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Would love to see an episode about Wu Zetian. She was the only woman to rule China in her own right using the title of Emperor as opposed to Empress in it's 5000 year history and 2000 years of dynastic history. One of the single most remarkable women who ever lived.
@@randomvintagefilm273 Of course, agreed about these women. Just making a suggestion. It is also great to see stories of non-western women as he did with Hatshepsut.
I'm just glad they took the time to educate some of us that otherwise would never know. High school World history doesn't get into it in this much depth, or at all. Thank you from an "un-educated", but interested listner.
My mom turned the lights back on in Seattle 1972 and worked top secret through Boeing 1/2 her life even married the love of her life, a Boeing engineer. And she was one of the top 10 golf players in Seattle
My respect and admiration for Women of the past grows exponentially the more their real stories are revealed. In particular those Women who have come into power, war and politics while meeting the expectations of being a woman and mother. Many shortcomings I have learned to overcome in knowledge of the tremendous pressures they were under. With the exception of a few truly great Male Rulers, I favor most if not all of these Female Monarchs. To say that it’s a Man’s World and ignore the contributions and sacrifices made by women throughout history. Is a gross oversight that productions such as these wonderfully rectify. There’s more to the world’s story than the Patriarchy. Well Done 👏🥂
Thank you British documentaries for teaching us and showing us world history and thank you Europeans for making movies and having photography and all the other great inventions of the world.
Awesome waiting for part 2 beautifully made even if I fell asleep on it 2 times today Saturday February 11, 2023. My great grandma Claire birthday whom would be 123yrs old today born in 1900 to September 13, 1996 at 96 yrs old.
We need more appreciation for the beautiful mind and soul of Queen Victoria. Much can be learned from her foresight, courage and intelligence, compassion and empathy. Thank you for sharing..
Really wish we had the full unredacted/ edited journals of most of these women. But especially Victoria. It’s honest a miscarriage of history how heavily her family censored her journals after her death. That’s history we will never get back :/
Anna Rushlau It is not a foible of history that ALL of Victoria's diaries are not shared with the WORLD! Jesus H. Christ LADY! HOW WOULD YOU LIKE ALL YOUR PRIVATE OPINIONS aired for the entire world to read!!?? Her family had EVERY right to keep her private diaries, just that. Private.
Snortles!!! 😉 Rumor has it, despite much of her reputation, she was a spicy, lively little woman! Her 9 children have touched most of the royal houses of Europe.
I think the fact that her stepson never attempted to conquer her or take her power answers the question of legitimate rule. Added to enduring peace in her kingdom, it says all one needs to consider when asking if she was in any way scheming or unwanted.
Throughout history right up until the 1950s, more women died in childbirth than men died in war. Women made that sacrifice to keep humanity alive, while men fought to protect that humanity. Men are honoured for the role they played (rightfully so), but no one ever acknowledges the horrors and the sacrifices that average women faced over and over again in the birthing chamber and maternity wards to literally build our future.
Thank You! Must needed History Lessons and enlightenment. Shows that we never learn from the past. History keeps repeating itself, over and over again. Excellent Video.
Considering that ancient Greece was at least half a millennia before ancient Rome, when most people think they were simultaneous.... yes, the depth of history is truly astounding
This is a serious study in Egyptology hitherto not well known. Congratulations Ola!!! I'm looking forward to the next chapter of the fascinating story.
My mom is a professional artist, highly educated in Calculus, triganometry, and any other mathematical application and you know what? She didn't pass ANY of her talents on to me😑 thanks mom🥰
An intriguing suggestion! Wu Zetian's remarkable legacy certainly deserves more attention. Kudos to British documentaries for bridging gaps in historical education and fostering curiosity worldwide.
You can look up Margrethe the first of Denmark. Unifying Denmark, Norway and Sweden under one union. A real underdog story, but she was so competent and eventually became so popular that the people find loopholes for her to remain at power until her death.
Being descended from abolitionists and suffragettes, my view of the world may be slightly different from others. My first name is the family name for Lucretia Mott and my second name from her brother William Llyod Garrison. I have noted during my short years of this mortal coil that history is invariably written by men, about men, for men. Aunt Lucretia was wholly owned by her husband and it was perfectly legal for him to beat her as long as the implement he used was no thicker than his thumb. For that, he was given a fine to pay. The long and short of it is that we haven't come anywhere near parity between the sexes. It's going on today as it did 6 thousand years ago. God forbid that a woman should be a strong ruler in her own right and claim the same power as a man. We were there to give men babies, mostly boys, please. Anne Boleyn was given 3 years to produce a son and was killed because she failed and because she tried to use her power as Queen. Empress Mathilda, had a strong and singular claim to the English crown but when she tried to wield power, she was called "she-wolf", and "poisoner of the female sex". Quite literally, the people of the medieval period considered being female as, in the time of Elizabeth I, "the illness of her gender". "A weak and feeble woman". We were expendable baby machines to be treated like our husband's favourite horse or the family dog. Aunt Lucretia knew that she would never, in her own lifetime, gain more privilege and rights and did her work for every woman right up to me, and we're still only beginning to excise the deeply held tenet that women aren't worth the oxygen we breathe and are needed only for our wombs. Heaven help those among us now whose skin is dark tan, brown, ebony, reddish or olive. I'm not even going to start with that one. The "historian" the narrator mentions in this video is very simply "full of it."
