I have stuff to do with Elizabeth I in my room when I was writing about her in college and I still have my work stuff today. In 2022, I hoped Woody.EXE to be just like her and he’s performing duties very well 2 years on. I’m so honoured to be Woody.EXE’s Queen known as Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth III during our 2023 coronation in Wales. I’ve never seen our people so hyped like this since our ascension in September 8th 2022; our coronation took place on my 21st birthday on July 20th 2023. Wales was so excited for our reign and 2024 is our 2nd anniversary shortly and I’m so nervous about it. I remember our first anniversary vividly
England was MORE than fortunate to have had Elizabeth as a monarch for such a long time!!! She set the kingdom on its feet again, after it was nearly destroyed by her father and her sister.
Elizabeth put her country first and her father put himself first!! Most of the monarchs put themselves first, but King Henry the 8th took it to a whole nother level. He was the late medieval periods time of corruption like we know of it today when a government makes the law to allow a punishment to be legal when it's otherwise illegal!! His problem was that he had nobody to oversee him as far as being the head of the Church of England. Presently Prince Charles of Wales is governor of the Church of England and it's been that way for centuries.
@@montrelouisebohon-harris7023 (Presently Prince Charles of Wales is governor of the Church of England and it's been that way for centuries.) We're in a new world according to Charles: The new interfaith identity of the country has led Prince Charles to voice his preference for the streamlined "Defender of Faith" instead. Meaning, every brand of Christianity, every brand of Islam, and every brand of every other religion. And not forgetting Scientology and the church of the Flying Spaghetti monster.
@@pedanticradiator1491 I knew that a couple hundred years ago that the monarch was the Supreme of the Church of England but I thought that some time between that that it became the Prince of Wales. Thank you for the info.
One of my favorite documentaries on Elizabeth I! Read Starkey's book on her for my own pleasure in high school and was struck by the wit, bravery and resilience of this woman. Her rough upbringing and highly intelligent mind certainly forged her into the monarch she eventually became. I admire her sense of dignity, resourcefulness and loyalty to her family and country. Those traits certainly saw her through the trials that came at her during those formative years onward.
HistoryLover1550 the fact she had a cock and a pair of balls definitely helped her where women normally fell apart aswell. Everyone knew she was a man. That's why she couldn't marry a foreign prince in case it spread all over Europe she was packing tackle.
@@octaviancaesarhibernicus4447 if had male parts it would have surly been noticed by her mother & others and would have no execution. So l presumed you lean towards the story that a boy replaced her when the real elizabeth died! I am no lover of her
Ikr?! Imagine his reaction if he could have known what would happen to his son, & that it was Anne Bolyns "bastard" daughter, who grew up to become one of the GREATEST Monarchs in history! I don't think he would take it very well! 😆 Besides, success is the ultimate revenge! 🥰
Not one of the greatest Queens of England sir - the greatest Queen of England. No one surpasses Queen Elizabeth I, though Queen Elizabeth II was a great monarch as well though she had no real power over England.
Must say, even if one were to go through a fraction of what she experienced in her path to the throne, they'd have an overload of post-traumatic stress disorder: She was a great character, and a source of inspiration for all succeeding generations of people. Every owes her their heartiest respect.
So much knowledge, so interesting. She was very intelligent woman, knew it was a mans world. She protected herself, never married. Her survival instincts held up well. She stabilized the Nation.
She was an authoritarian dictator, like all English monarchs up until the Glorious Revolution of 1688. She had her own secret police, run by Francis Walsingham. No one could disagree with or criticise her in public. Is that 'stability'? Give me the chaos of liberty any day!
She did a lot more than just stabilize the nation. When she came to the throne, England was basically bankrupt, hat barely a seaworthy ship left in the royal navy and no standing army. And it was deeply devided on religious grounds. Basically the question seemed only to be, if England would become a province of spain or of france, depending on Elisabeths choice for a husband. When she died, England was one of the richest nations in Europe, with a powerfull navy, and a rich cultural life. She turned England from a backwater to one of the major powers in Europe.
I so enjoy these. Thank you! David Starkey is the best. The only thing I disagree with on what he said was that Elizabeth airbrushed Anne out of her memory. Elizabeth was much too young to have remembered her mother being only 2 and a half when her mother was arrested.
I don't understand why Starkey ignores the blatant statement made by Elizabeth in surrounding herself with Boleyn's after becoming Queen. And, he ignores the letter sent to Elizabeth by Alexander Ales which discusses Anne and Elizabeth and recounts the moment Anne discovered the charges made against her. And the Chequer's ring? Elizabeth certainly didn't airbrush her mother out of her conscience - even though she wouldn't have remembered her.
@@joer8640 She wore that ring with her and her mother's miniature portraits inside for the rest of her life. She certainly did not forget her mother, you're right.
Her hand writing was truly beautiful I'd like to kids nowadays being able to write so brilliantly and in so many languages, they are more likely on there phones or iPads a way of learning forgotten Elizabeth was truly exceptional
emma beattie she was a princess for Christ sake,she had a life of privilege being educated in writing and languages,poetry and art, instead of thinking about today's kids and iPads think about the kids of Elizabeth's times who were working in fuckin fields all day and surviving on subsistence levels of food, or did you just assume every child in the country had the same lifestyle as a princess you bloody dummy.
It's humorous that you are speaking negatively about the stereotypical view of children's education in modern times. Your comment is lacking on the intellectual side. You don't use punctuation, proper grammar or even make sense. Ironic, don't you think.
Princesses were obviously not normal children although being Henry VIII's child was no picnic. However those of us who are what the French used to call "of a certain age" can remember when all schoolchildren were drilled in penmanship.
go stand in front of a mirror and repeat vehemently: "I want to rule the world!" until you believe yourself, lol. Don't forget to grasp the air with your hands.
Sue Harvey Well, believe it or not, most monarchs don't rule for the money..and ask yourself this: Who really wants to live comfortably their whole lives? Sounds like a pretty lifeless life to me.
I’ve studied her my entire life. My fave thing about her was that she was by far a much better monarch than her father as well as almost all before as well as after her.
