A History Teacher Reacts | "Cliffs of Gallipoli (Part 1)" by Sabaton History

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hey youtube welcome back to another history teacher reacts video with mr. Terry as I continued my search for historical knowledge found here on the Internet alright today we're watching another video from the great Swedish rock band Sabaton that does a lot of songs and videos about historical events so the video I chose here in the song I chose here is Cliffs of Gallipoli and I have not actually heard this song but what of course fascinated me was what I assume is the the content about the battle glibly in world war 1 so this was kind of the attempted sort of uh opening up as we would say of the region around the Bosphorus Strait in World War 1 the British were trying to open up to direct to get direct access to Russia from the Mediterranean to the Black Sea and of course this region was controlled by the Ottoman Empire and ends up being basically a failure on the British part is are unable to take this territory so they did a video on this or a song on this years ago and then of course what what made this appealing to me was the history video that they made to accompany this that came out I think about three or so weeks ago that was it so what we're gonna do here is check out the music video and then we will watch the history video now the history video is in two parts and it seems like they're they're very long about 15 minutes each so what we're gonna do here is do the what this video is the music video and then part 1 of the history video and then we'll come back look out for another episode of mine to cover their part 2 video all right so with that another reason I chose this too was I don't know for whatever reason I've been really interested in kind of I mean I've always been really interesting world war 1 but kind of the Ottoman Empire perspective of things and kind of their role which gets kind of overlooked by the way if you'd like to just get a little bit more on this I just did a let's play in battlefield 1 with the story mission that they did with Gallipoli so if you're just looking for something else Gallipoli related check that out it should be the video basically one or two behind this one when I posted so just look for the history teacher plays battlefield 1 and you'll you'll find the mission for Gallipoli all right the original videos will also be down below so make sure if you have not subscribed to Sabaton and like their videos and the sabaton History Channel make sure you go to the links below give them their credit because the work they're doing is fantastic all right and then if you have not subscribed to our channel here love to have you along on our journey for finding as much history we can on YouTube all right without further ado let's talk more rock here we go I haven't heard as much the the prominent piano and some of their songs it's pretty good and you you have that and then just laid behind with you know the the crunching guitars right sabaton have seem to have such a good good way of mixing so many different things and it's great it's great to see that kind of diversity there but still keeping that like rock anthem' like emotion that they seem to have in all their songs [Music] voices from the side let's see real quick if we can add some captions yep I like to see you add the captions in this so you can see the lyrics you know and see how they tie one thing I always like with these guys is trying to have the song content match at least some elements of the historical event that they're trying to cover which can be hard when you you know lyrics are so much smaller and how to how to get that feeling and actually tied to historical than just through you know a few verses can be can be hard the videos of course help with that if you but if you're just listening to the song then yeah being able to that I would think would be very difficult for a songwriter faculty will never leave our hearts are fade away live forever [Music] you know that you had to add to this because I hope that's what you're here for to see this this mission has been seen as such a deadly failure for for the British right famously Winston Churchill who was a young administrator in the Navy at this time was as a lot of people say that he was one of them the major people's that were major people that was pushing for this this attack right when supposedly a lot of people were telling him it could not be done it was not going to be worth it it would have required an incredible amount of potential casualties and the failure of this actually ruined it looked like it was gonna ruin his career he basically ends up resigning from the Navy and actually kind of famously ends up joining the army and going to the front but anyway yeah that's what their that's what they're referring to here when talking about like these wasted lives is the end result of this will not be what they were looking for and seen as a waste you know from from a strategic point of view [Music] [Music] so definitely if they've chosen to stick with the idea that that you know there's these lives were wasted almost like critical but at the same time you know making sure that you're showing that the lives weren't in vain necessarily and I'm sure that's go they're gonna continue on it's kind of my prediction there you know and definitely you could talk about the weight you know waste of life on the Ottoman Enright the so many Ottoman soldiers wouldn't have died too I guess if you just looked at the strategy of it and looked and said this wasn't going to be you so all this is going to do is be a lack of or death of many lives on both sides pretty much you know kind of wasteful [Music] [Music] where the ocean meets the sand so burden [Music] the shoreline let our heroes thinks the land light a candle [Music] [Music] it's just it's totally just saying the tragedy of it [Music] okay yeah I mean so many other their songs are very like inspiring that way like inspiring the people