Dr Kat and Katherine Parr

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024

Комментарии • 266

  • @reythejediladyviajakku6078
    @reythejediladyviajakku6078 4 года назад +41

    Katherine parr is my favorite. She was more than just a nurse and a maternal stepmother, she was also extremely intelligent and yes, she probably had a significant impact on Elizabeth later on when she’s queen

    • @jenniferp5916
      @jenniferp5916 4 года назад +5

      Her religious views were also shared by both Edward and Elizabeth and I suspect she instilled her protestant beliefs in them. They both lost their mother while quite young and were therefore open to someone who'd show them some maternal affection. Whereas Mary, had more time developing a relationship with her own mother and learned her catholic beliefs from her.

    • @reythejediladyviajakku6078
      @reythejediladyviajakku6078 4 года назад +5

      Jennifer P Right. I heard on a David Starkey documentary series that Katherine Parr’s mother had been a lady in waiting for Mary’s mother and that it’s very much a possibility that she had been named after the queen because I think I remember hearing that Catherine of Aragon had been Katherine Parr’s godmother. I like to think Despite the differences in religion, Katherine Parr still had a lot of respect for her earliest predecessor and probably understood that she was never far from Mary’s thoughts. Where Anne Boleyn wanted to make Mary forget her, Katherine parr loved her stepdaughter enough to understand how natural it was to think of her mother

  • @ChristChickAutistic
    @ChristChickAutistic 4 года назад +31

    "In the game of thrones, you win or you die. There is no middle ground." Queen Katherine Parr knew this, 500 years before Cersei said that in ASOIAF. KP is my favorite queen of the six, a published author, a proto feminist, reformer, a savvy and cunning political woman, and also a mother figure to Henry's motherless children, especially Elizabeth and Edward. Sociopath Cersei could have taken lessons from her, lol!
    Thank you Dr. Kat, for this presentation.

  • @persephoneparr6471
    @persephoneparr6471 4 года назад +28

    Katherine Parr is the person who first got me interested in Tudor history, at the age of 11. Discovering a Queen with my same last name (not at all common in my home country) peaked my interest, and a love story was born. 32 years later, my interest has expanded to other areas of History, not only Tudor England, but the fondness still remains.

    • @ChristChickAutistic
      @ChristChickAutistic 4 года назад +6

      I love your name, Persephone, too. Persephone Parr sounds like a heroine in a great adventure novel.

    • @sitamun7598
      @sitamun7598 3 года назад

      What an amazingly cool name you have! Persephone Parr!!

  • @AnnMarieKing
    @AnnMarieKing 4 года назад +91

    I like how Dr. Kat used paintings to explain the significance of Catherine Parr's unsung personal influence and political savvy. Well played.

  • @shelleygibbons1065
    @shelleygibbons1065 4 года назад +96

    Katherine parr is by far my favorite next to Anne of Cleves

    • @mjc63
      @mjc63 4 года назад +12

      You and me both! Anne of Cleves alone made it through unscathed, as Katherine Parr faced several scary turns at the hands of H VIII and quite possibly would have been killed eventually if his health had not quickly gone down hill!

    • @Laramaria2
      @Laramaria2 4 года назад +4

      She was a remarkable woman! I love her!

    • @vanessajarvais4727
      @vanessajarvais4727 4 года назад

      M

    • @catherineofaragon1343
      @catherineofaragon1343 4 года назад +5

      HEY!!!!!

    • @aeking29
      @aeking29 3 года назад

      I agree!

  • @leticiagarcia9025
    @leticiagarcia9025 4 года назад +108

    I researched her and found her to be very intelligent. She was political savvy and a religious reformer just like Anne Boleyn. Lucky for her Henry was old. She wrote Bibles in English. Elizabeth made a Bible to give to her father. He did not like it one bit. Like you said she was five steps ahead. She knew that she was going to be caught so she and her trusted ladies burned the Bible’s. Thanks to her quick thinking she manages to have Henry on her side. He tore the arrest warrant. I agree with you that Elizabeth learned from her.

