Who Would Be King of England Today According to Henry VIII's Will?

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  • Опубликовано: 2 май 2024
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    Video Credits:
    Charts/Narration: Matt Baker usefulcharts.com/
    Animation: Syawish Rehman / @almuqaddimahyt
    Audio Editing: Jack Rackam / @jackrackam
    Intro music: "Lord of the Land" by Kevin MacLeod and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution license 4.0. incompetech.com

Комментарии • 3,6 тыс.

  • @si29uk
    @si29uk 2 года назад +9694

    Little tip about British names... Beauchamp is pronounced Beecham and Derby is actually Darby. Makes no sense but just the way things are.

    • @UsefulCharts
      @UsefulCharts  2 года назад +1308

      Beecham? Yeah, I never would have guessed!

    • @si29uk
      @si29uk 2 года назад +897

      @@UsefulCharts one of the oddest is Featherstonhaugh which is pronounced Fanshaw

    • @joshuahargrave8239
      @joshuahargrave8239 2 года назад +1637

      @@si29uk And Godmanchester is pronounced Gumster, and Blackpool is pronounced Hell-on-Earth

    • @theghosthero6173
      @theghosthero6173 2 года назад +342

      Beauchamp isn't pronounced Bochan? I guess they distanced themselves from French pronunciation

    • @si29uk
      @si29uk 2 года назад +196

      @@theghosthero6173 I don't know when the shift from the French pronunciation happened but it is certainly Beecham now. Place names in the UK are just as strange. Care to guess how to say Cogenhoe or Happisburgh?

  • @andrewgordon7435
    @andrewgordon7435 2 года назад +7944

    “Elizabeth quickly understood the threat” sums up her reign fairly well

    • @morgantaylor517
      @morgantaylor517 2 года назад +107

      No wonder she never had kids!!!

    • @Mooseman327
      @Mooseman327 2 года назад +77

      @@morgantaylor517 Well, legitimate kids. Liz I, of course, was not a virgin, and was as randy as her father. Supposedly, she had several illegitimate children, including the Earl of Southhampton, made famous by Shakespeare's Sonnets. The Tudor family is truly a line of conniving, murderous rats.

    • @morgantaylor517
      @morgantaylor517 2 года назад +46

      @@Mooseman327 I didn't know that!!! I find that period of history so fascinating. I loved Hillary Mantel's books about Cromwell, I wish she'd write about QE1.

    • @Eriennexton
      @Eriennexton 2 года назад +149

      Someone enters the throne room wearing purple "Elizabeth quickly understood the threat"

    • @midnight_rose2337
      @midnight_rose2337 2 года назад +117

      @@Mooseman327 Did she have affairs? Ah, possibly, but an intense level of discretion would have been required. As the daughter of Anne Boleyn, half of Europe considered her a bastard. She had to keep her reputation seemingly spotless. As for illegitimate children… no. NO WAY she could hide that like she could plausibly hide a lover.

  • @edra2005
    @edra2005 2 года назад +7528

    Henry was so damn obsessed with ensuring his lineage that his children didn't have any children of their own

    • @minorka2
      @minorka2 2 года назад +257

      karma

    • @yemyearmii7231
      @yemyearmii7231 2 года назад +215

      His illegitimate children did I believe. I know Henry Fitzroy’a child did die as a baby, the others had some adult children’s

    • @student05-bdes52
      @student05-bdes52 2 года назад +209

      @@yemyearmii7231 there's no proof that Henry had any illegitimate children other than Henry Fitzroy. And even if those children were actually his, he never claimed those children and never intended them to be on the throne like he intended Mary and the others to be, and his precious dynasty ended

    • @brooke6549
      @brooke6549 2 года назад +70

      @@yemyearmii7231 Henry Fitzroy didn’t die as a child as shown in the show “The tudors” if that’s what your referring to. He ended up dying at 17 with no children of his own, then the son he had with his third wife Jane Seymour Edward who died at 15 but became king at 9 with no children.

    • @allshookup1640
      @allshookup1640 2 года назад +70

      Well Edward VI died when he was only 15 so he didn’t really have time and Mary tried it’s actually quite sad when she died it’s believed she thought she was pregnant because she wanted to be SO badly but she actually had cancer in her stomach or ovaries that made her stomach expand. As we Elizabeth was just a boss and didn’t want to be ruled by anyone so yeah haha

  • @reverseflashes
    @reverseflashes Год назад +475

    It is very strange to me that Henry regarded Edward so highly that he declared his own two daughters illegitimate, because he was so desperate to secure his lineage with his only male heir, but at the end, even his 15 year old son didn't follow his wishes.
    And Henry made his daughters hate him and the legacy of the Tudor name so much that Mary died childless pining over a man who never loved her, because rather than keeping the Tudor name alive, she preferred to honor her mother's Spanish blood instead; and Elizabeth sacrificed her chance to marry and have children because she wanted to end the Tudors completely.
    I think Elizabeth always knew James was gonna be the next monarch; and iirc, she *did* declare him her heir in one of her letters for him, but it is still very interesting to see the "what if" scenarios.
    Tudor Dynasty didn't last very long compared to, say, Habsburgs or Ottomans but I feel like there is still so much we don't know about them. Big respect to all who worked to preserve history and those who are teaching us today.
    And thank you very much for this video.

    • @jelkel25
      @jelkel25 Год назад +29

      Yes, Elizabeths father was not the most encouraging of male role models and its not unusual for adults who had traumatic childhoods to not want families of their own. Can't imagine all the scheming and assassination plots did her already Warranted trust issues any favours either. She probably turned out pretty well considering.

    • @trudilm3864
      @trudilm3864 Год назад +4

      We don't ask much from our Kings, but a son and heir is a full expectation.

    • @simhedgesrex7097
      @simhedgesrex7097 Год назад +14

      "It is very strange to me that Henry regarded Edward so highly that he declared his own two daughters illegitimate"
      Henry VIII was a sexist. Who knew?

    • @reverseflashes
      @reverseflashes Год назад +19

      @@simhedgesrex7097 I think he, just like all women and men of the 16th century, was too embraced in his gender roles.
      It's weird saying good things about him because nearly no one does, but I don't think he was a man who hated women. He wouldn't have married 6 times if he hated women. He believed it wasn't a woman's place or in a woman's nature to rule but he didn't believe that because he was sexist, but because that was the norm back then. (Even female monarchs wanted male heirs.)
      And slightly off topic but look at Henry's treatment of Catherine Parr, for example, it was clear he respected her and admired her as a person. He demanded in *his will* that she still get treated as if she were queen consort and not queen dowager. Anne of Cleves, after the divorce; and Catherine Parr after Henry's passing, became two of the wealthiest women in the country because Henry cared for them and didn't want them to struggle to provide for themselves or depend on others to survive.
      Man clearly had issues no one can deny that; and it is sickening how he treated his daughter Mary, his ex wives, or just pretty much everyone around him but he did have an understanding of love, albeit a warped one.

    • @joannakennedy6005
      @joannakennedy6005 Год назад +10

      I specialised in the Tudor dynasty, when I did my history degree. It was unique in how the courtiers manipulated procedures. Henry changed the course of this country, by wanting a male heir and changing what had always been a Catholic country, into the Church of England. What a unique history we have!

  • @darrenblois8495
    @darrenblois8495 Год назад +134

    I love these alternate scenario videos. I've suggested before, and do again, that you do one on: Who Would be King of England Today, if England had had Absolute Primogeniture since William the Conqueror? Interesting because the UK now does have absolute primogeniture. Should be an interesting chase down the genealogy trees.

