Prince Arthur Tudor: What if he had lived to be King?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • Today I want to explore some more counter-factual history - to take look at what might have been if things had played out slightly differently, if just one moment or event had gone the other way. This time I’m going be asking, what if Prince Arthur Tudor had lived?
    I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
    Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
    Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media:
    Instagram: katrina.marchant
    Twitter: @kat_marchant
    TikTok: @katrina_marchant
    Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
    Intro / Outro song: Silent Partner, "Greenery" [ • Greenery - Silent Part... ]
    SFX from freesfx.co.uk/...
    Linked videos and playlists:
    Videos on counterfactual history:
    What-if-tory: • Dr Kat and "What-If-Tory"
    Henry Fitzroy: • King Henry IX: What if...
    Images (from Wikimedia Commons, unless otherwise stated):
    Portrait of Arthur, Prince of Wales by an unknown artist of the Anglo-Flemish School (c.1500). Held in a private collection.
    Portrait of King Henry VII by an unknown Netherlandish artist (1505). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
    Portrait of Elizabeth of York by an unknown artist of the British School (16th Century). Held by the Royal Collection at Hampton Court.
    Map of England.
    Portrait of Katherine of Aragon by an unknown artist (c.1520). On display at the National Portrait Gallery, lent by Lambeth Palace.
    Photograph of Ludlow Castle viewed from Whitcliffe in evening sunshine. In the background is Brown Clee. Taken by Ian Capper (2011).
    A tapestry in the Flemish style of Catherine of Aragon and her husband Arthur Tudor, Prince of Wales (c. early 1500s). Current collection / location unknown.
    Portrait of Margaret Tudor by Daniel Mytens (c.1620-1638). Held by the Royal Collection.
    Portrait of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey by Sampson Strong (1585-1596). Held by Trinity College.
    Illumination showing Louis XII of France and his third wife, English princess Mary Tudor, from a book detailing the pageants given for Mary's reception into France by Pierre Gringoire (c.1514). held by the British Library, Cotton MS Vespasian bii f. 15r.
    “The Mayflower at sea” by an unknown artist (1893). Originally from Internet Book Images.
    Quoted texts:
    Rosemary Horrox , ODNB entry on Arthur Tudor
    Also consulted, were:
    Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
    #History #Tudor #CounterFactual

Komentáře • 756

  • @marshaprice8226
    @marshaprice8226 Před rokem +201

    Elizabeth of York and Henry VII tried to have another child because of Arthur’s death, resulting in the deaths of Elizabeth and her last child. If there had been no attempt at having another child, the chances are good that Elizabeth and Henry, not having been so stricken by their losses, would have lived together in better health and happiness. Henry VII’s reign may have been longer and his kingdom and the world’s politics been different by the time Arthur became king.

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 Před rokem +29

      Yes! When Arthur died, Elizabeth told Henry "we're still young enough", & she was pregnant just a month later. That kinda makes it seem like they'd stopped trying for children, probably cos they already had 2 sons so it wasn't worth the risk to Elizabeth's health, & they only tried for another child cos of Arthur's death. So I 100% agree: if he'd survived, they probably wouldn't have, & the last years of Henry VII's reign would've been VASTLY different if Elizabeth hadn't died in 1503.

    • @dianefitzwilliam
      @dianefitzwilliam Před rokem +5

      @@beth7935 I think she was saying, "We're still young enough to conceive a child *because* we still have an active sex life." Arthur died 2 April 1502. /ETA: Edmund, the last child born before the death of Arthur, was born in Feb of 1499 and died in June of 1500, so It doesn't seem as if Elizabeth had left off childbearing yet./ Katherine, the last child of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York, was born 2 Feb 1503. Assuming a full term pregnancy (and, who knows about that?), Katherine would have been conceived very shortly after Arthur's death. While it is certainly possible for someone to conceive on the first attempt, for me this argues in favor of the idea that Henry and Elizabeth had an active sex life together, and I suppose one could take more than one position on whether she was lucky in that final conception.

    • @gillianbergh7002
      @gillianbergh7002 Před rokem +1

      @@beth7935 I wonder if they knew much about preventing a pregnancy, other than refraining from having sex? It would have meant celibacy for Elizabeth - but it was the done thing for a king or prince to have mistresses. They were known as 'ladies of the bedchamber.'

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel Před rokem

      Henry VII was a right bastard. So were all the Tudors.

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 Před rokem +3

      @@dianefitzwilliam That's a possible interpretation too. Maybe it was just a coincidence Elizabeth got pregnant a month later- but good point that Katherine might've been premature, & therefore conceived later, which would make it less of a coincidence. I wonder if any records could tell us that? Probably not, cos we can't even work out if Arthur was a month early or conceived before his parents married, & Katherine would've been seen as less important. I don't find it that surprising to conceive on the 1st attempt though- I know a lot of women who have, & 2 of them were over 40- especially given how quickly Elizabeth got pregnant with Arthur (even if she & Henry didn't wait for their wedding, it was still pretty quick).
      _However,_ I agree that it's not conclusive either way if you look at the dates their children were born. It was only 3 years after Edmund's birth, as you said, & there had been similar gaps between some of their other children, like Elizabeth & Mary, July 1492 to March 1496. It's not like they'd had a kid every year, then no kids for 10 years- I think it's all still debatable.

  • @sagenoelle4439
    @sagenoelle4439 Před rokem +47

    Had Arthur survived, I wonder if Elizabeth of York would have lived longer too. She became pregnant shortly after Arthur’s death in an attempt to “replace” him with another son and then died in childbirth. I think it’s very possible that Elizabeth would’ve been done having children since there were several healthy sons and daughters. Arthur’s untimely death had a direct connection to his mother’s demise less than a year later, which makes it even sadder. Elizabeth of York living longer would have been beneficial for all her family (and the country).

