk for din tjeneste
@Odinnyb13
@Odinnyb13 2 ай бұрын
Takk så meget for din tjeneste
@Eyn4RTTV
@Eyn4RTTV 2 ай бұрын
@@Odinnyb13 det er et privilegium å få mulighet til å beskytte konge og fedreland
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre 2 ай бұрын
Vi så det igjen etter Utøya, og jeg så det under Corona. Jeg tror mange Nordmenn til og med undervurderer oss selv og vår enhet. Det ligger en gnist der inne... Og takk for din tjeneste og at du er i reserve.
@2serveand2protect
@2serveand2protect 4 ай бұрын
..."forgotten"??... In Poland the Battle for Narvik is still being very well remembered, since the Polish Independent Mountain Rifle Brigade (Samodzielna Brygada Strzelcòw Podhalanskich) is still being told during History lessons in every school.
@stipy5916
@stipy5916 4 ай бұрын
We Norwegians still remember the hole thing kinda good tbh
@2serveand2protect
@2serveand2protect 4 ай бұрын
@@stipy5916 Norwegians are true Warriors! I read the story of your Resistance - among them the deeds of Max Manus! Some of those stories are almost beyond belief. Big Respects. Best Regards!
@leodesalis5915
@leodesalis5915 4 ай бұрын
​@@2serveand2protectthe viking genes can come out in times of need 😂
@danyvindgjengst255
@danyvindgjengst255 4 ай бұрын
@@2serveand2protect i mean, in all respect to Max Manus, he was a lying drunk, that took claim for loads of shit he didnt do.
@rafaradzik5541
@rafaradzik5541 4 ай бұрын
and also two polish destroyers ORP Błyskawica (Lightning) and ORP Grom (Thunder) took part in the fighting, with Grom being sunk by german planes
@Tea_N_Crumpets
@Tea_N_Crumpets 4 ай бұрын
Kinda funny thing: My dad is a casual collector of postcards, especially old ones from our home city of Gothenburg. Recently, he bought a postcard with writing in Norwegian on the back. Turns out the buyer of the postcard was a guy from Noreay who went on a short trip to Gothenburg right before the invasion, and sent this postcard to their family (their brother if im not mistaken) to inform them that their return would most likely ve significantly delayed due to the "situation" at home.
@AdurianJ
@AdurianJ 4 ай бұрын
YEEESS! everyone always forgets the 15cm battery at Korpås kicked Lützow's ass after Blucher was sunk. But you forgot the awesome conversation between the two Gigachad's at Oscarsborg. "Is She to be torpedoed?" "She is to be Torpedoed!"
@ximiraxelo7375
@ximiraxelo7375 4 ай бұрын
I imagine the blucker captain after the ship got hit and lost most of its systems thinking "ok, we still have the engines running, we can maneuver this ship" and then they get torpedoed and he says "ok, screw it, the ship is kaput"
@AdurianJ
@AdurianJ 4 ай бұрын
They thought it was mines that's why no other ship tried to force a passage.
@antonsamuelsson1317
@antonsamuelsson1317 4 ай бұрын
Det var planerat att Sverige skulle gå in i norra Norge för att säkra Narvik men tyskarna använde fallskärmjägare och gjorde det innan
@ricardo3760
@ricardo3760 3 ай бұрын
Vist fanden skal der skytes med skarpt
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre 2 ай бұрын
@@AdurianJ The Reich decided to not enter past the fortress at all, which is a bit hilarious, even after the fortress was captured - they dispatched soldiers further downfjord instead. Another delay. Symbolic, too..
@ximiraxelo7375
@ximiraxelo7375 4 ай бұрын
The amount o giga chads, and giga chad moments in this campaign only was incredibly, the Bf 110 pilots taking a air field by themselves was impressive
@martinfedreheim3332
@martinfedreheim3332 4 ай бұрын
I'm from the Narvik area, and I have grown up walking around and seen the leftowers from the war. My grandfather even took a picture of the JU 52s at the frozen lake (Hartvikvatnet/Árajávri)
@PitterPatter20
@PitterPatter20 4 ай бұрын
Bro, Animarchy History, LazerPig, _and_ LeMMiNo all in one day? What treat is this!
@UnboltedList956
@UnboltedList956 4 ай бұрын
ikr!
@rawchicken3463
@rawchicken3463 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for being my notifications KZbin
@lucasmatiasdelaguilamacdon7798
@lucasmatiasdelaguilamacdon7798 4 ай бұрын
And Falcon’s video on the F-104
@nickmcgookin247
@nickmcgookin247 4 ай бұрын
Its a blitz
@MarkGoding
@MarkGoding 4 ай бұрын
Try "history of everything" for the quadrella.