The "berlin de voyage" coach arranged by Fersen for the flight to Varennes was not ostentatious. It was the standard vehicle for an aristocrat to use for long distance travel. Some of the back roads they were planning to use were rural so the coach, in essence, was more of an RV of sorts. Well equipped but not for the purpose of "luxury." This is according to the Antonia Fraser biography of Marie Antoinette.
Wow! The one thing all of these women had in common, is that they each were put in the situation they began by others. What's a woman to do? When your given lemons, you make lemonade. And so they did.
Qhy would Marie Antoinette havw "stepped up to the bat" when her husband, Louie XIVI was no longer able to rule? She fired the Financial Ministers for heavena sake! Her fault was her ignorance the plight of her subjects. She was never taught anything about administrative concepts, etc. Her husband, the King was taught from his youth. It is his fault the economy collapsed. By the time Marie Antoinette stepped into power, it was too late to affect any change! These video's enrich my life!♡
...Erzebet Bathory, Margaret Thatcher and Leni Reifenstahl were hardly heroes. People have the capacity for great villainy- men and women alike; It serves no one to put one gender above another.
Cathrine Medici is my favorite. Her whole Family dating back to the 1400s changed the world for sure! The Medici family is one the worlds most famous historical families. I respect them even tho they are not around today!
@@sashalove83 No not all of them are murderers. But let's not get off topic from the point. Most of them are so therefore why are we putting them on a pedestal and admiring them?
Hatshepsut had the title of the Wife of the God ( a duty she did to Amun-Ra at his temple) , Daughter of the Pharaoh, Wife of the Pharaoh, and Regent to her stepson , her brother had to marry her because her tie to the royal bloodline was stronger than his as his mother was a concubine while her mother was the Kings Wife and sister. Learn your history.
You know as many times as I heard the story of Elizabeth Bathory, this is the first time I’ve heard this angle. It’s definitely a compelling argument and quite plausible
I wept for Marie Antoinette. Poor girl, the tragedy she suffered. There was absolutely no reason for her to be executed while rapists, and murderers frolicked freely about.
Queen Victoria is my favorite. She did so much to better the lives of people, especially women. Her benevolence reached many countries, worldwide. Even the kingdom of Hawai'i. The last Hawai'ian Princess, bore her first name as Victoria to honor Queen Victoria.
The queen who did nothing to aid the Irish during the great famine? Hell no. She was very selective in where her care extended to. She was also a horrible mother, with her daughters carrying the brunt of it.
You don't always have to be in the history books or even looked on favorably to have changed history. Many women did it behind the scenes...can you do a video on ... Lina Heydrich? Her key role in one of the darkest periods in history shows that women can be just as aggressive as men, if not more so.
The role she had in the nazi party. with her husband Reinhard Heydrich who was one of the principal architect of the Holocaust. would be a very interesting topic. History is history even when it is on the topic of that people tend to shy away from. One of the worst if not the worst of humanity
@@silkoakranchpitchforkranch1205 some women are the cause of it. They are actually I am sad to say, just as responsible as men when given the chance. I've seen it myself personally behind the scenes and when in position of leadership.
@@silkoakranchpitchforkranch1205 she allowed him to rise to power, supported his strengths and weaknesses to the utmost (even his personal bad behavior beyond what most women would tolerate today) as a good wife, while at the same time instilled in him the anti semitism that allowed him to view his work as justifed and just part of the process. This is key.
She wasn't Black, is why. Her family were an incestuous Greek Macedonian family, who depicted themselves with red hair. Nefertiti, Hatchepsut and Queen Tiye were all likely Black, but the Ptolemies were colonizers who thought they were superior to the people they ruled.
Maria Teresa for the most part was an old battle axe who, succeeded in upsetting most of the heads of Europe at one time or another, but was also a successful business and state administrator.
Bathory was guilty. When they came to arrest her, there were corpses still in chains and women in various stages of torture. This documentarian seems to be saying that the whole thing was made up.
I don't see how Elizabeth Bathory has changed history. Guilty or innocent, she hasn't done anything of any importance for giving her any honor as an agent of chance.
