"If you couldn't hold onto the borders of your own kingdom, quite likely your neighbour would be happy to look after them for you" - That's a very gentlemanly way of putting it.
@spiritmatter15533 күн бұрын
Just as true these days, too.
@nikki.londonuk68813 күн бұрын
😂
@brandonlecompte92643 күн бұрын
Alot of peope dont seem to understand that anymore
@williamgarner67792 күн бұрын
In these areas the border between Sweden and Norway is marked by piles of stones painted yellow on the top of some high point. Standing on one of these I could see probably 30 miles into Norway and no human was in sight. I told my Swedish wife if she moved the yellow stones to the next hilltop west she could gain territory for Sweden but she didn't think it worth the trouble.
@admwadenx2 күн бұрын
Don't get me started...
@jimnelson97753 күн бұрын
Besides the actual story you narrated, this video is an excellent synopsis of how economics, specialisation of labour (in this case, training of soldiers), and politics, to name just a few issues, are intimately intertwined… to study history is to learn so much more than a few names and dates!
@E3ECO3 күн бұрын
No kidding. I had no idea how the advent of firearms changed everything.
@JudasMaccabeus13 күн бұрын
More than anything, history provides perspective. The more history I learn the greater I appreciate my life and the hardships I’ve eluded by merely being born in the time period I did.
@JustTryingToYoutube3 күн бұрын
@@JudasMaccabeus1this, I tell people now if you want to be more grateful for your life get into history, especially war history
@CptMoroni352 күн бұрын
@@JustTryingToKZbin I totally agree with you on that. Example: there is no way I’d survive to adulthood if I was born at any time during the 30 Years War. That was pure hell on earth.
@paulconlan1802 күн бұрын
Excellent! Thanks for your input!
@VG_1643 күн бұрын
Started watching the video to hear about soldiers dying in a snowstorm. Stayed to hear about Sweden's warfare doctrine in the 18th century.
@KamilDziadkiewicz3 күн бұрын
this should be a t-shirt 🤣
@PaulRudd19413 күн бұрын
Watching SandRhoman like:
@TJ-el5tm3 күн бұрын
Can I introduce you to Sabatons 2012 album: Carolus Rex
@EvMund3 күн бұрын
Can you please not? I'm tired of hearing about sabaton
@TJ-el5tm3 күн бұрын
@@EvMund I’m sorry your taste is so poor, or that you felt the need to respond as if I owe you anything
@Epidombe3 күн бұрын
I still appreciate so much that sean records every single intro instead of copy+paste every episode. It’s such a small thing but it really shows me the amount of care he puts in to every episode.
@minipup13 күн бұрын
I was half expecting some of them to cobble together some scuba gear and try to cave dive their way home.
@stuartgmk3 күн бұрын
😂😅😂
@scottn4872 күн бұрын
lol wrong episode but close!
@almahl4892Күн бұрын
A few of them did but its not wery well known
@YouveBeenMiddled3 күн бұрын
Beginning a campaign into Western Asia before winter seemed extraordinary folly. Marching a forced retreat through the Norwegian mountains in winter is some new kind of frozen hell.
@marhawkman3033 күн бұрын
Yes, VERY frozen. Also sending troops without rations to fight a war... seriously????
@Pottan232 күн бұрын
Charles the XII was many things, cautious wasn't one of them.
@paulconlan1802 күн бұрын
Yes!
@Yui714Күн бұрын
@@Pottan23 A king that was never hungry or cold wouldn't know that people could be lethally hungry or cold. Not so invincible so far outside the comfort of the king's private chambers.
@Pottan23Күн бұрын
@Yui714 tell me you don't know a thing about Charles XII without telling me you know nothing about Charles XII 😂
@norwegianboyee3 күн бұрын
Nice! I suggested this topic because it's not well known internationally. Gonna watch this video with some nice dinner.
@cancunamericanatl71623 күн бұрын
*Breakfast here now... cheers 🍻.* 👨🏾🍳🍳
@spakjoeXD3 күн бұрын
Dinner? It's 10 am mate! I kid
@jasonhoward97703 күн бұрын
Yea 11am here but almost lunch time 😊
@max_headroom_19873 күн бұрын
Thanks I've never heard this story before
@GoreTexTillEndEx3 күн бұрын
I worked in Harstad and Bardufoss during two winter periods. Very beautiful country but brutal winters 🥶.
