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  • 00:06

    In the mid 13th century, the land that had once been the mighty Kievan Rus was a smoldering

  • 00:12

    husk, its cities and villages burnt down, its people slaughtered under a hail of Mongol

  • 00:19

    arrows.

  • 00:20

    However, one of them - the oldest Rus city, Novgorod the Great, was a world away from

  • 00:26

    the devastation.

  • 00:27

    Its walls still stood firm, the bells of the Nereditsa Church still tolled, and its streets

  • 00:33

    were abustle with lively commerce.

  • 00:35

    In this video, we will explore how a free Republic caught between Mongol hordes to the

  • 00:41

    east, and Catholic crusaders to the west, would scheme, bargain, and fight to survive.

  • 00:48

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    keep his appearances, and as he is clumsy, it is good that LawnMower 3.0 doesn’t nick

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  • 02:04

    We must rewind the clock a few centuries to contextualize the city of Novgorod’s rise

  • 02:10

    to prominence as an autonomous power in the pre-Mongol era.

  • 02:14

    As you may recall from our previous episodes, Novgorod was the original capital of the Rus,

  • 02:20

    founded by the Rurik around 860.

  • 02:24

    Even after Rurik’s successor Oleg moved the capital to Kiev, Novgorod remained influential.

  • 02:30

    The people of Novgorod had always been free-willed, so when the Kievan Rus began splintering in

  • 02:35

    the early 12th century, the old Northern Capital emerged as one of the most dynamic independent

  • 02:41

    powers.

  • 02:43

    Novgorod ruled over a prosperous trading Empire, with the city itself serving as a central

  • 02:48

    hub of international commerce

  • 02:51

    This Novgorodian state had a unique system of government as it was not a hereditary monarchy,

  • 02:57

    but a republic since 1136, when the powerful merchant-lords of Novgorod, backed by the

  • 03:04

    general citizenry, overthrew Prince Vsevolod of Pskov.

  • 03:08

    Legislative power in Novgorod was controlled by the veche, a form of public assembly consisting

  • 03:14

    of nobles, clergy, merchants, and commoners.

  • 03:18

    Novgorod still had a Prince, but he had to be elected by the council, and could be fired,

  • 03:24

    if necessary.

  • 03:25

    That is not to say that the Novgorodian Princes became meaningless figureheads.

  • 03:29

    In fact, a particular Prince would soon emerge as one of Medieval Rus’ greatest military

  • 03:35

    leaders, and to many, the saviour of the Rus culture and faith.

  • 03:39

    In the year 1220, a boy known as Alexander was born to the Vsevolodovich dynasty, who

  • 03:46

    ruled Pereslavl and later, Vladimir.

  • 03:49

    The young princeling likely spent his childhood years learning to fight and lead men.

  • 03:55

    It was probably due to this pedigree that in 1236, his father dropped him off in Novgorod,

  • 04:02

    and the city council elected him to be their Prince, beseeching the young noble to take

  • 04:07

    charge of the city’s military affairs.

  • 04:11

    This was an incredibly tall order for a 16-year-old, as the city was in crisis.

  • 04:16

    To the east, the unstoppable horde of Batu Khan was thundering across the Rus heartland

  • 04:22

    and it would only be a matter of time before the Mongols would come to Novgorod.

  • 04:27

    In the west, the situation was just as volatile, as starting in the 12th century, various Latin

  • 04:34

    Christian powers had made headways into Northern Europe.

  • 04:38

    The Vikings of Scandinavia abandoned their old gods by the mid-1100s, and became more

  • 04:44

    or less Christianized, which allowed them to expand under the pretext of holy crusade.

  • 04:51

    The Kingdom of Sweden, in particular, began making ingresses into Finland claiming it

  • 04:56

    is converting the pagans of the region to Christianity, and by 1216, the Pope had recognized

  • 05:03

    Swedish suzerainty over Finland.

  • 05:06

    This expansion put Sweden on a collision course with Novgorod, who had economic and territorial

  • 05:12

    interests in Karelia.

