@@AKG-e6j What she's talking about with that is outright how nobility and royalty worked back then. Marriage for Love for a good part of history was a rare thing. And for a decent part of that rarity was also a "peasants thing" not a thing of Nobility. The reality is that She probably didn't even love her first husband so loving MacBeth didnt' factor into it either. This was about politics, and alliances, and power. Marriage secured these things and more. Plenty of nobility only had sexual relations with their spouses often enough to secure Heir's and daughters to be married off to the heirs of other families and then cut things off. Some had other lovers and as long as that didn't create issues from things like childbirth many didn't care.
Even with the bad sound, but it gets better as you get into it, or maybe my old age is doing it, or too many drugs in the 70's, or I'm just plain tired. No matter, like you said, it's Tony.
This is my favorite Shakespeare play. Didn't know at the time I have dyslexia. So in school when chosen to read aloud I spoke slower and more distinctly than my classmates. The teacher seeing this chose me to read most all the leads that year because I didn't rush. Perfect for Shakespeare. Lol.
This is quite incredible, I had the same experience as you Annette. When I read Macbeth in class, about 1965 in think, I was dyslexic and didn't know it. So then read more than the other classmates. BTW I didn't know about dyslexia until I was 40 -45.
This is the first time I've heard Macbeth blamed for Lady Macbeth's madness. I was always taught that she went mad because of the guilt she felt for setting in motion all the murders.
You can’t really say it was anyone’s fault (other than the wired sisters) lady Macbeth played a large role in convincing him to kill the king in the first place so its definitely not Macbeths fault.
Macbeth remains a supreme psychological drama, so brilliantly conceived and written that it's never been surpassed. And while this program was wonderful and fascinating, it cannot dimish either the power or the importance of the play. Yet it's important that the history that inspired it is not lost. It's why I enjoy this program so much.
The history behind the play contributes much to the understanding of the play. It makes the play that much more meaningful when one understands both the past history-the real Macbeth and his times-and Shakespeare’ and King James’s own times.
Dear, Dear Sir Tony (et. al), Thank you. Thank you for making history so personal and, above all, so truthful. You make it informative as well as entertaining.
Tony is right that Malcolm III defeating Macbeth changed Scotland's destiny. (Macbeth's stepson, Gruoch's son Lulach, was king for a few months in between.) Not only did Malcolm marry Margaret of Wessex, a Saxon princess, but several of Malcolm's sons were raised or sheltered at the court of William I, William Rufus and Henry I, and his daughter Matilda married Henry I, which gave all the Plantagenet line a reason to claim Scotland.
Yes and the only indigenous peoples on these islands are the Celts, Picts and Britons, Anglo's and Saxons are Germanic peoples, so if we are Anglo-Saxon we are German.
In my younger teens Shakespeare was not taught in a very enjoyable way. However, later on l read Macbeth in a classroom where l & the teacher were the only females. I was 18 and got to read Lady Macbeth's lines as well as the main female in "The Taming Of The Shrew". Just letting the kids read the different roles together in class was a GREAT way for the teacher to connect us & peak our interest in Shakespeare!!👍 I am now about to turn 61 & have enjoyed reading more Shakespeare on my own since, thanks to the right teacher waaaay back in the late 70's!! Thank💐 You Ma'am wherever you are now! 🤗💖🌈🇨🇦☘️⚜️
Annoyingly their sound is always off. I'd suggest that it's because they don't want the bots to catch them, but their info says the content they post is all licensed so...dunno.
Excellent, and very entertaining. As a self proclaimed history buff I also enjoyed how you tried to link the truth with art, and I found that very interesting as well! I love these Timeline documentaries, especially ones involving western, and Northern Europe from the Viking age through 17th century. Thank You!!!!
In all Shakespeare's plays, he played to Tudor court discrimination. Richard III, Macbeth are 2 examples whilst other plays boosted other individuals. They were plays for the masses after all and to keep them loyal to the Tudors.
@@allanthomson4488The Tudors would been just as anti Macbeth. Tannestry, elective monarchy, Highland culture, celtic. And of course family. Malcolm III and his wife Margaret of Wessex via their daughter Matilda (wife of Henry I, mother of Empress Matilda) were the ancestors of the Plantagenets and Tudors and their royal link to Alfred the Great. Plus it was seemingly very likely that James would succeed Elizabeth, so even if the Play had been composed earlier the impetus would be the same.
Baldrick, that's the absolute worst plan since Napoleon Bonaparte decided to take his soldiers on winter holiday in Siberia. I've got a better idea: Let's make a documentary!
@@dam_nic113 Maybe he mixed them up with the Pre-Dark Age Franks, The Gauls, though you would think he would realize Tower MacMaolain was making a joke about the tinney audio quality
Great documentary! Thanks for sharing the perspective that Macbeth might have been able to establish Scotland as a Gaelic kingdom for a longer period of time if he hadn't been killed.
