The Mad King Who Lost America

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  • Опубликовано: 24 апр 2024
  • The Mad King. The Man Who Lost America. Farmer George? There are a lot of things you could call George III, but boring certainly isn’t one of them. His reign was as scandal-packed as it was long, and it all led up to a seriously tragic end. As the leader of their enemies, the Americans villainized him, and his own subjects were quick to jump on the bandwagon. But was he really such a dire villain…or just a scapegoat?
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Комментарии • 424

  • @sydnidowney3598
    @sydnidowney3598 Месяц назад +479

    INTERESTING...that King George passed a law to protect Native Americans by not allowing further expansion and encroachment on Indian lands by colonists and also was responsible for ending slavery in the UK. l

    • @A-Grammie-On-the-ROCK
      @A-Grammie-On-the-ROCK Месяц назад +53

      He was a religious man likely a TRUE Christian not phony one and thus had the love of God for others wellbeing.

    • @kaibotski4939
      @kaibotski4939 Месяц назад +59

      I could be wrong but I thought he passed the law to ensure the land is legally ceded by the natives so we don't get stuff like the Nisga'a treaty. It's pretty specific that no land can be purchased without a treaty. He wanted to ensure the land can't be taken back and have more rebellions against the crown further down the road.
      Also the slavery thing is just to cut off cash to the US and good PR. It triggered mass slave flight thus causing economic harm and free recruits. I mean he personally expressed his disdain for slavery but it was only abolished when convenient. Just as Abe Lincoln did when the union found it convenient.

    • @donnadees1971
      @donnadees1971 Месяц назад +8

      Fie on you for passing him off as bein British. Sadnesses, just tragic sadnesses. Grief can do it to you, and arsenic in his food…lol

    • @bettybuccaneer
      @bettybuccaneer Месяц назад +29

      And, there lies the real reason for the Revolutionary War. It wasn't about taxes. It was more about maintaining slavery.

    • @Unknown17
      @Unknown17 Месяц назад +41

      @@bettybuccaneer What a unique and ridiculous theory!

  • @georgewhitehead8185
    @georgewhitehead8185 Месяц назад +307

    I as a doctor, and history buff, can possibly shed some light on "where and why did King George come in contact with Arsenic?" Here is the possible and probable answer. It was fashionable and popular among the higher class, the intelligentsia, the avant guard, and even royals, to use small portions of Arsenic as a stimulant. At fashionable, and intellectual parties, it was quite common for these people to partake of Arsenic as a stimulant. They of course knew that "too much" would most likely kill them, but they did it anyway for the "high" and exhilarating stimulation that Arsenic gave them. This I believe is why, in 2005, they discovered large amounts of Arsenic in King George's hair samples. Doctor George Whitehead (presented to you May 4, 2024) Thank you.

    • @Sarafimm2
      @Sarafimm2 Месяц назад +16

      Considering what was going on before he had his episodes of madness, I can believe he was using the arsenic as both a stimulant to keep himself awake to deal with troubles and to experience the mental "high" to get away from them. I would not doubt someone(s) might have used the arsenic to keep him happy in those last years of his life because of all his issues, physical and mental. George III might not have been as wary in taking arsenic as a medicine, since he had already been using it for years. Was it a matter of a drug that needed a higher dosage the longer it was used, or, sinisterly, was it a way to be rid of a monarch who was "inconvenient".

    • @raymondjack
      @raymondjack Месяц назад

      Sounds like fentanyl now, people always be trying to get high.

    • @christinec7892
      @christinec7892 Месяц назад +27

      Wasn’t arsenic used in dying fabrics and wall paper at this time too? I recall reading something about Napoleon most likely dying from the arsenic in the wall coverings in his room. I know that the wallpaper could flake and become airborne.

    • @Max_Ohm
      @Max_Ohm Месяц назад +2

      Fascinating

    • @sevenandthelittlestmew
      @sevenandthelittlestmew Месяц назад

      Arsenic was in everything for a good century. Makeup, wigs, and “party drugs”, apparently. It was impossible to avoid. As for the arsenic green in clothing, paint and wallpaper coloring, that was introduced in the late 18th century as Scheel’s Green and became popular (and a bit more stable) as Emerald Green or Brilliant green in the mid-19th century.
      During King George III’s reign, it was also regularly used as a treatment for syphilis. If King George was sleeping around, and contracted the disease, well… the arsenic and the disease would have both been a factor in his declining mental health, and ultimately his demise.

  • @stevenmiller184
    @stevenmiller184 Месяц назад +122

    Arsenic was found in Napoleon's hair as well. Again, deliberate poisoning was suspected. This turned out to be false. At that time Arsenic was used in the green coloring applied to walls. Just as lead used to be used in paint. This coloring was on the walls of Napoleon's last residence on the remote island of St Helena. Normally, this is not a problem but in damp or humid conditions the Arsenic will vaporize and be absorbed. I wonder if the cyclic nature of his madness had something to do with varying levels of humidity.

    • @christinec7892
      @christinec7892 Месяц назад +3

      I just posted something similar!

    • @bohd3
      @bohd3 Месяц назад +3

      Seasonal madness was common in those days

    • @paradoxical_taco
      @paradoxical_taco Месяц назад +8

      Arsenic was also believed to be a preservative, and people still loyal or devoted to Napoleon had taken locks of his hair and - it’s believed - put arsenic in the envelope they kept these locks of hair in, leading to the tests on these locks inconclusive regarding Napoleon’s death and arsenic. It was also used in the dye/pigment used on green book covers. I think green books published before a certain date must be handled by scholars wearing gloves.