@Nordern
@Nordern 4 ай бұрын
If you want some Norwegian movies about the war, covering things like sabotage & politics i can highly reccomend these: Gulltransporten (the gold transport) How they transported the gold reserves across the country just ahead of the Germans, only being possible due to Oscarsborg fortress sinking the Blutcher and delaying the landing forces meant for Oslo Max Manus (Lieutenant Milorg, his memoars are also a fantastic read, some crazy things they got up to like home-made "baby" torpedoes used to sink German shipping is nuts ) Kongens Nei ( The kings choice ) Movie about before the war & in the early stages covering the politics & how the king outright refused to cooperate or surrender the nation to the Germans without the support of the government, even if it was in his power to do so *edit this is also the movie the video clips are from where they sink the Blutcher Kampen om Narvik ( the battle for Narvik) i've yet to watch this, but reviews & what i hear says it's great, it's about as you might figure the fighting in Narvik in 1940
@theharlequin3088
@theharlequin3088 4 ай бұрын
I've seen the battle for Narvik, it's very good.
@hybelmygg
@hybelmygg 4 ай бұрын
While not a movie, the short series Kampen Om Tungvannet (The Heavy Water War: Stopping Hitler's Atomic Bomb) is pretty good as well, and well worth the watch.
@Nordern
@Nordern 4 ай бұрын
@@hybelmygg It's on my watch-list, currently working on English subtitles for it though so my friends can also watch with me
@BreadViking
@BreadViking 3 ай бұрын
Living in Narvik during the shooting and premiere of Kampen om Narvik I must say it's a great watch (if you haven't watched it at this time)
@sigursberget3777
@sigursberget3777 2 ай бұрын
Max manus is a fraud. He got the Credit for alot of other people and groups work.
@ewok40k
@ewok40k 4 ай бұрын
This campaign is so full of memetic moments.... Glowworm maneuver. (Unofficial for ramming forevermore). Blucher sank by 19th century weapons and pure Viking balls. Narvik: no one expects spanish inquisition and Warspite into narrow fjord.
@kristofferrobinhaug8029
@kristofferrobinhaug8029 4 ай бұрын
As a Norwegian I must say this was absolutely glorious to watch. I remember most of this from school, but presented in such a concise, entertaining and engaging fashion was expertly done. Playing the national anthem at the end was simply chefs kiss!
@frankhaugen
@frankhaugen 4 ай бұрын
You had to end on the anthem? Suddenly it got really dusty in her, and my eyes are acting up...
@Cuddlestrike
@Cuddlestrike 3 ай бұрын
im not crying, youre crying 🥺🥺😭
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre 2 ай бұрын
Yeah that was a dirty move 😅😅😅 and after those pesky flies flew into my eyes during Glowworm and Pol (yes I'm Norwegian but Glowworm has a special place in my heart too) Edit: Og Gladiatorene! ........................................ de visste ikke de kom til å møte så "få" fly som de gjorde, heller......................... ord blir fattige
@Immortal_Fish
@Immortal_Fish 2 ай бұрын
yeah, he just had to put that there while I was chopping onions
@brotherbadger6678
@brotherbadger6678 4 ай бұрын
1:23 regarding Chamberlain. It was so, so much worse than you led on. That was Leo Amery a back bench MP. "This is what Cromwell said to the long Parliament when he thought it was no longer fit to conduct the affairs of the nation: 'You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. Depart, I say, and let us have done wither you. In the name of God, go!'". He is said to have hoarsley whispered the last 6 words whilst angrily pointing at Chamberlain. David Lloyd George, PM during the First World War and signatory to the Treaty of Versailles , came down from the Lords to watch the debate and said of the speech "It was the the single most devastating delivery I have ever witnessed in my time as a parliamentarian." Quoting Cromwell in such a way is, like, the nuclear option of parliamentary debate. To my knowledge it wasn't used again until David Davis used them against Boris Johnson in 2022. Those words are considered a curse to a Prime Minister, none have survived there usage, political careers end when someone invokes Cromwell against you....
@emiliskog
@emiliskog 4 ай бұрын
sorry but you might have to do a further 2 digits of your timestamp if you want it to go to the right point as currently it leads to minute 1 second 23 but I assume you intend for it to go to hour 1 minute 23 which would be 1:23:00 as a timestamp
@shawnurch8755
@shawnurch8755 4 ай бұрын
Nice bit of history! I love people who know niche stuff like this.
@Trump2024asw
@Trump2024asw 4 ай бұрын
Cromwell hmpp. Give me the rightfull head still on king.
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre 2 ай бұрын
The Norway Debate is monumental in Parliament history, and in world history. It is worth a read in its own entirety, I recommend.
@AdurianJ
@AdurianJ 4 ай бұрын
Sweden was considered for invasion but was ruled out early because the Swedish navy was in the Baltic and was too powerful to contain with all the modern warships in Denmark and Norway. Personally I just think they feared the let loose of the three interned Polish Submarines in Mariefred
@Minifoss
@Minifoss 3 ай бұрын
Whenever he's yelling of "The >X NUMBER> NORWEGIAN GIGACHAD" it brings a small tear of national pride to my Norwegian eye. Especially in the blucher incident. Somehow it all feels a little more relevant with the situation in Europe right now.
@athrack
@athrack 4 ай бұрын
I've seen countless documantaries on ww2, and you are the first I've heard mentioning the Pol III. As a Norwegian I thank you for that.
