Hope you guys keep on doing the video format! Love it with the other „Rest is“ shows!
@AviMitrani10 ай бұрын
Don't know what I think about it...
@philiphorner319 ай бұрын
Our antifa is a lot like the SA.
@hellohihahahahhaldufuduai9 ай бұрын
@@philiphorner31fighting fascism and being a fascist are exactly the same things! you’re so smart!
@lordnelsonmc.billionberg91663 ай бұрын
Just be quite you peasant.
@paulastalas869110 ай бұрын
Already listened to this episode on sporify. But Tom's facial expresions while doing a german accent in the intro enhances the viewing experience.
@andrewcorrie89367 ай бұрын
You mean his "Inspector Clouseau" impression.
@scarlettfinlay120910 ай бұрын
So glad to see you're doing these again! Already listened to the episode but watching this as well! 😊
@danielcliment825110 ай бұрын
this podcast is even better when you can see these two getting all excited when talking!
@formaldehyde386410 ай бұрын
As much as I enjoy the regular podcast I occasionally get distracted when only listening to audio. This helps me soak up every detail. Love this new format!
@Mute_Nostril_Agony9 ай бұрын
I can imagine Göring at that wedding reception, saying “Are you going to eat those sausages?”
@user-cy4fz7mo7v19 күн бұрын
I can imagine Starmer at that wedding reception saying “Are you going to eat them hostages “ 😂
@doggerthebruce8210 ай бұрын
So happy to see another one of these. I've listened to the podcast already, but I like seeing the facial expressions and pictures - so watched this too. I appreciate the extra work that goes in to doing these. 🙂
@yuriy852210 ай бұрын
Love this channel, I always listen to it when falling asleep for the first 40min. I really missed it. It’s fun learning about history 😊
@jackiechan884010 ай бұрын
I know it's extra work, but I do enjoy video podcasts. Unless I'm walking or driving, then audio only. Cheers boys.
@theultimatechannel8469 ай бұрын
It is absolutely insane how they could openly kill their political opposition and then two years later be allowed to host the Olympic games like nothing happened.
@lloydgush8 ай бұрын
Opposition? They killed nazis, lol! The opposition was a bit before.
@d.c.88288 ай бұрын
Politics! Amirite!?!?!? 🥁
@Castlelong3333 ай бұрын
Because they were freemasons,
@anthonyweston6303 ай бұрын
Trump will probably be doing that in a few months and yet they’ve got the fifa World Cup/olympics in two years
@bardame3 ай бұрын
The standard setting of humanity is cowardice.
@sfwplant8 ай бұрын
"This paints the Nazi's in a very bad light" is a lovely quote.
@patl7096 ай бұрын
Who knew the Nazi’s were such naughty boys?
@wecanjump75122 ай бұрын
I’m beginning to think these Nazi’s are real jerks
@DeaconNortonАй бұрын
@@patl709 Holocaust what?
@sifridbassoon9 күн бұрын
"that's very harsh..." I love it when they say that. So understated. So English.
@mpersad10 ай бұрын
Terrific analysis. As others have said, please keep these YT vids going. So much easier to find than other such videos on YT.
@user-xx3zy9pn9b10 ай бұрын
Really enjoying the video format!
@steve.the.farmer10 ай бұрын
LOVE the video format.
@beerprem10 ай бұрын
Welcome back fellas. Its good to see you back on yt
@taraw197910 ай бұрын
Loved watching this, even though I had already listened to the podcast episode. Please do more of these. I really enjoy seeing you both and the photos of the people you reference is very helpful. 👍
@kevinmcinerney1959Ай бұрын
This is a wonderful way of delivering a narrative. Best thing on the internet. And with a faint smell of sulphur.
@bakk989 ай бұрын
It was a very interesting experience seeing your faces for the first time, after listening to your podcast for 2 years and getting used to your voices. Love the podcast, appreciations from the United States.
@blogbalkanstories480510 ай бұрын
A slight annotation to the translation used for Hitler's Reichstag speech: "I was the supreme judge..." does not quite nail it. He called himself "des deutschen Volkes oberster Gerichtsherr". Gerichtsherr has and even back then had a far more authoritarian connotation than Richter, i.e. judge. It's a throwback to feudal times when the feudal lord had ultimate jurisdiction over his subjects. The term speaks of power rather than justice, and in this context does away with even a pretense of a rule of law. So, translating it as "judge" is a bit off. I presume it is the standard English translation of the speech. Nevertheless, a suggestion for future projects: Perhaps there is an English term from feudal times that comes with similar connotations and that could be used. Otherwise: Very educative and entertaining episode. Thanks a lot.