Anything asked about the royals or the wars, I would politely answer them because I’m such a nerd on history. No wonder Woody.EXE chose me to be his Queen and he sees me as a bright Queen who loves everyone and doesn’t accept power and I’m glad Woody.EXE doesn’t accept power but love for his people of Wales. I can’t imagine life without him
What most people don't understand is that England was very unstable at the time. It consisted of 5 families jockeying for power. That's why Henry was obsessed with having a male heir.
As Dr Starkey watched Charles' coronation and bowed his head, how he must have thought of this description of Elizabeth I's coronation. What historical precedent!
Elizabeth looked just like Henry VIII...but for her black eyes from mom Anne B. But those paintings of her in her youth ..you can see Henry in her everywhere...she inherited both parents high amazing intellect..spoke numerous languages with ease..she had it extremely rough. So did Mary Tudor..starting in her teens when mistress Anne came on the scene and demanded all treat Mary like a low born servant. Terrible.
She definitely got her powerful abilities & personality from her Great Grandmother, Lady Margaret Beaufort....if it hadn't been for her machinations & planning, with Elizabeth Woodville, placing Henry the 7th on the throne, there would NEVER have been a Tudor Dynasty! 🧐
Those two women were extraordinary. I love the chapter of _Monarchy,_ another Starkey masterpiece, that describes those events. It would make an amazing drama series if handled correctly. It certainly worked well as a subject for Shakespeare 😁
I think so too. Thru his writings, he didn't blink when his uncle was beheaded. Seems he wrote to a childhood friend and nonchalantly, as he was just writing a friendly letter, said, "Oh my uncle Thomas Seymour was beheaded..." and continuing to bother Mary about being Catholic.
No doubt about it. He was raised to think he was as wise and powerful as Henry VIII thought himself. Not a good or reasonable thing for someone making decisions that affect the lives of millions. Many claim Mary I was terrible (she was, in reality, FAR less blood-thirsty than her father), but I think Edward would have been worse than Henry. Henry VIII was responsible for about 75,000 people being executed (Mary I executed about 300) and I believe that Edward would have outdone their combined total.
14:25 I meddle with a bit of calligraphy myself, to give you an idea, the wedding card I addressed to some friends of mine so impressed the postman that he knocked on the door just to find out about the writing! However, I could _never_ produce a single page to the standard that Elizabeth I demonstrated at the age of just _twelve!_ Let alone an entire book! My mind literally boggles at the neatness and precision of her writing. It doesn't appear that she had any lines to guide her, yet her writing is completely straight and level! It appears to be just - _perfect._ I am beside myself with admiration for this one feat alone, yet you think of what she had already achieved. She was fluent in many languages, and she had had to learn the very harsh lessons of how to navigate the polical maze of the Royal Court. She had to hide her emotions when she had been pronounced a bastard and no longer in line to the throne. She had had to be gracious, gentle and humble with her baby brother, whose birth might have prevented her from ever sitting on the throne. If she had put a foot wrong just once, or said anything out of place, the consequences and her Father's censure would have been severe. Yet as a child, she navigated it all and remained on good terms with the members of the Royal Court.
Remarkable documentary. Most of Elizabeth's early history (sexual abuse, Edward's and Mary's reigns) has been omitted, or briefly skipped over, in other biographies for public consumption. Thank you for this almost scholarly and very interesting presentation.
Not to mention she had her mother represented at her coronation, used Anne’s heraldic badge and symbols, and Elizabeth even brought up a few times at Mary’s court (according to Venetian ambassador) that her mother would never cohabit before marriage (which legitimises her claim to the throne, and therefore her mother’s legitimacy as Henry’s wife).
Elizabeth got her crown the old fashioned way. She fought for it an gave the world an England a lesson. In just what true will an iron are made of. Mary was too much a zealot, an its rather sad. That she allowed that to color her political dealings. England did not need outside forces controlling it.
The implication early on is that Elizabeth wasn't traumatised by her mother's death. This seems unlikely, however well she hid it. Surely this might have had at least some influence on the facts that she never married or had children herself?
Absolutely. Her mother, Catherine of Aragon and Mary Tudor's disasterous marriages must've spelled out to young Elizabeth how dangerous it was for a royal woman to be made 'obsolete" by men if she failed to produce male heirs. I think Elizabeth wanted to distance herself from political dangers of this kind with her celibacy. I don't think she wanted to make a man so powerful that he could get rid of her like her father did her mother.
Candid Burrow right how can a 3 year old not be traumatized when one minute her mummy is there the next she is gone without a word ? I mean yes 3 year olds are young but hey ain't stupid she would notice her mother missing and knowing Henry as I have come to know about him I would not put it past him to tell the poor child anything no matter how traumatic or even untrue and slanderous against her mother. I mean look what he did to Catherine of Aragon and Mary! Sure they were not killed but just as bad they were cut off from each other forever because they would not bend to his will later he did convince Mary too but likely out of threat of her own life not to mention desperation to get back the love of the one parent she had left at that point Catherine of Aragon essentially died of a mother's broken heart and Mary of a daughter's broken well loosing her beloved mother was not the last blow she would have to suffer either girl could not get any peace I hope she has it now with her mother again
@@aprilgosa5779 You're obviously not aware that rich parents, especially royal parents, never raise their own children. They still don't. They are far too busy with royal duties and enjoying their wealth. Raising children is what servants and tutors are for.
That & the fact that she was molested by Seymour. She suffered unknown atrocities against her person. Am just like her in that respect, down to the red hair. Child abuse destroys people as kids & it follows u your entire adult life. I never married, never had kids. Am 45 now. Am a true spinster & proud of it. That's why Queen Elizabeth is a particular heroine of mine. Truly a woman to admire & to remember. She was too smart to marry. And I respect her for that! 🥰
I suspect that Catherine just could not wrap her head around the reality that her husband was grooming and then feeling up Elizabeth. He had gone after her and had persuaded her to marry him months before it was considered to be appropriate for a widowed queen on England - and it had cost her considerably for her to marry the man that she loved (and thought he loved her the same way). It was only when she found him kissing Elizabeth that she realised that the abuse was actually true. And then she acted immediately, sending both Elizabeth and Jane Grey away from their household. (It also makes me wonder if he was grooming Jane Grey as well.)