    • @redzora80
      @redzora80 Год назад +13

      that would be hard to do, because often the birthdates of girls where not recorded proberly. Sometimes it is unsure if there where daughters born before the heir. and if they where, if they where older or not. Specialy in the first centurys soeties only boys names and dates where recorded. I tried that once but ended in a lot dead ends whne it says: probly older daughter who maaried and had issus... but you never know who they where.
      And depending on if you go with catolics or just by dna... but ou probply end up in some German/austrian small old royal lines. Wich hardly can be followed sometimes. Becuase of mentioned reasons. You maybe have to dig deep in some unknown family trees and then end up in deadlines.
      I tried it and gave up

    • @mauvegreenwisteria3645
      @mauvegreenwisteria3645 Год назад +1

      @@Lord_Skeptic Why Edward I ?

  • @craigrm74
    @craigrm74 2 года назад +5049

    Beatrice, Lady Kinloss was informed of this theory about the succession, and she said she "wouldn't want to be queen for all the tea in China".

    • @aaronhurst4379
      @aaronhurst4379 2 года назад +279

      Fair enough

    • @AlifNurfakhri
      @AlifNurfakhri 2 года назад +440

      how about for all the tea in China AND India?

    • @marcinkrz3140
      @marcinkrz3140 2 года назад +326

      Well that's not very Bri'ish of her

    • @JLynnEchelon
      @JLynnEchelon 2 года назад +117

      @@marcinkrz3140 c'mon, even for a Brit that's more tea than anyone needs. 😆

    • @juancampos8412
      @juancampos8412 2 года назад +29

      Not if he could sing like a bird? Not for all North Carolina?

  • @jren3246
    @jren3246 2 года назад +5623

    Imagine you're an unemployed lazy dude chillin' on his bed while watching this and suddenly, your name shows up as the true king of England: "I got a conquest to do fellas!"

    • @thathairbrush4990
      @thathairbrush4990 2 года назад +22

      Thatd be awesome

    • @wouterkok9610
      @wouterkok9610 2 года назад +128

      I guess that this lazy unemployed dude would quickly realize that being the legitimate King of England robs him from all his privacy and that being rich and famous isn't something to envy of haven't got the time to enjoy it. Nah, he would skip to the next recommendated video. Way too much work!

    • @johndanes2294
      @johndanes2294 2 года назад +20

      Cassus Belli: I want a throne

    • @thomassherwood5061
      @thomassherwood5061 2 года назад +8

      Liz: Bring it on

    • @shadowwolfcat13
      @shadowwolfcat13 2 года назад +30

      You mean the plot for the movie "King Ralph"?

  • @BigOrangeBus
    @BigOrangeBus Год назад +196

    There’s a documentary on the would-be Australian King, Michael Edward Abney-Hastings which is also interesting. He died in 2012 but after a historian did all the work to find him, he already had a family tree and knew he had royal lineage. He was a Uk ex-pat and loved living here in Australia.

    • @alisonholland7531
      @alisonholland7531 Год назад +22

      Yeah,he seemed a nice bloke and his kids were a bit bogan (in a good way) or maybe just ockers.
      Imagine a royal family that was 100% Aussie 🤣

    • @mypointofview1111
      @mypointofview1111 Год назад +18

      I saw the program, he seemed a lovely man, said he wasn't interested in becoming the next monarch. He had a good life where he was, why change it?

    • @BigOrangeBus
      @BigOrangeBus Год назад +11

      @@mypointofview1111 exactly. He seemed very down to earth and a good sport 🤩

    • @BigOrangeBus
      @BigOrangeBus Год назад +4

      @@alisonholland7531 😂 absolutely! Ha ha I was watching it thinking ‘soooo bogan…!’ 😅 but in a country kinda way 😁

    • @hycart7804
      @hycart7804 Год назад +2

      @@user-oh6xq8lx3z Why ruin a good discussion with talk of the Sky Fairy? ? ?

  • @katguyot6351
    @katguyot6351 Год назад +5

    This was AWESOME! Kudos on how much research you had to do.

  • @PopeLando
    @PopeLando 2 года назад +964

    "Known to history as Queen Elizabeth the First." Only for the last 69 years and 50 weeks, in fact. It's actually strange to realise that for nearly 400 years she was actually known to history simply as Queen Elizabeth - just like Queen Anne and Queen Victoria.

    • @user-ix1rp9ff3p
      @user-ix1rp9ff3p Год назад +47

      regarding Victoria, under the clockfaces of Big Ben was the inscription "Domine salvam fac Reginam nostrum *Victoriam primam* " (Lord doth preserve the queen our *Victoria the first* )

    • @richellebrittain2127
      @richellebrittain2127 Год назад +28

      @@user-ix1rp9ff3p You mean the clock faces of what is now called the Elizabeth Tower, after Elizabeth II. Big Ben is the name of the main bell in that tower.

    • @voidify3
      @voidify3 Год назад +24

      @@user-ix1rp9ff3p that’s just future-proofing in case there’s ever a Victoria II but nobody says the First part right now

    • @collingwoodmaggiesforever
      @collingwoodmaggiesforever Год назад +7

      Everyone else talking about the actual comment then 12 year old brain me 69 nice😂

    • @asiyaheibhlin
      @asiyaheibhlin Год назад

      Virginia was colonized in the name of Elizabeth I, thus her identity of her being the "Virgin Queen" already existed during her reign.
      If I am wrong then please provide proof of your "69 years and 50 weeks".

  • @ZuzannaTS
    @ZuzannaTS Год назад +6

    Useful charts - “As a side note I should make a note that the title queen of England doesn’t currently exist”
    Me - “Ahh yes yes. Cause she’s dead.”
    Useful Charts - “Queen Elizabeth the second is actually not the queen on England. She’s the queen of the United Kingdom”
    Me - “oh.”

  • @alicegilder-camarena3766
    @alicegilder-camarena3766 6 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you! I’ve always been curious about all of this

  • @CaptainPikeachu
    @CaptainPikeachu 2 года назад +1400

    Interestingly though, the current Queen Elizabeth is still a direct descendant of Mary Tudor (Henry the 8th’s sister) through her mother Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon. So in a way, Henry the 8th’s will was technically still followed, a descendant of his sister Mary is sitting on the throne today.

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад +176

      She is also possibly a descendant of Henry himself through the daughter of Mary Boylen who many believe was Henry's

    • @carolinacocula9119
      @carolinacocula9119 2 года назад +22

      @@pedanticradiator1491 OMG, I wanna know more now. I havent have heard of this before.

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад +78

      @@carolinacocula9119Mary Boylen was Henry's lover before he took up with her sister, she had 2 children that were officially her husband's but many believe that the eldest one Catherine Carey was Henry's but are not sure about her brother as the Careys were living away from the Royal Court when he was born. Catherine went on to become Elizabeth I's chief lady in waiting and was given an almost state funeral at Westminster Abbey a rare privilege for someone not of Royal blood. Catherine's daughter Lettice Knollys became a rival to Elizabeth when she married Royal favourite Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. Lettice was banished from court though her husband wasn't neither was her son by her 1st husband Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex who was another of Elizabeth's favourites. The present monarch is descended from Lettice through the late Queen Mother.

    • @sarasamaletdin4574
      @sarasamaletdin4574 2 года назад +16

      I don’t know why Henry’s will would be needed to followed to this extent anyway. If all heirs had died with him or there was some other chaos then his will would have been relevant for so many heirs that were named. But all the heirs who became monarchs had their own ability to make legal wills. And Henry wasn’t exactly a role model as a king. .

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад +35

      @@sarasamaletdin4574 it's because his will had been turned into an act of Parliament

  • @lightyagami3492
    @lightyagami3492 2 года назад +437

    I love these alternate succession videos. You end up learning about many of the minor nobles in british history that aren't talked about enough.

    • @nHans
      @nHans 2 года назад +16

      I'd say they're being talked about more than they deserve. No disrespect to them, but after all, they're *minor* nobles.

