Why didn't Africa Colonise Europe?

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LonerBox

LonerBox

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 4 700
@lonerbox
@lonerbox 4 жыл бұрын
Hello there, It's only been a couple of hours and I'm already overwhelemed by your very big-brain contributions (and criticisms!) in the comment section. I'm aware that condensing over 12,000 years of history into a 25 minute video inevitably means missing out or simplifying a few things, especially when you're answering an essentially racist question which ignores the fact that Europe had been colonised by Africans several times in history - the 8th century conquest of Iberia by the North African Moors to name just one. I very briefly mentioned the existence of agriculture in Zimbabwe but didn't go any further with it as I felt it was a little separate from the main argument which was to show the value of environmental factors over cultural and genetic explanations. I've often noticed that the example of European colonialism is a very good foot-in-the-door argument for people who struggle with the concept of sociological explantions for social patterns. Consequently I might have downplayed the development of pre-colonial empires in Africa (of which there were quite a few). For anyone who is interested in digging into the myth around Africa as a 'savage' continent, here is a brilliant video by satenmadpun that came out a few months ago: kzbin.info/www/bejne/mXa8qGirqdiEqZY In any case, I never thought I'd learn so much from reading a comment section so I appreciate any additional points or corrections anyone has to offer. Thanks for stopping by!
@CaptIronfoundersson
@CaptIronfoundersson 4 жыл бұрын
The internet is full of assholes with nothing positive to contribute to the world. Ignore them and keep doing what you're doing. It's needed.
@simomimo-t4u
@simomimo-t4u 4 жыл бұрын
A good fix would be changing the title to say Sub-Saharan Africa. I really love your videos, but as a Moroccan, it was jarring seeing the title and then watching the first few minutes where you asserted that no African civilization had colonized Europe.
@goldenknight.1959
@goldenknight.1959 4 жыл бұрын
Why is the British empire, from an island of swamps, bad soils and weather managed to conquer the globe? One overarching answer. Markets, Property rights and rule of law that were unmet in most of the world for some time. If your African tribal chief said to distribute your cattle to his sons and himself your incentive to grow cattle is pretty f£cking low honestly. But also entire civilisations prospects and success could be based on how close they were to the silk road which the British weren't to close to! But in all seriousness it's all about the incentives that propel the malnourished man out if his hole and build a farm, start a family and try out breeding horses to make stronger mules and shit. Some civilisations were just unlucky that they got stuck to tribalistic or feudal systems that turned them into repetitively thinking bees and ants while others were copying homework from other nations. It's not tied to race, as you mentioned one book that proposed China had a much more freer, market economy than most of Europe who were trying out Feudalism and were doing quite well off. Just maybe one point that you didn't point out to or mention which would make your video more educational if you're into something like that. Overall a good video and I wish you a good day/night depending on your location. Bye.
@kevingonzalez9191
@kevingonzalez9191 4 жыл бұрын
@LonerBox Found your video as better than the alternative who racial hypothesis,but I am sorry to say man it fails in answering the question part due to the hypothesis itself,that being the environment being the key role in the divergence and also you fail to understand Africa’s technological and societal history not just in the north but in the Sub Saharan region. I first and foremost recommend this video : kzbin.info/www/bejne/aIC0nqmIismlabc But to summarize why this video has problems. 1.It sees sub Saharan Africa as a bunch of small tribal societies with no major civilization,you spend like 4 points and only by the 5th do you mention that Sub Saharan Africa(I will just refer to it as Africa) actually had at least Agriculture.In actuality Africa had a bunch of different societies with complex religious hierchies,from the Mali,to the Chadian Empires,the various empires of The Horn of Africa and my favorite the Empire of Benin.The fact is that Africa had discovered writing,skipped the Bronze Age to go to Iron dirrectly,buit massive and complex civilizations and structures,etc.For example the Portuguese wrote of Benin that it was a planned city with light streets,unheard in Europe in 1500’s,no crime,paved roads,etc.And today Benin’s walls stand as one of the longest recorded in history.You should have really just focused the video on the great divergence,and not on how societies emerge as it feels weird doing this whole lecture when Sub Saharan Africa went through all these in various regions.The only thing it did not of course was Industrialization. 2.Is environmental determinism,the idea that the environment determines human progress and is almost the sole desider in human development.There is huge problems with this whole theory,in the video you even use the pseudo geographical example used in Gun Germs and Steel of the whole continental axis theory.In reality Africa’s Northern and Southern and Western and Eastern Axis are not so disimilar from those of Eurasia,only being off by a few kilometers.And this is not enough to say that this is what lead Europe to become the dominant world power 5000 years after.Also you mentioned the Mediterranean Sea being the key of why civilization developed in the Fertile Cresent,when in actuality the local fauna and rivers and people living there had a lot more to do with that.After all why only 4 major civilizations developed closed to the region broadly speaking(Only one of them was really one central civilization,that being Egypt)?Only Egypt,Mycenae Greece and Crete, Anatolian civilizations and those of Sumeria.But at the same and close to similar times the Indus River Valley developed,China and even South America had a major civilization (Norte Chico). None of these were anywhere close to the Mediterranean,and Sumeria the cradle was not as close as Phoenicia,so why was Phonesia so backwards in comparison despite being closer to the Mediterranean. 3.You were actually so close to finding why,you said it at first,time,over time things change and new oppurtunities and technologies are discovered and passed on.In the case of Europe the great divergence was down to colonialization of the America’s.At the time they arrived the people there were not inmune to the diseases and many of the ruling empires were long gone and replace by newer and less stable ones, one of them the Inca were even in a civil war by the time of European arrival.The easy conquest and exploitation of the region developed the engines of the capitalist European economy.It is no coincidence that Europe never colonized Africa and Asia until many years after they colonized the Americas,200 years in fact.
@kevingonzalez9191
@kevingonzalez9191 4 жыл бұрын
@Capitalist Crusader.1 Doubt,Britain was a feudal country for most of its early colonial history,and it dint conquer the globe by making good tea cups,it did so again via colonialism.They were able to conquer easy territory in North America and beat France to its land claims and later use this land in North America to expand to India and later Asia and Africa and discover Australia and also easily exploit that.And Britain had again a feudal and half slave economy for much of this early period and when they became more capitalist by the 1700’s they had a very protectionist economy. www.jstor.org/stable/2123049
@TheJayman213
@TheJayman213 4 жыл бұрын
'Cause we are living in a material world and I am a material girl. -Karl Marx
@oghenerukevwekofi7976
@oghenerukevwekofi7976 4 жыл бұрын
I first heard this line from NPCs in the Witcher 3
@Black_pearl_adrift
@Black_pearl_adrift 4 жыл бұрын
@@oghenerukevwekofi7976 I first heard it from Stranger Things Season 3 it was.... weird
@happystardelta8876
@happystardelta8876 4 жыл бұрын
Karl Marxonna
@karlboy21
@karlboy21 4 жыл бұрын
u a chillax man, Vogue
@MrOcote-gp9fu
@MrOcote-gp9fu 4 жыл бұрын
@u a name them.
@lucilferadonis5481
@lucilferadonis5481 4 жыл бұрын
Me in history class: *audible snoring* Me watching YT video about history: 👁 👄 👁
@felixn.burgos2340
@felixn.burgos2340 4 жыл бұрын
Honestly
@KDog410
@KDog410 4 жыл бұрын
imagine if we learned history like this when we were kids
@Impericalevidence
@Impericalevidence 4 жыл бұрын
An education is something you give yourself after you get out of school.
@agbaya5314
@agbaya5314 4 жыл бұрын
👁 👃. 👁 👄
@Impericalevidence
@Impericalevidence 4 жыл бұрын
@Tyrelle Humphreys that's the point of the quote Tyrelle. School is just about information and conditioning humans into becoming workers. The quote is Mark Twain, btw.
@aquashkhar7351
@aquashkhar7351 4 жыл бұрын
Has anyone ever noticed how whenever people speak of the British navy they show paintings of Dutch ships?
@MK_ULTRA420
@MK_ULTRA420 4 жыл бұрын
Probably because the British Ship of the Line was based on the Dutch Man-of-war so the ships look similar in paintings.
@MovieRiotHD
@MovieRiotHD 4 жыл бұрын
Because we destroyed their fleet and stole the Royale Charles.
@paulhennessey3454
@paulhennessey3454 4 жыл бұрын
Whats the difference? (Sincere question)
@Decordelights__
@Decordelights__ 4 жыл бұрын
Well the dutch were great too
@aveuch
@aveuch 4 жыл бұрын
Weren't those the Danes?
@kingmarc544
@kingmarc544 4 жыл бұрын
Ngl i didn’t expect the comment to be as non-racist as they are. maybe there is hope for the world. Thanks for not being idiots you guys.
@aceclop
@aceclop 4 жыл бұрын
Lowkey I came here looking for racist comments and on one hand I'm disappointed but on the other I'm pleased
@beetzgaming5836
@beetzgaming5836 4 жыл бұрын
Not to be racist, but Asian people BWAAAH.
@Nick-en8su
@Nick-en8su 4 жыл бұрын
@@beetzgaming5836 Ummm
@tieolden9424
@tieolden9424 4 жыл бұрын
BEETZGAMING 😐
@moona3206
@moona3206 4 жыл бұрын
@@beetzgaming5836 I suspect it to .be a joke but it sucks 🤢
@jonathanreyes5254
@jonathanreyes5254 4 жыл бұрын
Also brain size is not indicative of Intelligence, anyone with an ounce of time to spend three seconds looking it up is that neuron density is what matters
@gangbangmidnight841
@gangbangmidnight841 4 жыл бұрын
Neanderthals had bigger brains but uhh they’re dead.
@MoricsR.BrivMurnieks
@MoricsR.BrivMurnieks 4 жыл бұрын
Body and Brain Mass ratios matter tho
@Purpleturtlehurtler
@Purpleturtlehurtler 4 жыл бұрын
Somebody tried to convince me that dogs are smarter than cats because of bigger brains. Cats have 4× the neuron density.
@no-body-22
@no-body-22 4 жыл бұрын
Bigger brains allow more room for neurons.
@FilipCordas
@FilipCordas 4 жыл бұрын
Brain size is highly correlated to intelligence a similar Google search will show you numerous studies that that show this.
@snapsnocaps9630
@snapsnocaps9630 4 жыл бұрын
If you consider the fact that humans originated in ethiopia, africa did colonize europe
@kaassaus4230
@kaassaus4230 4 жыл бұрын
That means europeans just want its land back
@SSFYHHH
@SSFYHHH 4 жыл бұрын
@@kaassaus4230 😂
@NakayaAvarlina
@NakayaAvarlina 4 жыл бұрын
It's funny how Ethiopia wasn't colonized up until before WW2 by Italy
@guapothakidd5114
@guapothakidd5114 4 жыл бұрын
Nakaya they weren’t colonized, they were occupied. The Italians invaded and fought for like 6 years but never got past the northern part of the country
@krazywu
@krazywu 4 жыл бұрын
@@NakayaAvarlina they had my country eritrea colonized but not ethiopia
@justinc.5591
@justinc.5591 4 жыл бұрын
So in other words: “It’s the geography, stupid.”
@NicitoStaAna
@NicitoStaAna 4 жыл бұрын
But does geography affects culture? Ie Britain didn't start having a castle level civilization than rome. They were "barbarians" until rome forced the separated tribes into one. So they borrowed the culture from rome then improved on it. But why didn't they started it? I guess different geography have different incentives/priorities for the people that live in it. Ie Mediterranean-like geography is good for rising civilization While Britain is better for trades? (But harder on creating from scratch?) Edit: Philippines for example have the muslim dominated culture in the south Lots of islands/water Got some crops (and rice terraces) Got the trade routes with Japan/China/India Still. I don't see preservation/cultural influences as famous as say the ming dynasty or whatnot From my understanding. Pre-colonial Philippines have communal focused towns. Not individualistic (nuclear) family but communal which greatly reduces the growth rate since the mentality of "everyone's child, everyone's responsibility" is present (although I forgot if it's the whole Philippines or just that region) So in this case it's culture that killed the ("colonial/civilization potential?") of the Philippines? Or maybe the communal towns I just mentioned are a result of strong typhoons which requires community level cooperation to rebuild what they lost efficiently We even got a unique word for it bayanihan: community level cooperation And why the houses are usually a kubo where they can relocate just by a bunch of the villagers helping to carry said house.
@tombrown407
@tombrown407 4 жыл бұрын
@Tejas Misra Sort of, not really. After Britannia was abandonned as a province by Rome around AD 410, Saxon Piracy became increasingly problematic, and various tribes hired other Saxons as mercenaries to protect the province. Some of these Mercenaries settled, and other Saxons came as conquerors. Subsequently a series of petty kingdoms popped up, leading to a period known as the heptarchy in what is now England (this is where Game of Thrones gets the seven kingdoms from). These seven kingdoms don't unify. The Northern kingdoms fall to Danes (Vikings). The Christian South is unified by the Kingdom of Wessex. After Alfred the great eventually veat the Great Heathen Army, England was unified. Wales was conquered later, and It would be centuries before the King of Scotland unified with England, and even longer before the union became solidified. As for castles, they dont just pop up because theyre on a tech tree. Britain had forts and castles all the way back to the neolithic. But in the late Iron Age the Hill forts where mostly abandonned because they weren't needed. If there isn't a need for fortifications, they'll not be built, or become abandoned.