@DeadboltDame3 күн бұрын
I really like the background music you all play in your videos. It definitely adds to the creepy ambiance of the videos.
@Datch993 күн бұрын
As a Scandinavian I'm ashamed that we don't learn about these sort of historical events in school these days. Thanks for making such a fascinating video.
@bouncepsycho3 күн бұрын
We do [in Sweden]. Just not this in depth. We'd need to expand the school day to fit in more history class if we were to go into stuff like this. As a former school student, that would be about as far as worth as you could get. But this is absolutely mentioned and taught.
@JarthenGreenmeadow3 күн бұрын
Public school is good for literacy and arithmetic. It's useless for art, science and history.
@SandCastle993 күн бұрын
yeah i agree. its quite fascinating
@KRYAPP773 күн бұрын
There's a pretty cool exibition at Teknikland near Östersund about Karolinernas dödsmarsch
@Kalleri133 күн бұрын
We do indeed.
@RefreshingShamrock3 күн бұрын
As an American, you've singlehandedly taught me more gun history than any teacher has in 13 years of primary school and 4 years of college.
@admwadenx2 күн бұрын
Yeah, we don't exactly respect history in the states! It's probably why we're always trying to change it!
@2nicnag22 күн бұрын
My son just wrote two papers on guns for English in high school, I proofread them and learned more that way than anywhere else (the fear associated with AR’s and military upgrade from M4’s-son is a military history buff especially when it comes to the evolution of tanks)
@Yui714Күн бұрын
We can tell you Americans learn nothing about guns don't worry
@shaboom87872 күн бұрын
When the new drafting system was adopted they changed the names for more recognisable names. They could'nt have 36 Karlsson and 25 Svensson and 30 Johansson in a company. Many got names of personal qualities such as: Snygg = Handsome Trotsig = Defiant Stolt = Proud Stark = Strong Trygg = Safe, secure We are many today still carrying that remnant of Swedish history.
@mikkoleinonen9846Күн бұрын
All the Finns who served were given a "soldier's surname", and even today you can still tell if someone has Carolean soldier as their ancestor, by their surname.
@samis65533 күн бұрын
As a Finn I must say that Charles XII is often a hugely glorified king and sometimes I ofcourse feel this way about him too when I look at the early stages of the Great Northern War. But this king wanted everything and refused to accept any peaceterms even when his subjects were suffering all around him. In the end he only seemed to care about his glory. He did fight in the frontlines with the men, I do give him that, but that action was also very irresbonsible for a king. Eventually that bravery caused a huge chaos by him dying either by his fed up soldiers or the Norwegians from the castle walls. What I would like to add to this story is that this was happening at the same time when Finnish area (integral part of the Swedish kingdomn at the time) was under the rule of very harsh Russian forces. We call this time period the Great Wrath. A time when 20 000 - 30 000 (about 10% of the whole Finnish population) Finns were taken as slaves by these invaders -some of them ended up as sexslaves as far away as Persia- and basically the whole country was used as a pillaging ground for 7 years (1714-1721). While it's impossible to say how much did these Finnish soldiers knew about what was happening in their homeland, I do believe that they had some knowledge after so many years. It must have been so painful to literally march the other way from suffering family members in this forlorn hope action because of this king. Glorified men are nice stories for the historybooks and KZbinvideos but usually misery for people living at their time. To me this Carolean Death March is a reminder of how somehow one foolish uncaring stuborn boy can be responsible for thousands of men wasting away.
@norwegianboyee3 күн бұрын
@@samis6553 True that. This campaign in particular truly shows the folly of war. Nobody "won" here. Denmark-Norway did on paper, but most of the civillians and soldiers around Trondheim at this time were starving even before the invasion came and worsened it. Sweden lost its king and depleted its military. And like you said, most of the forces were Finnish and probably wished to be at home rather than campaign in Norway.
@jetblackjoy3 күн бұрын
Such were the times. It's not like French, Spanish, Russian and other kings terribly cared about the fates of common people.
@samis65533 күн бұрын
@@jetblackjoy No disagreement with that for sure! And ofcourse the upperclass were grown up to be a warriorclass and above others from birth so it is what it is (or was).
@solutanbrun3 күн бұрын
As a Swede I agree. He is unjustly glorified for all the reasons you list (and many more). I think we, the Swedes, are woefully unaware of the cruelty we have brought on our neighboring nations and I think that unawareness is embarrassing.