that were there and it I guess it would be hard to do that if you're attending to British perspective this but mostly just as a remembrance I guess and uh I don't pay tribute I guess to these to these these people but definitely focusing on the and I guess the tragedy of it all [Music] [Music] I'll miss footage is this from anything I know with some of their videos I mean the later ones is probably the oldest video I've seen of theirs they would bring it they had the the would team up with these other these are these these other companies that were already making videos and stuff like this but I mean a lot of this is pretty is pretty vague as far as the footage goes I mean done necessarily like you know really tied to Gallipoli maybe just cut a general footage that way but so school when they were do that it's really cool there what with the budgets they have in their later videos so but this is cool to to at least add some kind of element you know [Music] you know this song is like it's 2018 right now I think it said 2008 for this little singer I forgot his name he's great he's like got the same exact style it's like this camo slash like the Punisher looked do to stay in true staying true to himself [Music] that that ability gets really overlooked I feel like at least in America you know they talk about like I mean I might you'll hear about like Verdun and just kind of the but mostly just the front like the western front right and these if you want to call it the southern front or whatever or the eastern front definitely doesn't get looked at that much I mean that and that's I guess understandable from Western culture to mostly view the western side of the war but it's definitely something if you don't know much about World War one to look into because the results of this whichever way could have gone could I mean were but could have been very different because again if the British are able to open up this front and control the Mediterranean and be able to directly hook up with with Russia man that that would have huge effects you know what it means so yeah anyway that's more about the war itself but let's go back to the song [Music] those are more like a bowel illness [Music] [Applause] [Music] you haven't really heard them do a song kind of more in this style yeah it's it's it is very melancholy for sure but more yeah more of the ballad almost in a way but a sad one if that's a thing forgive my my lack of musical terminology [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] yeah we're been wondering if they were going to turn it into something more it I mean positive but more like in more memorial of the soldiers you know of going and fighting brave but really it's just it's just been all about it's sad you know it's very sad what's what's happening here it's a waste of life and all that stuff yeah [Music] I loved that was great I loved the the sabaton singer starter kit over here with the merch cut of you you know you're a rock sure your your camo your camo pants your aviators some music and whatever we got going on here awesome alright well yeah I mean the they totally just focused on the try guess the the tragic knave nature of this of the specifically from the point of view of these soldiers that got sent into maybe what would maybe what was a an impossible mission I mean the to take that it was so heavily fortified in the straight of water that you know so many people died and with with little to gain from it right so it's very you know critical almost like Killick not anti-war but you know what I mean yeah but yeah and I didn't heard a song of there's that kind of had that tone to it so that was interesting to see that way cuz so many other songs are so anthemic in kind of the positivity in a way or an inspiring nature and this one is very very melancholy that way so I don't maybe that's just the evolution of the band because he's probably the oldest song I've heard from them if they were more like that necessarily I know with the like the the Great War which I've been checking out now their newest album it's very anthemic that way so all right well cool I'm cool video there I'm glad they were able to throw in all those images and things like that from the war and kind of stay on the content of that I'm definitely excited now to go ahead and jump into their history video that actually was just came out so this this video I think was 2008 and in this video or the history video we're about to watch is just from a couple weeks ago and mid September of 2019 so let's go ahead and jump over there by the way for you guys that are really into the sabaton songs where do you put this song in how you liked all of their songs is this one of the upper ones what are the lower ones one of the kind of the middle ones so guys that are really into their catalog of music what do you guys think of the song specifically let me know in comments alright let's hop over all right we got a neidell back so I guess he's not wearing necessarily the the camo pants but he's still you know rockin look the Mohawk and the Aviators right so all right cool I love their set by the way in these videos these are so cool-looking oh it's like someone told me what this thing was from this like school thing down there I always thought that thing was really cool someone remind me what that what that's from but we got like an a K back there kind of a part of a gas mask I think down their helmets British flag yeah all right anyways let's just jump in check this up i'm indy neidell and i mean walking from solid zone and this is sabbath on history we cool [Music] now this song is going to be covered in two episodes so I can cover two aspects of the topic Gallipoli for eight months in 1915 that name was headline news worldwide and our song Callisto Gallipoli is a tribute to the men who fought and died there man eight months for exactly how long that ad lasted I know it was it was it was long but just eight months of just constant brutal fighting without getting those results both on land