Henry vii had a father, who was dead at the time of his birth of, well you know, he was 26, and his mother was 13. His mother outlived Henry by about 2 months
It seems you forgot to mention that Elizabeth Woodville possibly died from the plague! In 2019 a letter was found suggesting that it did indeed happen. Although it is not 100% certain, the way her funeral was carried out hastily and quietly does support the fact
Princess Joan was 15 when she died but among her companions was her sister Isabella who was accompanying her sister I'm not sure if she was going with her to the border or to Spain itself I read this in a historical novel about Isabella who was left stranded in France because all the retinue of her sister died in the plague and she couldn't return to England for two or three years When she arrived her father King Edward III and his queen couldnt believe it and his father swore to himself that he will never let another of his daughter leave ENGLAND again and he granted Isabella permission to marry a nobleman she loved that is what i read it was a sad andbeautiful story
A common misconception: the Tudors didn't so much end the Wars of the Roses so much as internalize and cannibalize them: Henry Tudor fought two battles after he ascended; beheaded Edward of Warwick after keeping him imprisoned for years; beheaded Perkin Warbeck, beheaded William Stanley; imprisoned Edmund de la Pole. Henry VIII executed the Duke of Buckingham; and, infamously, Margaret Pole, sister of the executed Edward of Warwick. This is not the record of a dynasty at peace with its position.
Henry the 7th killed everyone you mentioned except for Margret Pole. Margret Pole was killed by order of Henry the 8th because she was mother of cardinal Reginald Pole, allies of his daughter Queen Mary
I first heard of the story of Princess Joan of England when I saw a documentary on the Black Death. Her father's letter to her father in law saddened me. It was clear despite the former language that he was affected by news of her death.
I know what documentary you're talking about, it included reenactment of the events. Before she was sent off, there must have been some talk in England about the sickness creeping across the continent. It's a shame Edward III was not aware of how severe it was and that passing along messages back then took so long. Also, instead of stopping in France, I wonder how them going directly to Spain would've worked out (though it was already there too).
@@lebou9540 Joan's traveling party was warned about the plague and was told it was too dangerous to pass through France, but they pressed on, and Joan's death was the result!
So glad you mentioned Margrete I of Denmark She rests in my hometown Roskilde ... BUT .. originally she was buried in another church, while a year later her body was stolen and brought to Roskilde, by her close friend, who happened to also be the bishop of Roskilde. A 3 day feast was held in her honour after the move. Pretty wild stealing the body of the late queen, right?!
Big fan of your videos! Been watching since I was in 6th grade (I’m a sophomore in high school now), and always come back to your videos for my studies and because of you my favorite subject in school without a doubt is definitely history class! Keep it up, your channel has grown so much! 😊
History Have you been turned on to the best American military vids? That would be the Fat Electrician. Start with Most gangster politician you've never heard of.
I love your videos, but can't keep all the names straight. I'll watch one and think "oh yeah, got it now" but all the different areas and 15 Henrys, Edwards, and Johns later, clueless again. But i still love watching them all.
Is it possible you could do a royalty 101 video about female royals lives, like their daily routine, education, etc. I feel like it would be pretty interesting, since princesses and queens of different places and centuries have different ways of life. It’s an only an idea of course, but I think it would be a cool video
hii🌷 im 16 and ive ioved your videos since i was 13, love you, your my real queen and thank you for making videos🌸🎀 please never stop, much love from Texas💐🌷🌸💕
LOVE your history videos Lindsay! Thanks for all your hardwork! All those AI generated documentaries combined have NOTHING on you. And the loss of the Black Princes's first son edward was particulary tragic, not just the loss of a child to his parents but england as a whole given that they then got saddled with Richard II, one of the worst kings england ever had.
19:20 Actually the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance is in fact still in effect to this day it’s actually the World’s Oldest Alliance so it didn’t last until the Napoleonic Wars since the Portuguese came to Britain’s aid during the Great War (1914-1918)
19:20 The children of King João I of Portugal and Philippa of Lancaster are known in Portugal as the Illustrious Generation, and they played a significant role in both Portuguese and world history.
Please do a video on royals who had notable childbirths- I would love to watch that! (Died in childbirth, births that were unconventional for their times like Queen Elizabeth’s “home” birth after cesarean) :)
The war of the roses is very complicated. The genealogy is so fascinating. Trust me, you will have to study it multiple times before you finally understand the story.
Thank you so much for not putting loud music in your videos. So many creators do and it's distracting from the information it overpowers it. I also enjoy listening when I'm relaxing for bed and I hate hearing those videos with cannons and sound effects lol. You're one of the only channels to not have loud abnoxious sounds in your videos.
First you feel a little poorly Then you start to swell (ppft) Then you start to spit some blood And then you really smell. (Pong!) Then you know it's time to ring your funeral bell (dong!) Along comes Mr Death and swishes you to Hell Horrible Histories Plague Song
Oooh I’ve been waiting for this one! Love to see Leonor and Duarte mentioned! The latter rly showed promise as King, I’d love to know what could’ve been
Richard didn't quote "discover a priest" to say that Edward had previously been married. The Bishop who married Edward to Eleanor Butler came forward at this time because it was against Church law for a bastard to inherit the throne since the King's first wife was still alive when he married the prince's mother. He was a bigamist. Richard was the last descendant in the male line of the Plantagenet dynasty. Richard III was not unpopular. He was known as a fair and just man and very popular in the lands that he governed and also known for his honesty and upright character. The princes we're not shut in the tower. The Tower of London was the designated place for the heir to the throne to await his coronation. The fact is no one knows what actually happened to the princes and remains one of history's greatest mysteries and is debated to this day.
thank you for this!!! so glad someone said it, otherwise I’d have had to do it myself and I don’t have the energy lol. richard was a good king and perhaps the most unfairly maligned person in english history. so odd seeing otherwise solid historical channels still repeating centuries old propaganda unquestionably.
