Secrets of the Manor House - Part 1/4

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • A look back at the British aristocracy and how the first World War changed the entire financial, social and political landscape of the aristocracy.
    www.pbs.org/pro...
    Secrets of the Manor House was produced by Pioneer Productions

Komentáře • 247

  • @pianolessonsboulder1894
    @pianolessonsboulder1894 Před 3 lety +5

    Tragically, in the 1950's over a hundred ancient ancestral seats were destroyed because their owners could neither afford their upkeep or the 89 per cent taxes that they had to pay. Fortunately, the remaining great houses were opened up to the public for a fee on certain days and that is how they survived. Some were converted into posh hotels, and others rented to film and documentary makers like Brideshead Revisited and Downton Abbey.
    These ancient great houses are not only England's heritage, they are the world's heritage. They are mankind's heritage.
    Thank you for uploading this!

  • @nikkil764
    @nikkil764 Před 4 lety +15

    Magnificent architecture. We will never again see such quality of craftsmanship.

    • @strictlyyoutube6881
      @strictlyyoutube6881 Před 2 lety +2

      We will once we get rid of human rights and punish those who don't do a good job by flogging them.

    • @nikkil764
      @nikkil764 Před 2 lety +5

      @@strictlyyoutube6881 Let me guess. You live in a tiny house made of recycled pallets.

    • @strictlyyoutube6881
      @strictlyyoutube6881 Před 2 lety

      @@nikkil764 Was your great great grandfather a chimney sweep?

  • @Spinneygirl
    @Spinneygirl Před 10 lety +38

    I missed these programmes on TV, and I look forward to watching them here on UTube. Thank you for posting these for others to share. Diana.

  • @bunnymad5049
    @bunnymad5049 Před 5 lety +9

    I love their humility and his appreciation and almost wonder at things he lives with every day. That's rather special. And the butler seems a lovely man.

  • @melanie7781
    @melanie7781 Před rokem +3

    These manors were major employers in the building and maintaining of them for many years. People forget most of these were built before during the industrial age. Without them a lot of people would not have had jobs.

  • @johnbird2586
    @johnbird2586 Před rokem +3

    Despite their links to the "SLAVE TRADE" It is still nice to know that many of these beautiful houses have been preserved!

    • @gullwingstorm857
      @gullwingstorm857 Před rokem +1

      Britain, and this particular class, were the first in the world to abolish slavery, and they fought a war to stop it. Before you post such idiotic inanities, check your history.

  • @kefaad
    @kefaad Před 11 lety +5

    I simply adore British manor houses! This noble sense of continuity they have. You can find restoration, georgian, regency, victorian and edwardian pieces blend all together in a most aristocratic result... Private architecture and genteel interior decoration at its best! We support National Trust!!!

    • @normathomas8276
      @normathomas8276 Před 6 lety +2

      No offence but the great houses are not manor houses they are stately homes or mansions these programs would get there facts right

  • @clarisd
    @clarisd Před 11 lety +15

    I am so very happy that the society for the care and up keep of these great mannors and grounds are taken care of. I have had the pleasure of touring a few in England and here in Europe. It is a dream like walk through history itself. Wonderful and I thought that the servants were of a higher consideration than other trades, so not true and a harsh life to be sure.

    • @Gecko....
      @Gecko.... Před rokem

      Yes the aristocracy and landed gentry exploited and kept down the masses for over a thousand years. Their mansions were built on land taken from the people and constructed by labour on pitiful wages. The staff were indentured servants and often treated like furniture. I don't see these places as something to have national pride in, I see them as an awful reminder of how the lower classes were treated.

  • @danielharrhy9894
    @danielharrhy9894 Před 8 lety +13

    This really is quite a realistic view into the lives of aristocratic family's in Britain so thank you for the upload

    • @elizabethblackwell6242
      @elizabethblackwell6242 Před 4 lety +1

      No it really isn't. I counted 17 errors and I'm only 12 minutes in. It must have been made by Americans.

  • @gr8fuldeb699
    @gr8fuldeb699 Před 4 lety +4

    Coming from the states where monarchy never existed i find it fascinating that there are real live Kings Queens etc exist. Love it

  • @gr8fuldeb699
    @gr8fuldeb699 Před 4 lety +9

    A lot of books ive read made me think that the commoners found it a privilege to work in the castles.

    • @brendakabanda2181
      @brendakabanda2181 Před 4 lety +4

      They do now don't they. We know who wrote them why.

