The Black Prince - England's Warrior Prince Documentary

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  • čas přidán 6. 08. 2020
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @PeopleProfiles
    @PeopleProfiles  Před 2 lety +19

    Hello guys! If you like our work please subscribe to our second channel The History Chronicles czcams.com/users/TheHistoryChronicles

    • @sandrapetersen7289
      @sandrapetersen7289 Před měsícem

      I'm a Muggleton, descendant of Eakswyth, wife of Alfred the Great. Your video spelt her name differently. Her father was King of Saxony with whom Alfred cultivated a friendship, making him an ally. Vikings liked Alfred's leadership where he commanded that viking prisoners be treated with respect. His granddaughter Eaydth married Otto the first if Germany. Rotten Cromwell destroyed the grave if Alfred and Ealswyth, ordering the church to be destroyed, and for a prison to be built in its place. Alfred's bones were tossed out and found in a parking lot, the DBA confirmed by comparing the human bones to Eaydth who was intact in a cathedral in Germany. I welcome finding out more. History is full of intrigue, murders, evil plots to gain power, and as Tony Robinson said, finding the true bloodlines to the English throne leading to Michael Hastings in NSW, there is no Divine Right of Kings. The present royal family is illegitimate due to King Edward 4th being the result of his mother's affair while Her husband was away at war. Kings had to be of royal blood and not born out of wedlock. This is a huge scandal and a very long story.

  • @rahulbabu3272
    @rahulbabu3272 Před 2 lety +51

    I studied about him in college. He is one of my favourite historical personalities. It's sad that he never got a chance to rule.

  • @andrewlewis9231
    @andrewlewis9231 Před 2 lety +62

    The Black Prince has left his mark on history and its good to see he's appreciated today. A good concise documentary

  • @calvinh8755
    @calvinh8755 Před 3 lety +196

    Easily one of the most intriguing figures in Medieval European history

    • @ogladaczr.t.3168
      @ogladaczr.t.3168 Před 3 lety +9

      i mean, hardly intriguing. A prominent one, sure. Sign of times. But its not like he wasn't given all the means he needed to gain fame just by birth.

    • @JonyTony2018
      @JonyTony2018 Před 2 lety +10

      @@ogladaczr.t.3168 There is plenty of young princes who died before their fathers. None had the potential, the ambition, or the intellect Black Prince possessed. And no heir dying prematurely had cost his country this much. With the Black King England might have gone on to win the Hundred Years’ War, Richard II would have turned out differently and the War of the Roses would have been averted entirely.

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety +2

      The Black Prince was one of the most incompetent prince of the 14 th century. He was a great soldier but a rubbish leader. He lost everything his father gave him only 20 years after Poitiers.

    • @marymcvicker3543
      @marymcvicker3543 Před 2 lety +1

      Òoòòììp

  • @cabinfever7262
    @cabinfever7262 Před 3 lety +127

    History is weird, The Black Prince is seen as chivalrous while at the same time he butchered peasants and raised villages etc. Glad I am alive in current times !

    • @Kari77251
      @Kari77251 Před 2 lety +24

      @@bradmiller2329 Good point. But there’s more to this than just “when.” The “where” and the “who” are just as important. In current times, being female and a US citizen, for me, life is good. If the great lottery had seen me born in the same year but in a different part of the world, or on a different socio-economic plane, I might not feel so lucky. Yes, humanity has come a long way. But also, humanity seems forever destined to reinvent its ancient faults.

    • @andreebesseau6995
      @andreebesseau6995 Před 2 lety +5

      Yes he did ...the bloody"royals"were cousins.it was all about land.he killed a lot of people in Poitier and as in Dax in gascony old fief of her grand mother the weekly day for the outside market is still on the day that the black prince decreed it should be....the old presence of the english kings is still present in Gastony as well as the wine they liked lol.i lived In Bastide d Armagnac .town created by 2 noble men.one with an english name the other with a french name.it was all unterchageable.the inside courtyard;by law,cannot be touched, as it is a middle age "souvenir"😁😇

    • @neilnoakes2685
      @neilnoakes2685 Před 2 lety

      @@Kari77251 very well put

    • @nikoknowledge6660
      @nikoknowledge6660 Před rokem +10

      Typically when the adjective of “black” is added to one’s title, it’s a negative connotation applied by the peasants.

    • @talkingmudcrab718
      @talkingmudcrab718 Před rokem +9

      Life was cheap in Europe back then. There are still places like this on Earth today. Never forget that. Humans can be cruel beyond imagination. Darkness lurks in all our hearts. Some are better at resisting it than others but everyone has their breaking point given circumstances.

  • @gungadin7721
    @gungadin7721 Před 3 lety +346

    He was a man of his time. Hard, relentless, valorous, generous, conscientious. He did laudable and terrible things.

    • @shadowforger2035
      @shadowforger2035 Před 3 lety +46

      But he was a white male dude. How come there are no people of color in this documentary? This is wacist

    • @hugorenato1149
      @hugorenato1149 Před 3 lety +6

      @@shadowforger2035 Some say the later constable of France Bertrand du Guesclin, who was present and captured in the battle of Nájera, was son of an african king and black in colour. The english called him the the black dog of Brocéliande.

    • @cannibalcheese
      @cannibalcheese Před 3 lety +35

      @@hugorenato1149 stop trying to change history. His family "claimed" to be decended from a renowned Muslim king. Never anywhere does it say he was black. The depictions in the paintings say he was a white man possibly mixed race but not black.

    • @syndicalist-0
      @syndicalist-0 Před 3 lety +4

      @@cannibalcheese hey i dont disagree but history is literally all just tales lol we only know material things about our past. Anything is possible.

    • @toddherklotz5970
      @toddherklotz5970 Před 3 lety

      Great comment!

  • @marcfrancisteodoro7720
    @marcfrancisteodoro7720 Před 3 lety +73

    Please do the life of Alfred the Great, Edward the Elder and Athelstan the first King of England, thank you!

    • @kathrynjordan8782
      @kathrynjordan8782 Před rokem +4

      I would like to hear a documentary on Alfred the Great, Edward the Elder and Athelstan the first King of England. It would be so interesting to hear about them.

  • @xenaires
    @xenaires Před 3 lety +80

    The Black Prince should have become King. Even today he's unrivaled as an English warrior. Fascinating biography. I'll be back for more.