@@mariawhite7337no, he didn’t. there have been dozens of occasions in which people have claimed to find the princes. in some of these cases, they were apparently grown men who went on to live long (ish) lives. we simply do not know. and repeating unsubstantiated rumours is not a good way to approach history. the first record of ANY accusations regarding richard and the princes came from french propaganda at the time. they then traveled from france with henry tudor, who weaponised them AFTER richard’s death in order to discredit him. he was a very popular king in his time and even more so before his crowning, when he served as an important political figure in his brother’s reign. I’ll never understand why people are so willing to believe the word of gossiping political enemies when it comes to *this* monarch, but not others. the tudors and their extremely weak claim to the english throne are just really goddamn compelling I guess. I can’t help but to think that his physical disability is a factor. it was very very easy for henry tudor to discredit richard, not just as a king but as a PERSON, with the reveal of richard’s incredibly advanced scoliosis. richard was paraded, naked, on horseback, and then publicly displayed and decried as a monster to the public because of his appearance. THAT was henry tudor’s greatest weapon of propaganda. and it had to be, because his claim to the throne was noticeably weaker than richard’s and everyone knew it. no one wanted a cripple for a king, and then shakespeare came along and cemented that years later. the two things people still think they “know” about richard III came to us directly from his political enemies. that he was a nasty old hunchback, and that he imprisoned (and worse, apparently) his own nephews. in actuality, he was in his early 30s when he died, no one knew about his scoliosis while he lived because he dressed to hide it very convincingly (despite likely being in incredible pain every day of his life) and the princes in the tower are more fiction than fact. I find it funny how no one talks about henry tudor and his successors having much stronger and more valid motivations for getting those princes out of the way. what do people think they would have done if they’d gotten their hands on those boys? henry would have buried them without a second thought lol. or do we reeaally believe that he just got rid of richard for altruistic reasons, and never would have touched a hair on the heads of the little york boys if *they* were on the throne at the time of his campaign. we do not know when/how they died. we probably never will. we DO know that if they lived longer than Richard, and their location had been known to the tudors, they’d have had the chance of a cinder in snow at survival. the end. 👍
Most historians do not believe he was married to Eleanor Butler. His marriage to Elizabeth Woodville was highly unusual, and unpopular. Why would Richard bring up the first wedding when Edward IV had been married to Elizabeth, for so many years.
It's crazy how the black death almost got Justinian, Constantinople was one of the worst affected places by the first outbreak of the black death, and the Emperor of the Romans got so sick he fell into a coma. Empress Theodora took charge and managed the crisis admirably, taking the very difficult decision to burn the dead on mass and dump the ashes in Bosphorus... However, miraculously, Justinian survived and would go on to make a full recovery.
❤❤❤❤I really love your channel and would like to suggest a video idea: Royal princesses who died young, for example: Mary Of York, Mary Of Waltham, Joan Of plague, and lastly Margaret Of York (Daughter Of Edward IV)
*Anne of Bohemia was actually the 1st cousin of Isabella of Valois' grandpa, Charles V (although Anne was much younger- around the age of Charles V's son, Charles VI- the Mad- Dad of Isabella of Valois).
Two European Wars,The Hundred Years War And The Wars Of The Roses, Fascinating. If Some Of Killed By The Bubonic Plague Had Lived, History Would've Turned Out Much Differently!!!🤔😳😐☠️
Margrete the I wasn’t Queen Regnant. She was named Regent until she could produce an heir. At no point in her life was she recognized as the monarch, despite being the actual power behind the throne.
@@lilacgirl-z8w yes. But she adopted her sister’s grandson, Bugislaw of Pomerania, who was renamed to Erik and was named the new King of Denmark-Norway, and later the King of the Kalmar Union. He was however not the King Margrete had hoped him to be and after she died, everything started to fall apart. And when it got to tough, he fled to the Mediterranean and became a pirate. It’s from him the Danish saying “Det går ad Pommern til” derives from. “Pommern” being the Danish name for Pomerania, and the saying is for how really, really bad a situation can be. He had no children. The throne was passed to his cousin, Christoffer of Bavaria, but he too didn’t have children. Instead it passed to a descendant of King Erik the V of Denmark, Christian the I, who in 1448 created the Oldenburg dynasty that would rule Denmark until 1863 after which the male line died out, Norway until 1814 when Denmark was forced to give up Norway, and Sweden until 1520, because King Christian the II instigated the Bloodbath of Stockholm, which was the final nail in the coffin that was the Kalmar Union. Christian the II was forced off the throne in 1523 and was replaced by his uncle, King Frederik the I, whom, even though after 1863 a new dynasty came to be in Denmark and later Norway, the Danish and Norwegian royal families are direct descendants of.
Navarre is on the Iberian Peninsula not in France - it always has been on the Iberian peninsula on the other side of the Pyrenees as far back as the 10th century.