ONE OF THE GREATEST QUEENS THIS COUNTRY HAS EVER HAD WONDERFUL STRONG WOMEN BORN OF HENRY AND ANNE BUT HENRY I AM SURE WOULD HAVE BEEN PROUD OF HIS DAUGHTER SHE BROUGHT PROSPERITY AND WEALTH BACK TO ENGLAND
Susan Baskerville I'd say she'd be more happy that she didn't inherit the stink of Henry which was meant to have been like a dead pig covered in shit that had been buried in a rotting cow in the ground for 6 months.
It's hard to get to the point of your comment when you DO IT IN ALL CAPS. I'm not sure if you are trying to make it seem like you are yelling or if you think what you have to say is more important than everyone else.
20:49 It’s true that Katharine Parr was unsure about what was going on but was not cruel to Elizabeth. Later on, she sent her away to protect her from Thomas Seymour.
It is said that when Essex produced his sword in queen Elisabeth's presence, after a violent row, that was exactly what cost him life. Now, having seen this film, provided me, in a way, with some new perspective on that very event and its tragic repercussions.
5:04 to 5:18 "Elizabeth seems to have airbrushed her mother from her memory." Well, Elizabeth wasn't 3. She was only 2 years and 8 months old at the time. Does anybody really remember their life at that age? EDIT: those of you answering that you have memories of that age don't seem to understand what a rhetorical question is. My point is that MOST people don't, but if they do, it's memories of people who were, and possibly still are, a major part of their lives. Let's not be ignorant of the fact that Elizabeth I was not even brought up in her mother's household. She spent her earliest years at Hatfield house with her parents being at Hampton Court.
She was such a a strong woman and Queen! Very intelligent also! She could speak 4 or 5 fluent languages. I'm very humbled and proud to also have her as my 1st cousin ❤! Her cousin, Mary Queen of Scots was my 2nd. She was also a very strong woman and Queen! The struggles they both endured! Thank you for sharing this amazing video! ❤
For you to be her first cousin, one of your parents would have to have been a sibling of either Henry VIII or Anne Boleyn. I assume you mean a cousin many times removed.
Here’s what gets me. Catherine parr was usually very smart and aware of things. Plus, she had been known as a caring and protective stepmother with Elizabeth being het favorite so how were there no red flags waving at her to do something to protect her favorite stepchild?
3:55 Catherine of Aragon was pregnant 6 times but only Mary, her 5th child, survived. Her first child was a stillborn daughter, who, today, would be known as Henry VIII’s first child. She delivered a live son, Henry, but he only lived 52 days. Another son named Henry was born two years later but lived just a few hours. Before and after Mary came a stillborn baby, a boy before her and a girl after her.
What a woman she was, the speech she gave was tremendous, “feeble body of a woman with the heart and stomach of a lion” she was a strong woman and a strong ruler that showed no signs of weakness.
She was smart enough to make use of that trope of feminine weakness. And even the strongest women are still weaker than strong men. Look at sports: teenage boys easily won tennis tournaments against Serena Williams. And happing too with mediocre trans athletes.
@@Sensibar007 I was just referencing the strength she had to rule in those days for 45 years, she was an amazing woman. Best regards to you from Yorkshire have a good evening. Thank you for your comment. 🙏
Elizabeth had a childhood sweetheart, Robbie Dudley. Robbie would become Elizabeth's favorite when she became queen. Her council disapproved her interest in Robbie Dudley due to Robbie Dudley already being married. Elizabeth went on to become the virgin Queen.
No, Elizabeth's memory didn't "airbrush" her mother's memory. We don't know what this child of THREE was told. Furthermore, a 3yo's concept of death is quite different than someone older. She carried a picture of her mother in the ring she always wore. Elizabeth, who was wise, kept her feelings about both her parents close to the vest. Imagine coming to know that daddy had mummy killed. It simply rocks one's world.
I have read and re-read Mr Sarkey's book on Elizabeth I's early life. Since I was 8 years old, I have been a fan of her mother and to me, she was the greatest queen of England and her mother's revenge. That said, I met Mr Starkey at a seminar about women in the Tudor era back in 2001 and he was very rude! As young as I was, it upset me but I still love his work and respect his intellect. As much as I love the Mary Rose Museum in Portsmouth, UK which is my hometown, I am disgusted at how they have treated Mr Starkey! Whilst I recommend the museum to any history lover, especially a Tudor fan or someone who is interested in how the ordinary people used to live, the way they disguarded Mr Starkey was vile and ignorant.
Many people can't tolerate the idea that other people don't have the same opinions they do. Those are generally people who claim to be so "tolerant" but certainly don't act that way. The irony is that the only reason they are able to act in such a vile manner is because the people they attack are actually far more tolerant than they.
Anne boleyn didn't die at that spot as David Starkey quotes in fact it was by the crown jewels . Contemporary sources tell us as many historiams quote from documents who were presence at the execution. My heart goes out to anne boleyn n her family.
@@shanjones4869 she was beheaded by the crown jewels are now, contemporary evidence tells us. Katherine Howard was beheaded Tower Green, I respect your opinion as I do mine
Its amazing UK had THREE great riulers who shaped the country on the positive. All were women Elizabeth 1st, Victoria and present gracious Queen Eizabeth 2nd.
Yes, it's a shame our female politicians are so poor. Personally, their intellectual weakness& lack of leadership [ Thatcher excluded] makes me ashamed of them.
I’ll find it, I love Elizabeth I R (Queen Elizabeth I). Now Woody.EXE the second king of Uk is just like Elizabeth I and he’s very powerful. I have been his Queen of 2 years and I’m loving it
I love David Starkey history retelling such dangerous times especially for a woman monarch. Men thought only kings should rule . We have had the great pleasure of having 2 Queen Elizabeths on the throne . Elizabeth I from the Tudor Dynasty and Elizabeth II from the Windsor dynasty .