    • @Elly3981
      @Elly3981 3 года назад +14

      Catherine Parr is likely the most under-rated of King Henry's wives. And unlike Howard, she was actually smart enough to wait for King Henry to die before getting back with her lover and became a rich widow to boot!

    • @starrsmith3810
      @starrsmith3810 3 года назад +1

      @@Elly3981 I doubt Howard was even cheating. Who’s to say it wasn’t all made up by people who just wanted her gone like Anne Boleyn. Hell her entire life was spent being abused and used by men.

    • @Elly3981
      @Elly3981 3 года назад +4

      @@starrsmith3810 Anne Boleyn was strongly disliked by a lot of people, particularity those who were still loyal to Catherine of Aragon. She wasn't a very nice person either and often got on a lot of people's bad side, including Henry's. Howard was only 17 and wasn't bitchy like Anne so I can't think of many reasons for people to make up shit just to get her executed. Considering how unstable and dangerous Henry was, not many women want to be his wife, even if it means being queen.

    • @starrsmith3810
      @starrsmith3810 3 года назад +1

      @@Elly3981 except they did make things up that ended with Anne getting executed……..

    • @Elly3981
      @Elly3981 3 года назад +2

      @@starrsmith3810 I think Henry himself made up shit because he wanted an excuse to get rid of Anne for not having a son and because he was bored of her.

  • @zimnaya
    @zimnaya 4 года назад +39

    I thrilled to your explanation of the significance of the "turkey carpet"! The full-length portrait shows Katharine to have been a beautiful woman: we are so used to seeing the undeniably plain other portrait of her. I had always thought that this full-length portrait was of Jane Grey...so much more pleasing to think of it being Katharine Parr. Thank you for another superb talk.

    • @SafetySpooon
      @SafetySpooon 4 года назад +4

      A lot of people thought it was Jane Grey, but a closer examination of the jewels said Katherine Parr.

  • @makeittrue
    @makeittrue 4 года назад +11

    Katherine Parr has always been my favorite of Henry's wives with Anne of Cleaves as a close second. I think it is because she was so intelligent to begin with and definitely so well educated for any noble woman of that period. I so much appreciate your "reading the painting": the Turkish carpet, that it is the first full length painting of a noble woman in England, and the broach of the crown are assertions of royal position & power. I really had not considered that she could have acted as regent for Edward but it really makes total sense to me. You have definitely expanded my positive opinion of Katherine Parr even more.

  • @mishapurser7542
    @mishapurser7542 4 года назад +48

    Wow. I never knew Katherine Parr was such a fascinating woman. Thanks for the video.

    • @velvetindigonight
      @velvetindigonight 4 года назад +2

      Agreed.

    • @marshnn
      @marshnn 3 года назад +1

      She was she had to be very careful not to upset Henry who at that stage was very I'll tempered and I'll

  • @dandeliondandylion4517
    @dandeliondandylion4517 4 года назад +10

    "I don't need your love" was playing in my head throughout the video

  • @Meredith34567
    @Meredith34567 4 года назад +8

    I love your videos of Henry VIII's wives, and how you treat them as individuals with their own thoughts, dreams, and goals.

  • @bgraham928
    @bgraham928 3 года назад +3

    I know it's been two years ago, but I just watched this video. Great job Dr Kat!

  • @Dreymasmith
    @Dreymasmith 3 года назад +5

    Love this. Best one yet. A whole side of Katherine Parr I didn't know. Thank you.

  • @moogie1954
    @moogie1954 4 года назад +43

    I would have liked to hear of her life after Henry's death. I understand that she lived comfortably and even married again, which was highly unusual for a widowed queen.

    • @ReadingthePast
      @ReadingthePast  4 года назад +38

      Alas, she died of childbed complications a little over a year after Henry's death. She also caught her last husband, Thomas Seymour, making inappropriate advances on her step-daughter, Elizabeth, when she was living under their care.