    • @ogladaczr.t.3168
      @ogladaczr.t.3168 Před 2 lety +8

      Ever head of William Marshal? 😁Also, Cromwell sends his regards

    • @benbim540
      @benbim540 Před 2 lety +11

      They had many great warrior kings richard the lionheart. Henry V. Edward IV. and even Shakespeare's great villain king Richard III. here is the account of Richard III final battle. Richard led a cavalry charge deep into the enemy ranks in an attempt to end the battle quickly by striking at Henry Tudor himself.
      Accounts note that King Richard fought bravely and ably during this manoeuvre, unhorsing Sir John Cheyne, a well-known jousting champion and killing Henry's standard bearer Sir William Brandon and coming within a sword's length of Henry Tudor himself before being surrounded by Sir William Stanley's men and killed.

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes a bit like his son Richard II !! Hahahaha 😂😂. The black Prince was a joke as a leader !!

    • @TheFlutecart
      @TheFlutecart Před 2 lety

      You can always spot the King, he's only one not covered in shit!
      From 1066 till Henry VIII, all the English Kings spoke, ate, acted, dressed and were of French ancestry, , by design. So when Black Prince puts the French heraldry with the English Heraldry, he's just showing off. Kinda badass knightly stuff really.

    • @bruceplenderleith838
      @bruceplenderleith838 Před 2 lety

      @@antoinemozart243 apparently not, never mind, I'm sure you would have made a marvellous fool.

  • @kathrynjordan8782
    @kathrynjordan8782 Před 2 lety +28

    I love medieval history. This documentary on The Black Prince is very interesting. Thank you for this documentary.

  • @budahbaba7856
    @budahbaba7856 Před 3 lety +24

    Something i always find interesting about Edward I (who is only mentioned here in background) was that bloody man as he was, extinguishing the political independence of Wales among other feats, he seemed to have a very loving and intimate relationship with his strong Spanish wife, who was a powerful force in her own right. They seemed to work very well together, and she bore Edward many children, and helped ensure stability within the kingdom while he was so often away campaigning.

  • @MaverickSeventySeven
    @MaverickSeventySeven Před 3 lety +195

    Isn't English History wonderfully Complicated

    • @pedroheberle6665
      @pedroheberle6665 Před 3 lety +7

      Most definitely. But may I also suggest one that the English helped carve: Brazil's. Firstly, by escorting the Portuguese royal fleet to as far as they could from Napoleon, and making Brazil the seat of an European monarchy, for more than ten years. Secondly, by mediating (with the benefit, naturally enough, of a bilateral commercial agreement) the agreement which sealed the Portuguese recognition of Brazil's state and independence, in 1825. This agreement pitched a former Portuguese prince, on the one side, as Brazil's first head of state and Emperor - a title to which he would abdicate some nine years after, in favor of his firstborn, then only four year-old son (Emperor Pedro II of Brazil), as he had come to be seen as "Pedro the absolutist", an authoritarian monarch who had grew very unpopular since -, but also, on the other hand, the as rightfully heir to the Portuguese throne and Empire which he had just defeated in war - and of which he would still in life abdicate also, this time magnanimously, for the benefit of his firstborn daughter (Maria II of Portugal, born in Brazil), for whom he would fight, and triumph, and die as a martyr in Portugal for the cause of liberty (hence his alias - but on that other side of the salty Ocean-Sea which was strayed with the tears of Portugal's widows and orphaned sons and daughters only - as "Pedro the liberal"), where he is seen as a national hero up to this day, and the liberator against his brother (Maria's uncle, who had usurped her throne and incidentally - if only briefly - was king, too), who is known in history, I swear to God, as "Miguel the absolutist" -; and on the other side (I know, there's three sides), there was his father (and Miguel's father, too: though there are numerous controversies on whether the youngest of his progeny were, actually, of his progeny, as he and his Queen - who was Spanish and the King of Spain's sister - had then been very publicly known to have not shared a bed since the eighteenth century, and this, I swear, is also true) as the King of Portugal, which he already had been since the passing of his elderly mother (Maria I of Portugal, known as "The Crazy Woman", great-grandmother of that second Maria), BUT who was also, according to the agreement - as a token of friendship, I suppose -, the Emperor of Brazil: symbolically, sure. And yet, kind of literally, as well. Theirs (all these people's) was a dynastic business, and he was, after all, still head of the dynasty whose interests the English have "helped" us diligently preserve. Thank you, Englishmen. He died by the way one year after the 1825 agreement, and recent forensic evidence point to poisoning. And I don't want to name names here, but the Spanish Queen (of Portugal) and the "Absolutist" (her son - the Portuguese one) figure high on the suspects' list.

    • @georger64
      @georger64 Před 3 lety +22

      I‘m 56 and haven‘t run out of interesting books on English history.

    • @stevenlyon4348
      @stevenlyon4348 Před 3 lety +1

      And they are just skimming over the top.

    • @paulvbarbar9957
      @paulvbarbar9957 Před 3 lety

      Not really..

    • @calska140
      @calska140 Před 3 lety +1

      It's a giant soap opera

  • @Roman-oh7xc
    @Roman-oh7xc Před 2 lety +15

    The black prince is such an amazing historical figure to study

  • @NitoKuvell
    @NitoKuvell Před 3 lety +13

    Our most unfortunate thing for that time as English was the Death of the black prince, because following his death we had our equivalent of the mad king(game of thrones)and the war of the roses, so many precious English lives lost as a result

  • @estell8459
    @estell8459 Před 3 lety +32

    Based on the documentary, one can only conclude he was an honorable prince and warrior.

    • @nicholasbethell2921
      @nicholasbethell2921 Před 3 lety +4

      He honourably killed women and children and oppressed the poor.

    • @lesdodoclips3915
      @lesdodoclips3915 Před 3 lety +5

      @@nicholasbethell2921 standard for the time

    • @Cecilia-ky3uw
      @Cecilia-ky3uw Před 3 lety +1

      Nicholas bethell killing frenchmen was considered part of good parenting

    • @Cecilia-ky3uw
      @Cecilia-ky3uw Před 3 lety

      as for oppressing the poor the french did the same

    • @aidansumner8364
      @aidansumner8364 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nicholasbethell2921 Because that is how war is waged. Being honourable doesn't necessarily mean kissing everyone's ass.

  • @theearlofmarch
    @theearlofmarch Před 3 lety +58

    Absolutely well done mate! Truly one of the great princes to have lived.

  • @knightowl3577
    @knightowl3577 Před 3 lety +16

    John the Blind 'Tis but a scratch, Charge!"

  • @Arkavian1191
    @Arkavian1191 Před 3 lety +12

    My 19th Great Uncle, John de Harewell, was once his private chaplain and advisor. He later became the Bishop of Bath and Wells.

