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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » Crash Course
Samurai, Daimyo, Matthew Perry, and Nationalism: Crash Course World History #34

Samurai, Daimyo, Matthew Perry, and Nationalism: Crash Course World History #34

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
In which John Green teaches you about Nationalism. Nationalism was everywhere in the 19th century, as people all over the world carved new nation-states out of old empires. Nationalist leaders changed the way people thought of themselves and the places they lived by reinventing education, military service, and the relationship between government and governed. In Japan, the traditional feudal society underwent a long transformation over the course of about 300 years to become a modern nation-state. John follows the course of Japanese history from the emergence of the Tokugawa Shogunate to the Meiji Restoration, and covers Nationalism in many other countries along the way. All this, plus a special guest appearance, plus the return of an old friend on a extra-special episode of Crash Course. Re
Date: 2022-04-04

Comments and reviews: 8


No no no no no! Hideyoshi's wife did not call Hideyoshi a bald rat, at least not on any record. It comes from a letter written by Oda Nobunaga to Hideyoshi's wife, where Nobunaga called him a bald rat exactly one (1) time that we know of, in order to berate Hideyoshi for not paying enough attention to the wife.
(Also, while there are texts that say that Hideyoshi did indeed look like a monkey, it's quite unlikely that anyone would have actually called him that)

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Globes & the whole concept are outdated. -The national state has reached the limits of its development as an independent, self-directed social body. A world science, a world economy and a world consciousness, riding the wave of a new and universal movement of spiritual evolution, lay the foundations of world order. - - Baha'i Faith International Community
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A couple of problems. The Tokugawa Shogunate actually did centralize power, otherwise there would have been constant war between the Daimyos. Also, most samurai during that time were not bureaucrats. Most of them were semi-employed warriors with minimal duties, a bunch more were ronin, and another bunch were bureaucrats.
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Don't get me wrong, I love school, but they do everything wrong. School is terrible because of the concept that all students can be taught the same because all of them can learn the same, which is entirely flawed. I wont go into it here, but I'll find a vid about it and link it.
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You forgot to mention that Japan's modernisation is what directly led to a greater demand for resources, which is why they invaded new territories. So modernisation is what actually led to the aggression, not nationalism itself
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Every time I watch one of these video series I get overwhelmed by so much info
Can't u just talk about one thing individually
I really don't remember anything after I finish watching it

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which is why i happily pay taxes. I don't want a bunch of uneducated, no college degree having, so they cant get a decent job and resort to crime. so i pay my taxes happily.
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instead of great man history, i propose great woman history where we focus solely on the woman who called her husband the bald rat. i wanna know about her.
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