Great documentary. Good to get tonthe roots of who Macbeth really was. Great literature does not mean historical accuracy. Look how another character, Richard III.by no means a saint was turned into a monster by Shakespeare. As I always reminded my students: plays, novels and opera could be fun but are not the way to learn history. However they do arouse curiosity, provoke discussion and asking of questions....which is a good thing.
I used to share a desk with Viscount Emlyn, the real life Thane of Cawdor, at boarding school 45 years ago. He was about a year older than me, and a nice chap.
Thank you for the upload, it's great to see a new Tony This is a fascinating story, although of course that's what we expect from him. I found that the Scots accent greatly enhanced the story telling, and Tony seemed as if he was describing something he'd actually seen. Yes the sound is a bit wonky; I understand it bothering people because it's distracting, but if it's a choice between Tony with bad sound, and nothing, well....
I couldn't keep count of how many times I said wow during this program. So much snow information great great documentary thanks again to Tony and time team
Because of you & your Magnificent video documentary i just watched THE SCOTTISH PLAY for the first time & because of you i understood every word. For this I thank you. I loved being able to visualize the scenes so much better. More Please
He might be a Pictish/Scottish/Viking Gallowglass Warrior these were the Special Forces from Scotland that travelled the world as guns for hire or if you like Knights Templars without out the God complex 👍
I looked into the Stone of Destiny some years back. The original or real one was described as a white stone, perhaps quarts or marble, carved into the shape of a seat and covered with intricate patterns that may have been knot work. The one taken by the English was just the same as that used for Scone Abbey. Edward 1 of England came to Scone and demanded the stone and might have just been given a hatch for the drains. He came back the next year and tore the abbey to pieces likely looking for the real stone. Since then the English have always claimed the had the real one. Considering the real one came from Ireland it is unlikely it was Perthshire sandstone.
I did not know there was a real King MacBeth. It seems that "based on real events" meant as little to Shakespeare as it does to modern screen writers. :)
@@kezkezooie8595 well in all honesty Shakespeare is more concerned with writing a good story than following history to a key. I mean if all films followed history completely with all its politics and complications they would be kind of boring.
@@elgeneral5279 Oh, yeah, I know and I agree with you. It was just a bit of a joke. You know the old saying "Never let the truth ruin a good story" :) This was very interesting though. I love Tony Robinson's doco's, with, or without, turnips.
A brilliant presentation of the real Macbeth using Shakespeares play as counterpoint. Thoroughly enjoyed the information, which was largely new to me. Although a Scottish friend had tried to tell me the tale a couple of years ag
"Macbeth shall never vanquish'd be until Great Birnam Wood to high Dunsinane Hill Shall come against him." ...or perhaps an English writer of fiction shall obscure what was the height of Highland culture. Macbeth deserves to be remembered. I think a script based upon the real Macbeth would make an excellent movie.
Wow!! I`ve acted in the Shakespearean play in amateur theatre. I`ve read some of the 'history' of this almost mythical figure. However, my eyes have been opened wide by this exceptionally detailed and factually backed up documentary. Thank you World History and Tony Robinson for the most enjoyable experience.
24:13 when he describes the scene of Macbeth being acclaimed by the nobles, I just kept thinking of Game of Thrones : "King of the North ! KING of the North !! KING OF THE NORTH !!! "
I tend to disdain Game of Thrones but at least it got some people into real history. But always remember, please, history came first. GOT is facile but pretty
"Tell me, Brother Baldrick, what exactly did God do to the Sodomites?" "I dunno, my lord. But it can't have been worse than what they used to do to each other."
47:54 *"Out. Out. Brief Candle. Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more. It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."* ~Macbeth~
@@Elleoaqua True, and what is genius about this is that it is really Shakespeare writing it, knowing full well that those within his tragedy would not be able to appreciate it from his (God's)/the audience's perspective. It's funny how nihilists like to use this quote in a too literal way to justify their outlook.
I studied the play Macbeth during summer session. The classroom was hot 80-85 degrees. Our instructor Ms Eunice Sweeney not only had Gollum's height but she was that creature personified!
Macbeth is such a great story because of it's versatility. There are so many versions of it from feudal Japan (Throne of Blood) to futuristic settings. It's my favorite Shakespearean story.
I have to add, St Margaret-Malcolm III’s second wife (and the marriage I’m descended from) was only half English. She was a Princess of Hungary. (Her half brother was completely English.) There are families in Hungary today, still, who are her descendants, also.
Granddaughter of Edmund Ironside, King Cnut (or Canute) sent Ironside's sons to Sweden, from whence to Kief and then they ended up in Hungary. Margaret was born in Hungary about 1045. Her brother Edgar the Ætheling and sister Cristina were also born in Hungary around this time.
Even though it was 300 years later, it's easy to see why W. Wallace gained popularity among the 'common' so quickly and became such a 'pain' to the anglicised scot nobility....a nativist hope for a historical MacBeth part 2.