and then by sea because it's to open up the passageway there between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea but I know it was a huge devastating loss but eight months I don't know if that seems like a lot to you but it's a long time it's a long time to not have success in a specific battle right I mean the whole war had little success in a lot of areas for years the Great War was just a half year old but casualties had already risen to unthinkable levels British soldiers were dying by the tens of thousands in the bloody stalemate on the Western Front leading politicians began looking for an alternative to the slaughter in the trenches most vocal among them were Lord Kitchener Secretary of State for war and Winston Churchill First Lord of the Admiralty who thought that instead of trying to beat the Germans in Flanders they should strike towards the weakest link of the Central Powers no unknown thinks of of Churchill Churchill young and not like the you know overweight and grey you know what it means like yeah he was actually a younger guy at this are at this time period and a lot of people kind of forget his role actually in this and why it actually sidelined his career he basically had to restart his whole military career after this after the the the failure here First Lord of the Admiralty who thought that instead of trying to beat the Germans in Flanders they should strike towards the weakest link of the Central Powers the Ottoman Empire they believed the Ottoman military to be second-rate more of a nuisance than an equal Churchill envisioned a strike against Constantinople itself by sea hey yeah I mean the it's it's true I mean of the the powers Ottoman Empire remember and by the 1900's was a total shell of its former self I mean they peaked centuries before that and we're still I mean formidable but of course nothing like they once were so I mean from that standpoint it looks like it could be you know I could make sense right but far more logistical challenging than just looking at a piece of paper and just saying oh they're the weakest one therefore that's what we're gonna go after right it takes a lot more information and Intel than that taking the Turkish capital would drive the Ottomans out of the war and open up a direct shipping route towards Britain's Russian ally indirectly it would safeguard British interests in Mesopotamia and Suez as well so on paper this seemed like a total win-win for the Allies a win for the British hubris was the recent military record of the Ottoman Empire serious defeats during the Balkan wars and the recent catastrophic outcome of the Battle of sarikamish just weeks ago where tens of thousands of soldiers froze to death in the Caucasus Mountains painted a picture of incompetent leaders and a badly equipped and trained Ottoman military Ottoman had I'm a pirate basically lost Europe I mean they had South Eastern Europe for centuries before that but then with eventually the independence of kind of the Balkan states and that had yeah I had they were they were crumbling you know from the inside also why they won't survive this war either because they will be basically broken apart after the war as a result Harry the sick man at the Bosphorus would be no match for the professional British soldiers there was however a major obstacle along the way to strike against Constantinople any allied fleet would have to penetrate the Straits of the Dardanelles that guard the entrance to the Sea of Marmara and those Straits were narrow and had been a natural line of defence for centuries and the sick man was not as sick as the British believed since the Balkan wars the defenses of the Straits had been continually improved and ammunition restocked in addition to long-range guns the ottomans had mobile 120 millimeter howitzer batteries on the ready while highly trained troops and lying after line of mines in the waters under tranaka lay fortified area command of general Farah Pasha the Dardanelles became the most fortified area of the whole Ottoman Empire the British and French fleets tried to force passage through the Straits even a modern warship can be sunk by a single mine though I mean with how narrow was you could see some of the images there I mean that choke point is so narrow for these large ships and yeah I mean the British the British Navy is incredible but these choke points I mean there's a reason why this Strait of water and in control of from Constantinople down to the Dardanelles has been one that's been so tightly controlled for centuries I mean the Romans held it for a thousand years now the Ottoman Empire since the mid 1400s for the next 500 years have have held this United mean it's always been something extremely difficult to take both in ancient and modern times an after disaster on March 18th 1915 when the Ottomans sank three allied battleships and severely damaged three more the Allies had to rethink but didn't scare him off obviously [Music] use the artillery position way would those people on the sides can you see this on the on the side of the the ship watch this look look see all the people and there's things capsized and they're trying to get ready for and they're getting ready to bail that's that's frightening the artillery positions on the hills had to be taken out first by land if the operation towards Constantinople was to succeed the task was given to General Sir Ian Hamilton in overall command of the Mediterranean expeditionary force the mes included along with British units the Anzac Australian and New Zealand Army Corps under General Sir William Birdwood hmm go back to the battlefield mission I did the let's play of check that out fear into that you know that kind of stuff of video games that go over this stuff but yeah you're you're an Australian guy there of course the British you know use their the Commonwealth to get a lot of their soldiers right all different places they had colonized at this time yeah you plays an Australian in this in that play through in battlefield one heading