    • @judithstrachan9399
      @judithstrachan9399 29 дней назад +4

      Most very old books are only handled with gloves, but it’s to mainly preserve them from sweat & oils from the users’ hands.

  • @carolynrosser1574
    @carolynrosser1574 Месяц назад +128

    A shame you didn’t include the barbaric treatment he received from his doctors. Their “treatment“ was really torture and would have made a sensible person go crazy. What they did to control him was incredibly inhumane.

    • @johns3544
      @johns3544 Месяц назад

      Not as bad what joe pedo handlers are doing the mad so called president 🙄

    • @DarkKnight52365
      @DarkKnight52365 29 дней назад +4

      i'm guessing that was standard practice back then

  • @janesawyer1342
    @janesawyer1342 Месяц назад +152

    What an informative video of King George III. I didn't realize he'd been through all of this. He'd been through 3 wars?, and experienced tragedy and dysfunction in his family. I personally suspect his son was poisoning him. It sounds like Queen Charlotte was a good influence in his life, and that his being faithful to her was a good reflection on him.

    • @llydstrlng-sm1mo
      @llydstrlng-sm1mo Месяц назад +11

      It is always the good people ending up the worst 💀💀💀

    • @user-tv1qb6vf5r
      @user-tv1qb6vf5r Месяц назад +12

      I like your comment,and I agree with your suspicion of the son 😊

    • @rubyhoward2085
      @rubyhoward2085 Месяц назад +3

      That's my thoughts also Jane, his son and heir was very ambitious and who knows who was in his ear, helping him to attain the throne. His mother was a piece of work also but I think she was out of the picture by the time he started to have bouts of mania. Queen Charlotte loved him. Pure and simple. No woman would have fifteen children for a man, even a king, if she didn't love him. Well, anyway I enjoyed it.

    • @jaybee4118
      @jaybee4118 Месяц назад +8

      @@rubyhoward2085I definitely don’t think it’s simple enough to say no woman would have 15 children unless she loved her husband… while I believe they did love each other and I don’t think it’s the case here, there are unfortunately ways of forcing women to have many children. Especially then when women had virtually no rights as an individual.

    • @mylamberfeeties875
      @mylamberfeeties875 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@rubyhoward2085🤣 the average woman gave birth 5 to ten times do research it was common

  • @omegatired
    @omegatired Месяц назад +37

    Arsenic was used to dye clothing, wall paper, color plates and bowls; couple that with possibly bipolar disorder ... Yeah, you could definitely get a periodically mad king. Although, as much as he and Caroline loved each other, it's more a wonder he survived her passing as long as he did. Thank you for this informative view of King George III. As an American, we didn't get a lot of information on the British side of things in American History back when I was in High School and even college.

  • @tomakafrankconlon3207
    @tomakafrankconlon3207 Месяц назад +119

    The problem with the arsenic theory is simple. Most royals should have also acted just crasy as arsenic was used so commonly in their clothing. He was bi-polar most likely. That is why he would have episodes, become better and go mad again.

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Месяц назад +8

      He had Porphyria.

    • @bonniemoerdyk9809
      @bonniemoerdyk9809 Месяц назад +6

      @@tessdurberville711 ... I am a Stewart descendant, although not sure if King George was maybe a great (x?) uncle. I also, in the last 3 years have had vivid sapphire blue urine a few times ... talk about being shocked! 😮

    • @user-vm5ud4xw6n
      @user-vm5ud4xw6n Месяц назад +3

      @@tessdurberville711I would think if he had porphyria that the narrator would have mentioned the symptoms, most notably the constipation, nausea and vomiting.

    • @allinaday9882
      @allinaday9882 Месяц назад +10

      I agree 100%. It is relatively recent that scientist have discovered how much arsenic was in almost everything the ruling classes of the world used.!
      ( I was prescribed arsenic for 3-5 months to treat Ameoba Histolica infection and I basically slept. And ate a little bit. A much smaller dose I am sure, but still.

    • @appaloosa42
      @appaloosa42 Месяц назад +6

      Thyroid issues will also cause mental/emotional aberration. Iodine intermittent deficiency being a cause.

  • @dtchouros
    @dtchouros Месяц назад +75

    To live your life on a stage while battling inside takes fortitude and a toll.

  • @user-he8sc4ib7e
    @user-he8sc4ib7e Месяц назад +14

    Millennia of cousins intermarrying could have had something to do with the mental instability. As others have pointed out, mercury and arsenic compounds were common ingredients in so-called 'medicines' in those days, and was widely used in dyes, as was mercuric nitrate in hat making. Lead was everywhere, from plumbing to pewter to crystal glass. It's actually a miracle that every king and queen wasn't barking mad.

    • @elizabethbrauer1118
      @elizabethbrauer1118 Месяц назад +1

      Perhaps they were all barking mad ... and we just called them eccentric, pompous, erratic, etc. King Charles was often considered odd, and still is.

  • @user-iy6gq9ts7h
    @user-iy6gq9ts7h Месяц назад +55

    How sad that a faithfu godly husband and loving wife, with so many children that Lived in that era, had to endure so much.
    They did, however, live long lives.

  • @kermitefrog64
    @kermitefrog64 27 дней назад +12

    Canadians have their tea time also. One of the teachers I worked with was originally from Vancouver Canada. Every after noon at 2:00 p.m. she had tea with cookies. It was the same time every day. So, even though she had moved to California she kept her tea time tradition. You don't mess with tea time in Canada either.