    • @AJHart-eg1ys
      @AJHart-eg1ys Год назад +1

      What if they ARE being talked about enough. Every family has its slouches. :D

  • @deborahkelly1489
    @deborahkelly1489 Год назад +41

    Thank you for sharing your research with us. I know you worked hard putting this presentation together. I love British History. My husband taught genealogy at the University as sort of a extra class for those that were interested. He was on the faculty and was the University Bibliographer for the library system. His under grad was in European history . He was working on his own genealogy when he had his first round of cancer at thirty two . Sadly he never finished his own genealogy. He died at 43 of brain cancer. We had two young children. I really do enjoy European History and read a lot of literature on the history of Europe

  • @locher66gaming23
    @locher66gaming23 Год назад

    I stumbled upon your channel by accident and found it rlly interesting - ty for y’all your hard work

  • @thomasdixon4373
    @thomasdixon4373 2 года назад +2318

    I love the alternative succession charts, could you do some other countries as well?

    • @theghosthero6173
      @theghosthero6173 2 года назад +21

      I'll love to see who would be the Inca today although that might be hard and I'm not sure usefulcharts has made an Inca family tree chart yet.

    • @r.j.7313
      @r.j.7313 2 года назад +3

      @@spearshake4771 hell probably they sacrificed millions of people for their “gods” there was no undoing what they had coming to them

    • @canman5060
      @canman5060 2 года назад +5

      @@spearshake4771 The British and French may take possession instead !

    • @r.j.7313
      @r.j.7313 2 года назад +5

      @@spearshake4771 people glorify the past humans have alway been the same cruel creatures nothing has changed Except the difference today is people are held accountable u think he would’ve done that if it was right on the coast of Europe no he did it on the other side of the world cuz he never thought anyone would find out

    • @whitechapel8959
      @whitechapel8959 2 года назад +9

      Russia would be good. But hard.
      The red army did a good job scrubbing them out... who would be the real queen or king. Also Germany tecnicly still has a Keiser, bit hitler passed the leadership 2 weeks after the Keiser of ww1 passed. So.. they have one tecnicly but never really looked into it...

  • @MichaelSidneyTimpson
    @MichaelSidneyTimpson 2 года назад +1880

    Here's an even freakier scenario, let's say Henry's younger sister had produced a male heir during her brief marriage to the King of France, (that or one of Henry's many attempts to have his daughter Mary wed the dauphin): we might have seen the United Kingdom of England, Ireland, and France instead. Wow, imagine how much bigger the British [sic] Empire would have been in that scenario and maybe even still existing...that kinda screws up North American history too

    • @freesiaoriental
      @freesiaoriental 2 года назад +148

      Only if none of the other world powers complained. I can't remember which royals in particular, but there were definitely cases where certain heirs were chosen or supported over the others to avoid exactly such things happening. Charles V Holy Roman Emperor inherited Castile, Aragon, Austria, Bohemia, Hungary, the Netherlands, etc. but strategically divided them up between his two sons when he abdicated those thrones. (supposedly so they'd be more flexible and easier to govern)

    • @thewanderingcrusader
      @thewanderingcrusader 2 года назад +90

      Reminds me how Richard the 1st was supposed to inherit france but the french lords just said nah, causing the 100 year war

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад +51

      @@freesiaoriental actually Charles divided his dominons up between his son Philip and his brother Ferdinand not his 2 sons in fact Philip was his only surviving legitimate son

    • @freesiaoriental
      @freesiaoriental 2 года назад +21

      @@pedanticradiator1491 Ah yeah you're right, got it mixed up. Thanks

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад +24

      @@thewanderingcrusader it was Edward III who was the first English king to claim the French throne and started the 100 years war not Richard I. The war started in 1337 and Richard I had died in 1199

  • @angiebear8727
    @angiebear8727 Год назад +2

    Really fun and interesting. Ty for putting that all together.

  • @nab-rk4ob
    @nab-rk4ob Год назад +2

    How have I missed this channel? I LOVE charts.

  • @ninjawarrior8994
    @ninjawarrior8994 2 года назад +812

    How about a chart on how Henry VIII is related to all his wives outside of marriage?

    • @UsefulCharts
      @UsefulCharts  2 года назад +140

      A fan made a chart about that: www.reddit.com/r/UsefulCharts/comments/qltgwy/i_am_a_huge_six_the_musical_fan_so_i_made_a_chart/

    • @frankhooper7871
      @frankhooper7871 2 года назад +154

      @@UsefulCharts That's interesting - so all six of Henry VIII's wives descended from Edward I and Eleanor of Castile...who are my [double] 23rd great-grandparents LOL. I shall have to add them to my family tree.

    • @NotS1lly
      @NotS1lly 2 года назад +96

      @@frankhooper7871 could you consider that as a loose claim to the throne or too far of a reach? lmao

    • @samgaming3559
      @samgaming3559 2 года назад +2

      😎

    • @cyrilmarasigan7108
      @cyrilmarasigan7108 2 года назад +10

      @@UsefulCharts please do the video since i can't see the chart on reddit

  • @BB-qz7tr
    @BB-qz7tr 2 года назад +686

    People seem to forget Edward was in fact not Henry's only son, excluding illegitimate children he had one other. The son of Catherine of Aragon: Henry Duke of Cornwall, who died a few months after being born. Edward was his only living legitimate son not his only son nor his only legitimate son.

    • @dawnmrodgers
      @dawnmrodgers 2 года назад +40

      There was Henry Fitzroy who would have been next in line but this list doesn’t even mention him because he was illegitimate…

    • @BB-qz7tr
      @BB-qz7tr 2 года назад +36

      @@dawnmrodgers though he had a chance of being legitimised by Henry which is interesting

    • @student05-bdes52
      @student05-bdes52 2 года назад +22

      True. Little Henry really should have survived. Very unfortunate

    • @lebou9540
      @lebou9540 2 года назад +19

      It'd be interesting to see how English history would have turned out had he survived. A grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella as King of England in addition to all the other places their bloodline went.

    • @susanneduffy8157
      @susanneduffy8157 2 года назад +9

      @@dawnmrodgers He does not get a look in because of his illegitimacy.. That was the way of the times. In any case Henry VIII outlived Fitzroy by several years.

  • @jimmypapadopoulos2206
    @jimmypapadopoulos2206 Год назад

    Great clip I feel very enlightened.
    This just provides to me the whole thing is a bigger farse then ever.

  • @someusername1
    @someusername1 2 года назад

    Fascinating. Thank you for that!

  • @wesleyhunt7599
    @wesleyhunt7599 2 года назад +396

    15:00 "There is no Santa Claus. There is no Easter Bunny. And there is no Queen of England."

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад +36

      No there is no Queen of England but there is a Queen of the UK

    • @thebandit0256
      @thebandit0256 2 года назад +18

      Its a Megamind reference

    • @mfaizsyahmi
      @mfaizsyahmi 2 года назад +27

      Holy shit, Tighten was right all along!

    • @rainblaze.
      @rainblaze. 2 года назад +5

      @@pedanticradiator1491
      Your right if you mean r-UK minus scotland. There has never been a king or queen of scotland as no monarch has domain over the land in scotland. They would only be king or queen of scots. This is why if you buy land in scotland it's freehold not leasehold

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад

      @@rainblaze. the Stuarts changed the title to Scotland during the personal Union

  • @cloudestarscape
    @cloudestarscape 2 года назад +691

    Fun fact from someone studying the Tudors at A-Level, Lady Jane Grey wasn’t executed after her arrest. It was only when a rebellion sparked up during Mary’s reign (Wyatt’s Rebellion in 1554, happened due to Mary’s insistence on marrying Phillip of Spain (who referred to her as an aunt). People in England didn’t particularly like that. The rebellion got really close to London, actually.) that demanded to put Jane back on the throne. So, her and her husband were executed to remove any threat then. This was about a year after she came to the throne, so yeah!

    • @onespicysauce6599
      @onespicysauce6599 2 года назад +15

      I'm doing tudors at A Level too! Alongside I'm doing US 1945-80 and that's incredible

    • @collnss
      @collnss Год назад +8

      I believe she still remained imprisoned in the Tower though?

    • @Chrisiant
      @Chrisiant Год назад +8

      And it was the suspicion that her sister was a backer of Wyatt that motivated Mary to imprison Elizabeth.