I think Catherine de Medici was portrayed as an evil woman and in the books I have read,that is what it says,but having watched your show,I don't think she was that bad but gad to put up with her husband screwing someone else and being in love with them and only getting together because his mistress said so
Issue was, that was common in royalty. Marriages were based on alliances, rarely on love. What de Medici is most condemned for now is her religious persecution
Elizabeth bathory does seem pretty twisted. her opponents definitely exaggerated and got false confessions from torture, which really makes them no better. but the gynoecium, and the girls that turned up dead or missing are pretty horrifying. I mean just the idea her own servants weren't enough for her to torture and kill and needed more victims it's so evil and it does seem like that was the purpose of her gynoecium
Bathory is another example of who really knows. The behavior over examination of "cholera" victims. Would authorities have really ignored the disappearance of so many young girls? It was well known the methods used to discipline servants could be quite harsh. The confessions under torture were most likely balderdash. Who knows...
Absolutely none of the charges leveled against her would stand up in court today. No actual witnesses were presented, no physical evidence was shown. All of the "evidence" presented was hearsay, except for one person who was bribed, a handful whose "confessions" were produced under torture and another two who couldn't be trusted to say that the sky was blue. Some of the people who were named as "missing" or "tortured" were found later, healthy and happy and had no idea what the hell anyone was talking about when asked about torture. Any chance Ersebet had to defend herself or prove her innocence was actively suppressed by the two men who stood to gain the most financially from seizing her estate. No rumors against her surfaced until after she outlived her husband's protection - a husband that, it should be noted, was already noted for a violent temper and a propensity for torture above and beyond what the times tolerated and probably had combat PTSD as well. And nothing about the trial was recorded for a hundred years afterwards. We question the testimony of eyewitnesses in the courtroom mere months after the events due to distortion, and the dude who recorded the Bathory case was definitely not an eyewitness even to the trial, let alone the supposed events. Yet letters survive to third-parties from her time, letters which praise Erzebet for her gentle manner, kind spirit and fair-mindedness, qualities which are evidenced by her capable handling of the combined estates of her family and her husband's, by the lack of complaints made against her by her tenants or servants (until after the rumors started getting planted), and by her voluntary decision to educate women and girls and see to the provisioning of war widows. If the case which took her down then were presented in a court today, she would unquestionably be cleared on all charges and likely have grounds for a defamation countersuit. But she's dead, and still can't defend herself, and so all the most lurid crap imaginable ends up sticking to a woman whose only real offense was to be a Protestant noblewoman from a house that had pissed off the Habsburgs, and had the bad luck to outlive her husband right when the king really wanted rid of the debt he owed to her through her deceased husband.
Great presentation. Wonderful narrator. Clearly, there are countless other historically influential women that deserve a place in the video. But all cannot be included in one program. One questionable person included here is Elizabeth Barthory. While allegations of her cruelty and murders of hundreds of young girls made her infamous, I don't see how she "changed history." Did laws change because of her? If so, which ones? If anything, Elizabeth's personal history was changed as a result of the charges against her, particularly after her death.
El cuento de los Bourbon y los Hapsburg lo sabemos todos, pero gracias por tu vision de las mujeres permitidas en la historia....sigo mirando el video....
I think she was a kind smart women preserving her loved ones names to Reign in there name. After death others were not understanding and maybe that why others chose to erase her accomplishment and name..?
Dynastic Brilliance!!....The lady was bad in the best way and yes haters have existed since the beginning of time. Egyptian History is better because of her the female pharaoh Lady H🌺
And the greek philosopher and scientist? The martyr? She is missing here. Not to mention quite a few more ladies in history. Still, thank you, a good job, although a bit focused on the macbre and conflict.
So no mention of Elizabeth I of Spain, that's Elizabeth the Catholic. The woman that allowed for Columbus trip in 1492 to happen. The woman that laid down the banning of slavery in newly discovered lands, and other feats that were well ahead of her time. Maybe she actually deserves a whole people's profile episode by herself...
Are you referring to Isabella, the queen who authorized Columbus' trip. Though she never officially banned slavery in her lifetime albeit condemning it. The Laws of Burgos, passed by her husband and daughter after Isabella's death, did ban slavery. I say this because the one queen of Spain named Elizabeth, Elizabeth of Valois, was generally an unremarkable queen with the exception of her remarkably good relationship with her husband, Philip II
Si quieres te lo digo en español. La reina ISABEL I de Castilla y Fernando de Aragón. Veinte años antes de las juntas de Burgos, tuvieron lugar las juntas de Valladolid, en previsión de la reconquista de Granada, cuyo propósito era otorgar la ciudadanía a todo el mundo siempre y cuando se convirtieran al catolicismo. Isabel de Valois no pinta nada en esta historia
Every powerful woman in history, only reached that position because of a man or men. Whether born into a kingdom with power earned by a man, or married into the same thing.
