Thank you for taking the time to translate these videos into English, I've certainly enjoyed this channel. Cheers!
@장칼슨2 жыл бұрын
I highly recommend you speed up the playback speed to 1.25, otherwise great vid
@Camila-hq3br2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, it was very clear! I love that the voice is not too fast, as many other history videos.
@animationchannel29502 жыл бұрын
These three documents still form part of the British Constitution.
@gw76242 ай бұрын
The portrayal of Cromwell here as a dictator who was opposed to parliament is inaccurate. In fact, the regular summoning of parliament was one of Cromwell's 'four fundamentals'.
@mateussantos4432 жыл бұрын
Ameiii!
@miguelsaavedramaresca4126 Жыл бұрын
The first parliament in the world was in the Cortes de León in 1188, how strange that an British appropriates something that he did not do.
@Rowlph8888 Жыл бұрын
BS - He's condensing a lot of material that is for it to be accessibleI would guess, because he has omitted 2 precursors. .He didn't mention Anglo-Saxon common law (1041) and the Charter of liberties (1100) which were in England before your fraudulent attempts to appropriate something, as the French always do, distorting history through envy at the English culture's dominance in world history.The Magna Carta only enforced the sitting of the King at regular intervals with the parliament, so that they could keep a regular inventory of enforcement of stipulations.the Charter of liberties have most of stipulations in the Magna Carta. It was necessary as both William the Conqueror and King Henry, before King John had in Williams case brutally suppressed insistence on basic rights and in Henry's case, signed the 1st act to give him space and time to then ignore it and not sit with anyone to honour the stipulations all of your freedoms stem from the English jealous Frenchman, keep your stupid, uninformed quotes to yourself.I'll leave you with a couple of the quotes from 1 of your greatest minds - In a letter to his friend Nicolas-Claude Thiriot, Voltaire wrote that England was a country where he "learned to think'. It was the place that gave him the freedom to publish La Henriade, as well as the land that inspired "the Lettres sur les Anglais", the book that " taught the whole of Europe how to think". Oh yes, also the charter for the rights of man and the citizen and the French constitution was written by Lafayette with heavy consultation with Thomas Jefferson (British subject), who helped with developing some of the structures, which had in turn been lifted directly in some places and adapted in others from British civil and human rights legislation and Parliamentary structures into the US Bill of Rights and Constitution The entire French Revolution and your modern culture was given to you by the English and you're welcome. France was a backward autocratic tyranny until almost the 19th century, where there was intolerance for any kind of forwardthinking. this is 1 of your greatest minds, but there are many more that stipulated that the majority of the maverick, freethinking revolutionary ideas came from England which was a religiously tolerant country where freedom of speech and empiricism were allowed and favoured. This was over a century before this happened anywhere else, in any shape or form
@billder2655 Жыл бұрын
parliament is just the middle english spelling of the french word parlement - it just means ‘speaking’ it doesn’t suggest anything about the nature or powers of the body. The british model of parliament was heavily inspired by lingering anglo-saxon traditions such as the witan (when the King, or Cyning - similar to the german Konig, would assemble nobles to advise him) , and the “shire moot” (attended by local lords, bishops, sheriffs and representatives each village), which would become the County Court post-1066. The english traditions of parliament also trace their roots to the norse/germanic “thing” or “folkmoot” which essentially functioned as a parliament and long preceded the Cortes of Leon. The Cortes of Leon is significant because it’s the first parliamentary document, not because it’s the first parliament.
@gw76245 ай бұрын
Another Spaniard with an inferiority complex? How strange! The origins of England's parliament lie in the 9th century, but that isn't what's important here. The Westminster system of representative government was unique in the world and has either been copied or heavily influenced the development of democracy around the world in a way that your country could only ever dream of. England is home to the world's first bill of rights, Magna Carta - the first legal document in history requiring that the king is subject to the law of the land, and right to trial by jury. These are fundamental ideas that all westerners take for granted. You're welcome. Cope harder.