These always take my breath away. Edward IV is such a far away name and face, it's easy to reduce him to his battles and skirmishes. Same thing with Elizabeth Woodville, that's someone that lives in a fantasy realm that's how real she is. But seeing them come to life is so heart-wrenching, because they all of a sudden WERE real people, with hopes and dreams, hangnails and lopsided smiles, faces I probably have seen before on classmates or coworkers! It's humbling, because it makes their history suddenly so very real and not in fact so long ago.
Not King Charles and Queen Camilla, they may be the least attractive. Camilla's smoking did not help their health or appearance. This question seems rude to ask, considering who is king
I always thought Queen Camilla was nice looking when she was young but I must admit I couldn't think what Princess Diana saw in the now King Charles. Maybe it was his personality. Princess Diana was lovely inside and out
Looking at these recreations really does makes you believe that these legendary heroes and beauties have once, talked, ate, and laughed. Amazing, really 😍
I swear my nephew is Edward IV reincarnated. He's 6"4 has a relatively similar hair length, build, and facial features too. That's if Edward was reincarnated to be a regular 19 year old kid who can't stop looking at his phone. 😂
To see the face of the Elizabeth for whom so many queens, princesses, and commoners down through the ages have been named is something. I think you captured what must have been captivating about her: it wasn't mere beauty, it was warmth.
Just wanted to say thank you for your videos! I am a history buff and an art lover so this is the perfect combo! I also love how you present the women’s stories in a balanced way! I have always been a little sad at the portrayal of women in history: as long as they had an independent thought or tried to forge their own path, they were called witches, or evil or simply written off! Your videos always make me smile when you tell their stories!
Their love story is legendary. Her mother was Duchess of Bedford, married to the son of Henry IV, grandson of John of Gaunt. Elizabeth’s father was Richard Woodville, Earl Rivers whom her mother married in secret after she was widowed.Elizabeth was mother to the Princes in the Tower rumored to have been murdered by Richard III, Henry VII, or his mother , Margaret Beaufort. I loved their story in the White Queen .
My vote goes to Margaret Beaufort. She was singleminded about her son becoming king. If you look at the family tree, who was standing in the way of that ambition? The two young princes. Once they were gone, that ambition was realised. I think she may have been one of the most successful schemers in history.
They were truly handsome and beautiful. It’s great to see what they looked like and you’ve done a fabulous job with your recreation. Thanks for what y’all do. Very important work and very much appreciated. Hugz, Tree
Thank you, Becca, for two more great recreations! Your skills, taste, and intuition never fail to impress, but it's cases like these that really make them shine. I don't mean to say that Holbein's portraits are easy to work with, but ... it's what differentiates Holbein, Fouquet, Clouets, Velasquez, and other great portrait painters from the anonymous author(s) of these portraits. Rendering an individual's features realistically yet not crudely, without flattery yet in a way that made the individuals (and viewers) admire those features, the likeness, and the personality. I believe you have that ability too. The 15th century artist depicted Edward "as he could", but you interpreted his signs perfectly, found best modern means to render the likeness - et voila, a living, breathing charismatic young man. And a lovely visage indeed! Everything we read about but hardly saw in the original portrait. Brava Becca! But for me, this case also illustrates another ancient problem and possibly a major challenge for your skills - higher degree of idealization/generalization in female portraits. Second-class artists are even more inclined to use templates, smooth female features, introduce inaccuracies, etc. Whether it was a more formal approach to depicting royal women, courtesy, or artists' negligence because women had just to look rich and chaste, the result is obvious: such portraits are often so plain and boring compared to men's likenesses... Your Elizabeth Woodville, although not quite 'breathing' like Edward for me, does look like the mother of Elizabeth of York, her successor, so your ability to discern people's true features in old portraits is just amazing.
Rebecca Ferguson was a very good choice for Elizabeth Woodville.. In the White Queen series. Lots more drama but they got a lot of looks right. Also such a striking woman years later. King Edward is DEFINITELY where Henry the 8th got his height from. He is very much like Edward except not nearly as not nearly as "good?".
I agree. Rebecca Ferguson was perfect. Rebecca played her role very well showing the layers of Elizabeth’s character, her beauty, and inner strength to always persevere against adversity. Well done!
Never expected big foreheads to have ever been in vogue in the past (I have a big forehead). To think women were seen as beautiful to have receeding hairlines comes as a shock to me (mindblowing that they would pluck/shave their forehead to achieve the balding look). Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and what's culturally deemed beautiful I guess!