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 Před 2 lety

      @@brendakabanda2181
      You're correct. PR -

    • @gullwingstorm857
      @gullwingstorm857 Před rokem

      Because it was, and is a privilege. The domestic staff back in the day tried very hard to get such positions because they paid well, and had better conditions than working in rougher employment. Ignore the envious monkeys.

  • @adelemade
    @adelemade Před 11 lety +33

    Like the point, but I highly disagree on this regard: "We Brits have nothing to be proud..." Perhaps if we focus on the good things we have. I am danish/swedish, but my great-grandmother was english and very proud of her heritage that she passed it on to us. Being british/english is more than just the manor houses :D

  • @carrotjuse
    @carrotjuse Před 12 lety +4

    This is marvelous. Thank you so much for uploading this.

  • @nicoleannecollet
    @nicoleannecollet Před 10 lety +5

    I find this show fascinating, thanks for posting!

  • @ptkcollins
    @ptkcollins Před 11 lety +6

    Hi Sue, I believe this is due to the US audience (not completely sure) as a previous UK series The Edwardian Country House was renamed Manor House for the US market. The term manor houses appears to be used interchangeably with stately homes.

  • @pranavmanohaur391
    @pranavmanohaur391 Před 4 lety +2

    Samuel west, your voice is the best!

  • @pianolessonsboulder1894
    @pianolessonsboulder1894 Před 3 lety +1

    Superb! An absolute "Must see" !

  • @BigBirdy100
    @BigBirdy100 Před 12 lety +1

    Thanks so much for uploading this. I missed most of the program on tv and it would not play on my iphone so I was thrilled to find it on youtube. I enjoyed it.

  • @elizabethbower2168
    @elizabethbower2168 Před 3 lety +2

    I enjoyed this documentary but found it rather confusing as the narrator talked about US dollars yet it’s about the British aristocracy who use pounds sterling… The cost of things should have been related in British pounds not the American currency

  • @seanmcguire7974
    @seanmcguire7974 Před 4 lety +5

    Wouldve loved to see how they built these back then.

  • @ebenezermarley
    @ebenezermarley Před 12 lety +2

    Wow, that chandelier is mesmerising me. Appreciate the upload.

  • @yortie25
    @yortie25 Před 11 lety +3

    What is so sad is this is exactly where America is heading at breakneck speed and most Americans can not (or refuse to) see it.

  • @flyinspirals
    @flyinspirals Před 11 lety +13

    How very sad, how tragic, that the 1st consequences of industialization - which increased productivity, so in theory should have increased wealth for everyone, even if not equally - were simply to drive the two extremes further apart. That is the very essence of waste: starvation in the face of plenty.
    Surely there must have been some sense in which the individuals at the top felt compelled - not acting by choice - to keep being more extravagant. Can they all be sociopaths?? I feel so naive.

    • @jaimicottrill2831
      @jaimicottrill2831 Před 2 lety +1

      Look at the billionaires nowadays. They could solve world hunger together and still be very wealthy but they simply….don’t. Instead they build phallic rockets in a “mine’s better than yours” competition.

  • @robbiemartens5319
    @robbiemartens5319 Před 4 lety +2

    It reminds me of downton abbey house and lifestyle

  • @gmaureen
    @gmaureen Před 10 lety +37

    The best job, IMO, would have been taking care of the horses...mucking out a barn being preferable to emptying chamber pots.

    • @nannavargo840
      @nannavargo840 Před 7 lety +2

      gmaureen orgi

    • @galacruse2318
      @galacruse2318 Před 5 lety +5

      I'd probably like the horses better anyway. . . .

    • @lorig7077
      @lorig7077 Před 4 lety +3

      Me too. Also I'd take the dogs for loooonnnggg walks

    • @karifredrikson8492
      @karifredrikson8492 Před 4 lety

      gmaureen / Very Romantic of you.

    • @shadrach6299
      @shadrach6299 Před 4 lety +1

      I had a friend who LOVED horses. She worked one summer mucking out barns. Horses became much less important to her. Have you smelled a dirty barn? I can still smell our horses.

  • @JustAThought155
    @JustAThought155 Před 4 lety +2

    Reality: these are those who practiced colonization, but notice their priorities: curtains cost $1,000,000.00 (one MILLION DOLLARS); and the HUMANS that serve in their homes earn $50.00 per YEAR!!! Absolutely horrific!!!

  • @bymeerabrowngothicroyal
    @bymeerabrowngothicroyal Před 5 lety +6

    Downton Abbey sent me here.