@Ulyssestnt
@Ulyssestnt 4 ай бұрын
"quisling" isnt exactly a term of endearment in good old Norway either:) Also an awesome recounting of the 1940s spring Norwegian campaign:)...oh ...you shouldn't have:P The germans werent amused when they finally seized Oscarsborg fortress and could read on the cannons "Krupp steel".
@Last555555555
@Last555555555 4 ай бұрын
I think my favorite Norwegian War Hero was Hugo Munthe-Kaas, Norwegian Soldier and British Spy and Commando who served from the Battles of Narvik to the end of the war and was involved in the espionage leading up to the sinking of the Tirpitz
@stupidflandrs4856
@stupidflandrs4856 4 ай бұрын
A feature-length video about the Norway campaign? I remember being riveted by this part of the war from the top-down view of Churchill's war memoirs, and it's a bit crazy that so few sources cover it in depth. Can't wait to sink my teeth into this
@Phantom-qr1ug
@Phantom-qr1ug 4 ай бұрын
Given the staggering amount of gigachads featured in this video, I feel the need to add one who's story is the kind of thing movies are made of. Allan Mann, an eight-teen year old fledgling gigachad from Töreboda, Sweden volunteered in late 1939 for service with the Svenska Frivilligkåren (Swedish Volunteer Corps), a brigade-sized partly merchanised infantry unit created to take part in the Winter War against the Soviets. Allan, despite lacking any military experience at all (he hadn't even gone through basic training at this point), accompanied the roughly ten thousand volunteers from all over Sweden during their battles at the northern front in Salla, Finland. During this time, he made friends with several of the Norwegians also serving with the Corps (a couple hundred Norweigans and Danes fought alongside the Swedes during the war). During the final days of the Winter War, Allan's foot was mangled by Soviet artillery, and he returned to Sweden shortly after the ceasefire came into effect. But Allan's military days had only just begun, as shortly after returning home, he went to war again, this time in Norway. Crossing the border with a handful of other Swedish volunteers, Allan joined a ragtag Norwegian-Swedish unit comprised of Winter War veterans, conscripts and local sportingshooters tasked with defending the town of Kongsvinger. The unit commander, Lieutenant Einar Gamst ( a gigachad in his own right), forced the local pro-German supply officer at gunpoint to give the unit weapons and gear, before locking said supply officer in the storage room. In the following battle of Kongsvinger, the ad hoc defenders inflicted heavy casualties on the German invaders, despite being outnumbered and outgunned. Allan repeatedly demonstrated both excellent marksmanship and bravery during these skirmishes, and as the Norweigans recieved orders to withdraw North, the young Swede carried out an usually heroic act. A Norwegian soldier who had been wounded in an earlier battle had been left behind and was now trapped behind German lines. Upon hearing of this, Allan snuck his way into enemy territory, found the Norwegian, hoisted him onto his shoulders and carried the wounded man back to friendly lines. When he arrived, the Norwegian officers were shocked and amazed at the act of valour, and half-jokingly informed Allan that another Norwegian, a civilian wounded by crossfire, had also been located behind enemy lines. Without hesitation, Allan went back and rescued him too. In the following battles of Skarnes, Elverum and Os, the Swede rapidly proved himself to be one of the company's best men. Later in the campaign, the Norwegian-Swedish unit had made it's way to Narvik, where Allan's most mind boggling feat of heroism would take place. Fighting alongside Norwegians, Brits, Frenchmen and Poles, Allan was tasked with hunting down remaining Gebrigsjäger units still operating in the region. The Germans made extensive use of the various mines and tunnelsystems to hide from Allied forces, and while clearing one of these, Allan was met with a grenade blast, filling his chest with shrapnel. At a local field hospital, Allan met a wounded officer from the French Foreign Legion, who's foot had been seriously injured. By this point, the Allies had abandoned Norway, and the Germans where rapidly approaching, leading the nurses manning the hospital to flee. But Allan wasn't planning on getting captured, nor let his newly made friend do so either. Despite his grevious wounds, Allan construced an improvised sled with the help of a few nurses, layed the French officer on it, strapped the sled to a harness worn by himself, and set out to cross the mountains and the border to Sweden. For nineteen agonising hours with little to no rest and in complete defience off his own injuries, Allan pulled the sled all the way into Swedish territory, where he collapsed from exhaustion and has found be Swedish border troops half-buried in the snow. By some miracle, both Allan and the French officer managed to survive the ordeal, something the Swedish doctor in charge of them thought shouldn't even be possible. After the Norwegian campaign, Allan was recruited by the British Special Operations Executive (SOE) and served as a courier and spy along the Swedish-Norweigan border, transporting intelligence and weapons to the Norwegian resistance while rescuing refugees, primarily Jews escaping the Holocaust, on his way back. Later in 1943, Allan joined the famed Norwegian Independent Company No.1, becoming one of three Swedes to serve with the unit. His commando missions are shrowded in mystery, but he was a trusted comrade and close friend of nearly all the big war heroes of the unit, including Knut Haukelid, Max Manus and Gunnar Sonsteby, all of whom claim that Allan carried out several combat operations in occupied Norway. Allan would end the war mopping up German resistance in the northern Norwegian province of Finnmark, leaving the Norweigan army as a full captain in 1952. After the war Allan joined the Swedish Armed Forces and served as an instructor, teaching commando tactics and hand-to-hand combat techniques as well as serving as a UN peacekeeper on Cyrpus in 1964, before retiring twenty years later in 1984, leaving an immense legacy in his wake. Allan rarely talked about his experiences in the war, didn't consider himself to be a hero and quietly passed away in 2005, eighty-four years old. Thank you reading this, and I hope you enjoyed the (very abridged) story of Sweden's greatest soldier of the Second World War, the certified gigachad known as Allan Mann.