    • @rogerturner1881
      @rogerturner1881 Год назад +9

      Lady Jane should have been spared for after Elizabeth 1, thus continuing the TUDORS. although giving the fact that Jane's siblings could also be successors

    • @Chrisiant
      @Chrisiant Год назад +14

      @@rogerturner1881 Unfortunately Lady Jane was a candidate for the throne whether she wanted it or not. So she became a focus for plotters who did not care for Mary. As did Elizabeth later. Thing about being a focus-plotters can drag you down with them. You will be suspected whether or not you are guilty. That is why claimants often die young.

  • @mikkilarese4930
    @mikkilarese4930 Год назад

    Seriously my favorite RUclips channel ever!!!

  • @EeliOo
    @EeliOo Год назад

    woww loved this video! I know understand everything so clearly.

  • @lolapayneinthebun8106
    @lolapayneinthebun8106 2 года назад +46

    I love this video. I am a Tudor history lover and I'm so glad you did this video. ❤

  • @rwolfheart6580
    @rwolfheart6580 2 года назад +353

    Maybe you've done something akin to this before, I don't remember, but it would be interesting to see what the line of succession would be if the UK had opted for absolute primogeniture far earlier--say, during the reign of Elizabeth I.

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 2 года назад +61

      He did it for the scenario in which absolute primogeniture would've been introduced after the death of Queen Victoria. In this case, Victoria would've been followed by her eldest daughter, also named Victoria, but she died only seven months after her mother. Next in line would've been her son, German Emperor Wilhelm II.

    • @alcachofa6863
      @alcachofa6863 2 года назад +69

      (Warning, Long text coming forward!)
      Ok, so had Elizabeth I changed the rules of succesion to absolute primogeniture we still would have had James VI of Scotland become James I of England since the claim for the descendants of Margaret Tudor would have taken presedence. James's reign would've been nearly identical to his real life one except that at his death he would have been succeded by his eldest surving child, his daughter Elizabeth Stuart, briefly Queen consort of Bohemia (1596 - 1662), she would have reigned as Elizabeth II from 1525 to 1662.
      Now we run into a bit of a problem, Elizabeth had many children and it is through her that the current Queen has her claim to the throne, however this claim comes only from Elizabeth's 5th daughter Sophia of Hannover since the act of settlement of 1707 issued by Queen Anne bared catholics from inheriting the throne. However in this reality there is no Queen Anne nor James II (since it was him being a Catholic that influenced the act), thus Elizabeth would have been succeded by her eldest surviving son Charles I Louis (Charles I), Elector Palatine (1617 - 1680).
      Charles I Louise would have been succeded by his eldest son Charles II, (Charles II) Elector Palatine (1651 - 1685) however he died childless so he would be succeded by his sister Elizabeth Charlotte (Elizabeth III), duchess of Orléans (1652 - 1722) who would have been then succeded by her eldest son Philippe II (Philip II), duke of Orléans and regent of France (1674 - 1723) who would have been succeded by his eldest surviving daughter Louise Adelaide d'Orléans (Louise I), Abess of Chelles (1698 - 1743), since she didn't have any children she would have been succeded by her sister Charlotte Aglaé (Charlotte I), duchess of Modena and Reggio (1700 - 1761) who would have been succeded by her grandson Louis Alexandre (Louis I), Prince of Lamballe (1747 - 1768) and since he was childless he would have been succeded by his sister Louise Marie Adélaïde (Louise II), duchess of Orléans (1753 - 1821).
      Louise Marie Adélaïde's eldest child was Louis Philippe I (Louis II), the last king of the French (1773 - 1850), thus England and France would have been on a personal union from 1830 to 1848 when he was forced to abdicate the French throne.
      Louis would then be succeded by his 12 year old grandson prince Philippe (Philip III), count of Paris (1838 - 1894) who would have been succeded by his daughter Amélie (Amelia I), the last Queen consort of Portugal (1865 - 1951) and since she had no surviving descendants by the time of her death she would have been succeded by her sister's grandaughter Margherita (Margaret I) who is the dowager duchess of Austria-Este (1930). Margherita would have thus been the current queen of England for 70 years having as her heirs her eldest daughter Archduchess Maria Beatrice (1954) and Maria Beatrice's eldest daughter Countess Anna Therese Marie (1981).
      Thus the line would be this:
      - James (House of Stuart)
      - Elizabeth II (House of Stuart)
      - Charles I (House of Palatinate-Simmern)
      - Charles II (House of Palatinate-Simmern)
      - Elizabeth III (House of Palatinate-Simmern)
      - Philip II (House of Orléans)
      - Louise I (House of Orléans)
      - Charlotte (House of Orléans)
      - Louis I (House of Bourbon)
      - Louise II (House of Bourbon)
      - Louis II (House of Orléans)
      - Philip III (House of Orléans)
      - Amelia (House of Orléans)
      - Margaret (House of Savoy-Aosta)
      14, monarchs, 2 less than in real life (and no lord protector lol), 5 royal houses, 7 kings and 7 queens.
      Edit:
      In the case that somehow Sophia of Hannover and her descendants took presedence over Elizabeth Stuart's other children the succecion would have been changed to this.
      Sophia of Hanover (1630 - 1714) Electress of Hanover, never became queen since she died just a month before whom would have been her predecesor, Queen Anne, however in this line Sophia would have became queen in 1662 after her mother's death thus reigning during 52 years.
      Now we pretty much come back to the original order, Sophia would have been succeded by her son George (1660 - 1727), Elector of Hanover who just as in real life reigned as George I, then he would have been succeded just as in real life by his son George II (1683 - 1760), who outlived his eldest son Frederick, Prince of Wales but instead of being succeded by his grandson George III he would have been succed by his grandaughter Augusta (1737 - 1813), duchess of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel.
      Augusta would have been succed by her grandson William I (1781 - 1864), King of Württemberg, leading to the U.K entering in a personal union with the recently formed kingdom of Württemberg from 1813 to 1864.
      William would have been succeded by his eldest daughter Marie (1816 - 1887) however she died childless and would have been succeded by her half-sister Catherine (1821 - 1898) who would have been succeded by her son William II (1848 - 1921) who just as his granfather was also king of Württemberg leading to another personal union lasting from 1898 untill 1918 when he was deposed from the throne of Württemberg.
      William would have been succeded by his daughter Pauline (1877 - 1965), Princess of Wied, who would have been succed by her grandaughter Osterlind (1939) who would have been the current queen from 56 years and her heirs would have been her daughter Sophie von Klitzing (1965) and Sophie's daughter Viktoria von Mackenthun (2000).
      This line would be something like this:
      - James (House of Stuart)
      - Elizabeth II (House of Stuart)
      - Sophia (House of Palatinate-Simmern)
      - George I (House of Hanover)
      - George II (House of Hanover)
      - Augusta (House of Hanover)
      - William III (House of Württemberg)
      - Mary II (House of Württemberg)
      - Catherine (House of Württemberg)
      - William IV (House of Württemberg)
      - Pauline (House of Württemberg)
      - Osterlind (House of Wied-Neuwied)
      12 monarchs, 5 royal houses, 5 kings and 7 queens (Seems like independent of the succesion there would always be a current queen)

    • @cyrilmarasigan7108
      @cyrilmarasigan7108 2 года назад +3

      @@alcachofa6863 that would be great although it may cone far from reality since this is the era where male are still dominant and if this will came true then the UK will be the most queen regnant to be produced in their years as a kingdom

    • @tranidite
      @tranidite 2 года назад +10

      @@untruelie2640 The German Kaiser as the king of the UK? That sounds like a crazy alt history.

    • @Ensign_Cthulhu
      @Ensign_Cthulhu 2 года назад +5

      @@tranidite That's the point at which the succession would be disallowed by Parliament, and the Throne would just have to suck it.

