Or rather what are your faves?
>>18408829Primitive Technology (the original not all the indians) and Tasting History with Max Miller.
I've been enjoying this channel I found that's mostly about Roman coin collectinghttps://youtu.be/s_uC5qdTjM0
Redeemed Zoomer is pretty good for explanations on Christian churches and theological/political differences among them and their history.https://youtu.be/a2wOmxWexlE
>>18408829History Mapped Out is good. Nice graphics.
Any historical channel that says "Middle East" is suspect.Any historical or contemporary channel that uses the Crescent and Star to represent Muslims or Islam is suspect, excluding political states that explicitly use the secular symbol of pre-Islamic origin.
>>18408829North02Tasting History Battleship New Jersey and USS Cod channels, though that's obviously going to be entirely about those shipsGregsairplanesandautomobiles (aviation history)Legacy Collectables (almost entirely about Walther PPKs in German service)
Voices of the Past is a nice dramatic reading channel of various primary sources in translation, from a variety of historical periods. Some of these are pretty famous texts, some are more obscure. I like it for the almost total lack of editorializing by later historians, just reading aloud what people wrote down hundreds or thousands of years ago. I also like the documentary channel, Fall of Civilizations, which does longer form videos going over various collapses of ancient cultures. It's mostly overview stuff, but he does reference a lot of primary sources and uses actual footage of modern-day ruins and sites of the places he talks about. It's pretty informative, if not particularly obscure in its topics.
>>18408829Epic History TV
>>18408829simon roper for historical linguistics
>>18409051These two are great. Also Gold and Gunpowder for pirate history. Really detailed videos.
>>18408829Jackson Crowford for Nordic stuffhttps://www.youtube.com/@JacksonCrawford/videosLearn Hittite for historial linguistics of Middle Eastern and Indo-European languageshttps://www.youtube.com/@LearnHittite/videosGraham Scheper for Anglo-Saxon stuffhttps://www.youtube.com/@grahamamscheper/videosReligions and their history, mostly Islam but also christianity and judaismhttps://www.youtube.com/@LetsTalkReligion/videos
>>18408829Adrian Goldsworthy for anything Rome related and Type 56 if you have an interest in the CCP. Both are more concerned with narrative and both are phenomenal at giving lectures, they made my commutes more tolerable at least.
>>1840905Agree Fall of Civs is a great >>18409051If your first recommendation is as good as Fall of Civs, you sir are a gentleman, and a scholar. I thank thee
https://www.youtube.com/@allanbartonhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEPe78z7zB8
>>18408829history with cy, history time, thersites the historian, voices of the past, epic history, historymarche (succumbed to aislop), lindybeige, the historian's craft, survive history, history buffs, and some others
>>18410700forgot to name the histocrat
>>18408829For technological history, I like How To Make Everything because they actually try making the inventions and with historical methods. Though consequently they are. Thus you get to see the subtler manufacturing/operational tricks.I haven't tried to verify their information though.