WE THINK "HATSHEPSUT" WAS A LEGITIMATE RULER GIVE POWER BY MEN TO ENHANCE THEIR RULING! POWER SHE HAD STYLE, A CERTAIN CLASS MEN THOUGHT NECESSARY AT THAT TIME IN HSTORY THAT MADE THEM SEEM GREATER THAN ANY OTHER IN THE WORLD AT THAT TIME😇👍🏻👌 TO US "HATSHEPSUT"💋💜 WAS LIKE OUR OLD TESTAMENT "SOLOMON" 🀄💡 PRAISE THE L👑RD🀄
😂😂😂woe, Billy, lemme jump in here! This is the Egyptian History from the historical age of the 1500 (s) when the American Stock exchange was activated, lemme make you aware, black Egyptians were not included in this part of history! FYI, Slavery!!!
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ok pppp
According to your own video Elizabeth Bathory didn't do anything to change history.
Pp😊
P
You l😊😊 2:01:53 2:01:53 😊
Would love to see an episode about Wu Zetian. She was the only woman to rule China in her own right using the title of Emperor as opposed to Empress in it's 5000 year history and 2000 years of dynastic history. One of the single most remarkable women who ever lived.
That would be a good one.
im smilling already
There are MANY remarkable women like Joan of Arc, QE1, Catherine the Great etc but he can't fit them all in one video
@@randomvintagefilm273 Of course, agreed about these women. Just making a suggestion. It is also great to see stories of non-western women as he did with Hatshepsut.
@@jacquelineburgess8619 Catherine the Great forbade women to inherit the title of Emperor
Other Creators: creates shorts
The People's Profiles: *creates longs*
I've been nodding off to bed wonderfully listening to this, that's not an insult but a compliment, if you can understand that, you understand
I did the exact same thing! Do this a lot watching RUclips with my favorite narrators!
Absolutely. I listen to lots of history and fall asleep. It's being g read to I think.
100% agree, such a soothing voice
Im doing that right now
Four and a half hours plus !!! 😭😭😭 no timer ⏲️
I'm just glad they took the time to educate some of us that otherwise would never know. High school World history doesn't get into it in this much depth, or at all. Thank you from an "un-educated", but interested listner.
One is never to old to keep learning ~~~
Ur one of the brilliant ones I respect you in every way! 💯
My mom turned the lights back on in Seattle 1972 and worked top secret through Boeing 1/2 her life even married the love of her life, a Boeing engineer. And she was one of the top 10 golf players in Seattle
Okay
You have every reason to be proud of your mother ( mam ) she sounds like she led a positive impact in life. Good on her.
And this is relevant to the video because?
You are right to be proud 🥰🥰🥰 you're very lucky 💕💕💕🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
Bragging about a relative is one thing, but what did you achieve, as a result??
My respect and admiration for Women of the past grows exponentially the more their real stories are revealed. In particular those Women who have come into power, war and politics while meeting the expectations of being a woman and mother. Many shortcomings I have learned to overcome in knowledge of the tremendous pressures they were under. With the exception of a few truly great Male Rulers, I favor most if not all of these Female Monarchs. To say that it’s a Man’s World and ignore the contributions and sacrifices made by women throughout history. Is a gross oversight that productions such as these wonderfully rectify. There’s more to the world’s story than the Patriarchy. Well Done 👏🥂
Thank you British documentaries for teaching us and showing us world history and thank you Europeans for making movies and having photography and all the other great inventions of the world.
I quite enjoyed the video! ❤ very informative and cool history.
Patty- This was fantastic. Can't wait for Part Two
My impression of Queen Medici completely changed by this insightful view of her life a complete 180 on what I thought I knew. Thank you!
Awesome waiting for part 2 beautifully made even if I fell asleep on it 2 times today Saturday February 11, 2023. My great grandma Claire birthday whom would be 123yrs old today born in 1900 to September 13, 1996 at 96 yrs old.
Catherine de Medici was an astute, intelligent, powerful woman and a credit to the Medici name
oooo yeah i’m so excited for this! i absolutely love your longer compilations 👏 thank you!
We need more appreciation for the beautiful mind and soul of Queen Victoria. Much can be learned from her foresight, courage and intelligence, compassion and empathy. Thank you for sharing..
Really wish we had the full unredacted/ edited journals of most of these women. But especially Victoria. It’s honest a miscarriage of history how heavily her family censored her journals after her death. That’s history we will never get back :/
Anna Rushlau
It is not a foible of history that ALL of Victoria's diaries are not shared with the WORLD! Jesus H. Christ LADY! HOW WOULD YOU LIKE ALL YOUR PRIVATE OPINIONS aired for the entire world to read!!??