  • @kweejibodali3078
    @kweejibodali3078 2 года назад +20

    Henry VII. still had a claim to the crown through his mother Margaret Beaufort oldest child of the grandson of John of Gaunt, son of Edward III. this claim may seem less strong, but as you say that he won the crown through conquest,
    and also, considering that Henry VII was self exiled for most of his life as he was in danger due to his claim to the throne. However nebulous some people say a claim may be, this relation took over his whole young life. He survived due to the protection of his uncle Jasper Tudor, who smuggled him away to safety on the continent, and the fact that his mother Margaret was unable to see him most of his youth, as she stayed in England in order to consolidate power and to try to help bring him to power. Either that , or live in obscurity all his life in exile,

  • @Lord_Skeptic
    @Lord_Skeptic Год назад +14

    16:25 actually you would actually end up with his father's half sister Caroline since William's father's father's 3rd marriage was considered null and void because his divorce from his 1st wife was not valid therefore making William's father illegitimate taking him out of line

  • @aaronpatton15
    @aaronpatton15 2 года назад +432

    One error I noticed. Lady Jane Grey was not executed right away (after nine days as stated in the video). She lived for seven months after being deposed.
    Mary didn’t want to execute Jane because she knew that Jane was just a political pawn.
    However, after a rebellion that tried to overthrow Mary and restore Jane, Mary realised that Jane needed to die to help secure her position.

    • @scotteysteinsson7435
      @scotteysteinsson7435 2 года назад +16

      and it is through Jane's sister Catherine that I come from meaning I have a stronger claim to the throne the Liz because if you count Jane as a legit queen (which she was) her sister Catherine would have become queen after her, not Mary

    • @thescottishcyclist4640
      @thescottishcyclist4640 2 года назад +1

      Why do you know such information? i bet you're a right gossip in the neighborhood watch meetings lol ;)

    • @aaronpatton15
      @aaronpatton15 Год назад +9

      @@scotteysteinsson7435 unfortunately Scott. The law was changed in 1701. Only descendants of Sophia, Electress of Hanover can claim the throne. So you don’t have a stronger claim than the Late Queen Elizabeth II

    • @AJHart-eg1ys
      @AJHart-eg1ys Год назад +3

      @@aaronpatton15 Electress of Hanover sounds like a pretty bitchin' punk band, though. Maybe club music. In the U.S. we have "Snyders of Hanover" but that's a pretzel company.

    • @gingerguinea-pigfromoneoft6394
      @gingerguinea-pigfromoneoft6394 Год назад +1

      @@AJHart-eg1ys yeah it was actually pretty boring though,just meant you could elect a holy roman emperor if i’m remembering correctly

  • @daistoke1314
    @daistoke1314 2 года назад +153

    One of the problems in UK monarchy inheritance is that despite high sounding claims to succession, the claim to the throne was originally decided by might of arms, and later by Parliament. Most "rightful" heirs tended to die conveniently or kept very very quiet.

    • @TimJBenham
      @TimJBenham 2 года назад +18

      Supreme power always belongs to whomever is supported by supreme force. Sometimes force follows law, sometimes not.

    • @wardenblack9734
      @wardenblack9734 2 года назад

      Long long ago!

    • @daistoke1314
      @daistoke1314 2 года назад +4

      @@wardenblack9734 when I studied history back in the 70's the period after 1485 (Reign of Henry 7th) was regarded as modern history. History like time, is relative lol.

    • @berndlauert8179
      @berndlauert8179 Год назад +4

      @@daistoke1314 people usually consider the medieval time to be succeeded by the modern time by the time constantinople fell or america was discovered or especially in countries like germany when the protestant reformation began

    • @johnforrest695
      @johnforrest695 Год назад +3

      This is what most of these "Who is the rightful Monarch?" arguments appear to forget. Direct heir inheritance is only an approximation and, every now and then, the Monarch is effectively chosen / existing one is dumped by "the people". Thus what variously happened to Charles I, James II and Edward VIII - all of which were pushed out successfully. Let alone attempts to push Monarchs out unsuccessfully. If others had succeeded Edward VI, I think we can assume it would not be direct inheritance to this day.

  • @Lord_Skeptic
    @Lord_Skeptic Год назад +8

    15:50 you should do a video expanding on that genealogy

  • @nelsonhemstreet3568
    @nelsonhemstreet3568 Год назад +4

    Fascinating.
    There is a great trilogy of books by Randall Garrett featuring a character named Lord Darcy, who is a Sherlock Holmes-like detective. The premise of the books is that Richard the Lionhearted did not die in 1199 but returned to England to continue the Plantagenet line. History is VERY different in that time line.

    • @Chrisiant
      @Chrisiant Год назад

      The Lord Darcy books are brilliant, I agree, but they are fantasy, rather than alternative history, since Garrett also included magic in his stories. If the Plantagenet line continued (whether or not Richard stepped up to the plate, there was John Lackland) it might have been interesting to see how different England might be. Almost certainly, Great Britain would still be a Catholic country.

    • @bathtangle
      @bathtangle Год назад

      @@Chrisiant You just sold me. I have got to check these books out.

    • @bathtangle
      @bathtangle Год назад

      Thanks for the info.

  • @zackakai5173
    @zackakai5173 2 года назад +231

    I've been deep diving on classical Japanese history lately, in particular the Heian period. If you know anything about that subject, you'll recognize the name Fujiwara and the influence they had over the imperial lineage. It's wild watching this and seeing how this same basic pattern plays out over and over again in different cultures all over the world that had no direct contact with each other.

    • @barli7153
      @barli7153 Год назад +13

      The Fujiwara clan. Famous for marrying their daughters into the Imperial Family, allowing them control over the Heian court for 200 years.

    • @foreverfriendsg
      @foreverfriendsg Год назад +3

      @@barli7153 a fellow Linfamy viewer? 😂

    • @baalamo
      @baalamo Год назад +5

      Curious what pattern you've seen in the multiple cultures? I'm not well read on other royal histories and interested in hearing more.

    • @magiconesgirl
      @magiconesgirl 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@foreverfriendsg my thoughts exactly 😂

    • @artemisofthemoonandhunt1486
      @artemisofthemoonandhunt1486 8 месяцев назад +3

      It is human nature. Not royal nature.

  • @jamesallen74
    @jamesallen74 2 года назад +46

    9:57 "And this is where things get quite interesting" LOLOLOLOLOLOL like it hasn't already.
    New HBO series 2022 "Henry VIII fucks everything up for 100s of years". Game of Thrones doesn't have anything on this stuff.

    • @simcoe4045
      @simcoe4045 2 года назад +1

      So a remake of The Tudors?

  • @amyleibman9573
    @amyleibman9573 Год назад +45

    The only problem with these scenarios is that had the throne passed to Edward Seymour, his children all would have married differently with different children. So, near impossible but fun to imagine anyway.

    • @patriciajrs46
      @patriciajrs46 4 месяца назад

      Yes, nearly impossible to surmise.

    • @ruanpierre2108
      @ruanpierre2108 18 дней назад

      And the butterfly effect would take over

  • @RoyalDocumentary85
    @RoyalDocumentary85 Год назад

    great information~! love this!

  • @jmulvey371
    @jmulvey371 2 года назад +888

    These are always so interesting. By the time you get to the current claimants, they've devolved to being basically normal people --though still among the privileged class of course.
    I'd love to hear more from Beatrice and William, etc. Are they even aware of their claim? Was it something their family talked about?

    • @RockNRollHorrorshow
      @RockNRollHorrorshow 2 года назад +138

      As someone said above, Beatrice was informed about her claim and said that she wouldn't want to be Queen "even for all of the tea in China".

    • @ellahustwitt8025
      @ellahustwitt8025 2 года назад +6

      @@RockNRollHorrorshow what about Teresea? does she know?