@@RavenIdril2966 It’s an autonomous region. Navarre and a couple others kind of like being “independent,” but it seems so confusing. Kind of like states in US. But Castille-Leon, Greater Madrid, and Andalusia seem like “yeah, we’re real Spain.” It’s odd. I saw a lot of graffiti in Navarre and LaRioja about hating the king on the Camino de Santiago. Whereas, a lot of people know that the Camino is what pays the bills. Again, it’s weird. I was also in Barcelona when they were protesting tourists. I know that’s more than you asked, but I found it interesting how the changes could be seen along the Camino route.
Can we not use absolutes in describing the sexuality of Richard II? It's by no means known whether he was or not, and has been debated among scholars for years.
@@lilacgirl-z8w Ibn al-Akfani was a Kurdish Encyclopedist who worked at Cairo and died of the plaque. Al-Hakim II the Fifth Abbasid Caliph of the Mamluk Sultanate.
I think the Anglo-Portuguese alliance still exists? British ships took the Portuguese royal family to Brazil when Napoleon came calling, and during WWII they quietly let the British navy use their islands.
We take in domestic rescue rats, but we just adopted an orphaned baby black rat (Rattus rattus), and he's absolutely adorable - surprisingly soft too! Observing him do lightning zoomies and climb like a pro, really made me appreciate how easily black rats would've moved through thatched roofs and granaries in mediaeval times, easily spreading fleas and diseases. His ears are like little radar dishes too, and his eyes are bigger than the domestic types (Rattus norvegicus - brown rats), making him impossible for most predators to catch. Also, despite being flighty, he's already adapted well to a domestic setting, and he's very affectionate and trusting with me. So a perfect combination for spreading Yersinia pestis 😅 We live in Australia btw so he doesn't have plague or rabies before people freak out lol
I'm so sorry but all the depiction of death in the paintings like this 24:58 looks so funny to me. They're like "Tbh idek if you're the right person or not but...uhhh....you're coming with me anyway I guess"
We need one with smallpox too! Justice for Mary II! Also, didn’t Edmund Tudor, duke of Somerset (youngest son of Henry VII and Liz of York and Charles, duke of Orleans (youngest son of Francis I) also die of the plague?
I know there are thousands if not way more of us direct descendants of these crazy royals. Growing up I never knew my ancestry like I do now and I’m just amazed at how many iconic and crazy royals or other major players in their courts. Too many were beheaded in England and hung in Salem at the Witch Trials. Thank you for doing these videos they are fascinating
If I were Katherine Swynford, I'd be pretty mad at John. He idolized his first wife and held memorials for her even when he was remarried, and exclusively buried himself with Blanche. It feels like a strange posthumous adultery.
The funny thing is that Katherine knew Blanche as she was governess to Blanche's children- they loved Katherine even when she was being hated for being John's mistress and wife- and adored Blanche as a dear friend besides being her mistress, no pun intended. So she would've also done the memorials with John even while she was his mistress and as his wife. Though maybe she still would've been a little hurt that John got buried with Blanche but at least she knew that John loved her as much as he had loved Blanche.
@Mirandaconklin I heard that John stayed faithful to Blanche all their marriage and that it was while he was married to his second wife, Constance of Castile, that he made Katherine his lover. John also knew Katherine ever since she was a child because she was a lady in his mother's household but only made her his mistress when she was widowed from her husband and an adult.
Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things could you make a video of kings, sulrans/Caliph's and emperor's with the most kids as ottoman sultan Murad 4th for example had 32 kids when he passed away at age of 27
Maybe it was a good thing Joan of England did not marry Peter of Castile because if we take into mind how horribly he treated his wife Blanche of Bourbon who was imprisoned and poisoned at age 22 it would have actually been a blessing in disguise
Note: Even though Margarethe I was the first queen regnant in all of Scandinavia, she didn't call herself that. she styled herself something like a regent for her son, + wasn't recognized as queen until the reign of Margrethe II, who took the regnal number II after her
Richard was not unpopular, and his only Parliament invested in such items as a) ending benevolences b) protecting land purchase rights c) reforming the justice system d) preventing commercial dishonesty in the cloth trade e) protecting the English merchant f) preventing fraudulent collection practices Please, in future presentations that involve controversial people, please be careful to present more than one side, if there is one that that has gained legitimate traction, such as has been done with Richard. It's only fair, and will give your own channel more credibility.
When I learnt that Edward III's daughter Joan had died of the plague, I knew that disease does not discriminate when it comes to choosing it's victims, we are ALL vulnerable to disease, no matter our rank!
I really love the phrase that you used, "...they could not keep the princess safe from a danger no knight could vanquish." Great writing as always!
Agree, the phrase really captured that feeling of helplessness mediaeval people must have felt, especially when religion failed them.
How many dynasties were damaged by the bubonic plague.
You know a plague is really bad when even the royalty are dying from it☠️☠️☠️
People died of a chill back then 😅
They were not immune of it either.
How many years did the black death drag on?
Lmao
You know if the plague didnt affect the royalty we probably still have it now
Hearing how many of these girls were impregnated at an early age is so sad.
Henry vii had a father, who was dead at the time of his birth of, well you know, he was 26, and his mother was 13. His mother outlived Henry by about 2 months
The amount of kings this woman has seen crowned in her life.