Her family had EVERY right to keep her private diaries, just that. Private.
Snortles!!! 😉 Rumor has it, despite much of her reputation, she was a spicy, lively little woman! Her 9 children have touched most of the royal houses of Europe.
I think the fact that her stepson never attempted to conquer her or take her power answers the question of legitimate rule. Added to enduring peace in her kingdom, it says all one needs to consider when asking if she was in any way scheming or unwanted.
Throughout history right up until the 1950s, more women died in childbirth than men died in war. Women made that sacrifice to keep humanity alive, while men fought to protect that humanity. Men are honoured for the role they played (rightfully so), but no one ever acknowledges the horrors and the sacrifices that average women faced over and over again in the birthing chamber and maternity wards to literally build our future.
I absolutely love this channel always been a history lover I'd love to see more on queen Victoria or her children or Marie antoinette or Queen Anne
German baddies
Maybe no so famous ones would be good
Thank you for posting this interesting, unique history video. I appreciate it.
Thank You! Must needed History Lessons and enlightenment. Shows that we never learn from the past. History keeps repeating itself, over and over again. Excellent Video.
The pyramids ancient to Hatshepsut and Cleopatra is hard to wrap my head around; the depth of antiquity strikes awe in me.
Considering that ancient Greece was at least half a millennia before ancient Rome, when most people think they were simultaneous.... yes, the depth of history is truly astounding
This is a serious study in Egyptology hitherto not well known. Congratulations Ola!!! I'm looking forward to the next chapter of the fascinating story.
Nicely done. It great to know there amazing women that ruled many communities.
My mom is a professional artist, highly educated in Calculus, triganometry, and any other mathematical application and you know what? She didn't pass ANY of her talents on to me😑 thanks mom🥰
What kind of scientific and/or daVinci-like art does your Mom create?
An intriguing suggestion! Wu Zetian's remarkable legacy certainly deserves more attention. Kudos to British documentaries for bridging gaps in historical education and fostering curiosity worldwide.
why don't you ask chinese about it?
Thank you for this content. Keep it up 😊 ❤️💪🏼
You can look up Margrethe the first of Denmark. Unifying Denmark, Norway and Sweden under one union. A real underdog story, but she was so competent and eventually became so popular that the people find loopholes for her to remain at power until her death.
The Medici family has helped artists promote their work and shaped the Renaissance, a great period in cultural history. They changed many lives.
Thank you for the upload.
Being descended from abolitionists and suffragettes, my view of the world may be slightly different from others. My first name is the family name for Lucretia Mott and my second name from her brother William Llyod Garrison. I have noted during my short years of this mortal coil that history is invariably written by men, about men, for men. Aunt Lucretia was wholly owned by her husband and it was perfectly legal for him to beat her as long as the implement he used was no thicker than his thumb. For that, he was given a fine to pay. The long and short of it is that we haven't come anywhere near parity between the sexes. It's going on today as it did 6 thousand years ago. God forbid that a woman should be a strong ruler in her own right and claim the same power as a man. We were there to give men babies, mostly boys, please. Anne Boleyn was given 3 years to produce a son and was killed because she failed and because she tried to use her power as Queen. Empress Mathilda, had a strong and singular claim to the English crown but when she tried to wield power, she was called "she-wolf", and "poisoner of the female sex". Quite literally, the people of the medieval period considered being female as, in the time of Elizabeth I, "the illness of her gender". "A weak and feeble woman". We were expendable baby machines to be treated like our husband's favourite horse or the family dog. Aunt Lucretia knew that she would never, in her own lifetime, gain more privilege and rights and did her work for every woman right up to me, and we're still only beginning to excise the deeply held tenet that women aren't worth the oxygen we breathe and are needed only for our wombs. Heaven help those among us now whose skin is dark tan, brown, ebony, reddish or olive. I'm not even going to start with that one. The "historian" the narrator mentions in this video is very simply "full of it."
well said...
Nowadays people pretend not to even know what a woman IS, so the parity between sexes is going to be a bit delayed... 😅
Well this video is about 3 very strong women. I've listened to it at least 3 times. There are women narrators on this channel also.
Yada yada yada
I would love to see a video on Empress Wu Zetian!
The "berlin de voyage" coach arranged by Fersen for the flight to Varennes was not ostentatious. It was the standard vehicle for an aristocrat to use for long distance travel. Some of the back roads they were planning to use were rural so the coach, in essence, was more of an RV of sorts. Well equipped but not for the purpose of "luxury." This is according to the Antonia Fraser biography of Marie Antoinette.