  • @eliscanfield3913
    @eliscanfield3913 Před rokem +171

    I kind of think Catharine might still have had trouble giving birth to healthy children, but the longer time frame and better health conditions during her teens would probably have helped her have at least one or two more living children. And definitely her irl daughter wouldn't have been kept unmarried until her mid-30s.

    • @direfranchement
      @direfranchement Před rokem +26

      No reason to assume she would have had a daughter "irl" if she had conceived with a different man. Sex is determined by the sperm, not the egg. There has been speculation that Catherine's obsessive fasting may have played a role in her numerous failed pregnancies and infant deaths.

    • @elss8717
      @elss8717 Před rokem +20

      @@direfranchement. I did not know about her fasting. I also think that the women that had to produce the male heirs, had no or very little time to heal and recover from miscarriages and stillbirths. That could not have helped in the effort to have healthy offspring.

    • @direfranchement
      @direfranchement Před rokem +19

      @@elss8717 @elss8717 Absolutely. It's no small miracle that she survived as many labors as she did as so many women died either in childbirth or shortly after, even royal women. It happened to Elizabeth of York, K
      Catherine's mother-in-law.

    • @kaja933
      @kaja933 Před rokem +17

      Aren’t there a number of medical assessments that the reason Henry 8th had so many miscarriages or still births among his wives is that he had Kell Syndrome (probably misspelled because I am going off memory). If my recall is right, the first pregnancy from a father with this disorder would be viable, but subsequent pregnancies would be compromised - some reaction not unlike RH factor’s deadly impact in generations prior to scientific treatment. It is all conjecture, but all Henry’s living children were the first born of their respective mothers. I may be way off bases, I am not a medical doctor and just watch a lot of historical videos! What have others heard or read?

    • @elss8717
      @elss8717 Před rokem +11

      @@kaja933 Katherine’s first pregnancy ended in stillbirth. The second one I believe was a boy that lived 52 days. Two more pregnancies ended in miscarriage or stillbirth. (I might have got the order wrong). It was her 5th pregnancy that resulted in a live birth, Mary. I do think that you may be right about this condition but It took 5 times though to get a living child.

  • @SleepyAE31
    @SleepyAE31 Před rokem +109

    There's a book called The Alteration by Kingsley Amis that was written in the 70s with the same premise. It's a modern story about a young boy, but in this England, Arthur Tudor lived. There are a LOT of other changes done due to Arthur's reign, mostly concerning the influence of the Catholic Church.
    I LOVE alternate histories. It is such an fun little thought experiment to see exactly how things could have been if only XYZ happened. Thank you so much for sharing!

    • @dirgniflesuoh7950
      @dirgniflesuoh7950 Před rokem

      The main pivotal point was that Martin Luther reconciliated with the Catholic Church and became the pope Germanicus whatever number.
      Catholic Europe was in constant war with the Islamic empire to keep populations down. Electricity was heresy ....

    • @spacecardinal
      @spacecardinal Před rokem +6

      Should I have zigged instead of zagged?

    • @d.m.6397
      @d.m.6397 Před rokem +6

      Amis was a spectacular writer, I've not read this one, thank you for jogging me to pick it up.

    • @karynhitchman2498
      @karynhitchman2498 Před rokem +4

      Fascinating alternate history, thank you. A lot of what ifs and maybe or maybe not a better future because of it.🤔

  • @fiorimonde7494
    @fiorimonde7494 Před rokem +183

    I love when you do these. As a Jewish person the idea of the inquisition in England is chilling. While I respect Catherine of Aragon it's disturbing to think of her mother's role in our history

    • @ilanarhian
      @ilanarhian Před rokem +17

      Exactly what I thought as well (also being Jewish)

    • @louiseoliver3453
      @louiseoliver3453 Před rokem +18

      Well technically there were no Jews in England at the time, as Edward 1 expelled them and officially were only allowed to resettle in Cromwell's era, but it would certainly have had an effect on people's attitudes towards the Jewish people, and sadly it doesn't take much for anti semitism to flourish

    • @Ilivedbih
      @Ilivedbih Před rokem

      ​@@louiseoliver3453 That's terrible, I didn't even know that.
      Why were Christians against so Jews when that's where Christianity comes from?
      I get that it was towards other religions as well, but this one doesn't make sense to me.

    • @louiseoliver3453
      @louiseoliver3453 Před rokem

      @@Ilivedbih I think because over the centuries they were villified as 'Christ Killers' but also because they practised Usury. In parts of eastern Europe antisemitism was rampant as Jewish people were often the middlemen between sellers and the peasantry, the latter of whom always felt they were being diddled. Ironically, considering the problems between the two religions today, I was reading about how Jewish people from Muslim majority Albania were sheltered in the holocaust and those fleeing to the Middle east were often warmly welcomed by local Muslims. How times change!

    • @mariah4531
      @mariah4531 Před rokem +6

      It doesn't change the outcome, but Idon't think Isabel had a personal vendetta against Jewish people. She and Fernando needed the support of the church during and after the Reconquista, and the church wanted Jewish people gone and the Conversos policed by the Inquisition. So Isabel and Fernando agreed because they were ruthless realpolitikers.
      In a slightly different political situation they probably wouldn't have acted against the Jewish community. So Catherine wouldn't necessarily do so either.

  • @carinafourie9119
    @carinafourie9119 Před rokem +20

    I was under the impression that Elizabeth and Henry tried for their last child in an attempt to provide another male heir because Arthur died unexpectedly. Perhaps she may not have died in childbirth because if Arthur survived, this last pregnancy may not have happened?