  • 05:14

    The Catholic and Orthodox Churches had finally begun to overlap in the north.

  • 05:19

    Both sides desired land and power, and considered the other to be heretics, so the potential

  • 05:25

    for war was brewing.

  • 05:27

    According to the Chronicle of Novgorod, in the summer of 1240, a Swedish army led by

  • 05:34

    Bishop of Finland Thomas sailed up the Gulf of Finland in their longboats.

  • 05:39

    They then proceeded into Neva river with the aim of seizing control over Lake Ladoga, and

  • 05:44

    from there, striking at the city of Novgorod itself.

  • 05:48

    As the story goes, Prince Alexander wasted no time in rallying his druzhina and confronting

  • 05:54

    the Swedish host on the Neva, decisively routing the western invaders.

  • 05:59

    It should be noted that the battle at the Neva is never described in Swedish sources

  • 06:05

    and this has led some scholars to question if the battle at the Neva even happened in

  • 06:09

    the first place.

  • 06:10

    However, most agree, it was likely an impromptu border skirmish, rather than a full-scale

  • 06:16

    invasion.

  • 06:18

    Whatever the case, the young Prince Alexander had won his first military victory at the

  • 06:23

    age of 19 and received his sobriquet: Nevsky.

  • 06:29

    Alexander's success had made him some enemies as well, particularly the Boyars and Merchants

  • 06:34

    of Novgorod, who believed that his war jeopardized the delicate trade relations in the region.

  • 06:41

    Soon, the political situation deteriorated to the point where Nevsky and his soldiers

  • 06:45

    left the city.

  • 06:47

    This was bad timing indeed, for the Swedes were not the only Catholics who had ambitions

  • 06:53

    to take Novgorod territory.

  • 06:56

    It is now we move our focus south to the dense forests of the Baltic rim.

  • 07:02

    Much like Finland and Karelia, this region was one of the last holdouts of Paganism in

  • 07:07

    Europe.

  • 07:08

    The ancestors of the modern Lithuanians, Latvians, and Estonians had been fighting a losing war

  • 07:14

    against German and Danish invaders, who sought to convert them to Latin Christianity by force.

  • 07:21

    By 1228, much of the Baltic shore had been subdued by German Catholics, except for the

  • 07:28

    Estonian coast, which became Danish.

  • 07:31

    This land became known as Terra Mariana, the land of the virgin Mary.

  • 07:36

    It was an unstable colonial frontier, divided into several bishoprics directly sworn to

  • 07:42

    the Pope in Rome, but still inhabited by Baltic peoples who continued to resist Catholic overlordship

  • 07:49

    through guerilla warfare.

  • 07:51

    Throughout all this turmoil, a pair of Knightly orders rose as the apex predators of the northeast.

  • 07:58

    In Latvia and its environs, the Livonian Brothers of the Sword were dominant.

  • 08:04

    At the same time, directly to their south, the Teutonic Order waged a bloody crusade

  • 08:09

    against the Pagans of Old Prussia, establishing control over the region.

  • 08:14

    However, the balance of power was soon to shift.

  • 08:18

    In 1236, with the backing of the Papacy, the Brothers of the Sword launched an expedition

  • 08:24

    across the Daugava river to subdue and convert the Lithuanians.

  • 08:28

    However, Lithuanian tribes took advantage of the swampy forests of their homeland, ambushed

  • 08:35

    the Knights, and annihilated their invasion force.

  • 08:39

    So crushing was this defeat to the Brothers of the Sword, that their remaining members

  • 08:43

    had to join the Teutonic Order.

  • 08:46

    Now rebranded as the Livonian Order, they quickly rebuilt themselves into a powerful

  • 08:51

    autonomous chapter of the Teutons and this allowed them to wage a more effective war

  • 08:56

    upon the indigenous pagans.

  • 08:58

    By 1240, the Livonian Knights had established firm control on land as far east as Lake Peipus

  • 09:05

    [paypus] and now they neighbored the Novgorod Republic.

