Plantagenet: The Bloodiest Family Of Medieval England | Bloodiest Dynasty | All Out History

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2022
  • The Plantagenets have gone down in history as England's greatest royal dynasty. But how did this family hold on to power for so long in medieval Europe's often brutal and dangerous world? Follow Dan Jones as he gives a full and comprehensive overview of one of history's most fascinating families.
    If you're a history fan who loves binge-watching, this is the channel for you! From the pyramids of Ancient Egypt to the Trenches of WW1, we'll be publishing the best history documentary series for you to sink your teeth into.
    All Out History is part of the History Hit Network. It's like Netflix for History: the world's finest documentary streaming service -- follow the link for a free trial!
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @ACS402010
    @ACS402010 6 месяцев назад +186

    One thing I want more than anything, is a full-scale TV series based on the Plantagenets, from start to finish. I cannot even begin to imagine how awesome that would be.

    • @anastasiab9506
      @anastasiab9506 5 месяцев назад

      I don't, because half of the actors will be black or asian, and half of plantagenets would be trangender or gay.

    • @nativeamericanfeather9948
      @nativeamericanfeather9948 5 месяцев назад +2

      Yess

    • @scotthuska3403
      @scotthuska3403 5 месяцев назад +8

      They did. Game of Thrones.

    • @ACS402010
      @ACS402010 5 месяцев назад +11

      @@scotthuska3403 Oh, please. I'm not talking about fantasy fiction. I'm talking about actual history. GoT, only wishes it were as interesting as the actual history of the Plantagenets.

    • @Amoth_oth_ras_shash
      @Amoth_oth_ras_shash 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@ACS402010 though cant be denied , medival warlord matters would been more spicy if dragons the size of and armoured like battleships been real ,and able to bond with people since well.. XD there be like one in a thousand monarchs ever even knew what true affection be so the sledge hammers on a battlefield dragons likely either be peasants random aces or various knights with more down to earth understanding military might only goess so far so it be even more colourfull times ;)

  • @kryw10
    @kryw10 Год назад +59

    I watch these and thing about my Plantagenet obsessed grandmother and wish she’d lived to see the internet and all the readily available history out there. She’s have loved this. ❤

  • @KalyanaDesignTutorials
    @KalyanaDesignTutorials Год назад +212

    Best Plantagenet documentary I've ever seen. Dan Jones is awesome as a comentator and the soundtrack is terrific.

    • @skwoods7986
      @skwoods7986 Год назад +4

      His book was a really good read, too.

    • @AugustusCaesar88
      @AugustusCaesar88 Год назад +6

      It’s a great documentary but I prefer Robert Bartletts series called “The Plantagenets.” If you enjoyed this series I would highly, highly recommended checking it out. A bit more factual and old fashioned in its approach, it doesn’t have the reenactment stuff in it.

    • @MadameWesker
      @MadameWesker Год назад +8

      I could listen to Dan Jones tell me stories all day

    • @overcomerbtbojesus
      @overcomerbtbojesus 9 месяцев назад

      @@skwoods7986 💯💯 i’m reading it now

    • @joanfourie1753
      @joanfourie1753 4 месяца назад

      I agree he makes it all so real

  • @scotts9821
    @scotts9821 6 месяцев назад +45

    Thank you for putting this entire series into ONE VIDEO! The different parts are all over youtube (with different titles) but finally finding them in one place was so helpful.

    • @babyleonardaquetua2899
      @babyleonardaquetua2899 6 месяцев назад

      Im just wondering, if this is really a tv series or is the featured acts are just clips coming from a foreign movie?

    • @ClaiireeLiizz
      @ClaiireeLiizz 6 месяцев назад +2

      It was a 4 episode TV series that was released in 2014

    • @eddiemonster2928
      @eddiemonster2928 5 месяцев назад

      4x around 1 hour episodes. this is heavily cut, should take time to find full episodes@@ClaiireeLiizz

  • @kimberlypatton205
    @kimberlypatton205 Год назад +168

    The thing I love so much about history- you just couldn’t make these scenarios up if you tried!

    • @Gianni89128
      @Gianni89128 11 месяцев назад +4

      European history is amazing

    • @den264
      @den264 11 месяцев назад +7

      It was all about avarice, power and sexual conquests. Not much has changed judging by the behavior of our present Royal's ! Although only Andrew appears to be the pervert.

    • @delisinanaj8462
      @delisinanaj8462 10 месяцев назад

      Wekl said

    • @eraghose7310
      @eraghose7310 10 месяцев назад

      @@den264
      0

    • @denny414
      @denny414 9 месяцев назад +5

      Lmao these plantagsnets are the embodiment of if you don't learn your history you're doomed to repeat it 😂 I'm like omg wtf is this the new season of game of thrones? This shit is more brutal than game of thrones

  • @marionholtzmann6872
    @marionholtzmann6872 8 месяцев назад +23

    Wow, no wonder the French and English couldn't stand each other. A rivalry still alive to this day. What a brutal time it was. Great docu-drama. Thank you!

  • @jaymees6637
    @jaymees6637 11 месяцев назад +172

    I would love to see Dan Jones do a documentary on Eleanor of Aquitaine. She was an amazing woman and lived a fascinating life.

    • @ranonampangom2185
      @ranonampangom2185 11 месяцев назад +5

      She betrayed her husband, scheming with her sons to overthrow him. Amazing woman, yeah, but not exactly a supportive wife.

    • @buttercxpdraws8101
      @buttercxpdraws8101 11 месяцев назад +46

      @@ranonampangom2185yeh, her husband wasn’t exactly a model partner and father tho was he

    • @brettburke9295
      @brettburke9295 11 месяцев назад +8

      How about Empress Matilda?

    • @shavonnegramkow2699
      @shavonnegramkow2699 11 месяцев назад +16

      @@ranonampangom2185 Her husband wasn't the epitome of an amazing husband and father breaking his promises constantly and toying with his children's future and playing favorites

    • @smithmcsmith9218
      @smithmcsmith9218 10 месяцев назад +14

      @@ranonampangom2185 how many documentaries are made of men who were bad husbands? go on, I'll wait while you count them all.