@tombrown407
@tombrown407 4 жыл бұрын
@@NicitoStaAna Sorry dude but you're off on a few things here. Britain has had fortifications since arguably the Neolithic, and certainly since the Iron Age. The Iron Age Britons had Hill Forts all over the island, built variously from stone, timber, and earthworks. These where abandonned over a century prior to the Roman conquest. This was simply because they weren't useful at that point. There is no such thing as a "castle level" society. You build castles when you need them, and you use what you have available. When the Romans turnt up they built forts to subjugate the populace, and once the locals had started to Romanise, many of these forts attracted orbiting settlements (vicus). You then see a period without much extensive fortification until the Saxon Pirates become an issue in the 2nd and 3rd centuries, and the Saxon Shore line of coastal defenses are built. Now if you mean "why wasnt Britain building stone and mortar architecture before the Romans?" Then the answer is again, geography, and cultural ecology. Britain is cold and wet. Masonry does not fare well in these conditions and is prone to damp, and is dificult to keep warm. The Iron Age style Roundhouse persisted for many centuries after the Romans brought over the ideas and infrastructure to build stone houses and stone fortifications. Why? Because Roundhouses are fucking dope in British weather. The roof is easily kept waterproof with mimimal maintenance, which Tiled roofs aren't. They're cheaper, they easier to heat, theyre quicker to build and they naturally keep pests out of the roof simply by having the fire on. And to focus more on fortified structures, 11th century onwards style classic castles are a shit load of effort and totally aren't worth it for a bunch of farmers whose enemies don't have siege engines. A steep ditch and a timber faced revetment are very good at keeping the bad men out unless they have technology from 1000 years in the future.
@samseymour7004
@samseymour7004 4 жыл бұрын
L Cincinnatus it’s not evolution. Evolution takes far longer to change biology than the scale we’re talking of
@samseymour7004
@samseymour7004 4 жыл бұрын
L Cincinnatus ugh, I hate dealing with fucking race realists. First of all, that’s not what ironic means. Secondly, no one here said that evolution stopped happening. We’re saying that the reason different cultures developed differently is because of geography and environment, not genetics. For genetics to be influenced by any significant amount, one needs a far longer time span than any human civilization has existed. This isn’t even a lefty argument, this is fucking rudimentary evolutionary biology.
@felixromano3091
@felixromano3091 4 жыл бұрын
Didn’t the moors colonize Spain for like 700 years
@yasmeenamzk
@yasmeenamzk 4 жыл бұрын
Yep
@deanjairandrade1271
@deanjairandrade1271 4 жыл бұрын
He addresses that on his pinned comment
@vince6252
@vince6252 4 жыл бұрын
Then the Spanish got back in and ruined the land. Sillies. Still, Spain is much nicer than Morocco, Algeria or Tunisia.
@bigtmney
@bigtmney 4 жыл бұрын
@Esther A so u think
@paulshamblin6260
@paulshamblin6260 4 жыл бұрын
sub-Saharan Africans have no Neanderthal DNA. Thousands of years later Africans have yet to accomplish anything. No one is trying to immigrate into any non-white countries. It is what it is.
@fluffy_tail4365
@fluffy_tail4365 4 жыл бұрын
If the """"classical liberals"""" of the internet would read Adam Smith they would take him for a leftist
@vezvez1152
@vezvez1152 4 жыл бұрын
No dude im just a centrist who thinks the left has gone to far. Yes I think the white race is being exterminated by the third world, why do you ask?
@vezvez1152
@vezvez1152 4 жыл бұрын
@@lorenzoeli2939 I was meming. Im a leftist, calm down.
@lorenzoeli2939
@lorenzoeli2939 4 жыл бұрын
@@vezvez1152 gg, my bad thought you were serious
@vezvez1152
@vezvez1152 4 жыл бұрын
@@lorenzoeli2939 My fault if it was bad satire.
@Wyrdangus
@Wyrdangus 4 жыл бұрын
Vez Vez Satirising those views is near impossible these days lmao. I’ve seen people unironically saying pretty much exactly what you said. FeelsBadMan Nazis ruined satire
@thescopedogable
@thescopedogable 4 жыл бұрын
Historians have since argued it was because they have guns😆🤣
@itherael117
@itherael117 4 жыл бұрын
that wasnt for a while. and asia invented gunpowder
@yerhing6406
@yerhing6406 4 жыл бұрын
@@itherael117 What are you even talking about?
@itherael117
@itherael117 4 жыл бұрын
@@yerhing6406 the comment about guns what the fuck else?
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
yer hing They were saying that for the majority of Europe’s existence they did not have access to firearms.
@yerhing6406
@yerhing6406 4 жыл бұрын
@@itherael117 What 'wasn't for a while'? The guns? The Afrikaners clearly had guns and the Zulu not.
@aguynamedatidade
@aguynamedatidade 4 жыл бұрын
Personally I think it was because of the fact that Europe, Asia, The Middle East, and North Africa were closer to each other, and so ideas and advancements that were invented in those regions were usually spread around by war and trade, and were built upon by the others. Basically having 4 smart kids trying to share with and compete with each other, is always more productive than having just one smart kid doing his own thing. Also, the notion that African people are inherently more or less peaceful, however, is pretty dumb. Because ideologies like war, colonialism, and slavery were still heavily practiced among the various tribes in Sub-Saharan Africa, and are sadly even still being practiced today. Remember that most of the slaves in America were sold, and not stolen.
@angellos5552
@angellos5552 4 жыл бұрын
They were stolen during slave raids on neighbouring and or enemy lands/tribes or kingdoms for more info click here:https: //m.kzbin.info/www/bejne/mouniGRte6qKg9U
@aguynamedatidade
@aguynamedatidade 4 жыл бұрын
@@angellos5552 Actually most of the slave raids were by the middle eastern nations, and other African tribes with an urge to dominate. Unfortunately most people aren't aware of the Arab-African colonisation and enslavement. I actually live in Nigeria. They teach the Transatlantic slave trade extensively here as it was a major point in our history, and it was a big boost for the economy of many African nations. If you go to a famous Old slave port region called Badagry, you'll see the places where the slaves were auctioned and sold. As well as the point of no return, where they were drugged to forget their way home. Not to mention the well documented fact that a lot of Africans kept slaves long before the arrival of the West. This is common knowledge where I live. In fact, a lot of slavery and human trafficking by other black Africans and Arabians, still goes on today in our part of the world. It's a very big problem here. But nobody seems to be doing anything about it.
@chlorine5795
@chlorine5795 4 жыл бұрын
Basically we humans are all the same ,bunch of cunts swinging our dicks around.
@aguynamedatidade
@aguynamedatidade 4 жыл бұрын
@@chlorine5795 yep
@orionfoxx1954
@orionfoxx1954 4 жыл бұрын
Cognitive Dissonance not wrong
@katiecat9353
@katiecat9353 3 жыл бұрын
Why do people expect technology to develop at exactly the same pace everywhere on the planet? It would be a bit of a coincidence if that happened considering humans have been here for 200,000 years. There's got to be at least enough chance that factors in for there to be a few centuries leeway, at minimum, even if you ignore environmental and geographical factors.
@TSEliot1978
@TSEliot1978 3 жыл бұрын
Why do people expect IQ to develop at exactly the same pace everywhere on the planet?
@katiecat9353
@katiecat9353 3 жыл бұрын
@@TSEliot1978 Technological development is a lot faster than evolution. All human populations are practically identical biologically and haven't changed that much in the past 5000 years. Genetic exchange throughout the human population happens at a faster pace than significant genetic changes occur, whereas the same can't be said about technology (at least until recently with the advent of more advanced communication technology). So we've historically seen more technological and cultural diversity than genetic due to the different timescales involved. Evolution has been taking place gradually for tens of thousands of years, whereas things like agricultural revolutions and the development of writing have only happened sporadically and just a few times, before spreading before they have the chance to be developed independently in other places.
@andrewforrest3969
@andrewforrest3969 3 жыл бұрын
Because Egypt was so advanced..why wasn't the rest of Africa
@ddkay6478
@ddkay6478 3 жыл бұрын
@@andrewforrest3969 Open some books and do some researches on the subject. In the meantime, don't spread your biased ideas that can trigger racism, intolerance, hatred and violence. Thank you.
@JohnDoe-xc5kn
@JohnDoe-xc5kn 3 жыл бұрын
@@andrewforrest3969 Zanzibar was pretty advanced and not due to Arabic influence
@EmanueL-f2t
@EmanueL-f2t 4 жыл бұрын
Quick Fact: Berbers and arabs technically did colonize iberia.
@poppyappletree1400
@poppyappletree1400 4 жыл бұрын
Berber is a slur, just fyi
@EmanueL-f2t
@EmanueL-f2t 4 жыл бұрын
@@poppyappletree1400 Forgot about that, my bad. I meant the Amazigh.
@UnfortunatelyTheHunger
@UnfortunatelyTheHunger 4 жыл бұрын
@@poppyappletree1400 Wait, really? Is it because it sounds too close to "barbarian", or is there something I'm missing? Anyways, today I learned
@Th3EnterNal
@Th3EnterNal 4 жыл бұрын
@@EmanueL-f2t The amazigh is a slur since its associated with the word berber.
@長谷川恒男
@長谷川恒男 4 жыл бұрын
@ThisIsMyRealName Amazigh are indigenous to africa though. Also the same cultural differences between themand "black" africans are literally just as drastic as those amongst "black" africans.
@MultiNaruto900
@MultiNaruto900 4 жыл бұрын
Trick question - our ancient ancestors migrated from Africa to the rest of the world. The game was rigged from the start.
@itshenrique1753
@itshenrique1753 4 жыл бұрын
A man of culture I see
@stanfatou2002
@stanfatou2002 4 жыл бұрын
Lol dang
@jimg1056
@jimg1056 4 жыл бұрын
Lol😂
@Numbers_Game
@Numbers_Game 4 жыл бұрын
Which basically means one of two things: 1. Some Africans made the decision to stay put instead of taking the risk of migrating and that decision came to bite them in the ass generations later. 2. The Africans that stayed were physically superior and forced the weaker Africans to migrate and generations later their descendents came to even the score. In both cases they became complacent. Conclusion: complacency = inferiority, progress is only achieved by surviving strife. So much for equality being good.
@michaelweston409
@michaelweston409 4 жыл бұрын
NumbersGame good point
@thomasbrown3867
@thomasbrown3867 4 жыл бұрын
Africa did have empires, states, cities, agriculture, technology etc. Just wanted to put that out there.
@barbossa1384
@barbossa1384 4 жыл бұрын
Not strong ones tho
@thomasbrown3867
@thomasbrown3867 4 жыл бұрын
@@barbossa1384 Doesn't even make sense in this context but I'll just say they were plenty strong for their time
@QUEEN-uh2hq
@QUEEN-uh2hq 4 жыл бұрын
Splash The strongest of most civilisations actually
@barbossa1384
@barbossa1384 4 жыл бұрын
@@QUEEN-uh2hq they weren't stronger than Arab empires, search up battle of Yarmouk etc, how they took on 2 great empires of the time, Arabs defeated the mongols, the byzantines, the crusaders, the romans as examples
@QUEEN-uh2hq
@QUEEN-uh2hq 4 жыл бұрын
Splash Arabs were originally black Africans who had migrated and intermarried hence why a lot of black Africans claim that they come from Mesopotamia. The Egyptians inspired most of the modern day technology we have now and so did other groups and tribes: Nubian, Edo, Oduduwa, Zulu etc. African tribes have won and conquered many empires but we just don't hear about it in the history books because our history has basically been wiped out and that's why everyone takes us for granted, forgetting that we used to rule the world. We've had the richest and most prosperous civilisations (like the richest man to have ever lived was a African man) but we just didn't achieve that through war and bloodshed.
@frickinfrick8488
@frickinfrick8488 2 жыл бұрын
I always used to think of agriculture as an unambiguous leap forward in societal living standards, but now that I think about it it was a pretty garbage way to live for centuries until we developed better technologies to make it actually worthwhile. The loss of diversity in diet and facing starvation every time the weather, soil and pest conditions weren’t perfectly right for specific crops to grow would’ve left people with pretty bad health and life quality. Heck, my parents and grandparents were poor European farmers and their health was pretty shocking because of their limited diet. Humans evolved using a hunter gatherer lifestyle for their entire existence so it makes perfect sense why many cultures would instead choose to perfect their knowledge and ability in scavenging the land instead of making a radical shift towards agriculture. I spent some time with a local Australian aboriginal community and the amount of collective knowledge they have on how to use the land is staggering, I think there are things we could learn from them instead of trying to force every environment to fit our very specific agricultural methods and often messing up the soil and climate as a result. I think it’s pretty arrogant to think we have nothing to learn from people who have survived on this land for 40,000 years.
@Godlike-87
@Godlike-87 4 жыл бұрын
The answer was so obvious that you’d have to have an ideological bias to miss it.
@N3ONLUV
@N3ONLUV 3 жыл бұрын
I love this comment
@maximus4765
@maximus4765 2 жыл бұрын
Right, they didn't have boats.
@sabrinahays1568
@sabrinahays1568 6 ай бұрын
why didnt they have boats@@maximus4765
@AmbivalentDreams
@AmbivalentDreams 4 жыл бұрын
Just a heads up, but Aboriginal societies were not hunter-gatherers, this perception was a deliberate attempt to make the European claims of Terra nullius more believable. The book "Dark Emu" has more information on it if you're interested.
@methyod
@methyod 4 жыл бұрын
I really hope that within our lifetimes the narrative that even well educated, liberal people have about indigenous people is corrected. The notion that the way they interact with their environment might be a form of high technology (which is exactly how they usually think of it) that we have no analog for in the west will get you laughed at by almost anyone regardless of their politics.
@AmbivalentDreams
@AmbivalentDreams 4 жыл бұрын
@@methyod absolutely, even as we face a global crisis which can only be solved by embracing the sociology, technology and science of indigenous peoples.
@lockdownudein
@lockdownudein 4 жыл бұрын
@@AmbivalentDreams I honestly haven't heard this idea yet. What do you mean?
@methyod
@methyod 4 жыл бұрын
@@lockdownudein simply that indigenous groups often interacted with their environment in deliberate ways to produce certain outcomes, sometimes of great complexity; they weren't living in a state of nature. They engineered their environments.
@lockdownudein
@lockdownudein 4 жыл бұрын
methyod is there anything in specific that would be useful for us today?