@wallflower37233 күн бұрын
real
@CptMoroni353 күн бұрын
Starts cranking up Sabaton’s “Carolus Rex” album!
@nupnorth3 күн бұрын
In Trondheim, the university's orienteering club organises a particularly tough competition every autumn. There's a tradition that a certain "C.G.Armfeldt" is always on the start list for the men's race, and he's always announced as "Missing/Did Not Finish" at the end 😉🇳🇴
@Trollgernautt3 күн бұрын
Grim, love it.
@Styphon3 күн бұрын
That's cold!
@littlebear2743 күн бұрын
@@Styphon Well they are quite near the Arctic..... lol
@Skeppsvrak3 күн бұрын
As an ancestor to Armfeldt I should be offended, but I can't help finding that funny.
@Styphon3 күн бұрын
@Skeppsvrak I think he's be pretty chill with it
@goldenstilettos31663 күн бұрын
Amazing, glad to see this incident described in detail, you do manage to find stuff that is mostly overlooked but does actually make for a fascinating story
@pimkas3 күн бұрын
As a scandi, I could guess from the thumbnail what todays story was about. The march of the Karolian is a sad part of our history.
@rogerhoglunda3 күн бұрын
I live in the area. For a long time after the march, men with sawn of foots and legs ware trying to make their way home.
@kristofferhellstrom3 күн бұрын
Grim.
@debrickashaw93872 күн бұрын
How old are you???
@kristofferhellstrom2 күн бұрын
@@debrickashaw9387 This has been told for generations in the area. Obviously he's not from 1719.
@WideAwakeHuman2 күн бұрын
@@debrickashaw9387 347yrs old
@AniMeLoVeR234512 күн бұрын
Can't be sure of anything these days @@kristofferhellstrom
@boiledegginterested3 күн бұрын
Sunday got a little better :)
@justinbennett99983 күн бұрын
Not for those guys!!!
@djentspace60303 күн бұрын
Please continue a steady stream of videos that are in the time frame of 1600s to early 1900s i find the time and the stories fascinating!
@WideAwakeHuman2 күн бұрын
Haha same here… if I could only watch movies, read books and watch videos about one period of history for forever it would be 1600-1900 - I have no idea why
@Sonicsyndicat2 күн бұрын
It's very interesting to hear about this. I've been living in Sweden most of my life, and not once did i hear about this in school growing up. I know we had a very good army way back, but never did i expect something like this happend. And that the King died during that war. Thank you for the video and enlightening me about my country!
@PumaTomtenКүн бұрын
Vi fick lära oss om detta i mellanstadiet i början på 2000-talet, det skiljer sig evt från kommun/lärare vad som lärs ut
@bubblyproduction98093 күн бұрын
Best timing, love your uploads Scary Interesting
@Datch993 күн бұрын
*Instantly Sabaton Music Starts Playing*
@tacobanana64913 күн бұрын
Fränder! Bröder! Vår Stormaktstid är Över!!
@MrDaros893 күн бұрын
@@tacobanana6491 Vort rige bløder, fanen står i brand!
@lautarogomez97113 күн бұрын
@@tacobanana6491 Vårt rike blöder, fanan står i brand Aldrig, aldrig, aldrig återvända Svea stormaktstid till ända!
@furioussherman72653 күн бұрын
r/expectedsabaton
@OmarJayryan3 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@ScaryInteresting3 күн бұрын
Thanks so much for supporting the channel!
@Damarious253 күн бұрын
I didn't expect the channel to go in this direction. I like it!
@oddeh3 күн бұрын
In Norway it is called "Karolinernes dødsmarsj" and translates to "The Carolean Death March".
@Azraelleah3 күн бұрын
This channel is so authentic, I love it ❤
@Berylliyum3 күн бұрын
My girlfriend hates that I talk so much about Scary Interesting and recommend it to EVERYONE of my friends or anyone I meet. Literally my favorite channel on KZbin and have watched every single video, some of them multiples. Also, she hates that I don't switch back to my account when I comment :)
@afraidcone3 күн бұрын
Lol same 😅 And just FYI, everyone itself is a group: "... recommend to everyone." / "... recommend to every one of my friends or anyone I meet".
@ToucanSonofSam3333 күн бұрын
Leave her
@K2ELP3 күн бұрын
Bruh @@ToucanSonofSam333
@fonziebulldog57863 күн бұрын
!?