  • @WickedScott
    @WickedScott Год назад +23

    Who needs George RR Martin when you have this? Edward yeeting away with the fastest horse was pretty epic. Can you imagine the guards reaction? Derp 🤣

    • @lisadavis9535
      @lisadavis9535 5 месяцев назад +8

      Martin based his story on the Plantagenets and the Lancasters (War of the Roses)

    • @glittertea2025
      @glittertea2025 2 месяца назад +3

      George took inspiration from the books ‘the accursed kings’ which is a 7 book series about all of this, originally written in French but translated to English. I love the series

  • @animerlon
    @animerlon Год назад +103

    It's no surprise that Henry, Richard & John weren't good kings. Whatever on the job training & responsibilities they were given was just undermined by Dad's obsessive control. Without having the experience of being responsible for something, be the boss & see it through to a success or failure, they never got a chance to learn much. Instead of teaching them how to be a King, he pretty much set them up to fail. I wonder if Henry ll was afraid of them actually being successful & out-shinning him.

    • @lippesamsung8878
      @lippesamsung8878 Год назад +8

      He was actually afraid they were not patient enough and attempted to overthrow or assasinate him instead of waiting for their time. Exactly as you would expect from a paranoid king.

    • @animerlon
      @animerlon Год назад +5

      @@lippesamsung8878 True, kinda goes with the territory. Staying King is a tough gig. 😆

    • @overcomerbtbojesus
      @overcomerbtbojesus Год назад +9

      @@animerlon 🤣 shakespeare said it best “ uneasy lies the head that wears a crown” most of the history of the monarchy bears that out

    • @animerlon
      @animerlon Год назад +1

      @@overcomerbtbojesus 😆 William usually had the right of it.

    • @newgabe09
      @newgabe09 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@lippesamsung8878 well, not entirely paranoid, seeing they did try to overthrow him :)

  • @czgator9000
    @czgator9000 Год назад +193

    Great documentary, top notch production values and commentary. While I have always loved Eleanor of Aquitaine and wish they would do a documentary featuring her, this overview of the Plantagenet dynasty is fascinating.

    • @kittykatz4001
      @kittykatz4001 Год назад +16

      Alison Weir (a specialist in English history) wrote a biography of Eleanor or Aquitaine. I found a copy in my public library.

    • @jillfarley520
      @jillfarley520 Год назад +4

      @@kittykatz4001 I will try and get a copy. Thank you for sharing this info. I admire Eleanor.

    • @kittykatz4001
      @kittykatz4001 Год назад +6

      @@jillfarley520 It was a good read, but I read it years ago. I hope you enjoy it!
      If you decide to buy a copy, the book is old enough to find a used copy online to buy. Save some money 💰!

    • @den264
      @den264 11 месяцев назад +4

      Or the wonderful Chinese Empress Wu Zetian. Who could give queen Victoria a run for her money.

  • @dominiquelizarzaburu
    @dominiquelizarzaburu Год назад +136

    I love Dan Jones' documentaries so much! Since Great British Castles, I've been following his work. So intreresting to listen, and the production, so terrific to see. He is such a marvelous narrator.

    • @araneljones
      @araneljones Год назад +9

      His audiobooks are great, too. He narrates them, of course. I listen to them to relax.

    • @2serveand2protect
      @2serveand2protect Год назад +3

      They are very well done. Very interesting and (kinda!) different point of view from all the documentaries I've seen on the subject...even though I preferred those with prof. Bartlett. 🙂

    • @overcomerbtbojesus
      @overcomerbtbojesus 9 месяцев назад +5

      You have to read his books! I’m currently reading the plantaganets and its so addictive he writes his books for a broad audience- everyone from a serious history buff to those with a casual interest would love them

    • @brittaniwilliford1256
      @brittaniwilliford1256 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@overcomerbtbojesus I was going to say the same thing! His books on the Plantagenets and the Wars of the Roses are great. I like how he gives details on the personalities of the people involved, it helps you understand the motives and actions that major players made back then. Great reads, both of them. I would love if he went more into the reigns of Henry IV and V, because that's like a missing piece between the two books. He talks about them a bit but I think there's enough for a book there and I would love to read his take on it.

  • @johnwong8146
    @johnwong8146 Год назад +20

    Dan Jones makes history so entertaining, captivating. I'm hooked on his books.

  • @wendygreidanus8391
    @wendygreidanus8391 Год назад +70

    What a riveting documentary! I was staggered by the brutality, the cruelty, and the violence that seemed to be so much a part of everyday life. Thanks for this window into a history that I knew little about. It was fascinating.

    • @dimitrishow_D
      @dimitrishow_D 3 месяца назад

      Yeah but now we have safespaces

  • @tired1923
    @tired1923 11 месяцев назад +61

    my takeaway is that when English kings have a bff it never ends well

    • @brianm4178
      @brianm4178 7 месяцев назад +3

      😂😂 thays oretty accurate

    • @user-bp9s
      @user-bp9s 5 месяцев назад +1

      watch & wait what bradford chooses,goodnite

    • @overcomerbtbojesus
      @overcomerbtbojesus 17 дней назад

      🤣😂🤣

    • @pepperread1184
      @pepperread1184 13 дней назад

      Best comment!🎉

    • @kerriannefromene905
      @kerriannefromene905 8 дней назад +1

      Not so in the case of Henry VIII 's best friend Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. He even got away with a betrayal, after marrying Henry's sister without permission. The Duke died of old age 2 years before Henry.
      I'd say that's a win lol 🤪

  • @VampwolfWarrior
    @VampwolfWarrior Год назад +108

    I love this channel. The documentaries are always top tier. I have learned so much and can't wait to learn more.

    • @cplmpcocptcl6306
      @cplmpcocptcl6306 Год назад +1

      You can find this exact content on at least 5 other channels, years ago.😉

    • @marcusfridh8489
      @marcusfridh8489 Год назад +4

      Like most stockumentaries here on youtube. From timeline and absolute history to Chronicle, Odyssey and thus all out history, however what all out history does is to make a long cut instead of individual episodes, wich i do appreciate when in need for something for my insomnia.