  • @jessicamcminn-cotton1537
    @jessicamcminn-cotton1537 Před rokem +34

    I would like to believe a lot of Katherine's fertility issues came from the fact she was under such duress in her early life (being essentially held captive by her inlaws while they tried to figure out what to do with her when Arthur died). If those circumstances were removed, and if her marriage to Arthur proved to be a happy one, I think she could have mothered multiple heirs. I'd still think her first would be a girl, but then followed by two younger brothers, so : 👸🤴🤴.
    I also like to believe that Katherine would have been just as passionate about the education of her daughter in this timeline as she was in the actual history. That daughter might have ended up being diplomatically important in more ways than just who she ended up providing with children one day... Perhaps another "warrior queen"?
    The "what-ifs" of history are absolutely fascinating. Especially when it comes to the Tudors.

    • @dfuher968
      @dfuher968 Před rokem +11

      Yes, those horrendous living conditions after Arthurs death came to mind for me too. And she was no pushover, she would definitely have insisted, that all her children regardless of gender be equally and well educated. And she would probably have had a ally in that in her mother-in-law, since handwriting analysis now have made a plausible case, that Elizabeth herself taught at least Henry to write, even if she might not have had the same leeway with the heir as with the spare. And both Margaret and Mary seem to have been quite formidable themselves, which they could not have become without a strong female rolemodel, most likely their mother, a good education and a father, who allowed, perhaps even encouraged, both.
      Ive always been struck by how strong the Tudor women (by birth or by marriage) were, even by todays standards.

    • @puclopuclik4108
      @puclopuclik4108 Před rokem +6

      she delivered 5 children. fertility wasn't an issue.
      The issue was stillbirth and child mortality.

  • @maltesercat
    @maltesercat Před rokem +71

    Thanks so much for this, Dr Kat! I must say the thought of Henry VIII being Pope is one I've never considered before, and it brought me out in a cold sweat 😅

    • @sophiegeek1
      @sophiegeek1 Před rokem +3

      Same!! 😬

    • @tropicalgardenvlogs
      @tropicalgardenvlogs Před 11 měsíci +2

      He would have given Julius the second a run for his money!

    • @carterbentonjr399
      @carterbentonjr399 Před 6 měsíci +1

      One would have shuddered the thought but it could have cause the Reformation to spread further through out Europe.

    • @anniikka
      @anniikka Před 2 měsíci

      I don't know. Henry was unprepared in almost every respect to be king. He was the proverbial poor rich boy - spoiled, bratty, over-indulged, and suffering because of it. But that's par for the course when it comes to popes of the past. I think he'd have fit right in. But given time, he also might have had the opportunity to mature into his role in the world and been less of a boor.

  • @nicolemeiner6903
    @nicolemeiner6903 Před rokem +25

    Regarding the thought of her issues with pregnancy, if she'd been sleeping with Arthur for the entire period where canonically she was his widow, that'd have given her additional time - significant time - to have had subsequent pregnancies and living children. I think she still would have had troubles and still had stillborn children as well, but she may have had one or two more living children - and any daughters would not have had to outlive her parents before she could get married.

  • @christinaclark9754
    @christinaclark9754 Před rokem +21

    I think Catharine would have had better luck with having kids. Starting at a younger age and with having the spare brother would have helped. There would not be as much stress and desperation. One of the suspected reasons for her difficulties was her fasting way too much.

  • @spews1973
    @spews1973 Před rokem +21

    That was fascinating. I can't help thinking that, even if Arthur had been King, his brother Prince Henry (Cardinal Tudor? Pope Somebody?) would have made his mark on English and European history anyway due to his strong personality. But who knows?

  • @RABuffat
    @RABuffat Před rokem +48

    So interesting! I’ve always thought that if Arthur had lived, the split from Rome would not have occurred, at least not at that time and not in that way. Thank you Dr. Cat!

  • @elizabethtaylor-hall6924
    @elizabethtaylor-hall6924 Před rokem +37

    What I love about female historians is that I’m always left with more questions than answers! There’s so many ‘what if’s which is exactly what I think after I find out new things. Big love for this channel!

  • @Sattva468
    @Sattva468 Před rokem +30

    Great video! I like to imagine he would have taken after his frugal father and compassionate mother and kept the country out of war. His mother might still be alive, too, since she wouldn’t have felt the pressure to bear another son.

    • @Anna-xx1lv
      @Anna-xx1lv Před rokem +2

      I also think his sister’s life would have turned out much differently. I don’t think Scotland would have gone to war with England and King James IV would have not died as early as he did.

  • @bridgetm1343
    @bridgetm1343 Před rokem +7

    Why, oh, why did Arthur have to pass away before becoming king and producing heirs! I can not adequately express how much I enjoyed this thorough counterfactual history. Thank you for expounding upon not only Henry's Great Matter but all the other battles, border disputes, marriages, alliances, births, etc. I loved this!
    🤴🤴👸👸👸🤴

  • @nessagirl1911
    @nessagirl1911 Před rokem +22

    I love these thought experiments. You'd never think how much a relatively small thing like someone not dying or making a different decision could affect our world today. Please do more of these!

  • @beslim15
    @beslim15 Před rokem +16

    Love this topic. One thing I always think about is what if Henry VIII was content to keep Mary as his heir and did not seek a divorce. What would the world have looked like? In both instances, I think the reformation either is delayed or non-existent and England does not become the large empire it doe sin our time.