And she saw not only her own child but also her grandson be crowned king.
They were raped, but that was the norm. Girls who got their periods/menstrual cycles were classified as adults, and forced to marry elder men
Sadly it was quite normal. Girls were married off from the age of 12, if they were older than 16 they were deemed ‘old’😡
And so many died in childbirth.
I would have hid in a monastery, that's for sure.
It seems you forgot to mention that Elizabeth Woodville possibly died from the plague! In 2019 a letter was found suggesting that it did indeed happen. Although it is not 100% certain, the way her funeral was carried out hastily and quietly does support the fact
And her grandfather, Peter I, Count of St. Pol also died from the plague.
Interesting
Thanks for the updated information.
I don't believe so.
What did the letter say? That’s interesting:)
Princess Joan was 15 when she died but among her companions was her sister Isabella who was accompanying her sister I'm not sure if she was going with her to the border or to Spain itself I read this in a historical novel about Isabella who was left stranded in France because all the retinue of her sister died in the plague and she couldn't return to England for two or three years When she arrived her father King Edward III and his queen couldnt believe it and his father swore to himself that he will never let another of his daughter leave ENGLAND again and he granted Isabella permission to marry a nobleman she loved that is what i read it was a sad andbeautiful story
“The more feminine issues like having babies and the economy” made me laugh harder than I should have.
That woman needs her own biopic segment.
Women like her don't get enough notice and respect.
@@Butterflypegasus40 Who,Anne Of Bohemia?
Who Are You Referring To,Anne Of Bohemia?
@@gregoryjones9546no giovanna
A common misconception: the Tudors didn't so much end the Wars of the Roses so much as internalize and cannibalize them: Henry Tudor fought two battles after he ascended; beheaded Edward of Warwick after keeping him imprisoned for years; beheaded Perkin Warbeck, beheaded William Stanley; imprisoned Edmund de la Pole. Henry VIII executed the Duke of Buckingham; and, infamously, Margaret Pole, sister of the executed Edward of Warwick. This is not the record of a dynasty at peace with its position.
They won the war, but keeping at least one more full-fledged one from breaking out took some skirmishes and mafia-esque housekeeping, shall we say?
@@jonathancarlson6127 Yes, I think we can definitely say.
Henry the 7th killed everyone you mentioned except for Margret Pole. Margret Pole was killed by order of Henry the 8th because she was mother of cardinal Reginald Pole, allies of his daughter Queen Mary
@@jessicacarrillo1634 Very true: I did say it was Henry VIII, though it's all in one paragraph, which may have confused.
@@jessicacarrillo1634I thought he executed her as she refused to recognise him as head of the church of England..
I first heard of the story of Princess Joan of England when I saw a documentary on the Black Death. Her father's letter to her father in law saddened me. It was clear despite the former language that he was affected by news of her death.
I know what documentary you're talking about, it included reenactment of the events. Before she was sent off, there must have been some talk in England about the sickness creeping across the continent. It's a shame Edward III was not aware of how severe it was and that passing along messages back then took so long. Also, instead of stopping in France, I wonder how them going directly to Spain would've worked out (though it was already there too).
Joan was supposedly Edward's favorite child.
Yep, he wasn't a king in that letter, just a father mourning the loss of his child!
@@lebou9540 Joan's traveling party was warned about the plague and was told it was too dangerous to pass through France, but they pressed on, and Joan's death was the result!
. A long and dangerous sea jouney was a thing to be avoided back then.
A king dies and a woman is blamed tale as old as time
Her afterlife is better than the sultan and the guards who killed her.
@user-fg9xz4bz3b but their death wasn't as brutal she was humiliated by the men who surve the sultan who killed her family
Pedro the cruel was despicable too.
So glad you mentioned Margrete I of Denmark She rests in my hometown Roskilde ... BUT .. originally she was buried in another church, while a year later her body was stolen and brought to Roskilde, by her close friend, who happened to also be the bishop of Roskilde. A 3 day feast was held in her honour after the move. Pretty wild stealing the body of the late queen, right?!
Tænker at en royal grav tiltrækker pilgrimme, hvilket der kan tjenes gode penge på, så det giver vel god mening, omend det virker skørt...
That's a woman who should have a tv show.
@@Butterflypegasus40 the story of her life is worth a great Hollywood biopic for sure.
Queen/Empress Margrethe I Of Denmark Ruled Denmark, Norway And Sweden,The Kalmar Union Was The Scandinavian/Nordic Empire!!!🇩🇰🇸🇯🇸🇪🇫🇮🇫🇴🇦🇽
also, Margarethe I wasn't considered a queen until the reign of Margarethe II. She styled herself something like a regent for her son
I'm getting flashbacks to Ask a Mortician/Caitlin Doughty's videos 😆😆😆 "The Medieval Ages were magic~"
I ❤️ her! ⚰️
Me too!!! We miss our Death Mama ‘s well researched death videos!
@@LindsayHolidaywill you please do a part 2 with the German, Hungarian, Greek, and Polish royals.
Lol! Yes!
This has nothing to do with that, but we will never forget 🎵 Bentham's heeeeead 🎵
100 million death - when the population was so small - incredible so many unfulfilled lives
Big fan of your videos! Been watching since I was in 6th grade (I’m a sophomore in high school now), and always come back to your videos for my studies and because of you my favorite subject in school without a doubt is definitely history class! Keep it up, your channel has grown so much! 😊
That is awesome!