  • @mindakahn9964
    @mindakahn9964 Před 4 lety +5

    Irrepressible forces? Try family feud that cost lives. Two kings, cousins, grandchildren of Queen Victoria couldn’t get along.

  • @01denese
    @01denese Před 10 lety +10

    Edward was the playboy King as his mother Queen Victoria had ruled for so long and she wouldn't give him anything to do.

    • @marijaskolan9088
      @marijaskolan9088 Před 3 lety

      Yes, it seems that she was a good ruler for the country but not that good as mother. With her always stating to her kids that she will never love anyone as much as she did her husband. I must say, she sounds like a bad mother. And also allegations that her children were mistreated by nannies tells you that she didnt want or couldnt see that.

  • @Hotshotter3000
    @Hotshotter3000 Před 11 lety +4

    Yeah, that was one advantage. You didn't have to spend much money on yourself (if at all) so almost all the cash you made could be saved or sent to your family. Many domestic workers were young people who did send all their money back to their family. In the Edwardian period, however, many domestic servants did start to leave for better jobs and those that stayed did start to demand better pay and working conditions.

  • @RADIUMGLASS
    @RADIUMGLASS Před 4 měsíci +2

    Lord Palmer's CZcams interviews have been purged. I would like to see them upload. He told the story of how when he got hired in the family business he thought he was going to have a good position and someone threw a bucket at him and a razor blade and told him to go scrape off the gum off the women's lavatory floor.

  • @9340jr
    @9340jr Před 12 lety +1

    Brilliant program...

  • @Dizzinz
    @Dizzinz Před 12 lety +1

    Thank you so much for this show...really enjoyed it!

  • @ecureuil85
    @ecureuil85 Před 9 lety +8

    It's like a real life Downton Abbey - they even have the American lady of the house! I have to say, now that these people are the curious minorities, I find it all quite fascinating to watch. I doubt I'd have thought that way had I been around in Edwardian times, though. Us lower orders have come a very long way in the past 100 years, thank the lord!

    • @Austin8thGenTexan
      @Austin8thGenTexan Před 9 lety +1

      ecureuil85 She's already had her lunch served to her, wrapped in a road map - back to Texas. They're divorced since this feature was filmed. 'Tis sad, no ?

    • @WheelsRCool
      @WheelsRCool Před 9 lety

      James Claude How come they divorced?

    • @Austin8thGenTexan
      @Austin8thGenTexan Před 9 lety

      Kyle Blank Private reply sent.

    • @WheelsRCool
      @WheelsRCool Před 9 lety

      James Claude Thanks, but how do I access the private reply on here?

    • @RobRoyBoaz
      @RobRoyBoaz Před 8 lety

      +ecureuil85 FFS. ".....a real life Downton Abbey" ???? Are you a blithering idiot? Downton Abbey was based on this crap. Not the other way around. "Us lower orders have come a very long way in the past 100 years...." "lower orders?" You may see yourself as belonging to the "lower orders" Bought into the illusion have you?

  • @johnbird2586
    @johnbird2586 Před rokem +1

    Has anyone seen the you tube videos, by the titles "EMPIRES OF DIRT?" They are very interesting in deed!

  • @AndreaMimi1984
    @AndreaMimi1984 Před 7 lety

    I like the Manor House and the Secrets and I hope for new episodes.

  • @myboyz9391
    @myboyz9391 Před 4 lety +3

    When he said to imagine the sound of music being played in the great hall I imagined Christopher Plummer singing Edelweiss. Sorry..lol

  • @tnakai1971jp
    @tnakai1971jp Před 12 lety +1

    I am an uneducated Japanese of humble means and I am not qualified to make comments on matters of state, certainly not those of another country, but I feel that Britain should preserve her heritage, including the House of Lords.
    I think reforms with good sense of balance is called for. Outright abolitions of institutions are unlikely to serve the best interest of Britain.
    "Britain for the British" is of course important but "Britain in the modern world" deserves higher consideration.

    • @BlowinFree
      @BlowinFree Před 2 lety

      Like you said you should mind your own business

  • @CMOSjockey
    @CMOSjockey Před 12 lety +3

    I disagree that the manor house was in its heyday 100 years ago, because technology was having its impact. But it certainly still existed in all it's glory.

  • @shazkh7753
    @shazkh7753 Před 11 lety +2

    wow such beautiful homes.

  • @philipterzian4581
    @philipterzian4581 Před 5 lety +6

    The great Edwardian meritocrats -- images of General Kitchener, HH Asquith's family etc -- keep being shown as 'the aristocracy.' As an American I must ask: Does the BBC research department (if there is one) not know better?