    • @mjc63
      @mjc63 4 года назад +17

      It didn’t go so well as she married Thomas Seymour, had his child, died shortly after her daughter was born and was largely suspicious of his intentions toward young Elizabeth. Thomas was later executed after killing young King Edward’s dog. So Katherine Parr’s legacy was more or less providing a home for the Tudor children and nursing the King.

    • @hogwashmcturnip8930
      @hogwashmcturnip8930 4 года назад +11

      @@mjc63 He wasn't killed for killing the dog! He was killed for trying to abduct the king! Or whatever his intent was. It was certainly grabbing power

    • @tintinhickey5869
      @tintinhickey5869 4 года назад +4

      She died in childbirth and her last husband was executed for treason (he was Edward VIII's uncle)

    • @Lulu-ut9pv
      @Lulu-ut9pv 4 года назад +5

      @@mjc63 he did tried to marry Elizabeth when she died but couldnt, lucky Edward saw through that plot

  • @tomjares7559
    @tomjares7559 4 года назад +16

    Katherine Parr also published two books during her lifetime; a true feat in the male dominated English society of the 1500’s.

    • @Natalie_11188
      @Natalie_11188 3 года назад +3

      Wasn’t she the first woman in England to be published under her own name?

    • @thomasjares3428
      @thomasjares3428 3 года назад +3

      @@Natalie_11188 Yes, I believe she was.

  • @a.amanning7631
    @a.amanning7631 4 года назад +27

    Can you talk about her arrest or how they tried to arrest her and she got out of it. LOVE YOU!

  • @mistysouders7823
    @mistysouders7823 4 года назад +10

    Katherine was my great six times great grandmothers first cousin. She was very very smart. And ABSOLUTELY knew her place. And how to play the GAME. PROBABLY why she she lived!!. I can most certainly say I would not have wanted to merry Henry. That’s for sure

  • @lucygilligan477
    @lucygilligan477 3 года назад +4

    How different might the post-Henry period have been had he nominated Catherine Parr as Protector, rather than the council that then tussled over control?

  • @IntrepidFraidyCat
    @IntrepidFraidyCat 4 года назад +2

    Wow! There's more to Katherine Parr than I first thought. It all makes complete sense to me now.

  • @Luanna801
    @Luanna801 4 года назад +2

    Your analysis of the two portraits is brilliant! I'd seen both before, but never knew about the implications of Katherine's full-length portrait or how it might have been a response to being left out of the family portrait.

  • @alysencameron361
    @alysencameron361 4 года назад +19

    Would you do a continuation of Parr, in particular, explaining why she could not create a regency government for Edward?

    • @Autumn1988
      @Autumn1988 2 года назад

      Powerful men outmanoeuvred her and then she died in chodbed

    • @Autumn1988
      @Autumn1988 2 года назад

      **childbed

  • @j4eyes1
    @j4eyes1 4 года назад +1

    Ever since I first learnt about Katherine Parr, in school and continuing into adulthood. Your presentation confirms what an intelligent, brave and interesting woman she was.

  • @heatheralice89
    @heatheralice89 4 года назад +5

    I have learnt so much from this video that I never knew about Katherine Parr.

  • @lantonella236
    @lantonella236 3 года назад +1

    Loved this topic and appreciated the picture you've painted of this woman. Thanks.

  • @christinemay859
    @christinemay859 4 года назад +9

    I have recently discovered your channel and love your videos. A while ago on the Anne Boleyn Files under the title "5 September 1548 Catherine Parr dies at Sudeley Castle" I found this account of Katherine Parr's appearance, after her remains were accidentally exposed many years after her death. Quote ” A witness told of how the body was dressed in “costly burial clothes”, including shoes, and described the Queen’s appearance: “all her proportions extremely delicate; and she particularly noticed, that traces of beauty were still perceptible in the countenance, of which the features were at that time perfect”. She is never portrayed as beautiful but she surely must have been.