@@LindsayHolidayhave you read the book of the duchess?
Wonder if Italy was saved from the ottoman empire by the bubonic plague?
Literally the same for me. I feel like people look over history as nothing, but it can be so interesting if you take the time to
History
Have you been turned on to the best American military vids? That would be the Fat Electrician. Start with Most gangster politician you've never heard of.
I love your videos, but can't keep all the names straight. I'll watch one and think "oh yeah, got it now" but all the different areas and 15 Henrys, Edwards, and Johns later, clueless again. But i still love watching them all.
I didn't see any African royals.
Northern Africa was well known to Europe.
Kudos on saying João almost in perfection! 👏 I know how difficult it is to say it for foreigners (even to our Spanish neighbours)!
Absolutely..! Just a little more nasally in the “ã” and it will be perfect 💪🏻 it’s really hard for non-speakers to say it 😅
Is it possible you could do a royalty 101 video about female royals lives, like their daily routine, education, etc. I feel like it would be pretty interesting, since princesses and queens of different places and centuries have different ways of life. It’s an only an idea of course, but I think it would be a cool video
I think so too.
Another plague video?! Thanks! Always happy to learn more from these things. You're the Best Lindsay! No other better teacher❤❤❤❤❤
Will there be a part 2 cause I'm sure there were more royals and nobles who perished.
How about the Spanish influenza.
hii🌷 im 16 and ive ioved your videos since i was 13, love you, your my real queen and thank you for making videos🌸🎀 please never stop, much love from Texas💐🌷🌸💕
LOVE your history videos Lindsay! Thanks for all your hardwork! All those AI generated documentaries combined have NOTHING on you. And the loss of the Black Princes's first son edward was particulary tragic, not just the loss of a child to his parents but england as a whole given that they then got saddled with Richard II, one of the worst kings england ever had.
Jeanne of burgundy was a smart lady.
Blanche of Lancaster seemed like a real beauty.
Just watched more than 100 of your videos hahaha. Luv these types of topics about the medieval world
Wow, thanks!
@@LindsayHolidaydid the middle east also suffered from the black death?
@@lilacgirl-z8w
idk you mean Arabs?
@@LindsayHolidaywhich country do you think got it the worst?
19:20 Actually the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance is in fact still in effect to this day it’s actually the World’s Oldest Alliance so it didn’t last until the Napoleonic Wars since the Portuguese came to Britain’s aid during the Great War (1914-1918)
I've never heard of this?
@@lilacgirl-z8w Last year the UK and Portugal celebrated the 650th anniversary of the Alliance.
19:20 The children of King João I of Portugal and Philippa of Lancaster are known in Portugal as the Illustrious Generation, and they played a significant role in both Portuguese and world history.
Philippa of Lancaster an ancestor of queen isabel of castile?
Yes. Her granddaughter, Isabella, was the second wife of John II of Castile and was the mother of Queen Isabella and Infante Alfonso.
Please do a video on royals who had notable childbirths- I would love to watch that! (Died in childbirth, births that were unconventional for their times like Queen Elizabeth’s “home” birth after cesarean) :)
Thank you for another history video! Your narration is amazing as always! 😊
I really like Lindsay's voice.
this is probably my most favorite of all your vlogs
Definitely liked who she picked.
Didn't east asia get infected too?
This video has inspired me to learn more about the Wars of the Roses, the Hundred Years War, and Jeanne de Bourgogne. Thank you!
War of the roses was also called the cousins war.
The war of the roses is very complicated. The genealogy is so fascinating. Trust me, you will have to study it multiple times before you finally understand the story.
Poor Baghdad. Falsely accused and murdered unjustly.
Almost 1million subscribers!!❤ Thank you for the video Lindsay! ❤
Congrats on 1 million subscribers.
I really love your videos especially about medival ages. Love from the Philippines
Margrethe wasn't a queen but an empress.
Death saved Joan from a horrible marriage to Pedro.
@@lilacgirl-z8wsounds like you’re saying that Pedro would’ve violently abused Joan?
Pedro was known to history as Pedro the Cruel.
This is such an amazing histry video💜💜💜
I absolutely agree.
Thank you so much for not putting loud music in your videos. So many creators do and it's distracting from the information it overpowers it. I also enjoy listening when I'm relaxing for bed and I hate hearing those videos with cannons and sound effects lol. You're one of the only channels to not have loud abnoxious sounds in your videos.
Can you please make more videos about Medieval/Ancient times i love your videos so much💖
I second that.
The last two weeks has been great. I love listening and learning about black death
It was definitely a chaotic time.
@@lilacgirl-z8windeed
I’ve only been subscribed for a week, but adore your videos!
I am reading Mortons A Nervous Splendor thanks to your awesome Hapsburg videos!
"Giovana dealt with the more feminine issues like having babies and the economy".
She must have been overjoyed when Luigi died.
I’m loving these history videos from you Thank you💙
Never get tired of finding historical biopic podcasts.
I was waiting for this,Lindsay, you're a star ❤
Lindsay did an excellent job.
First you feel a little poorly
Then you start to swell (ppft)
Then you start to spit some blood
And then you really smell. (Pong!)
Then you know it's time to ring your funeral bell (dong!)
Along comes Mr Death and swishes you to Hell
Horrible Histories Plague Song
That is a horrible nursery rhyme.