@darrenlehane92
@darrenlehane92 4 жыл бұрын
The most persuasive argument I've heard for the great divergence is "the discovery of ignorance", ie the discovery that humans do not know the answers to the most important questions. The catalyst for this being the Colombian exchange, when Europeans were confronted with the existence of 2 massive continents that were neither mentioned nor predicted in any previously sacred texts.
@LC-wv7tz
@LC-wv7tz 4 жыл бұрын
9:45 Adam Smith wrote that 85 years before Marx penned his quote. Marx was taking Smith's side, not vice verse.
@TheSpecialJ11
@TheSpecialJ11 4 жыл бұрын
What's funny is Adam Smith and Karl Marx had a lot in common on their views of capital and the nature of economies if their work is actually read. But nobody actually reads the foundational texts of global ideologies, just like the people who don't read the Bible or Koran and argue about them.
@ThubanDraconis
@ThubanDraconis 4 жыл бұрын
Africa did colonize Europe, and Asia, and Australia, and the Americas starting about half a million years ago or so.
@ThubanDraconis
@ThubanDraconis 4 жыл бұрын
@@cringebleach905 Awesome, I love it when science overturns long accepted beliefs. Can you please post a link to the peer reviewed papers on the subject? I would love to get caught up on the latest information.
@TheMeanBean322
@TheMeanBean322 4 жыл бұрын
@@cringebleach905 big brain answer right here
@redsie1
@redsie1 4 жыл бұрын
@Õ_Õ Shy Guy it just depends on how far back you wanna go, this link says asia nearly 40 mya
@redsie1
@redsie1 4 жыл бұрын
www.sciencemag.org/news/2012/06/asian-origin-human-ancestors
@ThubanDraconis
@ThubanDraconis 4 жыл бұрын
@@redsie1 Thanks, and that is interesting. But while Afrotarsius may have been an ancestor of humans, they were not even remotely human, or even apes, They lived something like 38 million years ago. So this can't really be said to be colonization by humans, or even near humans.
@spluff5
@spluff5 4 жыл бұрын
Basically because Europe is the best spawn point in the game.
@jimmcclain8677
@jimmcclain8677 4 жыл бұрын
They all spawned from Africa though?
@steverico3090
@steverico3090 4 жыл бұрын
@@jimmcclain8677 yeah but once you capture a spawn it becomes yours
@chip1646
@chip1646 4 жыл бұрын
I think you mean the Americans have the best spawnpoint
@zubankesari7464
@zubankesari7464 4 жыл бұрын
No Asia is... Thats why India and China always had such a huge population.... Asia & Africa has nore and resources than Europe... The only reason why Europe is rich is because of colonisation and looting....
@jimmcclain8677
@jimmcclain8677 4 жыл бұрын
@@steverico3090 So basically it’s cheating to get off your ass.
@ibrahimyange1528
@ibrahimyange1528 4 жыл бұрын
Would also like to mention the fact that Africa lacked the close extremity to other advanced civilizations like Europe and Asia. It was much easier to travel across Europe and Asia and thus there was so much cultural exchanges between them. For countries on the South of the Sahara, it was much harder to meet other people. Other parts of Africa, especially those near the Mediterranean were substantially advanced because they were much closer to other advanced civilizations.
@GrrrlStyleNow
@GrrrlStyleNow 4 жыл бұрын
Purple lighting and skull and poured liquids: breadtube confirmed.
@willowarkan2263
@willowarkan2263 4 жыл бұрын
I was thinking that, but it wasn't a white liquid, like milk. So does that count as full breadtube?
@Minihood31770
@Minihood31770 4 жыл бұрын
@@willowarkan2263 HP sauce isn't white either...
@willowarkan2263
@willowarkan2263 4 жыл бұрын
@@Minihood31770 to be fair I don't know what HP sauce is.
@markoboredguy6911
@markoboredguy6911 4 жыл бұрын
Is davis a. A breadtuber??
@willowarkan2263
@willowarkan2263 4 жыл бұрын
@@markoboredguy6911 a as in aurini? I'm not sure I spell that right.
@alihyderi9928
@alihyderi9928 4 жыл бұрын
Keep up the content it’s been really good recently
@kaihinton6623
@kaihinton6623 4 жыл бұрын
Id argue the great divergence happened mainly due to the fact that Europe, while a fertile area of land, also had many geographical boundaries like the Alps and many rivers and seas, which made it virtually impossible to create a stable empire which stretched across most of the continent for more than a few years/decades. In places like China or even the Middle East, you had empires which controlled extremely large territories which lasted for many centuries and were relatively stable for most of that time. What this changes is that in Europe, rulers constantly had to keep innovating and outdoing their neighbours in terms of military and production capabilities just to survive, creating a very Darwinist geopolitical reality. Meanwhile in China or the Middle East, you had massive empires like the Qing and the Ottomans, which survived for centuries without having to do much in terms of advancement or economic competition. My final argument comes from a more social one, being that following the High Middle Ages, which were almost universally known as a time for prosperity and stability across most major civilisations, the combination of the Mongols and the Plague had ravaged many cultures and civilisations. The dominant social order in most civilisations which succeeded the High Middle Ages were either a strong priest ruling class like in India or the Middle East, a strong bureaucratic order in China/Asia, however in Europe became a strong relationship with the burgher class and the crown, which led to Europe becoming a strong center of trade and innovation as the burger/capitalist class slowly outgrew the other feudal classes which created the conditions for pre industrial capitalism, which also paved the way for industrialisation. Another thing which could also be observed is that the places which eventually formed out of the aftermath of the Mongol invasions like China and Russia, both seemed to fall back into a strong flavour Conservatism, although the cause of why countries naturally become heavily conservative after beating back a foreign ruling nations is unknown to me, although it is known to happen quite often.
@rundown_2043
@rundown_2043 4 жыл бұрын
I agree with this the political climate in Europe is significantly different to china for example while china was pretty isolated and massive with the only threat being nomads and the mandate of heaven, europe in contrast is a small continent filled with several nations who always needed a leg up on each other resulting in exploration & colonization. I would also say that spices and the ottomans influenced the europeans to go west to the americas and south to africa to find another way to the spices for cheaper prices cutting the middle man. To add to this european mercantilism gave a focus on maximizing exports promoting tariffs and imperialism
@broly425
@broly425 4 жыл бұрын
If that was the case where Kingdoms got stronger because of the competition, The kingdoms in India would have become more advanced than the west . They had much more of a competitive environment. so I dont think that's the case
@kaihinton6623
@kaihinton6623 4 жыл бұрын
Crazy cow india for most of recorded history was ruled my a strong priest class, essentially draining the subcontinent of technological and cultural innovation. Strong religious classes rarely tend to innovate much, and not to mention india doesnt have the same level of inland seas and peninsulas going through them as Europe does.
@Dahras1
@Dahras1 4 жыл бұрын
​@@broly425 Maybe the answer is that, for most of history, that was true, India was more advanced than Europe. I'd also argue that the idea of constantly stable, unified China is a myth that serves China's current rulers but is just not correct. China was ripe with national competition and it too was more advanced than the west. Most of Europe was a complete backwater until literally right after the High Middle Ages. Not to overlook the rich culture of Medieval Europe or anything (I, too, love Beowulf), but comparing them to India, China, the Muslim World, and parts of Africa, it's not even fair. I feel like our sense of Europe as developed during the Middle Ages is more historical revisionism than anything else: Europe didn't destroy their own historical documents and heritage and had a massive, supra-national religious institution who kept good records. But as a whole, it was a completely fucked place to live. The Europeans were still in the Viking Age when China invented gunpowder. And we consider the Romans "European" now because they play heavily into European's view of themselves, but for most of Roman history, they had as much if not more to do with the greater Mediterranean and North Africa than "Europe," which to them was near mythological. In my opinion, societal competition is valuable in making successful expansionist empires (as if that's some kind of good thing?). But only to a point. Complete societal collapse has never been good for empire building. The problem that China and India faced in the bad 13th and 14th centuries was complete societal collapse caused by the Mongol conquests, the scale of which can hardly be comprehended. Europe had the Black Death, sure, but it's effects were not nearly as devastating as the horror of the Mongols, even if the Yuan dynasty and Mugal empire eventually assimilated into their local cultures. Some might even argue that the Black Death's decimation of the lower class population increased the value (and therefore the bargaining power) of labor to the point where serfdom was completely broken, making way for the capitalist economies that drove the technological and economic conditions necessary for European colonialism. By the point when things in the East had mostly reset, the damage was done. Europe was a steam train (with steam trains) that was impossible to stop except by copying them. Oh, and another point, Europe just so happened to stumble upon two continents of land and valuable resources occupied by a population who promptly, and horrifically, died to the diseases the Europeans brought with them (90% in 100 years by some estimates, and not to downplay the role of European atrocities either). That's a stroke of "good luck" (if one must call it that) that no other would-be colonial power had ever had before. Combined with everything else going on at the time that's a recipe for conquering the world. It feels stupid and reductionist to say "right time, right place," but in my opinion, that's the long and short of it. Had but a couple of variables changed, we might be complaining about the horrific atrocities committed by Imperial China when conquering England and the new world (or something like that).
@BladeFitAcademy
@BladeFitAcademy 4 жыл бұрын
@@Dahras1 Don't over simplify the fact that the Huns basically did to the European interior and the Western Roman world what the Mongols had done to China and the Middle East 1000 years later. The entire European Middle Ages was a direct result of Asian plagues and successive waves of ever more terrible Nomadic Stepp tribes pushing, burning and collapsing all social systems as they came. Europeans were plugged into the Asian trade routes, the Spice Road and the Silk Road in Antiquity. And had contributed goods into this economic ecosystem. Amber from Scandinavian lands worked their way down to Rome, Byzantium, and beyond. Timbers, furs, white slaves, jewelry, technical expertise of various sorts all were European exports before the Stepp invasions. And many of those things were returning slowly. Not to mention after the fall of Rome a great deal of highly skilled and educated people from the western Roman world immigrated to Byzantium in a giant brain drain, serving the Near East for another 1000 years. And those class of people again wandered West after the fall of Byzantium, germinating much of the Renaissance of the West.
@gyanfranciskumar
@gyanfranciskumar 3 жыл бұрын
Well Africa did colonise Europe, where do you think Europeans came from? The Moon?
@draco_1876
@draco_1876 3 жыл бұрын
No. Just because the first people in Europe were darkskin doesn’t mean that modern Europeans are from Africa.
@gyanfranciskumar
@gyanfranciskumar 3 жыл бұрын
@@draco_1876 modern europeans originated somwehere in central asia, agreed, but if you go sufficently far up in their heritage you will still arrive in Africa, as for all other people on earth.
@gyanfranciskumar
@gyanfranciskumar 3 жыл бұрын
@@monke8072 Sure, but it wasn't exactly colonization, or at least not homo sapiens on homo sapiens colonization
@gyanfranciskumar
@gyanfranciskumar 3 жыл бұрын
@@monke8072 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joke
@dantecaputo2629
@dantecaputo2629 4 жыл бұрын
I would say most African states were at least medieval in terms of structure and technology. There are of course the obvious ones, Aksum and Mali, but even the Zulus lived in permanent towns, had metallurgy, and relied on agriculture for both sustenance and trade. They certainly were not ‘hunter gatherers.’ Good video though.
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah his treatment of Africa and Native America as the same technology wise kinda ruined the whole video.
@PlatinumAltaria
@PlatinumAltaria 4 жыл бұрын
@@lloydcoe9680 The native Americans also had large cities like Cahokia and Tenochtitlan, they even had the largest in the world. The problem was that it took a lot of human labour to keep it running. The point of the video is that these people didn't have access to what the Europeans and Asians had, specifically a lot of land and a lot of trade, so they aren't just "stupid" or "backwards", anymore than it would be fair to call you stupid for failing to set up a civilisation on a tiny island in the pacific.
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
PlatinumAltaria You’re putting words in my mouth. I wasn’t calling anyone stupid or making any sort of insult or demeaning comment. I was simply saying, native Americans were less technologically advanced than Africans of the same time period. For all the impressive astronomy the Aztecs and mayan did with their limited tools, they were not technologically equal.
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
And I understand Africa is a huge place with many different cultures and societies with different levels of development. And that those generalisations I made will not be true all the time, however for the most part Africa was more technologically advanced.
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
PlatinumAltaria And I think it was actually only the largest city in the Americas and then sixth in the world. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teotihuacan
@SigmaFlare420
@SigmaFlare420 4 жыл бұрын
I love this video! I'm African American and it pains me that no one tries to use logic before jumping into extreme assumptions! EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW THIS!
@thegreatafrican3367
@thegreatafrican3367 3 жыл бұрын
I don't understand... Do you originate in Africa or in America?
@waqasahmed939
@waqasahmed939 3 жыл бұрын
@@thegreatafrican3367 They're African American ie: it's not likely that they're Carribean and a descendant of slaves.
@skyk2005
@skyk2005 3 жыл бұрын
@@waqasahmed939 Correction: descendants of indigenous enslaved people. The people did not begin historically as slaves, they were enslaved. Please understand the difference in your limited speech.
@waqasahmed939
@waqasahmed939 3 жыл бұрын
@@skyk2005 Except they're not "indigenous" If they were they'd be native American. If however you're suggesting that they're descendants of people who are indigenous to the African continent, then that's a moot point because that's pretty obvious.
@skyk2005
@skyk2005 3 жыл бұрын
@@waqasahmed939 it is not a "moot point" when you refer to indigenous people of the planet as slaves. The people were enslaved. The oppressors such as Arabs and Europeans targeted indigenous people of the planet to fulfil their own selfish desires. These people were not slaves, they were scientist, doctors, engineers, etc. prior to enslavement. Thus, when you refer to an African American as a descendant of a "slave" it is incorrect and insensitive. Enslavement was not the beginning of African history/ancestry, enslavement interrupted the history. Language can also be used as a weapon which is the less obvious point being made.