  • @Jami-Frankie
    @Jami-Frankie Před rokem +5

    Henry ruthlessly destroyed countless lives in pursuit of a son. The irony of his daughter Elizabeth having a wildly successful reign is just tragic.

  • @jakual339
    @jakual339 Před rokem +14

    I found this video particularly fascinating! I was expecting something similar to the level of change created by Henry Fitzroy's survival (as you explored previously), but this got pretty wild! The only place I differ is that, if Catherine and Arthur had had trouble having children, I don't believe at all that Catherine would have agreed to step out of her marriage into holy orders. Even without the trauma of her widowed years, the humiliation of the "Great Matter"'s arguments, and the need to defend her daughter's rights... it really seems like there was a core of iron and pride in her that would have kept her where she was. She was Isabella and Ferdinand's daughter, after all.

    • @Natalie_11188
      @Natalie_11188 Před rokem +4

      I agree.

    • @dfuher968
      @dfuher968 Před rokem +4

      But she might very well have had no trouble having children with Arthur. There has been great speculation, given Henry's history with children, that the problem might have been with him, not her. Also, as Dr. Kat says, she wouldve been producing children at a much younger age. And I would add, that the years she lived as Arthurs widow were under quite bad conditions, both physically and mentally, and might also have affected her later childbearing.
      That said, I agree, that Catherine would likely not have stepped aside for Arthur, any more than she stepped aside for Henry.

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 Před rokem +2

      @@dfuher968 I agree- I think bad luck is the major or only reason Henry VIII only had 1 living male heir, & if Catherine had been married younger, I think there's a good chance she would've had more surviving children, & perhaps at least one surviving son. She had no trouble conceiving- she had 6 children in 9 years, & she had 2 healthy babies, it's just that the boy died later of illness.

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 Před rokem +2

      Yes, I really can't see Catherine meekly giving up her place as Queen of England & retiring to a nunnery! Even if it was done "nicely", no way! And it's not just her- I really can't see her powerful family accepting it either, or the Pope giving Arthur a divorce/annullment... And from the little bit we know of Arthur, I find it hard to imagine him ditching her, particularly not when he had his brother to continue the dynasty.

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd Před rokem +2

      Her daughter might have been a son though, so it wouldn’t have been an issue in the same way.

  • @beth7935
    @beth7935 Před rokem +28

    OMG, so excited! This is my favourite what-if!... Or my least favourite, cos I'm so sad it didn't happen. Literally _anyone_ would've been better than Henry VIII, of course, but I did get some idea of what Arthur was like from a great bio by Sean Cunningham. He looked at Arthur's education & upbringing, & the plans you could see Henry VII making for him, & Arthur was very much stepping up & doing what was expected of him, taking it seriously & doing a good job, so I think it's reasonable to assume he would've been a LOT more like his father than his brother, & I think his father was an excellent king. Overall, Arthur sounds like the absolute opposite of Henry VIII, so the world was ROBBED. As were the people who loved him, of course- the story of Henry & Elizabeth hearing about his death breaks my heart.

  • @mtngrl5859
    @mtngrl5859 Před rokem +6

    Interesting take on alternative timelines. I thinks its highly likely that she and Arthur would have been a better match. If one looks at her family lineage, fertility was fairly evident with her own mother and siblings. One of things I had read about her union with Henry is that she got pregnant too frequently in the early years of her marriage, that it rendered her much weaker. So, with being with Arthur as his teenage bride there would have been less pressure in the early years of their marriage to have children.

  • @VersieKilgannon
    @VersieKilgannon Před rokem +13

    His death is literally the event I say is the most pivotal point in history. We literally shifted to the bad timeline when he died

    • @Javajavajav
      @Javajavajav Před rokem +2

      Interesting, why do you think so?

    • @VersieKilgannon
      @VersieKilgannon Před rokem +5

      @corrinewager3776 two words- his brother 😅

    • @dfuher968
      @dfuher968 Před rokem

      Its 1 of those event, that makes u say "if only I had a timemachine". Then again, as this thought experiment shows, there would need to be a lot more consideration of all the other events changed by this 1 premature death. If we had that timemachine and went back, snuck in and gave Arthur antibiotics or whatever, so he survived, we would definitely come back to a completely changed world. But it might also have caused later horrific events, we could not predict. The further back we go, the more widespread the effect of changes of todays world would be.
      Hell, even if we had a timemachine and went back to smother Baby Hitler in his crib, that might lead to huge changes, good AND bad.

  • @dees3179
    @dees3179 Před rokem +4

    I’d love to see a further exploration of what Henry might have done in church. The thought of him as pope really tickled me. But you are right to raise ie. Why not. He was smart and ambitious and inventive. Why wouldn’t he have been. And what might he have done if he had made it to that position. What could he have affected. And in England, no destruction of all those monasteries….😱

    • @roberthudson3386
      @roberthudson3386 Před 6 dny

      One thing is for sure, he would probably not have issued the bull Regnans in Excelsis against his brother or daughter.....
      Maybe would have been pro-English and anti-French.
      Without his jousting injuries his character could have been very different to how he turned out.