Jayson...That's what I thought. It became a divided Kingdom, too bad for that. My family heritage is from the Highlands. The Gaelic language and culture are taught , sung, performed and live on in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.
Thank you Tony, I always learn something new from your programs. Adieu. This was you r most cunning program. "Unfortunately, Johnson hadn't got as far a 'Gullible' in the dictionary". Brilliant!
I found this to be absolutely fascinating. I am familiar with the play, and I have visited Scotland which I loved. Anyone into both literature and history must watch this.
Yes,there was coinage during his time. He was the first King to go to Rome and throw gold coins to the poor. The play was to honor the ancestor of the English queen. Malcolm Canmore(meaning big head) was the malcolm in the play. He was run to ground and killed at Lumphanan,where the grass grows golden to this day. If you go to where they say,and stop on the highway above you can see the yellow grass. He was actually buried though on the Isle of Iona,under a little mound in the graveyard at the Abbey. I came to see him from the US. I took out some Bushmills and climbed up top of the mound and sat down and got drunk with him,pouring a little for him I did. I love my ancestor.
It's only natural that Tony Robinson should host this documentary. After all, in one of the _Blackadder_ episodes he did as Baldrick, the name "Macbeth" was used continuously to spook the actors.
I love all of the Blackadders. I watched the first series when it first aired and it was very different and original for its time, especially that first season. The show changed the format and comedy style to a more traditional one in the later seasons but it didn't lose it's quality; I still loved them all.
Rebecca English-Tenji Ahhh! Hot potato, orchestra stalls. Pluck will make amends. For the record yes, this documentary conjures up mental images of THAT Blackadder The Third episode. 😉
Thanasis Earnest Lampropoulos -What are we forgetting, Your Highness? -Now look, if I stand any wider than this, I have a serious chance in disappointing my future queen. -No, your highness, the roar! -The roar? -Keanrick, from your Hamlet -WOOOAH To be or not to be What a legendary episode
I would argue that the light of Celtic Scotland briefly came back on again with William Wallace and Robert the Bruce. But yeah, Malcom shifted the Kingdom southward, totally agreed. But the locals continued to speak Scottish Gaelic well until the Reformation. Tragically the last speaker of Scottish Gaelic died a few years ago I heard. I guess it was inevitable. Tragically when a language dies, so goes an ancient culture and it's songs and customs as well.
Another example of how actors Hollywood and writers like to change History to their own liking. True History is Awesome enough it doesn’t need to be changed ,Thank you for making thing Right.
Its very interesting to hear parts of my own family history. My family is from Clan Duncan and you brought up a couple of facts I was unaware of. Our family line has been traced back to King Duncan. Thank you for this in depth documentary on Macbeth. This just adds to the history.
A lot of Saxons living in Scotland now including my home town Pitlochry & Dunkeld & Birnam where I worked as an apprentice electrician many times. No wonder the referendum was lost in 2014, Saxons are deluging Scotland with the tacit approval of their Union Jack Jock lackeys. That said, Tony is a braw lad, Superbious video.
Domnall mac Ailpín (Donald I) was the 1st King of Scotland, not Cináed mac Ailpin (Kenneth I). Kenneth was king of the Picts, it wasn't until Donald, who was raised as a Gael by his Scotti mother, in north west Ireland, took the throne did Pictland become Alba or Alban or Albany (ie Scotland).
Very nice documentary. As an American Shakespeare buff (I've been reading the plays more or less continuously for at least 15 years) Macbeth, Richard III, and of course Hamlet are my favorites, although I do like the Henry plays as well. I enjoyed this program very much.
Scotland didn't need the Vikings to the far north or the English or Rome and the pope to make them Macbeths or Bruces...The blue face Scot, where women were equal warriors were the last of true free Scotland 😢 I love Mr.Robinson's documentaries.❤
When he wasn't burning people alive and marrying their widow. Still, I suppose that is nothing much for then and he only did it once. A mere misdemeanour. Lol
The reason actors considered saying "Macbeth" was bad luck, ESPECIALLY in a theater, was that accidents seem to have occurred whenever the play was performed. Actors tended to be superstitious, and laid the blame on the play itself. The play was, in spite of this, very popular with the groundlings, so rather than not performing a true moneymaker, actors just changed the name to "The Scottish Play" among themselves
@@mikegrossberg8624 I was told by an actor that to quote from "The Scottish Play" was very bad luck, and if you spoke any line from it outside of actual rehearsal or performance, you had to leave the room, and turn round three times before re-entering. That was supposed to break the curse or something.
Wow Tony's final words on Macbeth really moved me, he really has a sensitivity to him and a way with words that brings history to life.
Perhaps a good scriptwriter?
@@janetmackinnon3411 Well yeah, the "scriptwriter" was Shakespeare himself! Those are words from Macbeth.
Gotta love that transition:
"Did she really love him?"
"WHAT'S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT?"
Bcz the narrator dr.louis seems like that character so she is relating every women to herself.