@PabloSanchez-qu6ib
@PabloSanchez-qu6ib 4 жыл бұрын
Actually moorish Spain was an African colony
@minivergur
@minivergur 4 жыл бұрын
True, but I think he is actually talking about subsaharan africa
@notallopinionswerecreatede4465
@notallopinionswerecreatede4465 4 жыл бұрын
When racists say that no civilisations came out of Africa, they mean the areas with black people
@SpanishDio
@SpanishDio 4 жыл бұрын
Not really, because, the caliphate of cordoba became independent from the rest of the Umayyad and Rashidun caliphate pretty quickly, and the central power capital of the caliphate was in Spain itself = Cordoba.
@PabloSanchez-qu6ib
@PabloSanchez-qu6ib 4 жыл бұрын
@@minivergur yes. I was being a little pedantic about the title.
@PabloSanchez-qu6ib
@PabloSanchez-qu6ib 4 жыл бұрын
@@notallopinionswerecreatede4465 yes. That African civilizations that bordered the Mediterranean had no problems competing with European ones shows the importance of the sea.
@RayMak
@RayMak 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for telling this story
@DipayanPyne94
@DipayanPyne94 3 жыл бұрын
Jesus ! You are everywhere ! Lol
@PeteMachini6732
@PeteMachini6732 3 жыл бұрын
Go away plz
@thegreatafrican3367
@thegreatafrican3367 3 жыл бұрын
Or maybe you guys are everywhere!
@adyingchannelsbrother8174
@adyingchannelsbrother8174 3 жыл бұрын
You are EVERYWHERE!!!!!
@redbitch3362
@redbitch3362 3 жыл бұрын
He's one of the owners of utube
@FrankyBabes
@FrankyBabes 4 жыл бұрын
Me before clicking this video: "Temperate climate and happy coincidence of raw materials, innit?" Me halfway through this video: "Oh cool"
@DontreadPimpBoy
@DontreadPimpBoy 4 жыл бұрын
🦆
@leehaiko3999
@leehaiko3999 4 жыл бұрын
Quack
@DontreadPimpBoy
@DontreadPimpBoy 4 жыл бұрын
@@leehaiko3999 Knock Knock
@leehaiko3999
@leehaiko3999 4 жыл бұрын
@@DontreadPimpBoy who's there
@DontreadPimpBoy
@DontreadPimpBoy 4 жыл бұрын
@@leehaiko3999 Duck man
@orderofazarath7609
@orderofazarath7609 4 жыл бұрын
8:08 "the first people to start building ships where the Phoenicians [..] and the Carthagenians" - I think you missed most of the Bronze Age here.
@joshuarichardson6529
@joshuarichardson6529 4 жыл бұрын
He also missed that the Phoenicians and Carthaginians were the same people. Carthage was just a Canaanite colony in north africa.
@macosta3499
@macosta3499 4 жыл бұрын
But bronze age ships could hardly cross the entire Mediterranean, they were majorly built for navigating in rivers. In the late bronze age, egypt and some proto-greek civilizations already traveled around eastern Mediterranean, but not very effectively. Plus, this video doesn't tries to dig deep into world history, so it sure would have some "simplified" stuff (but it doesn't mean ppl can't point out it's mistakes, they just have to be gentle lmao) But yea, phoenicians and carthaginians were broadly the same ppl...
@orderofazarath7609
@orderofazarath7609 4 жыл бұрын
@@macosta3499 Sure the first ships were worse than later ones, but they still were ships. By your logic the sentence "The first people to start building ships where medieval" could be right because the ships before that were unable to cross oceans and the earlier were not very effective at transporting cargo or whatever. Or "The first people to start building ships were modern" because sails are not very effective.
@macosta3499
@macosta3499 4 жыл бұрын
@@orderofazarath7609 But the point is the ship's purpouse. They were able to navigate in the sea, but were not built to it. But phoenician ships were.
@orderofazarath7609
@orderofazarath7609 4 жыл бұрын
@@macosta3499 What I learned looking this up is that the Phoenicians were around earlier than I knew (2500 BC). However, Minoans still beat them to it (3000 BC). Yeah Bronze Age ships preferably stick to the coasts, fear bad weather and aren't used at night, but they are ships navigating the mediterranean nonetheless. Minoa was not a river civilisation and ships were not using the optimal routes, but they are still ships on the mediterranean. But I guess this expert opinion (wiki quote) lists Phoenicians as the first "true" ship builders and is to blame: "By 1200 B.C., the Phoenicians were building large merchant ships. In world maritime history, declares Richard Woodman, they are recognized as “the first true seafarers, founding the art of pilotage, cabotage, and navigation” and the architects of “the first true ship, built of planks, capable of carrying a deadweight cargo and being sailed and steered.” " Sure.. the first "true" ship builders in 1200 B.C., but we get a "proto ship" by that definition in 2500 B.C. with the Khufu ship. I guess that one is a 40m long big boat by some definitions.... oh well.
@picklejuicepopsicles
@picklejuicepopsicles 4 жыл бұрын
Wtf this is so high quality. It's a shame it doesn't have more likes and views. Keep up the good work, comrade.
@antqueen2437
@antqueen2437 4 жыл бұрын
because you commented about 5 seconds after it was posted
@picklejuicepopsicles
@picklejuicepopsicles 4 жыл бұрын
@@antqueen2437 my bad
@Naalders
@Naalders 4 жыл бұрын
Comrade... larp cringe at its finest
@picklejuicepopsicles
@picklejuicepopsicles 4 жыл бұрын
@@Naalders How is that larp lmfao
@coemgenvsrex1351
@coemgenvsrex1351 4 жыл бұрын
K P liking your own comment is cringe
@nograviti2388
@nograviti2388 4 жыл бұрын
Wow what a poorly researched video, Africa was comprised of poorly developed hunter gather societies?? As a man of Nigerian heritage I would suggest you read up on the feudal Yoruba city states. Or better yet the Sokoto Caliphate a highly organised emirate system with highly developed systems of governance and a literary tradition. Finally I would point you to the Malian empire which surpassed Europe in terms of living standards, literacy, scientific advancement and wealth in the medieval period. If you are going to tackle such a broad subject please do some decent research first.
@kearvenstheodore8479
@kearvenstheodore8479 4 жыл бұрын
Neon Hombré he never said it was
@nograviti2388
@nograviti2388 4 жыл бұрын
@@kearvenstheodore8479 0.55 onwards "The story of the Afrikaaners is just one of many that shows us how Europe went through many stages of Civilization, whilst Africa remained the home of small hunter gather societies." Really you are going to start resorting to lies now??
@nograviti2388
@nograviti2388 4 жыл бұрын
@john son Agreed, I largely have no problem with your statement. What I took issue with was the categorization of the whole of the sub-saharan region as being composed of hunter gather societies. I immediately think of the Central African Pygmies or KhoiSan (bushmen) of South Africa when I think of hunter gatherers. Less developed folks exist on all regions, Gypsies or travellers in Britain, Sami in Scandinavia or the Roma in Eastern Europe. But no one uses them as an example of societal progress or lack of in Europe. I deliberately ignored Afro-asiatic civilizations like Egypt and the Kush that were developed thousands of years before most Europeans even had anything approaching civilization. Even the ancient Greeks borrowed heavily from Egyptian advances and said as much themselves. In fact take the Slavs, their name is believed to be the origin of the word Slave. They largely never developed independently themselves. In Eastern Europe their major cities until recently had majority German populations and Russia was centralised by the Kievan Rus folks of Scandinavian origin. In fact until the late 18th century, the Yoruba of Nigeria lived at greater population densities than they did!! Also a another problem is that interestingly some African regions do appear to have experienced the same kind of depopulation seen in the Amazon post contact with Europeans. There are huge empty steps of what are probably rice paddy fields in the mountains of Cameroon. Evidence of the Kingdom of Kongo which the Portuguese and Dutch documented, with large cities with straight streets disappeared entirely. Its cities were on a par with those found in the Nigerian region. In fact people in either region were aware of each other and traded goods. Whether it was down to disease, slavery, the introduction of firearms or colonialism we will only find out with more research and archaeological studies.. And finally Sub-Saharan Africa was trapped behind the Sahara which while not an impenetrable barrier it certainly slowed down the exchange of ideas to the region. At the same time the harsh environment in the region in terms of climate and disease again slowed development in the region. It is the reason why black Africans still exist. If the climate was benign we would have gone the way of the Native Americans. Life expectancy of early European colonials dropped to an average around 40 years even with their more advanced medical technology!! The fact that we had organised states was another reason why we endured. The British took a full 17 years to conquer the Sokoto Caliphate in Northern Nigeria. Even with the Maxim gun the Hausa/Fulani Cavalry were still deadly. The reason why the Emirs still exist in Northern Nigeria was because the leaders of the region said if you try to destroy our political structures we will go to war again. So the British accepted rule by proxy with the Emirs answering to them..
@nograviti2388
@nograviti2388 4 жыл бұрын
@Awoken Truther Thanks.. Research is so important, I mainly post to get these facts out there nowadays.
@jamesculverhouse4657
@jamesculverhouse4657 4 жыл бұрын
If only Hume was as fun to read as he was to look at
@somedudeok1451
@somedudeok1451 4 жыл бұрын
All looks, no talent.
@TheChiefOrg13
@TheChiefOrg13 4 жыл бұрын
"And Ancient Egypt" -Shows picture of Brendan Fraser's character in the Mummy- ...and subscribed
@AdamBlade17
@AdamBlade17 4 жыл бұрын
So you're saying that different populations had different outcomes because they adapted to different environments... Sounds like evolution.
@Veryveryinteresting23
@Veryveryinteresting23 4 жыл бұрын
Or adaptation
@Trashcan-vr8ow
@Trashcan-vr8ow 4 жыл бұрын
if this sounds like evolution, please read about memetics because you are right
@pepperet5216
@pepperet5216 4 жыл бұрын
it is evolution, the weak shouls bw wept
@sorsocksfake
@sorsocksfake 4 жыл бұрын
In part, Adam. Biological evolution however acts very slowly. Given relatively recent common decent, it wouldn't have done much. The vast majority of people survived through manual labor, so even if there hypothetically were differences, it would be among very few people. Far more significant is just pragmatics. Boats are going to be invented in water-rich areas, not in deserts. Cavalry will be pioneered on the steppes. When such inventions create a major advantage, "superior" civilizations will arise predictably, mostly by geography. If magically we had swapped the populations of the sahara and Britain in 1400, it'd be the Saharans in Britain who went on to colonize much of the world... not the Britons in the Sahara. There are however relevant aspects of memetics, cultural evolution, the evolution of ideas. For instance it's plausible that liberalism evolved in part from the reformation. We can certainly see major philosophers forming a chain of evolving ideas... and usually they'll live near the previous breakthrough. So getting major advancements in say Greece, Baghdad and Britain in their times of innovation is no coincidence. Just as we see today with some of the more prestigious universities. A next breakthrough is more likely to come from a student or friend of the last innovator.
@Fankas2000
@Fankas2000 4 жыл бұрын
@@Veryveryinteresting23 Different name same thing.
@KDog410
@KDog410 4 жыл бұрын
My favourite explanation of the phenomenon is that people in Africa had everything they could ever need. There was no need to conquer other lands because they already had everything. Europeans didn't have this luxury and so it becomes our history.
@dantetempest9585
@dantetempest9585 4 жыл бұрын
That is historically inaccurate.
@AiyameXi
@AiyameXi 4 жыл бұрын
@@dantetempest9585 Iceland and the Northern European countries would gleefully disagree
@Alexa-iq6it
@Alexa-iq6it 4 жыл бұрын
Wow cool that its your favourite explanation but it has nothing to do with the truth, did u even watch the video?
@Happymind-happyworld.
@Happymind-happyworld. 4 жыл бұрын
AiyameXi I think they would according to my European history books because I live in Europe and I have studied history for enough years of my life, the beginning of industrialization led to most of the colonialism because they needed a lot of raw materials that they didn’t have
@isthatso1961
@isthatso1961 4 жыл бұрын
@@Happymind-happyworld. even before industrialization, Europeans were explorers because they had to find resources. They first set foot in Africa during the 1500 as traders to buy farm produce, whereas Africans didn't see any need for intercontinental trades, as they thought they had all they needed
@AniMerrill
@AniMerrill 4 жыл бұрын
Although I never had any of the especially, um, reactionary ideas about this topic... I had always just naively assumed that maybe it had to do with Europe being more iron rich than a lot of other parts of the world or something, which is why they were pulled towards industrialization. This video was very informative though, and I feel like I learned a lot more about human history now.
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
Certainly in Britain there is/was (not sure if it’s still here) a huge disproportionate amount of coal which is why it started there and not say France.
@LOUDcarBOMB
@LOUDcarBOMB 4 жыл бұрын
That's specifically Birmingham where there's large deposits of coal and iron which makes different alloys of steel (and also nearby towns with different metals and mineral deposits). With that, there's also the Tame River which could be used for water power and combining them all together, you get a serious industrial center that's still going today.
@rundown_2043
@rundown_2043 4 жыл бұрын
@@lloydcoe9680 yeah although the infrastructure to allow such industrialization was in part due to its already established colonies
@DerAykac
@DerAykac 4 жыл бұрын
I would also say: Romans. They build a huge amount of infrastructure in form of good old roads. Damn, we still have alot of churches in europe which are older than most nations. I´d call that an advantage.
@DenUitvreter
@DenUitvreter 4 жыл бұрын
It's really a shame he mentioned water and ignored 16th century Flanders and 17th century Dutch Republic. That's were the 'protestant work ethic' blossomed, where mercantilism became modern capitalism, were freedom of thought and social mobility developped with all of it's effects on economic power, while guns were still not of the quality to overpower any opposition. Both are also a great example of how unfavourable environmental conditions turn into an advantage. The swamps were only fit for sheep but there was water enough to transport the cloth produced by the sheep, so it became trade based rather than feudal. Besides the lack of desire to conquer these dire lands, they were also very unfit for authoritarian rule because a group of soldiers in armer are very vulnerable in such wet terrain. You also had a lot of land owning peasants because if you made it dry you owned it. A king telling 'you got this land from god together with me to rule you' didn't really go down well there, so the people were more free spirited which resulted in economic strength and protestantism getting a fighting chance. The graph at 18.52 shows the enormous difference in GDP per capita in the Dutch Republic compared to the other countries, and allthough there was a lot of windmill powered industry, this was before the industrial revolution and must be down to capitalism and freedom rather than industrialization.