  • @stephaniemerlin1
    @stephaniemerlin1 Před rokem +4

    Thank you, this was genuinely fascinating. As a childless woman I believe that had Katherine of Aragon not bern so cruelly mistreated with presumably both her metal and physical health afffected even if not acknowledged, then this coupled with her attempts to become pregnant earlier in life would have meant she was able to produce more children than she subsequently did. The body and mind have a way of keeping account of hard times, sad times, and cruel times, and I fully believe that this has a way of affecting fertility, without taking into account the subsequent possibility of Henry VIII having a sexually transmitted disease which made conception and pregnancy by Katherine more difficult than it might. Had they had children, I'm sure they would have had many, but two of each remaining living would seem to be a happy outcome. ❤

  • @amykortuem5554
    @amykortuem5554 Před rokem +7

    I love this exploration of what may have been. Perhaps less tumultuous, perhaps more in different unknown ways. Anyway, I am, as my mother always called me, "The Queen Of What-Iffing" (both worrying and wondering) and this episode was right up my alley. What if Henry Tudor became pope !!?? Also, Dr. Kat, thank you for adding the important events and dates to the screen. Dates and numbers tend not to stick well in my memory, and that is very helpful. 🧒👧👧👧👦

  • @steelerbear
    @steelerbear Před rokem +7

    I love a good bit of what-iftory! Thank you, Dr Kat! 💗🤴👸🤴👸👸

  • @maevekilara5328
    @maevekilara5328 Před rokem +15

    I think Catherine's pregnancies would have been more successful as she may not have had the same high levels of stress and anxiety as she did when married to Henry. His constant wandering and his apparent clinical hunger for constant praise and validation would have been exhausting on top of that. I do still believe that Scotland would have eventually been annexed to another kingdom, whether by France or England or by whose domination I couldn't say

  • @pennyatkinson5740
    @pennyatkinson5740 Před rokem +7

    It's fascinating to wonder how a life without Henry V111 & his children would have been.Would there have been rivalry with his brother Arthur as with our present day "spare"?? Another thought provoking video.Thank you Dr Kat

  • @historybuff7491
    @historybuff7491 Před rokem +12

    I love these processes. Few of the others, I like, are King Edward VI lived into his 20's, or Queen Mary's false pregnancy (the 1st one) was real. This is fun. I hope you do more.

  • @aprilsnow7798
    @aprilsnow7798 Před rokem +15

    I absolutely love these what if videos you do! So interesting to consider how much 1 thing forever alters history and the future!

  • @michaellewis6510
    @michaellewis6510 Před rokem +3

    Absolutely fascinating detail. I think Arthur and Catherine would have been an excellent king and queen. How sad that Catherine arrived in England at the age of 16 years only to die of neglect when discarded by Henry.

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430

    👦 Henry, prince of wales ( Future Henry VIII)
    👧 Princess Elizabeth For both their mothers
    👧 Princess Mary For the Virgin and both their sisters.
    👦John, Duke of Richmond, For catherine's brother and John of gaunt.
    👦Edward, Duke of Somerset. For Edward Iv and III.

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 Před rokem +1

      I love that you chose names, AND titles for the younger princes! I've thought about names too, but I hadn't thought of "Elizabeth" for both their mothers, cos even tho it _is_ technically the English version of Isabel, the name "Isabel" was also used in England. I think it's a good idea though, & so is "Mary" for the Virgin Mary.... Anyway, my list:
      👸Princess Isabel
      🤴Arthur, Prince of Wales*
      🤴Prince Henry
      👸Princess Elizabeth
      👸Princess Margaret*
      🤴Prince Jasper*
      *I think Henry VII was dedicated to the Arthurian symbolism, & Arthur would've continued it, but I do think Arthur would've named his 2nd son after his father.
      *Henry VIII was very close to his sister Mary, but I've read that Arthur was closer to Margaret; & also for Margaret Beaufort, who did so much to get the Tudors on the throne.
      *I like to think if Henry VII had had a 4th son, he would've named him after Jasper, for obvious reasons, but you're probably right- Arthur & Catherine would be more likely to choose John or Edward, with so many ancestors & relatives with those names, or maybe Edmund.

  • @jfarzana1984
    @jfarzana1984 Před rokem +9

    This has been a fascinating conversation! 👶🧒👧👨‍🦰👩‍🦰👩‍🦰

  • @theladyprincess
    @theladyprincess Před rokem +3

    ooh i am looking forward to your take on this, i've often thought of the what ifs and could've beens if arthur survived and stayed married to catherine

  • @Fairtheewell1485
    @Fairtheewell1485 Před rokem

    The incredible amount of research and knowledge that flows out of Dr Kat is truly astounding- this is perfection for an avid Tudor fan and novice alike

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430

    One of my favorite what ifs! Thanks for this!🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤❤

  • @margaretschembridalli5218

    The What if's of Dr Kat witness her great creative and analytical intelligence. I'm in awe. What if Catherine of Aragon and Arthur Tudor would have also had the same issues to conceive and bear children?

    • @athanksgivingbaby570
      @athanksgivingbaby570 Před rokem +4

      It's possible that they may have. Blood theory isn't my area, but there is a theory that Henry VIII may have had a blood type that carried the rare Kell antigen.
      A Kell negative woman who gets pregnant with a Kell positive man can have a healthy first child. However the antibodies she produces during the first pregnancy will attack any Kell positive fetuses in later pregnancies, leading to miscarriages or early infant death. Henry seems to have had no problem producing pregnancies but all of his women seem to have issues carrying multiple children to term.
      This might explain why Katharine of Aragon swiftly conceived Henry's first son, who died as an infant, then had multiple miscarriages leading to only one surviving daughter.
      Blood types run in families and it's possible Arthur may have also been Kell positive, if it's true that Henry was.

  • @maureenogorman8740
    @maureenogorman8740 Před rokem +2

    You have the best topics.
    I can just see "Spare" the blockbuster expose of 1510

  • @elizabethbetts3834
    @elizabethbetts3834 Před rokem +4

    I wonder if Elizabeth of York would’ve even attempted to have an another child if Arthur hadn’t died. She may have lived for a few more years if they weren’t trying to replace their heir. Henry VII may have lasted even longer as King as well because her death caused a sharp decline in his health too.

