The Russian Revolution - OverSimplified (Part 2)

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Publicado 2020-08-18
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-------------- ATTRIBUTIONS --------------
Music (licensed under a Creative Commons license).

Music by Kevin MacLeod:
Investigations
Exotic Battle
Covert Affair
I Knew A Guy
Sneaky Snitch
Minima
Dances and Dames
Faceoff
Enter The Maze
Hard Boiled
Marty Gots A Plan
Fast Talkin
Infados
Dark Mystery
Outfoxing the Fox


From Artist:
LMOP - The Whisper Man
Ian Post - Eminence Landscapes
Alon Ohana - Never Give Up
Stanley Gurvich - Puddles
Kevin Graham - Autumn
Stanley Gurvich - At First
Otis McDonald - Celebration

THANKS FOR WATCHING!

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • the most influential human in russia: 1900 - Rasputin 2000 - Putin 2100 - Tin
  • @markyv2295
    What order to watch Oversimplified in: Three Kingdoms Battle of Hastings War of the Bucket Henry VIII American revolution part 1 American Revolution part 2 French Revolution part 1 French revolution part 2 American civil war part 1 American Civil war part 2 Hitler part 1 Russian Revolution part 1 WW1 part 1 WW1 part 2 Russian Revolution part 2 The Emu War Hitler part 2 WW2 part 1 WW2 part 2 Cold War part 1 Football war The Falklands Cold War part 2
  • @user-sl4ep8tw1s
    Those assasins made a misstake about Rasputin: they've poisoned a cake with a cyanide, while sugar is known to neutralize it.
  • @mackinbox
    Trotsky: “surprising military genius” Also Trotsky: “let’s stop fighting and see what happens”
  • @Vistroh
    Things everyone loves: Food Water YouTubers who post a part 1 and 2 on the same day.
  • Oversimplified: Starts talking about World War 1 Everyone else: Hey, I've seen this one. It's a classic.
  • @foulplayer7812
    If anyone's curious about what became of Alexander Kerensky after he fled Petrograd, he managed to survive the Russian Revolution and lived a relatively peaceful life, outliving many of the significant figures of the Russian Revolution. Oversimplified didn't cover this, but after Kerensky escaped the Bolsheviks during the October Revolution, he fled to Pskov, where he rallied some loyal troops in an attempt to re-take the city. They managed to capture Tsarskoye Selo but were beaten the next day at Pulkovo. Kerensky narrowly escaped again and spent the next few weeks in hiding before fleeing Russia for good, eventually arriving in France. During the Russian Civil War, he supported neither side, as he opposed both the Bolshevik regime and the White Movement. Eventually, after Germany invaded France in 1940, Kerensky fled to the United States, where he spent the remainder of his life. He lived in New York City with his wife but spent much of his time at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University in California, where he contributed to the Institution's huge archive on Russian history and taught graduate courses. He wrote and broadcast extensively on Russian politics and history. Kerensky eventually died of heart disease in New York City on June 11, 1970. At 89, he was one of the last surviving major participants in the turbulent events of 1917, having outlived Lenin, Stalin, Trotsky, and all the other prominent figures who had overthrown him.
  • @schishne7546
    15:03 "The palace was defended by a force known as: "The Battalion of Death" who immediately gave up." love it
  • @TheLUCKGOD1
    Lenin: Don't make Stalin the leader. Stalin: How about I do it anyway.
  • @lukeyuan9741
    When Oversimplified doesn’t include a "dude...uncool" scene: Dude...uncool
  • @rodmunch6865
    I absolutely love how completely random the introduction of Rasputin was to the Russian Monarch, and how crucial his role was to the collapse of Czarist Russia, despite the fact he was some weird horny and overall batshit crazy guy who just did whatever he wanted, like a literal college student. It's random shit like this that makes history so fascinating to me, and it shouldn't be that way lol
  • “The peasants were getting more peasanity, the workers were getting more workery, all the while Germany was getting more Germanery.” 😂
  • @danieloray5649
    Man in 1900’s: doesn’t have moustache Literally everyone: yeah, there’s gonna be a tax for that
  • @Justin-pe9cl
    Funny story regarding Rasputin, after his assassination he was buried in a church cemetery which was later broken into by red army soldiers. They took the body to a forest to burn him and when they set him on fire he sat up and allegedly tried to walk lol. The reason for this was because you're supposed to cut the tendons when you cremate which shrink when they burn hence the "sitting up" part. I would have SHIT if I saw that guy sit up in his fire pit.
  • THESE VIDEOS AREN'T JUST EXTREMELY EDUCATIONAL... But they also have that PERFECT touch of satire and comic relief!! AWESOME JOB!!
  • @mrawesome6504
    the fact that oversimplified does better Rise Of Kingdom ADS then the actual game, OverSimplified should just be the media manager for them
  • @qorso
    "is he dead?" Rasputin: summons satan
  • @wolfieplays3365
    The battalion of death They gave up immediately I did not see that coming
  • @ismaelnehme379
    21:31 Stalin was actually very intelligent. He had a great knowledge of history, a great understanding of the political game, had an amazing memory, had a great understanding of tactics (though he would make occasional catostrophic blunders, like in Poland) and would read constantly. Stalin was many horrible things, but stupid was not one of them