@00virgola
@00virgola 4 жыл бұрын
Gotta disagree with the notion that Africa is longer that it is wide, that mostly comes from the Mercator projection: if you look on a globe Somalia and Liberia are as far apart as Egypt and South Africa. Now, having a huge desert, few rivers and less territories to exchange goods with explains your points nonetheless, so I agree with you anyway :)
@kell3883
@kell3883 4 жыл бұрын
but it is
@YoungGzBlitz
@YoungGzBlitz 4 жыл бұрын
It is longer than it is wide, just not as much as most people think
@00virgola
@00virgola 4 жыл бұрын
I checked, it's 8100 km long and 7400 km wide
@notallopinionswerecreatede4465
@notallopinionswerecreatede4465 4 жыл бұрын
Also natural barriers like rainforests and deserts (as you mentioned), played a major part in Africa being very disconnected.
@00virgola
@00virgola 4 жыл бұрын
Also in Europe what big forests there were have been cut down because of agriculture and further industrial development. So it would completelt fit the logic of the argument that those natural barriers would remain in Africa.
@BrianMcKennaPuffnfresh
@BrianMcKennaPuffnfresh 4 жыл бұрын
Indigenous Australians DID have agriculture. There's a lot of evidence for fields of cultivated native plants. There was a native grain belt which was used for baking. There's a popular book called "Dark Emu" which goes over a lot of this evidence.
@sendmorerum8241
@sendmorerum8241 3 жыл бұрын
Dark Emu has been debunked since then.
@platylobiumobtuseangulum1607
@platylobiumobtuseangulum1607 2 жыл бұрын
@@sendmorerum8241 Well, that's what the reich wing claim. Not so sure they are right about that.
@rubinortiz2311
@rubinortiz2311 3 жыл бұрын
Africa didn’t colonies Europe but African empires did conquer many parts of Europe a few times
@ArturoBIturbide
@ArturoBIturbide 3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, northern Africans.
@unatco6554
@unatco6554 3 жыл бұрын
You mean that one time the Umayyad Caliphate made up mostly of west asian (white) Muslims conquered parts of Mediterranean Europe? Lmao
@rubinortiz2311
@rubinortiz2311 3 жыл бұрын
@@unatco6554 ancient Egypt and the kingdoms of kush conquered a few parts of south east Europe. And umayyad elite who where mainly western Asian wbu where not actually the majority of the population where not the ones doing the conquering. It was the amazigh, Tataouine, Songhai, and Tuareg where the ones doing the conquering mostly black and and heavily mixed berbers not many caucasians fought in those armies the Songhai and Wolof empire also had a few strong holds in Iberia. And some of those empires got pretty deep into the continent the umayyad got into central France and the Egyptians and kush got as far as modern day Romania and Ukrainian.
@unatco6554
@unatco6554 3 жыл бұрын
@@rubinortiz2311 Ancient Egypt ruling class was majority indo-european people as genetic evidence shows. Same for the Umayyad.
@rubinortiz2311
@rubinortiz2311 3 жыл бұрын
@@unatco6554 key words ruling class. Once again those weren’t the guys actually doing the conquering it was blacks and heavily mixed Berber groups. Egypt has had many dynasties where the blacks where the ruling class. I can bake many black pharaohs.
@robertharris6092
@robertharris6092 4 жыл бұрын
Bruh. Rome and greece were far from the firat civilizations. Ever heard of the late bronze age collapse?
@Flow86767
@Flow86767 4 жыл бұрын
Adam wasn’t taking the side of Marx, but the side of logic and reason.
@jeffersonclippership2588
@jeffersonclippership2588 4 жыл бұрын
Damn, so close
@andrepylon12
@andrepylon12 4 жыл бұрын
He was being disingenuous, Karl Marx actually thought there was no difference at all between any human other than environment. And according to Chomsky is a concept that was attractive to many intellectuals because they see them selves as the ones moulding people. So Adam smith and Marx were not on the same side on this at all, the difference is small, but noticeable. Remember Adam smith is rarely read, but often misquoted.
@GlitzPixie
@GlitzPixie 4 жыл бұрын
@@Flow86767 the idea that Marx saw history as nothing but class struggle is so untrue that all you have to do to disprove it is read ANYTHING he wrote beyond the opening statement of the Communist Manifesto, and if you're talking about equality of outcome when you talk about his plan for workers, Marx was very much against the idea and thought it was impossible. I'm not necessarily trying to defend him but it sounds like you haven't really read or watched anything that talks in depth about his beliefs
@dsjykf1427
@dsjykf1427 4 жыл бұрын
@@Flow86767 Calling it simplistic is so ridiculous and shows you have no idea how hard understanding dialectics can be
@nomallife
@nomallife 4 жыл бұрын
Lachlan Phillips unfortunately we decide for ourselves what's logical and reasonable
@scifience8297
@scifience8297 4 жыл бұрын
Marx: MATERIAL CONDITIONS
@hydrolito
@hydrolito 4 жыл бұрын
We learned printing and gun powder from Chinese as well as other things.
@leifkhas7425
@leifkhas7425 4 жыл бұрын
So what you're saying is 90% of inventions come from Europeans not 100%?
@ES-zk2so
@ES-zk2so 4 жыл бұрын
@@leifkhas7425 bruh tell me you're joking
@ES-zk2so
@ES-zk2so 4 жыл бұрын
@@leifkhas7425 this man is desperately clinging on to the idea that Europeans invented most things
@nduduzogasa5289
@nduduzogasa5289 4 жыл бұрын
@@ES-zk2so imbuzi lomjida
@draco_1876
@draco_1876 3 жыл бұрын
@@leifkhas7425 most of European civilization came from Asia
@awsomeboy360
@awsomeboy360 4 жыл бұрын
So apparently the Moors, Egyptians, aren't African? While Greek and Rome represented the entirety of Europe?
@frausteiner8615
@frausteiner8615 4 жыл бұрын
Who wants to tell him?
@lilachie
@lilachie 4 жыл бұрын
Things like these tend to happen in an echo chamber 😂
@KingBobXVI
@KingBobXVI 4 жыл бұрын
@@lilachie - you're definitely doing your part to keep it an "echo chamber" by not actually presenting any counterpoints. As for FErgersonn's question: you realize the Moors and Egyptions were also Mediterranean civilizations right? I'm going to assume you didn't watch the video at all, considering you're only making a surface level criticism of the title alone here.
@lilachie
@lilachie 4 жыл бұрын
@@KingBobXVIimagine being schooled about your own heritage 😂
@lilachie
@lilachie 4 жыл бұрын
@@KingBobXVI and I was just joking not everyone on internet is that serious
@christiannewaye7306
@christiannewaye7306 4 жыл бұрын
Ethiopia extended beyond Africa into Arabia and they also industrialized to the point where they were able to build modern weapons in which came in handy in 1889 with the Italians try to colonize Ethiopia little to the Italians North Ethiopian army was stocked with brand new berdan and Mosin rifles from Ethiopia
@ykmvp1870
@ykmvp1870 4 жыл бұрын
The Somalis once conquered 2/3rds of Ethiopia
@ykmvp1870
@ykmvp1870 4 жыл бұрын
JHyun - he means southern Yemen that’s why habesha are mixed with arab
@radicalfraction8570
@radicalfraction8570 4 жыл бұрын
JakeMoranIsLame yes, and for a short period occupied ethiopia out of brute force
@nicolamutton
@nicolamutton 4 жыл бұрын
@@radicalfraction8570 is there an occupation thats considered peaceful? 😂🤣its war
@nicolamutton
@nicolamutton 4 жыл бұрын
@Archie Fitzpatrick beC4u5e ThE b1ble Is acCur4tE!1!1🤣
@sigmasquad5285
@sigmasquad5285 4 жыл бұрын
Because they’re [redacted]
@georgiogiraffe8484
@georgiogiraffe8484 3 жыл бұрын
Short answer: they did, just did it so long ago no one remembers or cares
@Steve-zc9ht
@Steve-zc9ht 3 жыл бұрын
Facts that's how Europe got ppl they where colonized by africa but due to the lack of the sun there skin color started getting lighter over generations to fit the climate
@todiegame6640
@todiegame6640 4 жыл бұрын
Ask some 13th Century Spaniards about how Africans never invaded Europe. Actually, ask a Spaniard from like 700 something to 1300 about it.
@beerbatov
@beerbatov 4 жыл бұрын
berbers aren't africans though. They are a semitic race which makes them more white than african... hahaha
@Fankas2000
@Fankas2000 4 жыл бұрын
Arabs are from Asia though...
@velazquezarmouries
@velazquezarmouries 4 жыл бұрын
@@beerbatov well the Moorish of northwestern africa also invaded Spain and if I remember correctly they were the ones that took andaluz On the first place
@beerbatov
@beerbatov 4 жыл бұрын
@@velazquezarmouries moors is a different word for Berbers. So...still on point.
@todiegame6640
@todiegame6640 4 жыл бұрын
​@@beerbatov Moor is variously applied to Arabs, North African Berbers, and Muslim Europeans. The Umayyad Caliphate invaded Spain. They included several peoples from a vast geography. Let's look at the battle of Guadalete for example. Yes, there were Arab countries represented, but the force was mostly Berber, an ethnicity of several nations mostly indigenous to North Africa and some northern parts of West Africa. Moor is not an interchangeable term for Berber. It may be used that way but it is not so. In any case, you may notice how many times "Africa" is referenced as an origin for the Berbers.
@eduardgoldschagg1791
@eduardgoldschagg1791 4 жыл бұрын
Just a side note: You're using the British forces to portray the Afrikaners at the start of the video who also fought the Zulu's and Afrikaners. Not a big deal but thought I should mention it. Probably the lack of footage for battles against Zulus?
@hayteren
@hayteren 4 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. lol. Like, how long has Michael Cain been a Dutchman?
@reapersmercy7283
@reapersmercy7283 4 жыл бұрын
wait, I thought those were the Zulu's?
@mogznwaz
@mogznwaz 4 жыл бұрын
Oh no that's deliberate. A subtle way to blame the British.
@buddyrevell511
@buddyrevell511 4 жыл бұрын
...or maybe he's just an ignoramus who makes up half-baked theories and supports them with false or half-true evidence, out context, and thinks that sprinkling in unfunny boring jokes can save the audience from complete boredom... and fails.
@hatinmyselfiscool2879
@hatinmyselfiscool2879 3 жыл бұрын
I mean the afrikaners fought in the army too i think.
@owenkeller2748
@owenkeller2748 4 жыл бұрын
Mr. Box, Africa had agriculture; africans were not adversely affected by European diseases in the same way as American tribes, if anything the opposite was more true; Africans were protected from the rest of the world by the Sahara which was functionally better at defense than the English Channel. The title of this video was about Africa. But you got a bit sidetracked and talked more about the Americas and Asia. I understand that you are making the spawn point argument but I’m not sure if you think that philosophy (on any level) makes a difference or not. Your most devoted servant, Penismightier3000
@alexhurt7919
@alexhurt7919 3 жыл бұрын
Penis mightier 3000? That's a weird name
@matts1166
@matts1166 3 жыл бұрын
The weird thing about natural barriers is that they work both ways. The Sahara may have kept people from going to southern Africa, but also kept Southern Africans blocked in.
@leomarkaable1
@leomarkaable1 3 жыл бұрын
@@matts1166 But wasn't the Sahara much less arid not that long ago?
@JohnnyWalkerBlack142
@JohnnyWalkerBlack142 4 жыл бұрын
I've been researching this question for 4 years. Being biracial I was constantly trying to search for answers and I was always confused by this question. Thank you so much for the video. And I love the Bach in the background!
@mahamoudali2176
@mahamoudali2176 4 жыл бұрын
Europe didn’t have any resources African empires of the past were interested in. Also Europe compared to the rest of world was over populated and cold which made it unattractive for colonization.
@alsi1818
@alsi1818 4 жыл бұрын
@@KnellofPartingDay clearly didn't watch the video, i see
@mahamoudali2176
@mahamoudali2176 4 жыл бұрын
J. Stutton you are just dumb! Why all the hate and stupidity?
@princevimbai1
@princevimbai1 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your video, I like the honest and logical take you took to it. Just a quick correction: I think the majority of African groups were not hunter-gatherer societies, rather most of them were farmers. The majority of the Bantu groups are farmers who keep livestock, along with growing things like corn, which is a staple that came through Portuguese trade, and others which predate Portuguese trade like older more traditional staples such as sourghum and some I do not know how to name in English. Pretty much hunter gatherers were a small minority in the plethora of large tribes, nations and kingdoms. However, I very much concur with the geographical theory put forward. I can tell you that in Southern Africa the majority of our groups were nations in their own right. However, a consistent problem most nations had were fragmentations into smaller groups. This can be seen with the Zulus during the mfecane, bringing rise to other kingdoms like the Xhosa, Ndebele, Swati, Shangaani and other Nguni groups. Another closer to home example is the fall and abandonment of the Mwenemutapa (Great Zimbabwe) empire, and the subsequent rise of the Rozvi empire (centred at Danan'ombe ruins) which then fragmented when the last Rozvi changamire was killed. Fragmentation of empires and a seeming struggle to hold large empires for a long period of time was a big issue and one I think the geography has a role in. However, it seems in West Africa they did not share this problem as much. One thing I am convinced of however, is that the fact that from Europe you had close access to 4 continents really aided as it was through the sharing of ideas and adopting of others knowledge and skills that allowed Europe to advance to where it was. It was be shortsighted to say Europe got guns by their own wits, it was through the “discovering” of black powder from South East Asia. That development, and technological advancement was through accessibility of other people's who can be exchange with easily. However, in Southern Africa, the Americas and Australasia, this was not so much the case. People were often somewhat isolated from very different people with completely differing ways of life -not to say that our cultures even on the continent are anywhere near the same, but the usual variations as could be seen between the British, French and Spanish. It's like how someone said about having 4 smart kids versus one going at it alone. Anyway, thanks for the video. I really like what you're doing! God bless!