All kinds of things have been the beauty standard over time, it's really interesting! All the really heavy-lidded eyes in Restoration portraiture come to mind..
I love that you didn’t plaster Elizabeth with makeup like some of the other forensic artist videos do. You left her naturally beautiful, and didn’t try to make her look like a magazine cover model.
You are the only American historian who is so accurate has a lovely voice and is so interesting to listen to I love what u do thanks for your hard work and sharing 🇬🇧🇬🇧
They are in my ancestry tree. My brother and I both have sons who range from 6’2”” to 6’5” and resemble Edward IV. They are taller than our father and my brother.
Serious props particularly on Elizabeth Woodville! Of all the portraits of kings and queens of yesteryear, the one you had to use must be the toughest for reconstruction EVER! I get that her hair was fair and it was severely pulled back, but the artist, in a mad obsession to portray the sheer veil, made her look like a bald alien. How you got anything from that portrait just stuns me!
I like the fact we can see how they actually looked in real life , I love reading and history is my favourite subject. Most portraits do not flatter a person or show them truly as we have seen them here. Thanks
Thank you for sharing these transitional pictures from the older to newer interpretations. It’s really interesting to see. I think we just have a natural inability to view these older pictures as real people, sadly enough. But it’s easier to believe once you see them with more current hair styles.
Really great video, entertaining and intriguing. I am a Woodville and you just never hear this name. Perhaps related! Your rendition looks like me when I was younger ❤
Top notch, maybe a portrait of Saint/ King Oswald,who Tolkein based Aragorn on, ..? Keep up with the great work that you do...best wishes from the wirral peninsula,bounded by the mersey and the Dee and the Irish sea...geography and rhyme...E...😊😊
I think Elizabeth York, daughter of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville, looks a lot like her mother in the face except not as feminine. She was also considered a beauty, but not as iconic as her mother. Elizabeth of York was a little plumper and didn't have that long slender regal neck of her mother.
The problem with all the recreations I've seen of Edward IV is that they look too pretty and not masculine enough. This was a man over 6 feet when the average male height was around 5'7, whose physical prowess was extraordinary and who could carry the weight of heavy armour for hours through exhausting fighting. He was absolutely trojan on the battlefield and never lost a battle he personally led. All the pretty boys who've been chosen to portray him as well as the viral recreations never do him justice.
I think this is as close as we are likely to get. A really good job! One small point is that the full conclusion of TWotR would only come at Bosworth and Richard III's defeat. Edward and Elizabeth do appear to have had that rare thing, a good and loving marriage.
You know, I just don't see the beauty in Elizabeth. She's not ugly, no. She appears very plain or girl next door. I don't quite see why she had such an effect. Edward IV looks amazing. Both are wonderful and life like. Perhaps my modern lens is affecting her?
I can agree with you on that, but wonder if this was a case of beauty being in the eyes of the beholder. Or, perhaps her personality made her pretty. I've known people who were unattractive at the get-go but became gorgeous the more I was around them. Just a couple of thoughts....
Let's not forget that standards of beauty are time-specific. Supermodels of today would not be considered beautiful even 150 years ago, much less 600 years. Look at the "stunners" of the Pre-Raphaelite's, or the plump baby-faced coquettes of the mid 1800's - then the Flemish Madonnas of the mid 1400's. It's all transitory, and determined by the times, artistic representation and how society determines gender norms.
Her facial symmetry is perfect. We were not able to see her smile but I bet it was beautiful. Her Mother was of noble birth and would have taught those graces to her from birth. I’m sure Elizabeth would have radiated a room when she entered and had the experience to handle a man. Something Edward was not used to before he met her.
Elizabeth Woodville portrait is stunning Add the long gden hair and wow! Though if reports are true her two predecessors Margaret of Anjou and Catherine de Valois were seriously pretty as well!!
There is a portrait of elizabeth Woodville done when she was 16 and newly married to her first husban. Sorry to disappoint but she was a gorgeous redhead. This was actually shown on Time Team.
So much sadness linked to these two attractive individuals. As a history buff, I have wondered how differently the world would have unfurled if only Edward had been more wary of his younger brother, Richard, and had put in place an unshakeable guardianship for his sons, esp. the heir to the throne, Edward V, and his younger brother, Richard of Shrewsbury, who most agree were murdered by their uncle Richard III. If Edward had ascended the throne, we might never have had Henry VII defeat Richard at Bosworth; never have had Henry VIII separate from the Roman Catholic Church; never have had Elizabeth I, and so on. These two . . . they did change the course of history.