    • @maggiepacific
      @maggiepacific 22 дня назад +2

      Australia too !! Afternoon tea , often with scones.

  • @romad357
    @romad357 Месяц назад +41

    The American Revolution actually started on April 19, 1775 when the British Army tried to disarm the Massachusetts militia and fighting broke out.

    • @stevenmiller184
      @stevenmiller184 Месяц назад +4

      Yes, you are correct. There was a previous event in which the local militia in New Hampshire bloodlessly overtook a nearly abandoned fort on the coast, took the powder there and hid in it in Exeter, New Hampshire. The lack of armed resistance made this a largely ignored event. I belonged to a reenacting group in New Market that would hold an encampment there to mark the day. We would also go down on April 19th to reenact the battles of Lexington and Concord. Of course, the environment is different now, when we fired a volley, car alarms would go off.

    • @appaloosa42
      @appaloosa42 Месяц назад

      Yep. Long history of stealing from peter to repay paul in this Hemisphere.

    • @JMM33RanMA
      @JMM33RanMA Месяц назад

      The armed revolt happened because they were already prepared for it. The intolerable acts abolished the Mass. Parliament and town meetings. The parliament met outside Boston as the revolutionary, republican, provisional congress. Unlike most revolutions this one was fully supported by the people who, in town meetings, continued to elect delegates to it. Town meetings began "networking" to coordinate with other towns, counties and colonies. They began storing supplies, expanding and training the militia. The result was the retreat under fire of the redcoats, with severe losses, from Concord, and the subsequent loss of control in New England to any place upon which a redcoat's boot was not planted. Even the Southerners learned, at Little Round Top, you make New England Yankees angry at at your peril. After Pearl Harbor, the Japanese also learned that all Americans are dangerous when riled up.

    • @camalbee413
      @camalbee413 Месяц назад

      @@stevenmiller184 that’s really cool I used the live in Newmarket. Wish I could’ve seen the actual reenactment

    • @dustinlackey4250
      @dustinlackey4250 27 дней назад +2

      Ah yes. The shot heard round the world. Not too far off from today’s events.. history tends to repeat itself

  • @kristinedunner988
    @kristinedunner988 Месяц назад +54

    In 1770 Captain Cook "discovered" Australia and in 1788 sent convicts with their jailers to
    settle in the continent. They were instructed by the king to respect any native inhabitants. This did not always happen.

    • @myne00
      @myne00 Месяц назад +2

      Guess that's why it was called Terra Nullus

    • @nicholaswilson1851
      @nicholaswilson1851 Месяц назад +1

      Honestly they shouldn’t have expected people who didn’t broke the law to suddenly cooperate.

    • @holliemichailidis2951
      @holliemichailidis2951 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@nicholaswilson1851 Actually most convicts/settlers didn't bother aboriginals much. They even got along and helped each other. Farmers had issues when aboriginals killed livestock or stolen crops.
      But it was mostly the authorities/politicians that did most harm towards aboriginals.

    • @electronwave4551
      @electronwave4551 25 дней назад

      @@holliemichailidis2951 One guy who used to be a cattle stockman in North Queensland in the 50's told me of a very unhealthy not-so-past practice by large land holders to remove Aboriginals and if I hadn't been told, I would not have believed it. He was a good guy, but this cast a shadow because he didn't seem to think it was as horrendous as it was. I won't say what, sorry.

    • @holliemichailidis2951
      @holliemichailidis2951 25 дней назад

      @@electronwave4551 depends where? And of course there are bad people in every demographic.
      But for the most part at least my family history they lived peacefully with aboriginals. Even had marriages.
      Just as you had aboriginals that would kill livestock or would steal after being told and warned (mobs had their own laws about stealing. One was to be speared and another to go into servitude from whom they stole from. And that person would decide if they did enough duties).
      But the government was the main driver to separate different groups.
      Many smaller steads never had the same issues as the biggest stations due to the government wanting to grow the country.

  • @user-mh4su3xn2q
    @user-mh4su3xn2q Месяц назад +62

    I now have a better understanding of England's "Mad" King.

    • @Factinate
      @Factinate  Месяц назад +4

      Does that mean we earned the sub?

  • @chincemagnet
    @chincemagnet Месяц назад +9

    When I heard madness and rheumatism, I assumed heavy metal toxicity, but my first thought was lead.

  • @brendaowens2466
    @brendaowens2466 Месяц назад +39

    Arsenic is also used in dyeing clothing in those days. This could also be the reason.

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Месяц назад +10

      Green pigments…
      Scheele’s Green - the colour of Napoleon’s wall paper on St Helena…

    • @jacky3580
      @jacky3580 Месяц назад +2

      Particularly the color green, but all intense colors were loaded with it.

  • @manofcultura
    @manofcultura Месяц назад +13

    Other people tend to gloss George III as a bat brain who oversaw the loss of America. But thankfully channels like you show there’s more historical characters like George III. At the end of the day even rulers are human, for good or ill.

  • @josephforrest9472
    @josephforrest9472 20 дней назад +6

    Napoleon's hair had large amounts of arsenic. Napoleon had three sisters. Their hair also had large amounts of arsenic.

  • @christopheraliaga-kelly6254
    @christopheraliaga-kelly6254 Месяц назад +13

    Pitt the Elder, on being told that it was wonderful that George & Charlotte had so many sons, retorted"The damnedst set of millstones to be put around the necks of the nation!"
    NOT ONE OF THEM had an ounce of George or Charlotte's sense!!
    Talk about brains jumping the generation!