  • 09:08

    Once more, Catholic and Orthodox spheres of influence crashed together in northern Europe.

  • 09:13

    The council of Novgorod was initially divided on how to deal with the ever-encroaching Crusaders.

  • 09:20

    Initially, Slavic merchants prospered as trading partners with the Germans and Scandinavians,

  • 09:26

    and intermarriage between the Rus and newcomer nobility was not uncommon.

  • 09:31

    These ties to the west had been why Nevsky was forced into exile after his victory at

  • 09:37

    the Neva.

  • 09:38

    After all, what merchant would allow a glory-seeking Prince to chase off their best customers?

  • 09:44

    However, relations between east and west had begun to sour from 1224 when the Livonian

  • 09:52

    Knights took Tartu, a city that Novgorod considered to be within its political orbit.

  • 09:58

    The Crusaders also ramped up their efforts to convince the Novgorod aristocracy to convert

  • 10:03

    to Latin Christianity, which irritated the Slavs, for whom their Orthodoxy was the heart

  • 10:09

    of their society.

  • 10:11

    As diplomacy deteriorated, the German Knights began to gaze greedily at the wealth of Novgorod,

  • 10:17

    which, in their eyes, was a fair target as non-Catholics.

  • 10:21

    Around the year 1240, Pope Gregory IX finally authorized a crusade against Novgorod.

  • 10:28

    Hoping that the Republic would be too preoccupied dealing with the Mongols to the east to defend.

  • 10:35

    That same year, the Livonian knights stormed the outpost of Koporye, conquering it with

  • 10:40

    little resistance.

  • 10:42

    They established a permanent garrison and began the construction of a stone castle,

  • 10:47

    which made it evident to the people of Novgorod that the Knights had come to conquer.

  • 10:53

    Now in crisis mode, the veche of Novgorod turned back to the prince they had just exiled,

  • 10:59

    begging him to return.

  • 11:01

    Nevsky obliged, making haste for the northern capital.

  • 11:05

    By the time he arrived, the Crusaders had taken Novgorod’s sister-city and breadbasket

  • 11:10

    Pskov.

  • 11:11

    In the hands of an occupying force, it was a dagger pointed at the heart of the capital

  • 11:16

    itself.

  • 11:19

    Alexander knew that he had not a moment to waste and in the autumn of 1241, he struck

  • 11:24

    back, storming Koporye’s brand new castle and capturing it swiftly.

  • 11:29

    In the spring of 1242, he joined with the forces of his brother Andrey and thundered

  • 11:35

    into Pskov, retaking the city with little effort, likely because the Teutonic Knights

  • 11:41

    were preoccupied fighting the Mongols in Hungary at the time.

  • 11:45

    Nevsky’s swift military successes can likely be attributed to his druzhina, the archetypal

  • 11:51

    elite warrior retinue that had been a staple of Rus Princes for centuries.

  • 11:56

    Nevsky’s force traveled light, taking towns and castles before their Crusader enemy had

  • 12:02

    a chance to respond, a manner of warfare akin to his pagan ancestor Sviatoslav the Snow

  • 12:08

    Leopard, three centuries prior.

  • 12:11

    Following these successes, Nevsky mustered up a citizen militia to supplement his Druzhina’s

  • 12:17

    limited numbers, and launched an offensive raid into Catholic Estonia, breaking his army

  • 12:22

    off into contingents to raid and pillage the countryside.

  • 12:26

    This was a mistake, for he had overextended his forces, and the Teutons and their Estonian

  • 12:32

    allies managed to ambush and destroy one of the Rus raiding parties in an ambush on a

  • 12:38

    river crossing southwest of Tartu.

  • 12:41

    Nevsky decided to cut his losses, and orchestrated a careful retreat

  • 12:45

    Meanwhile, the Crusaders had been hastily assembling an army for a second invasion into

  • 12:51

    Rus lands.

  • 12:53

    Led by Bishop Hermann of Dorpat, it consisted of a core of Knights, alongside an allied

  • 12:58

    contingent of Danish soldiers and native Baltic auxiliaries.