Hello, I find this series of yours absolutely fascinating. thank you. I was wondering if you would be so kind as to credit the music? I loved it and would like to purchase if available to do so. Cheers
As a musician it would feel much more awesome if the music credit was given as well, as the music is probably playing an equal, if not the biggest role in this whole video, and we dont know who made it
I am shocked at how similar your version of Elizabeth Woodville is to Rebecca Ferguson when she played Elizabeth Woodville in the White Queen (TV movie adaptation of Philippa Gregory’s book series on the war of the roses)
I've just subscribed to Royalty Now Studios because I jus watched Elizabeth Woodville & King Edward IV. I love the story of Elizabeth & Edward and your production is a perfect interpretation for me. Could I ask if anyone knows the music played at the end of the video, it was such an inspirational piece.
I would like to see one of George, Duke of Clarence from his portrait. I know he was never king but he was a royal Duke and brother to Edward IV and Richard III.
These always take my breath away. Edward IV is such a far away name and face, it's easy to reduce him to his battles and skirmishes. Same thing with Elizabeth Woodville, that's someone that lives in a fantasy realm that's how real she is. But seeing them come to life is so heart-wrenching, because they all of a sudden WERE real people, with hopes and dreams, hangnails and lopsided smiles, faces I probably have seen before on classmates or coworkers! It's humbling, because it makes their history suddenly so very real and not in fact so long ago.
Not King Charles and Queen Camilla, they may be the least attractive. Camilla's smoking did not help their health or appearance. This question seems rude to ask, considering who is king
Well said. You write like a writer. You hit the nail on the head. Well done.
@@barbaraolson6783 Consider their ages, about the half that of the ones you named.
Except elizabeths long beachy waves this channel like to put on all the female “recreation’s ” is very much not accurate 😂😂😂
I always thought Queen Camilla was nice looking when she was young but I must admit I couldn't think what Princess Diana saw in the now King Charles. Maybe it was his personality. Princess Diana was lovely inside and out
Looking at these recreations really does makes you believe that these legendary heroes and beauties have once, talked, ate, and laughed. Amazing, really 😍
I swear my nephew is Edward IV reincarnated. He's 6"4 has a relatively similar hair length, build, and facial features too. That's if Edward was reincarnated to be a regular 19 year old kid who can't stop looking at his phone. 😂
Lol
Who knows?❤
This is such a funny comment lol 😂
Does ur nephew single?😂
😂😂😂😂😂
To see the face of the Elizabeth for whom so many queens, princesses, and commoners down through the ages have been named is something. I think you captured what must have been captivating about her: it wasn't mere beauty, it was warmth.
Just wanted to say thank you for your videos! I am a history buff and an art lover so this is the perfect combo! I also love how you present the women’s stories in a balanced way! I have always been a little sad at the portrayal of women in history: as long as they had an independent thought or tried to forge their own path, they were called witches, or evil or simply written off! Your videos always make me smile when you tell their stories!
Their love story is legendary. Her mother was Duchess of Bedford, married to the son of Henry IV, grandson of John of Gaunt. Elizabeth’s father was Richard Woodville, Earl Rivers whom her mother married in secret after she was widowed.Elizabeth was mother to the Princes in the Tower rumored to have been murdered by Richard III, Henry VII, or his mother , Margaret Beaufort. I loved their story in the White Queen .
I've read the book! Reccommend it if you don't mind smut. Also, highly approve of your username! May the force be with you!
My vote goes to Margaret Beaufort. She was singleminded about her son becoming king. If you look at the family tree, who was standing in the way of that ambition? The two young princes. Once they were gone, that ambition was realised. I think she may have been one of the most successful schemers in history.
@@jacquelinekirk5601same here
I love to see them moving, because it shows a charm that it's not translated with just the still painting.
They were truly handsome and beautiful. It’s great to see what they looked like and you’ve done a fabulous job with your recreation. Thanks for what y’all do. Very important work and very much appreciated. Hugz, Tree
Fantastic recreation as usual! I've been studying British and medieval history and watching your recreations really brings the history to life! Ty!