  • @vivaloriflamme
    @vivaloriflamme Před 11 lety +14

    I read a memoir : "The Road to Nab's End"- a description of life at the bottom- his grandmother starved to death. His bright sister couldn't make use of a scholarship because- no shoes.
    American version: vast wealth of places like parts of California and Manhattan, Nantucket, etc. 32 million for a penthouse apartment in NYC. And one in four American children are on food stamps (EBT card).
    Middle class jobs are evaporating. The real unemployment rate is much higher.
    So... when does WW3 start?

    • @pppmanly
      @pppmanly Před 4 lety

      The super wealthy and the politicians who support them keep the middle and lower classes in control by distracting them with issues that divide them and which make them hate / distrust each other -- such as racism, xenophobia, homophobia, religious intolerance, misogyny, etc.

  • @JM-gu3tx
    @JM-gu3tx Před 5 lety +2

    I'm fascinated by the artistic beauty of the interiors and the exquisite taste of all the many British manor houses, not the pretentious, idolatrous aristocracy title thing--which is all due to somebody being rewarded land for fighting in a war,ultimately. Britain has a scourge of class arrogance and rabid foaming at the mouth class warfare, envy based leftism that is truly horrifying, which you don't see in Canada, Australia or the U.S. I like how soft spoken, gracious and polite the civilized folk of Britain are. Reminds me of traditional Southerners or old Mid Westerners in the U.S.. British and other Europeans have a respect for tradition and timeless beauty that Americans, Canadians and Australians simply don't have anymore, which can be brought back. The latter are into the sterile lines of "modern" architecture and "modern" decor, which is soulless and vapid. That is why in England they are trying to bring back beautiful architecture.

  • @xetalq
    @xetalq Před 11 lety +9

    This documentary may have British actors, and a narrator with an English accent, but this is a US documentary, written and produced by PBS,.

    • @leeboriack8054
      @leeboriack8054 Před 5 lety +2

      Few of us are given the gift of accurate appraisal. As an American I favor the BBC's view on USA's politics and history. Perhaps a foreign cousin might offer a perspective we can not see from our own vantage point?

    • @elizabethblackwell6242
      @elizabethblackwell6242 Před 4 lety

      So many errors I couldn't keep watching it.

    • @mindakahn9964
      @mindakahn9964 Před 4 lety +1

      So what? It’s a good production and the home owners made money.

  • @iloveryangreasley6172
    @iloveryangreasley6172 Před 6 lety +27

    My father is a viscount and we're completely broke; a title doesn't pay the bills.

    • @robertvangilder9108
      @robertvangilder9108 Před 5 lety +5

      Totally agree with im in line to several titles like a duck and a Earl but they don't pay anything I heard I will just have a huge house that will be empty

    • @fghwertferty4613
      @fghwertferty4613 Před 5 lety +5

      @@robertvangilder9108 right, sure? A bit of a fantasist, aren't we?

    • @984francis
      @984francis Před 5 lety +4

      Vauxhall used to make Viscounts but they all rusted away😬

    • @cerdic6867
      @cerdic6867 Před 5 lety

      Inheritance tax has finished you off?

    • @garethlock50
      @garethlock50 Před 5 lety +7

      @@robertvangilder9108 You're going to be a Duck?

  • @valeria-militiamessalina5672

    Imagine working as a butler for 25 years in the same house; OMG, what an indefatigable!

    • @howardwayne3974
      @howardwayne3974 Před 3 lety +4

      They were the ones who were the real aristocracy ! You'd be surprised , but in some households the butler was the one who ruled ! After all he was really the only one who knew where everything was , who everyone was , what job everyone had , how much everyone was paid , how much the cook was stealing and selling out the back door , what footman was nipping at the old vintages in the wine seller and was about to get the sack , and basicly knew more about the lord and ladies children than they did themselves . so you see , the butler and the housekeeper were actually the lord and lady of the manor , and the ones with the titles just lived there . after all when the titled ones died , and their children inherited the butler will still be there running the place like nothing had ever changed . unless of course the eldest son lost it gambling .

  • @PaulJones-oj4kr
    @PaulJones-oj4kr Před 6 lety +2

    The Aristocracy, Torries, were not about to give up their wealth and status, once both world wars were immanent.