  • @mmsizzlak3726
    @mmsizzlak3726 Před 3 lety +11

    I liked the guy since he knighted Heath Ledger and gave him uncontested noble heritage...

  • @themac2238
    @themac2238 Před 3 lety +79

    I would say he was the highest example of what a medieval king should be brave warrior ruthless in battle magnanimous in victory but he was taken before his time he could have been one of England’s greatest kings England could have even won the Hundred Years’ War under him

    • @themac2238
      @themac2238 Před 3 lety +1

      johnnie anon agreed

    • @CieJe.Alexander
      @CieJe.Alexander Před 3 lety +1

      If he just had a few economics lessons...then yep maybe the best.

    • @themac2238
      @themac2238 Před 3 lety +2

      C. J. Alexander yeah economic literacy is essential for a good government in the modern world

    • @CieJe.Alexander
      @CieJe.Alexander Před 3 lety +1

      @johnnie anon Like manners, and honesty?
      I do get your point, but would you want him to be your country's Chancellor of the Exchequer/Sec. of the Treasury, or even your accountant?
      I'm not saying he needs to be like Henry VII. But at least to not go entirely bankrupt. Or, bankrupt the kingdom. Just a little more balance.

    • @NitoKuvell
      @NitoKuvell Před 3 lety +3

      One of our biggest what ifs as English, maybe the Scotts would have been brought to the union much sooner and militarily! Taken too soon, maybe even the french would be speaking English now as part of a greater UK OF BRITAIN AND FRANCE,because he could have claimed the french throne and joined England and France together

  • @davidkeller6156
    @davidkeller6156 Před 3 lety +125

    The English long bow. One of the most feared weapons of it’s time.

    • @phantomkelvink4225
      @phantomkelvink4225 Před 3 lety +7

      (my English is not very good) does anyone know any countries beside the one in the British isle that also or at least try to adopt a long bow type of army? Because it was so effective that I find not adopting it a bit....strange?

    • @davidkeller6156
      @davidkeller6156 Před 3 lety +15

      phantomkelvin K I’m not sure. It’s my understanding that training started in childhood and as they grew up they graduated to stronger and stronger bows. I think the pull on the bow was between 150 to 200 pounds. I watched a archeological video where the showed the skeletons of men killed in battle. They could tell the longbow men by the overdevelopment of the bones in the right arm and shoulder.

    • @generalyi6323
      @generalyi6323 Před 3 lety +3

      @@phantomkelvink4225 many other cultures adopted recurve bows .. recurves offer more power and easier pull than longbows...much more ergonomic for use on horseback and with nomadic lifestyles... from what I read the long bow was made from specific regional types of wood as well....

    • @generalyi6323
      @generalyi6323 Před 3 lety +11

      @@davidkeller6156 I have heard in many documentaries that there was a Kings edict stating that Sundays everyone was to practice longbow archery as well.... another clue to how important it was to warfare

    • @davidkeller6156
      @davidkeller6156 Před 3 lety +3

      Dennis Adams I’ve heard something similar to that. I know that it would take a long time for me to work up the strength to be able a 150 lb. pull bow. I’ve read that they could actually shoot up to 400 yards with a long bow. That seems far fetched to me. That’s a pretty long rifle shot.

  • @somyod2u
    @somyod2u Před 3 lety +15

    Erected in the 1890s, there is a magnificent equestrian statue of the Black Prince in the centre of the Yorkshire city of Leeds. I understand that he was largely instrumental in introducing the ' woollen - industry to the region.

    • @andrewtownend4511
      @andrewtownend4511 Před 3 lety +2

      Statue located in City Square opposite The Quenns Hotel near the Railway Station.

  • @dirt0133
    @dirt0133 Před 3 lety +26

    Very well done. Greatest English warrior/general of the Middle Ages.

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety

      No ! He lost everything in twenty years !!

    • @dirt0133
      @dirt0133 Před 2 lety +4

      @@antoinemozart243 I said General not administrator. AND he lost everything, as you put it, because of the war on behalf of Pedro the Cruel which his father, the King forced him to take part in. He won the battle and reinstated Pedro, but the subsequent taxes he then levied in France after Pedro reneged in compensating him for the war....cost him Greatly, Plus the fact that he Died shortly thereafter.

    • @williamstocker584
      @williamstocker584 Před 6 měsíci

      General and administration are two different things fool

  • @gs7256
    @gs7256 Před 2 lety +3

    I am not English..
    I am Greek..
    I love medieval history and I have read a lot..
    I believe that the black prince was not a person of his time..don’t think he was hard enough..he was much more polite and generous for his time..he was much more courageous for his time..ppl of less position fear for their life quite more than him..I find him as one of the purest and most interesting personalities of medieval Western Europe..of course he was hard?
    An honorable continuation of Edward the 1st..and his father Edward the 3rd..
    For me he died before his time..
    He saw the death of his greatest hope (losing a first born son, a prince, a king to be..I can not imagine the hit..not that any simple father pains less his son’s death..but this is huge in a political way as well..because this ppl life’s changes history..)
    He had his first victories in the age of 16 (like another Alexander the Great..)..A so young boy..A teen..but the times were demanding for a prince teen..
    I found the video amazing..and I believe more videos should be made for him..

  • @trojanette8345
    @trojanette8345 Před 3 lety +8

    That's one very busy and VERY determined Prince!!
    Anybody else doing that much fighting would have tired a long time ago.

  • @highspeedgaz
    @highspeedgaz Před 3 lety +30

    My Father had the nickname The Black Prince, where he use to work ,he was a Foremen at the time , I got to find out later from his work colleagues, he got the name because he was hard but fair , Yes he was !.

    • @gangleweed
      @gangleweed Před 2 lety

      It is a fact that nobody running business puts their best man in as a foreman....it's usually just someone that doesn't perform too well with machinery or on the bench so they get put out of harms way in the office.....someone with a bit of knowledge is required to do the watching, why take someone off the shop floor who is more productive there......office people are called chair warmers or armchair warriors where I was.
      On the other side of the coin you get the factory owner who employs cheap low class labor and employs someone with some knowledge at a high pay rate to do the hands on training of those that came into the factory on the broom.......they don't usually last long as once the work force is on stream they get made redundant and someone they trained gets made up to foreman at a much lower pay rate......it almost happened to me but I saw it coming and turned the job down.

  • @MrRobfullarton
    @MrRobfullarton Před 3 lety +7

    So Edward III was not the love child of Queen Isabella and William Wallace? As the great historian Mel Gibson portrayed in Braveheart!