for Britain before being diverted to Egypt instead of fighting Germans they would now fight the Ottomans the Australians New Zealanders and Mallory's of Anzac considered themselves natural soldiers men hardened by daily outdoor activity and the aggressive and unruly character of the Anzacs seemed perfect for the task ahead the MAF was further strengthened by an Indian Brigade and the Gurkha Rifles who joined the Anzacs and a French force at Malta in early March the French government was not too keen on the whole endeavor but they themselves had their own ambitions in the Middle East and could not simply leave it all to the British if they succeeded in is that because the French didn't think that this could work toppling the Ottomans the French created the first division Corps expedition air durian made up of regular French troops the French Foreign Legion and Senegalese and Zouave forces once again though the planning phase betrayed the arrogance of British High Command while Jen was on irrigation or Eastern fronts made plans for all sorts of eventualities and for a quick exit if everything suddenly went to help nothing of the sort was prepared for the Gallipoli landings instead Hamilton's plan was over ambitious and it had one critical flaw it all depended on the Ottoman inability to stand up to the invaders but what if they did not turn and run and instead stood and fought what happens right [Music] I mean the geography here doesn't seem like Nesser like in these straits could just get all those cliffs of the massive clear landing spots that you would need yeah I mean I mean that was even difficult when you look at World War two and like look at Normandy and stuff like that you worry you it's it's you know it you can do it but it's not gonna be easy Gallipoli is not easy at all the German influence over the Ottoman forces was personified by General Otto Liman von Sanders in command of the 5th army at Gallipoli ever since the naval attacks it was thought that an invasion might take place and the British did little to hide their intentions in fact the Greek newspapers ran headlines about the coming landings but the Gallipoli Peninsula was large and the Ottoman forces could not guard every beach von Sanders decided to put only a screening force as a tripwire defense close to the beaches and keep most of his men in reserve units further back Ottoman officers at the front would assess the situation and send in reinforcements where necessary one such officer was Lieutenant Colonel Mustafa Kemal in command of the ottoman 19th division he was familiar with the defences and his troops were well-trained motivated and equipped in fact with the help of German instructors and weapons supplies it was quite a formidable fighting force the landings began the night of April 25th the Anzacs would land on the west of the peninsula at a place called GABA Tepe later known as Anzac Cove they would build a bridgehead and advance the next day all the way to the heights of Mount FA the other British troops would land at the tip of the peninsula Cape Helles and then take Aki Baba and the killed' Barre plateau in one fell swoop after that they would simply join forces and push the ottomans from the heights that geography is so rugged and and and and narrow to be able to do this kind of invasion that it sounds like would be necessary for that am I wrong there were also several diversionary landings around the flanks with the French landing on the Asian side of the Straits at cone Calais illuminated by the moon the Anzac landing craft made their way towards their destination fighting the strong currents the beaches were in darkness it all was still it hopes were high they would fully surprise the enemy but as soon as they made ground the first bullets crashed into the boats a concert of rapid rifle fire erupted and the battle for Gallipoli had begun Anzac was not even facing an entire battalion but the sudden fire caused confusion as the first casualties began to litter the beaches as more and more Anzacs landed the outnumbered ottomans were treated to higher ground and into prepared trenches and as the Sun rose they fired freely into the massive men on the beaches the Anzacs had been ordered not to load their rifles and instead rushed up the hill lion it's fixed but in the dim morning it was hard to navigate the steep heights and the thorny undergrowth and the Ottomans fired and retreated further the Anzacs were soon left out in the open trying to make sense of the rough terrain climbing the high ridges running through razor-sharp thorns and over slippery stones ahead soon left them then exhausted and many felled to accurate Ottoman sniper fire the maps were totally inadequate and the officer still standing were were overwhelmed by the situation the Ottomans themselves retreated towards the heights of Chinook buyer from the high ground they could direct artillery fire onto the beaches Mustafa Kemal was among the first to understand that the landings at Anzac Cove were not a diversion but were the real deal he ordered his division to sorry bear the highest point on the peninsula but while he himself has are in trouble trying to get a better view of the situation he saw exhausted men flooding back from the fighting upon ordering them to stop they declared that the Anzacs were moving up and they themselves had no ammunition left while camels orderlies were running back to get the division moving he ordered the men he'd halted to fix their bayonets turn back to attack with he now famous words I don't order you to attack i order you to die what do you mean if your soldier what do you think of this when this is happening right when do your loyalties contradict with your your common sense and just your your I don't know emotional need to survive when you hear something like that right in the time which passes until we die other troops and commanders can take our place the time which passes until we die other troops of commanders can take your place that's that's just looking at your