  • 13:03

    By spring, they had begun pursuing Nevsky’s army northwards.

  • 13:08

    In April of 1242, the opposing armies met upon the frozen surface of lake Peipus.

  • 13:15

    Novgorod forces numbered some 5,000, while the Crusader alliance totalled at around 2,600.

  • 13:21

    The Catholics may have been outnumbered, but it was Nevsky who was outgunned.

  • 13:27

    Apart from the Princes’ druzhina and a contingent of allied Turkic horse-archers, the Rus army

  • 13:33

    was predominantly the poorly equipped, poorly trained militia raised from Novgorod’s general

  • 13:40

    citizenry.

  • 13:41

    Furthermore, the Crusader army had something the Rus did not, heavy cavalry.

  • 13:46

    Nevsky was direly aware of the fact that, in the hands of a capable commander, a single

  • 13:52

    deadly charge from a few hundred mounted knights could rout his entire army in minutes.

  • 13:58

    Nevertheless, against all the odds, the Novgorod militia held the line against the couched

  • 14:04

    lances of the black cross, allowing Nevsky to successfully pull off a pincer move with

  • 14:09

    his horse archer and druzhina units, driving the Knights and their allies off the field.

  • 14:14

    The day had been seized by the East Slavs.

  • 14:17

    This conflict, later immortalized as “the battle on the ice”, was a watershed moment

  • 14:23

    in the relationship between Medieval Rus and Catholic Europe.

  • 14:28

    A permanent border between Novgorod and the Crusader states was established along Lake

  • 14:33

    Peipus and the Narva River, and never again would the Teutons or their allies make serious

  • 14:39

    ingress into Rus territories.

  • 14:42

    For his victory, Alexander Nevsky earned immortality, known by all future generations of East Slavs

  • 14:49

    as a saint who saved the Orthodox Christianity.

  • 14:52

    Now, let us move back to the east, and address the Chingisid shaped elephant in the room.

  • 14:59

    While all this Crusader business had been happening, the Mongols had been ravaging their

  • 15:04

    way through the Northeastern Rus Principalities.

  • 15:07

    Nevsky’s solution for the Mongol problem was simple: Surrender.

  • 15:13

    While other Rus cities mounted futile resistance against Batu Khan, Nevsky instead sent envoys,

  • 15:19

    preemptively capitulating before the Mongols even reached his city, and accepting the Chingisid

  • 15:25

    Khans as his lawful overlords.

  • 15:28

    Because Novgorod had surrendered so quickly and willingly, it was spared the destruction

  • 15:33

    that other influential Rus cities were subjected to.

  • 15:37

    Why was Nevsky so willing to capitulate to the Mongols, but so insistent on fighting

  • 15:42

    the Crusaders tooth and nail?

  • 15:45

    The answer was simple.

  • 15:46

    To those who showed proper obedience, the Mongols ruled with a light touch.

  • 15:51

    They had no interest in influencing their subjects' religion, culture, or prevailing

  • 15:56

    system of government, so long as they paid tribute without issue, and allowed the Mongol

  • 16:01

    Khans to confirm their leaders.

  • 16:03

    Contrast this to the Crusaders, who had every intention of forcefully eradicating Orthodox

  • 16:09

    Christianity, and one can begin to see why the Novgorodians preferred a Steppe Warlord

  • 16:15

    to a German Bishop.

  • 16:17

    Nevsky spent the rest of his life as a loyal vassal of the Great Khan, making many trips

  • 16:23

    to the Mongol capitals of Sarai and Karakorum to pay his respects.

  • 16:28

    The ruler of Novgorod used his submission to the Mongols as a key to political advancement.

  • 16:33

    Indeed, the Mongol Khan bestowed upon him the title of Grand Prince of Kiev in 1246.

  • 16:41

    Of course, in the aftermath of the Mongol conquests, Kiev was a shell of its former

  • 16:47

    self, but the title itself still held significant symbolic power and gave him an edge over other

  • 16:54

    Rus princes who now competed for the Khan’s favour.