  • @brendan9868
    @brendan9868 Před 2 lety +22

    I don’t remember much from middle school, but I very vividly remember a day in history class when we were getting our first intro into medieval Europe.
    The Black Prince was brought up and a classmate asked our teacher what he did, teacher replied “No idea.”
    This teacher not knowing the answer to a simple question on something he was supposed to be an expert on literally changed my life and sent me down a path that led me to become a history major in uni.

    • @kathrynjordan8782
      @kathrynjordan8782 Před 2 lety +5

      If I were a teacher and I had been asked that question & responded that way, I would have been mortified. I would have hoped that I could say "Why don't we find that out together. This sounds like a good project for the entire class." I love Medieval history so this documentary is very interesting.

  • @nicholasbethell2921
    @nicholasbethell2921 Před 3 lety +8

    He was responsible for the deaths of women and children and oppressed the poor like the rest of his class. In battle he wore armour that made him much safer than the foot soldiers he commanded and could expect to be captured for ransom if he lost; unlike his poorly paid soldiers who would be slaughtered. Chivalry was not all it was cracked up to be.

  • @moonglow630
    @moonglow630 Před 3 lety +181

    I’ve seen his tomb at Canterbury Cathedral. I remember his effigy has a puppy carved at his feet. I thought that was so endearing. I remember being so so excited that I got to see his tomb. It was my first day in England.
    EDIT: now through genealogical research I’ve discovered I’m actually a descendant of the Black Prince.

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety

      The black Prince was an idiot 😂😂😂

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety

      @Facts are not hate speech ,CZcams fascists. why I would be jealous of a man that died in huge pain 650 years ago ? Are you nuts ? The Black Prince was a great soldier but an awful politician. He was abysmal in strategy and diplomacy. In less than ten years he was ruined !!!

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety +1

      @Facts are not hate speech ,CZcams fascists. are you serious ? The black Prince strategist ? Hahahaha 😂😂😂. This is certainly why he ruined the duchy , his father gave him ! Hahahaha ! Charles V who was not a knight or a great warrior had a strategic longbow and planted lethal strategic arrows in the great knight and his father. Sorry ! A great knight but a rubbish leader.

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety +2

      @Facts are not hate speech ,CZcams fascists. I don't give a ???k about what you think. Read historians. I know it hurts your feelings, but as you said facts are facts. The black Prince was certainly a great warrior but an abysmal leader.

    • @dulciemidwinter5990
      @dulciemidwinter5990 Před 2 lety +15

      @@5heffPaul yeah, Antoine Mozart that famous English Historian!

  • @bluestrife28
    @bluestrife28 Před 3 lety +16

    You guys are saving my life with these docs. Thank you!!!!

  • @whitney524
    @whitney524 Před 3 lety +26

    He’s depicted fictitiously in A Knights Tale.

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 Před rokem +1

      Lol I'm actually watching the extended edition of that right now one of my favorite movies.

  • @bmhd6598
    @bmhd6598 Před 3 lety +248

    A great king England never had.

    • @nevetsmahgnirtle8961
      @nevetsmahgnirtle8961 Před 3 lety

      You had a better one?

    • @Nyctasia
      @Nyctasia Před 3 lety +17

      @@nevetsmahgnirtle8961 - Edward I.
      Sadly The Black Prince left England his son, the dreadful Richard II.

    • @tylernelson4901
      @tylernelson4901 Před 3 lety +2

      “Great” is a subjective term here lol

    • @carmenlottner297
      @carmenlottner297 Před 3 lety +4

      @@nevetsmahgnirtle8961 Henry V,Elizabeth 1

    • @NoirFan01
      @NoirFan01 Před 3 lety +3

      Oh wow, spoiler alert. I have not yet watched the episode. Now I know how it ends. LOL

  • @jeffgould3877
    @jeffgould3877 Před 3 lety +18

    I think the black prince would have been one of England's greatest kings. Such a shame that he passed away at 45.

    • @Cecilia-ky3uw
      @Cecilia-ky3uw Před 3 lety

      wow kings grow too old just like in ck3 its annoying how my heir is nearly 50 by the time i die

  • @johnfyten3392
    @johnfyten3392 Před 3 lety +36

    Cool video. I learned a lot. Definitely gonna subscribe to your channel. I'm a tradesman, without a college education, but I really enjoy learning about history and science. Thanks.

  • @loyalist5736
    @loyalist5736 Před 3 lety +10

    Love Kings who will bare Arms and fight with there men at the front and at 16 nothing but respect.
    I'll give it to the British - English they do well in warfare wining alot of battles on enemy soil .

  • @cambs0181
    @cambs0181 Před 3 lety +33

    John of Bohemia must of been a brave man to face the enemy with no sight, but my absolute respect to his guide dog!

    • @unknownchannel3141
      @unknownchannel3141 Před 3 lety +3

      He was an idiot.

    • @miek526
      @miek526 Před 3 lety +1

      @@unknownchannel3141 i agree

    • @noldo3837
      @noldo3837 Před 2 lety

      @@unknownchannel3141 That is a matter of pride. He was expected to stand at the side of his ally, so he did. No matter what. He was a man and a king, so he simply kept his word. "Far be it that the King of Bohemia should run away. Instead, take me to the place where the noise of the battle is the loudest. The Lord will be with us. Nothing to fear. Just take good care of my son."

  • @spadebraithwaite1762
    @spadebraithwaite1762 Před rokem +2

    I am a direct descendant of the Black Prince, like half of Britain. I grew up in the Black Prince pub, in Woodstock, just over the wall from the house where he he was born, that the first Lady Marlborough had demolished. It's an interesting story to me.

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 Před rokem

      Just saw someone else in the comments say they're a direct descendant of his lol.

    • @Dryhten1801
      @Dryhten1801 Před rokem

      @@rc59191 It's a bit like how every Southern American claims they're a cousin of Jesse James. In this case it's probably more likely to be true though given England's small population at the time and give or take 700 years

  • @doesnotexist305
    @doesnotexist305 Před 2 lety +22

    The Black Prince is almost as legendary a figure as Richard the Lionheart. So legendary is he that when I, an American, read that he had been born in Maurice Druon’s novel The Lily and the Lion (part of the Accursed Kings) I was so hyped. I don’t think that I’ll be as excited for the birth of my own children as I was at reading that an infant was born who was to go on to be Edward the Black Prince in a novel. I’m exaggerating obviously but he’s that awesome.