@Jeff Oliver Lol! Tina MacTurner
@@AKG-e6j What she's talking about with that is outright how nobility and royalty worked back then. Marriage for Love for a good part of history was a rare thing. And for a decent part of that rarity was also a "peasants thing" not a thing of Nobility.
The reality is that She probably didn't even love her first husband so loving MacBeth didnt' factor into it either. This was about politics, and alliances, and power. Marriage secured these things and more. Plenty of nobility only had sexual relations with their spouses often enough to secure Heir's and daughters to be married off to the heirs of other families and then cut things off. Some had other lovers and as long as that didn't create issues from things like childbirth many didn't care.
I could listen to Tony Robinson explain ANYTHING with or without turnips.
... or even so much as a cunning plan 😉
I love him sooooooo much.
Even with the bad sound, but it gets better as you get into it, or maybe my old age is doing it, or too many drugs in the 70's, or I'm just plain tired. No matter, like you said, it's Tony.
@@laurievandenbeldt6353 it gets around the copy right issue
Agreed!
I blame the sound problem on too much wing of bat. You get that ingredient wrong, it ruins it every time.
Or eye of newt! That could've gone wrong too!
Clever lol
wing of bat. Love your humor. I smile. Thx
annoyed707 excellent
well, Eye of newt or tongue of dog isn't right for sure,,
This is my favorite Shakespeare play. Didn't know at the time I have dyslexia. So in school when chosen to read aloud I spoke slower and more distinctly than my classmates. The teacher seeing this chose me to read most all the leads that year because I didn't rush. Perfect for Shakespeare. Lol.
Good for you! Shakespeare should be sounded out or acted and watched..not read in silence!
Of course, the notes we got... were to spit those lines out as fast as possible... on stage, anyway.
This is quite incredible, I had the same experience as you Annette. When I read Macbeth in class, about 1965 in think, I was dyslexic and didn't know it. So then read more than the other classmates. BTW I didn't know about dyslexia until I was 40 -45.
That was a wise teacher indeed; you were fortunate.
Love how Tony Robinson brings fact n fiction together while maintaining the mystery. 👍
HOT ALLAN AT 14:24 !!! WHOAH AND THANK YOU !
This is the first time I've heard Macbeth blamed for Lady Macbeth's madness. I was always taught that she went mad because of the guilt she felt for setting in motion all the murders.
I agree !
You can’t really say it was anyone’s fault (other than the wired sisters) lady Macbeth played a large role in convincing him to kill the king in the first place so its definitely not Macbeths fault.
@@KdpaintedYeah bud, in the play.
Until this video I didn't even know that M Beth was a real person.
Macbeth remains a supreme psychological drama, so brilliantly conceived and written that it's never been surpassed. And while this program was wonderful and fascinating, it cannot dimish either the power or the importance of the play. Yet it's important that the history that inspired it is not lost. It's why I enjoy this program so much.
The history behind the play contributes much to the understanding of the play. It makes the play that much more meaningful when one understands both the past history-the real Macbeth and his times-and Shakespeare’ and King James’s own times.
@@shalevedna Exactly.
Dear, Dear Sir Tony (et. al), Thank you. Thank you for making history so personal and, above all, so truthful. You make it informative as well as entertaining.
Putting the sound difficulty to one side, this is a tremendous programme - Well done!
Is there a version of this with listenable sound?
Tony is right that Malcolm III defeating Macbeth changed Scotland's destiny. (Macbeth's stepson, Gruoch's son Lulach, was king for a few months in between.) Not only did Malcolm marry Margaret of Wessex, a Saxon princess, but several of Malcolm's sons were raised or sheltered at the court of William I, William Rufus and Henry I, and his daughter Matilda married Henry I, which gave all the Plantagenet line a reason to claim Scotland.
One son , Duncan .
Oops.
Most don't know Shakespeare fell out of favor with Queen Elizabeth after she caught him docking with Sir Walter Raleigh.
Yes and the only indigenous peoples on these islands are the Celts, Picts and Britons, Anglo's and Saxons are Germanic peoples, so if we are Anglo-Saxon we are German.
Thanks for the endnotes on this I was really wondering what had happened to Gruroch and the children and wished that had been included in the program.
Shakespeare never let the truth stand in the way of a good story.
Truth wasn't worth losing one's head over 🤔
His histories were not historical, his comedies were not comical but his tragedies weere tragic, in the pathetic sense of the word.
In all fairness, whatever sources were available would’ve been highly biased. That’s why Richard III was written the way it was.
@@knightofarkronia8652 No it was written that way to please the Tudor family over the Plantagenets.
With a nod to Mark Twain.
In my younger teens Shakespeare was not taught in a very enjoyable way.
However, later on l
read Macbeth in a classroom where l & the teacher were the only females. I was 18 and got to read Lady Macbeth's lines as well as the main female in "The Taming Of The Shrew". Just letting the kids read the different roles together in class was a GREAT way for the teacher to connect us & peak our interest in Shakespeare!!👍
I am now about to turn 61 & have enjoyed reading more Shakespeare on my own since, thanks to the right teacher waaaay back in the late 70's!! Thank💐 You Ma'am wherever you are now! 🤗💖🌈🇨🇦☘️⚜️
The sound is a little weird...