@MazeMaker4Life3 күн бұрын
Lol ok
@yuli_yuli15 сағат бұрын
I absolutely love how you did a deep dive into the mechanical history of European warfare before you got into the story proper. This kind of attention to detail and context is why I find you to be such a compelling storyteller. You're wonderful
@DarthMercanto3 күн бұрын
I’m kind of surprised at how effectively you explained the emergence of the Nation State in the 18th century lol
@mikaross46713 күн бұрын
I'm about to head out for brunch. Your videos are the best to wake up to. RIP to those poor souls.
@philtkaswahl21243 күн бұрын
"'Conquer Norway,' they said. 'It'll be fun,' they said!"
@stuartgmk3 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
@lunaequinox73332 күн бұрын
Mother Nature: No ❤
@Yui714Күн бұрын
They should've considered not trying to conquer Norway instead
@foo2193 күн бұрын
Marching across the mountains in winter without winter clothes. Truly, Karl XII was a special kind of military genius. :P
@tamaskosa44563 күн бұрын
The campaign was planned to end long before winter though.
@foo2193 күн бұрын
@tamaskosa4456 Yes, but you still plan for contingencies. This wasn't even the first time he fucked up in this exact way so apparently he wasn't capable of learning from mistakes either. Why far right nationalists worship this guy is beyond me.
@Pottan232 күн бұрын
He was dead by this point though
@The_Judge3002 күн бұрын
@@tamaskosa4456 True, but at the same time was the campaign started way to late in the year as the difficulties involved in it were totally underestimated. It reminds me of Putin thinking he would take Ukraine with in a few days and a few weeks at most. Starting a campaign against Norway where they needed to march on foot in the autumn and into the winter was pure insanity. They were lucky with the weather at the beginning as the winter came later than usual and their losses would have much higher if the winter had come at a normal time of the year for that area.
@lisaperry59993 күн бұрын
When in high school 40 yrs ago then college I didnt much care about history. My late husband watched The History channel and other shows. And I started watching when older. So I watch and read about history of world and country. I regret not caring and just wanting the diploma.
@Scenejellybean3 күн бұрын
You could be talking about a puppy rolling around in a paper bag and I’d listen. You make your stories so interesting and engaging :)
@jaxontaylor96703 күн бұрын
Just finished a new MrBallen episode to find out this just got uploaded. What a lovely Sunday.
@jameslovallo96033 күн бұрын
Going over to mrballen after this. This popped up first
@sweetmissypetuniawilson92063 күн бұрын
No way?! A new story yesterday AND a new one today? I don't believe you!
@sweetmissypetuniawilson92063 күн бұрын
Nope! Just checked! New Mr Ballen was yesterday, 22 hours ago. You're late to this ballen game! Get it?!
@jus10lewissr3 күн бұрын
They both used to upload on Sundays, which obviously made Sundays pretty great, but I've noticed MrBallen has been uploading on Saturdays here lately, which means I don't have to open up KZbin on Sunday afternoons and choose between which one I want to watch first anymore. I've also seen this channel uploading randomly at times during the week lately, too, so it's been nice getting multiple Scary Interesting videos per week.
@Dalpilarna3 күн бұрын
As a Swedish person I cant take MrBallen's name serious.
@HalfLifeGord3 күн бұрын
I love your historical stories. Thank you!
@leannaerickson97453 күн бұрын
You've done a great job of revealing a part of European history not taught in U.S. schools. The visuals behind the story are fascinating. Obviously, some of the pictures are created or enhanced for this episode. In the case of historic art and drawings, it would be nice to know who the creators are.
@SBG4203 күн бұрын
Been home sick binging the videos ive missed, glad theres 1 more :)
@devenbs19933 күн бұрын
One of your best yet 👌
@kwamehenry48673 күн бұрын
Just ripped the bong and new scary interesting drops
@npickle543 күн бұрын
Same but I just hit the rock pipe
@jasonhoward97703 күн бұрын
O dam 👆😵
@xlt03 күн бұрын
@@npickle54 bro what
@giggiddy3 күн бұрын
Some real class acts here. Waste of dna
@BigWrig3053 күн бұрын
@npickle54 lol. not the same...
@vinnielalumia3 күн бұрын
It’s crazy that humans do this to themselves. Like why not just stay at home and chill out?
@runlarryrun773 күн бұрын
Because nobility get grumpy at each other & use normal people to sort out their grievances instead of getting in the ring & fighting it out amongst themselves.