soldiers as completely replaceable people that are there not even people right there just numbers on a a sheet of paper or chess pieces on a chess board and not actual lives right but yeah I mean you'd say the Ottomans are taking this very seriously though right and maybe Sabaton was talking about the recklessness on both sides in that way I don't know they didn't really you know necessarily talk nationalities in it [Music] the pursuing anzacs were totally caught off guard by the sudden counter-attack fearing that Ottoman reserves had already arrived they pulled back everywhere around Anzac Cove the Ottoman resistance began to stiffen attempts to cross the ridges were immediately met with heavy fire from an unseen enemy invaders were stuck at helis the situation was even worse way worse this was an obvious landing site and the Ottoman defenders had prepared thoroughly as the Allied landing craft closed in on the beaches they were met with a deadly hail of bullets many men were hit before they could make landing others panicked and jumped into the water many of those drowned dragged down by their heavy kit but those that made it out of the boats met belts of barbed wire guarding the beach trapping them in the open soon bodies littered the beach and the waves washed ashore blood-red the men lucky enough to make it through huddled down behind a sand bank at just 5 feet high around one and a half meters it was the only cover available again there were only a few Ottoman platoons defending the area but they had fortified trenches and knew how to use their rifles and field artillery to deadly effect the British officers could only watch as the landing crafts were blown to pieces the men at helis were trapped similar scenes happen at the other landing places why Beach was shot to pieces while the attacks on X and s broke down the same way as the main landings without major results often forgotten by the history books is the French landing at Combe Calais the only isn't that supposed to be the distracting one or whatever the yeah the one they're supposed to be a more more of a distraction than anything send my victory that day that force under general Alberto Mota was to silence the ottoman guns on the Asian side of the Straits and divert Ottoman troops their actual landing was nearly unopposed but the overall Ottoman forces facing them were far more numerous than on the European side fighting for the tiny town lasted all day but the vicious close quarter combat was for naught the invasion plan had failed and as darkness fell it came as a relief for the exhausted Ottomans it was time to fall back and reorganize and wait for the reserves for the allies the cover of night was a saving grace finally they could make a move men could come ashore the injured could be tended to and fresh officers could take charge the wounded flooded back to the medical ships but the doctors and nurses were not prepared for the amount of casualties there was not enough room there was not enough morphine the medieval wounded man survived it was still a journey of 600 miles a thousand kilometers back to Alexandria to recuperate and so the first day of Gallipoli came to an end the campaign had only just begun [Music] so I mean it's this is a struggle day one of trying to get this to actually where they look totally unprepared for the terrain and just I mean especially the terrain it sounds like and for treatment of any wounded sir wounded soldiers overconfidence for sure right [Music] so you work in tell us a little bit about the musical side of classical Italy well that's a good question you work in because it's actually a song that took a long time to write I started writing it in 2006 and it's actually one of those projects sometimes you start writing a song and it takes a while before you get it done and or finish it but in many cases it's been lying dormant you haven't been working actively on it in the case here though I think I constantly wrote on that song almost every day for two years Wow like okay so that when it the finished released version does it sound very different from when it came out oh yes or no I mean I I don't know how many songs I mean all the parts that were taken away for that song probably could consist of two more songs in it Wow same thing for Bismark actually it's probably three songs worth of writing in there it didn't take as long though but with Crystal Gallipoli I just felt that I had something special going on and it's not a typical Sabaton song at all well you know you get these you fall in love with some of your projects a little bit more right sometimes a little bit too much this is one of those cases I I read yeah I really enjoy or like the fact or like that these guys Sabaton have so much passion for their songs and they take them very seriously because I think when you have this element of trying to portray real events and real people that you try to do it right you know what I mean because you're you're affecting a lot of things other than just the song you're affecting a whole history right and making commentary and olestra but I do I do like that they talk about how how serious they were like he's fine the idea of it taking three years to write the song to to get it right you know what I mean I really respect that he felt was something I wanted to make perfect as good as I could and for once I actually think I couldn't have done it any better probably someone I was good but at least I couldn't and it's one of the few times where a guitar solo I wrote ended up on the haha now did you write the music and the words or do you just write the music and the lyrics will freedom bathe me and power together okay yes really one of the most fantastic stories and you know in in most cases we actually get to this at the the sites we sing about right after we've done the song oh yeah sure and in this case when we came to Gallipoli the first time that a spooky because it's like paradise yeah it's so beautiful there and then you think you know you're walking around