I too found it very unlikely she airbrushed her mother out of her memory she loved her mother her mother was very devoted to her more than most queens were allowed to be back then
i always found it interesting that Tom Seymour was referred to as Elizabeth's step father. Not really. He didn't marry her mother. He married Elizabeth's step mother. If someone married my step parent in the event of my parent's death, this person would be nothing to me
Ur not a Tudor princess lol. Plus, not only had Catherine been married to her father, but Elizabeth moved in with her after Henry died, so she was also living as a ward of them when Catherine married Thomas soon after.
Her only other choice would have been Anne of Cleves as far as step-parents go. She was the only other one left alive. In retrospect, that might not have been such a terrible thing for her to have done instead.
She didn't travel light though! she had an entire waggon train of possessions with her, & servants, all of who had to be fed & housed by the lucky host! Her travels around the country are legendary.
Could listen to David Starky all day. A very educated man.
Educated moron
I have stuff to do with Elizabeth I in my room when I was writing about her in college and I still have my work stuff today. In 2022, I hoped Woody.EXE to be just like her and he’s performing duties very well 2 years on. I’m so honoured to be Woody.EXE’s Queen known as Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth III during our 2023 coronation in Wales. I’ve never seen our people so hyped like this since our ascension in September 8th 2022; our coronation took place on my 21st birthday on July 20th 2023. Wales was so excited for our reign and 2024 is our 2nd anniversary shortly and I’m so nervous about it. I remember our first anniversary vividly
@@nicolelawless9942 Ramblings of a madman.
@@Gwyndledore
He ain’t mad yet
@@nicolelawless9942 No you’re the mad one… your comment lacked any semblance of sense.
The great David Starkey always delivers quality. He's actually a very witty writer and commentator besides.
shame he's a right-wing zealot.
@@sibionic please. Please don't bring politics to me.
@@sibionic he has a right to his opinions do you believe in freedom of speech.
@@sibionic and all the better for it.
@@sibionic Not a shame at all. The left is currently destroying society.
England was MORE than fortunate to have had Elizabeth as a monarch for such a long time!!! She set the kingdom on its feet again, after it was nearly destroyed by her father and her sister.
Earle Frost You are so correct!
Elizabeth put her country first and her father put himself first!! Most of the monarchs put themselves first, but King Henry the 8th took it to a whole nother level. He was the late medieval periods time of corruption like we know of it today when a government makes the law to allow a punishment to be legal when it's otherwise illegal!! His problem was that he had nobody to oversee him as far as being the head of the Church of England. Presently Prince Charles of Wales is governor of the Church of England and it's been that way for centuries.
@@montrelouisebohon-harris7023 (Presently Prince Charles of Wales is governor of the Church of England and it's been that way for centuries.) We're in a new world according to Charles: The new interfaith identity of the country has led Prince Charles to voice his preference for the streamlined "Defender of Faith" instead. Meaning, every brand of Christianity, every brand of Islam, and every brand of every other religion. And not forgetting Scientology and the church of the Flying Spaghetti monster.
@@montrelouisebohon-harris7023 the Queen is presently the Supreme Governor of the Church of England not Prince Charles
@@pedanticradiator1491 I knew that a couple hundred years ago that the monarch was the Supreme of the Church of England but I thought that some time between that that it became the Prince of Wales. Thank you for the info.
One of my favorite documentaries on Elizabeth I! Read Starkey's book on her for my own pleasure in high school and was struck by the wit, bravery and resilience of this woman. Her rough upbringing and highly intelligent mind certainly forged her into the monarch she eventually became. I admire her sense of dignity, resourcefulness and loyalty to her family and country. Those traits certainly saw her through the trials that came at her during those formative years onward.
HistoryLover1550 the fact she had a cock and a pair of balls definitely helped her where women normally fell apart aswell. Everyone knew she was a man. That's why she couldn't marry a foreign prince in case it spread all over Europe she was packing tackle.
@@octaviancaesarhibernicus4447 if had male parts it would have surly been noticed by her mother & others and would have no execution. So l presumed you lean towards the story that a boy replaced her when the real elizabeth died! I am no lover of her
👍
Me too. Very well done and David Starkey is a great historian.
Professor Starkey is a great teacher.
The face says it all! "He meant no harm by it." Seymour said
Starkey scrunches face in distaste and disbeleif!
Fifteen yuuuhs.
Absolutely. Mr. Starkey's face just screamed digust and disapproval.
@@s871-c1q 🤭
Only 400yrs ago ....Ah but a ripple in the fabric of time....But she will be remembered forever....x
How ironic that Henry8 was upset that Elizabeth was female yet she was one of England's greatest queens.
Henry wasn't clairvoyant (he couldn't see into the future).
Ikr?! Imagine his reaction if he could have known what would happen to his son, & that it was Anne Bolyns "bastard" daughter, who grew up to become one of the GREATEST Monarchs in history! I don't think he would take it very well! 😆 Besides, success is the ultimate revenge! 🥰
History is written by the victors !
The 3 best monarchs of Britain have been female arguably
Not one of the greatest Queens of England sir - the greatest Queen of England. No one surpasses Queen Elizabeth I, though Queen Elizabeth II was a great monarch as well though she had no real power over England.
Must say, even if one were to go through a fraction of what she experienced in her path to the throne, they'd have an overload of post-traumatic stress disorder:
She was a great character, and a source of inspiration for all succeeding generations of people.
Every owes her their heartiest respect.
Madana Bhat-Khandige Truth right there!
Well, she did have her issues... but God, she managed them well, and without any therapy
Octavian Caesar Hibernicus are u normal with that bad language
she banned catholic worship in her act of uniformity and persecuted catholics. to hell with the heretic queen!
+Sanctus Europa this is a protestant country thanks
She adapted and played the game to win after all the drama in her life living in fear everyday alone what a amazing woman.
I agree.
Yes - the real Game of Thrones! With real blood & real deaths.
We still live in fear every day. We are just so accustomed to it many women do not even realize it.
Thank you so very much for being so thoughtful and uploading these programmes.
They are very much appreciated ☺️
So much knowledge, so interesting. She was very intelligent woman, knew it was a mans world. She protected herself, never married. Her survival instincts held up well. She stabilized the Nation.