  • @gaylesuggs8523
    @gaylesuggs8523 Před rokem +4

    Isn't it interesting to think about how things might have been totally different if just one historical event had turned out differently? The potential impact on the colonialization of America really hit me (as an American) - wow! We could have been speaking Spanish over here instead of English! Thanks again for another thought-provoking video - I always look forward to them.👑👑👑

    • @easjer
      @easjer Před rokem +2

      OMG, SAME. As someone with family traced back to the Mayflower - that was a very interesting personal thought! None of us would exist!

  • @sawyermclachlan5049
    @sawyermclachlan5049 Před 6 měsíci

    I love these what ifs and would be very happy if another one came out of your channel 😊

  • @janjohnsonamarillas3386
    @janjohnsonamarillas3386 Před rokem +3

    Fantastic , very interesting , I agree with you things certainly would be different! ❤

  • @michelerogers5379
    @michelerogers5379 Před rokem +3

    It's really mind boggling how one small event can change so many lives!

  • @anniebus105
    @anniebus105 Před rokem +1

    I totally agree with everyone else who have said that they really love when you do these types of historical deep dives into "what if." This is my cup of tea, and oh my goodness how different the world would be. I think all of North America would still be English. Would England weathered the Martin Luther craze and remained staunchly Catholic...maybe. So fun!!! Please do more of these types in the future. You are so brilliant and talented! Thank you! ❤

    • @octavianpopescu4776
      @octavianpopescu4776 Před rokem +1

      I think Luther wasn't that much of a craze in England. On him, Henry and the Pope agreed 100%. Neither of them liked Luther. Even after splitting with Rome, Henry still didn't like Luther. The craze was a Calvin craze. After Henry's death, a lot of the reformers were inspired by Calvinism and somewhat by Scottish Presbyterianism (e.g. Puritans), not as much by Luther. At the time, there was a triangle: Catholicism, Lutheranism and Calvinism. Lutherans and Calvinists could be just as suspicious of one another as they were towards the Catholics. Just because they didn't like the Pope didn't mean they liked one another and the word "popery" was thrown around as an accusation, not just against Catholics.

  • @rachael6956
    @rachael6956 Před 3 měsíci

    Brilliant! I love all your vlogs ❤ Such clarity and so easy to follow history. Thank you so much 🙏
    Rachael from Hever, Kent

  • @MorriganWarrioress
    @MorriganWarrioress Před 9 měsíci

    Really enjoyed this one!
    Honestly, the What-Ifs of history fascinate me. Love them! It's always fun to do a little waltzing through history, to see how moving one piece on the board, changes the entire scene. What the Butterfly effect is, if you will, of letting one seemingly small thing change. In this case, a teenager doesn't die of sickness shortly after his marriage and lives to be as old as some of his other siblings managed. That one thing changes, and how it spirals from there, all the way to possibly no Mayflower, no UK, and no break from the Catholic Church.

  • @calamityjane6437
    @calamityjane6437 Před 8 měsíci

    I just wanted to drop a note to say I LOVE your videos! Thank you. ❤

  • @Kasamira
    @Kasamira Před rokem +2

    I adore your videos thank you so much for making them and putting in so much hard work❤

  • @jovindsouza3407
    @jovindsouza3407 Před rokem +245

    The world would have undoubtedly become a better place just by virtue of Henry never becoming king.

    • @lauratube
      @lauratube Před rokem +21

      Are you Catholic or Protestant? Without KH8 making Protestantism the law of the land we stand a good chance of still being Catholic.

    • @athanksgivingbaby570
      @athanksgivingbaby570 Před rokem +30

      @lauratube - Are you implying that it ever was true that all English were Protestant, or that the world couldn't be a better place if England had remained a Catholic aligned country ?
      Henry the 8th did much more than change the religion of the country, and that was done for selfish rather than religious reasons.

    • @kathyjohnson2043
      @kathyjohnson2043 Před rokem +20

      Interestingly, many scholars see Henry as a great King in part because he improved technology in his many building projects like kitchens.

    • @lauratube
      @lauratube Před rokem +13

      @@athanksgivingbaby570 I think you can take it down a notch. I was just saying that, without Henry, and just like Dr. Kat said, Protestantism wouldn’t have taken a hold as sharply as it did.

    • @ellengill360
      @ellengill360 Před rokem +25

      Henry 8 was a paranoid monster and a lot of people would have been better off had he not been a king.

  • @sylviadonoghue2195
    @sylviadonoghue2195 Před rokem

    This is a really marvelous "what if" and I never cease to be fascinated by the ramifications of changing one event in history and pondering how it ripples through time.

  • @shan21999
    @shan21999 Před rokem

    I love the videos where you're able to speculate with such a great understanding of the times and being able to use other historical references to back you up. This is a question ive often wondered for myself and constantly wonder if Catherine herself was wondering it too.

  • @Zine2me
    @Zine2me Před rokem +7

    This was an absolute delight. All through the years I've heard stories of Henry VIII and all of them have fed my dislike of the guy. I never had knowledge of the cast of characters that you have so I could never begin to put a good story together. I really loved hearing what might have happened. I think it would have been great. edit: I don't know that he'd have been a great Pope. I hope there'd have been better candidates than him.

  • @kathleenb.9917
    @kathleenb.9917 Před 11 měsíci

    What a fascinating explanation of alternate history! I loved it!

  • @rebeccagooch9000
    @rebeccagooch9000 Před rokem

    Thank you Dr Kat for such a thoroughly thought through counter factual history tutorial. You’ve given me so much to consider with the knock-on effect of each change. Thank you!