May God have Mercy on all their soul, they were great women of the time they lived in, and may God have Mercy on us all 😢! In Jesus name Amen 🙏.
Wow! The one thing all of these women had in common, is that they each were put in the situation they began by others. What's a woman to do? When your given lemons, you make lemonade. And so they did.
Qhy would Marie Antoinette havw "stepped up to the bat" when her husband, Louie XIVI was no longer able to rule? She fired the Financial Ministers for heavena sake! Her fault was her ignorance the plight of her subjects. She was never taught anything about administrative concepts, etc. Her husband, the King was taught from his youth. It is his fault the economy collapsed. By the time Marie Antoinette stepped into power, it was too late to affect any change!
These video's enrich my life!♡
How did Countess Bathory, as interesting as she is, change history?
Every woman is a hero. History has not been kind to women. Still today things are not perfect. We persevere
Yet, without us, leading from the front or guiding from behind, there would be no history nor present. I am content ~~~
Uh, maybe not every single one. Some of those Nazi concentration camp women were pretty bad
@@watching7721 I stand corrected
...Erzebet Bathory, Margaret Thatcher and Leni Reifenstahl were hardly heroes.
People have the capacity for great villainy- men and women alike; It serves no one to put one gender above another.
Queen Victoria's Legacy is astonishing ! With much more power, Catherine de Medici was awesome, esp with the huguenots !
Great video!! Thank you!!
Welcome & and well done ... 😊
This is what the lust for power and wealth will do to the world, and it still goes on today.😣😞
Cathrine Medici is my favorite. Her whole Family dating back to the 1400s changed the world for sure! The Medici family is one the worlds most famous historical families. I respect them even tho they are not around today!
They were murderers.
So was a lot of other historical families. What does that change?🤔
@@sashalove83 No not all of them are murderers. But let's not get off topic from the point. Most of them are so therefore why are we putting them on a pedestal and admiring them?
and isabel of castilla? ella cambio la historia 360 grados
Thanks for sharing this story
The effort you put on this video is impressive. May I know where you can get free images?
HELLO thank you for your hard work.
These are beautifully written.
That was excellent. Thank you!
Well done ❤❤
love this! thanks
Maria Theresa wasn't Holy Roman Empress in her own right, her husband was elected Emperor so she was technically Empress Consort.
But for all intents and purposes
Hatshepsut had the title of the Wife of the God ( a duty she did to Amun-Ra at his temple) , Daughter of the Pharaoh, Wife of the Pharaoh, and Regent to her stepson , her brother had to marry her because her tie to the royal bloodline was stronger than his as his mother was a concubine while her mother was the Kings Wife and sister. Learn your history.
You know as many times as I heard the story of Elizabeth Bathory, this is the first time I’ve heard this angle. It’s definitely a compelling argument and quite plausible
Would love a video about Jadwiga, female king of Poland
Awesome! My favorite ones of the bunch are Maria Theresa and Victoria!
Can you make a video of Isabella I of Castile
Anyone else pumped for the new Marie Antoinette show?
It's AWESOME! I CAN'T WAIT for Season 2.
Where can I watch it?
I am just wondering when part 2 will be uploaded please 🤔🤔
I wept for Marie Antoinette. Poor girl, the tragedy she suffered. There was absolutely no reason for her to be executed while rapists, and murderers frolicked freely about.
Queen Victoria is my favorite. She did so much to better the lives of people, especially women. Her benevolence reached many countries, worldwide. Even the kingdom of Hawai'i. The last Hawai'ian Princess, bore her first name as Victoria to honor Queen Victoria.
The queen who did nothing to aid the Irish during the great famine? Hell no. She was very selective in where her care extended to. She was also a horrible mother, with her daughters carrying the brunt of it.
@@Peacekeeper88 I choose the glass that is half full instead of half empty.
@@FreeSpirit47 If you want to be tortured like these
Queen Victoria was against votes for woman, so not sure exactly what she did to better anyone’s life.
You don't always have to be in the history books or even looked on favorably to have changed history. Many women did it behind the scenes...can you do a video on ...
Lina Heydrich? Her key role in one of the darkest periods in history shows that women can be just as aggressive as men, if not more so.
The role she had in the nazi party. with her husband Reinhard Heydrich who was one of the principal architect of the Holocaust. would be a very interesting topic. History is history even when it is on the topic of that people tend to shy away from. One of the worst if not the worst of humanity
We need to as women all strive to change the world even if it’s only in our family. Break generational curses as you go.
@@shawnkerrick7815 I am definitely voting against trying to turn a nazi anyone into some hero. They are definitely not.