  • @misha4422
    @misha4422 Месяц назад +29

    Thank you. I learned a LOT of things I did not know. Being a monarch was not easy.

    • @Jesus-jq5zw
      @Jesus-jq5zw 25 дней назад

      Still easier than you think 😂

  • @marjoriegoodwin2993
    @marjoriegoodwin2993 Месяц назад +22

    George and Charlotte according to the artists, had some big lovely eyes.

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe Месяц назад +2

      Well it was also the beauty standard of the day

    • @mmyr8ado.360
      @mmyr8ado.360 Месяц назад +1

      The probably used nightshade on their eyes to make them look big.

    • @marjoriegoodwin2993
      @marjoriegoodwin2993 Месяц назад +1

      @@mmyr8ado.360 Really? How do people do that? I just never heard of it. Curious.

    • @BettyG1369
      @BettyG1369 19 дней назад +1

      ​@@marjoriegoodwin2993 it was used to dilate the pupils... 😂

  • @kaybrown4010
    @kaybrown4010 27 дней назад +4

    King George III was a good man in a difficult age. As an American, I knew little of his backstory. RIP.

  • @Robert-tj3qq
    @Robert-tj3qq Месяц назад +39

    I'd say the arsenic came from something he used over a period of time. Arsenic has been used in products of the past

    • @LindaStoronsky-yk4df
      @LindaStoronsky-yk4df Месяц назад +12

      The white face powder used at the time was made of arsenic.

    • @lisaguthrie174
      @lisaguthrie174 Месяц назад +9

      Yes Arsenic was used in hats and gloves etc .
      He also probably had lead.

    • @lisaguthrie174
      @lisaguthrie174 Месяц назад +1

      😮

    • @dragondemonsyne
      @dragondemonsyne Месяц назад +1

      If this was it, he wouldn't have been the only leader of the time done in by accidental arsenic poisoning. They are pretty sure that is what did in Napoleon. Arsenic was one of the components of a common green pigment used at the time, and the house Napoleon lived in during his exile has green wallpaper. In the damp climate, the pigment reacted with moisture in the air and produced volatile, gaseous arsenic compounds. Since arsenic is a cumulative poison, breathing traces of it over time was enough.

    • @blacktigress15
      @blacktigress15 Месяц назад +1

      @@LindaStoronsky-yk4df that was white lead not arsenic

  • @bob7975
    @bob7975 Месяц назад +6

    Arsenic was often found as an environmental pollutant back then. It was used in dyes, medications, cosmetics, leather tanning, and believe it or not, food coloring. It has a stimulant effect in small doses and was also often used as a recreational drug. He was most likely given arsenic compounds by his doctors, who would have been acting according to the best medical practices of the time.

  • @rogersheddy6414
    @rogersheddy6414 Месяц назад +4

    One thing that's very interesting in a biography. Written a few decades ago is the fact that george the third had an incredible memory.
    Somehow he knew the names ranks and service histories of everyone who was an officer in both his army and his navy. He would walk up to any number of junior or senior officers and refer to all kinds of things they had been part of.
    It's almost as though he had memorized all the dispatches issued from the beginning of his reign.
    I mean, There are people who memorize all this statistics about these baseball players.
    But also consider this. People with such an intensely detailed mind as that often verge into insanity. It is a byward to say that genius and insanity are closely related, that there is a fine line between the two.
    One thing they don't mention here is that parliament had to pass an act to finance the gambling debts incurred by his son, the prince of wales. He actually incurred debt that was equal to the cost that waging a war would have been. Absolutely massive beyond our imagining today.
    So if you can imagine something like that looming over you as well...

  • @BladeStar-uq6xe
    @BladeStar-uq6xe Месяц назад +9

    The only known conversation between George Washington and King George 3:
    Washington: You're crazy! You're an absolute Psycho!
    George 3rd: I want a second opinion!
    Washington: Fine, you're ugly too!
    😃😄😁😆🤠😎😀

  • @clairisalong126
    @clairisalong126 Месяц назад +6

    I feel like this holds with my theory that you can either be a good parent or a good leader, but you can’t be both, because somethings Gotta give. You’re either paying attention to your kids instead of the nation, or paying attention to the nation instead of your kids. He obviously cared greatly about his children and his nation, which I believe is why it wore so heavily on him.

    • @neilbuckley1613
      @neilbuckley1613 Месяц назад

      Interesting, King Charles I, whose incompetence and stubborn adherence to Divine Right of Kings led to his execution was by all accounts a good family man, faithful to his wife, adored by his children, loved by his ministers and servants and a connosieur of art. Contrast this with Samuel Pepys, who was Secretary of the Navy in the reign of King Charles II. Pepys is credited with reforming the administration of the Navy so well that his work was still in force in Nelson's time, and the official records show him to have been a highly intelligent and effective official. However his personal diary reveals an unfaithful husband who molested his female sevants, beat his young male servants unmercifully and used his position in a Weinstein like manner to blackmail sea captains wives into his bed.

  • @Imjetta7
    @Imjetta7 Месяц назад +24

    This was really informative, thank you!

    • @Factinate
      @Factinate  Месяц назад +2

      Glad you liked it! Welcome to the channel 🙂

  • @brucehartnell1475
    @brucehartnell1475 28 дней назад +3

    When the movie “ George lll” was tested on American audiences, people liked it but were confused because they hadn’t seen the first two movies.
    The changed the title of the movie to “ the madness of George the third” for American releas.