  • @Thomas-fu8vp
    @Thomas-fu8vp Před 4 lety +4

    Lord Palmer :Always putting a price on everything is such a demonstration of vulgarity. But then again he did hook up with a Texan.Those drapes? The family got ripped off.

  • @Hotshotter3000
    @Hotshotter3000 Před 11 lety +5

    The House of Lords should have been abolished, it isn't something that's just for show. The British nobility and royalty still control a lot of the land in Britain and dominate certain sectors. Did you know that the Queen of England has a virtual monopoly on mineral rights for radioactive materials? No one person should have that much influence.

  • @flyinspirals
    @flyinspirals Před 11 lety +2

    There is something I want to ask; I don't know how many English people would be watching this American PBS version of this video, but: do people think that WWI somehow functioned as (took the place of) revolution as a way of ending the extreme differences between the aristocracy & the laboring people in England? And do you think it just happened to be timely; that there would have been some other kind of revoultion if the war hadn't intervened? Or am I getting into the area of conspiracy theory?

  • @suzannesadiiqa
    @suzannesadiiqa Před 12 lety +2

    The first shots are not of manor houses but stately homes, a great difference................

  • @Patrick3183
    @Patrick3183 Před 11 lety +4

    I think that despite the hard work of the servants, working in a House was steady employment and you usually had your own room and board.

  • @notnek202
    @notnek202 Před rokem +1

    What about the Viscount’s & Baronets?

  • @flyinspirals
    @flyinspirals Před 11 lety +5

    I just made some (naive) comments to this video, then read your comment.
    I think people tolerate an incredible amount of inequality before they develop the desperation to revolt, because if it comes, there will be terrible loss of life - people sense this even if they don't know it. I suspect they have to feel their chance of dying if they revolt is drawing closer to their chance of dying if they don't.
    Do you do think WWI took the place of revolution? Deliberately, by the aristocracy? WWII?

  • @kikimahieu8711
    @kikimahieu8711 Před 12 lety +5

    A great pity the House of Lords wasn't abolished as a consequence of these changes.

  • @annalejandro1
    @annalejandro1 Před 10 lety +11

    Why are you picking on Americans? In this whole country there are about 20 houses comparable to "The English Manor House" (or whatever type of house you want to call a huge lavish English country house situated on the owner's vast land holdings), and these are not tied to land but usually to beachfront large lots for seasonal recreation in a Rhode Island, Long Island, and. Few other paces like Asheville NC which the Vanderbilts DID tie to vast acreages of mountain forests. The others were the non profit vacation homes of the Gilded Age robber barons or "captains of industry" (most were a mix who were huge philanthropists as well as hugely wealthy short lived dynasties)such as the Rockefellers, Carnegies, Frisks, Goulds, Astors, and a few others. They were not members of the House of Lords (there isn't one), they didn't hold titles (there aren't any), they were simply obscenely rich and became so through legal and illegal ways. The illegal ways, or most of them, were put a stop to by President Theodore Roosevelt who had grown up on the same posh Manhattan block as the family friends he was at the time of his presidency "bringing to heel" to make opportunities fair and equal for any investor/inventor.the simple act is that in the UK or the US, people are fascinated by the opulence of these beautiful homes, and like to go visit them. In the US, only 2 of these are privately owned, Donald Trump's Mar a Lago which survives as a private club, and some Vanderbilt cousin who kept Biltmore in North Carolina and some of its acreage by opening it to the public. The rest are run by foundations, not a National Trust, but the means of saving the homes is neither here nor there:Tourists like pay to to go see them because they're gorgeous and it's nice to imagine what it would be like to be richer than Fort Knox. People of great wealth are building homes just as expensive today minus the servants' quarters. I have absolutely no problem with how many and what size homes are built by Oprah Winfrey or Bill Gates or Richard Branson. It's fine with me if your knickers are in a twist that ever an Althorp or a Blenheim was built. Good God, the Americans didn't do it. The UK was still putting up with rolling blackouts while the US was sending someone to the moon.

  • @pranavmanohaur8352
    @pranavmanohaur8352 Před 3 lety +2

    I want Lord Palmer's podcast!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pleas.....................................eeeeeeeeeeeee.....................!!!!!!!!!

  • @neilpatterson1615
    @neilpatterson1615 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I'm confused. Most of these houses aren't manor houses

  • @tfh5575
    @tfh5575 Před 2 lety

    and the fight for equality continues

  • @suzannesadiiqa
    @suzannesadiiqa Před 11 lety +1

    Thanks for that Patrick, I might have guessed it was something like this and I know I should't let it bother me but I do hate sloppy terminology.