    • @jenniferp5916
      @jenniferp5916 4 года назад +3

      King Henry liked attractive and dainty women, but we don't always share their concept of beauty. Today's ideal of beauty generally prefers highly exaggerated and overly made up plastic dolls over the natural!

  • @deb-1558
    @deb-1558 4 года назад +4

    I've been to Sudeley Castle a few times which is where she lived. Its amazing to see remaing bits of her red hair and textile of her dress which was recovered from somebody opening her tomb within the church there.

  • @Xhante
    @Xhante 4 года назад +4

    I loved this video. I just wish it were longer. Katherine Parr is my favorite Queen of Henry’s. I would have liked to hear more about her.

  • @katharper655
    @katharper655 2 года назад

    HELLO, DR. KAT!
    I deeply enjoyed your most shrewd-and I believe completely accurate-assessment of Queen Catherine Parr's powerful personality, her brilliant intellect, the strength and determination which were the hallmarks of her amazing character.
    I cannot thank you enough for this insight into a terribly underrated Woman Of Power, and Queen of England.

  • @mellie4174
    @mellie4174 4 года назад +3

    Would love a longer video with more details about her :)

  • @gafls3151
    @gafls3151 Год назад

    Love the episodes about the history behind the symbolism in art.

  • @melissaknive3494
    @melissaknive3494 3 года назад +2

    So great!!! I would have been happy with twice the length! Your discussion about the portrait is particularly fascinating!

  • @Laramaria2
    @Laramaria2 4 года назад +4

    Katherine Parr 💙 she was a remarkable woman!

  • @candyclews4047
    @candyclews4047 Год назад +1

    I love Katherine Parr, her commitment to all her husbands and her step children but most of all, her intelligent approach to religious reforms. I would love to sit down and have dinner with her!

  • @janicejanostak2545
    @janicejanostak2545 3 года назад +1

    I find katherine parr to be a fascinating, intelligent woman and would eagerly watch any more videos you wanted to do about the remainder of her life.

  • @janellinger4492
    @janellinger4492 3 года назад +1

    I'm so glad you did this video. I was always shocked with Henry's family portrait. What a great move on her part. From what I've read about her, I think she would have made a very good regent. I wonder how this would have changed both Mary's and Elizabeth's reigns.

  • @ShiningFriendship87
    @ShiningFriendship87 3 года назад +2

    Catherine Parr was my favorite of Henry VIII’s wives! She was kind, intelligent, shrewd, politically-savvy, and a wonderful stepmother to his three children.

  • @jamesridewood4118
    @jamesridewood4118 2 года назад

    Dear Dr Kat., Well done, asu sual. Your explanation of a complex situation is a joy to hear. My best from the bottom the world.

  • @eacarr05carr50
    @eacarr05carr50 3 года назад +3

    Okay, love the going over the artwork and it’s symbolism. Can you do a series on this with English queens?? Or anything about symbolism in royal paintings??

  • @lexomil1414
    @lexomil1414 4 года назад +1

    thank you I learnt even more abut the Great Katheryn Parr thanks to your analysis of the portrait.

  • @chloe_speaks2384
    @chloe_speaks2384 3 года назад +1

    I'd like to see a video on Catherine's sister Anne Parr. I read that she was a lady-in-waiting to all six of Henry's wives, so she basically had a front-row seat to all of his shenanigans.

  • @VLove-CFII
    @VLove-CFII 4 года назад +2

    ANOTHER EXCELLENT VIDEO. Thank You!

  • @pierrefireball2505
    @pierrefireball2505 4 года назад +4

    Hello Dr. Kat, you are amazingly good at telling US how, and when history was made and how it change the way WE perceived history. When I was much younger I wanted to be an History teacher, didn't happen I took another pat, but history is and remain my favorite subject. I'm so good at it that friends usualy say : wait ask Pierre about it. I'm more scholar about it that you are. You are by far what I would have love to have for professor then. Because I would have continued had I had YOU into my life. Thank you very kindly for your work and your generosity for doing so. Sorry english isn't my main language.