what you know where we are the trenches and then you almost fall and break your leg is like okay I guess there are inches well that's such a different in contrast in the same war like you know we've talked about and we visited together like locations on the Western Front of Verdun and stuff and it is really somber it is and you know you feel that there's been war here but when you're like overlooking the Dardanelles and stuff I mean it's just fantastically beautiful you don't think I mean there are sure there's there's earthworks and that they've rebuild and there's some physical buildings and defences but you don't you don't see it unless you're thinking of it that this was a place where thousands upon thousands of people died in horrible conditions no I mean and I also think that I would have done things differently I mean if me and Power had been there and seen that we would have built in some parallels of you know the contrasts of them and now in a way uh-huh how'd that be very interesting too well maybe you could write another song about so basic even just the fact like even a place like Verdun or something you can go to these places and how much has changed since these these wars which again we're not that long ago you're talking a hundred years or whatever but you can go to them even though some of the major world war one sites you could go there and maybe not even know that a war had been there right with something so devastating it's amazing how life can kind of move on from that if you don't know actually what what what had happened yeah I mean this one gets to episode so maybe we should cover it again and you know you've got all that extra music that you didn't make the finest so you've got that is actually a really bringing though so you've made cliffs of Gallipoli this could be like the bays of Gallipoli the sea or the darkness shores of the shores of Gallipoli I see yeah all right so on your second album Great War part two that's gonna come out you're a 90s R&B album comes out in 2020 that's gonna have shores of Gallipoli on it yes truck beat cool man all right well I think we've all learned something today yes thank you very much yaki thank you for having me we'll see you next time [Music] [Music] alright and here's some cool stuff going we're gonna do our older albums with the History Channel editions that's got Indy speaking it's cool I can't say that word anyway you should become a patreon because then you can get that stuff see you soon yeah it's so I'm so glad that they're doing this even again for songs or ten years old they're going back as yeah you can do an episode on every one of them just the history and then combining that with indy neidell whose it was a great host and a great a great speaker and a great presenter i love the the mashup that they have been doing if they hadn't been doing these they probably I probably wouldn't be be looking at this stuff cuz it makes him irrelevant to what I'm trying to do with this channel but that's that's so cool so definitely like he said go support all their stuff right that they're that they're doing there and it's so cool that they're just they're working on past you know working on and enhancing their past material you know what I mean not just baring that they're trying to keep it alive and and stuff like that which is very cool so I really enjoy that all right well I am yeah the song again was very different in what I've heard from them and it shows me another side of them which is always cool to see from a musician our band and then the video was great I learned a ton of stuff more of the intricacies I mean I knew about like why I happened and you know why maybe it had failed but seeing some of those specific things I'm about day by day what was actually happening was great so I definitely learned a lot and I'm definitely looking for looking forward to part two so stay tuned on the channel hopefully in the next few days you will see a video that I'll do on their part to video but again so the meantime in the meantime with that definitely give them like and subscribe link to these videos will be will be down below so you can support them I'm like I said if you wanted to see some if you're if you're a gamer I want to see some gameplay as with with specific with gameplay check out my little let's play I did the other day just look at history teacher plays battlefield one the first one that pops up there should just be a couple days before this video goes up you can check that out and see just kind a gameplay footage of of what that was like it goes through this yeah Australian commander and he's going and they're trying to fight but it's failing and it's basically a part of their retreat and how how deadly that was so that was that was yeah it's good to see how those those can relate so alright well anyway just a few plugs on the way out I also have a patreon account for our channel here so if you like what you see here hopefully you we see a subscriber if you'd like to support the channel another way you can join our patreon there'll be a link down below one of the perks that patreon members get is to participate in a weekly poll for videos that get on here also there are discord benefits for our patron members so that also is a good time to join our patreon we have a patreon server that currently has over 3000 as participants as of when I've posted this video so if you'd like to be part of a history community with a lot of good good smart minded and and personable people definitely check that out alright with that I think we'll go ahead and cut it here again look out for part two and we'll see you next time bye
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Channel: Mr. Terry History
Views: 48,693
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: react, history, sabaton, gallipoli, world war 1, ww1
Id: mUdkH60blIU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 44min 26sec (2666 seconds)
Published: Sun Sep 29 2019
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