    • @rabbitwho
      @rabbitwho 2 года назад +34

      that's the thing, people have so many kids that henry has thousands of descendants, it's just she happens to be the direct line, but the wealth of her ancestors was spread between a lot of people, and obviously the government + the royal family have a lot of it, but even besides that.
      "who do you think you are" is always funny because yes, that person is your great great great great great great great grandfather, but thousands and thousands of people can say the same, which is why ancestory websites can work and not just be untenable

    • @leaa1243
      @leaa1243 2 года назад +18

      I always have this thought too. Myself, alongside millions of others I’m sure, found through ancestry that the royal line are my distant grandparents etc, but I’m just a normal middle class girl in Gloucestershire. It’s weird how life works lol. Like imagine if things went differently

    • @petrograd4068
      @petrograd4068 Год назад +2

      I'd say they've evolved into normal people instead, but that's me :P

  • @0617kitty
    @0617kitty 2 года назад +9

    Very interesting! Thank you for taking your time to do this work! I have been wondering who were supossed to be Queen of King instead of Elizebeth II's line🤣😁

  • @rake9768
    @rake9768 Год назад +6

    An interesting extra on the Dukedom of Buckingham: it's been created and extincted four times, and the fourth family to own it are the Dukes & Duchesses of Buckingham named in the video, but the second family to have owned it are the Villiers family, to which William Child-Villiers belongs.
    Incidentally, the third family to have owned the Dukedom are the ones after whom Buckingham Palace is named.

  • @thepastremembered7651
    @thepastremembered7651 Год назад

    Thank you for making this video, very interesting

  • @EtreemeeIV
    @EtreemeeIV 2 года назад +8

    I love your family trees! Keep up the good work 👍

  • @Midlife_Manical_Mayhem
    @Midlife_Manical_Mayhem 2 года назад +65

    i love your charts, matt. it makes it so easy to visualize the connections when they are laid out in this manor. i wonder if these individuals are aware of who they might have been in that altnernative history

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 2 года назад +2

      Some are. And its Manner (though each of the Duke has a manor no doubt)

    • @phildavenport4150
      @phildavenport4150 Год назад +2

      @@highpath4776 And it's "it's".

    • @thomasburke9060
      @thomasburke9060 Год назад +1

      Sometimes they are. Usually they don't make much of it. The current Jacobite pretender, for example, is willing to discuss his claim, but says that it is "merely hypothetical".

    • @phildavenport4150
      @phildavenport4150 Год назад +1

      @@thomasburke9060 Far more entertaining to watch King Ralph - and as relevant.

  • @karlosh9286
    @karlosh9286 Год назад

    Brilliant , and also mind bending !

  • @lutheur33
    @lutheur33 Год назад

    It’s been a while since I’ve been lost so quickly by such a ball breaking commentary 🤷🏾‍♂️

  • @angr3819
    @angr3819 2 года назад +3

    Thank you.
    This has actually been one of those random and strange things I have sometimes wondered about and never got around to trying to research. Cheers 🙂

    • @devonseamoor
      @devonseamoor Год назад

      @Ang R. That's exactly the reason why so many in Britain were running around like headless chickens, after voting Brexit. The neglect of study on subjects that matter is horrendous in Britain, I've noticed during my almost 5 years in Britain.
      I've seldom observed such complacency in a population. Is it depression maybe?

    • @angr3819
      @angr3819 Год назад

      @@devonseamoor Who would be be King if....to Brexit is going off at a real tangent. How do you relate the two to your comment?
      Incidentally, Brexit was sabotaged and isn't anything like it was supposed to be - which would be better than being in the EU. For instance, we should not be paying VAT, which is an EEC/EU tax. We should also have much tighter control of our borders and entry points. No unmanned airports such as Newcastle, sea ports and marinas where anyone can simply walk in. The channel dinghies are a distraction from that. I would bet they and their dinghies are dropped off from larger boats and ships a few miles from our shores, and their 'rescue' pre-arranged. No reports ever of any of them capsizing, running out of fuel, the dinghy leaking and deflating, people drowning etc. Staged!

  • @sophiefraser3995
    @sophiefraser3995 2 года назад +10

    I had just completed my GCSE module on Elizabeth I, which I enjoyed. This was very informative and this History geek loved this random knowledge.

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад

      Wish we had done Elizabeth I when I did my GCSEs many years ago instead of the History of Medicine

  • @jostrange-webb1138
    @jostrange-webb1138 Год назад +2

    Great video! thank you. Just one niggle. Derby is phonetically pronounced D'ah'by as in B'ar'bie. (say it like a pirate but breathing out - lol ) Not to be confused with the spelling of D'er'by with the phonetic vowel sound of 'urr' as in f'urr'by. I hope this helps with future videos.
    All the best from a native of D'ah'byshire :)

  • @mccarraa
    @mccarraa Год назад

    amazing video. first time watching this channel videos.

  • @AshleyLebedev
    @AshleyLebedev 2 года назад +43

    Favorite wife to Henry VIII is a super relative thing. They were all his favorites at beginning, at least first 3, and Katherine Howard. Seymour only stayed that way because of her very early death and her “gift” to him, he would have tired of them all, eventually.

  • @LordOfMkuze
    @LordOfMkuze 2 года назад +12

    I’m so happy to hear Matt’s voice

  • @thehangingparsiple5692
    @thehangingparsiple5692 Год назад

    Love this, although I was going a bit cross-eyed towards the end 🙏🙏

  • @pippa3150
    @pippa3150 Год назад

    Great video, thank you!!!

  • @laxjetbear
    @laxjetbear 2 года назад +7

    Love these videos. Thank you for the research and putting these all together. Just FYI: Beauchamp in Britain is pronounced bee-chem.

  • @aagold76
    @aagold76 2 года назад +13

    the one problem with these videos... had the person become King or Queen, they probably would have married different people and had different heirs.

  • @googiegress7459
    @googiegress7459 Год назад +3

    I feel like after that last Richard died without heirs, there'd be another succession crisis and some other tangentially associated rando with more wealth and political power would have gotten it instead of Kinloss.
    It's interesting though to track how a family's wealth and status can rise or, in this case, precipitously fall, through generations.

  • @astridberwouts8432
    @astridberwouts8432 Год назад +23

    Fun fact: William Child-Villiers is the father of Amelie Child-Villiers, who plays Galadriel as a child in Rings of Power

  • @MichaelSidneyTimpson
    @MichaelSidneyTimpson 2 года назад +96

    ACTUALLY, so wait, if everyone DID honor Henry's wishes, including his son Edward VI, Jane Grey (or her descendants) would have become Queen after Elizabeth, since she would not have claimed the throne before Mary and been executed.

    • @otisdylan9532
      @otisdylan9532 2 года назад +11

      Yes, I think that's correct, assuming that Jane either lived until 1603 or had living descendants at that time.

    • @thomasburke9060
      @thomasburke9060 Год назад +2

      The Henrician acts of succession and his will _did_ place his three surviving children before the Greys. Edward's desire to have Jane Grey succeed him deviated from this.

  • @mowvu5380
    @mowvu5380 2 года назад +3

    fascinating, but we don't know which of these alternative kings or queens would have had grandiose unification ideas. great work.

  • @sandraleatongray518
    @sandraleatongray518 Год назад +14

    I’d love to see a chart of the line of succession if Henry VIII had not chopped off the head of Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham (he was a cousin with possibly the strongest claim to the throne if Henry’s own line died out, and was executed for saying it out loud - aka ‘imagining the death of a king’)

    • @Rampart.X
      @Rampart.X Год назад

      Clever wording for that act of treason.

    • @lisetteonline
      @lisetteonline Год назад

      The dumb princes stupid wife allegedly stated they were a plane crash away from the crown... Thankfully for them this law is no longer enforced

  • @hannahappleby5942
    @hannahappleby5942 2 года назад

    really enjoyed that :)

  • @samhawkins4952
    @samhawkins4952 2 года назад +18

    I just stumbled upon your channel so I don’t know if you already made a video like that, but I’d love to see who’d be king if Richard iii had won the wars of the roses!