  • @wandasimons3305
    @wandasimons3305 4 года назад +2

    Amazing video as always. I enjoy your channel immensely!

  • @amandabauer6146
    @amandabauer6146 2 года назад +1

    Great video Dr Kat!

  • @SF-ru3lp
    @SF-ru3lp 3 года назад

    Brilliantly insightful Dr Kat. Thank you. Very enjoyable. G Ire

  • @angelasmith5174
    @angelasmith5174 3 года назад

    Anne of cleve's and Katherine Parr seems to be the two most overlooked of Henry's Queens. Both were kind, practical and courageous. Katherine was highly intelligent and an author on religion. She has my admiration. Anne of cleve's was also practical and a survivor. I love both of them. I love all of Henry's Queens all for many different reasons. I'd love to see a video on elizabeth woodville and her mother jaquetta. Was she not a Duchess from Luxembourg? I would love to learn more.

  • @amandavictoriasewell7393
    @amandavictoriasewell7393 4 года назад +1

    Fascinating. Thank you - these programmes really help me to navigate my way through 'The Mirror & the Light. I am enthralled now by this period in history.

    • @giddygrub7176
      @giddygrub7176 3 года назад

      I'm finding that more difficult to get my teeth into than the first 2 books.

  • @jenniferhosmer9180
    @jenniferhosmer9180 2 года назад

    Dr Kat your videos are always fabulous!!!

  • @sandilthomas896
    @sandilthomas896 2 года назад

    Dr. Kat, I absolutely love your videos. I could (and have) watched you for hours! Thank you so much for sharing your hard work and wisdom with us!

  • @janicesnyder9305
    @janicesnyder9305 2 года назад

    It is amazing the small details you pull from the portrait and explain the symbolism.

  • @barbaracriss3614
    @barbaracriss3614 3 года назад

    Huge fan of Dr Kat's. My COVID project has been my family genealogy. Thomas Tresham was my 16th great grandfather. Thank you soo much for this video. I am still reeling from the discovery...This video helped

  • @seto749
    @seto749 4 года назад +1

    I heard a lecture some time ago with the interesting tidbit that she had a great passion for clocks.

  • @anitapike4592
    @anitapike4592 3 года назад

    Thoroughly enjoyed it, thank you!

  • @JB-ox7ib
    @JB-ox7ib 4 года назад +2

    Really enjoy your vids including that little ditty type music 😊. Thank you 🙏

  • @doesthisfacemakemelooklike535
    @doesthisfacemakemelooklike535 2 года назад

    Anne Boleyn is Catherine Parr, Queen consort of England and Ireland's fourth cousin once removed.
    Catherine Parr, Queen consort of England and Ireland
    → Sir Thomas Parr of Kendal
    her father → Elizabeth Vaux
    his mother → Alice Fitzhugh
    her mother → Alice Montagu (Montacute), 5th Countess of Salisbury
    her mother → Thomas Montacute, 4th Earl of Salisbury
    her father → Lady Anne Hankford, Duchess of Exeter
    his sister → Anne Butler, Countess of Ormond
    her daughter → Margaret Boleyn
    her daughter → Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire.
    her son → Anne Boleyn
    his daughter

  • @Amc933
    @Amc933 3 года назад

    I am late to viewing this but it is amazing! A whole new look at Katherine Parr and her unappreciated positives... Thanks, Dr. Kat.

  • @Jeffhowardmeade
    @Jeffhowardmeade 5 лет назад +8

    I had a history prof who once referred to her as "the bravest woman in history".

    • @ReadingthePast
      @ReadingthePast  5 лет назад +8

      I fully agree! Luckily for her, that bravery was also served with a full side of common-sense, cunning and self-control! She might be my favourite!

    • @neilbuckley1613
      @neilbuckley1613 4 года назад

      I hope I am not being cynical, but I think she would have been even braver [ also foolish ] to have said no to Henry.