@@lilacgirl-z8w it’s from horrible histories
That's horrid, but true.😅
Morbid as it is i was so excited to see this episode available i have been looking forward to this series.
The little children broke my heart.
The no good husbands not at all.
@@lilacgirl-z8w
what do you mean?
Das Video ist grossartig! Danke dafür!🙏💐
ive been watching you since 2019 and every video u make never fails to entertain me !
I didn't know this podcast had been around that long.
Oooh I’ve been waiting for this one! Love to see Leonor and Duarte mentioned! The latter rly showed promise as King, I’d love to know what could’ve been
I like the illustrations.
I am obsessed with your videos ❤thank you for your hard work 🫶
This was highly informative and interesting, and not done in this way before
Well done!
Richard didn't quote "discover a priest" to say that Edward had previously been married. The Bishop who married Edward to Eleanor Butler came forward at this time because it was against Church law for a bastard to inherit the throne since the King's first wife was still alive when he married the prince's mother. He was a bigamist. Richard was the last descendant in the male line of the Plantagenet dynasty. Richard III was not unpopular. He was known as a fair and just man and very popular in the lands that he governed and also known for his honesty and upright character. The princes we're not shut in the tower. The Tower of London was the designated place for the heir to the throne to await his coronation. The fact is no one knows what actually happened to the princes and remains one of history's greatest mysteries and is debated to this day.
They literally may have found the little boys bodies recently. They found 2 kids skeletons. So yeah he killed them.
thank you for this!!! so glad someone said it, otherwise I’d have had to do it myself and I don’t have the energy lol. richard was a good king and perhaps the most unfairly maligned person in english history. so odd seeing otherwise solid historical channels still repeating centuries old propaganda unquestionably.
@@mariawhite7337no, he didn’t. there have been dozens of occasions in which people have claimed to find the princes. in some of these cases, they were apparently grown men who went on to live long (ish) lives. we simply do not know. and repeating unsubstantiated rumours is not a good way to approach history.
the first record of ANY accusations regarding richard and the princes came from french propaganda at the time. they then traveled from france with henry tudor, who weaponised them AFTER richard’s death in order to discredit him. he was a very popular king in his time and even more so before his crowning, when he served as an important political figure in his brother’s reign.
I’ll never understand why people are so willing to believe the word of gossiping political enemies when it comes to *this* monarch, but not others. the tudors and their extremely weak claim to the english throne are just really goddamn compelling I guess. I can’t help but to think that his physical disability is a factor. it was very very easy for henry tudor to discredit richard, not just as a king but as a PERSON, with the reveal of richard’s incredibly advanced scoliosis. richard was paraded, naked, on horseback, and then publicly displayed and decried as a monster to the public because of his appearance. THAT was henry tudor’s greatest weapon of propaganda. and it had to be, because his claim to the throne was noticeably weaker than richard’s and everyone knew it. no one wanted a cripple for a king, and then shakespeare came along and cemented that years later. the two things people still think they “know” about richard III came to us directly from his political enemies. that he was a nasty old hunchback, and that he imprisoned (and worse, apparently) his own nephews. in actuality, he was in his early 30s when he died, no one knew about his scoliosis while he lived because he dressed to hide it very convincingly (despite likely being in incredible pain every day of his life) and the princes in the tower are more fiction than fact.
I find it funny how no one talks about henry tudor and his successors having much stronger and more valid motivations for getting those princes out of the way. what do people think they would have done if they’d gotten their hands on those boys? henry would have buried them without a second thought lol. or do we reeaally believe that he just got rid of richard for altruistic reasons, and never would have touched a hair on the heads of the little york boys if *they* were on the throne at the time of his campaign.
we do not know when/how they died. we probably never will. we DO know that if they lived longer than Richard, and their location had been known to the tudors, they’d have had the chance of a cinder in snow at survival.
the end. 👍
Most historians do not believe he was married to Eleanor Butler. His marriage to Elizabeth Woodville was highly unusual, and unpopular. Why would Richard bring up the first wedding when Edward IV had been married to Elizabeth, for so many years.
I always get so excited to see a new video from your channel. I absolutely love history and music.
It's crazy how the black death almost got Justinian, Constantinople was one of the worst affected places by the first outbreak of the black death, and the Emperor of the Romans got so sick he fell into a coma. Empress Theodora took charge and managed the crisis admirably, taking the very difficult decision to burn the dead on mass and dump the ashes in Bosphorus...
However, miraculously, Justinian survived and would go on to make a full recovery.
I really love your plague videos. Will you please consider doing a video on female saints who were queens?
I'm into that.
Im sure this video will be full of Humors, very excited to watch
❤❤❤❤I really love your channel and would like to suggest a video idea: Royal princesses who died young, for example: Mary Of York, Mary Of Waltham, Joan Of plague, and lastly Margaret Of York (Daughter Of Edward IV)
Everytime I watch your videos it’s like the first time all over again. I love it! 😍
Excellent video, loved hearing this topic a lot, very different from the usual topics, so much more interesting, for me. 😊
*Anne of Bohemia was actually the 1st cousin of Isabella of Valois' grandpa, Charles V (although Anne was much younger- around the age of Charles V's son, Charles VI- the Mad- Dad of Isabella of Valois).
Anne of Bohemia is someone I wonder who she would have been if she outlived her husband?
