The Colonel Pride Review

3.7K posts

The Colonel Pride Review

The Colonel Pride Review

@ColonelPrideRev

History Video Creator, focus on Colonialism and the British Empire

Katılım Mart 2023
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
WARNING! This video contains awesome colonial adventure in the Tasman Sea, entrepreneurial convicts, hardened mariners, and brutal cross-cultural encounters between British/Australian Sealers and New Zealand Maori... also cannibalism. YOU'VE BEEN WARNED youtu.be/U7sCjSwReMo?si…
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
@lowlandsapien We have the same thing from certain sniffling people in Britain, "Please invade and fix us daddy Trump, I see what you did for Venezuela and I want that for me too"
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Academic Agent
Academic Agent@AcademicAgent_X·
Turned Witcher 3 off again. Go to this place, talk to this guy, follow the arrow, talk to the guy, oh I need a herb to kill a griffin, talk to this woman here, follow the arrow again.
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
@ghostofnobodys Parramatta was the birth place of many of the first Australian born Britons to make their mark on history. James Kelly the great sailor and John Batman the founder of Melbourne were both born there.
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Nobody's Take
Nobody's Take@ghostofnobodys·
1790: Just 3 years after settlement at Sydney Cove, a second settlement where crops grew better was coming along. Parramatta, a name similar to what the aborigines called the area, had been established. The goal was to establish an agricultural plot to service the colony. What buildings existed here early on, and what were they trying to grow? A governor's house was also built here and was the preferred location for the governor to stay.
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
@NicholasOShaug1 Because they had chosen war with England, as well as received a promise from the Charles II to impose Presbyterianism on England at the point of the sword.
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Nicholas O'Shaughnessy
Nicholas O'Shaughnessy@NicholasOShaug1·
How could Oliver do this to good protestants?
RogueSailor@sailor_rog19339

Most people have never heard this story. And that's exactly why it needs to be told. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿⛓️ After the Battle of Dunbar in September 1650, Oliver Cromwell's forces captured thousands of Scottish soldiers. What happened next wasn't imprisonment. It was something far darker. Thousands of Scots were marched south in brutal conditions. Hundreds died of disease and starvation before they ever reached a ship. Those who survived were branded, chained, and loaded onto vessels bound for the American colonies, Barbados, and Virginia, sold into years of forced labor on plantations and in ironworks. They were not called slaves in the records. They were called "indentured servants." But they had no choice, no contract they agreed to, and no freedom waiting at the end. This is part of the Scottish diaspora story that rarely gets told. If your family roots trace back to the American South, New England, or the Caribbean, and your surname is Scottish, there is a chance your bloodline began not with a willing emigrant, but with a prisoner who survived the crossing and built a life from nothing on foreign soil. Scotland's story has never been simple. It has always been written in blood, grief, and unbreakable resilience. Cromwell repeated this conduct in his war in Ireland. Next time you view a document that an ancestor was an "Indentured Servant", look a little deeper...

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Ἀγίας 𓃬
Ἀγίας 𓃬@blondesnmartini·
Europeans First View of the Grand Canyon, 1540
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
Read this article a while ago, very good read, so if you prefer to listen then go check out Clossington's channel.
Clossington🏴‍☠️@Chossingstone1

Starting today, I am dropping weekly Youtube audiobook videos on my channel using content from my published @OldGloryClub Substack articles. My first audiobook is from my Knights of the Golden Circle article, roughly an hour and a half long, premiering today at 4 PM EST. Next week, I am going to drop the audiobook from my The Owl and The Eye article on the rise and fall of the Illuminati. Two weeks from now, I will drop my four-hour long audiobook on the Whiskey Rebellion.