    • @darrenlamb5640
      @darrenlamb5640 Před 2 lety +4

      It's good having English ancestry isnt it ; )

    • @volslover1504
      @volslover1504 Před 8 měsíci

      My English ancestry is Oliver Cromwell.

  • @bryanrobinson8886
    @bryanrobinson8886 Před 3 lety +45

    The greatest prince, warrior, knight and never - King England has ever had. I truly enjoy the tales and history of the Black Prince. I remember when I first learned of him and he is the stuff of legend that you almost can't believe it. But he is and was greatest 👑. Yes he did have a dark side and faults but he saved England and promoted the highest ideals of knightly valor and honor.

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety

      This is certainly why this great soldier lost everything and returned quickly back to England !! Hahahaha 😂 the black Prince was a great warrior but an absolute embarrassment as a leader. No wonder his son asked for the king of France to reduce the English in England !!! Hahahaha, you English are laughable !!

    • @bryanrobinson8886
      @bryanrobinson8886 Před 2 lety +3

      @@antoinemozart243 Huh? What did the Black Prince loss exactly...? Yes, he lost some battles but those battles were mostly outside of domain of the king of England and in Spain not France. So, yeah he should have chosen better allies. But he died before his father and the Kingdom of England was pretty secure for the most part until his father too. The issues were the Black Prince and his father, King Edward III did not get along as they son and father should have to keep peace between factions.

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety

      @@bryanrobinson8886 the black Prince was a great warrior but an abysmal politician . Not only he lost all what was gained after Poitiers but Charles V tricked him like a child in the Spain affair. Even Edward II did better. And that says a lot.
      He was absolutely unable to rule Aquitaine, his father gave him. When he went back to England, the English had only a band of land along the ocean. Edward III and the black Prince were children compared to Charles V.

    • @bryanrobinson8886
      @bryanrobinson8886 Před 2 lety +1

      @@antoinemozart243 Lol... the Black Prince was only misfortunate after the Spain affair because cost money and men. So the black Prince just ran out of both. Also, the barons played a larger than many will like to admit. The trend of rebellious barons had been a century in the making probably dating back to the Lionheart or earlier. Charles V may have been better at politicticing but the situation in France and England had change from the supremacy of England and there would be other opportunities for English gain. Ever hear of Henry V.

    • @antoinemozart243
      @antoinemozart243 Před 2 lety

      It's better to delete answers ! As my arguments destroy yours !

  • @Germanicus-
    @Germanicus- Před 3 lety +8

    Absolutely love British history..

  • @ata-ayitehunlede5632
    @ata-ayitehunlede5632 Před 3 lety +8

    Wonderful man. Eternal Glory for these Great men, Knights who served and fought for their country and inspire the respect of their enemies whilst treating them with respect and dignity as the Black Prince did for King John II of France.

  • @carywest9256
    @carywest9256 Před 3 lety +55

    I have read that the standard bearer which you say came to Prince Edward's aid is a man named Ralph Shelton.
    He was knighted for his part during this part of the battle of Crecy.
    My mother's family name is Shelton.This family line was from County Norfolk,England.
    There is a Shelton Hall South of Norwich,but it is a private residence in our time.
    Also,in Henry VIII's time Anne Boleyn would stay at Shelton Hall with young Princess Elizabeth in tow.

    • @whitney524
      @whitney524 Před 3 lety +2

      I wasn’t familiar with how my family played into his story. I’m a descendant of the Bruce’s.

    • @JulianJ58
      @JulianJ58 Před 3 lety +3

      Timothy Eames totally possible bruh, Genghis Khan, another monarch from the Middle Ages, has around 30 MILLION decendents

    • @whitney524
      @whitney524 Před 3 lety +2

      JulianJ58 Charlemagne is another one who has a ton a descendants. I’ve heard that anyone with European ancestry can count Charlemagne in their family tree. Idk how true that is though

    • @MendTheWorld
      @MendTheWorld Před 3 lety +1

      The Sheltons would attain even greater accomplishments in the New World, as Robert Shelton rose to become the Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.

    • @whitney524
      @whitney524 Před 3 lety +3

      MendTheWorld eh, can’t really hold someone responsible for what an ancestor, possibly even distantly related family, have done. I’m sure we all have a few shitbags if you look far enough back into your family tree.

  • @kennethMblake
    @kennethMblake Před 2 lety +3

    Why was he called "The Black Prince" 46:56
    1) Black coloured armour?
    2) Dark reputation in France for being cruel?
    3) The three ostrich feathers on a black backgrounds as his personal cote d'arms?

  • @vegandolls
    @vegandolls Před 3 lety +6

    Considering who came next his death is one of the biggest events in english history, there would have been no bollingbrook. It reminds of the death of Germanicus, the noble son of Drusus during the Augustan age of Rome

  • @jacey1963
    @jacey1963 Před 3 lety +35

    I've been waiting for this one, I'm descended from his brother's line, John of Gaunt...

    • @ata-ayitehunlede5632
      @ata-ayitehunlede5632 Před 3 lety +3

      And you are pretty woman, lineage of Princes and Princesses

    • @AndyMcSherry1
      @AndyMcSherry1 Před 3 lety +6

      Really Jacky? I am descended from a Howard line, strangely enough, from an undocumented line who presumably fled to Ireland, posing all sorts of questions. I seen on TV that Howard goes back to Edward III, I know Edward I invited the Howard's into the inner circle but not sure about how they married into the family, or where and when. I've haven't figured that one out yet so Its all a bit romanticised as far as definitive evidence goes. I really don't know the significance but I know family members were often drawn out of pictures during the Tudor era so I think I'll get a DNA test for my male cousin just in case there is something there. So how did you know you were a descendant? It's a big part of your identity.

    • @jacey1963
      @jacey1963 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ata-ayitehunlede5632 thank you so much....

    • @jacey1963
      @jacey1963 Před 3 lety +5

      @@AndyMcSherry1 ....that's really interesting Andy, we may have ancestors in common. I researched my family tree a few years ago and found a line on my dad's side which is descended from Edward I through John of Gaunt and Joan of Beaufort, there are also other lines on my mum's side that go back to Owen Glendower's brother Tudor, so my parents each come from lines who would have fought against each other which I found amusing.

    • @paulinetravis9994
      @paulinetravis9994 Před 3 lety +4

      I am related to Henry 1st and King John, but both mistresses children. Lol. My madon name Trivett is only 1 of 9 names that can be traced back to the Norman's. My family where one of the friends of the Black Prince. And one of my Gr Grand Mothers was one of the first Women getting rewarded with the Garter, by his Son Richard. She also is berries in Canterbury, in a toom, in the Grib, where he really wanted to be berries, to lay near his friends. But his father would not let him so berries above.. I feel very proud of my family, that a Prince and King where they friends.