  • @janettemiller-heffernan609
    @janettemiller-heffernan609 Před 11 lety +7

    Today there is something grisly about the Edwardian era. Being English I find it grotesque and embarrassing. The show of wealth and the total disregard of human beings I find distasteful. My late husband a GP felt the whole lot of these building should be pulled down and I agree with him. This series shows why. We Brits have nothing to be proud of and it still continues today. Our Royal Family is of this mould and until recently paid not one penny in tax. Just take,and a wave of the hand.

    • @iloveryangreasley6172
      @iloveryangreasley6172 Před 6 lety +2

      And what should the aristocrats and wealthy people do? Just die? There will always be rich people, doesn't make you a bad person.

    • @sumamor1270
      @sumamor1270 Před 6 lety +1

      IloveRyanGreasley she is ignorant jealous old lady

    • @deandrareynolds7371
      @deandrareynolds7371 Před 5 lety +2

      I’m glad this sort of inequality has (mostly) gone and the aristocracy is dying but why tear down the beautiful buildings built by some of the greatest architects of their age? Let’s keep the building and the art as state owned enterprises/hotels for the general public or something

    • @cerdic6867
      @cerdic6867 Před 5 lety

      Shut the fuck up Boomer

  • @PrimaveraNuova
    @PrimaveraNuova Před 12 lety

    I can't see the enormous difference. Every stately home is first and foremost a manor house.

  • @WheelsRCool
    @WheelsRCool Před 8 lety +10

    So how did these aristocrats view themselves as the human equivalent of the thoroughbred horse with all the inbreeding they did? I mean they have to have known, from so many years of breeding animals, that inbreeding is bad. Yet they did it to themselves; why didn't they know that was bad too and that reproducing with non-aristocrats would keep the line healthy and strong?

    • @user-qz5dq8kn4p
      @user-qz5dq8kn4p Před 6 lety

      Kyle Blank okay here it is the reason for the interbreeding of Royal blood lines is to secure your position and title and to unsightly family’s and treaties amongst country’s and the family’s thought it would be a good match
      And not only that there are succession laws that only males could rule and gain property so if your uncle had no mail line only daughters then you married your cousin to keep the lands in the family that’s why it was done and the marriages were arranged Hell my grandpapa and grandmama met the day of there wedding and they were 2nd cousins ounce removed And there old European old money from Russia

    • @oliviamartini9700
      @oliviamartini9700 Před 3 lety

      Many of the children born to aristos, particularly the younger ones, were not theirs biologically (affairs were rampant due to arranged marriages) or most of these inbreds would have gone the way of the Hapsburgs.

  • @msbrowngault
    @msbrowngault Před 5 lety +1

    Did she say "Texas"?

  • @tnakai1971jp
    @tnakai1971jp Před 11 lety +2

    Japan is now a better place because we learnt from others. We were given a bitter lesson - don't try to take territories just because the British and the French were doing the same from long ago.
    Japan still has problems, but on the whole, it is a nice place.
    Britain is a wonderful place, I just feel that a few things are about to crumble into pieces. The House of Lords has been in effect a powerless upper house for many years. I think T B tried to make his mark on something rather useless.

  • @realistic.optimist
    @realistic.optimist Před 6 lety +2

    You skipped Marquess

  • @machinegunmolly1
    @machinegunmolly1 Před 12 lety

    Does anybody know if the music throughout the show is part of a movie score? It sounds very familiar.

  • @andrewbrendan1579
    @andrewbrendan1579 Před 11 lety +6

    The narrator talks about the aristocrats ignoring the situation of the poor. I wonder how many people of wealth did acts of kindness and philanthropy without drawing attention to themselves, obeying the Biblical admonition of not letting the left hand know what the right hand is doing, remembering what is in the Gospel about how if one draws attention to one's good deeds then the earthly reward is all one gets, none in Heaven. Yes extravagance and inequity but surely good things were done too.

  • @kissmyashxxxxxx1596
    @kissmyashxxxxxx1596 Před 7 lety +1

    Lord the British were truly a bunch of " light in feet" type. Especially Edward....I'd be embarrassed.

  • @Caiteduck
    @Caiteduck Před 10 lety +1

    Is this the episode "Secrets of Chatsworth"?

  • @hajimerafael9665
    @hajimerafael9665 Před 3 lety +1

    Downton Abbey vibes

  • @Hotshotter3000
    @Hotshotter3000 Před 11 lety

    I'm talking about the radioactive minerals, like raw uranium and the like. Not radioactive waste which is something else.