@77Night77Shade77
@77Night77Shade77 4 жыл бұрын
Also, you forgot to mention the Golden Age of India. That one gets ignored so often, by so many people. It really is infuriating.
@danielnsikanjoshua306
@danielnsikanjoshua306 4 жыл бұрын
Man, you cant expect a westener to know the history of india and afrika
@dxdboy7418
@dxdboy7418 4 жыл бұрын
The golden age of India wasn’t nearly good compared to 🇮🇶 or 🇪🇬
@danielnsikanjoshua306
@danielnsikanjoshua306 4 жыл бұрын
@Meforbleach hehe dont be too sure
@AC-fs3vm
@AC-fs3vm 4 жыл бұрын
Also golden age of Middle East. This one is the major factor that led to Renaissance.
@s-kazi940
@s-kazi940 3 жыл бұрын
@@dxdboy7418 Nah, they were even wealthier than Iraq and Egypt.
@CarmellaMulroy
@CarmellaMulroy Жыл бұрын
Ever notice the people saying IQ is about race don't have particularly high IQs themselves
@robertharris6092
@robertharris6092 4 жыл бұрын
It did... 1.8 million years ago. The moors also colonized spain for a few 100 years.
@nopt8191
@nopt8191 4 жыл бұрын
They didn t colonised u bloody idiot they invaded in 711
@trufu9678
@trufu9678 4 жыл бұрын
NO Pt Nah the moors did more good to a lot of Euro nations such as irrigation and how to clean themselves. The Greeks were the first to ever give Africans the name of Moorish. The Moors has a lot to do in the exchange of knowledge such as architecture, mathematics, and even medicine. They never “invaded” the euro nations if they made them better.
@robertharris6092
@robertharris6092 4 жыл бұрын
@@trufu9678 europeans had bath houses thousands of years before the moors arrived to Europe. And records show europeans in the medieval ages bathed regularly. All the moors did is rape pillage and enslave white and christian people.
@subscribeplease4875
@subscribeplease4875 4 жыл бұрын
The moors are not black
@trufu9678
@trufu9678 4 жыл бұрын
subscribe please yes they were... That’s why the Beethoven topic is poppin up... he was moorish
@hasanitto
@hasanitto 4 жыл бұрын
Ok we just forget they were empires and kingdoms in Africa like Nubian kingdom, Abyssinian Empire, Mali Kingdom, the Ajuran Kingdom and many more, so u just have to believe what suits u and Africa is different from Americas and Australia because Simply Europeans didnt succeed to take Africa like Australia or Americas but ruther they were faced by organized civil stand and get their sovereignties back with their blood, just reminding thats all😅
@hasanitto
@hasanitto 4 жыл бұрын
Asimova2000 TheOne Well obviously English is not my native language, secondly if they are made of mud why are there still be seen today after thousand of years, Lol u have to believe what u like but truth is out there and i know were this is going so, in every continent there were those who builded empires and those who lived in basic clan system and Europe is not out of this list too.
@boofbafn
@boofbafn 4 жыл бұрын
You do know that the biggest reason there was no real resistance in australia and the americas was the fact that disease wiped out most of the populations there? Essentially any resistance was non-existent until the children of the colonizers started to pursue their own independence from the mother countries. Expect for Haiti, the only place where the slaves were able to overthrow their masters.
@louie4551
@louie4551 4 жыл бұрын
Asimova2000 TheOne Wrong Nubian Empire: www.nationalgeographic.com/history/magazine/2016/11-12/ancient-egypt-nubian-kingdom-pyramids-sudan/ Abyssinian/Ethiopian: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Ethiopia Ajuuran: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajuran_Sultanate All made out of stone
@jayydamour4195
@jayydamour4195 3 жыл бұрын
What’s the name of that empire from Africa that invaded Europe besides Mali 🇲🇱 and moors , probably Egypt or kemet
@jayydamour4195
@jayydamour4195 3 жыл бұрын
White folks are just a baby 👶 to this world... the youngest race (6kyears) vs melanin folks that been on this planet for over 100 million years if not billions. Now they think they are over everything on this planet..... didn’t they read the Bible..... let us make mens in our image... not no pale skin, frail looking, with teeth matching their skin tone.
@Josep_Hernandez_Lujan
@Josep_Hernandez_Lujan 4 жыл бұрын
"Whatever happens, we have got The Maxim gun, and they have not"
@AlexJ1
@AlexJ1 3 жыл бұрын
I've learned bits and pieces of this throughout the years. Thank you for explaining it all so cleanly!! This is my new favourite channel 🙌
@bravelittleroomba
@bravelittleroomba 4 жыл бұрын
Answer: they did, several times over the past few hundred thousand years.
@ntmn8444
@ntmn8444 4 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@jenzyk1302
@jenzyk1302 4 жыл бұрын
That wasnt colonisation was it?
@gr125412
@gr125412 4 жыл бұрын
No they did not
@TheCastedone
@TheCastedone 4 жыл бұрын
@@jenzyk1302 it wasn't how Europeans colonized...they merged with the people and current society bringing their good and keeping the good there for the most part. European colonization pretty much decimated local population then they move in and "colonized" who's left.
@jenzyk1302
@jenzyk1302 4 жыл бұрын
@@TheCastedone pretty sure fighting Neanderthals still aint colonialism if thats what you were after?
@alihyderi9928
@alihyderi9928 4 жыл бұрын
I didn’t write this btw my friend did he sent this to me “My first problem with this video is his clear, complete, misunderstanding of what the 'first ancient civilisations' were. With a map he shows at 7:22 he shows that the 'first ancient civilisations' (which is how he addresses them earlier) were Rome, Greece, a civilisation in the Middle East (I'm pretty sure it's the Phoenicians as he talks about them later) and Ancient Egypt. Now most importantly these were not the first ancient civilisations. Those are referred to as the 'Cradles of Civilisations' and are Mesopotamia, Ancient Egypt, Ancient India, Ancient China, the Andes, Mesoamerica. At the beginning of the segment 'Environment' he talks about it being important in where civilisations do and do not emerge. He refers to the argument made by Adam Smith in 'The Wealth Of Nations' that it was due to the Mediterranean that the first ancient civilisations emerged. The main problem with this? He was just wrong. It wasn't just the mediterranean that allowed civilisations to appear, it was any major water source (considering there were about ten involved with the cradles of civilisation I won't list them). The second mistake he makes is to say that the Phoenicians were the first to invent ships. Although he is wrong (one google search and it comes up in big bold letters as the Egyptians) is that they were the first to build ships that could carry you across the sea. I'm not sure if this is correct however either way saying this is just deceptive. The third mistake he makes is with Egypt. He says 'it was for this reason ' (water sources allowing trade and commerce) 'that towns and villages were never situated more than a couple of miles away from the Nile or from the break up of canals'. Egypt (except from those areas a few miles from the Nile or in around the occasional oasis) is a desert. An inhospitable, unliveable desert. The Nile's annual flooding turns the useless dead sand into some of the most fertile land in the world (because of the silt carried by the river and deposited). It's not that they decided living along the Nile was better it's that they couldn't live anywhere else. “ just wanted to see how you would respond to this
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
Gay
@Kleph.
@Kleph. 4 жыл бұрын
The important takeaway from this video, I think, is not the particular history but what determines its course. Your friend's explanation is more historically accurate, but it only furthers the ideological points LB is making. I think your friend says it best at the end when writing ,"It's not that they decided living along the Nile was better it's that they couldn't live anywhere else." This is the case for all of this geographically and materialistic interpretation of history; people dont act from the abstract, they act from the real. Thank you for sharing your friend's comment.
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
Kleph Hi friend here, this was never intended to be seen so it’s purposefully nit picky as, especially as I had intended to write a more relevant one on the videos latter half and my problems with the video as a whole. However some of the things he said are either terribly written or blatant lies. If you search up ‘what civilisation invented ships/boat’ it’ll show, very clearly, it was the Ancient Egyptians.
@lloydcoe9680
@lloydcoe9680 4 жыл бұрын
Kleph Also could you clarify what the ideological points of this video are, I think we took away different things from watching it.
@Kleph.
@Kleph. 4 жыл бұрын
@@lloydcoe9680 The ideological point is that we should not understand the imbalanced power distribution of the world, particularly the recent success and hegemony of Europe, as resulting from 1) race, 2) culture (ideas), or 3) great men. As for the historically inaccuracies, I really have no idea what LB was thinking. At 8:09 he says the phoenicians and Carthaginians were the "first people to start building ships." Given the evidence of hollowed out logs and rafts and other such vessels from 5kya or more, I assume he means sea-worthy vessels. Encyclopedia Britannica writes: "Navigation on the sea began among Egyptians as early as the 3rd millennium BCE. Voyages to Crete were among the earliest, followed by voyages guided by landmark navigation to Phoenicia [...] According to the 5th-century-BCE Greek historian Herodotus, the king of Egypt about 600 BCE dispatched a fleet from a Red Sea port that returned to Egypt via the Mediterranean after a journey of more than two years. Cretan and Phoenician voyagers gave greater attention to the specialization of ships for trade." Given how little overlap this has with what LB says, I think it's fair to assume that he incorrectly remembered this history and didn't think to fact check it. Nevertheless, if we use this new evidence to challenge his broader narrative, I think we find that this still bolsters his point: there was nothing special about Egypt except that it was on a navigable river. Technology developed to navigate it, because that's a useful ability. That tech then improved to the point they could sail in the Mediterranean and Red Sea. Nothing here is significant about race, culture, or great men. Does this help?
@gnashattack1
@gnashattack1 4 жыл бұрын
When you were showing the clips of all the racist people you should’ve put in Leonardo DeCaprio’s servitude rant in Django Unchained lmao
@darthcraft1575
@darthcraft1575 4 жыл бұрын
And to think i liked the 1st dude because owned the libs and feminists, ooh silly me
@floodstreet2961
@floodstreet2961 4 жыл бұрын
shadman haha
@gnashattack1
@gnashattack1 4 жыл бұрын
KrustBuket thank you for being upfront and not like literally everyone else that’s like “wHy dO i ReCoGnIsE yOuR pRoFiLe pIcTuRe ?”
@shane92515
@shane92515 2 жыл бұрын
Didn’t the availability of domesticatable animals also play a big role? Like in Europe they had more animal husbandry than other parts of the world?
@pogo8050
@pogo8050 2 жыл бұрын
It did. Most oxen died in SSA because of a parasite from the tse tse fly.
@doraymeandyou
@doraymeandyou 4 жыл бұрын
Wasn’t there something in the Bible that says don’t store food, only pick what you can eat straight away? Would that have been God trying to warn us about the evils of agriculture?
@strawberryshortcake4342
@strawberryshortcake4342 4 жыл бұрын
Gringa Maluca I think much of Genesis is the lamentation of the loss of the nomadic shepherding way of life to agriculture. God preferred Abel’s gift of meat over Cain’s gift of grain. Cities were places of evil, etc.
@anartistnamedmatthew1849
@anartistnamedmatthew1849 4 жыл бұрын
I think you’re referring to when the Jewish people feasted on mana from heaven, and God warned them not to store the food in order to prevent greed and gluttony.
@anartistnamedmatthew1849
@anartistnamedmatthew1849 4 жыл бұрын
To provide further context, God gave the Jewish people the manna because they were starving during their escape from Egypt.
@doraymeandyou
@doraymeandyou 4 жыл бұрын
An Artist Named Matthew that’s the one! I knew there’d be someone out there who could elaborate. I’ve never been much of a bible reader...or a reader of any sort, lol, but that part obviously stuck in my mind. So do you think there’s cryptic message there that relates?
@doraymeandyou
@doraymeandyou 4 жыл бұрын
Strawberry Shortcake hmm. I moved to a city and am now stuck here. I feel like it’s a place of evil.
@edwardviverette6044
@edwardviverette6044 4 жыл бұрын
Actually, most ancient African civilizations were/ are unknown to most Europeans. The length of Chem, Axum, Great Zimbabwe, etc., civilizations were unknown nor mentioned today. Most of today's myths speaks of these nations. Just visiting ancient spots clearly show this.
@razatiger22
@razatiger22 4 жыл бұрын
I mean... At the end of the day Africa colonized the world. Otherwise there would only be humans in Africa since its the mother continent of humanity.
@gog_magpie
@gog_magpie 4 жыл бұрын
So everyone is African ,it means it wasn't colonization they retaken their ancestors land , now China does
@sylamy7457
@sylamy7457 4 жыл бұрын
@@gog_magpie No, everyone evolves, after a long time of migration throughout the world, humans settled europe tens of thousands of years ago, it's been so long that we are no longer biologically related, as you can see our racial differences as humans have adapted differently to climates.
@Cagliostro85
@Cagliostro85 4 жыл бұрын
This is a low quality tl;dr of Jared Diamond’s Guns Germs and Steel.
@leomarkaable1
@leomarkaable1 3 жыл бұрын
Agree. Quite a bit of plagiarism here.
@haseebniwaz4478
@haseebniwaz4478 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/oaKZdqiQn5mUrqM
@shiroishii7312
@shiroishii7312 4 жыл бұрын
I've lived in Africa for almost my whole life, and the answer I would give to your questions, is philosophy. Each culture has a different conception of the essential elements influencing the evolution of a society. In China for example, their conception of time is way different than than that of the west. In the same way, happiness, time and success have different meanings in Africa, and these different conceptions shaped men, more caring about their family, day to day life and social cohesion, we wanted nothing more and were mostly happy with what nature had given us. Is it bad ? Well maybe, it made us weak, never trying to evolve, to discover and consequently, we never went outside of zone of comfort. The only reason we are different today (we evolved), is because we were colonized, and even then, most of us still are happy with nothing (in the Occidental sense of nothingness). I feel like this will lead us to destruction, as the African elite tasted the western style of life and started to see that they had nothing, they exploit the citizens of their countries work them to death to extract every bit of money they can from them, in order to get closer to the western dream of success. The people below is powerless and sometimes doesn't even notice the manipulation, because, they are happy with "nothing".