@user-fg9xz4bz3b that's something to hypothesize.
I wonder what the history books will say in 100 years about COVID-19. what a horrible 4 years it's been.
Bubonic or Spanish Influenza makes covid small.
Still I’d MUCH rather be
alive now than back then
2010s were like ten
thousand times worse
Queen Philippa of England, Queen of Portugal and daughter of blanche of lancaster also died with black plague
Queen philippa of England didn't die from the bubonic plague.
Two European Wars,The Hundred Years War And The Wars Of The Roses, Fascinating. If Some Of Killed By The Bubonic Plague Had Lived, History Would've Turned Out Much Differently!!!🤔😳😐☠️
When someone dies on your birthday even hundreds of years ago it still make me wonder 🤨
Not for me.
Margrete the I wasn’t Queen Regnant. She was named Regent until she could produce an heir. At no point in her life was she recognized as the monarch, despite being the actual power behind the throne.
That was a woman boss!
She did have a child but died before puberty and she chose to not remarry.
@@lilacgirl-z8w yes. But she adopted her sister’s grandson, Bugislaw of Pomerania, who was renamed to Erik and was named the new King of Denmark-Norway, and later the King of the Kalmar Union. He was however not the King Margrete had hoped him to be and after she died, everything started to fall apart. And when it got to tough, he fled to the Mediterranean and became a pirate. It’s from him the Danish saying “Det går ad Pommern til” derives from. “Pommern” being the Danish name for Pomerania, and the saying is for how really, really bad a situation can be.
He had no children. The throne was passed to his cousin, Christoffer of Bavaria, but he too didn’t have children. Instead it passed to a descendant of King Erik the V of Denmark, Christian the I, who in 1448 created the Oldenburg dynasty that would rule Denmark until 1863 after which the male line died out, Norway until 1814 when Denmark was forced to give up Norway, and Sweden until 1520, because King Christian the II instigated the Bloodbath of Stockholm, which was the final nail in the coffin that was the Kalmar Union. Christian the II was forced off the throne in 1523 and was replaced by his uncle, King Frederik the I, whom, even though after 1863 a new dynasty came to be in Denmark and later Norway, the Danish and Norwegian royal families are direct descendants of.
I literally just came from the song Rats and was looking for something interesting to fall asleep to and this is perfect😅😅 (too dark to admit that?)
Thank you Lindsay. 😊😊😊😊
Really interesting, thank you!
Navarre is on the Iberian Peninsula not in France - it always has been on the Iberian peninsula on the other side of the Pyrenees as far back as the 10th century.
Is Navarre considering getting back their sovereignty?
@@RavenIdril2966 It’s an autonomous region. Navarre and a couple others kind of like being “independent,” but it seems so confusing. Kind of like states in US. But Castille-Leon, Greater Madrid, and Andalusia seem like “yeah, we’re real Spain.” It’s odd. I saw a lot of graffiti in Navarre and LaRioja about hating the king on the Camino de Santiago. Whereas, a lot of people know that the Camino is what pays the bills. Again, it’s weird. I was also in Barcelona when they were protesting tourists. I know that’s more than you asked, but I found it interesting how the changes could be seen along the Camino route.
This is a very nice video history tea time Lindsay 😊🎉
Where did the bubonic originated from?
Man, I love history
Me too.
Ditto.😊
Am I a bad person for wanting to say, "Bring out your dead!" when she mentions victims of the worst pandemic in human history?
WE LITERALLY JUST ABOUT THIS IN WORLD HISTORY CLASS TODAY!!!!
LOVE the video, could you consider doing one about female painters and artists alike
That's a wonderful idea!
The history is really interesting. But man I was thinking King Luigi as Luigi 😂
He reminds me of the 2nd and 3rd husband of queen Mary Stewart.
Could you do a video on some queens/princesses etc who died in childbirth?
I have! ruclips.net/video/QB1TB8Tf2-0/видео.htmlsi=KMDMluUfpJjQWwxG
Can we not use absolutes in describing the sexuality of Richard II? It's by no means known whether he was or not, and has been debated among scholars for years.
I agree with you.
Has anyone noticed that polish royalty was not affected by the Plague as well as german, bohemian and hungarian?
That annoyed me.
What about Egypt?
@@lilacgirl-z8w Ibn al-Akfani was a Kurdish Encyclopedist who worked at Cairo and died of the plaque. Al-Hakim II the Fifth Abbasid Caliph of the Mamluk Sultanate.
Well, that priest *had* married Edward to someone else before Edward met Elizabeth ... he ended up becoming a bishop.
Sounds fishy too me.
Yes, it was Stillington Bishop of Bath and Wells.
I think the Anglo-Portuguese alliance still exists? British ships took the Portuguese royal family to Brazil when Napoleon came calling, and during WWII they quietly let the British navy use their islands.
You really should do a video talking about the misterious sweating sickness. It changed the course of England's and Great Britain's history
Does anyone know what the sweating sickness was?
@@lilacgirl-z8w there are plenty of theories about it, but nothing is certain, that's why I think it would be an interesting video
@@lilacgirl-z8w
arguably excellent question
We take in domestic rescue rats, but we just adopted an orphaned baby black rat (Rattus rattus), and he's absolutely adorable - surprisingly soft too!
Observing him do lightning zoomies and climb like a pro, really made me appreciate how easily black rats would've moved through thatched roofs and granaries in mediaeval times, easily spreading fleas and diseases.