    • @YT4Me57
      @YT4Me57 4 года назад +1

      In history? I doubt that. There were and are women all over the world for millennia who could be placed in the same category for reasons other than merely figuring out how to maneuver as a political tool. Your former professor needs to expand his horizons beyond that of the European theater in Medieval times.

  • @ingerfaber3411
    @ingerfaber3411 5 месяцев назад

    As always very interesting thank you so much ☺

  • @RussiaIsARiddle778
    @RussiaIsARiddle778 9 месяцев назад

    I loved this video. I guess that the novelty of painting, because I know how she was needed to run things. Well Henry was in France and her intellect would be well known, and they wish to please their master. ❤

  • @manekakapoor1612
    @manekakapoor1612 4 года назад +13

    I'm related to Catherine Parr on my English mother's side.

  • @bkathrynbladgett8274
    @bkathrynbladgett8274 4 года назад +3

    Wow Dr, I got a reply from you! Great! I am use to speaking to the universe lol! Ty so much for your email. Love your programs.

  • @shannonellenp
    @shannonellenp 2 года назад

    I thought Anne of Cleves was my fave.... until now! Great video

  • @maryloumawson6006
    @maryloumawson6006 10 месяцев назад

    I think Katherine Parr may have had some influence on how Elizabeth I conducted herself and promoted her own Queenship. If you put this portrait beside one of Elizabeth's, you can see they are both instruments of propaganda and meant to convey power and majesty. The imagery of Katherine standing on the Turkish rug is mirrored in Gloriana pictures of Elizabeth with decked out in her own finery. Thanks for bringing out the facts of this painting. It really does put a new perspective on Katherine Parr that I had not considered. But I have always wondered how she felt about "The family of Henry III" painting.

  • @francescaseyer4709
    @francescaseyer4709 4 года назад

    Thank you for these details about Katherine Parr. I’ve read many books about her, both factual and fictional as you said, but today I’ve learned many more interesting details about the person that she was 👍👍👍

  • @dragonclaws9367
    @dragonclaws9367 4 года назад +1

    I love your Henry and Anne rubber ducks! Do I see Will Shakespeare there too? ( I am a bookshelf voyeur, have been having great fun in the home broadcast age of news.)

  • @LavenderLori406
    @LavenderLori406 Год назад

    She was such a fascinating woman! So much more of her story! Thanks to you! So interesting all the points of the portrait.
    My last name is Parr and I was always told she is my ancestry. There is question as to her having had a child... what do you know?
    Thank you so much!

  • @Herries8325
    @Herries8325 2 года назад

    This is brilliant. it will make me feel powerful for the rest of the day. :-} I am so pissed off that she didn't head up a Regency Counsel. she'd proved herself perfect for the role.

  • @tintinhickey5869
    @tintinhickey5869 4 года назад +6

    She also holds the record for the most married queen in British history (three times).

    • @christinelachance8012
      @christinelachance8012 4 года назад

      Tintin Hickey ...Katherine Parr was married FOUR times... E.Burg, J. Neville, H VIII and T. Seymour, and she only had one child!

  • @bbond7840
    @bbond7840 4 года назад +1

    I’m so fascinated that people know for sure who these portraits are. They all look the same to me. 😂 the dresses change and the faces stay the same! The sketches used to make the paintings look more like different, but real people.

    • @jenniferp5916
      @jenniferp5916 4 года назад

      I agree. I find the faces look so much alike. I assumed the court painter had a certain style he kept to.

  • @Pixiesnix
    @Pixiesnix 2 года назад

    I'm a caregiver, and I object to the idea that having that role makes one boring or is something to be looked down upon. It is an exhausting, draining, and (clearly) unappreciated job. We often DO have to have the patience of a saint to deal with not only our charges, but being ignored, looked down upon, and taken for granted.

  • @helenangus1675
    @helenangus1675 4 года назад +4

    Tell me more about this amazing queen.