@natanzel48 ай бұрын
Thank you for this very insightful clarification. Just shows how crucial is a solid linguistic and historical foundation of the material to be translated.
@JM-iu7qx8 ай бұрын
I wonder if "overlord" would capture the same meaning.
@wecanjump75122 ай бұрын
@@JM-iu7qx liege lord works as well
@TerriKash-NEO9 күн бұрын
What a great way to learn about history. Been listening for a couple of weeks, and I really enjoy how you deliver the information. Really brings it all alive. Where were you two when I was in school? 😊
@beaky2910 ай бұрын
This is great to see you guys in action. However, having already listened to this episode I am doubling my time allocation. Interesting product placement going on in the background Dominic!
@Pinakij10 ай бұрын
This is really great, who doesn’t love Rohm the love bandit, I’m a big fan of the show. I love watching it on video.
@Lanxe10 ай бұрын
Was gifted a handful of Dominic’s Adventures in Time books for Christmas! Very happy and looking forward to reading them with my son. Love the video format!
@duncannapier31810 ай бұрын
Just another reason this is my favorite binge watching channel, many vids I watch multiple times. Thanks for making and thanks for sharing 👍🇿🇦
@patscherlbraun10039 ай бұрын
You guys are so spot on with your summaries and analyses of this incredible period in history. You are also fantastic interesting story tellers!
@throwback198418 ай бұрын
Thank god for that, heard one of them was called Dominic then at the end I had the terrible thought that I'd been listening to Dominic Cummings for 52 minutes (and finding him engaging and enjoyable) and had to go look them up. Dominic Sandbrook, thank fuck.
@dalebrown877110 ай бұрын
Like a lot of people I've already listened to this but it's fantastic that you're now visually recording the pods. Would be great if this was a regular thing now!
@JoeFabeets9 ай бұрын
I could listen to you gentlemen speak about this forever.
@_Pauper_10 ай бұрын
This is a great way for me to share your excellent work. Thank you !
@humblescribe852210 ай бұрын
"This paints the Nazis in a very bad light..." 😂
@kevinmcinerney1959Ай бұрын
I enjoyed the banter.
@Rayshard.Oblique7779 ай бұрын
Very interesting, great vid. However, Hitler wasn't actually a vegetarian as you said. He was, apparently, advised by his doctor to cut down on the sausage intake to manage his chronic flatulence, but still occasionally ate meat. As for the drinking, he gave up after getting hideously drunk on Schnapps as a youth and waking up in a field. By the way, did you know that Jagermeister once had the nickname 'Goering's schnapps' because of his fondness for the drink? Though for some reason the company does not use this nickname in its advertising today....
@steph71395 ай бұрын
“…for some reason” 😅 perhaps because they don’t want to brand themselves with the nazis??
@nicknewman784810 ай бұрын
When I was at school in the 80's my teacher invited a friend of his who was a journalist in the 1930's to speak to us. He had interviewed Hitler in the mid 30's and had been given a signed copy of Mein Kampf. He told the story of how he lost it on the way back to the airport. I can't remember the persons name, so if anyone has any knowledge of English Journalists who interviewed Hitler in the 30's it would be nice to be reminded of his name. I can't imagine there would have been that many.
@Johnconno9 ай бұрын
Mr Jones.😢
@kevinmcinerney1959Ай бұрын
The only one I can think of was G Ward Price of the Daily Mail. One reason I believe he interviewed Hitler is because he wrote a book called "I Know These Dictators". I have a copy somewhere. But G Ward Price, like the Daily Mail, were enthusiasts for fascism. After the little 1939/45 upset I know the Daily Mail tended not to draw attention to its previous erm... lack of judgement. I think Ward Price possibly would have felt the same way, and turned down invitations to talk at schools.
@nicknewman7848Ай бұрын
@@kevinmcinerney1959 Yeah.. Ward Price died in 1961 so was unavailable in 1989/90 around the time of the visit to my history class. I'm estimating the gentleman was in his late 70's then which would place him in his mid 20's around the time the interview took place. I'm assuming it likely took place between 1934 and 1938. I can't find anything on google because I have no idea who the guy worked for or if it was even a mainstream newspaper. It could be mentioned briefly somewhere in the ocean of literature written on the subject or could be potentially found by people who have access to archive material with official appointment diaries etc.