@@silkoakranchpitchforkranch1205 some women are the cause of it. They are actually I am sad to say, just as responsible as men when given the chance. I've seen it myself personally behind the scenes and when in position of leadership.
@@silkoakranchpitchforkranch1205 she allowed him to rise to power, supported his strengths and weaknesses to the utmost (even his personal bad behavior beyond what most women would tolerate today) as a good wife, while at the same time instilled in him the anti semitism that allowed him to view his work as justifed and just part of the process. This is key.
Fabulous ❤️
You forgot Jennifer Lawrence, she was the first strong female according to Jennifer Lawrence
😂😂😂
You forget Isabella of Spain.
It should be " The Women who made history", you can't change what is yet to come.
QUESTION Why Do They Portray. Cleopatra To Look 👀 Like As She Wasn’t A BLACK WOMAN 🤔
She wasn't Black, is why.
Her family were an incestuous Greek Macedonian family, who depicted themselves with red hair.
Nefertiti, Hatchepsut and Queen Tiye were all likely Black, but the Ptolemies were colonizers who thought they were superior to the people they ruled.
Maria Teresa for the most part was an old battle axe who, succeeded in upsetting most of the heads of Europe at one time or another, but was also a successful business and state administrator.
You mean madness, stupidity and colonialism
@@عليياسر-ذ5ب No, that's just called Europe
@@watching7721 These are lies from Queen Isabelle, my brother, because she hates her sister
@@عليياسر-ذ5ب Idk what you're talking about, I was just mocking Europe
@@watching7721 Of what good purpose is that, please?
Bathory was guilty. When they came to arrest her, there were corpses still in chains and women in various stages of torture. This documentarian seems to be saying that the whole thing was made up.
I enjoy documentaries but the music in background is no good for adhd people.
No background music in my device.
Sorry, what about Elisabeth I of England? How is she not on the list?
I don't see how Elizabeth Bathory has changed history. Guilty or innocent, she hasn't done anything of any importance for giving her any honor as an agent of chance.
These poor women. Responsible for so much with zero rights or power of their own.
You know, besides all their power as ruler
The thumbnail showed Marie Antoinette and Nefertiti but they aren't mentioned? Pretty click-baity.
They are mentioned lol
@@PeopleProfiles Where?
I think Catherine de Medici was portrayed as an evil woman and in the books I have read,that is what it says,but having watched your show,I don't think she was that bad but gad to put up with her husband screwing someone else and being in love with them and only getting together because his mistress said so
Issue was, that was common in royalty. Marriages were based on alliances, rarely on love. What de Medici is most condemned for now is her religious persecution
Elizabeth bathory does seem pretty twisted. her opponents definitely exaggerated and got false confessions from torture, which really makes them
no better. but the gynoecium, and the girls that turned up dead or missing are pretty horrifying. I mean just the idea
her own servants weren't enough for her to torture and kill and needed more victims it's so evil and it does seem like that was the purpose of her gynoecium
Yes, she is a good lady. No wonder my sons killed this lady
Bathory is another example of who really knows. The behavior over examination of "cholera" victims. Would authorities have really ignored the disappearance of so many young girls?
It was well known the methods used to discipline servants could be quite harsh. The confessions under torture were most likely balderdash.
Who knows...
Absolutely none of the charges leveled against her would stand up in court today. No actual witnesses were presented, no physical evidence was shown. All of the "evidence" presented was hearsay, except for one person who was bribed, a handful whose "confessions" were produced under torture and another two who couldn't be trusted to say that the sky was blue. Some of the people who were named as "missing" or "tortured" were found later, healthy and happy and had no idea what the hell anyone was talking about when asked about torture. Any chance Ersebet had to defend herself or prove her innocence was actively suppressed by the two men who stood to gain the most financially from seizing her estate. No rumors against her surfaced until after she outlived her husband's protection - a husband that, it should be noted, was already noted for a violent temper and a propensity for torture above and beyond what the times tolerated and probably had combat PTSD as well.
And nothing about the trial was recorded for a hundred years afterwards. We question the testimony of eyewitnesses in the courtroom mere months after the events due to distortion, and the dude who recorded the Bathory case was definitely not an eyewitness even to the trial, let alone the supposed events. Yet letters survive to third-parties from her time, letters which praise Erzebet for her gentle manner, kind spirit and fair-mindedness, qualities which are evidenced by her capable handling of the combined estates of her family and her husband's, by the lack of complaints made against her by her tenants or servants (until after the rumors started getting planted), and by her voluntary decision to educate women and girls and see to the provisioning of war widows.