  • @LokiScarletWasHere
    @LokiScarletWasHere Месяц назад +3

    If not for the arsenic I would have been open to the idea that he had partial seizures. Seizures can do some weird shit when they aren't tonic-clonic. Staring fits, mania, personality changes, you name it.

  • @benketengu
    @benketengu Месяц назад +14

    I am an American the textbook I used in my high school Advanced placement world history pointed out that the tea Smugglers we’re going out of business because the British tea was cheaper hence The Boston tea party.
    One of the major causes was there was not enough currency available in the colonies, The lack of it was strangling business. Another was the prohibition against a direct trade between the American colonies and the Spanish territories. Instead of sending a ship down to Cuba for example we were supposed to Buy any Cuban products in England at the ridiculous price. These things might have been able to be negotiated had not the last American attempt to avoid war arrived in London during August when there is no one to negotiate with. London was too hot and government was out of session.

    • @darby5987
      @darby5987 26 дней назад +5

      "These things might have been able to be negotiated had not the last American attempt to avoid war arrived in London during August when there is no one to negotiate with. London was too hot and government was out of session."
      So, an American contingent arrived in London, the capital city of the largest empire in world history. He walks up to a London police officer asking directions to No. 10 Downing St. The officer replies, "Sorry, mate. London is closed for the summer."
      And because your textbook said that, you believe the story? I can't be sure but I would not be surprised if the author of that section of your text had just watched the Peter Seller's movie, "The Mouse that Roared" wherein a tiny country declares war on the US so it can surrender and receive reconstructions funds. Problem is, when they got off their boat to invade New York City...it was closed. They tried to surrender to police officers but they were too busy with assuring the city remained closed.
      (It was a citywide air raid drill).
      Do some fact checking. I'll give you a hint: August 1775 and 1776 in London was cold, fog and rainy. In fact the winter of 1775-1776 saw some of the most severe cold weather in the UK for quite some time.
      I'll leave it to you to do the research. You can find this information online if you give it a good go. In fact you can even find copies of the original hand written British documents from 1775-1776 charting the weather.
      Anyway, fact check the text book. Don't feel too bad if you find significant errors. After he retired from Cal Tech Professor Richard Feynman, PhD sat on a California Department of Education (DoE) task force charged with reviewing high school text books. He was appalled at how inaccurate the texts were, especially the science and math texts. He ultimately threw his hands up in frustration because the DoE didn't listen. So he walked away.

  • @lisasweeney8158
    @lisasweeney8158 Месяц назад +11

    It was nice to see Nigel Hawthorne. Now there was a good actor. Thankyou.

  • @s1nd3r3llee
    @s1nd3r3llee Месяц назад +9

    Arsenic was in so much of daily life back then.

  • @jCREATESj
    @jCREATESj Месяц назад +11

    Arsenic was an ingredient in women's cosmetics back in the day. Perhaps it was also in the powder used in wigs?

    • @marietteestabrook4098
      @marietteestabrook4098 Месяц назад +5

      Yes.,absolutely. It killed the bugs since they didn’t wash the wigs.

    • @patrickporter1864
      @patrickporter1864 Месяц назад +2

      Wallpaper.

    • @jCREATESj
      @jCREATESj Месяц назад

      @@patrickporter1864 swimming in poisons...and today toxins and allergens

  • @cleot151
    @cleot151 29 дней назад +3

    I agree: Don't mess with tea!

  • @christinemcconnell2618
    @christinemcconnell2618 Месяц назад +29

    I always thought he had porphyria, a condition where the body is unable to metabolise the breakdown products of haem.

    • @emilywall2597
      @emilywall2597 Месяц назад +4

      That’s what I had read.

    • @allinaday9882
      @allinaday9882 Месяц назад +2

      What is haem?

    • @jeffreylehman1159
      @jeffreylehman1159 Месяц назад +2

      Actually, it is a build up of a precursor of hemoglobin.

    • @user-vm5ud4xw6n
      @user-vm5ud4xw6n Месяц назад

      @@allinaday9882it’s the English way of spelling (probably shortening) hemoglobin. But who knows. I’ve seen it a few times but I’m not so sure about the porphyria diagnosis!

    • @nevisstkitts8264
      @nevisstkitts8264 Месяц назад

      Critical studies by scientists over the last five decades have discredited the claim for porphyria. Perhaps the most objective investigations examined the genetic traces in George III's descendants finding a complete lack of porphyria markers.

  • @Nettsinthewoods
    @Nettsinthewoods Месяц назад +6

    Great vid. This put todays royal issues into perspective. Arsenic was prevalent in wall paper, especially green paper in the 18c. A lot of people died as a result of its effects.

  • @yvettevitacaponigro
    @yvettevitacaponigro Месяц назад +7

    Thank you for the post! Informative! ✌🏼😊

  • @dakotaridgek9
    @dakotaridgek9 Месяц назад +13

    I grew up in King George, Virginia.

    • @jacquiaba9132
      @jacquiaba9132 Месяц назад +1

      Interesting that the IS names places after English royalty!!!

    • @thedreadtyger
      @thedreadtyger Месяц назад

      ​@@jacquiaba9132 They were our kings and queens until the revolution. A reading of our Declaration of Independence shows the authors' demand for their rights as Englishmen.