She was an authoritarian dictator, like all English monarchs up until the Glorious Revolution of 1688. She had her own secret police, run by Francis Walsingham. No one could disagree with or criticise her in public. Is that 'stability'? Give me the chaos of liberty any day!
She did a lot more than just stabilize the nation. When she came to the throne, England was basically bankrupt, hat barely a seaworthy ship left in the royal navy and no standing army. And it was deeply devided on religious grounds. Basically the question seemed only to be, if England would become a province of spain or of france, depending on Elisabeths choice for a husband. When she died, England was one of the richest nations in Europe, with a powerfull navy, and a rich cultural life. She turned England from a backwater to one of the major powers in Europe.
Starkey is so English he bleeds tea. I love his documentaries.
Now there's a thought.
Tea is of indian and Chinese origin!
😂 🫖 🏴
English you mean stands for everything that is wrong in the not so good UK Union
@@jimorr5580 Take a break from being outraged for a few minutes in your life.
I am so enjoying listening to this historical documentaries. Love them
Me too!
Love this . . . I have read much of her life (all my life), and this is the BEST documentary I have ever seen . . .THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!
I love these programmes, l think David Starkey is the ultimate narrator
But he isn't just the narrator, he is the historian
I so enjoy these. Thank you! David Starkey is the best. The only thing I disagree with on what he said was that Elizabeth airbrushed Anne out of her memory. Elizabeth was much too young to have remembered her mother being only 2 and a half when her mother was arrested.
Aremor she also wore a locket almost daily, which contained two photos, one of herself and the other one was her mother.
I agree
I don't understand why Starkey ignores the blatant statement made by Elizabeth in surrounding herself with Boleyn's after becoming Queen. And, he ignores the letter sent to Elizabeth by Alexander Ales which discusses Anne and Elizabeth and recounts the moment Anne discovered the charges made against her. And the Chequer's ring? Elizabeth certainly didn't airbrush her mother out of her conscience - even though she wouldn't have remembered her.
@@joer8640 She wore that ring with her and her mother's miniature portraits inside for the rest of her life. She certainly did not forget her mother, you're right.
@@ElizabethF2222 yes! I was going to mention the ring as well.
The woman playing Catherine Parr is Abigail Hopkins, the daughter of Anthony Hopkins.
Very interesting!
I’ve watched this so many times, but, when the end credits are shown, I can’t believe how time has flown!
Her hand writing was truly beautiful I'd like to kids nowadays being able to write so brilliantly and in so many languages, they are more likely on there phones or iPads a way of learning forgotten Elizabeth was truly exceptional
emma beattie she was a princess for Christ sake,she had a life of privilege being educated in writing and languages,poetry and art, instead of thinking about today's kids and iPads think about the kids of Elizabeth's times who were working in fuckin fields all day and surviving on subsistence levels of food, or did you just assume every child in the country had the same lifestyle as a princess you bloody dummy.
It's humorous that you are speaking negatively about the stereotypical view of children's education in modern times. Your comment is lacking on the intellectual side. You don't use punctuation, proper grammar or even make sense. Ironic, don't you think.
@@smithamy1982 So what the heck do conservative Supreme Court judges
mean when they claim to subscribe to "originalism"? Channel the Framers?
Princesses were obviously not normal children although being Henry VIII's child was no picnic. However those of us who are what the French used to call "of a certain age" can remember when all schoolchildren were drilled in penmanship.
@@smithamy1982 I had the same thought when I read her comment.
I love the recreation of the painting of Elizabeth, that looked so good.
Thomas Seymour was just a greedy selfish pervert if we’re honest.
If you mean the one when she was a young girl , the original hangs in Windsor Castle !
"greedy, selfish pervert" perfectly describes her father too.
22:42🤨
He had eyes on the throne as much as Elizabeth herself
These royals have it hard. But i must say that she was and is my favorite monarch in all of history.
Love your voice,love your knowledge,love ALL your programs and I want you back on the television!!!!!!!!!
Why anyone would want to be a monarch when there is the alternative of a comfortable life as minor aristocracy with funds is beyond me.
go stand in front of a mirror and repeat vehemently: "I want to rule the world!" until you believe yourself, lol. Don't forget to grasp the air with your hands.
Sue Harvey Well, believe it or not, most monarchs don't rule for the money..and ask yourself this: Who really wants to live comfortably their whole lives? Sounds like a pretty lifeless life to me.
That's an easy one, POWER. That's what it's all about.
@@sparkswain2820 Tigerstar vibes
@@daviddollarhide7185 😄😄😄
I’ve studied her my entire life. My fave thing about her was that she was by far a much better monarch than her father as well as almost all before as well as after her.
Obviously not your entire life. In any case, that was your only takeaway from a life of study?
Anything asked about the royals or the wars, I would politely answer them because I’m such a nerd on history. No wonder Woody.EXE chose me to be his Queen and he sees me as a bright Queen who loves everyone and doesn’t accept power and I’m glad Woody.EXE doesn’t accept power but love for his people of Wales. I can’t imagine life without him
Awesome!
Elizabeth I, was fluent in 5 languages; English, French, Italian, Latin, & Greek.
She was amazing
She could also speak Spanish as well and I remember she could speak six languages and Mary Queen of Scots could speak 5. That pretty incredible!!
nowadays they learn common core math and CRT.
I thought welsh too as well?
She was fluent in Irish, Cornish, Scottish and Welsh as well.
He is totally English Oriented in his outpourings, and beloved of the issues of the subject, his programmes are magnificent
I've been off social media for a time. I'm delighted to see MrsTudor again - professional colour, sound and clarity guaranteed. ❤ Thank you Mrs T.
David I like your Documentary stories best, well done you !
What most people don't understand is that England was very unstable at the time. It consisted of 5 families jockeying for power. That's why Henry was obsessed with having a male heir.
I didn’t know that! It makes a lot of sense, actually.
Elizabeth l and Elizabeth ll are well proof that women are successful, too!!!
Yes, and they had just come out of the Wars of the Roses
Who were the 5 families jockeying for England’s power?
@@Jossianne19130 What is Queen Mary I proof of?
As Dr Starkey watched Charles' coronation and bowed his head, how he must have thought of this description of Elizabeth I's coronation. What historical precedent!