  • 16:59

    Alexander would only continue to grow more and more influential under the Mongol wing.

  • 17:04

    In 1252, his brother Andrey reigned as the Prince of Vladimir.

  • 17:09

    However, when Khan Mongke ascended as ruler of the Mongol Empire, Andrey refused to travel

  • 17:16

    to Karakorum to have his Princeship confirmed.

  • 17:19

    As a result, the Golden Horde launched a punitive expedition into Vladimir, chasing Andrey out

  • 17:25

    of his lands and forcing him into exile in Sweden.

  • 17:29

    In his place, Nevsky was confirmed as the Mongol-appointed Prince of Vladimir, as a

  • 17:34

    reward for his continued loyalty.

  • 17:37

    Nevsky paid off the confidence the Mongols showed him in dividends, defending their authority

  • 17:43

    whenever the need arose.

  • 17:45

    In 1259, when the citizenry of Novgorod revolted and refused to pay tribute to the Khans, Nevsky

  • 17:52

    marched into the city with soldiers, forcing his own people to obey their Mongol masters

  • 17:58

    by force of arms.

  • 18:00

    Nevsky died in 1263, taken by illness while journeying home from one of his trips to pay

  • 18:07

    homage to the Khan in Sarai.

  • 18:10

    The Rus he left behind was a complex one.

  • 18:13

    On one hand, invaders from the west were defeated, their religion saved in the process.

  • 18:19

    On the other, it had been utterly ravaged by Mongols, becoming subjects of a foreign

  • 18:25

    Empire.

  • 18:26

    The legacies of St. Olga, Vladimir the Great, and Yaroslav the Wise remained in the form

  • 18:31

    of their faith, culture, and identity they had helped build.

  • 18:35

    But as the various Rus Princes slowly reconsolidated their lands and power under the watchful eye

  • 18:42

    of Mongol overlordship, it became clear that the age of the Kievan Rus was long behind

  • 18:48

    them, and a new era had begun in what would become Russia.

  • 18:54

    We’ll continue this series in the coming months, so make sure you are subscribed and

  • 18:58

    have pressed the bell button.

  • 19:00

    Please, consider liking, commenting, and sharing - it helps immensely.

  • 19:04

    Our videos would be impossible without our kind patrons and youtube channel members,

  • 19:09

    whose ranks you can join via the links in the description to know our schedule, get

  • 19:14

    early access to our videos, access our discord, and much more.

  • 19:19

    This is the Kings and Generals channel, and we will catch you on the next one

All

The example sentences of COMPLEMENT in videos (15 in total of 130)

