• DamarcusArt
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    1 year ago

    Ancient Americas is pretty good for pre-colombian history of the Americas.

    https://www.youtube.com/@AncientAmericas

    Miniminuteman generally covers psuedohistory, tearing it to bits, but his stuff is quite entertaining:

    https://www.youtube.com/@miniminuteman773

    Epimetheus does general broad overviews of various historical nations, his narration style can be a little dry, and it tends to be a bit light on detail, but it is good for an overview:

    https://www.youtube.com/@EpimetheusHistory

    Historia Civilis mainly does stuff on Rome, but he is one of the better Rome channels (a lot of them tend to be…white supremacist):

    https://www.youtube.com/@HistoriaCivilis

    Speaking of Rome, the “History of Rome” podcast by Mike Duncan is fantastic, and he also did another podcast called “Revolutions” where he goes through historical revolutions, including the Russian revolution (though I personally haven’t reached that series yet, so I can’t vouch for its accuracy.)

    Unfortunately, there are relatively few channels that focus on non-western history, partially due to western bias and partially due to language barriers.

    • albigu
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      1 year ago

      he also did another podcast called “Revolutions” where he goes through historical revolutions, including the Russian revolution (though I personally haven’t reached that series yet, so I can’t vouch for its accuracy.)

      He is horribly lib sometimes in the first 3 (English, Yankee, French) but as soon as he reaches Haiti he starts to realise the hypocrisy of liberalism and it only gets better after that. On the first two he was working on the constraint of “15 episodes per revolution” so they suffer a lot for it, so you can skip to French or Haiti if you just want to check it out. The dude is an incredibly skilled podcaster though with a lot of attention to detail, and he always makes sure to correct every mistake when pointed out. His Rome one was what got me into history in the first place.

      He also spawned a whole trend of in-depth history podcasts (like History of Byzantium) and while I haven’t found one so catching yet, I think it is harder to be spewing nonsense if most of your audience is already a bunch of history nerds who will correct you endlessly. YouTube mostly encourages going for aesthetics and briefness so it’s actually harder to put a similar amount of research and information density. I guess hbomberguy has become a modern conspiracy history channel for the last 2 years after the midlife crisis. He only posts once a year. Youtubers are weird.