@AnimarchyHistory
@AnimarchyHistory 4 ай бұрын
Holy crap this man is insane. Thank you for giving me a video idea for the back pocket. Good lord.
@Phantom-qr1ug
@Phantom-qr1ug 4 ай бұрын
@@AnimarchyHistory Well damn, didn't expect to be seen by the man himself. Thank you for the incredible work you do and for putting the spotlight on lesser known parts of history.
@Erik_Arnqvist
@Erik_Arnqvist 3 ай бұрын
Giga chad writing a small documentary for a KZbin comment
@EdwardOfEastAnglia
@EdwardOfEastAnglia 3 ай бұрын
Damn, the guy must of been protected by Legions of Angels, thanks for writing all that 🙏Good read. Definitely a Mad Lad he was, I'm gonna have find some reading material of this Allan Mann, even his name seems like he's created as a fictional character in a Movie, as well as his story, my word. Are you Swedish Brother?
@Phantom-qr1ug
@Phantom-qr1ug 3 ай бұрын
@@EdwardOfEastAnglia Indeed I am.
@TonyChan-eh3nz
@TonyChan-eh3nz 4 ай бұрын
It appears USS Johnston and USS Samuel b roberts have some friends
@Darqshadow
@Darqshadow 4 ай бұрын
Old Ironsides too. She may be an Age of Sail ship, but all of them are on the roster for bravest/most insane afloat
@Anonymous-zu7dh
@Anonymous-zu7dh 4 ай бұрын
As far as I'm aware, the allies didn't manage to send any military aid to Finland during the winter war. You know who did though? Sweden. we sent like 1/3 of our stockpiles...... which became inconvenient when Norway were invaded and the border guards didn't have the proper amount of ammo.
@Grautwok
@Grautwok 4 ай бұрын
I don't think there were any official military aid from the allies, but there were definetly British volunteers in Finland. Fun fact: Sir Christopher Lee was one of them (actor that played Dracula, Saruman and Count Dooku)
@Anonymous-zu7dh
@Anonymous-zu7dh 4 ай бұрын
@@Grautwok the allied plan for more directly intervening was to send troops through the Norwegian port of Narvik through Sweden...... With the interesting side effect of most of those troops occupying northern Norway/Sweden to prevent the iron ore trade, Norway and Sweden saw through that cunning plan though. There were Hungarian volunteers in the winter war, although they arrived a bit late due to having to take the long way round Europe to avoid German territory.
@seneca983
@seneca983 4 ай бұрын
@@Anonymous-zu7dh I think the British and the French sent 30 planes each.
@michealohaodha9351
@michealohaodha9351 4 ай бұрын
​@seneca983 Bizarely fascist Italy also sent Fiat fighters, rifles etc. They had to avoid transitting through Germany due to the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact.
@seneca983
@seneca983 4 ай бұрын
@@michealohaodha9351 I don't think it's that bizarre considering fascists and communists often don't like each other.
@oneazy9810
@oneazy9810 4 ай бұрын
As a Norwegian, it warms my heart that this part of WW2 history is getting more attention.
@comentnine1574
@comentnine1574 4 ай бұрын
It’s so strange to see AH talking about WW2 warships and not use any Azure Lane art.
@ardantop132na6
@ardantop132na6 4 ай бұрын
Well there's only one: *HMS Glowworm.*
@comentnine1574
@comentnine1574 4 ай бұрын
@@ardantop132na6 Yeah should’ve waited till I posted that huh?
@Neptune0404
@Neptune0404 4 ай бұрын
To anyone intrigued by this video, I implore you to watch the movie "the king's choice". It's a norwegian movie about this very conflict, and some of the clips used in this video were from it including the naval defense of Oslo. It's an amazing movie and beautifully captures the conflict and some of its heroes, and as a Norwegian it fills me with pride to see our efforts in ww2 raised like this.
@Ianmundo
@Ianmundo 4 ай бұрын
I wonder at what point did HMS Glowworm’s crew realise their Captain was a madman? 😂 Best of the Best 🇬🇧
@jamespocelinko104
@jamespocelinko104 4 ай бұрын
It's a destroyer, they knew the moment they stepped aboard. (¬‿¬)
@snebbywebby2587
@snebbywebby2587 4 ай бұрын
⁠they all were crazy
@leodesalis5915
@leodesalis5915 4 ай бұрын
The captains of Royal Navy destroyers (and most countries) were specifically chosen for being daring, ballsy and fearless. Caution is for battleship and carrier captains you want your destroyers in a knife fight 😂
@Swan_River_Cowboy
@Swan_River_Cowboy 4 ай бұрын
@@leodesalis5915 a criminal record for recklessness is required to be a destroyer captain
@leodesalis5915
@leodesalis5915 4 ай бұрын
@@Swan_River_Cowboy I've heard if the captain doesnt say "drive closer, I want to hit them with my sword" at least once per battle, the destroyers crew loses confidence in their captain, immedietely mutiny and install the maddest man they can find aboard.