@gq_barry
@gq_barry 3 жыл бұрын
I agree with you on that
@evetats235
@evetats235 3 жыл бұрын
Are you even African or some kind of plant who is pretending to demonstrate the racist’s inaccurate theories? If you are African, could I implore you to think and study our histories across Africa before you say such humiliating things like “Africans did not evolve...” Ridiculous. Embarrassing. In this world of white supremacy, the last thing any African should do is provide those racist fools with ammunition!!! Stay on code man!
@gq_barry
@gq_barry 3 жыл бұрын
@@evetats235 I think he used the word "evolve" quite appropriately. Your ego has been deflated while reading that, admit it. And before you assume me to be a white supremacist, I'm Kenyan
@shiroishii7312
@shiroishii7312 3 жыл бұрын
@@evetats235 Indeed , that is certainly a bad call, but I am interested in knowing your explanation, to the fact that we were once the most powerful continent in the world, we had advanced scientific knowledge before Europeans even had toilets, but they managed to use our knowledge and improve their societies to the point were they considered us as inferior animals. Why is that ? Isn't that a proof that our philosophy is not expansionist ? That we were not trying to evolve but to instead sustain ? (not talking about any genetic or biological factor here, just sociological). I am trying find the causes of a problem so together we can solve it, if you have the answer i am looking for, I would really like to hear it.
@제길-l7n
@제길-l7n 3 жыл бұрын
@@shiroishii7312 the video talks about a lot of what you’re asking. It’s not that Africa didn’t want to expand, but a lot of their geography made it harder to.
@oghaki5097
@oghaki5097 3 жыл бұрын
The most recent DNA evidence suggests all four of the ancient civilizations you enumerated were, in fact, the same racial group.
@dias8726
@dias8726 3 жыл бұрын
Link?
@oghaki5097
@oghaki5097 3 жыл бұрын
​@@dias8726 1. Greece and Rome spoke _Indo-European_ (IE) languages. 2. The bulk of the population in Mesopotamia and Egypt were _Neolithic Farmer_ (NF), which were part of the same group that IE came from, but left earlier (before admixture from _Eastern Hunter-Gatherer_ (EHG) gave them higher rates of light hair, admixture from _Western Hutner-Gatherer_ (WHG) gave them light eyes, or before they evolved lactose-tolerance, but after the evolution of 𝙎𝙇𝘾𝟮𝟰𝘼𝟱, which is the primary gene responsible for European skin color, with NF being the first people to bring this gene into Western Europe, though it isn't far-fetched to think that genes with similar effects may have existed in WHG, considering the selection pressure towards genes which produce lighter skin all over higher latitudes). Nonetheless, the modern population to which ancient Egyptians and Mesopotamians are most similar is Sardinia, who cluster with modern Europeans, and not with people who currently live in the near east. It is also worth noting that IE, NF, WHG, and EHG, all came from the same source group on the Pontic-Caspian steppe, with WHG leaving first and moving into Western Europe, only to be later out-populated by NF, who were subsequently displaced and interbred with IE (at least NF females did, the males didn't make it for the most part, judging by the overwhelming preponderance of R-haplogroups almost everywhere IE went), with IE deriving largely from EHG, and the combination of these groups, mostly IE and NF, which is primarily due to the relative population sizes, forms the modern European's genome. With that said, it's looking a lot like the start of dynastic Egypt coincides with conquest of a previously-NF civilization by IE, who then ruled over (and we see similar things with the Akkadians). The first group in the region we know to be IE-speaking is the Hitties, although the Greeks, Medes, and Persians follow soon after, all IE-speaking and all coming from Eastern Europe in the Pontic steppe. Also, IE were the first people to ride horses, and they invented the spoked wheel and chariot and composite bow. The presence of all of these things in the near East seems to coincide with their arrival. The first groups of people who might be said to be of a different racial group that IE encountered were probably found in India, the far-Eastern steppe / Manchuria, or perhaps the Tarim Basin. In all of these areas, they brought the spoked wheel, the chariot, horse-back riding, the bow, and, often, bronze-working. Also, with the possible exception of north-East China, they left their genetic markers that are still easily visible today (a couple thousand years later, China would exterminate what remained of them in NE China and the Tarim basin through ethnic cleansing, although it looks like they had mostly moved on due to changes in climate from the latter). Modern Persians have significant admixture in most areas, but many populations still exhibit the strong Indo-European / Indo-Aryan traits of their ancestors. Likewise, in India, we see much stronger contribution in the North and Punjab, and many Brahmin are still predominantly genetically Indo-Aryan (having light skin, with some even retaining light eyes and hair). Persians and Indians both still speak mostly IE languages, with ancient Sanskrit, the language of the ancient Vedas, being one of the best sources for inferring what the ancient proto-IE language was like (also, IE brought Hinduism to India, and it also looks like the first Buddhists were IE as well, but the evidence for this, if I'm not mistaken, is closer to the Tarim basin). Also, it appears that the first group of people to enter the new world, through the Bering strait, were the ancestors of IE, which is likely why many Native Americans, especially in the North-East United States, have a Caucasoid appearance (must larger migrations from East-Asia would follow millennia later). I'm not going to be able to give you a single link for all of this info, but it isn't very hard to find (search for 'proto-indoeuropeans' or 'indoeuropean origins' or 'autosomal clustering european' or 'principal component analysis european' or something similar). You can take a look at the videos below (I included a mix of formality, as well varied levels of self-satisfaction with the findings, on the part of the speaker) or even look at Wikipedia (you'll likely need some background on the topic to properly understand what you're reading there, though). Also, even with haploid analysis, we started being able to see some of these things, but now that we're able to sequence full genomes of ancient DNA cheaply and have large databases of it, we have much more granular information, and the rate at which new information is arriving is very high, as so much relies on the work of others and our ability to recover and sequence DNA after thousands of years of exposure to non-ideal conditions. Finally, I should mention, you're not going to see most of these experts talk about 'race', but, if by 'race', you mean a population of people who largely share a common ancestry, forming a kind of clade, and who largely exhibit permutations of certain phenotypical traits which make them identifiable as a group, then you'll be as satisfied as you might hope to be. The topic is incredibly interesting, and it is important to telling the story of who we are and where we come from, as well as how different groups have interacted with one another, whether peacefully through trade and sharing of technology, or violently through war and conquest, but all of it has shaped the variances and preponderances of our modern genetic pools and affects who we are psychologically and culturally, as much as how we look physically. Ancient Human Genomes...Present-Day Europeans - Johannes Krause (kzbin.info/www/bejne/epyZZoeYf7eBlaM) Indo European Origins | DNA | Geneticist Razib Khan (kzbin.info/www/bejne/h4nOgauql7afh7c) The Spread of the Indo-Europeans (kzbin.info/www/bejne/l4KVaWaElL-Xgbs) The Indo European Invasion of China (kzbin.info/www/bejne/apm8eqxsrsufi7s) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_history_of_Egypt en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_history_of_the_Middle_East ───────────────────────────────────────────── *Also, as a side-note, the guy who made this video should really distinguish between North Africa, which was caucasoid for as long back as we're able to tell based on DNA, and Sub-Saharan Africa, which, for most of man's history, has been predominantly negroid, although there is substantial genetic, phenotypical, and cultural variation among these people, and there is far more immigration from N. Africa, Asia, and Europe, repeatedly, and as far back as 80,000 ybp, than we would have ever imagined (with some San people having a near majority of Eurasian genes). Also, migrations within S.S. Africa are complex and often tragic (see the _Bantu Migrations_, and look up what you can about their origins and early genetics, as we're learning a lot). You'll surely experience a kind of ambivalence, as, while so much of the cultural and technological development of S.S. Africa is tied up with, and dependent upon the Bantu conquest, so are things like the African slave trade, war, death, and genocides. Further, while many might consider the progress of Europe to be, at least somewhat, bolstered by the African slave trade, the indirect effects may have been just as substantial-for example, because of the efficiency of the African slave trade supply, with powerful S.S. African groups capturing and selling, _en masse_, groups from ever-deeper within the African sub-continent, the enslavement (at least _de jure_ , although kinds of _de facto_ slavery would persist for some time) of European peoples became obsolete, as it was too costly, which dramatically reduced conflict between Christian and Mohammadians in certain regions, freeing up European and Arab human capital from slavery and war, which could then be directed towards other pursuits, far more efficiently as free labor than the former bondage (the same would prove true for the labor of descendants of those S.S. African slaves in the West, the near-East, and S.S. Africa, after the European colonial powers forced emancipation upon the world).
@lif3andthings763
@lif3andthings763 3 жыл бұрын
@@oghaki5097 Why are you lying?
@oghaki5097
@oghaki5097 2 жыл бұрын
@@lif3andthings763 lol, which part do you think is a lie? I wrote a lot.
@croixfadas
@croixfadas 4 ай бұрын
​@@oghaki5097All of it lmao
@Brainsore.
@Brainsore. Жыл бұрын
They just didn’t feel like it
@EARART
@EARART 3 жыл бұрын
This is misinformation, the moors ruled and colonised europe for well over 800 years and the moors were black not arab etc
@m7mo0o
@m7mo0o 3 жыл бұрын
the moors were Arabs and Berbers, don't pull facts out of your ass
@mitchbaker5394
@mitchbaker5394 4 жыл бұрын
I have heard that the reason North and South Americas did not develop like Europe was because of the lack of “beasts of burden” or domesticated working animals. Is the same true in Africa?
@unlockwithjsr
@unlockwithjsr 4 жыл бұрын
Africa is a complex issue
@Oldheadontheblock
@Oldheadontheblock 4 жыл бұрын
Africa lacks water. Thats why they stayed behind.
@sethneall5705
@sethneall5705 4 жыл бұрын
in both Africa and North America the tribes were small with tons of land so they really did not have to compete with each other while places like India China and Europe had constant wars between tribes than kingdoms And the fact trading was done kinda regular advancements in technology where more likely to be pass around this is just one of the many factors that led to the development of certain country over others
@ryanrobinson2293
@ryanrobinson2293 4 жыл бұрын
Ha I literally just subscribed because your Ben Shariro video got recommended to me
@Xpwnxage
@Xpwnxage 4 жыл бұрын
The first video I got was the Christchurch massacre
@CaptIronfoundersson
@CaptIronfoundersson 4 жыл бұрын
The Eyeball Zone sent me here.
@urnii
@urnii 4 жыл бұрын
If all man came from Africa, then technically it did...
@amenrakwamehotepporchprima9307
@amenrakwamehotepporchprima9307 3 жыл бұрын
Re-Examining the "Out of Africa" Theory and the Origin of Europeoids (Caucasoids) in Light of DNA Genealogy Anatole A. Klyosov*, Igor L. Rozhanskii Abstract: Seven thousand five hundred fifty-six (7556) haplotypes of 46 subclades in 17 major haplogroups were considered in terms of their base (ancestral) haplotypes and timespans to their common ancestors, for the purposes of designing of time-balanced haplogroup tree. It was found that African haplogroup A (originated 132,000 ± 12,000 years before present) is very remote time-wise from all other haplogroups, which have a separate common ancestor, named β-haplogroup, and originated 64,000 ± 6000 ybp. It includes a family of Europeoid (Caucasoid) haplogroups from F through T that originated 58,000 ± 5000 ybp. A downstream common ancestor for haplogroup A and β-haplogroup, coined the α-haplogroup emerged 160,000 ± 12,000 ybp. A territorial origin of haplogroups α- and β-remains unknown; however, the most likely origin for each of them is a vast triangle stretched from Central Europe in the west through the Russian Plain to the east and to Levant to the south. Haplogroup B is descended from β-haplogroup (and not from haplogroup A, from which it is very distant, and separated by as much as 123,000 years of “lat- eral” mutational evolution) likely migrated to Africa after 46,000 ybp. The finding that the Europeoid haplogroups did not descend from “African” haplogroups A or B is supported by the fact that bearers of the Europeoid haplogroups, as well as all non-African haplogroups do not carry either SNPs M91, P97, M31, P82, M23, M114, P262, M32, M59, P289, P291, P102, M13, M171, M118 (haplogroup A and its subclades SNPs) or M60, M181, P90 (haplogroup B), as it was shown recently in “Walk through Y” FTDNA Project (the reference is incorporated therein) on several hundred people from various haplogroups. Keywords: Y Chromosome; Mutations; Haplotypes; Haplogroups; TMRCA; STR; SNP; “Out of Africa” Cite this paper: Klyosov, A. & Rozhanskii, I. (2012). Re-Examining the "Out of Africa" Theory and the Origin of Europeoids (Caucasoids) in Light of DNA Genealogy. Advances in Anthropology, 2, 80-86. doi: 10.4236/aa.2012.22009. References [1] Cruciani, F., Trombetta, B., Sellitto, D., Massaia, A., Destro-Bisol, G., Watson, E., et al. (2010). Human Y chromosome haplogroup R-V88: A paternal genetic record of early mid Holocene trans-Saharan con- nections and the spread of Chadic languages. European Journal of Human Genetics, 18, 800-807. [2] Cruciani, F., Trombetta, B., Massaia, A., Destro-Bisol, G., Sellitto, D., & Scozzari, R. (2011). A revised root for the human Y chromosomal phylogenetic tree: The origin of patrilineal diversity in Africa. The American Journal of Human Genetics, 88, 1-5. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2011.05.002 [3] Klyosov, A. A. (2009a). DNA Genealogy, mutation rates, and some historical evidences written in Y-chromosome. I. Basic principles and the method. Journal of Genetic Genealogy, 5, 186-216. [4] Klyosov, A. A. (2009b). DNA Genealogy, mutation rates, and some historical evidences written in Y-chromosome. II. Walking the map. Journal of Genetic Genealogy, 5, 217-256. [5] Klyosov, A. A. (2011a). The slowest 22 marker haplotype panel (out of the 67 marker panel) and their mutation rate constants employed for calculations timespans to the most ancient common ancestors. Pro- ceedings of the Russian Academy of DNA Genealogy, 4, 1240-1257. [6] Klyosov, A. A. (2011b). DNA genealogy of major haplogroups of Y chromosome (Part 1). Proceedings of the Russian Academy of DNA Genealogy, 4, 1258-1283. [7] Klyosov, A. A. (2012). Ancient history of the Arbins, bearers of hap- logroup R1b, from Central Asia to Europe, 16,000 to 1,500 years before present. Advances in Anthropology, in press. [8] Rozhanskii, I. (2010). Evaluation оf the сonvergence оf sets in STR phylogeny and analysis оf the haplogroup R1a1 tree. Proceedings of the Russian Academy of DNA Genealogy, 3, 1316-1324. [9] Rozhanskii, I. L., & Klyosov, A. A. (2011). Mutation rate constants in DNA genealogy (Y chromosome). Advances in Anthropology, 1, 26- 34. doi:10.4236/aa.2011.12005 [10] Simms, T. M., Martinez, E., Herrera, K. J., Wright, M. R., Perez, O. A., Hernandez, M. et al. (2011). Paternal lineages signal distinct genetic contributions from British Loyalists and continental Africans among different Bahamian islands. American Journal of Physical Anthro- pology, 146, 594-608. doi:10.1002/ajpa.21616
@_doofiis7420
@_doofiis7420 3 жыл бұрын
Africa kindve did conquer Europe since humans evolved in Africa
@Bigboy-nx3nc
@Bigboy-nx3nc 3 жыл бұрын
The only sensible answers that no one talks about is Africa is the richest continent on the planet and it has been that way for years , why would one think of moving elsewhere while he can have everything in Africa. It’s the same reason to why China never had colonies, it’s because their country is rich in all kinds of minerals....