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A. B. Thompson
A. B. Thompson@procrastixote·
I watched "1917" (by Sam Mendes, director of Skyfall) again last night. It's probably the best British war movie in decades. The scenes in and around this burning French village alone almost qualify it for that.
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
I'm thoroughly enjoying this right now. Written by a veteran British naval officer of the Napoleonic Wars, it tells the humorous story of a young Englishman committed to the ideals of "equality and the rights of man" finding such ideas are hard to apply to rough navy life.
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theknightirish
theknightirish@theknightirish·
A beautiful folio edition picked up yesterday. More eighteen century content with the story of England in that century by Roy Porter. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇬🇧 📚
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
It takes me way too long to complete videos but I have finally finished this, an in-depth retelling of the Sealer's War, when British/Australian Sealers fought a series of brutal conflicts with the Maori of Otago, New Zealand. The video includes some excellent first hand accounts of the conflict, particularly from the illustrious Tasmanian James Kelly, and is rich in contemporary imagery (not AI generated material). The video will premiere this Saturday, keep a tab open for it! youtu.be/U7sCjSwReMo
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
@ERN_Malleyscrub NSW was named for its supposed similarity to south Wales and to honour the Prince of Wales. When given this name there was no expectation of it being used as a penal colony. In Anglo Saxon times the Welsh were as free a people as anyone else. Nothing in your post is correct
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Blue Sphere in Space 🌏😐🦋🐨🤷🏻😑🦘💡
There’s a sad part of history that is the British naming of New South Wales. The Welsh were slaves in AngloSaxon times. Wales retained this background to their place in Britain. Sending convicts to New South Wales was part of English cruel humour.
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Antipodean Empire 🇦🇺
Antipodean Empire 🇦🇺@AntipodeEmpire·
"...in countries like India and Pakistan and the new African nations Republicanism has presented itself as the antithesis and opponent of 'Colonialism'..." — PM Sir Robert Menzies KT AK CH QC FAA FRS 🇦🇺
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Hugo
Hugo@lowlandsapien·
I saw that we are paving the "worlds longest shortcut" at a cost of $1.2b. You'll be able to drive from Perth to Cairns on bitumen. Huge effort, they have to truck everything including water way out there. Big issue has been negotiating with land owners/TOs but its getting there. Towns along the way are arguing they arent setup for the influx of people expected. Will be a good drive to do once at least.
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Nicholas O'Shaughnessy
Nicholas O'Shaughnessy@NicholasOShaug1·
It is I know a spectacularly naive question, but when in history did the British actually invade Ireland? It had of course the characteristics of an invaded country, but when?
BUCHANAN: Dublin Time Machine@RobLooseCannon

“The Whole of Ireland Trembled” when Edward Bruce landed on our shores today in 1315. 300 ships spilled their human cargo onto the shores of Larne, Ulster. They carried with them 6,000 battle-hardened Scots, commanded by Edward Bruce, the younger brother of Robert the Bruce, King of Scots. And they did not come quietly. According to the Annals of Connacht, their arrival sent shockwaves through the land: “…his warlike slaughtering army caused the whole of Ireland to tremble, both Gael and Gall.” This was no mere raid. It was a full-scale invasion, carefully planned by Robert Bruce to open a second front against Edward II of England. The English crown, battered by Scottish resistance, depended on its Anglo-Irish vassals to maintain its war effort. Robert knew that if those Norman settlers could be broken, or better yet turned, the tide might swing for good. So he sent his little bro across the sea with an offer they couldn't, or shouldn't refuse. That June, Edward Bruce met with Domhnall Ó Néill the King of Tír Eóghain (Tyrone). Domhnall had already petitioned the Bruces for help against the encroaching Normans. But Robert had named his price, Edward must be recognised as High King of Ireland. The King of Tír Eóghain agreed. From there, the Scots-Irish army swept south toward Carrickfergus, taking the town with ease. The Anglo-Irish were caught lacking. The Earl of Ulster, Richard de Burgh, was away in Connacht, and the Chief Governor, Edmund Butler, was far off in Munster. By the time they reacted, it was too late. At Carrickfergus, twelve Irish kings came to Edward and bent the knee. They gave him hostages, oaths, and most significantly the ancient lordship of Ulster. According to one chronicle: “…they consented to his being proclaimed King of Ireland, and all the Gaels of Ireland agreed to grant him lordship, and they called him King of Ireland.” For the first time in centuries, the idea of a High King of all Ireland, not a puppet of foreign power, but a warrior-king backed by native and foreign swords alike was upon the land. The following year, Edward was formally inaugurated as King of Ireland, the last man to ever hold that title. But glory fades. Soon famine stalked the land, and fresh wars ground down alliances as quickly as they formed. In October 1318, Edward Bruce was killed at the Battle of Faughart, near Dundalk. His dream of unification died with him. His Scottish army was routed by a combined Hiberno-Norman force under John de Bermingham and Edmund Butler, that same governor who had missed his landing three years earlier. The temporary High King Edward's head, sans crown, was sent to Edward II in triumph. The Anglo-Normans once again wrested control of our turbulent island. Buy the Dublin Time Machine a pint and support the DTM Book ko-fi.com/buchanandublin…

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Alistair Michaels
Alistair Michaels@SonofZealandia·
I know this is a couple of days late, but one time I came across a piece asking what if Queen Victoria had been male. It was interesting, especially the implications on the continent with Hanover.
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The Colonel Pride Review
The Colonel Pride Review@ColonelPrideRev·
3 things I admire about 18th century Britain: The lash. The noose. Penal Transportation. It's common to denigrate that era for their harsh treatment of "crimes against property" but now that we've tasted living in a society of thievery we should reasses this prejudice.
Nicholas O'Shaughnessy@NicholasOShaug1

share.google/uJTWu6apDkf9dB… Quick bite to eat with my brother this evening. Australian tourists on the next table. A man comes through the gate with red roses and harasses them: he steals a mobile. This city has become a nest of thieves. This is normal.

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