  • @janethayes5941
    @janethayes5941 Месяц назад +7

    This is such a a great channel for learning.😊

  • @jeeperspeepers8323
    @jeeperspeepers8323 Месяц назад +6

    I just ate dinner, then watched this, and then I wept.

  • @everTriumph
    @everTriumph Месяц назад +11

    Arsenic was famously present in Napoleons hair as well. It was attributed to the copious amounts used in wallpapers and coverings. Mourning clothes were often dosed with the chemical, leading to the early demise of widows. It was quite possibly present in other things as well. As for America, they were just a bunch of hooligans.

  • @Vlachosj
    @Vlachosj 3 дня назад

    Thank you and well done. Mr. Perry (my eighth grade history teacher) would have loved this presentation.

  • @limeycheesehead97
    @limeycheesehead97 Месяц назад +5

    Another brilliant video!

  • @anitapeludat256
    @anitapeludat256 Месяц назад +2

    My Grandfather, born in Canada, in the late 1800's, was named after King George . He emigrated to the USA to become an American citizen by volunteering in WWI. King George was quite a resilient man to survive a tough life. And 15 children. Wow, a number of queens were quite prolific and brave .

  • @strange_and_magnificent
    @strange_and_magnificent Месяц назад +16

    Poor guy ☹️

  • @nomdeplume5446
    @nomdeplume5446 Месяц назад +8

    It cracks me up that THE defining moment in American history is barely a footnote in British history.

    • @patrickporter1864
      @patrickporter1864 17 дней назад +1

      That's life.

    • @kelliepatrick519
      @kelliepatrick519 10 дней назад +1

      Yah, it's kind of like these videos about the British monarchies. We're all like, "who?? Oh, just another king in England".

  • @Sammy312
    @Sammy312 Месяц назад +5

    Thank you..Very good.

  • @Kathy-ut9kf
    @Kathy-ut9kf Месяц назад +5

    Congratulations, I wish you much continued success😊❤🎉

  • @patricklonge8912
    @patricklonge8912 16 дней назад +2

    Lead poisoning is also a possible cause of his madness. One of his enameled cups (his favorite) was made of lead. The enamel was worn away at the inside bottom of the cup.

  • @briano6115
    @briano6115 Месяц назад +36

    There are really 2 reasons why he was crazy, (1) he was British; (2) he was British. I think that covers it. {oh, btw, I am british :)

    • @susanlansdell863
      @susanlansdell863 Месяц назад +5

      Sound reasoning.xx👍

    • @hgc5293
      @hgc5293 Месяц назад +3

      😂

    • @mannywilliams6409
      @mannywilliams6409 Месяц назад +7

      Actually, he was more German than English. When his grandfather became king he spoke almost no English at all.

    • @appaloosa42
      @appaloosa42 Месяц назад +3

      Made the Saxons proud.

    • @Hrossey
      @Hrossey 25 дней назад

      @@mannywilliams6409America can’t speak English to this day. Ask one if they can spell “labour” and then ask them what a woman is.
      They know little.

  • @12thDecember
    @12thDecember Месяц назад +13

    I'll add to the comments that he had porphyria, sometimes called (unfortunately) the vampire disease.

  • @benketengu
    @benketengu Месяц назад +1

    Thank you very much for your video I learned some thank you

  • @nneichan9353
    @nneichan9353 Месяц назад +3

    Treatments given for his illnesses might have resulted in the arsenic levels noted in his hair. either deliberate doses or as contaminants in medicines. impossible to tell if arsenic was the cause of his illnesses, or resulted from treatments for this same illnesses.

  • @carlousmagus5387
    @carlousmagus5387 27 дней назад +1

    What they did to His Majesty was nothing less than torture.

  • @fifi199991
    @fifi199991 Месяц назад

    Great info!!!!!

  • @violetangelflame1
    @violetangelflame1 Месяц назад +4

    Hum? I never knew any of this! Very interesting and informative!

  • @Armphid
    @Armphid Месяц назад +3

    "With what little power and resources he had left..." as if he wasn't the sovereign rules of the largest, more powerful, and wealthiest empire the world has ever seen. Let's not pretend that he was a plucky underdog.
    The treachery and opposition of his son wasn't something that I knew about, though. Very interesting.

  • @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD
    @Ploxtifs_OldAndDeadAccountXD 2 дня назад

    “King George? More like King ENgorged!”
    *ANNOYING LAUGHTER*

  • @amitisshahbanu5642
    @amitisshahbanu5642 Месяц назад +6

    Porphyria

  • @LeeEisPrettyStrange
    @LeeEisPrettyStrange Месяц назад +21

    They found arsenic in his hair.

    • @gmanette188
      @gmanette188 Месяц назад +5

      Thanks

    • @marietteestabrook4098
      @marietteestabrook4098 Месяц назад +3

      Yes.,The wigs were full,of arsenic to kill the bugs since the wigs were never washed!

    • @patrickvolk7031
      @patrickvolk7031 Месяц назад

      Lots of people that day had arsenic exposure.

    • @wintersking4290
      @wintersking4290 Месяц назад

      Arsenic was used as a treatment for syphilis which it is known he had and syphilis causes madness. None of this is surprising at all.

  • @jadakowers590
    @jadakowers590 Месяц назад +7

    Interesting video! Could all three be responsible for King George’s mental dysfunction?