  • @5th_progenator_reesecobar758

    I'm here early! Gonna save it for tonight, really looking forward to this one. Thanks!

    • @donaldmacauley4571
      @donaldmacauley4571 Před 3 lety

      I feel exactly the same way when a new video (especially on English royalty) comes out. I really look forward to it

    • @ironhand9096
      @ironhand9096 Před 3 lety

      CAt From Outer Space before you run any of those tests consider the following:-
      1. Learn to spell. No Dr will authorise tests from anyone unable to spell single syllable words especially when they have the option to spell check.
      2. Study basic medicine, learn human anatomy, physiology & pathophysiology. Maybe even gain a basic understanding of neurology.
      3. Do a course in lower education followed my a mid level course. Higher education could be a bit much but just maybe within reach with a lot of support.
      4. Come back on CZcams and show the world you’re not a complete half wit, stun them with your new found intelligence.

    • @nevetsmahgnirtle8961
      @nevetsmahgnirtle8961 Před 3 lety

      @@ironhand9096 Wow! You have such a huge opinion of yourself, if only someone else shared it

  • @davidkeller6156
    @davidkeller6156 Před 3 lety +43

    Loved the video! I’ve read Dan Jones book on the Plantagenets many times and it’s great to see a video like this.

  • @malcwalker8565
    @malcwalker8565 Před rokem +2

    The Black Prince's Ruby is the big gemstone at the front of the Imperial Crown of the United Kingdom. That has always fascinated me.

  • @mikedavies9628
    @mikedavies9628 Před 3 lety +9

    Just had a thought lol. A prince of wales that was actually a Welshman. I go to the foot of the stairs lol

  • @dillionday7414
    @dillionday7414 Před 3 lety +30

    Awesome video. There is only a few short videos about him on CZcams. Is there a chance you can do a video on Edward the Confessor. All these kings were named after him and it would be great to see it.

    • @PeopleProfiles
      @PeopleProfiles  Před 3 lety +11

      Great suggestion!

    • @cklg88
      @cklg88 Před 3 lety +1

      There are plenty of Edward the Confessor available.

  • @vender68
    @vender68 Před 3 lety +16

    Wow never knew he was the broke prince too

  • @franceslambert8070
    @franceslambert8070 Před 3 lety +6

    I really enjoyed this video. I was able to follow the battles and learned about the "Black Prince". Thank you for giving me something else to study.

  • @sarahinaurora
    @sarahinaurora Před 3 lety +8

    A great and honorable man and that England never had the privilege of calling their King.

  • @goodyeoman4534
    @goodyeoman4534 Před 3 lety +14

    "Witness our too-much-memorable shame
    When Cressy battle fatally was struck
    And all our princes captived by the hand
    Of that black name, Edward, Black Prince of Wales..."
    Henry V. Act 2, Scene 3.

  • @JacobScott0000
    @JacobScott0000 Před 3 lety +3

    Very well done. Thank you.
    Although, It would have been a nice touch at the end to read out what he had written on his tomb:
    Such as thou art, sometime was I.
    Such as I am, such shalt thou be.
    I thought little on th'our of Death
    So long as I enjoyed breath.
    On earth I had great riches
    Land, houses, great treasure, horses, money and gold.
    But now a wretched captive am I,
    Deep in the ground, lo here I lie.
    My beauty great, is all quite gone,
    My flesh is wasted to the bone.

  • @johnmontag
    @johnmontag Před 3 lety +2

    This channel should have 10x subs. Quality is top tier. Keep at it

  • @ian_b
    @ian_b Před 3 lety +16

    Philippa of Hainault was best mates with Tracy of Fairlop and Shanice of Theydon Bois.

  • @marshaprice8226
    @marshaprice8226 Před 3 lety +13

    A most interesting and informative biography! I learned much that I did not know about the life and career of Edward of Woodstock.

  • @liorfanous9210
    @liorfanous9210 Před 3 lety +31

    This was excellent, i literally nearly cried when you said the Black Prince had died.

  • @Cyberlucy
    @Cyberlucy Před 2 lety

    Thanks for putting this together. This was very well done.

  • @jessicapotter2012
    @jessicapotter2012 Před 2 lety +2

    What a lot of people don’t realise is that royals constantly lied about their achievements and attributes etc because they know know one back then could call them a liar and they paid people to be on their side. And of course they also knew after there death no one would bother or be able to find out if it was a lie or not so that’s how they are remembered!!! Quite clever and sneaky if you ask me.

  • @guitarhick
    @guitarhick Před 3 lety +7

    awesome documentary/ the artwork is inspirational the hard hitting facts and no BS with battlefield strategy i love it please make more

  • @thomashampton6801
    @thomashampton6801 Před 3 lety +6

    As per usual great video well done guys!

  • @LordGadwin
    @LordGadwin Před rokem +1

    He was forged in war, and when he wasn't at war he lived like he would die in the next battle. He enjoyed his life when he could and made sure the ones that fought next to him did the same.

  • @zackhartley4718
    @zackhartley4718 Před 3 lety +15

    I’ve always enjoyed your videos, but man your getting way better!! 🤙🏻

    • @jacey1963
      @jacey1963 Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks so much from the team!

  • @Admiralofthedeeps
    @Admiralofthedeeps Před 3 lety +20

    This..is....class.

  • @hashiahmed2381
    @hashiahmed2381 Před 3 lety +3

    Wow you guys always have the greatest documentaries.

  • @jackpotbox
    @jackpotbox Před 2 lety

    The manner in which you narrate in your videos, is quite impressively engaging. I've already subscribed. Thanks so much for the videos.

  • @raynor7030
    @raynor7030 Před 3 lety +24

    definitly the greates king england never had.

    • @Abdi-libaax
      @Abdi-libaax Před 3 lety

      Better than Arthur??

    • @raynor7030
      @raynor7030 Před 3 lety

      well you are right in some way, he was one historys most popular kings and one of the greatest warriors ever, no doubt about that. some doubts if he was a good king for england, he spent only 6 month during his reign in england, the rest of this time he was fighting somewhere else in france or the holy land and he was using england to collect massive taxes to finance his wars (it is mentioned that he said he would sell london if he could find a buyer) opinions may be different on that matter .... but you are absolutly wrong too: he was not one of the greatest kings england never had - cause he was king of england.