Love David Starkey's voice
Me too!! 🥰
He's a massive racist douche, tho, and most of his docs are pretty misogynistic too.
@@complimentary_voucher great historian, but a monumental arsehole
I love his impersonation of Princess Diana at the Taj Majahal.
@@complimentary_voucher He certainly is not racist for disagreeing with professional " anti- racists . "
Elizabeth looked just like Henry VIII...but for her black eyes from mom Anne B. But those paintings of her in her youth ..you can see Henry in her everywhere...she inherited both parents high amazing intellect..spoke numerous languages with ease..she had it extremely rough. So did Mary Tudor..starting in her teens when mistress Anne came on the scene and demanded all treat Mary like a low born servant. Terrible.
She definitely got her powerful abilities & personality from her Great Grandmother, Lady Margaret Beaufort....if it hadn't been for her machinations & planning, with Elizabeth Woodville, placing Henry the 7th on the throne, there would NEVER have been a Tudor Dynasty! 🧐
Those two women were extraordinary.
I love the chapter of _Monarchy,_ another Starkey masterpiece, that describes those events. It would make an amazing drama series if handled correctly. It certainly worked well as a subject for Shakespeare 😁
"Definitely"
And it's Henry VII not "Henry the 7th"
One of the greatest documentaries about the Queen Elizabeth I❤ Thank you for your hard work❤
The people dodged a bullet when Edward died.
He would have one down as one of the most vicious English kings in history.
I think so too. Thru his writings, he didn't blink when his uncle was beheaded. Seems he wrote to a childhood friend and nonchalantly, as he was just writing a friendly letter, said, "Oh my uncle Thomas Seymour was beheaded..." and continuing to bother Mary about being Catholic.
Being murderous seems to run in the Tudor line
No doubt about it. He was raised to think he was as wise and powerful as Henry VIII thought himself. Not a good or reasonable thing for someone making decisions that affect the lives of millions. Many claim Mary I was terrible (she was, in reality, FAR less blood-thirsty than her father), but I think Edward would have been worse than Henry. Henry VIII was responsible for about 75,000 people being executed (Mary I executed about 300) and I believe that Edward would have outdone their combined total.
14:25 I meddle with a bit of calligraphy myself, to give you an idea, the wedding card I addressed to some friends of mine so impressed the postman that he knocked on the door just to find out about the writing! However, I could _never_ produce a single page to the standard that Elizabeth I demonstrated at the age of just _twelve!_ Let alone an entire book! My mind literally boggles at the neatness and precision of her writing. It doesn't appear that she had any lines to guide her, yet her writing is completely straight and level! It appears to be just - _perfect._ I am beside myself with admiration for this one feat alone, yet you think of what she had already achieved. She was fluent in many languages, and she had had to learn the very harsh lessons of how to navigate the polical maze of the Royal Court. She had to hide her emotions when she had been pronounced a bastard and no longer in line to the throne. She had had to be gracious, gentle and humble with her baby brother, whose birth might have prevented her from ever sitting on the throne. If she had put a foot wrong just once, or said anything out of place, the consequences and her Father's censure would have been severe. Yet as a child, she navigated it all and remained on good terms with the members of the Royal Court.
Happy 489th birthday, great queen elizabeth I.
She would tell you that she's only 35.
Remarkable documentary. Most of Elizabeth's early history (sexual abuse, Edward's and Mary's reigns) has been omitted, or briefly skipped over, in other biographies for public consumption. Thank you for this almost scholarly and very interesting presentation.
Almost scholarly?
@@eshaibraheem4218 Yes indeed, almost scholarly.
Not to mention she had her mother represented at her coronation, used Anne’s heraldic badge and symbols, and Elizabeth even brought up a few times at Mary’s court (according to Venetian ambassador) that her mother would never cohabit before marriage (which legitimises her claim to the throne, and therefore her mother’s legitimacy as Henry’s wife).
Elizabeth got her crown the old fashioned way. She fought for it an gave the world an England a lesson. In just what true will an iron are made of. Mary was too much a zealot, an its rather sad. That she allowed that to color her political dealings. England did not need outside forces controlling it.
The implication early on is that Elizabeth wasn't traumatised by her mother's death. This seems unlikely, however well she hid it. Surely this might have had at least some influence on the facts that she never married or had children herself?
Oh how melodramatic. Elizabeth was a small child of 2 and 1/2 when her mother was killed so I doubt she was affected by her mother’s death.
Absolutely. Her mother, Catherine of Aragon and Mary Tudor's disasterous marriages must've spelled out to young Elizabeth how dangerous it was for a royal woman to be made 'obsolete" by men if she failed to produce male heirs. I think Elizabeth wanted to distance herself from political dangers of this kind with her celibacy. I don't think she wanted to make a man so powerful that he could get rid of her like her father did her mother.
Candid Burrow right how can a 3 year old not be traumatized when one minute her mummy is there the next she is gone without a word ? I mean yes 3 year olds are young but hey ain't stupid she would notice her mother missing and knowing Henry as I have come to know about him I would not put it past him to tell the poor child anything no matter how traumatic or even untrue and slanderous against her mother. I mean look what he did to Catherine of Aragon and Mary! Sure they were not killed but just as bad they were cut off from each other forever
because they would not bend to his will later he did convince Mary too but likely out of threat of her own life not to mention desperation to get back the love of the one parent she had left at that point Catherine of Aragon essentially died of a mother's broken heart and Mary of a daughter's broken well loosing her beloved mother was not the last blow she would have to suffer either girl could not get any peace I hope she has it now with her mother again
@@aprilgosa5779 You're obviously not aware that rich parents, especially royal parents, never raise their own children. They still don't. They are far too busy with royal duties and enjoying their wealth. Raising children is what servants and tutors are for.
That & the fact that she was molested by Seymour. She suffered unknown atrocities against her person. Am just like her in that respect, down to the red hair. Child abuse destroys people as kids & it follows u your entire adult life. I never married, never had kids. Am 45 now. Am a true spinster & proud of it. That's why Queen Elizabeth is a particular heroine of mine. Truly a woman to admire & to remember. She was too smart to marry. And I respect her for that! 🥰
I love his documentaries
I really enjoyed the narration of this video. Keep them coming. Thank you.