  • @erikreber3695
    @erikreber3695 Месяц назад +2

    10 seconds in... was it found in green wallpaper??? 😂

  • @chipcook5346
    @chipcook5346 Месяц назад +2

    "And then several other spares"! And a decent man? Did not know.
    When you said tea, I thought "lead." Is this it? No. Arsenic.
    Arsenic. Hats, then? Or is that mercury?
    A number of plants accumulate arsenic. Was he a foxglove fan?

  • @user-cp8tw7qi4j
    @user-cp8tw7qi4j Месяц назад +12

    Nothing is worse than to loose a child, but to be so wealthy and powerful must make the pain more unbearable. Sorrow/ grief are soul wrenching. So King George III was probably poisoned. But in his reign he did some amazing feats. As Shakespeare said “ the good is often interred with their bones”

  • @brendaduncan4347
    @brendaduncan4347 20 дней назад +1

    What a sad story.

  • @juliafritz9248
    @juliafritz9248 9 дней назад

    Yes, arsenic was commonly used in those days. BUT! As a woman who lived with a bi-polar man for 48 years, I watched my husband go through the same sort of episodes. Very subtle at first but rapidly increasing in his later years. He declined into severe depression and died in his early 70s. Classic bipolar.
    I can empathize with Queen Charlotte and his family. Even in this day of medic wonders, sometimes nothing works, and no matter how much you try and love a person, there is just no changing the outcomes. Medication can help some bipolar persons. Seek help for yourself or your loved ones. Take care of yourself. Your survival is important for them and you. History hits home.

  • @rogerscottcathey
    @rogerscottcathey Месяц назад +7

    Poor fellow. He was actually a decent man. He doubtlessly had been or became poisoned. Arsenic began to be used as a wallpaper colorant in 1775 "when Swedish German chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1742-1786) first used arsenic to produce the vivid color that came to be known as Scheele’s Green."
    See RSID museum publication issue 15
    Who knows if it was experimented with by the King through his interest in science or what . . .

  • @cl5080
    @cl5080 23 дня назад +2

    I heard that a dye used in popular clothing at that time, turned cloth green. It had, I think, cobalt and arsenic. Did he wear a lot of green?

  • @peterunderdown4374
    @peterunderdown4374 Месяц назад +7

    Just a thought,as nice was used in all makeup,wigs and powders at the time ,bathing was frowned upon.

  • @MortarIvy
    @MortarIvy Месяц назад +1

    And here I thought he was called the “Mad King” because I wouldn’t answer his texts, but left on read.

  • @brianfuller757
    @brianfuller757 29 дней назад

    I taught history and this video was very informative.

  • @b1646717
    @b1646717 Месяц назад +3

    500 years of cousin lovin'?

  • @Sarafimm2
    @Sarafimm2 Месяц назад +1

    The fact King George III was faithful to his wife, or enough to get her pregnant repeatedly, says a lot about their relationship. If he hadn't had such a good relationship with her or had far fewer possible heirs, he may have been able to pass the law that allows the monarch to control marriages within the royal family. It would have been challenged long ago and possibly abolished by Queen Elisabeth II's time, but can you imagine how the British monarchy might have been changed because of it.

  • @helenpk237
    @helenpk237 Месяц назад +6

    Oh! My goodness me ! To hear this vidence of poor king gear get the third , how dreadful & evil , to find out that good king was murdered slowly ! Oh ! Dear Father God please let his Dear Soul be at Peace with you in Heaven , I’m sorry I misspelt evidence but have just corrected my mistake xx thank you so much for this video, & for the EVIDENCE that has been found xx ❤❤❤❤ love Helen xxxx

    • @dreadcthulhu5
      @dreadcthulhu5 Месяц назад +4

      Arsenic was used in the white face powder they all wore, their clothes, various medicines and other daily household items they used. It's not necessarily murder, but living everyday life.

    • @helenpk237
      @helenpk237 Месяц назад +3

      I’m sorry I spelt George like gear!! I still feel very sad. For king George cos, he was a good King in many ways but, unfortunately the Doctors & surgeons didn’t know enough about Arsenic poisoning!! X helen x

  • @joehughes5177
    @joehughes5177 16 дней назад +2

    They all wore hats, and those hatbands were treated with mercury. Mad hatters disease.

  • @sheilacabral7137
    @sheilacabral7137 Месяц назад +1

    Women also used cosmetics that contained things like arsenic,lead and silver nitrate. Any of these things could have made him sick. They also had wallpaper that contained things they used as dyes such as lead.

  • @almightyyt2101
    @almightyyt2101 22 дня назад +1

    The name of your channel sounds like it should be added to the Websters Dictionary - what happens when the addition of a single strong fact topples your house of wild cards & crumbles your worldview. Kind of how I feel when I hear a certifiably nuggy anecdote about someone we used to respect who played a role in a shenenigan which came to light several years later. I was completely factinated by the new information which came to light about Georgie Porgie King of the Organ Grinders.

  • @andrewcarr3650
    @andrewcarr3650 Месяц назад +2

    George III gained the Indian sub-continent, far more valuable than North America, and so launched the empire.

  • @mrhassell
    @mrhassell 29 дней назад +2

    Porphyria, a genetic blood disorder and Arsenic Poisoning, resulting in five major bouts of mental derangement, during which he was restrained in a straitjacket and chained to a chair. Not complicated.

  • @A-Grammie-On-the-ROCK
    @A-Grammie-On-the-ROCK Месяц назад +8

    Why did all those people seem to look alike with huge blue eyes and similar facial features ?