    • @reynardus1359
      @reynardus1359 Год назад +3

      Pick up some reputable books instead

    • @anypercentdeathless
      @anypercentdeathless Год назад +3

      Low info-density.
      About a page of ideas spread across three hours of bad costumes.
      Read a book.

  • @jimmyguitar2933
    @jimmyguitar2933 5 месяцев назад +12

    I can't believe you didn't include the most famous quote of all: "Can no one rid me of this meddlesome priest?"
    I mean WOW.😮

    • @sweetmusic3821
      @sweetmusic3821 2 месяца назад +3

      It must not have been said that way. The original French is at 13:25 ... and, presumably, the words here are what was actually recorded in historical records.

  • @Challenger-pi2vm
    @Challenger-pi2vm Год назад +21

    I love documentaries that not only explain the history but have you rooting for particular past figures as well!

  • @Igorooooleynikov
    @Igorooooleynikov Год назад +18

    Richard II story is similar to Ivan IV, at least in some details. Both had childhood trauma of peasants revolting, both had a notion of them having some holy status and invincibility guaranteed by god, both even started repressions on elite and got personal army. Horrible tortures included. I may be wrong, but it is still fun to find historical coincidences.

  • @Poecilia1963
    @Poecilia1963 Год назад +17

    I listen to a *lot* of this stuff, and there's one thing that never seems to get covered - when a king "regains his French lands" (always temporarily), what actually changes on the ground for the French people? Are there English government figures who go over and run things, are they collecting taxes to send back to England, are they moving the French out of manor houses (or whatever they might be called there) and moving in?

    • @beachboy13600
      @beachboy13600 Год назад +5

      Dont think about the movement of people just the movement of money. All the revenue gets kicked up to the land owners

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne 10 месяцев назад +4

      The "English" bureaucracy at the time were French, just vassals of the Duke of Normandy, the Count of Anjou & the Duke(duchess) of Aquitaine, i.e. the King of England, & somewhat wayward vassals of the King of France. The kings of England & their nobility didn't even speak English until near the end of the Wars of the Roses & really not until the accession of the bastard Tudor line, the first British kings who were actually Britons (Welsh).

  • @anansimaluma6410
    @anansimaluma6410 Год назад +12

    "my boyfriend's back and you're gonna be in trouble"
    Edward, probably

  • @aznz6961
    @aznz6961 8 месяцев назад +3

    i love it when he is telling the story, he is also walking to places where it all happened.

  • @MarkMastrocinque
    @MarkMastrocinque Год назад +14

    The scene of Henry's death at 43:20 is a masterpiece of cinematography. Bravo!

    • @kasie680
      @kasie680 11 месяцев назад

      How is it a masterpiece??? it’s someone laying down 😂😂😂😂

  • @rhythmandblues_alibi
    @rhythmandblues_alibi Год назад +18

    I wish the title cards included a voiceover. I listen to these like a podcast and I miss out on some of the details because of it!

    • @henriettalowe4689
      @henriettalowe4689 6 месяцев назад

      It’s close captioned so you can read what is being said.

    • @TheBlinky81
      @TheBlinky81 4 месяца назад

      @@henriettalowe4689they listen to it like a podcast… how would Closed Captioning help?

    • @VictorH-27
      @VictorH-27 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@henriettalowe4689 that's exactly the issue for people who prefer to listen in while attending to tasks/chores. We prefer listening than reading while busy 😂

  • @saints3824
    @saints3824 Год назад +28

    These videos never fail to bring people claiming to be descendants of royals. Pretty annoying tbh

    • @scottydu81
      @scottydu81 Год назад +3

      It’s like how Italian people all know someone in the Mafia

    • @notyourproblem474
      @notyourproblem474 Год назад +15

      The funny things is that the majority of people in Europe or Europeans descendants do have at least one noble ancestor. It's not something that special. Like how in Asia so many are descendants of Genghis Khan

    • @juliazierdt3654
      @juliazierdt3654 Год назад +5

      The royals had wealth , which equals food, which leads to healthy adults who can procreate. It's really amazing, but England is an island full of desendants of people who survived.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne Год назад

      Since King John has over 100 million descendants in the USA alone, What do you expect?

    • @pineapplesauce7499
      @pineapplesauce7499 Год назад +2

      ​@@notyourproblem474i wonder if a lot of Europeans are descendants from "royal" concubines who had illegitimate heirs? 😂

  • @historicfootprints
    @historicfootprints Год назад +4

    Love this!! thanks for sharing I always love learning something new about this topic :)

  • @themenopausetalks
    @themenopausetalks 10 месяцев назад +7

    DanJones is the best historian teller

  • @catlover4319
    @catlover4319 10 месяцев назад +44

    Would like to repeat what others have said that eleanor of Aquitaine desperately needs her own video because she sounds like an absolute legend and icon

    • @lowellfast490
      @lowellfast490 8 месяцев назад +1

      Why is Elenor of Aquitne getting into this complex story?

    • @michaelj.beglinjr.2804
      @michaelj.beglinjr.2804 6 месяцев назад

      @@lowellfast490 --- That is an excellent question, but she is all over these comments.

    • @ebriggs3498
      @ebriggs3498 29 дней назад

      Modern Hollyweird would ruin it!

  • @rlrogers8694
    @rlrogers8694 Год назад +9

    Just sharing, Edward the first strengthened the crown and Parliament against the old feudal nobility. He subdued Wales, destroying its autonomy; and he sought (unsuccessfully) the conquest of Scotland. His reign is particularly noted for administrative efficiency and legal reform.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne 10 месяцев назад

      Yep, but many of his vassals didn't like him much, 'cause he taxed them to no end to carry on his foreign wars. Henry III, Edward I's Dad, may have been rather ineffective, but more beloved. He actually made the prerogatives & freedoms of the Magna Carta effective. Not nearly as nasty as his father, King John, who murdered his own nephew in order to seize the throne.