Thank you, Becca, for two more great recreations! Your skills, taste, and intuition never fail to impress, but it's cases like these that really make them shine. I don't mean to say that Holbein's portraits are easy to work with, but ... it's what differentiates Holbein, Fouquet, Clouets, Velasquez, and other great portrait painters from the anonymous author(s) of these portraits. Rendering an individual's features realistically yet not crudely, without flattery yet in a way that made the individuals (and viewers) admire those features, the likeness, and the personality. I believe you have that ability too. The 15th century artist depicted Edward "as he could", but you interpreted his signs perfectly, found best modern means to render the likeness - et voila, a living, breathing charismatic young man. And a lovely visage indeed! Everything we read about but hardly saw in the original portrait. Brava Becca! But for me, this case also illustrates another ancient problem and possibly a major challenge for your skills - higher degree of idealization/generalization in female portraits. Second-class artists are even more inclined to use templates, smooth female features, introduce inaccuracies, etc. Whether it was a more formal approach to depicting royal women, courtesy, or artists' negligence because women had just to look rich and chaste, the result is obvious: such portraits are often so plain and boring compared to men's likenesses... Your Elizabeth Woodville, although not quite 'breathing' like Edward for me, does look like the mother of Elizabeth of York, her successor, so your ability to discern people's true features in old portraits is just amazing.
Rebecca Ferguson was a very good choice for Elizabeth Woodville.. In the White Queen series. Lots more drama but they got a lot of looks right.
Also such a striking woman years later.
King Edward is DEFINITELY where Henry the 8th got his height from. He is very much like Edward except not nearly as not nearly as "good?".
I agree. Rebecca Ferguson was perfect. Rebecca played her role very well showing the layers of Elizabeth’s character, her beauty, and inner strength to always persevere against adversity. Well done!
@@genna2586I agree she was perfect in white queen
❤ Accolades cannot describe how stunning these living portraits of this beautiful and historic couple are for me. Shaking my head. Absolutely amazing!
Oh, I wish you had shown their re-creations together. Great job! I have visited their tombs in England.
Never expected big foreheads to have ever been in vogue in the past (I have a big forehead). To think women were seen as beautiful to have receeding hairlines comes as a shock to me (mindblowing that they would pluck/shave their forehead to achieve the balding look). Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and what's culturally deemed beautiful I guess!
Be proud of your big forehead! Prominent foreheads used to be a sign of nobility and high status :)
Yet, she is astoundingly beautiful!
All kinds of things have been the beauty standard over time, it's really interesting! All the really heavy-lidded eyes in Restoration portraiture come to mind..
Beauty is definitely cultural but that is not known when one is growing up.
@@vespertine2326 I think I was born in the wrong century then. 😔
I love that you didn’t plaster Elizabeth with makeup like some of the other forensic artist videos do. You left her naturally beautiful, and didn’t try to make her look like a magazine cover model.
This is definitely not natural.
@@9395gb I think it is . but it looks kind of unnatural because of how she was painted .
It is SO fascinating to see how you bring historical figures to life!! So amazing!!!
I love this channel so much!!!! It’s been so fun to watch these with my mother and including my grandmother in our watching too!!! ❤❤❤
Your work is absolutely beautiful. Fascinating and impeccable. Thank you 🙏🏻
Absolutely stunning re-creations! Thank you for sharing!
Perfect recreation! And very realistic, your recreations totally bring the history to life ❤️
My ancestors. Your videos gives me then opportunity to see what they looked like and makes me even more proud of my heritage. Thank you
You are the only American historian who is so accurate has a lovely voice and is so interesting to listen to I love what u do thanks for your hard work and sharing 🇬🇧🇬🇧
They are in my ancestry tree. My brother and I both have sons who range from 6’2”” to 6’5” and resemble Edward IV. They are taller than our father and my brother.
My family as well. My brother and cousins are 6’3” but don’t look much like him since they’re biracial. 😊
We are related then. Elizabeth is a Great Aunt to me. Her sister married a Stafford. Our common ancestor…Jaquetta of Luxomborg.
Who are you decended from
Another cousin here. Elizabeth was my 15th Great Grandmother. Your rendering of her reminds me of my mother.
Another descendant here, my Dad, brothers & son are all over 6ft 2", I'm the only female & 5ft 3". 🤣
Serious props particularly on Elizabeth Woodville! Of all the portraits of kings and queens of yesteryear, the one you had to use must be the toughest for reconstruction EVER! I get that her hair was fair and it was severely pulled back, but the artist, in a mad obsession to portray the sheer veil, made her look like a bald alien. How you got anything from that portrait just stuns me!