It echos.
Annoyingly their sound is always off. I'd suggest that it's because they don't want the bots to catch them, but their info says the content they post is all licensed so...dunno.
Yeah I always want to contact them about fixing all their tinny videos haha. The content is always so quality but the audio is usually meh.
So is life....
It's not so bad you can't watch it though.
Excellent, and very entertaining. As a self proclaimed history buff I also enjoyed how you tried to link the truth with art, and I found that very interesting as well! I love these Timeline documentaries, especially ones involving western, and Northern Europe from the Viking age through 17th century. Thank You!!!!
I love discovering a Tony Robinson program that's new to me!
Yes!
Me too!
ahaaa not many left.. Just started watching Tracks of Britain,
My t-ball coach gus is better than Tony
@@loganstroganoff1284 what is that in English?
In all Shakespeare's plays, he played to Tudor court discrimination. Richard III, Macbeth are 2 examples whilst other plays boosted other individuals. They were plays for the masses after all and to keep them loyal to the Tudors.
One must remember, Shakespeare was a author of plays and wrote those plays for the specific purpose of those who paid for his work.
Macbeth wasn't for a Tudor court - by then it was a Stuart Court...
@@allanthomson4488The Tudors would been just as anti Macbeth. Tannestry, elective monarchy, Highland culture, celtic. And of course family. Malcolm III and his wife Margaret of Wessex via their daughter Matilda (wife of Henry I, mother of Empress Matilda) were the ancestors of the Plantagenets and Tudors and their royal link to Alfred the Great. Plus it was seemingly very likely that James would succeed Elizabeth, so even if the Play had been composed earlier the impetus would be the same.
What are you doing here, Baldrick ?
I'm making a documentary, mylord.
Baldrick, that's the absolute worst plan since Napoleon Bonaparte decided to take his soldiers on winter holiday in Siberia. I've got a better idea: Let's make a documentary!
Hahaha, I thought he looked familiar.
Aha,what a cunning plan
That's how things sounded back in 1050 Scotland.
Sean Doherty Níl, you mean Gaelic (Gàidhlig). I reckon a typo. Little difference between Irish Gaelic and Scots Gaelic up to the 19th century.
@@dam_nic113 Maybe he mixed them up with the Pre-Dark Age Franks, The Gauls, though you would think he would realize Tower MacMaolain was making a joke about the tinney audio quality
In medivel scotland, they also didn't have color few^^ We should expect black&white tin-sound
@@NjK601 🤣😂🤣😂
LOL!
Great documentary! Thanks for sharing the perspective that Macbeth might have been able to establish Scotland as a Gaelic kingdom for a longer period of time if he hadn't been killed.
I love watching these documentaries, plz continue with them. Learned more thru these documentaries than I ever did in high school, LOVE HISTORY!
I'm so glad to see the comments about the terrible sound - I thought that my phone was kaput.
its a bypass for youtubes growing capitalist ideas.
Nope. The problem is with them.
It's the witches, distorting the sound.
Great documentary. Good to get tonthe roots of who Macbeth really was. Great literature does not mean historical accuracy. Look how another character, Richard III.by no means a saint was turned into a monster by Shakespeare. As I always reminded my students: plays, novels and opera could be fun but are not the way to learn history. However they do arouse curiosity, provoke discussion and asking of questions....which is a good thing.
I used to share a desk with Viscount Emlyn, the real life Thane of Cawdor, at boarding school 45 years ago. He was about a year older than me, and a nice chap.
Liar. That isnt possible.
@@josephswolin7450 it's very possible in the UK
Thank you for the upload, it's great to see a new Tony
This is a fascinating story, although of course that's what we expect from him. I found that the Scots accent greatly enhanced the story telling, and Tony seemed as if he was describing something he'd actually seen.
Yes the sound is a bit wonky; I understand it bothering people because it's distracting, but if it's a choice between Tony with bad sound, and nothing, well....
I couldn't keep count of how many times I said wow during this program. So much snow information great great documentary thanks again to Tony and time team
Tony is the best! I love all of his documentaries.
Some sound problems, but you get used to it. Good documentary, thanks for uploading.
Yes, at least it's not muffled, it's just a bit tinny with a slight echo at times. I got used to it fairly quickly.
Cant get used to it..Im gone
Kind of annoying
Because of you & your Magnificent video documentary i just watched THE SCOTTISH PLAY for the first time & because of you i understood every word. For this I thank you. I loved being able to visualize the scenes so much better.
More Please
It's the ancient sound of a curse
The sound is horrible
That weapons expert is the most Scottish person ever, he makes Billy Connolly look like Danny Dyer!
IKR? 😂. That bit was great! I seriously watched it three times🤣
Lol , hes magnificent
Aye, but then again, Connolly is a half baked Paddy.