    • @raynor7030
      @raynor7030 Před 3 lety

      difficult question on the first sight :-) if we can agree that arthur really existed rather than being a myth - in that case he was king indeed and could not be the greatest king england ever had but not the greatest england never had. if we agree that there is no proof for his existance - some legend created by fiction would not be qualified at all (beside the fact that this legend would also have been king) .... so finally: maybe not better than arthur (fact or fiction, never mind) cause arthur was king.

    • @maddywhite3633
      @maddywhite3633 Před 3 lety +7

      @@Abdi-libaax Arthur was never King of England, he was known as King of the Britons, the Celts. He's just a legend, we don't even know if he really existed

    • @jefferyball7672
      @jefferyball7672 Před 3 lety

      @@raynor7030 .

  • @patrickhows1482
    @patrickhows1482 Před 3 lety +7

    It is noticeable that Edward lll was one of those rare kings who had a harmonious family life. He had good relationships with all his children, contrast his good relationship with Edward the Black Prince with that of the Hanoverian kings and their heirs. Not many kings would have allowed his heir to marry someone with Joan of Kent's marital history.

    • @alpacinoravidutt
      @alpacinoravidutt Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah also his son's had good relationships with each other. Gaunt was fiercely loyal to the black Prince and so was Edmund Langley. Shame that their descendants were fuck ups that led to the wars of the Roses.

  • @user-ti5cw1ug6l
    @user-ti5cw1ug6l Před 3 lety +57

    This is who Rhaegar Targaryen is based on.

    • @yaboyed5779
      @yaboyed5779 Před 3 lety +12

      Nahhhh, he didn’t seem like a romantic fool, but i see what you meant

    • @patrickbateman783
      @patrickbateman783 Před 3 lety +2

      The Silver Prince 😍😘

    • @TheCandiceWang
      @TheCandiceWang Před 3 lety +8

      Rhaegar was NO FOOL. Not sure where u got that from. Plus, ASOIAF chars aren't all based on just one historical person each. Cersei could be based on Margaret DAnjou AND emperor Irene.

    • @Baileaf11
      @Baileaf11 Před 3 lety +5

      @@TheCandiceWang well he kinda was a fool since he abandoned his wife and got eloped with Lyanna which obviously would’ve pissed off The North and the storm lands then this caused a whole fucking rebellion which deposed his Dynasty and ended with him dying

    • @motorcitymangababe
      @motorcitymangababe Před 2 lety +1

      @@Baileaf11 problem with that is no one knows why he did it or what the reasoning behind it is and all the evidence points to him being aware of the white walker situation so its probably more complicated than just "abandoning his wife and eloping with lyanna" which btw hasnt been canonized in the books yet and we have no idea how elia feels about at the lyanna situation. In fact we have everyone but her feelings on the matter. Considering shes from dorne where paramours and bastards are accepted chances are he had her approval or apathy- we just dont know. And without more information beyond second hand accounts of family members who were traumatized cgildren idolizing him and his bitter enemies and no great people either no one can really say anything about him other than he existed and was the flashpoint that sparked an inevitable rebellion.
      Thats what makes him interesting- that hes so influential but such a mystery.

  • @angrymetal4788
    @angrymetal4788 Před 3 lety +2

    3:27 Woah Piers Gaveston and Hugh Despenser the Younger picture looks so realistic.

    • @hotmechanic222
      @hotmechanic222 Před 3 lety +2

      must have been retouched as they would obviously have been in black and white originally lol

  • @jackmiller2404
    @jackmiller2404 Před rokem +2

    Another winner, my history connoisseurs! I could be misinformed about this, but I thought I heard a story about when they were studying the Black Prince’s tomb, that they found out that later generations must have painted it black and that it was actually a brass like color underneath. They discovered this cause while examining the tomb, the thick black paint flaked off and was found out to be not as old as the tomb itself. Anyone else hear about this, or did I dream it, lol.

  • @gunraptor
    @gunraptor Před 3 lety +18

    Given his financial issues, it's ironic that the "Black Prince" was rarely...in the black.

  • @nevillebonner6244
    @nevillebonner6244 Před 2 lety +5

    That’s mind bogglingly interesting . I live in the black prince’s winter garrison about halfway between Limouges and Poitiers. The castle has mostly gone but there are a few houses inside the walls and towers built from the remnants. I know the French attacked , there was a massacre and the survivors were driven over a wooden bridge into French owned France at Abzac .thé bridge was burned behind them. The castle has been repaired and destroyed numerous times during the 100 years war. I believe it started life as a Roman garrison on the Salt Run . I had trouble getting my head around the black prince coming up from Aquitaine whilst the king of France had an obvious English name. I’d love to understand at which point in the story this happened and if it was his knights garrison or if he stayed. There’s another castle just up the road at St Germain de Confolens .. i wonder where that fits in as well …

    • @Mindy832
      @Mindy832 Před rokem

      Foi fake news o massacre de Limouges

  • @alicemoller
    @alicemoller Před 2 lety +2

    This is missing today from leaders, who the people voted in power. Thanks for a great documentary.

  • @fatherjohnholoduekoca4587

    Pius, Brave, and Honorable!

  • @KRUGE67
    @KRUGE67 Před 3 lety +12

    a true warrior and knight, he was a product of his times, to bad no such men are like him anymore.

    • @claudeyaz
      @claudeyaz Před 3 lety +3

      He didnt live long enough to have a shitty reputation xD

  • @koori3085
    @koori3085 Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent presentation! The Black Prince intended to do and be good, but that was difficult in that time.

  • @juliusdream2683
    @juliusdream2683 Před 3 lety +5

    Honorable warrior king 🤴. I’m American and don’t know much about British history. But so far been watching these episodes and he seems up there as one of the best

  • @evelynbyrd4961
    @evelynbyrd4961 Před 3 lety +6

    Edward of Woodstock, HONORABLE and FAITHFULL to The End.

  • @wilsontheconqueror8101
    @wilsontheconqueror8101 Před 3 lety +8

    Loved this! Oh what could have been! Noble,fair,courteous the war campaigns should be viewed in the context of the time. And spending more than he should have,well he wasn't the first. Truly a bold prince who was a son to a King, a defender of his lands and people, a father and husband. And a righteous servant of God! The Black Prince could have become a King that could have literally saved England from decades of discord.

  • @kimberlybates6261
    @kimberlybates6261 Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent video. Loved it.

  • @GoogleUserOne
    @GoogleUserOne Před 3 lety +7

    Finally! The black prince!!!!