  • @shiftyjake
    @shiftyjake Před 11 lety +2

    2:55
    Lol, that hair.
    "I'm not saying the aristocrats were aliens, but..."

  • @Iranda_
    @Iranda_ Před 6 lety +2

    Two sharks meet in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. "How are you?" asks one shark. "Not too good. I ate an American a week ago and my guts are still glued together with chewing gum. And you?". "It's even worse. I ate a Russian general a week ago and I am still shitting medals". Replace the second shark with a British prince, wearing more medals than an average serviceman may earn in three lifetimes of military service.

  • @deanwright2012
    @deanwright2012 Před 12 lety

    Interesting....

  • @feelingbetternaturally1099

    Aristocracy is another word for Evil.

  • @tnakai1971jp
    @tnakai1971jp Před 11 lety +1

    Well, we all feel like that at times. We recently had a politician of high profile trying to justify wartime prostitutions "supposedly" arranged by Japanese government or the Imperial Japanese Army.
    I shall refrain from making comments on that matter as I am no expert.
    You should not feel ashamed of being Americans. We all love you for all the good things you have done on Japan.
    Every country has its forte and weakness. Our own emotions on national pride swings all the time.

  • @shirleyhowley4721
    @shirleyhowley4721 Před 3 lety

    Shocking ! Sad !! No words !!

  • @miketwocoat
    @miketwocoat Před 3 měsíci

    You forget your station sir,

  • @KD-jg5yd
    @KD-jg5yd Před 2 lety +1

    If you marry into this family and this house, you will find it is a Jail.

  • @MD_80906
    @MD_80906 Před 11 lety

    14:23 The Devonshire Ball!!!

  • @yash1551
    @yash1551 Před 10 lety +1

    Where did the Viscount went to? :S wasn't it above the Barons?

    • @MrMikeyDunphy
      @MrMikeyDunphy Před 10 lety +2

      The order is: Duke, Marquess, Earl, Viscount, Baron, Esquire, Gentleman.

    • @T1Bentley
      @T1Bentley Před 10 lety

      Mikey Dunphy Baronet missing in this list.

    • @T1Bentley
      @T1Bentley Před 10 lety

      Mikey Dunphy Baronet missing in this list.

    • @michaeldunphy6881
      @michaeldunphy6881 Před 10 lety

      So it is; Duke, Marquess, Earl, Viscount, Baron, Baronet, Esquire, Gentlemen.

    • @T1Bentley
      @T1Bentley Před 10 lety

      Thank you, Michael

  • @adrianlarkins7259
    @adrianlarkins7259 Před 6 lety +16

    This production is so biased towards the left wing it distorts the actual truth. For example,the servants wages were low BUT what the film fails to mention was free housing, free uniform, free food and in some cases free medical care. Most employers were kind and considerate towards their staff despite the long hours. As for the notion of the staff not being seen or heard, that may seem degrading by today's way of thinking but was the norm at the time and therefore the staff would not have expected anything different.
    Being in domestic service was a huge factor in the overall national employment before the First World War.

    • @JM-gu3tx
      @JM-gu3tx Před 5 lety +1

      Aye, indeed. Anything produced by British media,especially the BBC will have a class warfare loving, socialist, envy based perspective that will demonize anybody who is successful or hard working.

    • @wrinklies2167
      @wrinklies2167 Před 5 lety

      Adrian Larkins www.amazon.com/Aprons-Silver-Spoons-Mollie-Moran/dp/0718159993/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3HVLJUTCAWSQC&keywords=aprons+and+silver+spoons&qid=1548091562&sprefix=Aprons+and+silver+%2Caps%2C255&sr=8-1

    • @tribeofjosepht.i.community9977
      @tribeofjosepht.i.community9977 Před 5 lety +1

      People knew and understood their places and duties, at that Time Period. And today’s sick society, sodomites and SJW’s demanding to be as royalty ! When in fact, these are the lowest of ignorant trash.

    • @jacintaperdue1720
      @jacintaperdue1720 Před 5 lety +1

      @@tribeofjosepht.i.community9977 What is SJWs

    • @leeboriack8054
      @leeboriack8054 Před 5 lety +4

      Why not offer staff a wage that they could afford to pay for their own housing?

  • @andrewbrendan1579
    @andrewbrendan1579 Před 11 lety +6

    I agree, Mike: this is not serious, scholarly viewing. I believe it's over-simplified, over-dramatic and biased against the aristocracy. The system had its flaws, all right, and the aristocrats weren't/aren't perfect but the way classes are portrayed here makes me think "propaganda".