  • @jopenkin7672
    @jopenkin7672 Год назад +18

    Thank you so much for such a brilliant documentary series. It’s going to take me months to go through this and absorb all the information.

  • @geoffreyrose5255
    @geoffreyrose5255 7 месяцев назад +3

    On my Dad's side Edward III is my 17th great grandfather. On Mom's side he is my 18th, 19th and 20th great gramps. Goes all the way back to Geoffrey Plantagenet.

  • @colewellnitz1470
    @colewellnitz1470 Год назад +49

    It's a travesty! How in the world can you talk about Henry 2, John, Henry 3, Eleanor, and Richard without also talking about the man who made it all possible for them: William Marshall.
    Without his loyalty and military prowess, there's no way this dynasty would have ever gotten as far as they did.
    And a huge oversight is that Henry 3 barely held on to the thrown at all of it wasn't for William holding together the kingdom through his regency. Henry 3 had a lot going against him when he inherited the crown. Rebellious Barons and war against Prince Louis, and Marshall salvaged the kingdom against crazy odds.
    How Beckett and Monford gets honorary mentions, and Marshall is bigger influence than both combined and didn't even get mentioned.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne Год назад +8

      I understand, I'm descended from both Henry III & William Marshal (Guillaume le Mareschal), Earl of Pembroke & default King of Leinster. Marshal saved the Plantagenets' bacon more than once. Of course that's part of the reason Marshal's daughter (or granddaughter, I'm not sure) married Henry III's grandson (son of Edmund, Earl of Lancaster & Leicester). Like about 100 million Americans, you may be descended from the Plantagenets & Marshal, too. Unfortunately, Marshal left no descendants in the male line.

    • @TheDaleSwitzer
      @TheDaleSwitzer 11 месяцев назад

      That's what I was wondering through the whole video.

    • @newgabe09
      @newgabe09 11 месяцев назад

      @@1952jodianne Thanks for that comment; another character to follow up :)

    • @RoninDave
      @RoninDave 10 месяцев назад +1

      It also passes over the reigns of Richard, John, Edward I, and Edward III

    • @tarakeegan9479
      @tarakeegan9479 6 месяцев назад +1

      Absolutely! He was very loyal. He married Isabel de Clare, daughter of Richard “Strongbow” de Clare and Aoife McMurrough of Leinster.

  • @Andy_Babb
    @Andy_Babb Год назад +65

    Thanks for the great uploads! Anything from Roman/post-Roman Britain to the Vikings and through the Tudors just fascinates me. I wish my ancestors never left Britain lol Im so jealous of all the history and archaeology… you can live anywhere and dig in your yard and probably find something ancient. Im so envious lol

    • @virgiesargent8330
      @virgiesargent8330 Год назад

      Ii8g hi I I. $7 h. $ 8iip

    • @angelicpapillon
      @angelicpapillon Год назад +4

      You can always move back! It’d prolly be a genealogical goldmine.

    • @Andy_Babb
      @Andy_Babb Год назад +5

      @@angelicpapillon I would love to one day. I was actually able to trace my lineage back to around the year 1000! I’m a direct descendant of a Magna Carta surety, somebody nicknamed The Moneyer, who owned the mint in Normandy around the time of William the conquerors fathers reign, and another with the nickname Monoculus! I can only imagine what I’d be able to find if I were able to dive into the records!

    • @scottydu81
      @scottydu81 Год назад +12

      In America, 100 years is a long time. In Europe, 100 miles is a long distance.

    • @Andy_Babb
      @Andy_Babb Год назад +2

      @@scottydu81 haha well said. Amazing how humans have been here in the America’s for at least 13,000 years and looking like it may actually be way earlier or even an earlier form of human to make it… yet we have such little evidence, even if the things we DO know

  • @ep081598
    @ep081598 11 месяцев назад +11

    What is more devastating, are the people who didn't have a choice and were pawns in all this violence.

  • @andrewthompson6192
    @andrewthompson6192 9 месяцев назад +7

    Dr Dan Jones skipped over Edward I - Longshanks, who was a ruthless King who battled and conquered Wales, and builds Castles to surround Wales called the "Ring of Iron" , then tries to conquer Scotland, William Wallace (braveheart) Robert the Bruce.
    I wish Dan Jones had not skipped over Edward I - it would have been a good piece in the Plantagenets story

  • @janetjones4710
    @janetjones4710 10 месяцев назад +1

    This so well done..thanks for all your hard work...i learned so much.

  • @newyardleysinclair9960
    @newyardleysinclair9960 9 месяцев назад +2

    Ive watched this series multiple times now. Its so interesting. It helps me to see in order to learn. I like the renactments of how you should picture the era. It helps to understand how they lived

  • @madal59
    @madal59 Год назад +26

    Se then, as now, it's always a handful of psychopaths who ruins it for the rest of us.

  • @leftykeys6944
    @leftykeys6944 10 месяцев назад +6

    Who needs soap operas?! (haha) Except that history is a lot more interesting.

  • @AgustePerry
    @AgustePerry 11 месяцев назад +2

    Your documentary is absolutely brilliant, wonderful content!

  • @EpicHistoryoftime
    @EpicHistoryoftime 7 месяцев назад +1

    This video is a great starting point for those wanting to learn more about the historical context of these wars. It piques my interest to explore further.

  • @mathewfines8727
    @mathewfines8727 Год назад +4

    Very well done: dramatic and convincing!

  • @Jacqueline-go6lh
    @Jacqueline-go6lh 8 месяцев назад +3

    I don't know what it is but I super love the history of all royals ,it fascinates me,could you imagine living in that world? Amazing!

  • @nativeamericanfeather9948
    @nativeamericanfeather9948 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great documentary! Love the use of artifacts,facts,real visuals,& the reenactments.Brilliantly done! Thank you

  • @michelepurington3227
    @michelepurington3227 Месяц назад

    Dan, I can listen to you talk Plantagenet history all day, over and over. The history itself is so fascinating, rich with blood and betrayal better than any fiction.Your story telling is fantastic.