@adamender9092
@adamender9092 3 жыл бұрын
By the way, 87% of European countries never colonised. Colonisers: 🇬🇧🇳🇱🇧🇪🇩🇪🇫🇷🇵🇹🇪🇸🇮🇹 Not colonisers: 🇮🇪🇮🇲🇬🇬🇯🇪🇱🇺🇩🇰🇳🇴🇸🇪🇫🇮🇪🇪🇷🇺🇦🇹🇨🇭🇨🇿🇸🇰🇭🇺🇸🇮🇭🇷🇦🇩🇧🇦🇷🇸🇦🇱🇽🇰🇬🇷🇲🇰🇧🇬🇷🇴🇺🇦🇹🇷🇦🇿🇦🇲🇬🇪🇱🇹🇱🇻🇱🇮🇻🇦🇸🇲🇨🇾🇰🇿🇮🇸🇫🇴🇧🇾🇵🇱🇲🇩🇲🇹.
@bhka6423
@bhka6423 3 жыл бұрын
Turkey is a colonizer and only 3% of Turkey is in Europe and Azerbaijan, Armenia, Kazakhstan and Georgia are not European.
@2006IZ
@2006IZ 3 жыл бұрын
That and those countries who did were really into it, so in the end, although not all European nations participated in the colonisation game, that shouldn’t under highlight the insanity of the world domination game
@2006IZ
@2006IZ 3 жыл бұрын
And russian originally owned Alaska
@MrHat.
@MrHat. 2 жыл бұрын
Russia isnt a colonizer? Please
@boogztapez4892
@boogztapez4892 4 жыл бұрын
bro....we as Africans had everything we needed...we didnt have to move by we didn't need nobody......the europeans needed us .....we are the first people on Earth
@ericjohnson7234
@ericjohnson7234 3 жыл бұрын
no and no
@samuelbedsole5089
@samuelbedsole5089 3 жыл бұрын
The European powers didn't so much need the resources of Africa and the Americas, they just really wanted them. The lands was there, the people living there weren't really using the resources there- and didn't put up much of a fight for it, try as they did- so they just took it in a similar fashion the Romans did during their conquest of Europe.
@ericjohnson7234
@ericjohnson7234 3 жыл бұрын
@@samuelbedsole5089 And so many others would have done the same. That is just human history in a nut shell, the rich taking from the poor. Tell me, what is the main contributing factor to an empires creation?
@samuelbedsole5089
@samuelbedsole5089 3 жыл бұрын
@@ericjohnson7234 One guy managing to convince a lot of other guys with swords/guns to follow him by making it worth their while.
@ericjohnson7234
@ericjohnson7234 3 жыл бұрын
@@samuelbedsole5089 Yeah mercenaries. Its not really hard, to convince the poor who those rich fucks made poor on purpose, to convince them, that becoming a mercenary wouldn't be that bad. IT puts food on their families table. Why i'm not upset, is that if the roles were reversed yours would do the exact same thing to mine. So no. I wont apologize for what my Race did, for others do the exact same.
@matthewmann8969
@matthewmann8969 4 жыл бұрын
North Africans almost did with The Moors And Barbary Pirates
@iz_ray2479
@iz_ray2479 4 жыл бұрын
while watching this I had to repeat the words he was saying twice in my head. Just so my dumb ass gets it lmao
@itsmecaldo
@itsmecaldo 3 жыл бұрын
same
@salvodippolito6013
@salvodippolito6013 4 жыл бұрын
I'm glad to discover that I've never been alone yapping about these theories, thank you.
@curtisyue182
@curtisyue182 4 жыл бұрын
Somehow you're interesting despite your unbelievably monotone intonations.
@isaacorina892
@isaacorina892 4 жыл бұрын
Is it only I that prefer the robotic monotone intonation? I hate people who do too much when delivering points 😂
@curtisyue182
@curtisyue182 4 жыл бұрын
@@isaacorina892 You make a good point. HEY GUYS, TODAY WE'RE COVERING THIS TOOOOTALLY WHACKY TOPIC BUT BEFORE WE GET IT WHY DON'T YOU HIT THAT LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE BUTTON
@calebfudrums
@calebfudrums 3 жыл бұрын
I think its in part because the topic is very intriguing on its own right, he delivers it with occasional rewarding humour, and crucially the video its structured clearly and coherently
@leomarkaable1
@leomarkaable1 3 жыл бұрын
The monotone is quite sly, isn't it? l also like the sneaky eyes, as in "My mind is like a caged animal with a fast bite..."
@dirtydeeds4free553
@dirtydeeds4free553 Жыл бұрын
Tbf, people forget Northern Africa, and classify it completely different from the rest of Africa. They did some wild shit and did indeed have influence into Europe. As far as colonies i dont know, i enjoy history but obviously dont know it fully.
@purpledragon3075
@purpledragon3075 3 жыл бұрын
I give human history a 7.8/10 too much water.
@laraking804
@laraking804 4 жыл бұрын
The answer is religion. Religion shapes ideologies. Most indigenous groups by default are and were very exclusive. Outsiders were not part of the tribe. Most of them also weren't looking to spread their ideologies and cultures to the outside world. Christianity was one of the first organised religions that made it their mission to go out and conquer and convert. Islam too but with less administration and bureaucracy.
@MrBossisi
@MrBossisi 4 жыл бұрын
It's thanks to Christianity and America. Portugal and Spain found allot of new lands when they went out to the sea to spread Christianity. And whit all those new rich lands there is no way the other European nations would stay away so it pretty much began a tech race to see who would be the winner. And England was pretty much the winner. Edit: And lets not forget the big lies from Spain whit the Fountain of Youth and El Dorado. That made the nations even more invested in becoming the winner. Lol
@mogznwaz
@mogznwaz 4 жыл бұрын
I think that's a very astute point. It wasn't just conquest and resources that drove colonial expansion, it was curiosity, discovery, and a mindset that the Gospel needed to be shared with the world and for the heathens to be 'civilised'. I've no doubt they considered this a righteous and moral endeavour.
@supernsansa
@supernsansa 3 жыл бұрын
Let us not forget the impact of the domestication of horses. Horses are native to Eurasia. For most of human history sub-saharan Africa, Australia, and the Americas had no horses.
@Youreoverthinkingit
@Youreoverthinkingit 3 жыл бұрын
Same with large livestock, the America's just weren't the same as Alpaca's just aren't as good as pigs or cows (for both diseases and food)
@calebr7199
@calebr7199 4 жыл бұрын
Come on, this is just guns germs and steel. The environment was very important but this video and the book is way overblown in how much the environment effects civilizations. The reasons for those being conquered and those doing the conquering have far more to do with the collective choices of whole civilizations and the end result is effectively random as to which civilizations do what. China could have just as easily started exploring and colonizing but didn't due to several reasons that are mostly human choices effected by the environment. The environment affects human choices but they are not as simple as a one to one determiner.
@coolbule1238
@coolbule1238 4 жыл бұрын
and that is the main criticisms of guns germs and steel.
@johndevries7397
@johndevries7397 4 жыл бұрын
This video explaines how Europe got the steel and guns in the first place
@mickeyesoum3278
@mickeyesoum3278 4 жыл бұрын
I think the point is that it isn't race; it is mostly the environment PLUS (as you put it) a series of individual choices. Chinese emperors made some very dumb choices, for instance, which got them stuck while Europe advanced. The same goes for many African tribes and nations that got stuck in wars and shit.
@calebr7199
@calebr7199 4 жыл бұрын
@JHyun - Well, that was my point about China, they could have explored and colonized but didn't. They had the ability but not the desire.
@elvis4868
@elvis4868 4 жыл бұрын
@@calebr7199 Bruh their environment meant that they didnt need to explore so they didnt, the environment in Europe meant they had to explore the 'desire' is affected by the environment
@WEAREALLJUSTMEAT
@WEAREALLJUSTMEAT 3 жыл бұрын
North Africans did colonize Iberia
@gabrielalves303
@gabrielalves303 4 жыл бұрын
My dad went to São Tomé e Príncipe some years ago and he described how, surprisingly, African nations seems to live on easy mode. Anything you drop on dirt grows and gives you food. They seem pretty chill without our culture tbh. Aids and malaria kinda suck tho.
@MohammadAli-iz9ld
@MohammadAli-iz9ld 4 жыл бұрын
@@NAGIUXS everyone is depressed in the west
@TheSm1thers
@TheSm1thers 4 жыл бұрын
@@NAGIUXS People need goals to work towards otherwise they feel worthless, like they have no purpose. If you're fighting for survival all the time you always have something to work towards. No time to think about purpose cos it's right there in front of you.
@TheSm1thers
@TheSm1thers 4 жыл бұрын
@@NAGIUXS True. I think people with depression tend to also be coddled by their parents and led to believe they can be as successful as Steve Jobs or Bill Gates, when in reality it's extremely rare to be that successful. Poorer families are taught to be happy with what they have even if it's not much. Richer people often don't know how to deal with failure either because they rarely had to deal with it as a kid and always had mummy and daddy there to cover their backs. If you're poor, you learn how to deal with struggle and failure from a young age so it's not as harmful mentally. You have to bounce back quickly otherwise it could mean starvation. Maybe I'm full of shit but I got with a rich girl, now my ex, who's depressed and that's what I've gathered.
@Jetcodelab
@Jetcodelab 4 жыл бұрын
Actually there was no Aids read on how the british injected Aids to africans during colonization
@TheSm1thers
@TheSm1thers 4 жыл бұрын
@@Jetcodelab What the fuck are you talking about?
@rip5905
@rip5905 3 жыл бұрын
The richest man ever was From Africa and was the leader of the mali empire (mansa musa) He met many European and middle eastern leaders And made good relations. 120 years later, the first African slave trade was completed.
@prewidis1144
@prewidis1144 3 жыл бұрын
That is not true. The richest man ever was Jakob Fugger from germany.
@rip5905
@rip5905 3 жыл бұрын
@@prewidis1144 Not even close. a very rich man, But definitely not the richest.
@Poomayne
@Poomayne 4 жыл бұрын
“Why you white man have so much cargo but we New Guinea have so little” - Guns, Germs, and Steel.
@travisjohnson8540
@travisjohnson8540 4 жыл бұрын
I was waiting for someone to mention that book, one of my favorites.
@Trending_Usa
@Trending_Usa 4 жыл бұрын
You got Ebola tho
@Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat
@Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat 3 жыл бұрын
@@travisjohnson8540 sorry but it's actually not great historically though. Check out the videos by badempenada and cynical historian for some criticism of it. I can kind of appreciate the basic popular history it gave but I feel like it made a lot of, frankly, basic mistakes and ignored advancements in the historiography of much of the world. It's not horrible as a basic intro but it definitely shouldn't be a stopping point. Also please check out badempenada and cynical historian's videos on the book, I can't emphasize that point enough.
@lv2668
@lv2668 4 жыл бұрын
this video is criminally underrated
@Xmiikkii3X
@Xmiikkii3X 4 жыл бұрын
You answered a question I never thought about perfectly and I’m so glad I watched haha
@Emily-fm7pt
@Emily-fm7pt 2 жыл бұрын
16:00 Just in case anyone had any faith left in the American education system, that was actually taught to me as: "We gave them a gifts and tried to help them, but we just really didn't know how to help with diseases. It was an accident really."
@timthompson2358
@timthompson2358 4 жыл бұрын
Uhh, didn't the Moores kinda run Spain for a while?
@KhayJayArt
@KhayJayArt 4 жыл бұрын
They didn't colonize the entire continent, just one country.
@KingBobXVI
@KingBobXVI 4 жыл бұрын
They were also a Medeterranean culture, so while _technically_ it's sort of a counter-example to the title, it's not really relevant to the content of the video.
@timthompson2358
@timthompson2358 4 жыл бұрын
@@KingBobXVI By that taxonomic differentiation the Romans werent Europeans. Which is kind of interesting, but I would think most people would still classify Romans as a european civilization.
@nein798
@nein798 4 жыл бұрын
@I'm not flat, stop asking still in africa
@pepperet5216
@pepperet5216 4 жыл бұрын
they were arabs
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