Beautiful work! Also nice music selection! This is my favorite English era. You have brought it to life for all to see. Thank You!
He was so handsome. She was beautiful, too... with her unusual greyish brown eyes with blonde hair, like an English Mona Lisa.
I like the fact we can see how they actually looked in real life , I love reading and history is my favourite subject. Most portraits do not flatter a person or show them truly as we have seen them here. Thanks
This is a recreation, hon. We do not know how they really looked.
What a great way to start my weekend! Thank you for another great video!
Wow, these two look absolutely gorgeous! What a stunning recreation of each of them.
Absolutely stunning work. Reading up on the War of The Roses this weekend. 🕊️
Thank you! I love your channel, I feel like I was travelling in time and that's priceless! Beautiful re-creation btw!😃😃😃❤
I loved the collision of Elizabeth Woodwille’s fashion styles.
I’m related to Elizabeth Woodville. Always love learning about history
I totally love these videos. It is so awesome to see a portrait come to life. Its totally amazing.
I agree with everyone else, thank you for these recreations of our favorite historical figures. I am also enthralled with this family. Thanks again!❤
Thank you for these recreations. They are my ancestors ❤️❤️❤️
Cam I just say...??? You always have the best music!?!?! 🎉🎉🎉 Id 💯 have that on repeat if I could!
Beautifully done! Those two were quite the lookers!
i love your work. You deserve way more subscriptions. This is content that should be promoted not only on youtube, but in schools, universities etc.
I love your channel. Thank you for the fascinating video.
I love your videos. I enjoy seeing the people come to life. Your creations are stunning!
Another triumphant piece. Love your channel. And the music is divine 🙂
Thank you for sharing these transitional pictures from the older to newer interpretations. It’s really interesting to see. I think we just have a natural inability to view these older pictures as real people, sadly enough. But it’s easier to believe once you see them with more current hair styles.
Really great video, entertaining and intriguing. I am a Woodville and you just never hear this name. Perhaps related! Your rendition looks like me when I was younger ❤
Absolutely stunning, thank you for these. Xx
Top notch, maybe a portrait of Saint/ King Oswald,who Tolkein based Aragorn on, ..? Keep up with the great work that you do...best wishes from the wirral peninsula,bounded by the mersey and the Dee and the Irish sea...geography and rhyme...E...😊😊
I think Elizabeth York, daughter of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville, looks a lot like her mother in the face except not as feminine. She was also considered a beauty, but not as iconic as her mother. Elizabeth of York was a little plumper and didn't have that long slender regal neck of her mother.
Love it. Loved the White Queen book
The problem with all the recreations I've seen of Edward IV is that they look too pretty and not masculine enough. This was a man over 6 feet when the average male height was around 5'7, whose physical prowess was extraordinary and who could carry the weight of heavy armour for hours through exhausting fighting. He was absolutely trojan on the battlefield and never lost a battle he personally led. All the pretty boys who've been chosen to portray him as well as the viral recreations never do him justice.
So his prowess in battle precludes him from having nice features? 🤔
very nice recreation. Great job!
Thank you for the shorter version of this video.
You bet!
Thank you for creating life like images that I enjoy seeing and believing.
Just beautiful 😍 I truly admire your work. Pure magic 💜
Fantastic work! A real travel in time at the English Court...Thank you.
I think this is as close as we are likely to get. A really good job! One small point is that the full conclusion of TWotR would only come at Bosworth and Richard III's defeat. Edward and Elizabeth do appear to have had that rare thing, a good and loving marriage.
They were both stunning humans ❤
Wow!!! These videos are amazing. Just wow
Beautifully restored portraits!
Love to see Richard III face. Handsome actors often portray him.
I always thought they were both beautiful 😍
Elizabeth Woodville was one of my great grandmothers on my father’s side.
Elizabeth was born in 1437
so gorgegous😢 I cant😭❤ thankyou anyway. great job guys, you rock🤘🏿
The Woodvilles and Ferrers were all beautiful
Please recreate Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, the love of Elizabeth I's life.
You do beautiful work.
You know, I just don't see the beauty in Elizabeth. She's not ugly, no. She appears very plain or girl next door. I don't quite see why she had such an effect. Edward IV looks amazing. Both are wonderful and life like. Perhaps my modern lens is affecting her?