  • @elenawalczyk5927
    @elenawalczyk5927 8 месяцев назад +8

    It would be so great to see the computer reconstruction of those ruins of medieval castles that still exist in Great Britain

  • @heathfairbairn2460
    @heathfairbairn2460 5 месяцев назад +1

    wow one of, if not the best historic documentaries ive ever seen, Bravo !!!

  • @christyhollis7909
    @christyhollis7909 5 месяцев назад +2

    Your documentaries are purely fact and worth not just historical but helps to understand what you are explaining about royal family fueds and got britain as it stands with wars and blood lines very well explained. Thank you so much

  • @TheJennick13
    @TheJennick13 Год назад +4

    Oh, Dan Jones, how many different ways will these episodes be rehashed??? Even so, still love them- Even in podcast form!

  • @angietyndall7337
    @angietyndall7337 Год назад +6

    I remember watching A Lion in Winter with Catherine Hepburn in my history class in middleschool which is about Becket & Henry II.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne Год назад

      Correction, "A Lion in Winter" is about Henry II & his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine. "Becket" is about Henry II & Archbishop of Canterbury Thomas a Becket. You may be confused because the fine Irish actor, Peter O'Toole portrayed Henry II in both.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne Год назад

      Lion in Winter featured Katharine Hepburn as Eleanor. Becket featured Richard Burton as Archbishop Becket.

  • @coralhammond3100
    @coralhammond3100 4 месяца назад

    Loved every second of this excellent documentary. Great job, very well done.

  • @CherieFlemingHorrigan
    @CherieFlemingHorrigan Год назад +2

    Dan Jones! I love Dan's take on History.

  • @cassandraunheeded
    @cassandraunheeded 8 месяцев назад +6

    Eleanor contributed more than mere ‘prestige’. Aquitaine was a large and VERY rich duchy. She was strategic, diplomatic, and very, very smart; smart emotionally and logistically. Henry was so stupid emotionally it is legend.
    He lost everything when he ‘lost Eleanor.

    • @tarakeegan9479
      @tarakeegan9479 6 месяцев назад +1

      She had been raised by her father to govern and rule Aquitaine. She was well educated and very politically savvy.

    • @dazeyday5699
      @dazeyday5699 19 дней назад +1

      The women/wives/queens get no more respect in these documentaries than they did back then. Can't imagine what they suffered being handed off from violent man to violent man at crazy young ages to bear children who will both suffer from and perpetuate the violence. The strong women who surivived learned to function within that violent mileu but were often misunderstood and maligned in documentation both medieval and modern.

    • @cassandraunheeded
      @cassandraunheeded 19 дней назад

      @@dazeyday5699 All the more reason why Eleanor of Aquitaine and Maud of the 1000s are so spectacular.

  • @GaryYork-tk2ow
    @GaryYork-tk2ow Год назад +9

    The Plantagenets were the greatest dynasty to ever hold the British throne, and even though they had their faults, were better for Britain than the line that followed them. If only things had turned out differently at the Battle of Bosworth Field. 🇬🇧

    • @den264
      @den264 11 месяцев назад +3

      If you haven't read Dan's Jones book called "the Kings who made England " please have a read. It goes in to far more detail.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne 10 месяцев назад +1

      The Plantagenets never held the "British" throne, only the English & Irish (under protest).

    • @CandiceMMartinez
      @CandiceMMartinez 7 месяцев назад

      One of their faults seems to be bipolar disorder. Lol

  • @vimbainasheeileenpencil
    @vimbainasheeileenpencil 6 месяцев назад +1

    I love this series so much. I come back every few months to watch it again👌

  • @richardmaccotta4341
    @richardmaccotta4341 3 месяца назад

    Such quality documentaries, so happy to have found this channel, subscriber

  • @jfontenot2842
    @jfontenot2842 Год назад +4

    Informative. Can’t believe he demonstrates historic documents with his bare hands

    • @maryshanley329
      @maryshanley329 Год назад +3

      They are photo copies.

    • @michaelj.beglinjr.2804
      @michaelj.beglinjr.2804 6 месяцев назад +1

      They've found that using gloves while reading old manuscripts takes away so much feeling in the fingers that the odds of ripping them by accident are too high, so they've stopped wearing gloves while reading old stuff. these are probably just copies anyway, but still.

  • @boris8787
    @boris8787 Год назад +3

    Excellent - reminds me of the soldiers in the medieval town of Chillingbourne.

  • @joshuasacco7779
    @joshuasacco7779 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is great! I'm fascinated.

  • @joannamallory2823
    @joannamallory2823 5 месяцев назад

    Very interesting. Well done. I couldn’t wait for each new twist.

  • @lkreyche
    @lkreyche Год назад +23

    I'm watching so many of your offerings, and they are all great. Very informative. It does seem, however, that everyone was named Henry. Therefore, I rarely know who we are talking about. I do wish your royal families had named the occasional son Doug or Carl, perhaps even Warren from time to time. At least I don't have to sit for exams anymore. But I do confuse the Henrys.

    • @overcomerbtbojesus
      @overcomerbtbojesus Год назад +7

      I know what you mean too many henrys and edwards 😂

    • @maryshanley329
      @maryshanley329 Год назад

      @@overcomerbtbojesus And now we have Prince Harry. He has complained that his real name is Henry.
      I am not a fan of those who turn on their loved ones.
      Prince Harry lived in palaces, best food, never any worry about keeping a roof over his head.
      Millions of people in the world long for financial stability, including many in England.
      I actually feel sorry for him. Many a better man than he has been compromised by a controlling and narcissistic
      female.
      Love is indeed blind.