@@KeithWilliamMacHendry ?????????????
He might be a Pictish/Scottish/Viking Gallowglass Warrior these were the Special Forces from Scotland that travelled the world as guns for hire or if you like Knights Templars without out the God complex 👍
I clicked for the ginger hunk in the thumbnail!
(I can't believe no one commented on him yet)
msflyingfox I did EXACTLY the same! What a total hunk. They don’t make them like that down here in the south
Lol
Aye, bet you double-clicked... even.
He looks like a giant ginger Billy Connolly.
Ahh that dude is a bit into it LOL
I looked into the Stone of Destiny some years back. The original or real one was described as a white stone, perhaps quarts or marble, carved into the shape of a seat and covered with intricate patterns that may have been knot work. The one taken by the English was just the same as that used for Scone Abbey. Edward 1 of England came to Scone and demanded the stone and might have just been given a hatch for the drains. He came back the next year and tore the abbey to pieces likely looking for the real stone. Since then the English have always claimed the had the real one.
Considering the real one came from Ireland it is unlikely it was Perthshire sandstone.
Thanks for these details. "...might just have been given a hatch for the drains." Gotta love it! Took Edward I a while to figure it out!
Sounds logical
Maybe but why demand the hatch back later if it was fake...
Wow that sounds interesting. “Stone of Destiny”.
@@canbrit4621 If Edward couldn't find the real stone, wouldn't he make the best of the situation?
Another beautiful piece my friend. Well done, as usual.
I did not know there was a real King MacBeth. It seems that "based on real events" meant as little to Shakespeare as it does to modern screen writers. :)
Macnutz420 without those plays tho, all that history would probably have been lost
Artistic license
LOL! It seems it's part of a long tradition.
@@kezkezooie8595 well in all honesty Shakespeare is more concerned with writing a good story than following history to a key. I mean if all films followed history completely with all its politics and complications they would be kind of boring.
@@elgeneral5279 Oh, yeah, I know and I agree with you. It was just a bit of a joke. You know the old saying "Never let the truth ruin a good story" :)
This was very interesting though. I love Tony Robinson's doco's, with, or without, turnips.
Thank you Tony. This puts Macbeth into a timeline that can be related to what was going on to the south...Edward the Confessor etc.
A brilliant presentation of the real Macbeth using Shakespeares play as counterpoint. Thoroughly enjoyed the information, which was largely new to me. Although a Scottish friend had tried to tell me the tale a couple of years ag
I enjoyed the play versus history aspect as well
"Macbeth the King" by Nigel Tranter is a really good novel on this subject
One of my favourites by Tranter!
Mr Tranter never wrote a bad book...
Here's to you Tony Robinson Jesus loves you more than you will know.
Did he die?
@@talosheeg Simon and Garfunkel lyric. Mrs Robinson.
Lemonheads
Pagan Pilgrim Hohoho...
xD
Thank you for sharing the history of our heritage. Thank you for preserving our story🧚🏻♀️🍃
Very interesting and informative. Thank you for uploading.
Very much enjoyed this show, it explained Macbeth better than many of the books I've read. Thank you.
"Macbeth shall never vanquish'd be until
Great Birnam Wood to high Dunsinane Hill
Shall come against him."
...or perhaps an English writer of fiction shall obscure what was the height of Highland culture. Macbeth deserves to be remembered. I think a script based upon the real Macbeth would make an excellent movie.
Wow!! I`ve acted in the Shakespearean play in amateur theatre. I`ve read some of the 'history' of this almost mythical figure. However, my eyes have been opened wide by this exceptionally detailed and factually backed up documentary. Thank you World History and Tony Robinson for the most enjoyable experience.
Too many friends in drama classes when I was younger. I still refer to it as "The Scottish Play"
Absolutely fascinating!!! Thank you, Tony.
a historian on some other clip mentioned how the Celts 'faded into the West' like the Elves in Lord of the Rings.
I am so in love with Scottish heritage. I want to visit Scotland so desperately.
I'm glad to know of this truth about the real MacBeth. Thank you for showing this.
Beautiful! Thanks SO much for the awesome docu! =D
I always wanted to know more about Macbeth - thank you!
One if the very best novels about
MacBeth was called ' The King Hereafter' by Dorothy Dunnett.
Macbeth was most likely Earl of Orkney. Thorfinn.
Sorry, are you saying MacBeth wasn't MacBeth? Don't understand.
24:13 when he describes the scene of Macbeth being acclaimed by the nobles, I just kept thinking of Game of Thrones :
"King of the North ! KING of the North !! KING OF THE NORTH !!! "
Same! Lol
I tend to disdain Game of Thrones but at least it got some people into real history. But always remember, please, history came first. GOT is facile but pretty
The real King in the North by Max Adam's about Saint /King Oswald, who Tolkein based Aragorn on
The History of Macbeth is fascinating..Thank you Tony..