His ears are like little radar dishes too, and his eyes are bigger than the domestic types (Rattus norvegicus - brown rats), making him impossible for most predators to catch.
Also, despite being flighty, he's already adapted well to a domestic setting, and he's very affectionate and trusting with me. So a perfect combination for spreading Yersinia pestis 😅
We live in Australia btw so he doesn't have plague or rabies before people freak out lol
Just asking why you posted this video at 1pm?
Scheduling mistake 🤷♀️
@@LindsayHolidayI just glad I can see this.
I can’t even imagine how painful it was for Margaret Beaufort for being so young
It's terrible for child brides.
You have the best voice!
Excellent and informative video.
Did east asia also got the bubonic plague?
@@RavenIdril2966 That's a very good question. China seems to have had epidemics in the 14th century.
Not first but early!
I'm so sorry but all the depiction of death in the paintings like this 24:58 looks so funny to me. They're like "Tbh idek if you're the right person or not but...uhhh....you're coming with me anyway I guess"
I think it's kinda gothic.
I'm surprised to not seeing vampires.
Plague history is one of my special interests so I could not have watched this video faster
Did the plague save europe from the Mongols?
This vlog has piqued my interest.
We need one with smallpox too! Justice for Mary II! Also, didn’t Edmund Tudor, duke of Somerset (youngest son of Henry VII and Liz of York and Charles, duke of Orleans (youngest son of Francis I) also die of the plague?
And Manuel I of Portugal too, I think?
Very brilliant idea.
Ooh yes! Didn't one or two of Marie Antoinette 's sisters die from smallpox?
Marie Antoinette did in fact lose 2 sisters to smallpox after being betrothed to the same guy.
Idk if he was a Royal or noble, but Nicholas Mavrocordat, who was the ruler of Wallachia and Moldavia died of plague too in 1730.
Very interesting.
Wow! They still ring the bell twice a day for a Queen that died almost 800 years ago? 😮
I would so much watch a movie about her.
I find her fascinating.
I know there are thousands if not way more of us direct descendants of these crazy royals. Growing up I never knew my ancestry like I do now and I’m just amazed at how many iconic and crazy royals or other major players in their courts. Too many were beheaded in England and hung in Salem at the Witch Trials. Thank you for doing these videos they are fascinating
I feel like people would’ve just kinda assumed it was some kinds of plague if they didn’t know what the illness was
Very interesting 😊thank you ❤
If I were Katherine Swynford, I'd be pretty mad at John. He idolized his first wife and held memorials for her even when he was remarried, and exclusively buried himself with Blanche. It feels like a strange posthumous adultery.
She was a mistress first so I side with Blanche.
John cheated on his wife so she was taken from him.
The funny thing is that Katherine knew Blanche as she was governess to Blanche's children- they loved Katherine even when she was being hated for being John's mistress and wife- and adored Blanche as a dear friend besides being her mistress, no pun intended. So she would've also done the memorials with John even while she was his mistress and as his wife. Though maybe she still would've been a little hurt that John got buried with Blanche but at least she knew that John loved her as much as he had loved Blanche.
Uhhhh imagine how Blanche felt when he was having an affair with Kathrine, Kathrine is not the victim here
@Mirandaconklin I heard that John stayed faithful to Blanche all their marriage and that it was while he was married to his second wife, Constance of Castile, that he made Katherine his lover. John also knew Katherine ever since she was a child because she was a lady in his mother's household but only made her his mistress when she was widowed from her husband and an adult.
Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things could you make a video of kings, sulrans/Caliph's and emperor's with the most kids as ottoman sultan Murad 4th for example had 32 kids when he passed away at age of 27
I would love to know of the sultanas of the ottoman empire.
Maybe it was a good thing Joan of England did not marry Peter of Castile because if we take into mind how horribly he treated his wife Blanche of Bourbon who was imprisoned and poisoned at age 22 it would have actually been a blessing in disguise
The great mortality no respecter of persons regardless of status.
Duh it’s obvious
@@jaydoubleu3419 Cud
@@grapeshot 😂
@@jaydoubleu3419 😄😄😄
@jaydoubleu3419 apparently it's not always obvious to those who feel their status makes them somehow invincible😄
Note: Even though Margarethe I was the first queen regnant in all of Scandinavia, she didn't call herself that. she styled herself something like a regent for her son, + wasn't recognized as queen until the reign of Margrethe II, who took the regnal number II after her
who else like this channell
Richard was not unpopular, and his only Parliament invested in such items as
a) ending benevolences
b) protecting land purchase rights
c) reforming the justice system
d) preventing commercial dishonesty in the cloth trade
e) protecting the English merchant
f) preventing fraudulent collection practices
Please, in future presentations that involve controversial people, please be careful to present more than one side, if there is one that that has gained legitimate traction, such as has been done with Richard. It's only fair, and will give your own channel more credibility.
Which Richard are you referring too?
who else like Lindsay
really love this one xoxo
When I learnt that Edward III's daughter Joan had died of the plague, I knew that disease does not discriminate when it comes to choosing it's victims, we are ALL vulnerable to disease, no matter our rank!
*King John II of France also died of the plague while being held captive in England as his Mom & wife did previously.
Please do a video on the house of lichtenstein and the history of lichtenstein
Is lichtenstein a kingdom or duchy?