I never realized how bad the abuse was. I thought Catharine Paar was smarter than that. Abuse is abuse.
...you can be smart as hell, if the abuser has absolute power over you it doesnt matter...YOUTOO but your Master doesnt care...
I suspect that Catherine just could not wrap her head around the reality that her husband was grooming and then feeling up Elizabeth. He had gone after her and had persuaded her to marry him months before it was considered to be appropriate for a widowed queen on England - and it had cost her considerably for her to marry the man that she loved (and thought he loved her the same way). It was only when she found him kissing Elizabeth that she realised that the abuse was actually true. And then she acted immediately, sending both Elizabeth and Jane Grey away from their household. (It also makes me wonder if he was grooming Jane Grey as well.)
ONE OF THE GREATEST QUEENS THIS COUNTRY HAS EVER HAD WONDERFUL STRONG WOMEN BORN OF HENRY AND ANNE BUT HENRY I AM SURE WOULD HAVE BEEN PROUD OF HIS DAUGHTER SHE BROUGHT PROSPERITY AND WEALTH BACK TO ENGLAND
Susan Baskerville I'd say she'd be more happy that she didn't inherit the stink of Henry which was meant to have been like a dead pig covered in shit that had been buried in a rotting cow in the ground for 6 months.
It's hard to get to the point of your comment when you DO IT IN ALL CAPS. I'm not sure if you are trying to make it seem like you are yelling or if you think what you have to say is more important than everyone else.
Who'd love to meet her?
VC YT yeah I can imagine someone like you meeting Elizabeth "youuu hooo, Lizzy can I get a selfie Queenie ".
I certainly would love to have met Queen Elizabeth I. She may not have been the first queen, but she was definitely the first successful queen.
She'd probably chop your head of off God rest her soul.
@@PapaPalpatine666 i disagree. She would have been fascinated with the new. She loved her younger men. Total cougar and visionary X x
She is by far my absolute favourite Tudor. I'd love to meet her and give her a cuddle X x
20:49 It’s true that Katharine Parr was unsure about what was going on but was not cruel to Elizabeth. Later on, she sent her away to protect her from Thomas Seymour.
Brilliant & fascinating & beautifully told & presented by Starkey really he is simply the best historian that we have
Best documentary! I’m here for history class.
It is said that when Essex produced his sword in queen Elisabeth's presence, after a violent row, that was exactly what cost him life. Now, having seen this film, provided me, in a way, with some new perspective on that very event and its tragic repercussions.
Dr Starkey’s SNEER at 22.45 about Seymour’s behavior is fantastic. He is the best of the best to watch
Her training and her tribulation combined to prepare her for a lengthy and dangerous rule.
It is no longer acceptable to wear gloves while handling old manuscripts, books and paper. More damage can be done with gloves than with bare hands.
..you dont know my hands...
5:04 to 5:18
"Elizabeth seems to have airbrushed her mother from her memory." Well, Elizabeth wasn't 3. She was only 2 years and 8 months old at the time. Does anybody really remember their life at that age?
EDIT: those of you answering that you have memories of that age don't seem to understand what a rhetorical question is. My point is that MOST people don't, but if they do, it's memories of people who were, and possibly still are, a major part of their lives. Let's not be ignorant of the fact that Elizabeth I was not even brought up in her mother's household. She spent her earliest years at Hatfield house with her parents being at Hampton Court.
She always wore a ring with both their pictures in in 🤷♀️ She wasn’t overt about it, she knew her mother’s reputation. But, good point.
I don't! Sometimes, I have a hard time remembering what I did the day before, let alone what I did when I was two years old. 🤔
Most people dont remember being 3 years of age, Only a physical trauma to oneself can be remembered at 2 yrs.
@@kayt9576 Nope. I remember some things from when I was 2 years old.
@@perniciouspete4986 Same. I have a few good memories from around age 2.
She was such a a strong woman and Queen! Very intelligent also! She could speak 4 or 5 fluent languages. I'm very humbled and proud to also have her as my 1st cousin ❤! Her cousin, Mary Queen of Scots was my 2nd. She was also a very strong woman and Queen! The struggles they both endured! Thank you for sharing this amazing video! ❤
For you to be her first cousin, one of your parents would have to have been a sibling of either Henry VIII or Anne Boleyn.
I assume you mean a cousin many times removed.
Grow up, you lying weirdo
i've always been fascinated by English history. it's biblical in breadth & depth.
Can I just point out how freakin' adorable child version of Elizabeth (Saskia Backwell) is, especially in the scene starting at 9:11? :)
She is adorable!!!
The lady playing Elizabeth I nailed her look. She stands and looks so regal, too. Her hair is a beautiful colour.
This is a great series
I think so
Will always love Elizabeth. Sacrificed having children for the sake of the nation.
Thank God she was a much better Ruler then her Brutal father Henry the 8th. Who was so ruthless.
Here’s what gets me. Catherine parr was usually very smart and aware of things. Plus, she had been known as a caring and protective stepmother with Elizabeth being het favorite so how were there no red flags waving at her to do something to protect her favorite stepchild?
Very interesting documentary! I love it! Elizabeth I is my favourite English Queen :)
ღsuga minyoongi ღ she had a big old dick and a pair of brass balls.
If David Starkey is hosting, I’m watching.
Me too!!
Now ER II can finally can meet her namesake.
💀
She was a good queen as well
Imagine the conversation they are having !
Imagine having these psychopaths for a family
What a beautiful book Elizabeth made.
3:55 Catherine of Aragon was pregnant 6 times but only Mary, her 5th child, survived. Her first child was a stillborn daughter, who, today, would be known as Henry VIII’s first child. She delivered a live son, Henry, but he only lived 52 days. Another son named Henry was born two years later but lived just a few hours. Before and after Mary came a stillborn baby, a boy before her and a girl after her.
What a woman she was, the speech she gave was tremendous, “feeble body of a woman with the heart and stomach of a lion” she was a strong woman and a strong ruler that showed no signs of weakness.