I can agree with you on that, but wonder if this was a case of beauty being in the eyes of the beholder. Or, perhaps her personality made her pretty. I've known people who were unattractive at the get-go but became gorgeous the more I was around them.
Just a couple of thoughts....
Let's not forget that standards of beauty are time-specific. Supermodels of today would not be considered beautiful even 150 years ago, much less 600 years. Look at the "stunners" of the Pre-Raphaelite's, or the plump baby-faced coquettes of the mid 1800's - then the Flemish Madonnas of the mid 1400's. It's all transitory, and determined by the times, artistic representation and how society determines gender norms.
Her facial symmetry is perfect. We were not able to see her smile but I bet it was beautiful. Her Mother was of noble birth and would have taught those graces to her from birth. I’m sure Elizabeth would have radiated a room when she entered and had the experience to handle a man. Something Edward was not used to before he met her.
Edward’s claim to the throne was through Lionel rather than Edmund of Langley. Edmund was younger than John of Gaunt.
Elizabeth Woodville portrait is stunning Add the long gden hair and wow! Though if reports are true her two predecessors Margaret of Anjou and Catherine de Valois were seriously pretty as well!!
You really did a great job!!
A comely couple.
Elizabeth was the grandmother of Henry 8th
I LOVE YOUR CHANNEL!
Had history turned out differently, Diana, Princess of Wales, would’ve been the most beautiful queen ever.. in my humble opinion.
Agree with you 100% on that! x
She isn’t English. Diana is an ethnic Jew. Jews are not English or European.
There is a portrait of elizabeth Woodville done when she was 16 and newly married to her first husban. Sorry to disappoint but she was a gorgeous redhead. This was actually shown on Time Team.
Maybe a strawberry blonde?
It’s amazing what a more realistic skin tone can do to make a face look less like a painting.
So much sadness linked to these two attractive individuals. As a history buff, I have wondered how differently the world would have unfurled if only Edward had been more wary of his younger brother, Richard, and had put in place an unshakeable guardianship for his sons, esp. the heir to the throne, Edward V, and his younger brother, Richard of Shrewsbury, who most agree were murdered by their uncle Richard III. If Edward had ascended the throne, we might never have had Henry VII defeat Richard at Bosworth; never have had Henry VIII separate from the Roman Catholic Church; never have had Elizabeth I, and so on. These two . . . they did change the course of history.
Excellent! thank you. I really enjoyed this.
The sun in splendor and a descendent of a river goddess ❤❤❤lovely
Excellent… well done…✨💖✨
My sister in-law had such light brown eyes, they seemed golden to me! Ive never seen eyes like hers to this day.
oh my... HM. Elizabeth looks like she could be the ancestor of Dr. Zarka from that PBS channel that does Monstrum!
Damn your work is good!!!!!!!! 😯
Hello, I find this series of yours absolutely fascinating. thank you. I was wondering if you would be so kind as to credit the music? I loved it and would like to purchase if available to do so. Cheers
Really well done. Thank you!
Wowza, such an awesome job of recreating! 🥰👏
A relative of mine managed to trace my ancestry to Elizabeth Woodville's father, Richard. So this video is particularly interesting to me.
Absolutely amazing
As a musician it would feel much more awesome if the music credit was given as well, as the music is probably playing an equal, if not the biggest role in this whole video, and we dont know who made it
Best one yet. wonderful.
If you would include all of the isle I would say, Mary Queen of Scotts
This is amazing thank you! ❤
I am shocked at how similar your version of Elizabeth Woodville is to Rebecca Ferguson when she played Elizabeth Woodville in the White Queen (TV movie adaptation of Philippa Gregory’s book series on the war of the roses)
Amazing work!
It makes me wonder about so many paintings of people of the times. The Artist's could be very rude in their talents.
These two monarchs made for a very impressive couple and the England of its time.
Beautiful
Great video. Also, the narration is really nice, especially in these days of AI narration!
Elizabeth II was truly beautiful
two beautiful people.
I've just subscribed to Royalty Now Studios because I jus watched Elizabeth Woodville & King Edward IV. I love the story of Elizabeth & Edward and your production is a perfect interpretation for me. Could I ask if anyone knows the music played at the end of the video, it was such an inspirational piece.
I would like to see one of George, Duke of Clarence from his portrait. I know he was never king but he was a royal Duke and brother to Edward IV and Richard III.