@willywonka78123 күн бұрын
Because of the profit motive.
@anb99993 күн бұрын
Because we are always seen as slaves (serfs, chattel or wageslaves)
@raytracer57263 күн бұрын
Because the world is a constant struggle for survival. You are either at the dining table or on it.
@michaelpettersson49193 күн бұрын
When surrounded by enemies this was an attempt to knock out one threat to avoid a twi front war. This was mentioned in the video.
@jamie67043 күн бұрын
I always look forward to your uploads.
@ludwigderzanker97673 күн бұрын
So far the friendly scandinavians...Ever the same old story, a guy behind a desk made a nice plan and thousands died...Thanks for the rare info about this disaster! Ludwig
@manecroft98352 күн бұрын
When I saw the title I thought this was about the Antuco Tragedy, this might be a topic you want to check, is way more contemporary, but definitely something worthy of this channel.
@SpicyWhiteBread232 күн бұрын
Sweden went from most aggressive military force to Neutral war policy ever. You did an amazing job with the details as always. Thank you for your hard work on this historical moments.
@James-r8s3 күн бұрын
Never miss this,one, of the best channel going today.
@luis33-n5k3 күн бұрын
This the #1 channel I look for new videos on. Just wanted to share 😁 Thanks 👍
@nancyjones67803 күн бұрын
I would like everyone to imagine our population of 18-35 year olds being put into a situation like this! The strength of character in these men in this terrible scenario is remarkable! I like the historical videos ❤
@AlfredCerwensky2 күн бұрын
I'm afraid 9 out of 10 wouldn't make it😮...
@jamessaibot56812 күн бұрын
Why imagine. You can watch this sort of thing in real time. There are plenty such things happening in Ukraine to 18-50 year olds. It's all on x and tiktok
@lazgungippyКүн бұрын
you realize they didn't have a choice right? They were given orders and if they weren't followed they were executed for insubordination. Same with nearly every fighting force in history.
@edwardlee14973 күн бұрын
Cover the Bataan Death March next
@fid_hivemindscape2 күн бұрын
"a grim, stop motion retelling of their journey" 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 Sean your storytelling and voicing is so impressive
@moomyung92313 күн бұрын
I had Swedish ancestors in the military then. I think I'll get too weird about this.
@PoochieCollins3 күн бұрын
Your profile pic fits the comment well.
@alexfoote13103 күн бұрын
I love your unbiased factual take on history bro too many channels get into their bias and it ruins the educational part keep it up 💪
@solderingironofjusti3 күн бұрын
In high school this kind of history lesson (from a textbook) would have bored me to death. Now i seek it out, and the presentation format holds my attention and interest, even with worst case of adhd 😎👍🏼
@philsteele71513 күн бұрын
Just outside of Trondheim is a village called Hell, it sits at the end of a valley leading past the Hegra fortress which guards a pass to Sweden that held off the Germans in WW2, Hell means cliff or overhang in Norweigen.
@projectalice81193 күн бұрын
So I always listen to Scary Interesting when I’m in bed to help me wind down. I link my phone to an Echo dot speaker that sits on the nightstand beside my bed for better sound quality. Last night I was on the verge of dozing off when I heard this strange noise that sounded like a bird fluttering its wings near my head!! It startled me so much that I sat up and started looking around for the bird!! Naturally there wasn’t one so I lay back down and went back to listening to the story. A few minutes later just as I’m nodding off again, I heard the same noise again! This time I get out of bed and I’m looking around my bedroom thinking “what the hell?!” I finally figured out it was a sound effect from the video and started laughing hysterically. God only knows what my neighbors thought if they heard me last night! 😂🤣
@jeremywhite57623 күн бұрын
Good morning or good day to everyone hope all is well fantastic work as always Sean i really appreciate your time work dedication put into your content it definitely shows thanks once again man
@EyesOfByes3 күн бұрын
0:10 Really? Cant remember that from school. I just remeber Axel Oxenstierna, Gustav Vasa, Johan III, Erik IV, and Kalle Dussin (Carl XII).... Oh NOW I remember that history class in highschool
@sleepysombre43073 күн бұрын
no one fvckin cares
@stomper28883 күн бұрын
?
@johntheidiot90463 күн бұрын
Budet kom på en kall vinternatt "Carolus finns ej mer"
@shadowfalls86Күн бұрын
Hell yeah, Carolus Rex by Sabaton 🤘🎸
@voidworshipКүн бұрын
This is really well produced; what a wealth of historical military and economic information in such a small package!