She was smart enough to make use of that trope of feminine weakness. And even the strongest women are still weaker than strong men. Look at sports: teenage boys easily won tennis tournaments against Serena Williams.
And happing too with mediocre trans athletes.
@@Sensibar007 I was just referencing the strength she had to rule in those days for 45 years, she was an amazing woman. Best regards to you from Yorkshire have a good evening. Thank you for your comment. 🙏
37:45 Her handwriting was still beautiful, even though she was under unimaginable pressure and fear. What strength of mind, heart and spirit she had.
I am currently studying this in my history class. It is a very good revision tool.
Aaaah when the BBC did actual great, informative programming with genuine experts who didn't merely tick a box😊. They were the days.
It was channel 4 who produced this tbf .....
Queen Elizabeth I was the greatest Queen England ever had.
Hands down. 👍
Thank you for sharing, very interesting.
A great deal of history presented very beautifully.
Elizabeth had a childhood sweetheart, Robbie Dudley. Robbie would become Elizabeth's favorite when she became queen.
Her council disapproved her interest in Robbie Dudley due to Robbie Dudley already being married. Elizabeth went on to become the virgin Queen.
No, Elizabeth's memory didn't "airbrush" her mother's memory.
We don't know what this child of THREE was told. Furthermore, a 3yo's concept of death is quite different than someone older.
She carried a picture of her mother in the ring she always wore.
Elizabeth, who was wise, kept her feelings about both her parents close to the vest.
Imagine coming to know that daddy had mummy killed. It simply rocks one's world.
What a very interesting video many thanks for sharing it with us I have subscribed to your channel
I have read and re-read Mr Sarkey's book on Elizabeth I's early life. Since I was 8 years old, I have been a fan of her mother and to me, she was the greatest queen of England and her mother's revenge. That said, I met Mr Starkey at a seminar about women in the Tudor era back in 2001 and he was very rude! As young as I was, it upset me but I still love his work and respect his intellect. As much as I love the Mary Rose Museum in Portsmouth, UK which is my hometown, I am disgusted at how they have treated Mr Starkey! Whilst I recommend the museum to any history lover, especially a Tudor fan or someone who is interested in how the ordinary people used to live, the way they disguarded Mr Starkey was vile and ignorant.
Many people can't tolerate the idea that other people don't have the same opinions they do. Those are generally people who claim to be so "tolerant" but certainly don't act that way. The irony is that the only reason they are able to act in such a vile manner is because the people they attack are actually far more tolerant than they.
You're right, Starkey is utterly vile
Anne boleyn didn't die at that spot as David Starkey quotes in fact it was by the crown jewels . Contemporary sources tell us as many historiams quote from documents who were presence at the execution. My heart goes out to anne boleyn n her family.
She was beheaded on Tower Green
@@shanjones4869 she was beheaded by the crown jewels are now, contemporary evidence tells us. Katherine Howard was beheaded Tower Green, I respect your opinion as I do mine
"The biography of Freddie Mercury and Queen" brought me here!
I think Elizabeth was a real badass. I really do!
Bonjour je ne connaissais pas ce chroniqueur mais il est vraiment bon j'ai lachance d être bilingue et c'est vraiment utile pour moi
You could not have chosen a better English speaker for elocution or diction.
Its amazing UK had THREE great riulers who shaped the country on the positive. All were women Elizabeth 1st, Victoria and present gracious Queen Eizabeth 2nd.
Elizabeth I did not rule the whole of the modern UK, Scotland was a seperate independent kingdom
Yes, it's a shame our female politicians are so poor. Personally, their intellectual weakness& lack of leadership [ Thatcher excluded] makes me ashamed of them.
This randomly came up. Must be a sign. Now o gotta watch. Ugh.
If anyone reading this has not seen the BBC miniseries "Elizabeth R," I highly recommend it.
I’ll find it, I love Elizabeth I R (Queen Elizabeth I). Now Woody.EXE the second king of Uk is just like Elizabeth I and he’s very powerful. I have been his Queen of 2 years and I’m loving it
So the men came into the tower leading to Elizabeth thinking she was going to die on the 19 of May of all days? Mary had to know what she was doing.
I have this on DVD. Elizabeth Tudor was truly a survivor.
Henry the eighth’s Least Favorite Child becomes one of the greatest rulers England ever Had…
Victoria, Disraeli, Tony Blair
I love David Starkey history retelling such dangerous times especially for a woman monarch. Men thought only kings should rule . We have had the great pleasure of having 2 Queen Elizabeths on the throne . Elizabeth I from the Tudor Dynasty and Elizabeth II from the Windsor dynasty .
I thought that said Elizabeth II: from Prison to Palace and I questioned what Ole Liz did.
“He ROMPED with her in the garden! ROMPED!” 😂😅😂
Thomas Seymour abuses a 14 year old girl and SHE'S the one sent away.
The usual
who else had to watch this for lockdown GSCE work?
I too found it very unlikely she airbrushed her mother out of her memory she loved her mother her mother was very devoted to her more than most queens were allowed to be back then
i always found it interesting that Tom Seymour was referred to as Elizabeth's step father. Not really. He didn't marry her mother. He married Elizabeth's step mother. If someone married my step parent in the event of my parent's death, this person would be nothing to me
Ur not a Tudor princess lol. Plus, not only had Catherine been married to her father, but Elizabeth moved in with her after Henry died, so she was also living as a ward of them when Catherine married Thomas soon after.
Her only other choice would have been Anne of Cleves as far as step-parents go. She was the only other one left alive.
In retrospect, that might not have been such a terrible thing for her to have done instead.
Fave quote from Queen Elizabeth I: To a deputation of eighteen tailors; "Good morrow, gentlemen both." 🙂
❤️ ❣️ ❤️ great quote from her
Whow it took 11 days for her to travel from Leeds to London.how awful is that.
She didn't travel light though! she had an entire waggon train of possessions with her, & servants, all of who had to be fed & housed by the lucky host! Her travels around the country are legendary.
From Hatfield to London ! Nowhere near Leeds !
This documentary is so ASMR.
Whatever you or we or I think of David Starkey, he does great documentaries, Donie