@yanisbaker881
@yanisbaker881 4 ай бұрын
we NEED a HMS warspite video
@lanchester101
@lanchester101 4 ай бұрын
Same here. I adore the grand old lady.
@Tobo9745
@Tobo9745 3 ай бұрын
As a Norwegian and a big fan of history, especially surrounding WWII, I feel you have done norway a great service telling our story. And in a mighty fun way. I loved the way you told the story. Praise to you.
@peanutbutter7682
@peanutbutter7682 4 ай бұрын
i would love to see a video on the Scandinavian resistance movements as a follow up to this.
@Capt-Harpoon
@Capt-Harpoon 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for a brilliant film. Sell it to broadcasters. As a Norwegian all the content is well know to me, but I still watched it all due to the talented story telling and presentation.
@jhoncho4x4
@jhoncho4x4 4 ай бұрын
"The King's Choice " movie shows the battle between the Blucher and Erickson's Oscarsburg Fortress very well. Guns and bankside Torpedoes.
@jovra001
@jovra001 2 ай бұрын
Great vid mate! You’ve done a great job on making an infromative video, and I loved all the funny tidbits that added to the quality of this video! I can only complain that this video isn’t longer, I would have loved to see your coverage of the norwegian resistance during the occupation! Love from Norway mate! You’ve earned another subscriber, and I’m off to watch more of your videos!
@Batabusa
@Batabusa 4 ай бұрын
Ey, at 1:12:51 you've accidentally missed a gigachad! The gentleman to the right is "Hans Reidar Holtermann". He commanded "Hegra fortress" during the initial invasion of Trondheim (or actually Værnes, the airport) Inflicted big German losses in a siege lasting 20 days. Great stuff! But I feel like you missed out on a lot by not covering Trøndelag, Namsos and Trondheim.
@AnimarchyHistory
@AnimarchyHistory 4 ай бұрын
It’s like a lot of things. I had to cut some of the other stuff to focus on the most insane ones. It’s the curse of making these. If you want to cover literally everything you would be here for hours. I really wanted to do Namsos in detail but that would have put us over two hours which is a rough one to make and watch.
@Batabusa
@Batabusa 4 ай бұрын
​@@AnimarchyHistory Fair. I would watch the extra hour, but then again, I might be biased. Grew up in Namsos and live in Trondheim. I'd add though, your drama flair and writing really did suck me in, even if I knew (most) of the stuff covered already, so maybe an additional hour wouldn't be such a bad idea beyond a horrible workload with a bit lower ROI? :p Do love how you butcher the pronunciation of all names and do not apologize for it. Refreshing! If you for some weird reason do end up making anything on the region, feel free to hit me up for some local knowledge (or even pronunciation pointers) :P
@redqueeen2950
@redqueeen2950 2 ай бұрын
​@AnimarchyHistory My grandparents live in Namsos, the old pictures they have from the war and the ruins.. It was just... gone.
@Batabusa
@Batabusa 2 ай бұрын
@@redqueeen2950 EY, fellow Namsosing :D The thing about the damage done to Namsos was the retaliatory fire bombing of the then beautiful wood city done to "smoke out" the English landing there. The real shame is the church, natural stone, but rebuilt in bricks and the old one used as fundament for a road in "Vika". And until pretty recently, the only pretty part of the town was the parade bastion built by the Germans.. Namsos is still kinda butt ugly as the "older" parts are all quickly built post war concrete boxes.
@EirikXL
@EirikXL 3 ай бұрын
My Grandfather was 9 years old growing up on a farm not far from Narvik. He and many other Norwegians hated the British after this as most of the destruction in the area was done by the British in order to secure the town which had already been fortified by the Germans. And most civilian casualties were inflicted by British collateral damage. I'll never forget my Grandfather (rest in peace) telling stories of of seeing both German and British formations of Aircraft going over his house (which is now my cabin), as tides of war were constantly turning, hearing the roaring thunders in the waters beyond the mountains. Side note: My Aunt (grampa's Daughter), moved south and bought a farm near Oslo Fjord, right next to Oskar's borg, their estate came with a huge splinter embedded in the exterior wall, it was from the massive explosion of the Blucher which sent it flying about 5 km into that wall, now the splinter is framed with the piece of wood.
@Odinnyb13
@Odinnyb13 2 ай бұрын
Here in Norway the name Quisling is still synonymous with the word Traitor. to call someone quisling is calling them a traitor of their own country.