    • @meganrobinson9867
      @meganrobinson9867 Год назад +3

      I actually figured this out once! After Richard III died the throne would have gone to:
      Elizabeth I (Richard III's sister)
      Edmund (Son of Elizabeth I)
      Elizabeth II (Daughter of Edmund)
      William III (Brother of Edmund)
      Margaret (Cousin of William III)
      Reginald (Son of Margaret)
      Arthur I (Nephew of Reginald)
      Geoffrey I (Brother of Arthur I)
      Arthur II (Son of Geoffrey I)
      Geoffrey II (Brother of Arthur II)
      Edward VI (Geoffrey II's first cousin one removed)
      Henry VII (Son of Edward VI)
      Mary (Sister of Henry VII)
      Henry VIII (Son of Mary)
      William IV (Nephew of Henry VIII)
      William V (Son of William IV)
      Which brings us up to 1751. After that I ran out of Wikipedia. This is assuming that they keep their dates of death, which given some of them were executed by the monarch at the time, wouldn't be the case if they were on the throne

  • @jgr7487
    @jgr7487 2 года назад +18

    the William Seymour - Arbella Stuart union probably would have been the beginning of the new line, as it would have tied up a lot of knots.

  • @MJHKing1
    @MJHKing1 Год назад

    Very informative. Smiling at the couple of American pronunciations of English and French words 😉, but didn't detract from the overall content

  • @susancaleca4796
    @susancaleca4796 8 месяцев назад

    Enjoyed the journey

  • @godemperorofmankind3.091
    @godemperorofmankind3.091 2 года назад +19

    Please do who is the most senior heir to Charlemagne if we use male preference or absolute primogeniture

    • @somebodysomewhere5571
      @somebodysomewhere5571 2 года назад +1

      YES MY EMPEROR WE WILL SLAY THE HISTORICALLY INACCURATE HERETICS

    • @january1may
      @january1may 2 года назад

      I've tried to calculate the most senior heir to William the Conqueror by absolute primogeniture a while back and it was a real mess. (I briefly thought it was Talleyrand but that line turned out to be based on a misunderstanding.) I don't recall if I've tried Charlemagne but it would probably be way worse; there's just not a lot of data on 9th century royal daughters.
      Then there was that one time I tried to figure out the most senior heir of Harold Godwinsson by male preference, and got hopelessly lost in very confusing 18th and 19th century Polish family trees...

  • @napolien1310
    @napolien1310 2 года назад +51

    Now who is going to tell Teresa about her claim?

    • @PauxloE
      @PauxloE 2 года назад +9

      I'd suppose she is already aware of that.

    • @derickgoh5272
      @derickgoh5272 2 года назад +15

      @@PauxloE Or maybe she sees this video and starts raising an army. 🤣🤣

    • @thebandit0256
      @thebandit0256 2 года назад +10

      Hold up she probably doesn't care and she wants William to take over after both his grandma and Bastard father dies

    • @MenloMarseilles
      @MenloMarseilles 2 года назад

      Her mom knew, apparently.
      > When Debrett's informed [Beatrice Mary] she would have been Queen but for a quirk of history, Lady Kinloss was unimpressed. "I wouldn't take the job for all the tea in China," she apparently retorted. "I have quite enough to do looking after a family of three while attending the Lords three times a week."

  • @ffotograffydd
    @ffotograffydd 2 года назад +5

    An interesting video. The only criticism I have is that Beauchamp is actually pronounced Beechham in English.

  • @jax6296
    @jax6296 Год назад +7

    Anyone else seeing this after the Queen died? R.I.P. Liz 🖤

  • @Dutchienl2006
    @Dutchienl2006 2 года назад +33

    Jane was not beheaded after the nine days. She went to Jail and was actually as good as pardoned and could have lived if her father wasnt so stupid to go against Mary again.

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 2 года назад +9

      Yes her father doesn't seemed to have had much sense. Had he not rebelled a 2nd time Jane and Guildford could have lived a relatively normal life as I believe Mary would have eventually released them

  • @Alan.Endicott
    @Alan.Endicott 2 года назад +28

    I would find a chart listing all potential alternative UK monarchs alive today quite interesting if only for one reason. It would be interesting to speculate on the possibility of relationships that might tie them all together so that, going forward, all the alternatives are unified.

    • @carltanner9065
      @carltanner9065 Год назад

      They're all related to one another, Alan. As are quite a few "ordinary" folk.

  • @jiwik731
    @jiwik731 2 года назад +8

    It is interesting how such a important families fell so deep through the history to a level of people from next door.

    • @devonseamoor
      @devonseamoor Год назад

      @JiWiK. It's my belief that abuse of power and loss of integrity, also the effects of inbreeding, are the cause of that decline. Losing moral values. My mother used to say "It must be a pair of strong legs that will be able to carry the weight of wealth"

    • @sethm3856
      @sethm3856 7 месяцев назад

      Yea, my Grandmother's last name is Bruce, directly descended from Robert the Bruce, and we're a very middle-class ordinary family living in New Zealand.

  • @Telecasterland
    @Telecasterland 4 месяца назад

    Subbed love it.

  • @AshleyYakeley
    @AshleyYakeley 2 года назад +18

    You forgot to mention the dukes of B&C had the awesome surname of Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville.

    • @carltanner9065
      @carltanner9065 Год назад

      Just got me to thinking, I wonder if there's any of these hyphenated surnames that actually spells out a word? That would be interesting to find!!

  • @chronicminimalism
    @chronicminimalism 2 года назад +15

    Are you going to do a video about surviving members of the Plantagenets. I tried to do it on my own but it got to confusing...

    • @ChrisRamsbottom
      @ChrisRamsbottom 2 года назад

      There is a book "Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal" which traces all Plantagenet descendants down to about the 1970s. I know it's on Ancestry, not sure if you can actually buy it though

  • @ShayminLover492
    @ShayminLover492 7 месяцев назад +1

    Basically, here's how the line of succession world work here:
    Basically, as outlined, Henry's succession plan would involve the throne going to Edward, and then to any future sons he has (which never came), followed by his daughters (just as it did in our timeline), after which it would then follow Mary of Suffolk's bloodline rather than England falling under a Scottish king
    House of Tudor
    Henry VII - 1485-1509
    Henry VIII - 1509-1547
    Edward VI - 1547-1553
    Mary I - 1553-1558
    Elizabeth I - 1558-1603
    House of Seymour
    Edward VII - 1603-1612
    Edward VIII - 1612-1618
    William III - 1618-1660
    William IV - 1660-1674
    Elizabeth II - 1674-1697
    House of Aylesbury
    Charles - 1697-1747
    House of Chandos
    James - 1747-1789
    Anne - 1789-1836
    Richard IV - 1836-1861
    Richard V - 1861-1889
    House Kinloss
    Mary II - 1889-1944
    Mary III - 1944-2012
    Teresa - 2012-

    • @DarthDread-oh2ne
      @DarthDread-oh2ne 6 месяцев назад

      That's cool. Aww, now, A part of me wishes that would have happened.

  • @OutdoorsmanDave
    @OutdoorsmanDave Год назад

    Fascinating, thanks

  • @tranquilitybasehotelcasino2932
    @tranquilitybasehotelcasino2932 2 года назад +92

    I’ve never heard the name Arbella before, but I imagine if we’d had a queen it would’ve risen massively in popularity.

    • @elirchi9214
      @elirchi9214 2 года назад +2

      Me too. I'm going to put it on my list of potential future children's names.

    • @nicholashoughton7364
      @nicholashoughton7364 2 года назад +8

      Arabella, perhaps?

    • @justineharper3346
      @justineharper3346 Год назад +2

      It reminds me of Harry Potter. Arabella Figg is Harry’s neighbor that babysits him and has a bunch of cats that she likes to show him pictures of. I think about her quite frequently when my cat almost trips me because in the books one of hers makes her fall and break her leg lol. I think it’s a really pretty name though

    • @justineharper3346
      @justineharper3346 Год назад +2

      I saw someone do an interesting deep dive on her. Maybe Reading the Past? I don’t think she and Queen Elizabeth got along very well.