  • @3636Clarence
    @3636Clarence Před 12 lety +1

    In the opening aerial view of the manor, there are little white dots on the lawn. We're these sheep?

  • @Mallymoore
    @Mallymoore Před 10 lety +19

    its easier for a fat man to go through the eye of a needle then for a rich man to enter through the gates of heaven

    • @Mallymoore
      @Mallymoore Před 9 lety

      i changed it lol not if he or she is very very fat

    • @MatthewMcVeagh
      @MatthewMcVeagh Před 9 lety

      It's easier to drive a coach and horses thru your Bible quotes than it is a camel thru your misuse of the word 'then'.
      BTW the Hebrew for camel is the same as or related to Gimel, the name of the letter G in the Hebrew alphabet and "eye of a needle" is one of the meanings of Qoph, the name of the letter representing a K sound (transcribed as a Q). Both have meanings in Jewish mysticism (such as Qabalah) so when Jesus said this (or the words were put in his possibly fictional mouth) he may have had a mystical meaning "You cannot achieve a 'gimel' state thru 'qoph' type activities".

    • @Mallymoore
      @Mallymoore Před 9 lety

      were and when did i state it was a quote from thhe book of lies

    • @Mallymoore
      @Mallymoore Před 9 lety

      you seem very judgmental

    • @Mallymoore
      @Mallymoore Před 9 lety

      THAN is that better for you

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 Před 2 lety

    The entire Ego Minded Social Pecking Order is just really out dated, if they enjoy it so be it, but it just is tiresome.
    Quirky - habits.
    King Edward is the only of the Royal line that "feels realistic", Then Diana later offered a most warm and empathetic grace
    .
    It is quite a hollow structure. We choose our place through our thoughts, if you desire it then you should have it, but it comes through Thought rather than physical efforting.
    The lady from Texas is lovely.

  • @peterbradshaw8018
    @peterbradshaw8018 Před 11 lety +1

    Is that valuation of US$20 million for the rebuild of Manderston correct if so it is a steal. A Gulfstream G550 cost more. A boat for 20 mil will hardly stir any waves in Monaco. The decorator has taste looks better than some New York pent houses that cost loads more.

    • @RADIUMGLASS
      @RADIUMGLASS Před 9 měsíci

      No. To rebuild that you would probably need a minimum of 100 million dollars.

    • @peterbradshaw8018
      @peterbradshaw8018 Před 8 měsíci

      My thoughts exactly.

  • @Ne0c225
    @Ne0c225 Před 12 lety

    What is the name of the house at 00:03?

  • @shadrach6299
    @shadrach6299 Před 4 lety

    Wow!

  • @cedricsmith3162
    @cedricsmith3162 Před 8 lety +1

    I am Portuguese, French Ancient Egyptian, Scottish, and other ancient Royalty but all people see in me is a black person, my family made paper money I am from the Smiley family of Scotland.

  • @myboyz9391
    @myboyz9391 Před 4 lety

    I wonder who Lawrence James inherited his hair from? Lol

  • @MD_80906
    @MD_80906 Před 12 lety +1

    blenheim palace in oxfordshire home of the 11th Duke of Marlborough and home also of miss Consuelo Vanderbilt

  • @cedricsmith3162
    @cedricsmith3162 Před 8 lety

    I have, Magic Talisman from Britain.

    • @zahria
      @zahria Před 6 lety +1

      If you are so posh - why can't you say that in proper English? ?

  • @Mallymoore
    @Mallymoore Před 10 lety +5

    its cold in hell

  • @francesmcmillan7596
    @francesmcmillan7596 Před 3 měsíci

    It's too bad how many were torn down.

  • @sixsixxsixxxx
    @sixsixxsixxxx Před 6 lety

    If there's a bustle in your hedgerow...

  • @mmexplore4554
    @mmexplore4554 Před 12 lety

    Is 3:29 Mr. Bean?

  • @RADIUMGLASS
    @RADIUMGLASS Před 4 měsíci

    Lord Palmer died July 2023.

  • @Iranda_
    @Iranda_ Před 6 lety +4

    One and a half million servants who could have been educated, could have done something better with their lives than cleaning chamber pots. Millions of wasted human lives. Pitiful.

    • @alangallagher4040
      @alangallagher4040 Před 4 lety +2

      Do you think the masses being subject to massive corporate entities is any better? We are all a product of our time....