  • @finnjones6912
    @finnjones6912 4 года назад +5

    Thank you Dr Kat...always entertaining and informative. How old was she at the time of the portrait?. On a superficial note....she was very attractive

  • @deniserichardson5965
    @deniserichardson5965 3 года назад

    Fascinating!! Symbolism and paintings and the messages they spoke. Reminds me of the undercurrent messaging in Shakespeare plays. Love the videos, they are addictive...lol. Keep them coming :)

  • @GradKat
    @GradKat 4 года назад +1

    Excellent video! I’m so glad I came across your channel. Love those Tudor portraits!

  • @mjc63
    @mjc63 4 года назад +5

    Excellent points concerning one of the least remembered, yet clearly most intelligent sixth wife of Henry VIII. I am subscribed!

  • @ellieaylen337
    @ellieaylen337 4 года назад +1

    More about Katherine please!

  • @leslieannashing8911
    @leslieannashing8911 4 года назад

    Fascinating analysis of Catherine Parr's portrait. Was wanting to hear what Catherine did upon Henry's death and up until coronation of Edward VI.

  • @fancifulfoxtale
    @fancifulfoxtale 4 года назад +7

    Very interesting. Sounds like she was on track to do something amazing, instead she married and died in childbirth. Perhaps Elizabeth did learn from her example?

    • @jenniferp5916
      @jenniferp5916 4 года назад +2

      I'm guessing she was willing to be the regent, but the decision makers chose someone else to guide young King Edward. Women had fewer opportunities, despite their capabilities. Her final husband, who's name I don't recall, was quite the opportunist, and despicable in his treatment of Elizabeth! So sad Catherine Parr died in childbirth!

  • @1998babybear
    @1998babybear 4 года назад

    During presentation, all I could do was envision the actors on The Tudors! 1st class Dr Kat.

    • @nobodysbaby5048
      @nobodysbaby5048 Год назад

      They did a too notch job on cast selection & costuming.

  • @chrisobrien5633
    @chrisobrien5633 4 года назад +5

    Hi Dr.Kat so glad I found the channel. I have one question is there any known surviving communications between Edward VI and Queen Katherine Parr?
    Thanks
    Chris

  • @cindyclark8983
    @cindyclark8983 4 года назад

    Love your bits of history and insight. Also love your rubber tudor ducks behind you.

  • @redalcock4704
    @redalcock4704 4 года назад

    I found this intriguing. I discovered your videos about three days ago and have watched several since then. I find them very informative. I especially like the way that you shine a light on a range of women from the past. Thank you for that. I like your presentation and your obvious research. I will keep watching

  • @Myke_OBrien
    @Myke_OBrien 2 года назад

    She was a brilliant woman. Well educated and definitely politically savvy. I’d very much like to see a more in-depth video on her life.

  • @michellekinder3051
    @michellekinder3051 2 года назад

    Correct me if I am wrong but the man that was her best husband was Henry. All the others were either mad or cheated on her. But Henrey made sure she was provided for after his death. I think he respected her.

  • @JustJaime2
    @JustJaime2 3 года назад

    The rubber duckies on your shelf behind you are awesome!! Lol 😆

  • @dionepastor6166
    @dionepastor6166 3 года назад

    I absolutely love your channel!!! Anyway you could do a segment on Lord Byron???

  • @Lulu-ut9pv
    @Lulu-ut9pv 4 года назад +1

    Catherine parr is very interesting, she married Thomas Seymour, brother of jane and the lord protector so she still had an active role in court and was expected to be treated as a queen dispite Henry being dead, I don't believe she tended to Henry as a "nurse maid", more like monitored him, affterall she is a queen and is descended from nobility and kings of England, it was nice to know she had a good relationship with all her step children and was technically the reason why Henry changed his will so that his daughters could inherit.

  • @robinhumphrey2692
    @robinhumphrey2692 Год назад

    Short and sweet! 😊

  • @DrEdwardTsang
    @DrEdwardTsang 3 года назад

    Thank you for producing such an insightful video!