goal noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present to to maximally adverb stimulate verb, base form collagen noun, singular or mass production noun, singular or mass , i personal pronoun use verb, non-3rd person singular present non noun, singular or mass laser noun, singular or mass technology noun, singular or mass to to complement verb, base form the determiner
scent noun, singular or mass that wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner perfect adjective complement noun, singular or mass to to the determiner scent noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner other adjective manscaped proper noun, singular products noun, plural that preposition or subordinating conjunction
phrases noun, plural , that wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner determiner noun, singular or mass takes verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner noun noun, singular or mass phrase noun, singular or mass as preposition or subordinating conjunction its possessive pronoun complement noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction projects noun, plural
is verb, 3rd person singular present often adverb dominant adjective and coordinating conjunction even adverb a determiner focal adjective point noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner other adjective side noun, singular or mass will modal complement verb, base form
now adverb , we personal pronoun can modal also adverb use verb, base form " to to " and coordinating conjunction " for preposition or subordinating conjunction " as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner complement noun, singular or mass mean noun, singular or mass - . . . a determiner complement noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner phrase noun, singular or mass that wh-determiner completes verb, 3rd person singular present
complement noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction as preposition or subordinating conjunction such adjective fortress proper noun, singular mode proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present best adverb, superlative employed verb, past participle when wh-adverb awaiting verb, gerund or present participle the determiner arrival noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction reinforcements noun, plural ,
to to complement verb, base form our possessive pronoun video noun, singular or mass today noun, singular or mass , magellan proper noun, singular has verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner documentary noun, singular or mass about preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner saturn proper noun, singular v proper noun, singular , called verb, past participle the determiner
complement noun, singular or mass a determiner traditional adjective golden adjective corral adjective feast noun, singular or mass such adjective as preposition or subordinating conjunction pot noun, singular or mass roast noun, singular or mass with preposition or subordinating conjunction scalloped verb, past participle potatoes noun, plural and coordinating conjunction carrots noun, plural
as adverb well adverb as preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner headquarters noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction its possessive pronoun star proper noun, singular helix proper noun, singular security proper noun, singular complement proper noun, singular , and coordinating conjunction the determiner government noun, singular or mass facilities noun, plural
genes noun, plural that determiner complement noun, singular or mass our possessive pronoun so preposition or subordinating conjunction we personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present not adverb likely adjective to to me personal pronoun with preposition or subordinating conjunction somebody noun, singular or mass who wh-pronoun has verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner
the determiner box noun, singular or mass complement noun, singular or mass each determiner other adjective really adverb well adverb it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner very adverb well adverb thought verb, past tense out preposition or subordinating conjunction methodical adjective presentation noun, singular or mass
because preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun want verb, non-3rd person singular present to to make verb, base form sure adjective everything noun, singular or mass does verb, 3rd person singular present complement noun, singular or mass each determiner other adjective instead adverb of preposition or subordinating conjunction , like preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner
popular adjective aircraft noun, singular or mass , but coordinating conjunction boeing proper noun, singular found verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun needed verb, past tense to to complement verb, base form it personal pronoun with preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner smaller adjective, comparative widebody proper noun, singular
in preposition or subordinating conjunction other adjective words noun, plural , look verb, base form for preposition or subordinating conjunction some determiner of preposition or subordinating conjunction thurber proper noun, singular 's possessive ending signature noun, singular or mass wit noun, singular or mass to to complement verb, base form the determiner stunning verb, gerund or present participle action noun, singular or mass
that preposition or subordinating conjunction she personal pronoun adds verb, 3rd person singular present to to complement verb, base form the determiner features noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner forms noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner face noun, singular or mass here adverb .

Use "complement" in a sentence | "complement" example sentences

How to use "complement" in a sentence?

  • I love Andre 3000 from OutKast. I think we'd complement each other, but I'm hoping he's got a good sense of humour.
    -Paloma Faith-
  • An America that inspires hope in its ideals must complement an America that inspires awe in its strength.
    -Adam Schiff-
  • The writing, acting and the directing all complement each other and make each other better. It's one of those amazing instances where everything seems to come together.
    -Alex Gansa-
  • Ideology and communication more often than not run into each other rather than complement each other. Principle and communication work together. Ideology and communication often work apart.
    -Frank Luntz-
  • The cigar is the perfect complement to an elegant lifestyle.
    -George Sand-
  • What's better, a poetic intuition or an intellectual work? I think they complement each other.
    -Manuel Puig-
  • High tech companies that focus on research, development and production will learn that they can be the perfect complement to our world-renowned agriculture heritage.
    -Alan Autry-
  • solitude is not absence of love, but its complement
    -Paulo Coelho-

Definition and meaning of COMPLEMENT

What does "complement mean?"

noun
(Linguistics) set of words completing a sentence.
verb
To go with so as to make the whole complete.

What are synonyms of "complement"?
Some common synonyms of "complement" are:
  • accompaniment,
  • companion,
  • addition,
  • supplement,
  • accessory,
  • adjunct,
  • trimming,
  • amount,
  • total,
  • aggregate,
  • contingent,
  • company,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.

What are antonyms of "complement"?
Some common antonyms of "complement" are:
  • contrast,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.