    • @spoffspoffington6576
      @spoffspoffington6576 4 месяца назад

      It's a shortening of Arabella

  • @LoriFalce
    @LoriFalce 2 года назад +25

    The William Child-Villiers part is funny since he's part of a line that gave two royal mistresses and at least five illegitimate royal children.

    • @blueashke
      @blueashke 2 года назад +5

      See now THIS is a video I need. Monarchical history is so fascinating, especially when you're from a country that has never had a monarchy.

    • @phildavenport4150
      @phildavenport4150 Год назад +2

      @@blueashke Well, if you're from the US, we gave you two opportunities to establish one. Both princes married US women.

  • @pamelacass9642
    @pamelacass9642 Год назад

    Fascinating!

  • @alistairkewish651
    @alistairkewish651 Год назад +4

    Very, very erudite scholarship exploring the ins and outs of who gets what, and sometimes doesn’t. A fascinating account of the curious twists and turns of history. Plus bits I didn’t even know about.

  • @Valkorion9872
    @Valkorion9872 2 года назад +3

    Could you do a video a video on the Bagrationis, I think it would be really cool

  • @NintenGamer
    @NintenGamer 2 года назад +44

    Can you do a chart on the Japanese emperors if they switched away from having sons as successors?

    • @grav8241
      @grav8241 2 года назад

      no way in hell any asian country would have done that

    • @barnaby4232
      @barnaby4232 2 года назад

      @@grav8241 numerous Asian countries allowed female succession

    • @andypham1636
      @andypham1636 Год назад

      you mean if Japan introduced absolute prinogeniture?

  • @boomboomwatts4745
    @boomboomwatts4745 Год назад +6

    How about doing this for the Stewart lineage? They are my ancestors, so would be very interesting to see how that one would go. 😊

  • @ld3418
    @ld3418 Год назад +3

    Absolutely fascinating! Thank you for your time producing this, and evidence once again for the possible rethinking along republican lines for such extraordinary wealth and privilege to be passed by birth, gender, race and religion in contravention to all principles we now hold dear.

  • @ericoberlies7537
    @ericoberlies7537 2 года назад +82

    The problem with this analysis is that the Will is only good in the immediate aftermath of Henry’s death and succession. Once Edward VI became King, the Will of his predecessor becomes irrelevant. The succession goes according to prior law.
    In any case, this was all rendered moot by the Glorious Revolution, English Bill of Rights, and the Act of Settlement 1701. The Succession is and has been for some time, determined by Act of Parliament.

    • @Chrisiant
      @Chrisiant Год назад

      There's some room for argument, regarding the right of a King to determine who would succeed him after his death, at least before the Act of Settlement. Mary Tudor rallied popular support, and claimed the throne, imprisoning the young queen Jane, and her supporters. Vox populi, vox Dei.

    • @RedRocket4000
      @RedRocket4000 Год назад +3

      And the Will only relevent as an act of Parliament made it official.

    • @ericoberlies7537
      @ericoberlies7537 Год назад +2

      @@RedRocket4000 The whole issue has been up to Parliament for a long time.

    • @gidzmobug2323
      @gidzmobug2323 6 месяцев назад

      From what I had read, Edward VI had been barred from making any changes to the succession. I don't remember if that was only during his minority (his entire reign was spent under a regency, as he was only 9 when he became King).

    • @highloughsdrifter1629
      @highloughsdrifter1629 2 месяца назад

      The Glorious Revolution/Williamite War was my thought. Does it still happen? If it does we still end up with Charles the Third. What about the Civil War? Without Charles the First do we still get Oliver Cromwell? And are different decisions made after his death? Could be a Republic from the 1660s...

  • @benjiholland6263
    @benjiholland6263 2 года назад +11

    Have you done a chart going into Abraham Lincoln's ancestry, specifically through Nancy Hanks Lincoln? I think that would be an interesting video

  • @freedomthroughspirit
    @freedomthroughspirit Год назад

    That was fascinating! And good fun.

  • @debbcraig3232
    @debbcraig3232 5 месяцев назад +3

    I’ve gone down a rabbit hole in search of my Native American ancestors instead I found my royal family! What a shock and a very interesting journey it’s been up to this point! I only plugged in myself and my parents to connect to my grandparents and there it was a family tree that I could not have imagined!! If all information is correct, I’m 14th generation descendant of Mary Queen of Scots through the line of King Charles II.

  • @armanmahmood9783
    @armanmahmood9783 2 года назад +9

    Matt I dare you to make a HRE dukedoms family tree.
    itll be like the European one and the Asian one combined
    i mean you might take years so maybe not-

  • @Nurichiri
    @Nurichiri 2 года назад +8

    I'm on a Tudor kick at the moment, so this was great timing for me.

    • @cheriewilliams2026
      @cheriewilliams2026 2 года назад

      Are you also binge watching Simon Schama - amazing historian

  • @alanfbrookes9771
    @alanfbrookes9771 Год назад +2

    This whole scenario differs from Tony Robinson's scenario in that you regard conquest as being a legitimate change in the line of succession. That being so, it introduces a very vast array of scenarios. For instance, with no Elizabeth I to build up the navy, maybe the Spanish Armada would have succeeded, and the line passed to the Spanish, by right of conquest. Then again, there are others that could have invaded England if a different set of people had been in charge, including the French and the Scots. Maybe James VI of Scotland, or even Mary Queen of Scots herself (without Elizabeth to execute her) would have invaded England and taken it by conquest. Then, from James VI onwards, the line would have reverted to the present one.
    Change one person in history and it affects everyone and everything thereafter.

  • @ShmuelWeintraub
    @ShmuelWeintraub Год назад

    Nice work on the video... this is, of course, predicated on everyone agreeing that the House of Tudor does, in fact, have a legitimate claim to the Throne... If we started the line of succession a couple of hundred years earlier, well, things get very different very quickly...

  • @penny1186
    @penny1186 2 года назад +45

    Jane was Henry’s favorite only because he gave him a son who lived and died before she could irritate him enough to have her killed.

    • @deespaeth8180
      @deespaeth8180 Год назад +1

      Or divorced.

    • @phildavenport4150
      @phildavenport4150 Год назад +1

      @@deespaeth8180 For Henry, same thing.

    • @chelseawilson7723
      @chelseawilson7723 Год назад +2

      I find it interesting that people think this way about Henry's temperament - that he was just looking for a reason to kill his wives. I'm not saying Henry was a standup guy by any means, but I AM saying that he probably truly did believe Anne Boleyn was guilty of adultery. There is evidence of him breaking down crying to his son Henry Fitzroy upon Anne's arrest; he truly felt he had been betrayed, he did not simply devise a way to be rid of Anne because she "irritated" him. Furthermore, he was devoutly religious and probably truly DID believe he was being punished by God for his marriage to Catherine of Aragon. Jane was specifically chosen because she was rather demure and conservative. I can't imagine Henry would have found many issues with her had she survived childbirth, although her brothers were quite obviously power-hungry and might have invented trouble for her.

    • @edithengel2284
      @edithengel2284 Год назад +1

      Henry would never have divorced Jane; it would have further muddied the already messed up succession. Depending on why she might have been divorced, it might also have cast doubts on Edward's paternity. Henry would have little reason to kill her; after securing the succession he might very likely, had she lived, taken mistresses--no need to get rid of her really.

  • @DS9TREK
    @DS9TREK 2 года назад +23

    You can't say there definitely wouldn't be a UK without the Crown's merging beforehand. It's less likely but not impossible.

    • @petertaylor4980
      @petertaylor4980 2 года назад +1

      Even if there wasn't an Act of Union with Scotland, there could have been one with Ireland.

  • @debpansier6705
    @debpansier6705 Год назад

    Brilliant!

  • @tylerdurden7500
    @tylerdurden7500 Год назад

    Thank you for the explanation. That makes sense. Ps just a note Derby is pronounced Darby.