    • @randomsurname9090
      @randomsurname9090 Месяц назад +6

      Usually because of the time period's beauty standards. While some people surely did look quite like their portraits, the artist behind it always considered the "trends" of that time and worked accordingly, in favor of the (often aristocratic) subject. That's why they put emphasis on eyes, posture, certain other facial features like a soft chin or rosy cheeks and especially for females: round, small shoulders.
      It was a combination of expectations, personal style and highlighting the things they had in common with their ancestors.

    • @user-qc9ov9pc5j
      @user-qc9ov9pc5j Месяц назад

      Incest

    • @bonniemoerdyk9809
      @bonniemoerdyk9809 Месяц назад +2

      @@randomsurname9090 ~ I'm wondering if maybe it was also a touch of Thyroid disease? I've noticed most of the Stewart Kings and Princes have this feature. I've paid particular attention due to being related to them. I only recently found out about Thyroid Eyes, how the bulging is a feature of it. My dad had the same look to his eyes as he got close to 80, and if you changed his clothing and hair style, he would have fit in w/all the other Stewart King Portraits! 😉👑

    • @neilbuckley1613
      @neilbuckley1613 Месяц назад +1

      Definitely hereditary in the Hanover family and passed down through Victoria. Look at a photo of Tsar Nicholas and King George V standing together. They were first cousins and look very similar, but te gie away is George's big blue eyes.

    • @stardresser1
      @stardresser1 21 день назад +1

      Because they were alllllll related. 😮

  • @GotrekGurnisson
    @GotrekGurnisson Месяц назад

    I love your thumbnail photo

  • @fixedG
    @fixedG Месяц назад +1

    Dark horse theory: poisoned by a time traveler.

  • @_Peter_Silie_
    @_Peter_Silie_ Месяц назад +1

    George III suffered from porphyrism, his state of health wasn't unclear from the beginning. The doctors made very much ado about him in order not to lose their jobs. They knew all about the disease.

  • @user-tq9pv1zw6x
    @user-tq9pv1zw6x Месяц назад +2

    He was probably bi-polar.

  • @scoopydaniels8908
    @scoopydaniels8908 Месяц назад +1

    I never really considered the fact that the American Revolution is just a tiny piece of the British story from 1700 to 1850.. as a British person, how many of the battles can you name from the American Revolution?

  • @donnadees1971
    @donnadees1971 15 дней назад +1

    What we didn’t get in hi school. Thank you

  • @tristanthomas5006
    @tristanthomas5006 Месяц назад +1

    I'd say the arsenic was exposed to him on and off. And long term, it caused Alzheimer's disease, which is why he never recovered in later life.

  • @JMM33RanMA
    @JMM33RanMA Месяц назад +1

    While this video goes further into the root causes, an important cause of disaffection between the colonies and the crown is overlooked. One of the last acts of the Stuart regime was to attempt to gain complete control over the colonies by abolishing their charters and their local governments in an attempted consolidation. On the eve of the "restoration" by William of Orange, the people of Boston arrested Governor General Andros and the people of New York arrested his Lt. Governor. Hamfisted actions by stubborn king and politicians continuously inflamed the already brewing discontent. It is correct that American portrayals of George III as a tyrant are somewhat exaggerated, but the statements and actions of the king and parliament lent them credence. My ancestors in Massachusetts were moved to revolt by the attempt to abolish their Parliament and local government by town meeting. The attack on Lexington and Concord was the spark that set of the powder keg.

  • @michaelshore2300
    @michaelshore2300 Месяц назад

    Wall paper Arsnic was used to produce the bright red in Georgian wall paper

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 23 дня назад

    Greetings from the BIG SKY. You never know if what you've found is any good until you loose it.

  • @clairisalong126
    @clairisalong126 Месяц назад +1

    What was arsenic used for at the time? Did they know it was toxic, like they didn’t know mercury was toxic for a long time and were using it every day.

    • @morewi
      @morewi Месяц назад

      It was used for a lot of things back then and arsenic has been used for thousands of years

  • @willhovell9019
    @willhovell9019 Месяц назад +2

    The Party of King's friends was a big mistake. If the Whiggs had been in power, perhaps the North American uprising wouldn't have proved necessary. Various monarchs have exceeded their authority, from Charles 1st James 2nd, George 3rd and indeed Queen Victoria, ignoring parliament and public sentiment. 'Farmer' George 3rd would have been more content to be a country farmer.

  • @amariev226
    @amariev226 Месяц назад +3

    Probably poisoned. I remember in the movie they said he was peeing "blue."

  • @kathyr2792
    @kathyr2792 Месяц назад +3

    It would be interesting if they could test hair from his father and grandfather. It seems possible to me that his mother was up to no good.

  • @AjninHaru
    @AjninHaru 15 дней назад

    Most of the U.S. founders saw the Boston Tea Party as a “despicable act” and offered to compensate for the loss.

  • @Rich4098
    @Rich4098 Месяц назад

    I once saw a show that forwarded the same theory about Napoleon's death. I think that locks of hair at the time were preserved in arsenic, and that's why they find arsenic in the hair.

  • @bryancrick640
    @bryancrick640 Месяц назад

    We urgently need to discover the cause of KCIII's madness

  • @donnasherwood283
    @donnasherwood283 Месяц назад +11

    i think he had porphyria as does prince ernst of hanoer i believe which is some somatic genetic disorder

  • @michaelturner2806
    @michaelturner2806 Месяц назад

    Haven't watched the video yet, but I'm here half because the video topic sounds interesting, but the other half wondering if the thumbnail is from Blackadder.