@colinritchie1757
@colinritchie1757 4 ай бұрын
"The battle for Norway hasn't really been covered properly", it has now , brilliant
@whimseyOFC
@whimseyOFC 2 ай бұрын
As a norwegian, who is wildly interested in war history, I have to say thank you. Finally someone covers what actually happened. It gets very boring very quickly to hear all the allegations of us surrendering without a fight, when in fact, we fought hard AF. People dont realise that we had to fold under the pressure at some point to ensure survival, considering we where only 2.5 million people in a country almost as large as germany. So when people say "Haha norway where such whimps during ww2", I finally have a good, entertaining video to guide them to, so they can learn some proper history. With that said, there are several other battles and giga-chad moments that you missed, and if you ever want to do a part 2, I'll be happy to help. Several battles and other gigachad moments are as big, if not bigger than most of the ones already mentioned in your video
@kitten-inside
@kitten-inside 4 ай бұрын
I can only imagine how this influenced Hitlers later thinking. "It's not paranoia if they are actually after you."
@oyevintj
@oyevintj 4 ай бұрын
Quisling is still used as an insult here in Norway. Means betrayer
@andreix123
@andreix123 2 ай бұрын
There Is even a Quisling movie In the making set for release In September. "Quisling's last days"
@Vingul
@Vingul Ай бұрын
It's used all over the world, I think it was first used in that way by the New York Times (or maybe it was the London Times). It's undeserved, though.
@MikeJones-qn1gz
@MikeJones-qn1gz 29 күн бұрын
I had never heard that used term used in the west but I guess in Canada we get a lot of isms from the US, so Benadict Arnold is more common dis for traitors
@IAmTheAce5
@IAmTheAce5 4 ай бұрын
It's a CRIME Hollywood didn't make any memorable movies about _any_ of these scenes of absolute Giga-Chadness!
@Eagle-ci9dr
@Eagle-ci9dr 4 ай бұрын
That ending got me..... is someone cutting onions around here? But seriously, the fact that this is little more than a foot note in History is absurd. There are so many heroic act's that happened in the battle for Norway. Even though the allies had to retreat and reconsolidate the Norwegian spirt still fought on. Makes me proud to have ancestry from that part of the world. Keep doing what you do. We need people to know about the forgotten battles of world war II. Stay awesome.
@pebzi-
@pebzi- 4 ай бұрын
btw those junkers 1:34:36 that landed on the frozen lake, were raised back in the 2000s i think it was, and is now stored in a warehouse in bjerkvik for restoration, one is allready restored and in the flight museum at gardermoen
@whitemink0939
@whitemink0939 4 ай бұрын
35:27 respect
@fatherchef6969
@fatherchef6969 4 ай бұрын
Had to hold back a tear when the national anthem played, Takk så mye ❤
@Palora01
@Palora01 4 ай бұрын
One addendum, 3:43: mass unaliving operations were already in full swing in Poland. Both Germany and the USSR were doing them.
@walnzell9328
@walnzell9328 4 ай бұрын
The most unholy alliance ever conceived. Technically not an alliance, the two nations secretly and not so secretly hated each other, and yet still often acted like brothers in arms. They were ever so coincidentally very cooperative whenever they were committing crimes against humanity.
@williameddlewis4625
@williameddlewis4625 4 ай бұрын
British forces sent to Norway 1940. the 146th Infantry Brigade - comprised of the 1/4th Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment, the Hallamshire Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment, and the 1/4th Battalion, King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry they landed at Namsos and the 24th Brigade - comprised of the 1st Battalion Scots Guards, 1st Battalion Irish Guards and 2nd Battalion South Wales Borderers they landed at Narvik imperial war museum also has a photo of the 1/6th Battalion, Duke of Wellington's Regiment talking to a polish officer so this is probably not a complete list of British troops deployed.
@adylevene4318
@adylevene4318 3 ай бұрын
The Norwegians never forgot The Green Howard's efforts in the fight.
@honk813
@honk813 4 ай бұрын
Such a shame we couldn’t hold Norway, honestly I’d say if ever there could have been a time pre 1941 had we held Norway the war probably would have ended far sooner, and millions would have been spared. The cut to iron ore would have likely left Germany struggling to meet demand and probably though a long shot maybe even convinced several neutrals to stand with the allies.
@AdurianJ
@AdurianJ 4 ай бұрын
Everyone was inexperienced. But most of the blame for the loss of Norway falls on the Norwegian government for their criminal neglect of the military pre-war and general incompetence on security policy.
@meckelbu
@meckelbu 4 ай бұрын
@@AdurianJ Norway wasn't the only one guilty of this either, AFAIK Finland was in a similar state when the Winter War broke out as our military forces had been neglected for budgetary and ideological reasons during the early era of independence until at the last moment amid rising tensions it became clear that something needed to be done. So it ended up with having to accept gear such as 19th century French artillery which France had already deemed obsolete before the _First_ World War, telling soldiers to bring their own hunting weapons to war, and also not receiving critical deliveries before the war ended as (Nazi) Germany blockaded them.
@AdurianJ
@AdurianJ 4 ай бұрын
No Norway was in much worse shape. They had not viewed invasion as something that could happen and had been very casual about their defences. In Finland the Political leadership always knew of the danger of Russia and it focused the mind, also fenland increased defence spending modestly in the 30's.