    • @kittykatz4001
      @kittykatz4001 Год назад +1

      I know what you mean. I read the historical fiction novel “Sunne in Splendor” by Sharon Kay Penman about the war of the roses and everyone was named either Richard or Edward’ 😮

    • @clarissa8477
      @clarissa8477 Год назад +1

      It can get confusing 😂

    • @TheDaleSwitzer
      @TheDaleSwitzer 11 месяцев назад

      "It's worse than the Wars of the Roses" said Lucy ---- CS Lewis in Prince Caspian

  • @cherylmailloux9647
    @cherylmailloux9647 Год назад +14

    If you have never seen the movie beckett, peter o' tool is the king and Richard Burton is Beckett then you don't know what you are missing and it's wonderfully done ❤❤😊

    • @den264
      @den264 11 месяцев назад +3

      It was O'Tool's first movie after Lawrence of Arabia. He insisted on having his hair died black in order to not become the blonde blue eyed stereotype male role. Boy did he knock them dead for the second time. And this phenomenal actor never received an Oscar. Consider the source as my old man used to say. The Oscars are for American "B" Actors.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne 10 месяцев назад +3

      "Lion in Winter", with O'Toole again portraying Henry II, is a far better movie. Katharine Hepburn portrays his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne 10 месяцев назад

      @@den264 Not sure why O'Toole would dye his hair dark, Henry II was a ginger.

    • @beastshawnee
      @beastshawnee 10 месяцев назад

      It’s a great movie. Just not for a 4 year old which is how old I was when Mom first had me sit thru it.

  • @pauldrake1858
    @pauldrake1858 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you this series was great, after reading Allison Wiers War of the Roses this puts the cause of that war in perspective. Dan Jones has done a great job. Cheers

  • @josephcollins6033
    @josephcollins6033 6 месяцев назад

    Stunning that they have all these videos from the time. Fantastic find. Thanks!

    • @lisadavis9535
      @lisadavis9535 5 месяцев назад

      ???? No videos back then.... but then again, you are joking, right?

    • @josephcollins6033
      @josephcollins6033 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@lisadavis9535 Bahahahahahaa! Of course, I am!!!

  • @shitsakrabeen4547
    @shitsakrabeen4547 Год назад +11

    Simply, the most entertaining period pieces I have seen.
    Begs the question, with boardroom tyrants replacing regency, one cannot help but wonder "where are They now?"

  • @eisamiller88
    @eisamiller88 Год назад +24

    Oof...these people are my ancestors....great documentary! I've never spent much time on the Plantagenet's before but recently found that I descend from them so it's sparked an interest.

    • @eisamiller88
      @eisamiller88 Год назад +8

      @CipiRipi00lol. Nah. My lineage stopped being royal when they lost the war of the roses. Most of the family lost their heads in the subsequent purge, but Margaret Pole's (nee Plantagenet) daughter Ursula managed to avoid execution and I descend from her.

    • @mattjack3983
      @mattjack3983 Год назад +5

      I'm down for the cause, Your Grace. Lets go get your throne!

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne 10 месяцев назад

      @CipiRipi00 There are over 100 million Americans descended from the Plantagenets. The Windsors, as they are now called, got to the throne through their Stuart ancestors, who, in turn, were descended from the bastard Lancastrian Tudor line (bastard descendants of John of Gaunt & his mistress, Katharine Swinford).

    • @CandiceMMartinez
      @CandiceMMartinez 7 месяцев назад +2

      Serious question:
      Does bipolar disorder run in your family?
      This Henry guy just seems like he has classic bipolar disorder. I would know because I displayed similar behavior before I was medicated. So, not judging. Just curious.

    • @leatricewallace6223
      @leatricewallace6223 7 месяцев назад

      These are my ancestors too. I’ve always been interested in this period of history.

  • @EDDIELANE
    @EDDIELANE 4 месяца назад +2

    that second Henry smiles like the girl who’s house is on fire in the meme.

  • @SOPHIA-yf7ws
    @SOPHIA-yf7ws Год назад

    OK, SPECTACULAR. YOUR EXPLANATION IN THE ORIGINAL LOCATIONS, CASTLES, MANUSCRIPTS, INTERMINGLED WITH DRAMA ......FANTASTIC PRESENTATION .......

  • @artistictalent
    @artistictalent Год назад +55

    They once said women were unfit to rule because they were governed by their emotions. **the plantagenet kings enter the chat**

    • @sydneymomma11
      @sydneymomma11 Год назад

      that's bc men always project their insecurities onto others.

    • @overcomerbtbojesus
      @overcomerbtbojesus Год назад +4

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @soonmeekim930
      @soonmeekim930 8 месяцев назад +2

      I’d be the first to admit that I’d be completely and utterly unfit to rule due to my emotions ruining everything 😂. If I ruled, I might make the Plantagenet’s look calm and sane

  • @Cheka__
    @Cheka__ Год назад +6

    Why wasn't Richard I and John's reign covered?

  • @stephanieribar5724
    @stephanieribar5724 9 месяцев назад

    I found ur channel through Hannah's royal history channel. U both have excellent channels and i love both ot them.

  • @willl.3353
    @willl.3353 7 месяцев назад

    Awesome doc. It's a confusing time, but you explain it well.

  • @brandijade7063
    @brandijade7063 11 месяцев назад +4

    Unpopular view. Beckett was a traitor. Also, would love to hear more of Eleanor of Aquitiane.

  • @newgabe09
    @newgabe09 11 месяцев назад +5

    This is excellent. I knew nothing of these 'far off' kings, with so much focus on the Tudors.. but this was riveting. Thanks so much for the upload ! Questions left over though.. I'm wondering though how Eleanor could 'separate' from Louis and marry so soon after, pre-divorce. Will have to go watching docos on her now :)
    And what happened with Richard and John?

  • @user-ho4jz6rf7g
    @user-ho4jz6rf7g 9 месяцев назад

    Such a great documentary!

  • @pattywhitney3750
    @pattywhitney3750 Год назад

    Amazing documentary

  • @vascoapolonio2309
    @vascoapolonio2309 Год назад +6

    "Simon's says..." 🤣🤣🤣

  • @r-nabors660
    @r-nabors660 Год назад +14

    A distant relative tracked down our ancestry on our maternal grandmother. We are descended from Eleanor of Aquitaine. But not much about women of that era

  • @KellyBell1
    @KellyBell1 Месяц назад

    Really like Dan Jones storytelling!! Excellent production. Thank you for sharing history with us in such an engaging and entertaining way!! ❤Love it!!