  • @cobralord4279
    @cobralord4279 Před 3 lety +14

    England was defiantly the most powerful kingdom during the 14th and first half of the 15th, which is a massive accomplishment since its population was so small compared to others, I think you can’t blame medieval kings and princes for their savagery it was how it was back then and the people loved a war time leader like him, it was the same with roman emperors. If you don’t any many military accomplishments it largely decreases your chance of holding power.

    • @cobralord4279
      @cobralord4279 Před 3 lety

      Sorry, 14th and first half of the 15th century

    • @shapurthegreat7542
      @shapurthegreat7542 Před 3 lety +1

      Plantinstein only in Europe, Asia had other great powers that could or beat England

    • @cobralord4279
      @cobralord4279 Před 3 lety +1

      Shapur The Great yeah sorry I was meant to put in Europe

    • @fabianus1501
      @fabianus1501 Před 3 lety +2

      No, the kingdom of England was just a piece of the Angevin Empire which in modern perception was more French than English. The hundred years war was a conflict between two houses, the Plantagenet and the Valois who both originated in France, so the question is when did the French Plantagenet become the English?

    • @cobralord4279
      @cobralord4279 Před 3 lety +1

      Fabianus The Angevin empire ended when king John died loosing most of his lands, it’s normally considered from there on the Plantagenet line became English with Henry iii but the English upper class mostly spoke french until Henry viii

  • @richardellis1141
    @richardellis1141 Před rokem +3

    It's just wonderful. Nuf said. I'm biased because I'm English through and through and have a passion for history but it's absolutely fascinating. We had some dodgy periods but all told I'm proud of my little countries history and it's contribution to the whole of this planet. Tiny little island off the north west coast of Europe. Pretty impressive I'd say.

  • @cristianvillanueva8782
    @cristianvillanueva8782 Před 3 lety +50

    The blind knight being tied to his horse, excuse me what?

    • @FishBoneD14
      @FishBoneD14 Před 3 lety +18

      The king of Bohemia? Yeah it’s an interesting story

    • @erikrungemadsen2081
      @erikrungemadsen2081 Před 3 lety +35

      The blind King, yes that actually happened. What is even worse his horse was tied to a bunch of his guards horses. Imagine a cranky, old, and blind man in full armor yelling for his guards to bring him closer to the enemy, so he could bash them with his sword.

    • @staciasmith5162
      @staciasmith5162 Před 3 lety +2

      @@erikrungemadsen2081 😷🤭🤣😂😷

    • @erikrungemadsen2081
      @erikrungemadsen2081 Před 3 lety +13

      @@fatnsassy99 As a former soldier. John of Bohemia should not have been in the vanguard in the first place. I can admire the bravery, but i despise the foolishness.
      I can not respect what John of Bohemia did at Crecy, it was selfish, and it was stupid. At best he was led like a blind lam to the slaughter, at worst he stuffed himself and his retainers into a blender made of metal, horses and men and pressed the start button himself.
      John of Bohemia abandoned his post as King so he could go out fighting, he abandoned his men, his son and his people to ensure his reputation and honor.
      "No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making some other poor dumb bastard die for his country." -Patton
      “Death is lighter than a feather, but Duty is heavier than a mountain” -Japanesse Imperial Rescript.

    • @erikrungemadsen2081
      @erikrungemadsen2081 Před 3 lety +6

      @@fatnsassy99 Danish army, Armored infantry. Congratulations on the retirement. You have been serving as long as i have been alive.

  • @AlonyaJ
    @AlonyaJ Před 2 lety +1

    Really cool, with one exception... a lot of the pictures date from 1430-1490s, as attested by the ladies henin & veil headwear, houpelande gowns, and men's chaperon hats.

  • @kevinpaul1847
    @kevinpaul1847 Před 3 lety +6

    The most Kingly prince ever 🤴

  • @kevinc809
    @kevinc809 Před 3 lety +18

    His death changed everything.

    • @PeopleProfiles
      @PeopleProfiles  Před 3 lety +5

      Bit like Henry V really. "The best laid schemes o' mice an' men."

  • @victoriaaletaaustria2817

    It's so hard during those time. Dysentery is now easily arrested by antibiotics after lab culture of stool. He was such a brave, chivalrous warrior and survived wars, but died young at 46 y.o. due to illness.

  • @LiLtRiCkToXiC
    @LiLtRiCkToXiC Před 3 lety +5

    Greatly detailed documentary

  • @mangot589
    @mangot589 Před 3 lety +4

    Just ran across your channel. Well met.

  • @andreebesseau6995
    @andreebesseau6995 Před 3 lety +4

    The black prince was responsible for the death of 3.000 people in Poitier France.also there is a town in Landes-Gascony where a weekly market is still happening(2020) on the day the black prince ordained it to be :))

  • @khalraesh3176
    @khalraesh3176 Před 2 lety +1

    I love that this happened... the black prince is the most intriguing english royals in my opinion...

  • @jeffhumble5144
    @jeffhumble5144 Před 3 lety +26

    You talk a little too fast. Slow it down just a hair so we can enjoy all the information you’re providing. Otherwise, enjoy all of these!

    • @nomeyodomar
      @nomeyodomar Před 3 lety +3

      I've actually set the video to a slower speed 🙂

    • @PeopleProfiles
      @PeopleProfiles  Před 3 lety +14

      It's not too fast.

    • @peetyw8851
      @peetyw8851 Před 3 lety +8

      The People Profiles isn’t “too” in the eye of the beholder?

    • @PeopleProfiles
      @PeopleProfiles  Před 3 lety +8

      @@peetyw8851 1k likes and 30 dislikes suggest the pace is fine.

    • @peetyw8851
      @peetyw8851 Před 3 lety +5

      The People Profiles Agreed!

  • @jacquelinedeigan3913
    @jacquelinedeigan3913 Před 3 lety +15

    A perfect Prince for his time

  • @josecipriano3048
    @josecipriano3048 Před 3 lety +3

    He would probably be a lousy king, spending all his wealth on PR while not even securing payment for his army. There's much more to kingship than martial prowess (like Richard III proved).

  • @SporeFreak2010
    @SporeFreak2010 Před 3 lety +2

    3:39 TOP A THE MORN'IN TO YA LADDIES! *WHA-PSH!!!* 🖐 King Edward the second here and today we're play'in some CRUSADER KINGS 3!!

  • @williamdevonshire356
    @williamdevonshire356 Před rokem +1

    apparently on my Moms Dads side, I am related to the Black Prince and John of Gaunt