  • @Charly-H
    @Charly-H 4 года назад

    Dr Kat
    always smiles with her eyes

  • @brittanybales715
    @brittanybales715 4 года назад +1

    Can you do a video on cathren of arigon, Henry 8s first wife?

  • @lilystonne4108
    @lilystonne4108 4 года назад

    I did not know about the significance of Turkish carpets, and the other symbols of status and royalty. Thank you for giving us a clearer picture of Katherine Parr as a person with plans for a life after Henry. Too bad she was not allowed to be regent to Edward VI. Who knows what could have happened.

  • @Lizzie-ve7kt
    @Lizzie-ve7kt 3 года назад

    I wonder if Katherine sending Elizabeth away after supposedly finding her husband Thomas Seymour in a potentially compromising position was to protect Elizabeth or because she was jealous or upset with her. I hope it’s the former as her relationship and sort of mentor role of Elizabeth has been one of my favorite stories from the Tudor era. Also, I could be wrong, but apparently what she saw was overtly sexual, but definitely suspect and inappropriate given the fact that Thomas wasn’t actually Elizabeth’s father coupled with his previous behavior leave little doubt that his show of affection wasn’t paternalistic, but I do wonder the extent to which Katherine may have been complicit as I remember one story where Thomas was having a pillow fight with Elizabeth and was using it as an opportunity to smack her bottom and touch her inappropriately and that Katherine joined in rather than scold him-again, I don’t know if she just didn’t see it as predatory at the time as she could’ve been blinded by her love for him or if she saw Elizabeth as a threat and used the pillow fight to appease her husband and keep an eye on the two of them while maybe even using it as a way to put her in her place. I mean, I know Catherine Howard’s step grandmother slapped Catherine when she found the young girl with her music teacher (and she was reportedly only 12 at the time) so while I hope that wasn’t the case here since Katherine was by all accounts a highly intelligent and quite progressive woman, I also know that many of her contemporaries had deep rooted misogyny that led them to see women and unfortunately even young girls as being at fault for “tempting” men so if she was finally pregnant and married to the man she loved for years, I can kind of see how living in that era could’ve led to some internalized misogyny that led her to see the best in Thomas and believe the worst about Elizabeth.

  • @santi7616
    @santi7616 4 года назад

    Your videos are super interesting. Thank you very much. 😊 Greetings!!!

  • @make-upmaven565
    @make-upmaven565 4 года назад +2

    I love your royal duckies!

  • @JonathanRedden-wh6un
    @JonathanRedden-wh6un 9 месяцев назад

    Katherine was devout but embraced biblical Protestantism during the final 18 months of Henry’s reign as is made clear by the tone of her books.

  • @lightningbug276
    @lightningbug276 4 года назад +2

    Did most of Henry’s wives have auburn hair? That’s a gorgeous painting!

    • @90sHONEY
      @90sHONEY 4 года назад

      As far as I know, Catherine o.A. was a redhead, Anne Boleyn had very dark hair, Jane Seymour was a blonde, Anne of Cleves I don't know, Catherine Howard was a brunette and Catherina Parr probably had auburn or dark blonde hair or something similar (not too dark)

  • @MartaEzis
    @MartaEzis 3 года назад

    As to the statement about no queen wearing a crown in a painting before: I´m confused. There are pictures and illustrations of queens wearing crowns 200 years prior to this. Joana of France, Blanche of Navarre, wife of King Philip VI of France, Beatrix of Bourbon, the queen of Bohemia, Eliška Přemyslovna, the queen of Bohemia and others.
    Where does this information come from? Does this perhaps only regard realistic portraits? Perhaps I didn´t understand properly, English is not my first language.

  • @tatjanastamenkovska7808
    @tatjanastamenkovska7808 4 года назад

    You are amazing. I love all of your videos😊

  • @kogotokLenok
    @kogotokLenok 4 года назад

    Thank you for the great video!