@nicknewman7848Ай бұрын
@@kevinmcinerney1959 From wikipedia - The 1930s saw Price carry out several interviews with Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini. The British historian Daniel Stone called Ward Price's reporting from Berlin and Rome "a mixture of snobbery, name dropping and obsequious pro-fascism of a most genteel 'English' type".[20] In his articles, Ward Price consistently sought to belittle those who criticised the fascist regimes for human rights abuses, downplaying such reports and attacking the motives of the critics as self-interested and biased.[21] In several of his articles, he argued that Jews and Ethiopians who criticised the Third Reich and the Third Italian Civilisation were only doing so to "play the victim" by garnering sympathy that they did not deserve.[21] Stone described Ward Price as a crypto-fascist who professed to be an objective journalist who was taking a "just the facts" approach in his reporting, but in fact clearly admired and liked fascist regimes.[22] Ward Price was very close to Lord Rothermere, the proprietor of the Daily Mail. The journalist Wickham Steed called Ward Price "the lackey of Mussolini, Hitler and Rothermere"
@nicknewman7848Ай бұрын
@@kevinmcinerney1959 I'm now beginning to wonder if the story perhaps got embellished over the years and maybe the man i met was a secretary or assistant of some kind that managed to get a signed book and a handshake rather than a published interview. It's fair to say that if that had happened to me then 50 years later it probably would have morphed over time into "When i went to interview Hitler and advised him that if he happened to go to war in the future he really shouldn't bite off more than he can chew and make sure to be pragmatic when it came to logistics.."
@hello551258 ай бұрын
Not sure what Uncle Monty would have made of that comparison!! Great episode. I have only recently disovered this channel and I'm loving it.
@Billzor99110 ай бұрын
Love the format and I love the episode! I can't wait for more of this series!
@r.w.bottorff77359 ай бұрын
Great video, I'm glad that I was recommended your channel. Thank you!
@Jameszet16096 ай бұрын
Brilliant show and format folks, I love when Dominic laughs and cracks up too 😂
@ricardom197410 ай бұрын
I'd already listened to this, but had to ride both horses and watch it too
@thelucky110 ай бұрын
Jeez i was getting worried, good to have you back, also can you have Bart van Loo back on please, loved the burgundian episode!
@theirishantiquarian236310 ай бұрын
Video podcasts are great!!
@leo1961berlin2 ай бұрын
It's impossible to mention every detail of significance in an hour-long podcast. However, one reason so many Germans felt they had been stabbed in the back by the politicians after WW1 was that when the armistice was signed no foreign troops occupied German soil. There was still the appalling stalemate along the Western front. Equally as bad as the effects of the Great Depression post-1929 with rising levels of unemployment was the horrendous increase in inflation prior to that. German finances were in a mess, largely because of the punitive reparations imposed on the country by the Allies. The upshot was that the middle-classes lost all their savings. In any country, the middle-class is a bulwark of stability. When that falls away, you create a revolutionary potential.
@gizabitadat14999 ай бұрын
This is what the world needs to remember how it really goes down , when we loose all our marbles and allow new laws and powers rule our lives . great work lads !
@rumdukes10 ай бұрын
I think Dominic's study wins hands down
@richardcutt727Ай бұрын
Your series on Custer's last stand was excellent. A particular interest of mine ever since Errol Flynn and They died with their boots on.
@simonprodhan50509 ай бұрын
superb stuff, i've read quite a few of dominic's books and i've enjoyed them immensely, i'm particularly interested in the political history of the third reich and the SA and this podcast was very interesting
@coling39579 ай бұрын
Rohm is a very interesting character.. after ww1 he remsined an officer in the army. He was an equipment officer in Bavaria and became known aa "the machine gun king" , controlling army supplies , which he put into secret caches for use by nationalist groups , not just nazis. His wartime service included the Stormtroops , elite fighting men. No surprise the name would be reprised for the SA. most of the SA looked to him as their leader and an alternative to Hitler in 1933.
@michaelcoyne370010 ай бұрын
I have stayed in Bad Weissee twice, never at all realised the history of the place I was there for work.
@mh-piano-lessons9 ай бұрын
Very interesting and compelling format and substance.
@alanmcmeechan5210 ай бұрын
Just realised something interesting with this. I listened to the very first few TRIH episodes when they first came out , and decided they weren't for me, even though I loved Tom Hollands book. I couldn't stand the way they talked over each other. Now watching this, I see they now separate their voice in the podcast, but not in this video. I spent 5 minutes going over the bit at 28:12 when Dominic mentions Tom is a vegetarian, and Tom talks over him, so the next bit makes no sense about why inviting Tom to a wedding would be a bad idea. But if you listen to the podcast, they've split that up so you hear both clearly.