I keep expecting him to turn to MacBeth and say that he has a cunning plan.
LOL! It would be good if he'd snuck that in somehow.
"Tell me, Brother Baldrick, what exactly did God do to the Sodomites?"
"I dunno, my lord. But it can't have been worse than what they used to do to each other."
Fantastic video. Love Tony Robinson and this film really explores an interesting history. Held my interest every moment from beginning to end.
47:54 *"Out. Out. Brief Candle. Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more. It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."*
~Macbeth~
Shakespeare's way of saying that nihilism is how the mad see life.
@@grahambates7162 i'm not sure. the clowns and madmen often speak true but in puzzles like the witches
@@Elleoaqua True, and what is genius about this is that it is really Shakespeare writing it, knowing full well that those within his tragedy would not be able to appreciate it from his (God's)/the audience's perspective. It's funny how nihilists like to use this quote in a too literal way to justify their outlook.
I studied the play Macbeth during summer session. The classroom was hot 80-85 degrees. Our instructor Ms Eunice Sweeney not only had Gollum's height but she was that creature personified!
wow, this is amazing. I live right in the middle of all this action.
Beautiful landscapes...
Macbeth is such a great story because of it's versatility. There are so many versions of it from feudal Japan (Throne of Blood) to futuristic settings. It's my favorite Shakespearean story.
I have to add, St Margaret-Malcolm III’s second wife (and the marriage I’m descended from) was only half English. She was a Princess of Hungary. (Her half brother was completely English.) There are families in Hungary today, still, who are her descendants, also.
Granddaughter of Edmund Ironside, King Cnut (or Canute) sent Ironside's sons to Sweden, from whence to Kief and then they ended up in Hungary. Margaret was born in Hungary about 1045. Her brother Edgar the Ætheling and sister Cristina were also born in Hungary around this time.
Possible topics for further discussion: 1) What happened to Malcolm? 2. Were the witches called Urdur, Verdandi, and Skuld?
Even though it was 300 years later, it's easy to see why W. Wallace gained popularity among the 'common' so quickly and became such a 'pain' to the anglicised scot nobility....a nativist hope for a historical MacBeth part 2.
Does anyone else feel like Tolkien might have been influenced by this tale?
Jayson...That's what I thought. It became a divided Kingdom, too bad for that. My family heritage is from the Highlands. The Gaelic language and culture are taught , sung, performed and live on in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.
Wallace was a nobleman himself and would of had some land. Though in the movie he appears to live in a hut made of dung.
Anglicised? Strange that England was ruled by the Normans at the time and that many of these 'anglicised' Scots have French names....
@@cambs0181 Braveheart? A tissue of lies - Shakespeare could have started with it and made another great fiction!
Thanks for these videos Baldrick! Love your content.
Remember, Shakespeare was an Englisher denigrating a “heathen”. The victor always writes the histories the future reads.
Good stuff from Tony .... seems very well researched and interestingly presented.
Outstanding doc, so interesting to learn about the real Macbeth and what might have been for Scotland. Truly poignant.
Fascinating to find out the true story. Thanks for uploading!
Re-upload, the sound is bad.
Edward Cumpstey they'll have to when it gets flagged!
Thank you for your most fascinating documentary. You are a Master of The Arts.
Loved it! A great presenter and always interesting presentation of history.
Shakespeare got Richard the 3rd wrong, so not surprising he got MacBeth wrong as well. I love the way Tony Robinson tells about history.
He didn't get them "wrong"! He was writing timeless stories that told of the human condition. He wasn't writing documentaries!
Thank you Tony, I always learn something new from your programs. Adieu. This was you r most cunning program. "Unfortunately, Johnson hadn't got as far a 'Gullible' in the dictionary". Brilliant!
I found this to be absolutely fascinating. I am familiar with the play, and I have visited Scotland which I loved.
Anyone into both literature and history must watch this.
Great video. I really enjoyed it. Thank you for posting and sharing.
Yes,there was coinage during his time.
He was the first King to go to Rome and throw gold coins to the poor.
The play was to honor the ancestor of the English queen.
Malcolm Canmore(meaning big head) was the malcolm in the play.
He was run to ground and killed at Lumphanan,where the grass grows golden to this day. If you go to where they say,and stop on the highway above you can see the yellow grass. He was actually buried though on the Isle of Iona,under a little mound in the graveyard at the Abbey. I came to see him from the US. I took out some Bushmills and climbed up top of the mound and sat down and got drunk with him,pouring a little for him I did.
I love my ancestor.
It's only natural that Tony Robinson should host this documentary. After all, in one of the _Blackadder_ episodes he did as Baldrick, the name "Macbeth" was used continuously to spook the actors.
I love all of the Blackadders. I watched the first series when it first aired and it was very different and original for its time, especially that first season. The show changed the format and comedy style to a more traditional one in the later seasons but it didn't lose it's quality; I still loved them all.
I love this channel! Wonderful documentary!