  • @lisahanna6328
    @lisahanna6328 Před rokem +1

    I love these discussions about “what if?“. I have one for you. What is Anne Boleyn’s first child had been a boy and had survived? Give that one to go Dr. Kat! Would she had cut off Cromwell’s head now that she was done with him? Would Henry have still wanted to get rid of her now that he had his boy or would the marriage have held together? And what of Elizabeth? Would she have been dutifully married into some foreign nation? That is a “What if?” worthy of your consideration!

  • @rebeccarobinson9371
    @rebeccarobinson9371 Před rokem

    Loved this thought exercise!! Enjoy your work!!

  • @megremisfamily4music
    @megremisfamily4music Před rokem

    What an insightful analysis of “what if”, Dr Kat! It’s very possible the spread of the English language and the English dominance in America may not have been what it is if Arthur had lived to become king.

  • @williethomas5116
    @williethomas5116 Před rokem +3

    Thank you Dr Kat for the glimpse into the world of unintended consequences.
    I think you are right about many Tudor Princes, Henry in the church. I am not sure the reformation would have taken hold in England and Puritans still would have fled. The thing that they didn't like about the church of England is how much it was like the Catholic Church. I don't think Arthur and Katherine would have had any trouble keeping England in the church.

  • @GaryWalshDublin
    @GaryWalshDublin Před rokem

    Very interesting and informative video. I think you bring up many great points.

  • @kendracrispin5327
    @kendracrispin5327 Před rokem +3

    There is one other glitch that could've happened had Arthur lived: the impetus for Henry VII and Elizabeth of York to have that last daughter was Arthur's death. Would Elizabeth of York have still gotten pregnant?
    Still, a fascinating look at the what ifs.

  • @possumaintdead
    @possumaintdead Před rokem +1

    Very interesting exercise. I would love to hear your take on what would have happened if Richard III had won the battle of Bosworth field! 😊

  • @laurieduerr4757
    @laurieduerr4757 Před rokem +2

    Very thoughtful insights on this interesting "what if" scenario! I agree that England likely would have remained Catholic longer, and with the transition to Protestant faith being smoother and more aligned to the rest of Europe. But very curious to think that England and Scotland would not likely have been united!

  • @Marley-Kabin
    @Marley-Kabin Před rokem

    Please make this a series!!! I’m in love with your historic speculation!

  • @user-gg7zm2sq1i
    @user-gg7zm2sq1i Před 2 měsíci

    Brilliant ideas. You've covered all bases!

  • @user-wf1zx8qc6z
    @user-wf1zx8qc6z Před rokem

    I am loving these counter-factual videos you are doing. Would love LOVE love to hear one if Ann Boleyn had lived…either if she escaped the block and retired to a nunnery…or…if she was able to bear King Henry a son and remained his wife. I end my day with one of your videos…really love the format and how you are presenting information!❤

  • @shawnehartnett3979
    @shawnehartnett3979 Před rokem

    Another insightful and thought provoking video. Im so thankful to have found you during the pandemic and one day will make it to England (I'm in US) to see all those wonderful places!

  • @Shane-Flanagan
    @Shane-Flanagan Před rokem +1

    Love these counter factual videos
    Dr Kat does them so well

  • @xajaso
    @xajaso Před rokem +2

    Such a fun thought experiment & video! It could've been 2X as long and I'd have loved it all. Henry VIII as Pope, cannot imagine!
    Poor Prince Arthur & Catherine of Aragon, fairly tragic figures both. In addition to granting them the longed-for princes & princesses, I am giving them some pets to snuggle with. And time, much more time.
    🤴🤴👸👸🤴👸🐕🐕🐈🦜🦜
    ⏳️⏳️

  • @MorriganWarrioress
    @MorriganWarrioress Před 9 měsíci

    PS: Did share this channel with some friends in a Discord group. They are loving it!

  • @wendyk.6987
    @wendyk.6987 Před rokem +1

    Great video! I always wonder how things might have been different if Henrys younger brother Edmund had lived....would Henry have been satisfied with his brother as an heir?

  • @JojannekevandenBosch
    @JojannekevandenBosch Před rokem

    Thank you for your tip for attending the joust at Hampton Court! I’ll miss it because I went last Thursday, BUT I went also to Hever Castle yesterday, and there was…jousting! It was super fun, and I loved all of it!

  • @allclairesbears
    @allclairesbears Před rokem +3

    Oooh, have you done an episode about what might have happened if William 1 had failed to take over?

  • @moonloon5859
    @moonloon5859 Před rokem

    I really enjoyed this video. It really made me think. Thank you.

  • @bearcahcaw
    @bearcahcaw Před rokem

    Love your work, thanks Dr Kat! This was an incredibly fun thought experiment 😊

  • @j7333nnn
    @j7333nnn Před rokem +1

    Thanks! Missed you these past weeks during my African safari

  • @christinarobertson1773

    thank you Dr.Kat found your channel and absolutely love your perspective.

  • @ffotograffydd
    @ffotograffydd Před rokem

    A fabulous video as always!
    My answer to the question “What would you do if you could travel back in history?” has always been “Try to find a way to save Arthur.” This video hasn’t changed my mind, I think our history would have been far more harmonious, with much less bloodshed, had he survived. Especially if he and Catherine had produced an heir.