@Destroyer_V0
@Destroyer_V0 4 ай бұрын
@@AdurianJ ... when you put it like that. Why the hell did anyone decide it was a good idea to disarm after the soviet union fell. Your standing military and the industry behind it, is an insurance policy. And so many western nations reduced their payments... and are now seeing the consequences. Seems we never do learn from history, huh.
@Norwagen
@Norwagen 4 ай бұрын
@@AdurianJwe had the Belgium mindset. Should have been more like the Swiss. Neutrality isn’t like a shield. Neutrality can’t protect you, you must protect your neutrality.
@HardThrasher
@HardThrasher 4 ай бұрын
Beautiful ending mate
@m4rt_
@m4rt_ 2 ай бұрын
Fun fact, in Norwegian, "Quisling" is now a synonym for "landsforræder" which translates to "traitor" or "traitor of the country".
@Kraakesolv
@Kraakesolv Ай бұрын
As it does in the English language, as mentioned in the documentary here.
@nate1511
@nate1511 4 ай бұрын
Incredible video as always! I knew about the heavy water plant and a bit about the resistance later in the war but this was my first time learning about most of the naval action! Those men were something else, true chads in every respect
@Rulusto
@Rulusto 4 ай бұрын
As a norwegian, thank you for this epic video 🙂
@Fenris86
@Fenris86 4 ай бұрын
I am surprised this doesn't also have a "Ramming Speed!" counter. Also, Warspite best corgi.
@ShadowKayvaan
@ShadowKayvaan 2 ай бұрын
As many WW2 documentaries as I have watched, it is always nice to see there is something new to learn. Not to mention this was quite amusingly edited. Well done and well told, sir.
@Weatherman_Ace
@Weatherman_Ace 4 ай бұрын
My Ancestors originally came from Norway and I've been wanting to learn more about the history of Norway so thank you lad.
@Funkaheltok
@Funkaheltok 4 ай бұрын
Yeah… delete that anime pic. With love form Norway
@toxn1xwaste378
@toxn1xwaste378 3 ай бұрын
@@Funkaheltok Nice way of representing norwegian there -_-
@TheWeirdNorwegianGuy
@TheWeirdNorwegianGuy 3 ай бұрын
Keep the anime pic. With actual love from Norway.
@Funkaheltok
@Funkaheltok 2 ай бұрын
@@TheWeirdNorwegianGuy the absolute perfection of your name is this context
@TheWeirdNorwegianGuy
@TheWeirdNorwegianGuy 2 ай бұрын
@@Funkaheltok 😎
@mayp5996
@mayp5996 4 ай бұрын
For anyone interested in an account of life and the resistance in Norway during the occupation there’s a short book called They Came As Friends that was written by a Norwegian press attaché in 1943 that is absolutely fascinating. It’s a bit hard to find a copy, but I would definitely recommend it if you can!
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre 2 ай бұрын
You can also find contemporary radio show recordings online from USA by a radio channel I can't remember but it had quite a reception, with a half-Norwegian (or something) host, and having guests that were among the refugees who had fled Norway by boat (often with fatalities and under Luftwaffe attacks). I'm sorry I can't remember the name of my source. But it's there... open source something? WWII radio recordings, Norway... can't remember how I found it There's some harrowing stories there as well.
@ewok40k
@ewok40k 4 ай бұрын
That campaign is epitome of pyrrhic win for Kriegsmarine. Losing like 3 or 4 cruisers and half of entire destroyer force meant they had completely no hope of trying to escort landing force in the hypothethical Sealion.
@Grautwok
@Grautwok 4 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mr. Animarchy, for shedding light on my beloved country. I would love it if you were to tell more stories about the Norwegian resistance, especially Operation Gunnerside, considering how crucial it may have been.
@m4rt_
@m4rt_ 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for playing our national anthem at the end :) Also, yes, the song is literally called "Yes, we love" (as in "Yes, we love our country", which is the first line of the song. "Ja, vi elsker dette landet.")
@DemiK-AE
@DemiK-AE 2 ай бұрын
Oh man, this is great video making!!! I made dinner, and ate while smiling til my mouth hurt. My grandfather on my mothers side fought at the battle for Vinje-svingen. this video made me remember that, i now feel proud of the few and true! Keep on keeping on! Thank you for covering this in detail, many don't realize everything that went down during this period. I didn't even get this much information in school! liked and subscribed!
@claymaster3489
@claymaster3489 4 ай бұрын
Please make a documentary about Battleship Scharnhorst
@forgetmeshots
@forgetmeshots 4 ай бұрын
The DEEP DIVE joke with the Polish submarine isn't too bad. Although, I think giving the Polish submarine more SCREEN time is better. Great content. Well done, Sir. 🍻👍🏻
@jarethanson8775
@jarethanson8775 3 ай бұрын
From now on I refuse to watch any historical documentary without a Giga Chad Counter
@fivedoorsup5293
@fivedoorsup5293 4 ай бұрын
You know it’s gonna be good when there’s a giga chad counter
@DJSockmonkeyMusic
@DJSockmonkeyMusic 4 ай бұрын
And then learning about HMS Courage and her incredible Captain, Commander David Havoc! What a wonderful day!