  • @mannythedj2023
    @mannythedj2023 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very Entertaining 👏🏼👏🏼

  • @katesleuth1156
    @katesleuth1156 Год назад +7

    I didn’t know that divorce was allowed in the time of Eleanor of Aquitaine.

    • @stephaniejane306
      @stephaniejane306 11 месяцев назад +3

      It was more like annulment at that time since they believed if you couldn't have children specifically males then the marriage could be annulment. For a fee of course.

    • @cherandehr
      @cherandehr 10 месяцев назад +1

      In politics, anything is possible. During this time setting aside a marriage that doesn't seem to produce sons for the possibility of one that could was possible.

    • @Tina06019
      @Tina06019 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@stephaniejane306 If you were king, the Church would give you an annulment , if your wife had given you only daughters, or no children at all. The only reason Henry VIII had to make a break from the Catholic Church was that Catherine of Aragon fought the annulment tooth & nail, and her nephew the Emperor had control over the Pope at the time.

    • @stephaniejane306
      @stephaniejane306 10 месяцев назад +2

      @Tina06019 yep pretty much. If she didn't fight the annulment, she probably would have gotten a better deal than Anne of Cleves, but she was a proud woman, and she stood by what she believed was true. We can't fault her for that.

    • @bwtv147
      @bwtv147 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Tina06019 The Roman Catholic Church gave Senator Edward Kennedy and his nephew Rep. Joseph Kennedy annulments. Joe Kennedy’s
      wife contested her annulment and got it reversed.

  • @MrPrincebass99
    @MrPrincebass99 10 месяцев назад +10

    Henry II and Eleanor are my 18th grandparents.

    • @nativetexan6628
      @nativetexan6628 6 месяцев назад +2

      Wow! How cool. My relative was at Jamestown with Captain John Smith and Pocahontas. That's the best I have. 😂

    • @AndrewRedskin
      @AndrewRedskin 4 месяца назад +2

      Hi cousin

    • @fredharvey2720
      @fredharvey2720 Месяц назад +2

      Hey cousins

  • @heidiklipp693
    @heidiklipp693 7 месяцев назад +2

    What a wonderful documentary, I feel as if I was there to see all. Thank you, great work❤

  • @sasistasquad6105
    @sasistasquad6105 6 месяцев назад

    Love all this history so amazing and captivating

  • @maluribeiro68
    @maluribeiro68 Год назад +27

    Fantastic! great research, love Dan! I can only wish that you guys actually covered the in betweens you skipped, though I've seen some docs on Richard the Lion Heart, King John, etc, I could totally have watched 1-2 more episodes, and I'd love to have found out more about the werewolf queen!

    • @Manic71
      @Manic71 Год назад +10

      She-wolf. Read 'She-Wolves: The Women Who Ruled England Before Elizabeth' by Helen Castor.

    • @maluribeiro68
      @maluribeiro68 Год назад +4

      @@Manic71 Thanks! I heard of that but having ADHD, I prefer videos, I've a hard time to memorize books, let alone read the whole thing (I already read the history of Britain & others - it's hard to retain... very hard the older I get) ... so these videos are important to go memorizing & learning details ...

    • @landsea7332
      @landsea7332 Год назад +2

      Actually , I was hopping Dan would provide a complete history of Edward I ( Longshanks ) ,
      Hey also , Churchill
      - hyper focused on military events
      - was well known to be impulsive
      - struggled with depression ( he called Black Dog )
      - self medicated with Cigars , Johnnie Walker and Champagne

    • @Manic71
      @Manic71 Год назад +1

      @@maluribeiro68 How about an audiobook? If not, here's a video with Helen Castor herself! ruclips.net/video/iud1Hc4cT-g/видео.html

    • @maluribeiro68
      @maluribeiro68 Год назад +1

      @@Manic71 That's what I wrote, that I do videos and audios, thanks! I told you I already studied all this, I watch the videos just to brush up, get one more detail.. I'm happy with the videos, I just wanted him not to skip a couple of things.. I thank you for you time, but don't need your help. Thanks! Cheers!

  • @alienor1322
    @alienor1322 Год назад +3

    I’m here for Richard III and Aliénor.To me they are so unique and understated.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne 10 месяцев назад

      Richard III, who gets a bad rep, may or may not have been evil. We really don't know if Richard murdered his nephews or not. Certainly, his rival Henry Tudor (Henry VII), Descended from a bastard Plantagenet heir, he had far more reason to eliminate Edward V's sons than did Richard. They were the last of Richard's male heirs, after all.

  • @hivanaghibi1998
    @hivanaghibi1998 Год назад

    it was amazing.thank u :XOXO

  • @JustMe-mh2pn
    @JustMe-mh2pn 2 месяца назад +1

    This site is worth its weight in gold. The story is totally exciting and seeing the locations is just a dream. I'm obsessed with English history. And here it is simply explained in an exciting and understandable way. But, I just have to mention the dedication and historical background with which Rebecca Gable wrote her books "Waringham Saga".
    I have to be a little careful with all those Henry's! Why were so many of the English kings called Henry?
    DAN JONES Please keep it up! This documentary is simply fantastic.
    isn't that a thousand times better than Game of Thrones

  • @JP-st9hn
    @JP-st9hn Год назад +37

    Elenor must have been a real firecracker! She had generations of men completely wrapped around her finger… 🤔
    I imagine she used her womanly charm much more than we will ever know. Very impressive person.

    • @michaelpurdon7032
      @michaelpurdon7032 Год назад +9

      Yea there's that but she also was the ruler of one of the most powerful Duchies in Western Europe

    • @shuckydarn2856
      @shuckydarn2856 Год назад

      She held courts of Love .

    • @darrellhelmick6084
      @darrellhelmick6084 Год назад +8

      The Lion in Winter tells the tail of Elenor and Henry
      Great Movie

    • @JP-st9hn
      @JP-st9hn Год назад +2

      @@darrellhelmick6084 Oh cool, thanks. I’ll check it out. I’ve been on a Plantagenet binge for the past few months.