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 Před rokem +7

    Arthur might have had the same genetic problem that likely made Henry’s wives unable to bear viable sons. Medical historians think this might have been Kells Syndrome, in which a wife might produce a first healthy son, but the gene inherited from the father would have created an autoimmune attack on subsequent children, in utero. This is similar, apparently, to the better-know Rhesus negative syndrome. This is important to any young woman hoping to have children who have the rH negative blood type, it can now be treated with a simple injection before a second pregnancy. I’m no doctor, though, don’t rely on this information too much if it might personally affect you

    • @theladytudor3805
      @theladytudor3805 Před rokem +2

      So I have RH negative blood type and have always wondered if, at least Anne Boleyn, also suffered from it in a time before medical help. However, I had never heard of a similar issue, that could be a result of Henry, causing so many miscarriages/stillbirths/infant deaths in both Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn's cases, intriguing!

    • @easjer
      @easjer Před rokem

      It fits with some of his other children, but Catherine's first pregnancy was a stillbirth and their first son died less than 2 months old. Mary was pregnancy number 5, I think. So it's harder to make that case with Catherine than with Anne Boleyn.

    • @theaxe6198
      @theaxe6198 Před rokem

      I am RH neg. It is treated with a shot with every pregnancy

  • @GROK99
    @GROK99 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for all of your wonderful research.

  • @lamemechose7072
    @lamemechose7072 Před rokem

    The simple sentence of “ugh, I really wish Arthur had lived” is relatively common for me. But you took that musing and RAN with it! 🏃‍♀️🏃🏃‍♂️ Thanks for all the great videos!

  • @BlackFrostQueen
    @BlackFrostQueen Před rokem

    🥰 I loved this video. The what-if of Arthur surviving has always been fascinating to me. Thanks for the video!!

  • @karengieseking1437
    @karengieseking1437 Před 7 měsíci

    I love your content, but also your voice is so soothing!

  • @LoisThiessen
    @LoisThiessen Před rokem

    I really appreciate following you down this rabbit hole! From the little I know of Arthur, his character was very different from that of Henry. I don't believe he was the braggart and in-your-face competitor that was Henry. Having been raised as the heir, he understood what it meant to rule and, I suspect, he would have cared for his people - something that was foreign to Henry. Though the thought of a Catholic England is unsettling for me (I'm in Canada, and we would likely now not exist), as you mentioned, the Reformation was on the move and would likely have arrived in England at some point. This is a very interesting exercise, and I appreciate being brought along to consider 'what might have been.'

  • @pilotgal6191
    @pilotgal6191 Před rokem

    As you explored each possible twist and turn based on Arthur living instead of succumbing to his illness, my jaw dropped lower and lower. The very existence of well-established countries and the shape of world power would have been radically different.
    Fate is more powerful than the greatest of armies. Well done!

  • @emilydawson9292
    @emilydawson9292 Před rokem

    What a fabulous video?! I thibk it’s my favorite so far. More speculative-retrospective-butterfly-effect- counter factual histories please?!
    Such a fun game to play a bit like pick your own adventure with the additional benefit that it challenges you to consider motivations, psychologies, all of it from fresh and multiple angles! Thank you!

  • @suzannecontant
    @suzannecontant Před rokem +1

    I've always found this to be so remarkable. It's incredible how one person's death literally changed the course of history.

  • @madelinevanderbunny607

    Sorry about the typos in the beginning.

  • @Voronochka262
    @Voronochka262 Před rokem +5

    Not to quote Monty Python here, but "I wasn't expecting thé Spanish Inquisition!"

  • @MrsPatPape
    @MrsPatPape Před rokem

    Thanks for this video. Very insightful.

  • @King_Steffon_II
    @King_Steffon_II Před rokem

    You did a spectacular job 🎉
    I pray you do A LOT more of these types of videos 🙏🏾

  • @roslynholcomb
    @roslynholcomb Před rokem +2

    I had not considered the possibility of an earlier English contact with the New World. Interesting.
    I’ve often wondered what would’ve happened if Catherine of Aragon had gone to a convent as Henry wanted.

  • @leonajahour8351
    @leonajahour8351 Před rokem

    I find it interesting to look at the many things that one event has the potential to effect.

  • @annebutler5169
    @annebutler5169 Před rokem

    I love your videos. This one was very interesting and lots of fun. Please make more like it.

  • @theresalaux5655
    @theresalaux5655 Před rokem

    Great video Dr Kat! This was really fun!😊❤

  • @susannaheanes
    @susannaheanes Před rokem

    Fascinating premise, and I agree that the world and England in particular would have been a very different place had historical events turned out thusly. Thanks yet again for a splendid video.

  • @eshim3961
    @eshim3961 Před rokem

    Dr. Kat's analysis are always amazingly well thought out and presented. The scenario epitomizes the idea of a butterfly effect.

  • @bihottie26
    @bihottie26 Před rokem

    I stumbled on your channel while browsing at the gym. Pretty cool!!!

  • @sydneyandress9248
    @sydneyandress9248 Před rokem

    Love this Dr. Kat!! What an interesting, thought provoking concept! It would be interesting to do one of these with the what if Anne Boleyn’s baby had been a boy

  • @Pattygblanco
    @Pattygblanco Před rokem

    This is definitely my favorite what-if video ❤
    It's amazing to think how different the world would have been had it Arthur survived

  • @mandicruz912
    @mandicruz912 Před rokem

    I truly enjoy your videos and the integrity with which you deliver them. I have always wondered what would have happened had Anne Boleyn given birth to a son instead of Elizabeth 1. Could you please do a video on that & what your take is on how things may have turned out. I am particularly interested because of how headstrong and argumentative she supposedly was as opposed to traditionally trained royalty- especially women. Do you think because of King Henry’s tendency to behead those who displeased him in the slightest he would have found another reason to be rid of Anne. Possibly still coming up with the same seemingly trumped up adultery charges, just at a later date, as a way to rid himself of her. Still with the same results- charges of treason and the death penalty.