@MythicMindScape21Ай бұрын
Great Channel. I love your material.
@nelsonmacy10102 ай бұрын
Now you guys need to do a 25 parts series on the evils of the British empire and how they sowed the seeds for endless forever wars.
@TeresaE11610 ай бұрын
Please keep doing these on Video! I love the Podcast and I’m a paid subscriber! This is just one more fantastic piece to “The Rest Is History” World!!🥰
@gregschinn69433 ай бұрын
Was the expression “the night of the long knives” first applied to this event or was this moniker applied to earlier events in history?
@psmcguin10 ай бұрын
Got my signed copy of the new rest is history book. 😊
@GorgeDawes8 ай бұрын
How awful. You go for a nice, peaceful Nazi spa break and something like this happens. 1 star on Yelp.
@rtimofei110 ай бұрын
Great to see you both!
@jaycapino57776 ай бұрын
❤love this story of that particular history!!!😊
@amycunnington74616 ай бұрын
Watching so many of the your video podcast, they’re great!! I’ve been trying to work out the entire time if you’re both in the same room or not 🤣
@timmills852110 ай бұрын
Good stuff guys, slightly childish Thatcher / Hitler comparison aside !
@Vicshade10 ай бұрын
This was great. Very enjoyable presentation.
@russellboyd98582 ай бұрын
Just watched the whole custer and crazy horse.learned so much.now onto one of my favorite subjects.watching the last series i think i thought of the similarities of the usa and the natzis as far as ethnic cleansing .once i thought about it about 20 mins later u guys mention the same thing.
@parkercoelho90367 ай бұрын
I wish you guys would number the episodes in the series lol
@maccumhaill553410 ай бұрын
Welcome back lads!
@zeroceiling9 ай бұрын
“Hitler visits Essen..which, at the time is having a wold board game championship..which is nice.”…I literally laughed out loud!…
@JonniePolyester10 ай бұрын
That was great…even though I studied the event some 30 years I didn’t realise Hitler was actually present. I’ve been comparing the characters in the current fascist regime in Russia with their forebears in Nazi Germany Rohm was definitely a Prigozhin…similar sort of role, character & demise!
@Cb48910 ай бұрын
Love this show, as well as all the others
@richardcutt727Ай бұрын
A brilliant combination of stand up comedy and history...😂
@pepleatherlab3872Ай бұрын
It's always the thing about conjured chaos. The people who initiate it (SA), often become the rungs on which tyrants climb...to their own demise. Hubris and the smell of sulfur.
@rontimus9 ай бұрын
I'm still waiting for a much more comprehensive episode on Nietzsche.....
@helmutsecke3529Ай бұрын
Anything on Viktor Lutze then?
@fastpublish8 ай бұрын
Tom sounds like Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseau asking for accommodation in The Pink Panther - A Rohm?
@JeffPreen-br3oi8 ай бұрын
Len Deighton WINTER - compelling reading
@KKTR39 ай бұрын
I miss your tv programs
@nickpage73339 ай бұрын
Just wondering Mr Sandbrook, do you own any books written by anyone else, or are you filming this in a branch of Waterstones?
@garad12345610 ай бұрын
I imagined you fellers a lot younger based on your youthly voices. But it makes sense that one does not obtain such extensive historical knowledge without studying for decades
@RaffieFaffie8 ай бұрын
Funny you say that, in an interview Dom said that someone thought he and tom were younger than imagined.
@dominicmcauley931810 ай бұрын
Are these videos separate from the audio podcasts??
@tomsmith32692 ай бұрын
best history podcast
@fleurs12342 ай бұрын
You know, the story telling is amazing. I hate the Nazis.
@thomaslienert42252 ай бұрын
Bad Godesberg is not in Westfalia, but Rhineland (it's next to Bonn).
@TEMindset837028 ай бұрын
Ironically the members of the SA were drafted into the German Army anyway.
@philodonoghue30627 ай бұрын
See Tik history channel for different historical and I think more broadly researched and thus more acute analysis. However, any channel featuring one of my favourite historians, Mulholland catches and retains my rapt attention.
