Saragarhi - The Last Stand - Extra History
Added 2017-08-05 07:18:52 +0000 UTC
Twenty one men in the 36th Sikhs Regiment stand against thousands of attackers, prepared to make their final stand.
Would recommend Ashoka.
Calminos
2017-08-09 21:55:26 +0000 UTC
Hopefully more someday!
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:51:49 +0000 UTC
We're just glad you're enjoying it! Thanks for stopping by!
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:51:41 +0000 UTC
Yeah, Saragarhi was specifically being used to relay communications between those forts, and because it made communication between them so efficient, it was going to make actually taking (and holding) those much-better defended forts individually significantly harder, if not impossible. Taking it out was the first step to taking them out. The fort was much better defended than the post so it would not have been an easy take, even in that case.
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:51:21 +0000 UTC
Glad you enjoyed it!
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:50:01 +0000 UTC
Fortifications can do a lot - if you have thousands of people but they all have to fit through a space that can only fit ten people abreast, then your push boils down to a wave of 10v10 battles and a defender with a lot of stamina can hold that kind of position for a long time.
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:49:55 +0000 UTC
It does mean lion, yes!
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:48:52 +0000 UTC
There's something about that last stand against impossible odds...
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:47:14 +0000 UTC
Glad you enjoyed it!
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:47:03 +0000 UTC
Scott really brought some beautiful scenes to this one!
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:46:58 +0000 UTC
I'm afraid I do not know that off the top of my head! If James was wrong, we can all tease him.
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:46:36 +0000 UTC
Oh, eventually Alexander did make it through Afghanistan, but he had a hell of a time. The Afghan Campaign by Steven Pressfield, while historical fiction rather than straight-up history, is a good place to dip your toe into that.
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:46:15 +0000 UTC
Well, I like to keep folks up to date! It can be disappointing when an episode is late, especially if your timezone means that "late episode" means "I have to go bed and can't watch this today at all." I understand that can be frustrating so I do want to let people know and not keep them up late hoping!
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:45:22 +0000 UTC
We hope so too! We're striving to get back on track by the time this week's Lies episode comes around, but should that fail, we're pretty sure we'll have it together by the start of Great Northern War.
Extra History
2017-08-09 21:44:33 +0000 UTC
Finally, some Indian history to soothe me soul.
Calminos
2017-08-09 16:19:18 +0000 UTC
Loving your stuff working on getting support too thanks for the inspiration total awesome !
B.D.I A.K.A Donald McKenney
2017-08-08 15:47:08 +0000 UTC
Saragarhi was the only point of communication between the 2 forts because they did not have a direct line of sight to each other. The rebels knew that Saragarhi was strategically important and taking it out quickly would nean both forts becoming effectively blind.
SpoonofEvil
2017-08-06 21:06:41 +0000 UTC
They might not have - but they were in a position to relay messages from one fort to the other. The signal post itself might not be much threat, and the fort they were signalling couldn't spare men to reinforce it... but I'm willing to be that had one fort been attacked, a signal would have been sent to the other for reinforcements. That one likely would have been answered, as the second fort would be a more important location (and they could know their own fort wouldn't be attacked - all the enemies were busy with the other one after all).
Nessf
2017-08-06 17:13:14 +0000 UTC
I'm wondering - if the delay caused by holding the signaling post was substantially important for the fort on the hill, why did the attackers bother to take the post instead of immediately going for the fort with better chances? It's pretty obvious they wouldn't have had to worry much about the men from the post, as those would have not amounted to much of a threat in such small numbers _outside_ their fortified post...
Porcupine
2017-08-06 15:22:04 +0000 UTC
Nice one!
Katerina
2017-08-06 08:16:43 +0000 UTC
Sikhs are a warrior culture, and they are generally highly trained and highly disciplined. On top of that, their communications post was fairly well fortified and on highly advantageous ground.
SpoonofEvil
2017-08-06 08:14:22 +0000 UTC
How was such a small group able to fight against such a large one? Was it the fortifications, better equipment, better training?
Chris
2017-08-06 01:09:14 +0000 UTC
I forgot how diverse India is in comparison to almost any other nation. I guess if someone who looks less like you than the folks you're fighting with and improves your standing, you're more inclined to throw your lot in with them.
Michael Jebbett
2017-08-05 19:16:46 +0000 UTC
History and empires are not so black and white. India was hardly unified nor peaceful before the British arrived, and the Sikhs suffered much discrimination and atrocities at the hands of the Mughals and Afghan Muslims. The Sikhs were hugely loyal to the British because they improved their overall standard of living AND were a helpful ally against their regional enemies.
SpoonofEvil
2017-08-05 18:46:39 +0000 UTC
I question why the Sikhs were so loyal to the British.
These were the people who invaded and subjugated their country, and yet they're willing to lay down their lives to expand their power?
Is this an example of colaborating with one's enemy?
Michael Jebbett
2017-08-05 18:16:03 +0000 UTC
Isn't it true that Singh, the name each Sikh male adopts upon reaching adulthood means "lion"? If so then this was a sacrifice of 21 lions.
Richard Fejdasz
2017-08-05 17:47:46 +0000 UTC
Brilliant episode and surprisingly moving. That company of Sikh soldiers put one in mind of a group of Spartan soldiers some 2500 years before. Every one a hero.
Huw Rollinson
2017-08-05 16:36:36 +0000 UTC
Awesome episode!
Jason Youngberg
2017-08-05 14:01:37 +0000 UTC
Absolutely amazing work of art. Thank you very much.
Martin Ockovsky
2017-08-05 13:49:58 +0000 UTC
Typo there, 1849 is the end of the Second Sikh/Anglo war.
James V Nutley
2017-08-05 13:40:34 +0000 UTC
The British fought two bloody wars against the Sikhs ending in 1949. Then they allowed Sikhs to enlist in the British Indian Army (BIA). Only volunteers were accepted into the Sikh units and they had to be both strong and physically fit. During the Sepoy Mutiny, the Sikhs remained overwehelmingly loyal to the British Raj. In the first year following the mutiny over 23,000 Sikhs enlisted in the BIA.
barefoot James
2017-08-05 13:29:05 +0000 UTC
The Sikhs in general were loyal to the Empire, after their own (failed) rebellion. They were respected and treated fairly well by the British, and were famed for their courage in battle.
Sikhism, at least to my understanding, is a militant religion - but which emphasises peace and harmony.
2017-08-05 13:04:42 +0000 UTC
Good video! I just have a question: What made this group of soldiers so particularly loyal to the British Empire when so many other groups were rebelling? Thanks for posting
Todd Carter
2017-08-05 12:16:41 +0000 UTC
Isn't that graveyard of Empires thing a bit of a myth (in comparison to elsewhere and how bad the losses were, it's not like the struggles did not happen).
Sara Samaletdin
2017-08-05 11:33:51 +0000 UTC
As I recall Alexander beat Besus. There was a nice video about it on the BazBattles channel
Michael Waisfeld
2017-08-05 09:50:13 +0000 UTC
Why the sorry? It's your Patreon in the end. Besides, as long as you deliver who can complain?
Ah yes! At times the small things are the ones that make the most impact. The only question after that is; can those whom the sacrificed have given their lives for let their sacrifice go to waste or honor it by building upon their legacy?
Joo-Hwan Jun
2017-08-05 07:54:51 +0000 UTC
Extra Delays ~ coming soon to a Patreon Creator Page near you! π More seriously hopefully you will be Back to your Normal schedule soon.
Martin Verran
2017-08-05 07:25:15 +0000 UTC