@SebHaarfagre
@SebHaarfagre 2 ай бұрын
@@DJSockmonkeyMusic Wait a second... 😅
@Norwagen
@Norwagen 4 ай бұрын
Finally someone talked about my country. Love the video
@Immortal_Fish
@Immortal_Fish 2 ай бұрын
despite us loosing against the initial invasion from by Germany, the fact that we held out the longest and all the things we did to fight back even after being occupied is something we're very proud of
@bartweijs
@bartweijs 4 ай бұрын
I replayed the HMS Warspite entry a dozen times. Keeps giving me chills. Magnificent & great work. Pure art.
@stevenchoza6391
@stevenchoza6391 4 ай бұрын
Great video… still waiting for part 2 of the Soviet/Russian Aircraft history.
@anorwegianguy3780
@anorwegianguy3780 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this wonderful documentary. This must be one of the best and comprehensive videos of the German Invasion of Norway and I appreciate that you used your time and resources to make this. I have read through a book that recounts almost every event with the invasion of Bergen and what was most shocking for me and a sign of how unprepared and/or ignorant the Norwegian High Command was of the situation, the commander of the DK Vest (District Command West) received the order to mobilize troops and schedule it for friday, the 12th... He received this order at a small farm outside of Bergen at 7 o clock 9th of April after the Germans had landed in the city a couple of hours before. Just a small not so fun fact, anyways I hope you have a wonderful day.
@Brodaddy1000
@Brodaddy1000 2 ай бұрын
As a Norwegian, this was an insanely good listen. And thank you to the British for all your aid during the occupation and invasion from the Germans! Forever grateful.
@runarnorway2376
@runarnorway2376 3 ай бұрын
This was a well appreciated video, the supply ship mentioned at 1:33:00 is most likely called the rauenfels. I have been on the mountain where this ship blew up and there are giant pieces of metal 100-150 meters over sea level. I also used to know a man who witnessed this explosion firsthand from the shore on Tjeldøya!
@NickJohnCoop
@NickJohnCoop 4 ай бұрын
HMS Warspite does deserve it's own entry music.
@Raged87
@Raged87 3 ай бұрын
A well made video, I enjoyed it! Good to see the acknowledgement of "gigachads" on all sides in the conflict, as much as can be sourced anyways. Absolutely lost it at "... The lead ship in fact, looked a lot closer than the others, and it seemed to be raising a battle-ensi- OH SCHEIßE..." and later the HMS Warspite entering the fjord. Well done!
@hanswichmann5047
@hanswichmann5047 4 ай бұрын
Undoubtedly your best work to date! Thankx for another amazing history lesson...
@zaknoten7854
@zaknoten7854 4 ай бұрын
I love these videos man. The Marseille and the USS Eisenhower story. I really love the long format, they can’t be long enough. Truly unique on youtube
@shikatsu
@shikatsu 4 ай бұрын
How hard was it to not have *HORSE WHINNY* every time the Blucher was mentioned Animarchy?
@99kitfox
@99kitfox 4 ай бұрын
What a great insight into the bravery and tenacity of the Norwegian people, faced with invasion at the opening of the war. Also I love that Lazerpig and Lord Hardthrasher made guest appearances.
@AJTheUnexceptionalBiker
@AJTheUnexceptionalBiker 4 ай бұрын
Oh damn. That Warspite intro. CHILLS
@sindreherstad8739
@sindreherstad8739 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering this. You did an awsome job
@larsespeland6068
@larsespeland6068 Ай бұрын
my grandfather faught in the unit used to take the heavy water factories in the north as an infantry scout. The americans who saved him from his boat which was sunk during the war when he was just a civilian tried to have all of those returning to norway to fight for their country and the ones going to help them instruction in how to speak norwegian, only to have the instructors enter the room to see the entire class speaking in norwegian to one another, showing a greater fluency than they had. I was very proud of the picture of my grandfather on skis looking out with his goggles which hung in our main hallway of the house in brooklyn where I ended up being raised. It was an inspiration. Thank you for this wonderful display of the destructive force that can become of a people who will not say it's okay to take my home, you shall fight for every inch, and I'll make you pay for it with your pain and blood. We will not give in and we will resist with all we have. They had people living in underground areas like sewers having to survive on rats when they got to liberate some sections of the cities I'm told, but that was not enough to have them surrender what they felt was never truly in the nazi's hands. Not completely.
@unbindallgaming7556
@unbindallgaming7556 4 ай бұрын
"defecation had collided with oscillations" is maybe the most creative way I've ever heard that expressed
@Telsion
@Telsion 4 ай бұрын
Awesome video so far, I'm about 40 minutes on, but I need to interrupt my viewing experience to congratulate you on your music choice. It SLAPS 🔥
@TheNephilimofEmpireCity
@TheNephilimofEmpireCity 4 ай бұрын
okay I know this isn't something to be focused on but the footage of the Nazi's doing that stupid salute, they all look like they are trying for a high-five but they're both social awkward and inept at it
@a_channel2545
@a_channel2545 4 ай бұрын
Really only tangentially related to the video, but can we all just admire for a moment what a GORGEOUS ship HMS Cossack was?
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