If the case which took her down then were presented in a court today, she would unquestionably be cleared on all charges and likely have grounds for a defamation countersuit. But she's dead, and still can't defend herself, and so all the most lurid crap imaginable ends up sticking to a woman whose only real offense was to be a Protestant noblewoman from a house that had pissed off the Habsburgs, and had the bad luck to outlive her husband right when the king really wanted rid of the debt he owed to her through her deceased husband.
@@DeborahRosen99 Least good woman in Britain Don't touch my Queen Mary
Great presentation. Wonderful narrator. Clearly, there are countless other historically influential women that deserve a place in the video. But all cannot be included in one program. One questionable person included here is Elizabeth Barthory. While allegations of her cruelty and murders of hundreds of young girls made her infamous, I don't see how she "changed history." Did laws change because of her? If so, which ones? If anything, Elizabeth's personal history was changed as a result of the charges against her, particularly after her death.
HATSHEPSUT'S TALL MOUMENT LOOKS LIKE AMERICA'S "WASHINGTON MOUMENT TODAY👍🏻👌💡
Egyptians really built impressive monuments
El cuento de los Bourbon y los Hapsburg lo sabemos todos, pero gracias por tu vision de las mujeres permitidas en la historia....sigo mirando el video....
28:23
Beautiful made love history wow 6 hrs
Yikes!!! Got up to Lizzie B…
Not a good bedtime story ~~~
Will scroll on and pop back in later ~~~
ty!!!!!!
I think she was a kind smart women preserving her loved ones names to Reign in there name.
After death others were not understanding and maybe that why others chose to erase her accomplishment and name..?
Dynastic Brilliance!!....The lady was bad in the best way and yes haters have existed since the beginning of time. Egyptian History is better because of her the female pharaoh
Lady H🌺
And the greek philosopher and scientist? The martyr? She is missing here. Not to mention quite a few more ladies in history. Still, thank you, a good job, although a bit focused on the macbre and conflict.
Hypatia?
Uploaded 16mins ago, 6 hours long, evening is set
Me too 😀 over the moon 🌝
So no mention of Elizabeth I of Spain, that's Elizabeth the Catholic. The woman that allowed for Columbus trip in 1492 to happen. The woman that laid down the banning of slavery in newly discovered lands, and other feats that were well ahead of her time.
Maybe she actually deserves a whole people's profile episode by herself...
Are you referring to Isabella, the queen who authorized Columbus' trip. Though she never officially banned slavery in her lifetime albeit condemning it. The Laws of Burgos, passed by her husband and daughter after Isabella's death, did ban slavery.
I say this because the one queen of Spain named Elizabeth, Elizabeth of Valois, was generally an unremarkable queen with the exception of her remarkably good relationship with her husband, Philip II
Si quieres te lo digo en español. La reina ISABEL I de Castilla y Fernando de Aragón. Veinte años antes de las juntas de Burgos, tuvieron lugar las juntas de Valladolid, en previsión de la reconquista de Granada, cuyo propósito era otorgar la ciudadanía a todo el mundo siempre y cuando se convirtieran al catolicismo. Isabel de Valois no pinta nada en esta historia
@@NAISGUANMEIT 알아요. 내가 말하고자 하는 것은 스페인의 엘리자베스 여왕이 당신이 그녀에게 귀속시키는 일을 한 적이 없다는 것입니다
Watching 6:53
Ohh contraire, do tell! Continue
The list lacks the most remarkable woman: JOAN OF ARC
Every powerful woman in history, only reached that position because of a man or men. Whether born into a kingdom with power earned by a man, or married into the same thing.
But men achieved that status by being born from women!
WE THINK "HATSHEPSUT" WAS A LEGITIMATE RULER GIVE POWER BY MEN TO ENHANCE THEIR RULING! POWER SHE HAD STYLE, A CERTAIN CLASS MEN THOUGHT NECESSARY AT THAT TIME IN HSTORY THAT MADE THEM SEEM GREATER THAN ANY OTHER IN THE WORLD AT THAT TIME😇👍🏻👌
TO US "HATSHEPSUT"💋💜 WAS LIKE OUR OLD TESTAMENT "SOLOMON" 🀄💡 PRAISE THE
L👑RD🀄
Salvation salvation salvation.. please remind in... faith
😂😂😂woe, Billy, lemme jump in here! This is the Egyptian History from the historical age of the 1500 (s) when the American Stock exchange was activated, lemme make you aware, black Egyptians were not included in this part of history! FYI, Slavery!!!
Cathrine de Medici’s father died in 1519 not 1492. 2 different Lorenzo’s
They did make a lot of CONVENIENT mistakes
Your right! Totally bugged me because I I’ve studied that family all my life!
❤❤❤❤❤
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ for them
She was a legitimate ruler.
Doesn't seem to actually describe how they changed their times. 🤔
Fake news
They just ruled like any other person would man or female
Title very misleading,