P. S oh God I so want to visit Scotland someday. Dude the place really looks heaven 😍
How many of you are seeing THAT Blackadder episode?
Rebecca English-Tenji Ahhh! Hot potato, orchestra stalls. Pluck will make amends.
For the record yes, this documentary conjures up mental images of THAT Blackadder The Third episode. 😉
that...and Discworld's Wyrd Sisters...
Being a mere butler you are not aware of the great theater tradition that one must NEVER speak the name of the Scottish play!
Thanasis Earnest Lampropoulos
-What are we forgetting, Your Highness?
-Now look, if I stand any wider than this, I have a serious chance in disappointing my future queen.
-No, your highness, the roar!
-The roar?
-Keanrick, from your Hamlet
-WOOOAH To be or not to be
What a legendary episode
Me. I'll just refer it as the Scottish play.
I love this program! Kudos to all involved! I"d love to have a beer with Tony Robinson any day, even tho I don't drink! LOL!
I would argue that the light of Celtic Scotland briefly came back on again with William Wallace and Robert the Bruce. But yeah, Malcom shifted the Kingdom southward, totally agreed. But the locals continued to speak Scottish Gaelic well until the Reformation. Tragically the last speaker of Scottish Gaelic died a few years ago I heard. I guess it was inevitable. Tragically when a language dies, so goes an ancient culture and it's songs and customs as well.
Absolutely remarkable. Respect for honesty.
The sound makes me feel like I'm listening to the chipmunks version of history lol.
.75 speed
Another example of how actors Hollywood and writers like to change History to their own liking. True History is Awesome enough it doesn’t need to be changed ,Thank you for making thing Right.
"Johnson hadn't gotten as far as gullible in his dictionary." lol.
It was great to hear an English narrator throw some shade on ole Johnson. He usually only gets high praise from the English. lol
He also forgot "sausage". Oh, and "aardvark".
He wasn't happy with the definition of dog- not a cat.
Tony always presents 🎁 work, worth listening too 🗣
Great, thanks for posting!
Its very interesting to hear parts of my own family history. My family is from Clan Duncan and you brought up a couple of facts I was unaware of. Our family line has been traced back to King Duncan. Thank you for this in depth documentary on Macbeth. This just adds to the history.
Blackadders face comes to mind, and when he says Macbeth. MACBETH!
True, since the narrator is the actor who played Baldrick.
*Aaahhh!!! Hot potato, orchestra stalls, Puck will make amends!*
A lot of Saxons living in Scotland now including my home town Pitlochry & Dunkeld & Birnam where I worked as an apprentice electrician many times. No wonder the referendum was lost in 2014, Saxons are deluging Scotland with the tacit approval of their Union Jack Jock lackeys. That said, Tony is a braw lad, Superbious video.
Domnall mac Ailpín (Donald I) was the 1st King of Scotland, not Cináed mac Ailpin (Kenneth I). Kenneth was king of the Picts, it wasn't until Donald, who was raised as a Gael by his Scotti mother, in north west Ireland, took the throne did Pictland become Alba or Alban or Albany (ie Scotland).
Oh God what ??
Incredible documentary: the link between the real Macbeth and Shakespeare’s Macbeth.
I can't believe he said the name of the Scottish play; poor Tony, that's the end of him. He gave his all for the viewing public.
@Celto Loco Kind of reckless, aren't you?
Seeing The Scottish Play at the Globe in person was really incredible!
Very nice documentary. As an American Shakespeare buff (I've been reading the plays more or less continuously for at least 15 years) Macbeth, Richard III, and of course Hamlet are my favorites, although I do like the Henry plays as well. I enjoyed this program very much.
Thank's for the upload.
I feel as if the action is taking place in the Albert Hall with ,as Joyce Grenfell once said, "an uncontrollable echo".......
Scotland didn't need the Vikings to the far north or the English or Rome and the pope to make them Macbeths or Bruces...The blue face Scot, where women were equal warriors were the last of true free Scotland 😢 I love Mr.Robinson's documentaries.❤
It's too bad that Macbeth's name is regraded as a curse by actors, it sounds like he and his wife were pretty decent people.
When he wasn't burning people alive and marrying their widow. Still, I suppose that is nothing much for then and he only did it once. A mere misdemeanour. Lol
The reason actors considered saying "Macbeth" was bad luck, ESPECIALLY in a theater, was that accidents seem to have occurred whenever the play was performed. Actors tended to be superstitious, and laid the blame on the play itself. The play was, in spite of this, very popular with the groundlings, so rather than not performing a true moneymaker, actors just changed the name to "The Scottish Play" among themselves
I’d like to see mr and mrs macB on the Newlyweds
@@mikegrossberg8624 I was told by an actor that to quote from "The Scottish Play" was very bad luck, and if you spoke any line from it outside of actual rehearsal or performance, you had to leave the room, and turn round three times before re-entering. That was supposed to break the curse or something.
I often work in theatres and get around the superstition by calling it MacDeath. Actually I almost always call it that anyway. Lol.