@machinedude93865 сағат бұрын
I like how you give context for the adoption of firearms instead of ridiculing the medieval people for being so seemingly backwards
@janey70063 күн бұрын
This was a great one! Thank you for the history lesson!
SUGGESTION: The 1902 Japanese Mount Hakkōda disaster. Tragic and a compelling story of survival. (Love your videos!)
@ellieraan2723 күн бұрын
He's done a video on this! Search his channel for 'The WORST Mountain Disaster In History | Hakkoda Mountains Disaster'
@Exanier3 күн бұрын
He already has a video about the topic
@mogyesz93 күн бұрын
I think they already did a video on that.
@jus10lewissr3 күн бұрын
Anytime you want to suggest a story idea to Scary Interesting, email your request to Sean and he or his team will actually read it and answer back, because you just never really know if they're gonna see your comment. But, like the other folks are saying, I think he's covered that one already.
@user-zg7ps9vf5o3 күн бұрын
I was thinking of the Bataan Death March. But this is equally as interesting.
@user-ur3gr2qs6i3 күн бұрын
Thanks for covering the Swedish Empire. The Karoleans were one of the first professional militaries. It wasn't communities it was farmsteads that had one professional warrior and they were forbidden to do farm work. They were to do nothing but practice shooting, swordsmanship, and horse riding. The size of the farm determined if you were Calvary or infantry based on the ability to care for several horses or not. The farm avoided paying taxes this way. They spent a month traveling learning regiment formations and battle drills as they got to know their battle buddies in their units made up of men from surrounding communities. Most nations used massive armies of conscripts that didn't see a rifle until they got a crash course before battle. The Swedes were so effective that they routinely defeated armies several times their size. Their tactics and the fact that everyone had a sword instead of a bayonet greatly helped them fight as a single organism. They even carried 20mm muskets which is the smallest calibre cannon that you find on a helicopter gunship today. Huge! They could literally shoot through the entire ranks of enemy lines before charging their cavalry into the breach to divide the entire enemy army in two. They also were ordered to shoot an enemy in the back if he ran and to engage with swords if they stayed to fight. This kept the formation tight and kept the cavalry from chasing people in different directions and getting cut off from each other. They are my favorite military force to do research on. But you forgot the part about the Swedes defeating all of these nations on her own and chasing the Russians all over Russia as Peter "the great" begged for peace. But The Young Lion of the North, went too far into Russia and had to retreat when Sweden was being attacked back home again. His return was this battle and his final campaign. My father was very proud that Sweden itself was never conquered. Just lost all her war territory gains.
@luxborealis2 күн бұрын
"They defeated all these nations on their own before they defeated them" isn’t the dunk you think it is. The situation in reality was Charles XII was an excellent field commander but a terrible politician and diplomat. He should have made a quick peace with the Russians once he knocked the Danes and Saxons out of the war, but he didn’t. He shouldn’t have committed war crimes in Poland that would guarantee them rejoining the war, but he did. And perhaps more fatally, he should have concentrated on fighting Denmark while fighting Denmark-Norway, as had worked in 1700, rather than repeatedly try to conquer Norway with the terrible conditions there. And most important of all, he should have tried to avoid getting sucked into the wars in the first place. Ceding Peter the Great the city he wanted at the start of the conflict would have saved the rest of the Empire and allowed him to beat his other foes. The man may be praised for his skill as a strategist, but his pride and stubborness was an incredible disaster for Sweden and Finland. Tens of thousands of people dead, starving, sick and enslaved for the sake of his ego.
@nore59922 күн бұрын
I think you were blinded by vain glory of war and pride, same as Charles XII. In reality Charles XII is a warmonger. Do you think all of Caroleans war is just with Russia?. What about Denmarl, Norway, Prussian, Saxony?. What about the sack of Poles nobility done by Charles that indirectly created yeare of Anarchy in Poles, why does he prolonged the war and left Finland on its own?, where was he when Sweden were in chaos after his defeat at Poltava?, i dunno maybe sucking Ottoman Sultan some relief for war, while his entire navy were destroyed and Finland ravage. And when the only time he got back to Sweden, not in a year he immedietly goes to war and got himself killed and his entire army froze to death. He is such a great King that he lead his nation into a glorious irrelevancy for next centuries.