    • @peakydene1943
      @peakydene1943 Год назад +9

      Eleanor was reported to be beautiful and she was perhaps the wealthiest woman in the 12th century and became one of the most powerful. Her father, the wealthy Duke of Aquitaine, had her educated in literature, philosophy and languages and she was proficient in riding, hawking and hunting. At age 15, at her fathers death, she became Duchess of Aquitaine, and in three months, Queen of France by marrying King Louis VII. With her husband, she led men in battle in the Second Crusade. After 15 years with King Louis VII, she had two daughters and no sons, so they got their married annulled and she was given back her lands in Aquitaine. She quickly married the Duke of Normandy, who within weeks of his fathers death became King Henry II of England, making her Queen of England. She was 30 and he was 18. With Henry, she had eight children, five sons and three daughters. Three of her sons became Kings of England: Young King Henry, King Richard (the Lionhearted), and King John. King Henry II angered his sons by not giving them any duchies, wealth or power, so they rebelled, with Eleanor’s help, and they plotted against him. Her husband was furious and had her imprisoned for 16 years and kept her jailed in several castles throughout England while she and his sons plotted against him, until his death. The Young King Henry died young and then Richard, who was Eleanor’s favorite son, became King Richard of England. The first thing he did was free his mother. Richard was not interested in governing in England, as he was a knight and was only interested in battle, so while he went to fight in the Third Crusade, Eleanor was his regent in England. Richard later was captured in battle and Eleanor raised money and ransomed him. When Richard eventually was killed in battle, John, the youngest son, became King John of England, with Eleanor’s help. Eleanor lived to age 82, outliving all her 10 children except John and a daughter, Eleanor of Castile. Eleanor’s progeny married into most of the families of the royalty and nobles of Europe. Eleanor is an ancestor of Queen Elizabeth II and King Charles.

  • @augustvalek
    @augustvalek Год назад +36

    these brutal stories are good and all, but I'd love to hear about those 70 year lapses between them, did anything remarkable happen with those other kings, did they do anything at all? I feel like we needed more details about Isabella and Edward III

    • @mism847
      @mism847 Год назад +9

      Every single one of those skipped kings are important kings, for the better or for the worse.

    • @snakes3425
      @snakes3425 11 месяцев назад +3

      The skipped Kings (Richard I, John, and Edward I) have volumes full about their reigns, Henry II, Henry III, Edward II, and Richard II are not as well known.

    • @myamdane6895
      @myamdane6895 10 месяцев назад +4

      I was shocked Edward III was skipped, he’s arguably the greatest Plantagenet king

  • @marlenecheek9585
    @marlenecheek9585 9 месяцев назад +2

    Love European history and Dan Brown....

  • @Aspasia2929
    @Aspasia2929 Месяц назад

    Hey Dan, I’ve watched this series DOZENS of times and it still fascinates me. I’ve NEVER watched a docu-drama that comes close to being as good! You’re an amazing storyteller and the cinematography; production design; every detail is so well thought of, it transports me to the Middle Ages. The costume design blows me away, the attention to detail is incredible; it’s lux but in an understated way that makes it believable. You and the crew bring the family who put the FUN in DYSFUNCTION to life in a more entertaining way than any scripted drama I’ve watched. Have you ever considered doing a similar project with The Tudor’s? I know it’s a saturated market, but I’d love to watch an ACCURATE HISTORICAL portrayal of the most famous and infamous royal family in history. The House of Wessex would also be cool! Alfred the Great is so enigmatic… I’d love to learn more about him, his brothers and his descendants! Anyhoo thx for all your great work!

  • @karabarnhardt964
    @karabarnhardt964 8 месяцев назад +4

    I love the way he says the story without censoring the brutal truth. Who would want to return to a time like that? Those who know say NO, absolutely not!

  • @OaksArmorial
    @OaksArmorial Год назад +5

    I want a chainmail hoodie too.

    • @1952jodianne
      @1952jodianne Год назад

      Would be very intimidating when knocking off a convenience store.

    • @KG-ho1iu
      @KG-ho1iu Год назад

      😊ড😊

  • @quantumcontactwithmckennajames
    @quantumcontactwithmckennajames День назад

    Like half of North America I’m a Plantagenet. Easily traceable. Thank you for this series.

  • @PlateletRichGel
    @PlateletRichGel Год назад +5

    I did the Ancestry two week free trial. Found little on my mom's side, on my dad's found my GG who emmigrated to Boston. On my paternal grandmother, keep going back and back and back and back for two weeks, I was amazed. Then one night, there it was, I am related to Plantagenent through Longshanks and also related to Scottish Kings and some Scottish Highlanders from the Hebrides. Through both lines of Kings I was related to Eleanor of Aquitane and Louis of France parents of King John. I figured stop there LOL.

  • @joanneel9708
    @joanneel9708 11 месяцев назад

    GREAT PROGRAM…LOVED IT ❤

  • @ARiddle1986
    @ARiddle1986 11 месяцев назад +5

    The Plantagenets are likely connected to my family (hard to prove but I am related to some of their descendants) and I gotta say - the dysfunctional family aspect never really left them. I had some interesting family members to say the least. XD

    • @Jenifer_G
      @Jenifer_G 8 месяцев назад

      What name is the connection mine is De Burge, or Bourke, norman french spelling, robert half brother of WTCon. He apparently had a bad temper.

    • @ARiddle1986
      @ARiddle1986 8 месяцев назад

      @@Jenifer_G I am connected through the Boren -> Larkin -> Holland (or Holand) line and that goes back to Joan Plantagenet. Then Edmund of Woodstock and then Edward Plantagenet.

  • @celebrityrog
    @celebrityrog Год назад +8

    I like to call them by thier French pronounced name, Plan-taaj-jhenay because after-all, they are French.

  • @the_esoteric_cryptologist
    @the_esoteric_cryptologist 6 месяцев назад

    Fantastic to watch ... Thank you 🙏🏼

  • @hollygolightly8048
    @hollygolightly8048 6 месяцев назад

    Very interesting video that is reminiscent of what is happening today. History repeats and showcases how brutal and cruel humans are.