@eminturksezer94233 ай бұрын
This was very entertaining. Sadly you both for fell the NS fairy tales. In Germany this event is know as Röhm Putsch, which is never was. It was the pragmatic approach of Hitler to remove conservative allies and obviously a clean-up between the paladins in which Himmler, Göring and Goebbels came out on top. By the way the coach company was Finsterlin. The family was still around when I went to school. The Hotel Hanselbauer became the Hotel Lederer am See and was demolished just a few a ago. I remember the old night club. At that time the young people moved to Rottach-Egern to go out and Bad Wiessee was left to the elderly. The love nest of Röhm's inner circle the RIngsee Insel was our hangout in school summers, playing pen and paper all day long.
@longandshort66392 ай бұрын
It always amazes me how so many historians fail to understand that the Nazis were left wing - they were national socialists, not right wing or capitalist at all.
@warheadsnation2 ай бұрын
They were pro-inequality. They supported private property rights for those who "deserved" it in their caste-race pyramid. They pretended that class didn't matter yet made everything about hierarachy and absolute obedience, including to private bosses. It was the workers who weren't supposed to mind their exploitation. The capitalists were allowed to oppress their workers (and later work slaves to death) as long as they expelled Jews from the boards of directors and replaced them with Party hacks. The capitalists embraced Nazism because it threw socialists in concentration camps and guaranteed their own survival with war contracts. So no different than capitalists anywhere else on Earth.
@Walrus93110 ай бұрын
finally new upload
@Johnconno9 ай бұрын
Rohm, what a guy what a dude. Even in stockings and heels 😜.
@francescaderimini29312 ай бұрын
I wish you would go into the street fighting led by Rosa Luxembourg against the Imperialistic German soldiers who barely survived WW1. Rosa asked for exile from Poland. She ended up as a trophy.
@piushalg5041Ай бұрын
I would no forget to mention thy hyper inflation that was imposed on the Germans after the war. One has to acknoledge that war effort was financed to a grade of 70 % by government bonds bought ycitizens. And the state could not cope with this huge debt. So it printed money and in the end the war cost only 70 pennies. Of course this measure impoverished much of the middle class. And the consequences were fatal.
@bkohatlАй бұрын
Sulla had proscriptions, Julius Caesar refused to death, they killed him and taught Octavian what was the only answer which worked.
@salters25 күн бұрын
If only they taught us modern history in the 1970s when I was at secondary school..A lot of the troubles of today are from that lack of history schooling back then..
@dmthandmade56742 ай бұрын
How about you make a video pointing out similarities between what Both of the Moustache men of Europe did and (the Germanstrian one and the Georgian one) and what the Starmbannfuhrer is up to right now.
@philiphorner319 ай бұрын
They didn't have a clue about DNA. Many today don't know what it means either.
@paulharrison903027 күн бұрын
Im glad that you didn't try to do the accent Tom.
@VirtualCockpitChronicles3 күн бұрын
What a great name for a pub.. the spittle and spa
@JamesBarry-j7mАй бұрын
You forgot the hyperinflation that sets in in late 1919 which even keyes didn't think was possible
@CaptainGrimes110 ай бұрын
I wonder if Rohm kept a sensational cellar?
@Vintagevanessa998 ай бұрын
Lessons from history.
@KvltKrist10 ай бұрын
The video format is wang-tastic.
@richardcutt727Ай бұрын
Henry Cotton was winning the Open championship at Royal St. George's the same week in 1934. The future Spitfire fighter took it's first flight that year. Rohm was a homosexual and liked boys.
@charlesjackson79049 ай бұрын
Micah’s daddy was annihilated on the night of the long knives
@bucksolo70310 ай бұрын
Are they at the same place or is Tom at his place and Dom is at his place
@sambcg10 ай бұрын
Stalin apparently admired Hitler after the night of the long knives.
@TheWaveGoodbye-Music10 ай бұрын
... No he didn't, you can literally read Stalin's own memoirs and books (people don't because they assume they already know everything after other people have told them about him) and he laid out in Black and white how he felt about hitler and the "Hitlerites"
@humblescribe852210 ай бұрын
Isn't he supposed to have said something like "now that's how you do it!" I think he saw a ruthlessness which he shared. Perversely he did trust Hitler, hence his refusal to believe Hitler was preparing to invade Russia in 1941, amd the two week depression he sunk into after it happened.
@Imperium839 ай бұрын
@@humblescribe8522 yeah okay, he was literally mobilizing for the largest offensive in European history before Barbarossa was launched against him instead. But please keep propagating the "Poor Uncle Joe" American BS.