@Metusalem9792 күн бұрын
Great. I live in Trondheim and have a cabin on The swedish border. This is lore
@JudasMaccabeus13 күн бұрын
This weather isn’t half as bad as what my grandparents from Florida had to deal with walking to school everyday.
@stuartgmk3 күн бұрын
😂😅😂. And uphill both ways.
@JudasMaccabeus12 күн бұрын
@@stuartgmk with one shoe and no socks
@witheringhook66gg129 сағат бұрын
Please do a video on the K2 2008 Disaster!!!!!!
@Koreviking16 сағат бұрын
I live in Trondheim. People are still finding equipment and bones from the Caroleans in the mountains between here and Sweden.
@vickigrove85492 күн бұрын
History books so often only give statistics; I appreciate how you humanize the loss of lives and treat those statistics as the individual people they were.
@peaceseeker523 күн бұрын
Army vs Winter not often does the Army win. I have a lone Dane in my Norwegian lineage who was noted to be a Soldier in a 1700's Danish Norwegian War. Afterward he came back to marry the woman he loved and they stayed in Norway.
@BrianMerkey3 күн бұрын
Love your videos! They get me thru rough times. I've lost my wife + kids + dogs + way of life, but when Shawn uploads a new video none of that matters 😇 Thank you
@spiritmatter15533 күн бұрын
Very sorry for your losses, man.
@giggiddy3 күн бұрын
@@BrianMerkey Dogs and kids are smart and loyal. They'll be back..
@p-y82103 күн бұрын
Sorry for your loss man.
@psychonauty20203 күн бұрын
@@giggiddy gosh unless they have passed away😢😢
@theScotian243 күн бұрын
@@psychonauty2020that is whats bein suggested. She left him and took everything.
@trmoody363 күн бұрын
Fantastic Videos.Every single one is fantastic.im a huge fan.keep up the great content
@MomentsInTrading3 күн бұрын
Something that is important to understand is that a soldier only got 1 shot and then had to reload, which took 20-30 seconds. Therefore, if another army is running at you, you only had 1 or maybe 2 shots from the time they got within musket range, until they got close enough for bayonets.
@verilyheld2 күн бұрын
Aye. The Battle of Fontenoy, France versus England. The French said to the English- Men of England, fire first! A gallant, noble action, inviting the enemy to take the first shot, from a distance far enough away that hitting your men is a long-shot. Then, while the enemy reloads their muskets, charge, get closer, ensure your first volley causes great harm to the enemy! Yes, the French won that battle!
@The_Judge3002 күн бұрын
This campaign was pure insanity from day 1. One thing if they had started it in May with extremely much better weather conditions and chances to get food easier, but to start it when they did with Norwegian autumn and winter weather and famine in the areas with huge problems to find enough food for the soldiers, was pure insanity. If the winter had come at a normal time of the year, this campaign would have been doomed even before it started with zero chances of success, even if there had been no famine in the area. By some "luck" they had MUCH better autumn and winter conditions than what was normal in the area, but because of famine, bad planning and good Norwegian resistance were they not able to achieve their objectives and when they decided to march home, the Norwegian winter finally decided to punish them for their fool's errand. All these soldiers, support people and animals died and suffered because of a king that only cared about himself and his glory. In many ways does he remind me of Putin that have huge ambitions for himself and give insane orders to his generals without knowing and understanding the realities. Sending lots of men to die on a fool's errand.
@petenztube85923 күн бұрын
Well this was something a bit different! Thanks!
@RaccoonsLeek2 күн бұрын
8:02 There was a large painting depicting the kings march hanging on one of the walls in the entrance of the school I used to go to. Without doxxing the school (which I may be doing now anyway) it got its name from the Carolines as a tribute after they passed through on that specific march.
@dramares3 күн бұрын
SI's art/production is still supreme.
@paulconlan1802 күн бұрын
It is always appropriate to remember these brave souls and all the other soldiers who did their duty even if it cost them their lives! Valhalla
@kynyaralewis82263 күн бұрын
Dope story, really felt like I was there had to grab a jacket🥶
@johndohe9902 күн бұрын
I live close to the place this death marsch started from and have visited the memorial of Amfelths Karoliner in the border mountins betwen Sweden and Norway a few times. In my military service we did the marsch, called ”Bergsartilleri marschen” (Mountin artillery marsch).
@sarahlevine7763 күн бұрын
This isn't the only time an army marched into snowy mountainous terrain and lost many of their solders to a blizzard. There was a similar incident in Japan, though that one was meant as a training exercise.
@jus10lewissr3 күн бұрын
Even though you obviously already know the story, he covered that one on this channel and I still totally recommend watching his rendition. I know I watched it in the last year sometime, but I don't know if it was a new upload or just an old one that I'd never seen until then.
@axl11783 күн бұрын
Ah, yes. The Hakkoda mts hike.
@StudioJake3 күн бұрын
This is an excellent video!
@freja93983 күн бұрын
Yay, en till svensk Scary Interesting-video! ☺
@buffoonustroglodytus46883 күн бұрын
Yeah it’s fackin cold up there
@ipeaceful63 күн бұрын
always a good day when scary interesting uploads 🙏
@steamtruck696120 сағат бұрын
I live in Trondheim and it was fortified against an attack like this. We learned about this invasion in school. Every time our fortress is under restoration I like to joke that the Swedes are coming :)
@tessawells7734Күн бұрын
Excellent history lesson. Thank you!
@gtech75772 күн бұрын
18 yr war is crazy. its sad how humanity love to go to war with your neighbours and even much more sadder is very little has changed since then,
@Arrowfodder3 күн бұрын
Interesting video! I have atleast two ancestors who fought in the Great Northern War, one of whom died in battle and one who was with the king in Norway.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis97143 күн бұрын
The carolians where not nearly close to the first shock troops in the world, those where as old as time, they where however the first footmen in Europe to retrain in the use of mele weapons and engage the enemy with steel in hand centuries after most armies had abandoned mele weapons (and completely abandoned armor) for guns and no longer trained their troops to fight in mele. An unarmored concript only trained to stand in line and shoot his musket wont survive a second in mele combat to a trained swordsman charge.
@TornadoElle_2 күн бұрын
Gosh you make history so interesting 😂 i wish it was like this in school
@Skräckensvärld6618 сағат бұрын
Great video!!!
@nullset113 күн бұрын
The real Scary Interesting thing in this video are the kids' faces in the painting at the 3:10 mark 😱
@jus10lewissr3 күн бұрын
That was literally the first thing I noticed in that painting! The boy in the bottom right and the girl in the bottom center. They look more like full-grown adult dwarves than they do children. 😳
@jus10lewissr3 күн бұрын
And yeah, the faces are right on the verge of being nightmare-inducing.
@NummyScrum3 күн бұрын
I can't even write my name legibly but seeing old time paintings really blows mind how macabre and dark they can be
@TrustyEngineer2 күн бұрын
'Ruina Imperii' by Sabaton describes that story... but it is only in Swedish... 😏
@raywhitehead7302 күн бұрын
Death marches: the 50,000 strong Babylonian army of Cambysis into Egypt 524 BC. Lost without a trace. In 1915 the Ottoman army had 25,000 deaths marching through the mountains due to a sudden winter storm.
@luxborealis2 күн бұрын
One interesting effect of this disastrous campaign is that it made the Swedish army more or less permanently hesitant about campaigning in the Norwegian mountains, fearing they would be swallowed up like Armfeldt’s force. While a handful more minor wars happened between Sweden and Denmark-Norway after this, it was mostly Denmark-Norway striking into Sweden interspersed with a few Swedish border raids. Only almost a century later, in 1814, did Sweden try a large scale invasion again, after the Norwegians revolted against Denmark in response to their imminent handover to Sweden as part of the peace treaty after Napoleon’s fall (Denmark-Norway had been a French ally). Even then they stuck to the milder south coast, and after it took over a month of skirmishes through the forests to approach the Norwegian capital, the Swedish commander and future king, General Bernadotte, realized the campaign would last into the winter if they had to march into the mountains, and agreed to a compromise peace with the Norwegians where the countries would share a monarch but have separate governments and militaries. A century after that again, when the Union collapsed in 1905, the Norwegians had constructed a series of heavy border fortifications throughout the southeast, to force the Swedes to attack through the mountains, and once again the Swedes wavered, maintaining the union not being worth the risk of another incredibly dangerous mountain campaign. In this way, the military trauma of Armfeldt’s Disaster helped shape the division of Scandinavia into three independent countries we still have today 300 years after the march.
@jebediahbingham2613 күн бұрын
Here we go again, always somewhat sad but entertaining
@lilmsmischief693 күн бұрын
Dang, I’m kind of early but for real what amazing scary interesting fates do we have today??